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41751231 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reece%20Styche | Reece Styche | Reece Styche (born 3 May 1989) is a professional footballer who plays as a striker for Southern League Premier Division club Stourbridge and the Gibraltar national team. Known as a physical attacker, he is also known as "Brutus" by fans in Gibraltar after the nickname was given to him by head coach Julio Cesar Ribas. He currently holds the record of joint-highest scorer for Gibraltar, shared with Tjay De Barr, Liam Walker and Lee Casciaro.
Club career
Early career
Born in Sutton Coldfield, West Midlands, Styche came through the youth system at Hednesford Town and made his debut for the club on 28 April 2007, coming off the bench and scoring twice in a 3–2 away win over Kendal Town. A number of injury problems hampered his progress and he spent a month on loan at Bromsgrove Rovers in September 2008. He made four substitute appearances, three in the Southern League Midland Division and one in the Birmingham Senior Cup, and scored once, against AFC Sudbury.
After two substitute appearances for Hednesford, he joined Grantham Town permanently after a short trial period. Four months later he left Grantham and joined Coalville Town in February 2009. He ended the 2008–09 season with Coalville but then signed for Shepshed Dynamo.
In October 2009, he joined Northern Premier League Division One South club Chasetown. He scored on his debut after just three minutes of an FA Trophy victory over Lincoln United. His goalscoring success with the Scholars saw him find the back of the net 13 times in 15 appearances10 from 13 league matchesand would earn him a move away from the club as a result.
Forest Green Rovers
On 25 January 2010, Styche joined Conference Premier club Forest Green Rovers. He made his debut the next day, scoring twice in a 3–2 away win over Hayes & Yeading United after coming on as a substitute for Craig Rocastle. In May 2010, he agreed a new contract to stay with the club for the 2010–11 season. He ended the 2010–11 campaign as the club's top goal scorer with 16 goals. His fine goalscoring form earned him a call-up to the England C squad for the final of the International Challenge Trophy against the Portugal under-23 team. He appeared as a substitute in the final at Sixfields Stadium but couldn't prevent England C from suffering a 1–0 defeat.
In August 2011, he was the subject of a bid from league rivals Luton Town which was rejected by Forest Green, and he signed a new three-year contract with the club. In October 2011, having scored six times in nine appearances, he suffered a knee injury which was expected to rule him out for much of the season. He returned to first-team action towards the end of the campaign, and began the 2012–13 season with a first goal against AFC Telford United, albeit awarded as an own goal, followed by a last-minute penalty at Gateshead which secured a 1–1 draw.
In February 2013, he suffered a ruptured anterior cruciate ligament which required surgery. He returned from injury in October, and scored his first goal of the 2013–14 season in a 6–2 away win over Hyde on 18 January 2014.
Wycombe Wanderers (loan)
A few days later, he joined League Two team Wycombe Wanderers on loan until the end of the season. He made his debut against Mansfield Town and was replaced after 69 minutes of his first game in the Football League. He appeared 14 times for Wycombe, left the club at the end of his loan spell, and was one of ten players released by Forest Green at the end of the season.
Non-League football
On 15 May 2014, Styche signed a two-year deal with Conference club Kidderminster Harriers. He made his debut on 9 August, coming off the bench in a 0–0 draw with Lincoln City. His first goal for Kidderminster came in a 4–0 home win over Altrincham on 16 September 2014.
In October 2014, he joined Conference North club Tamworth on loan. He scored on his debut for Tamworth. He went on to make five appearances, scoring twice, during his loan spell. On 13 January 2015, Styche joined Tamworth on loan for a second spell till the end of the season. On 8 August 2015 Styche scored on his return to the Harriers' first team in a 2–2 draw with Grimsby Town.
On 30 October 2015, Styche joined Macclesfield Town of the National League on loan until January 2016. Despite a contract offer to stay at Macclesfield, Styche signed for fellow National League club Gateshead in May 2016. After his Gateshead contract was cancelled in January 2017, Styche signed for Tamworth, where he had previously spent time on loan. In November 2017, he moved on to another National League North club, Darlington, for an undisclosed fee. He scored 11 goals in 21 league matches in what remained of the season and, according to the Northern Echo, played a major role in the club avoiding relegation. In October 2018, Darlington accepted an offer for Styche's services from divisional rivals Alfreton Town, apparently for financial reasons. He completed the move on 24 October and scored after seven minutes of his debut three days later.
On 23 May 2019, it was announced that Styche had transferred to league rivals Hereford. In February 2020, he joined Southern Premier Central side Bromsgrove Sporting. However, he was only able to make one league appearance for the club before the season was abandoned due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and in June 2020 he moved again, this time to Buxton of the Northern Premier League Premier Division. With another season curtailed by the pandemic, Styche moved once more in May 2021, this time returning to Hednesford Town after 13 years away.
International career
In 2010, Styche received a call-up to the England C squad; he made his debut in the 2009–11 International Challenge Trophy final against Portugal U23 on 19 May 2011. In January 2014, head coach Allen Bula named Styche as a player on his radar who could play with the Gibraltar national football team in the near future. On 11 February, he was called up to the Gibraltar national squad for friendlies against the Faroe Islands and Estonia. He qualifies to play for Gibraltar through his grandmother.
He made his Gibraltar debut on 1 March, starting in a 4–1 defeat against the Faroe Islands. Upon the arrival of new national team coach Julio César Ribas in July 2018, Styche was included in his first open squad list. He was subsequently called up to Ribas's first UEFA Nations League squad, and came off the bench in both matches, against Macedonia and Liechtenstein. He scored his first international goal on 18 November 2019, in a UEFA Euro 2020 qualifier against Switzerland.
International statistics
International goals
Scores and results list Gibraltar's goal tally first.
References
External links
1989 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Sutton Coldfield
Gibraltarian footballers
Gibraltar international footballers
English footballers
England semi-pro international footballers
Association football forwards
Hednesford Town F.C. players
Bromsgrove Rovers F.C. players
Grantham Town F.C. players
Coalville Town F.C. players
Shepshed Dynamo F.C. players
Chasetown F.C. players
Forest Green Rovers F.C. players
Wycombe Wanderers F.C. players
Kidderminster Harriers F.C. players
Tamworth F.C. players
Macclesfield Town F.C. players
Gateshead F.C. players
Darlington F.C. players
Alfreton Town F.C. players
Hereford F.C. players
Bromsgrove Sporting F.C. players
Buxton F.C. players
Northern Premier League players
Southern Football League players
National League (English football) players
English Football League players
English people of Gibraltarian descent | [
"Reece Styche (born 3 May 1989) is a professional footballer who plays as a striker for Southern League Premier Division club Stourbridge and the Gibraltar national team.",
"Known as a physical attacker, he is also known as \"Brutus\" by fans in Gibraltar after the nickname was given to him by head coach Julio Cesar Ribas.",
"He currently holds the record of joint-highest scorer for Gibraltar, shared with Tjay De Barr, Liam Walker and Lee Casciaro.",
"Club career\n\nEarly career\nBorn in Sutton Coldfield, West Midlands, Styche came through the youth system at Hednesford Town and made his debut for the club on 28 April 2007, coming off the bench and scoring twice in a 3–2 away win over Kendal Town.",
"A number of injury problems hampered his progress and he spent a month on loan at Bromsgrove Rovers in September 2008.",
"He made four substitute appearances, three in the Southern League Midland Division and one in the Birmingham Senior Cup, and scored once, against AFC Sudbury.",
"After two substitute appearances for Hednesford, he joined Grantham Town permanently after a short trial period.",
"Four months later he left Grantham and joined Coalville Town in February 2009.",
"He ended the 2008–09 season with Coalville but then signed for Shepshed Dynamo.",
"In October 2009, he joined Northern Premier League Division One South club Chasetown.",
"He scored on his debut after just three minutes of an FA Trophy victory over Lincoln United.",
"His goalscoring success with the Scholars saw him find the back of the net 13 times in 15 appearances10 from 13 league matchesand would earn him a move away from the club as a result.",
"Forest Green Rovers\n\nOn 25 January 2010, Styche joined Conference Premier club Forest Green Rovers.",
"He made his debut the next day, scoring twice in a 3–2 away win over Hayes & Yeading United after coming on as a substitute for Craig Rocastle.",
"In May 2010, he agreed a new contract to stay with the club for the 2010–11 season.",
"He ended the 2010–11 campaign as the club's top goal scorer with 16 goals.",
"His fine goalscoring form earned him a call-up to the England C squad for the final of the International Challenge Trophy against the Portugal under-23 team.",
"He appeared as a substitute in the final at Sixfields Stadium but couldn't prevent England C from suffering a 1–0 defeat.",
"In August 2011, he was the subject of a bid from league rivals Luton Town which was rejected by Forest Green, and he signed a new three-year contract with the club.",
"In October 2011, having scored six times in nine appearances, he suffered a knee injury which was expected to rule him out for much of the season.",
"He returned to first-team action towards the end of the campaign, and began the 2012–13 season with a first goal against AFC Telford United, albeit awarded as an own goal, followed by a last-minute penalty at Gateshead which secured a 1–1 draw.",
"In February 2013, he suffered a ruptured anterior cruciate ligament which required surgery.",
"He returned from injury in October, and scored his first goal of the 2013–14 season in a 6–2 away win over Hyde on 18 January 2014.",
"Wycombe Wanderers (loan)\nA few days later, he joined League Two team Wycombe Wanderers on loan until the end of the season.",
"He made his debut against Mansfield Town and was replaced after 69 minutes of his first game in the Football League.",
"He appeared 14 times for Wycombe, left the club at the end of his loan spell, and was one of ten players released by Forest Green at the end of the season.",
"Non-League football\nOn 15 May 2014, Styche signed a two-year deal with Conference club Kidderminster Harriers.",
"He made his debut on 9 August, coming off the bench in a 0–0 draw with Lincoln City.",
"His first goal for Kidderminster came in a 4–0 home win over Altrincham on 16 September 2014.",
"In October 2014, he joined Conference North club Tamworth on loan.",
"He scored on his debut for Tamworth.",
"He went on to make five appearances, scoring twice, during his loan spell.",
"On 13 January 2015, Styche joined Tamworth on loan for a second spell till the end of the season.",
"On 8 August 2015 Styche scored on his return to the Harriers' first team in a 2–2 draw with Grimsby Town.",
"On 30 October 2015, Styche joined Macclesfield Town of the National League on loan until January 2016.",
"Despite a contract offer to stay at Macclesfield, Styche signed for fellow National League club Gateshead in May 2016.",
"After his Gateshead contract was cancelled in January 2017, Styche signed for Tamworth, where he had previously spent time on loan.",
"In November 2017, he moved on to another National League North club, Darlington, for an undisclosed fee.",
"He scored 11 goals in 21 league matches in what remained of the season and, according to the Northern Echo, played a major role in the club avoiding relegation.",
"In October 2018, Darlington accepted an offer for Styche's services from divisional rivals Alfreton Town, apparently for financial reasons.",
"He completed the move on 24 October and scored after seven minutes of his debut three days later.",
"On 23 May 2019, it was announced that Styche had transferred to league rivals Hereford.",
"In February 2020, he joined Southern Premier Central side Bromsgrove Sporting.",
"However, he was only able to make one league appearance for the club before the season was abandoned due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and in June 2020 he moved again, this time to Buxton of the Northern Premier League Premier Division.",
"With another season curtailed by the pandemic, Styche moved once more in May 2021, this time returning to Hednesford Town after 13 years away.",
"International career\nIn 2010, Styche received a call-up to the England C squad; he made his debut in the 2009–11 International Challenge Trophy final against Portugal U23 on 19 May 2011.",
"In January 2014, head coach Allen Bula named Styche as a player on his radar who could play with the Gibraltar national football team in the near future.",
"On 11 February, he was called up to the Gibraltar national squad for friendlies against the Faroe Islands and Estonia.",
"He qualifies to play for Gibraltar through his grandmother.",
"He made his Gibraltar debut on 1 March, starting in a 4–1 defeat against the Faroe Islands.",
"Upon the arrival of new national team coach Julio César Ribas in July 2018, Styche was included in his first open squad list.",
"He was subsequently called up to Ribas's first UEFA Nations League squad, and came off the bench in both matches, against Macedonia and Liechtenstein.",
"He scored his first international goal on 18 November 2019, in a UEFA Euro 2020 qualifier against Switzerland.",
"International statistics\n\nInternational goals\nScores and results list Gibraltar's goal tally first.",
"References\n\nExternal links\n\n \n \n \n\n1989 births\nLiving people\nSportspeople from Sutton Coldfield\nGibraltarian footballers\nGibraltar international footballers\nEnglish footballers\nEngland semi-pro international footballers\nAssociation football forwards\nHednesford Town F.C.",
"players\nBromsgrove Rovers F.C.",
"players\nGrantham Town F.C.",
"players\nCoalville Town F.C.",
"players\nShepshed Dynamo F.C.",
"players\nChasetown F.C.",
"players\nForest Green Rovers F.C.",
"players\nWycombe Wanderers F.C.",
"players\nKidderminster Harriers F.C.",
"players\nTamworth F.C.",
"players\nMacclesfield Town F.C.",
"players\nGateshead F.C.",
"players\nDarlington F.C.",
"players\nAlfreton Town F.C.",
"players\nHereford F.C.",
"players\nBromsgrove Sporting F.C.",
"players\nBuxton F.C.",
"players\nNorthern Premier League players\nSouthern Football League players\nNational League (English football) players\nEnglish Football League players\nEnglish people of Gibraltarian descent"
] | [
"Styche is a professional footballer who plays for Stourbridge and the Gibraltar national team.",
"He is known as \"Brutus\" by fans in Gibraltar after the nickname was given to him by his coach.",
"He is the joint- highest scorer in Gibraltar with Tjay De Barr, Liam Walker and Lee Casciaro.",
"Styche came through the youth system at Hednesford Town and made his debut for the club on April 28, 2007, coming off the bench and scoring twice in a 3–2 away win over Kendal Town.",
"A number of injury problems hampered his progress and he spent a month on loan at a different club.",
"He made four substitute appearances, three in the southern league and one in the senior cup.",
"He joined Grantham Town after a short trial period.",
"He joined Coalville Town in February 2009.",
"He joined Shepshed Dynamo after the 2008–09 season with Coalville.",
"He joined Chasetown in October of 2009.",
"He scored on his debut in just three minutes.",
"His goal scoring success with the Scholars saw him find the back of the net 13 times in 15 appearances10 from 13 league matches and earn him a move away from the club as a result.",
"Styche joined the club on January 25, 2010.",
"After coming on as a substitute for Craig Rocastle, he scored twice in a 3–2 away win over Hayes & Yeading United.",
"He signed a new contract with the club in May of 2010.",
"He was the club's top goal scorer with 16 goals.",
"He was called up to the England C squad for the final of the International Challenge Trophy against the Portugal under-23 team.",
"England C suffered a 1–0 defeat in the final at Sixfields Stadium while he was a substitute.",
"He signed a new three-year contract with the club after he was the subject of a bid from Luton Town.",
"After scoring six times in nine appearances, he was expected to be out for much of the season due to a knee injury.",
"He returned to first-team action towards the end of the campaign, and began the 2012–13 season with a first goal against AFC Telford United, albeit awarded as an own goal, followed by a last-minute penalty at Gateshead which secured a 1–1 draw.",
"He had surgery on his knee in February of last year.",
"He scored his first goal of the season in a 6–2 away win over Hyde in January.",
"He joined the team on a loan until the end of the season.",
"He was replaced after 69 minutes of his first game in the Football League.",
"He left the club at the end of his loan spell and was one of ten players released by Forest Green at the end of the season.",
"Styche signed a two-year deal with Kidderminster Harriers.",
"He made his debut off the bench in a 0–0 draw with Lincoln City.",
"He scored his first goal for Kidderminster in a 4–0 win over Altrincham.",
"He joined the Conference North club on a loan.",
"He scored on his debut.",
"He made five appearances and scored twice.",
"Styche joined Tamworth on loan for a second spell until the end of the season.",
"On August 8, 2015, Styche scored on his return to the Harriers' first team.",
"Styche joined Macclesfield Town of the National League on a loan.",
"Styche signed for Gateshead in May 2016 despite being offered a contract to stay at Macclesfield.",
"Styche had previously spent time on loan before he signed for Tamworth.",
"He moved to another National League North club, Darlington, for an undisclosed fee.",
"He scored 11 goals in 21 league matches to help the club avoid the drop.",
"Styche's services were offered by Alfreton Town for financial reasons.",
"He scored seven minutes into his debut after completing the move.",
"On May 23, it was announced that Styche had transferred.",
"He joined the side in February 2020.",
"However, he was only able to make one league appearance for the club before the season was abandoned due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and in June 2020 he moved again, this time to Buxton of the Northern Premier League Premier Division.",
"After 13 years away, Styche returned to Hednesford Town in May 2021.",
"Styche made his international debut in the International Challenge Trophy final against Portugal U23 in May 2011.",
"Styche was on Allen Bula's radar when he was the head coach of the Gibraltar national football team.",
"He was called up to the Gibraltar national squad for a couple of games.",
"He is eligible to play for Gibraltar because of his grandmother.",
"He made his debut in Gibraltar on March 1st.",
"Styche was included in his first open squad list after the arrival of new national team coach.",
"He came off the bench in the first two matches of Ribas's first Nations League squad.",
"He scored his first international goal against Switzerland.",
"Gibraltar's goal tally is listed first in International goals Scores and results.",
"Gibraltarian football players, English football players, and Hednesford Town F.C. football players are linked to External links.",
"The players are from the F.C.",
"The players are from Grantham Town F.C.",
"Coalville Town F.C. has players.",
"Shepshed is a player for the F.C.",
"The players are from Chasetown F.C.",
"The players are from Forest Green.",
"The players of the club.",
"The players are from Kidderminster.",
"The players are from Tamworth F.C.",
"The players are from Macclesfield Town.",
"The players of F.C. are from Gateshead.",
"The players are from Darlington F.C.",
"The players are from Alfreton Town F.C.",
"The players are from F.C.",
"The players are from the Sporting F.C.",
"The players are from Buxton F.C.",
"English people of Gibraltarian descent play football in the Southern Football League and the English Football League."
] | <mask> (born 3 May 1989) is a professional footballer who plays as a striker for Southern League Premier Division club Stourbridge and the Gibraltar national team. Known as a physical attacker, he is also known as "Brutus" by fans in Gibraltar after the nickname was given to him by head coach Julio Cesar Ribas. He currently holds the record of joint-highest scorer for Gibraltar, shared with Tjay De Barr, Liam Walker and Lee Casciaro. Club career
Early career
Born in Sutton Coldfield, West Midlands, Styche came through the youth system at Hednesford Town and made his debut for the club on 28 April 2007, coming off the bench and scoring twice in a 3–2 away win over Kendal Town. A number of injury problems hampered his progress and he spent a month on loan at Bromsgrove Rovers in September 2008. He made four substitute appearances, three in the Southern League Midland Division and one in the Birmingham Senior Cup, and scored once, against AFC Sudbury. After two substitute appearances for Hednesford, he joined Grantham Town permanently after a short trial period.Four months later he left Grantham and joined Coalville Town in February 2009. He ended the 2008–09 season with Coalville but then signed for Shepshed Dynamo. In October 2009, he joined Northern Premier League Division One South club Chasetown. He scored on his debut after just three minutes of an FA Trophy victory over Lincoln United. His goalscoring success with the Scholars saw him find the back of the net 13 times in 15 appearances10 from 13 league matchesand would earn him a move away from the club as a result. Forest Green Rovers
On 25 January 2010, Styche joined Conference Premier club Forest Green Rovers. He made his debut the next day, scoring twice in a 3–2 away win over Hayes & Yeading United after coming on as a substitute for Craig Rocastle.In May 2010, he agreed a new contract to stay with the club for the 2010–11 season. He ended the 2010–11 campaign as the club's top goal scorer with 16 goals. His fine goalscoring form earned him a call-up to the England C squad for the final of the International Challenge Trophy against the Portugal under-23 team. He appeared as a substitute in the final at Sixfields Stadium but couldn't prevent England C from suffering a 1–0 defeat. In August 2011, he was the subject of a bid from league rivals Luton Town which was rejected by Forest Green, and he signed a new three-year contract with the club. In October 2011, having scored six times in nine appearances, he suffered a knee injury which was expected to rule him out for much of the season. He returned to first-team action towards the end of the campaign, and began the 2012–13 season with a first goal against AFC Telford United, albeit awarded as an own goal, followed by a last-minute penalty at Gateshead which secured a 1–1 draw.In February 2013, he suffered a ruptured anterior cruciate ligament which required surgery. He returned from injury in October, and scored his first goal of the 2013–14 season in a 6–2 away win over Hyde on 18 January 2014. Wycombe Wanderers (loan)
A few days later, he joined League Two team Wycombe Wanderers on loan until the end of the season. He made his debut against Mansfield Town and was replaced after 69 minutes of his first game in the Football League. He appeared 14 times for Wycombe, left the club at the end of his loan spell, and was one of ten players released by Forest Green at the end of the season. Non-League football
On 15 May 2014, Styche signed a two-year deal with Conference club Kidderminster Harriers. He made his debut on 9 August, coming off the bench in a 0–0 draw with Lincoln City.His first goal for Kidderminster came in a 4–0 home win over Altrincham on 16 September 2014. In October 2014, he joined Conference North club Tamworth on loan. He scored on his debut for Tamworth. He went on to make five appearances, scoring twice, during his loan spell. On 13 January 2015, Styche joined Tamworth on loan for a second spell till the end of the season. On 8 August 2015 Styche scored on his return to the Harriers' first team in a 2–2 draw with Grimsby Town. On 30 October 2015, Styche joined Macclesfield Town of the National League on loan until January 2016.Despite a contract offer to stay at Macclesfield, Styche signed for fellow National League club Gateshead in May 2016. After his Gateshead contract was cancelled in January 2017, Styche signed for Tamworth, where he had previously spent time on loan. In November 2017, he moved on to another National League North club, Darlington, for an undisclosed fee. He scored 11 goals in 21 league matches in what remained of the season and, according to the Northern Echo, played a major role in the club avoiding relegation. In October 2018, Darlington accepted an offer for Styche's services from divisional rivals Alfreton Town, apparently for financial reasons. He completed the move on 24 October and scored after seven minutes of his debut three days later. On 23 May 2019, it was announced that Styche had transferred to league rivals Hereford.In February 2020, he joined Southern Premier Central side Bromsgrove Sporting. However, he was only able to make one league appearance for the club before the season was abandoned due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and in June 2020 he moved again, this time to Buxton of the Northern Premier League Premier Division. With another season curtailed by the pandemic, Styche moved once more in May 2021, this time returning to Hednesford Town after 13 years away. International career
In 2010, Styche received a call-up to the England C squad; he made his debut in the 2009–11 International Challenge Trophy final against Portugal U23 on 19 May 2011. In January 2014, head coach Allen Bula named Styche as a player on his radar who could play with the Gibraltar national football team in the near future. On 11 February, he was called up to the Gibraltar national squad for friendlies against the Faroe Islands and Estonia. He qualifies to play for Gibraltar through his grandmother.He made his Gibraltar debut on 1 March, starting in a 4–1 defeat against the Faroe Islands. Upon the arrival of new national team coach Julio César Ribas in July 2018, Styche was included in his first open squad list. He was subsequently called up to Ribas's first UEFA Nations League squad, and came off the bench in both matches, against Macedonia and Liechtenstein. He scored his first international goal on 18 November 2019, in a UEFA Euro 2020 qualifier against Switzerland. International statistics
International goals
Scores and results list Gibraltar's goal tally first. References
External links
1989 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Sutton Coldfield
Gibraltarian footballers
Gibraltar international footballers
English footballers
England semi-pro international footballers
Association football forwards
Hednesford Town F.C. players
Bromsgrove Rovers F.C.players
Grantham Town F.C. players
Coalville Town F.C. players
Shepshed Dynamo F.C. players
Chasetown F.C. players
Forest Green Rovers F.C. players
Wycombe Wanderers F.C. players
Kidderminster Harriers F.C.players
Tamworth F.C. players
Macclesfield Town F.C. players
Gateshead F.C. players
Darlington F.C. players
Alfreton Town F.C. players
Hereford F.C. players
Bromsgrove Sporting F.C.players
Buxton F.C. players
Northern Premier League players
Southern Football League players
National League (English football) players
English Football League players
English people of Gibraltarian descent | [
"Reece Styche"
] | <mask> is a professional footballer who plays for Stourbridge and the Gibraltar national team. He is known as "Brutus" by fans in Gibraltar after the nickname was given to him by his coach. He is the joint- highest scorer in Gibraltar with Tjay De Barr, Liam Walker and Lee Casciaro. Styche came through the youth system at Hednesford Town and made his debut for the club on April 28, 2007, coming off the bench and scoring twice in a 3–2 away win over Kendal Town. A number of injury problems hampered his progress and he spent a month on loan at a different club. He made four substitute appearances, three in the southern league and one in the senior cup. He joined Grantham Town after a short trial period.He joined Coalville Town in February 2009. He joined Shepshed Dynamo after the 2008–09 season with Coalville. He joined Chasetown in October of 2009. He scored on his debut in just three minutes. His goal scoring success with the Scholars saw him find the back of the net 13 times in 15 appearances10 from 13 league matches and earn him a move away from the club as a result. Styche joined the club on January 25, 2010. After coming on as a substitute for Craig Rocastle, he scored twice in a 3–2 away win over Hayes & Yeading United.He signed a new contract with the club in May of 2010. He was the club's top goal scorer with 16 goals. He was called up to the England C squad for the final of the International Challenge Trophy against the Portugal under-23 team. England C suffered a 1–0 defeat in the final at Sixfields Stadium while he was a substitute. He signed a new three-year contract with the club after he was the subject of a bid from Luton Town. After scoring six times in nine appearances, he was expected to be out for much of the season due to a knee injury. He returned to first-team action towards the end of the campaign, and began the 2012–13 season with a first goal against AFC Telford United, albeit awarded as an own goal, followed by a last-minute penalty at Gateshead which secured a 1–1 draw.He had surgery on his knee in February of last year. He scored his first goal of the season in a 6–2 away win over Hyde in January. He joined the team on a loan until the end of the season. He was replaced after 69 minutes of his first game in the Football League. He left the club at the end of his loan spell and was one of ten players released by Forest Green at the end of the season. Styche signed a two-year deal with Kidderminster Harriers. He made his debut off the bench in a 0–0 draw with Lincoln City.He scored his first goal for Kidderminster in a 4–0 win over Altrincham. He joined the Conference North club on a loan. He scored on his debut. He made five appearances and scored twice. Styche joined Tamworth on loan for a second spell until the end of the season. On August 8, 2015, Styche scored on his return to the Harriers' first team. Styche joined Macclesfield Town of the National League on a loan.Styche signed for Gateshead in May 2016 despite being offered a contract to stay at Macclesfield. Styche had previously spent time on loan before he signed for Tamworth. He moved to another National League North club, Darlington, for an undisclosed fee. He scored 11 goals in 21 league matches to help the club avoid the drop. Styche's services were offered by Alfreton Town for financial reasons. He scored seven minutes into his debut after completing the move. On May 23, it was announced that Styche had transferred.He joined the side in February 2020. However, he was only able to make one league appearance for the club before the season was abandoned due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and in June 2020 he moved again, this time to Buxton of the Northern Premier League Premier Division. After 13 years away, Styche returned to Hednesford Town in May 2021. Styche made his international debut in the International Challenge Trophy final against Portugal U23 in May 2011. Styche was on Allen Bula's radar when he was the head coach of the Gibraltar national football team. He was called up to the Gibraltar national squad for a couple of games. He is eligible to play for Gibraltar because of his grandmother.He made his debut in Gibraltar on March 1st. <mask> was included in his first open squad list after the arrival of new national team coach. He came off the bench in the first two matches of Ribas's first Nations League squad. He scored his first international goal against Switzerland. Gibraltar's goal tally is listed first in International goals Scores and results. Gibraltarian football players, English football players, and Hednesford Town F.C. football players are linked to External links. The players are from the F.C.The players are from Grantham Town F.C. Coalville Town F.C. has players. Shepshed is a player for the F.C. The players are from Chasetown F.C. The players are from Forest Green. The players of the club. The players are from Kidderminster.The players are from Tamworth F.C. The players are from Macclesfield Town. The players of F.C. are from Gateshead. The players are from Darlington F.C. The players are from Alfreton Town F.C. The players are from F.C. The players are from the Sporting F.C.The players are from Buxton F.C. English people of Gibraltarian descent play football in the Southern Football League and the English Football League. | [
"Styche",
"Styche"
] |
3599518 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin%20Gitlow | Benjamin Gitlow | Benjamin "Ben" Gitlow (December 22, 1891 – July 19, 1965) was a prominent American socialist politician of the early 20th century and a founding member of the Communist Party USA. During the end of the 1930s, Gitlow turned to conservatism and wrote two sensational exposés of American Communism, books which were very influential during the McCarthy period. Gitlow remained a leading anti-communist up to the time of his death.
Background
Benjamin Gitlow was born on December 22, 1891, in Elizabethport, New Jersey. His parents were Jewish immigrants from the Russian Empire; his father, Lewis Albert Gitlow, moved to the United States in 1888, followed by his mother, Katherine, in 1889. In the United States, his father worked part-time for insufficient hours in various factories, while his mother helped the impoverished family to make ends meet by stitching piecework at home for garment factories.
Radicalism seems to have run deeply in the family. Guests to the family home told stories about their personal and political experiences in Tsarist Russia. Gitlow later recalled this experience as formative to his own political development: I would listen intently to the adventures of the Russian revolutionary leaders, of their experiences with the police, the days and years spent in prisons and their exile to the wastes of Siberia. I would grow indignant hearing how the Tsar mistreated the people. I thrilled at the stories of the underground movement, of the conspiring activities, how deeds of violence against the Tsarist oppressors were planned... The stories of personal experiences when raids were made by the secret police upon revolutionists' homes held me spellbound. I anticipated every incident that would be related. I also listened to discussions, very idealistic in their essence, in which the participants showed how Socialism would transform the world, and to arguments over methods of how Socialism would be achieved. In later years, his mother achieved some notice as an important Communist women's leader, serving as Secretary of the Women's Committee of the Workers Party of America in 1924.
Career
Gitlow studied law while working as a retail clerk in a department store in Newark, New Jersey. He helped to organize the Retail Clerks Union, political activity for which he was discharged from his job and blacklisted by the Merchants' Association. In June 1914, Gitlow testified before the US Commission on Industrial Relations on conditions prevalent in U.S. department stores. His testimony included descriptions of mandatory overtime, spying on workers, and quid pro quo sexual harassment.
Following his blacklisting from the retail sales industry, Gitlow worked briefly as a cutter in the garment industry before entering the world of radical journalism in 1919.
Entry into radical politics
As soon as he turned 18 and became eligible for membership, Ben Gitlow joined the Socialist Party of America. Gitlow was a committed and active member of the party and he was elected a delegate to the New York state convention of the SPA in 1910, the year after his joining. In the fall of 1917, Gitlow was elected on the Socialist ticket to the New York State Assembly (Bronx Co., 3rd D.), and sat in the 141st New York State Legislature. He was one of 10 Socialists elected to the Assembly of 1918, all of them from New York City.
Despite (or perhaps because of) his two years as a Socialist parliamentarian, Ben Gitlow professed a belief in revolutionary Socialism. From its earliest days in 1919, Gitlow was an adherent of the proto-Communist Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party, working closely with renowned radical journalist and war correspondent John Reed. In April 1919, the Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party of Local Greater New York established an official weekly newspaper called The New York Communist. Reed was named the editor of the new publication, with Maximilian Cohen handling the day-to-day operations of the publication as its business manager. Effective with the June 14, 1919, issue, Max Cohen exited the scene and Ben Gitlow assumed the post of business manager.
Following the Left Wing National Conference in June 1919, Reed's New York Communist was merged with the older and better established newspaper of the Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party, Local Boston, The Revolutionary Age, edited by Louis C. Fraina. This publication was moved to New York and thereafter recognized as the "National Organ of the Left Wing Section, Socialist Party," with the former New Yorker Fraina continuing as editor and Ben Gitlow taking over as business manager.
John Reed was named the editor of the a new monthly labor magazine of the Left Wing Section, called Voice of Labor. Ben Gitlow also served as business manager of this publication, which was adopted by the Communist Labor Party in the fall, shortly before its termination due to lack of finances.
Arrest and trial
For his publicized connection on the staff of The Revolutionary Age Benjamin Gitlow was targeted for arrest during the coordinated raid of the Communist movement conducted by New York state authorities and the Department of Justice during the night of November 7/8, 1919. Gitlow was charged with violation of the New York Criminal Anarchy Law of 1902, which made it a crime to encourage the violent overthrow of government. It was contended that the publication of the Left Wing Manifesto by The Revolutionary Age earlier that year constituted such illegal action.
Ben Gitlow's widely publicized trial began in New York City on January 22, 1920, and went to the jury on February 5. Gitlow addressed the jury in his own defense in the case, saying: I am charged in this case with publishing and distributing a paper known as The Revolutionary Age, in which paper was printed a document known as the Left Wing Manifesto and Program. It is held that that document advocates the overthrow of government by force, violence, and unlawful means. The document itself, the Left Wing Manifesto, is a broad analysis of conditions, economic conditions, and historical events in the world today. It is a document based upon the principles of socialism from their earliest inception. The only thing that the document does is to broaden those principles in the light of modern events.... The socialists have always maintained that the change from capitalism to socialism would be a fundamental change, that is, we would have a complete reorganization of society, that this change would not be a question of reform; that the capitalist system of society would be completely changed and that that system would give way to a new system of society based on a new code of laws, based on a new code of ethics, and based on a new form of government. For that reason, the socialist philosophy has always been a revolutionary philosophy and people who adhered to the socialist program and philosophy were always considered revolutionists, and I as one who maintain that, in the eyes of the present day society, I am a revolutionist. The attempt of the Gitlow defense to declare the publication of the Left Wing Manifesto an expression of historical analysis rather than an act of practical advocacy was unsuccessful, however. Gitlow was convicted of the charge against him and on February 11, 1920, was sentenced to 5 to 10 years in prison. He served over two years at Sing Sing prison before being released on bail related to his filing of a writ of error. Gitlow's appeal motion was ultimately granted on December 13, 1922, followed by further hearings by the state.
Political activity after prison
Following his release from prison on bail in the spring of 1922, Ben Gitlow was made a full-time employee of the Communist Party of America. The governing Central Executive Committee named him as Industrial Organizer (party organizer in the unions) for a large area which stretched from New York City to Philadelphia and which encompassed the entire New England region.
He was elected as a delegate to the Communist Party's ill-fated August 1922 convention held at Bridgman, Michigan, a gathering which was infiltrated by a Justice Department spy and raided by police. Gitlow was arrested and jailed in the aftermath, eventually released on bail. Ultimately only 2 of the delegates to this convention were tried, trade union leader William Z. Foster (freed when the jury failed to agree) and Workers Party Executive Secretary C.E. Ruthenberg, who was convicted but who died before appeals were finalized and the sentence imposed.
From May 1923 until early in 1924, Gitlow — a devoted partisan of the party faction headed by C.E. Ruthenberg and an opponent of the faction headed by William Z. Foster — was named the editor of the Workers' Party's Yiddish language daily, the Morgen Freiheit, this despite the American-born and educated Gitlow's faltering familiarity with the language. The appointment was political in nature and Gitlow was removed from the paper as soon as the Foster faction achieved majority control of the party apparatus.
In 1924, Gitlow was named the candidate of the Workers Party of America for Vice President of the United States.
Return to prison
Three years after his release on bail, on June 8, 1925, the US Supreme Court upheld his conviction in the case of Gitlow v. New York, by a vote of 7 to 2, confirming that the publication of the Left Wing Manifesto in The Revolutionary Age did, in fact, constitute a punishable act under the law. As the legal wrangling and backstage politics continued, Ben Gitlow prepared to return to jail.
In November 1925, Gitlow was ordered back to Sing Sing Prison by the court to finish his sentence. This would not be "hard time," however. Gitlow was immediately transferred to a new section of the prison located on a hill, a much more comfortable facility than that in which he had previously been confined. Gitlow was assigned to a cleaning detail that occupied only about one hour of his time. The cells had fresh air, a comfortable mattress, hot water in the basin, and clean, smoothly painted steel walls. Gitlow later recalled that "had a bath been included, it would have been equivalent to a good small room in a modern hotel." Gitlow anticipated a short stay in the facility as the American Civil Liberties Union assured him that it had obtained a verbal commitment from Governor Al Smith that Gitlow would be pardoned expeditiously.
On December 11, 1925, Gitlow's first wedding anniversary, he was visited by his wife, who showed him a letter from an ACLU attorney stating that he would be free to leave Sing Sing on parole if he agreed to the conditions of his release. Gitlow considered this an unfortunate turn of events, as he sought freedom to continue his political activities without the constraint of parole supervision and the threat of a rapid return to jail. Gitlow's wife received word by telephone at that time that his decision on whether to accept a parole was moot, however, as the Governor had decided to grant him a full pardon. Freed from jail the next day, Gitlow arrived by train to a packed Grand Central Station, where he received a rousing hero's welcome from the assembled party members and friends.
In 1926, Gitlow ran on the ticket of the Workers Party of America for Governor of New York.
In 1928, Gitlow was once again named the candidate of the Workers Party of America for Vice President of the United States, running for a second time on a ticket headed by William Z. Foster.
Gitlow reached the summit of his political life as a Communist Party leader shortly after the conclusion of the 1928 campaign, when on March 16, 1929, Gitlow was named to the three-man Secretariat at the helm of the Communist Party, assuming the post of Executive Secretary. His time at the top proved to be momentary, however, as on March 23 he boarded an ocean liner for Moscow as part of a 10-person delegation seeking to appeal the Comintern's decision to expel Jay Lovestone from the Communist Party. The job of Executive Secretary was turned over to factional ally Robert Minor in the interim.
Radical oppositionist
In 1929 Communist Parties around the world were purged of so-called "Right Oppositions" by the Communist International as the world Communist movement lurched towards the revolutionary left. Together with his factional co-thinker Jay Lovestone, Ben Gitlow was expelled from the party as purported supporters of Nikolai Bukharin in the USSR in opposition to the hardline faction of Joseph Stalin. The expelled Communists followed Lovestone into a new organization, the so-called Communist Party (Majority Group), which actually included a small fraction of the membership of the regular Communist Party.
Gitlow was named a member of the governing National Council of the CP(MG) in October 1929. At the 1st National Conference of the organization, held July 4–6, 1930 in New York City, Gitlow was elected Secretary of the Lovestone political organization, a role in which he continued at least through 1932. In the fall of 1930, Gitlow was sent on a month-long tour of the United States on behalf of the Lovestoneites, taking him to Detroit, Chicago, and Superior, Wisconsin, before returning to the east coast.
Throughout the first 5 years of its existence the Lovestone organization continued to seek accommodation with the regular Communist Party. Gitlow's own views had gradually changed, however. In May 1933 he and Lazar Becker split from the Lovestoneites to found the Workers Communist League, which in turn merged with a group around B.J. Field to form the Organization Committee for a Revolutionary Workers Party the next year.
Anti-Communist years
After briefly rejoining the Socialist Party in 1934, Gitlow became disillusioned with radicalism of all shades and emerged as an outspoken anti-communist. In 1939, he publicly rejected the Communist Party in testimony before the House Committee on Un-American Activities, chaired by Martin Dies, Jr. of Texas.
In 1940, Gitlow published his first work of political autobiography, I Confess: The Truth About American Communism. The book was controversial and widely noticed, pushing Gitlow into the public eye as a leading opponent of American Communism. The book remains an important primary document for the study of American Communism in the 1920s and 1930s.
In 1948, Gitlow followed his 1940 memoir with a steamier retelling of old tales called The Whole of Their Lives: Communism in America. Non-specialists should use the historical accounts in this later book, written as a potboiler for the popular market, with great caution as some of its details are at variance with the same stories told by the same author nearly a decade earlier. Also in 1948, he joined the American Jewish League Against Communism.
On May 1, 1950, in Mosinee, Wisconsin, a local American Legion outpost staged a mock Communist takeover to illustrate what life under Soviet conquest might be like. Gitlow played the role of General Secretary of the "United Soviet States of America", while ex-Communist Joseph Zack Kornfeder played the new commissar of the newly renamed town of "Moskva." A Soviet flag flew in front of the American Legion outpost.
Ben Gitlow's final pamphlets, written in the early 1960s, were published by fundamentalist preacher Billy James Hargis's Christian Crusade Ministries, an organization committed to stopping the spread of Communism in the world.
Personal life and death
In 1924, Gitlow married Badana Zeitlin.
Benjamin Gitlow died in Crompond, New York, on July 19, 1965.
Gitlow's papers are housed at the Hoover Institution Archives, located at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, and at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
Publications by Benjamin Gitlow
The "Red Ruby": Address to the Jury; Also, Darrow; The Judge; Giovanitti. n.c. [New York]: Communist Labor Party of America, n.d. [1920].
Acceptance speeches. With William Z. Foster. New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1928.
Some Plain Words on Communist Unity. New York: Workers Age Publishing Association, n.d. [1932]. alternate link
America for the People!: Why We Need a Farmer Labor Party. New York: Labor Party Association, 1933.
Why the Boycott of Nazi Germany? London: British Section of the World Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi Council to Champion Human Rights, n.d. [middle 1930s].
I Confess: The Truth About American Communism. New York:E. P. Dutton, 1940.
The Whole of Their Lives: Communism in America: A Personal History and Intimate Portrayal of Its Leaders. New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1948.
How to Think about Communism. Whitestone, N.Y., Graphics Group, 1949. — Illustrated reprint of selections from "The Whole of Their Lives."
Nikita Sergeyevich Khrushchev and the Downgrading of Stalin. Tulsa, OK: Christian Crusade, n.d. [c. 1962].
Communism — A World-Wide Failure? Tulsa, OK: Christian Crusade, n.d. [c. 1962].
The Negro Question: Communist Civil War Policy. Tulsa, OK: Christian Crusade, n.d. [c. 1962].
Related Publications
Women in politics by Kate Gitlow New York: United Council of Working Women, 1924
Is the Stalin general line correct? New York, N.Y: Workers Communist League, 1933.
References
External links
Benjamin Gitlow Papers:, J. Murrey Atkins Library, University of North Carolina-Charlotte.
"Footnote for Historians" by Max Shachtman in New International, Vol.4, No.12 (Dec. 1938), pp. 377–379.
1891 births
1965 deaths
20th-century American politicians
American people of Russian-Jewish descent
Jewish American state legislators in New York (state)
Communist Party USA politicians
Members of the New York State Assembly
Politicians from Elizabeth, New Jersey
Retail clerks
Right Opposition
Socialist Party of America politicians from New York (state)
1924 United States vice-presidential candidates
1928 United States vice-presidential candidates
Former Marxists
Politicians from the Bronx | [
"Benjamin \"Ben\" Gitlow (December 22, 1891 – July 19, 1965) was a prominent American socialist politician of the early 20th century and a founding member of the Communist Party USA.",
"During the end of the 1930s, Gitlow turned to conservatism and wrote two sensational exposés of American Communism, books which were very influential during the McCarthy period.",
"Gitlow remained a leading anti-communist up to the time of his death.",
"Background\n\nBenjamin Gitlow was born on December 22, 1891, in Elizabethport, New Jersey.",
"His parents were Jewish immigrants from the Russian Empire; his father, Lewis Albert Gitlow, moved to the United States in 1888, followed by his mother, Katherine, in 1889.",
"In the United States, his father worked part-time for insufficient hours in various factories, while his mother helped the impoverished family to make ends meet by stitching piecework at home for garment factories.",
"Radicalism seems to have run deeply in the family.",
"Guests to the family home told stories about their personal and political experiences in Tsarist Russia.",
"Gitlow later recalled this experience as formative to his own political development: I would listen intently to the adventures of the Russian revolutionary leaders, of their experiences with the police, the days and years spent in prisons and their exile to the wastes of Siberia.",
"I would grow indignant hearing how the Tsar mistreated the people.",
"I thrilled at the stories of the underground movement, of the conspiring activities, how deeds of violence against the Tsarist oppressors were planned...",
"The stories of personal experiences when raids were made by the secret police upon revolutionists' homes held me spellbound.",
"I anticipated every incident that would be related.",
"I also listened to discussions, very idealistic in their essence, in which the participants showed how Socialism would transform the world, and to arguments over methods of how Socialism would be achieved.",
"In later years, his mother achieved some notice as an important Communist women's leader, serving as Secretary of the Women's Committee of the Workers Party of America in 1924.",
"Career\n\nGitlow studied law while working as a retail clerk in a department store in Newark, New Jersey.",
"He helped to organize the Retail Clerks Union, political activity for which he was discharged from his job and blacklisted by the Merchants' Association.",
"In June 1914, Gitlow testified before the US Commission on Industrial Relations on conditions prevalent in U.S. department stores.",
"His testimony included descriptions of mandatory overtime, spying on workers, and quid pro quo sexual harassment.",
"Following his blacklisting from the retail sales industry, Gitlow worked briefly as a cutter in the garment industry before entering the world of radical journalism in 1919.",
"Entry into radical politics\n\nAs soon as he turned 18 and became eligible for membership, Ben Gitlow joined the Socialist Party of America.",
"Gitlow was a committed and active member of the party and he was elected a delegate to the New York state convention of the SPA in 1910, the year after his joining.",
"In the fall of 1917, Gitlow was elected on the Socialist ticket to the New York State Assembly (Bronx Co., 3rd D.), and sat in the 141st New York State Legislature.",
"He was one of 10 Socialists elected to the Assembly of 1918, all of them from New York City.",
"Despite (or perhaps because of) his two years as a Socialist parliamentarian, Ben Gitlow professed a belief in revolutionary Socialism.",
"From its earliest days in 1919, Gitlow was an adherent of the proto-Communist Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party, working closely with renowned radical journalist and war correspondent John Reed.",
"In April 1919, the Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party of Local Greater New York established an official weekly newspaper called The New York Communist.",
"Reed was named the editor of the new publication, with Maximilian Cohen handling the day-to-day operations of the publication as its business manager.",
"Effective with the June 14, 1919, issue, Max Cohen exited the scene and Ben Gitlow assumed the post of business manager.",
"Following the Left Wing National Conference in June 1919, Reed's New York Communist was merged with the older and better established newspaper of the Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party, Local Boston, The Revolutionary Age, edited by Louis C. Fraina.",
"This publication was moved to New York and thereafter recognized as the \"National Organ of the Left Wing Section, Socialist Party,\" with the former New Yorker Fraina continuing as editor and Ben Gitlow taking over as business manager.",
"John Reed was named the editor of the a new monthly labor magazine of the Left Wing Section, called Voice of Labor.",
"Ben Gitlow also served as business manager of this publication, which was adopted by the Communist Labor Party in the fall, shortly before its termination due to lack of finances.",
"Arrest and trial\n\nFor his publicized connection on the staff of The Revolutionary Age Benjamin Gitlow was targeted for arrest during the coordinated raid of the Communist movement conducted by New York state authorities and the Department of Justice during the night of November 7/8, 1919.",
"Gitlow was charged with violation of the New York Criminal Anarchy Law of 1902, which made it a crime to encourage the violent overthrow of government.",
"It was contended that the publication of the Left Wing Manifesto by The Revolutionary Age earlier that year constituted such illegal action.",
"Ben Gitlow's widely publicized trial began in New York City on January 22, 1920, and went to the jury on February 5.",
"Gitlow addressed the jury in his own defense in the case, saying: I am charged in this case with publishing and distributing a paper known as The Revolutionary Age, in which paper was printed a document known as the Left Wing Manifesto and Program.",
"It is held that that document advocates the overthrow of government by force, violence, and unlawful means.",
"The document itself, the Left Wing Manifesto, is a broad analysis of conditions, economic conditions, and historical events in the world today.",
"It is a document based upon the principles of socialism from their earliest inception.",
"The only thing that the document does is to broaden those principles in the light of modern events....",
"The socialists have always maintained that the change from capitalism to socialism would be a fundamental change, that is, we would have a complete reorganization of society, that this change would not be a question of reform; that the capitalist system of society would be completely changed and that that system would give way to a new system of society based on a new code of laws, based on a new code of ethics, and based on a new form of government.",
"For that reason, the socialist philosophy has always been a revolutionary philosophy and people who adhered to the socialist program and philosophy were always considered revolutionists, and I as one who maintain that, in the eyes of the present day society, I am a revolutionist.",
"The attempt of the Gitlow defense to declare the publication of the Left Wing Manifesto an expression of historical analysis rather than an act of practical advocacy was unsuccessful, however.",
"Gitlow was convicted of the charge against him and on February 11, 1920, was sentenced to 5 to 10 years in prison.",
"He served over two years at Sing Sing prison before being released on bail related to his filing of a writ of error.",
"Gitlow's appeal motion was ultimately granted on December 13, 1922, followed by further hearings by the state.",
"Political activity after prison\n\nFollowing his release from prison on bail in the spring of 1922, Ben Gitlow was made a full-time employee of the Communist Party of America.",
"The governing Central Executive Committee named him as Industrial Organizer (party organizer in the unions) for a large area which stretched from New York City to Philadelphia and which encompassed the entire New England region.",
"He was elected as a delegate to the Communist Party's ill-fated August 1922 convention held at Bridgman, Michigan, a gathering which was infiltrated by a Justice Department spy and raided by police.",
"Gitlow was arrested and jailed in the aftermath, eventually released on bail.",
"Ultimately only 2 of the delegates to this convention were tried, trade union leader William Z.",
"Foster (freed when the jury failed to agree) and Workers Party Executive Secretary C.E.",
"Ruthenberg, who was convicted but who died before appeals were finalized and the sentence imposed.",
"From May 1923 until early in 1924, Gitlow — a devoted partisan of the party faction headed by C.E.",
"Ruthenberg and an opponent of the faction headed by William Z.",
"Foster — was named the editor of the Workers' Party's Yiddish language daily, the Morgen Freiheit, this despite the American-born and educated Gitlow's faltering familiarity with the language.",
"The appointment was political in nature and Gitlow was removed from the paper as soon as the Foster faction achieved majority control of the party apparatus.",
"In 1924, Gitlow was named the candidate of the Workers Party of America for Vice President of the United States.",
"Return to prison\n\nThree years after his release on bail, on June 8, 1925, the US Supreme Court upheld his conviction in the case of Gitlow v. New York, by a vote of 7 to 2, confirming that the publication of the Left Wing Manifesto in The Revolutionary Age did, in fact, constitute a punishable act under the law.",
"As the legal wrangling and backstage politics continued, Ben Gitlow prepared to return to jail.",
"In November 1925, Gitlow was ordered back to Sing Sing Prison by the court to finish his sentence.",
"This would not be \"hard time,\" however.",
"Gitlow was immediately transferred to a new section of the prison located on a hill, a much more comfortable facility than that in which he had previously been confined.",
"Gitlow was assigned to a cleaning detail that occupied only about one hour of his time.",
"The cells had fresh air, a comfortable mattress, hot water in the basin, and clean, smoothly painted steel walls.",
"Gitlow later recalled that \"had a bath been included, it would have been equivalent to a good small room in a modern hotel.\"",
"Gitlow anticipated a short stay in the facility as the American Civil Liberties Union assured him that it had obtained a verbal commitment from Governor Al Smith that Gitlow would be pardoned expeditiously.",
"On December 11, 1925, Gitlow's first wedding anniversary, he was visited by his wife, who showed him a letter from an ACLU attorney stating that he would be free to leave Sing Sing on parole if he agreed to the conditions of his release.",
"Gitlow considered this an unfortunate turn of events, as he sought freedom to continue his political activities without the constraint of parole supervision and the threat of a rapid return to jail.",
"Gitlow's wife received word by telephone at that time that his decision on whether to accept a parole was moot, however, as the Governor had decided to grant him a full pardon.",
"Freed from jail the next day, Gitlow arrived by train to a packed Grand Central Station, where he received a rousing hero's welcome from the assembled party members and friends.",
"In 1926, Gitlow ran on the ticket of the Workers Party of America for Governor of New York.",
"In 1928, Gitlow was once again named the candidate of the Workers Party of America for Vice President of the United States, running for a second time on a ticket headed by William Z.",
"Foster.",
"Gitlow reached the summit of his political life as a Communist Party leader shortly after the conclusion of the 1928 campaign, when on March 16, 1929, Gitlow was named to the three-man Secretariat at the helm of the Communist Party, assuming the post of Executive Secretary.",
"His time at the top proved to be momentary, however, as on March 23 he boarded an ocean liner for Moscow as part of a 10-person delegation seeking to appeal the Comintern's decision to expel Jay Lovestone from the Communist Party.",
"The job of Executive Secretary was turned over to factional ally Robert Minor in the interim.",
"Radical oppositionist\n\nIn 1929 Communist Parties around the world were purged of so-called \"Right Oppositions\" by the Communist International as the world Communist movement lurched towards the revolutionary left.",
"Together with his factional co-thinker Jay Lovestone, Ben Gitlow was expelled from the party as purported supporters of Nikolai Bukharin in the USSR in opposition to the hardline faction of Joseph Stalin.",
"The expelled Communists followed Lovestone into a new organization, the so-called Communist Party (Majority Group), which actually included a small fraction of the membership of the regular Communist Party.",
"Gitlow was named a member of the governing National Council of the CP(MG) in October 1929.",
"At the 1st National Conference of the organization, held July 4–6, 1930 in New York City, Gitlow was elected Secretary of the Lovestone political organization, a role in which he continued at least through 1932.",
"In the fall of 1930, Gitlow was sent on a month-long tour of the United States on behalf of the Lovestoneites, taking him to Detroit, Chicago, and Superior, Wisconsin, before returning to the east coast.",
"Throughout the first 5 years of its existence the Lovestone organization continued to seek accommodation with the regular Communist Party.",
"Gitlow's own views had gradually changed, however.",
"In May 1933 he and Lazar Becker split from the Lovestoneites to found the Workers Communist League, which in turn merged with a group around B.J.",
"Field to form the Organization Committee for a Revolutionary Workers Party the next year.",
"Anti-Communist years\n\nAfter briefly rejoining the Socialist Party in 1934, Gitlow became disillusioned with radicalism of all shades and emerged as an outspoken anti-communist.",
"In 1939, he publicly rejected the Communist Party in testimony before the House Committee on Un-American Activities, chaired by Martin Dies, Jr. of Texas.",
"In 1940, Gitlow published his first work of political autobiography, I Confess: The Truth About American Communism.",
"The book was controversial and widely noticed, pushing Gitlow into the public eye as a leading opponent of American Communism.",
"The book remains an important primary document for the study of American Communism in the 1920s and 1930s.",
"In 1948, Gitlow followed his 1940 memoir with a steamier retelling of old tales called The Whole of Their Lives: Communism in America.",
"Non-specialists should use the historical accounts in this later book, written as a potboiler for the popular market, with great caution as some of its details are at variance with the same stories told by the same author nearly a decade earlier.",
"Also in 1948, he joined the American Jewish League Against Communism.",
"On May 1, 1950, in Mosinee, Wisconsin, a local American Legion outpost staged a mock Communist takeover to illustrate what life under Soviet conquest might be like.",
"Gitlow played the role of General Secretary of the \"United Soviet States of America\", while ex-Communist Joseph Zack Kornfeder played the new commissar of the newly renamed town of \"Moskva.\"",
"A Soviet flag flew in front of the American Legion outpost.",
"Ben Gitlow's final pamphlets, written in the early 1960s, were published by fundamentalist preacher Billy James Hargis's Christian Crusade Ministries, an organization committed to stopping the spread of Communism in the world.",
"Personal life and death\n\nIn 1924, Gitlow married Badana Zeitlin.",
"Benjamin Gitlow died in Crompond, New York, on July 19, 1965.",
"Gitlow's papers are housed at the Hoover Institution Archives, located at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, and at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.",
"Publications by Benjamin Gitlow\nThe \"Red Ruby\": Address to the Jury; Also, Darrow; The Judge; Giovanitti.",
"n.c. [New York]: Communist Labor Party of America, n.d. [1920].",
"Acceptance speeches.",
"With William Z.",
"Foster.",
"New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1928.",
"Some Plain Words on Communist Unity.",
"New York: Workers Age Publishing Association, n.d. [1932].",
"alternate link\nAmerica for the People!",
": Why We Need a Farmer Labor Party.",
"New York: Labor Party Association, 1933.",
"Why the Boycott of Nazi Germany?",
"London: British Section of the World Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi Council to Champion Human Rights, n.d. [middle 1930s].",
"I Confess: The Truth About American Communism.",
"New York:E. P. Dutton, 1940.",
"The Whole of Their Lives: Communism in America: A Personal History and Intimate Portrayal of Its Leaders.",
"New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1948.",
"How to Think about Communism.",
"Whitestone, N.Y., Graphics Group, 1949.",
"— Illustrated reprint of selections from \"The Whole of Their Lives.\"",
"Nikita Sergeyevich Khrushchev and the Downgrading of Stalin.",
"Tulsa, OK: Christian Crusade, n.d. [c. 1962].",
"Communism — A World-Wide Failure?",
"Tulsa, OK: Christian Crusade, n.d. [c. 1962].",
"The Negro Question: Communist Civil War Policy.",
"Tulsa, OK: Christian Crusade, n.d. [c. 1962].",
"Related Publications\nWomen in politics by Kate Gitlow New York: United Council of Working Women, 1924\nIs the Stalin general line correct?",
"New York, N.Y: Workers Communist League, 1933.",
"References\n\nExternal links\n \nBenjamin Gitlow Papers:, J. Murrey Atkins Library, University of North Carolina-Charlotte.",
"\"Footnote for Historians\" by Max Shachtman in New International, Vol.4, No.12 (Dec. 1938), pp.",
"377–379.",
"1891 births\n1965 deaths\n20th-century American politicians\nAmerican people of Russian-Jewish descent\nJewish American state legislators in New York (state)\nCommunist Party USA politicians\nMembers of the New York State Assembly\nPoliticians from Elizabeth, New Jersey\nRetail clerks\nRight Opposition\nSocialist Party of America politicians from New York (state)\n1924 United States vice-presidential candidates\n1928 United States vice-presidential candidates\nFormer Marxists\nPoliticians from the Bronx"
] | [
"The founding member of the Communist Party USA was Benjamin \"Ben\" Gitlow.",
"During the McCarthy period, Gitlow wrote two books about American Communism which were very influential.",
"Gitlow was a leading anti-communist.",
"On December 22, 1891, Benjamin Gitlow was born in Elizabethport, New Jersey.",
"His parents were Jewish immigrants from the Russian Empire and his father moved to the United States in 1889.",
"In the United States, his father worked part-time for insufficient hours in various factories, while his mother helped the impoverished family to make ends meet by stitching piecework at home for garment factories.",
"It seems that radicalism has run in the family.",
"People who were guests at the family home told stories about their experiences in Russia.",
"I would listen intently to the adventures of the Russian revolutionary leaders, of their experiences with the police, the days and years spent in prisons, and their exile to the wastes of Siberia.",
"I would be angry when I heard how the people were treated.",
"The stories of the underground movement, the conspiring activities, and the planned violence against the oppressors were wonderful.",
"I was spellbound by the stories of personal experiences when the secret police raided the homes of revolutionists.",
"I knew every incident would be related.",
"I listened to discussions in which the participants showed how Socialism would transform the world, and to arguments over methods of how Socialism would be achieved.",
"His mother was the Secretary of the Women's Committee of the Workers Party of America in 1924.",
"Gitlow studied law while working as a retail clerk.",
"He was kicked out of his job and blacklisted by the Merchants' Association for helping to organize the Retail Clerks Union.",
"In June 1914, Gitlow testified before the US Commission on Industrial Relations about the conditions in U.S. department stores.",
"He described quid pro quo sexual harassment and mandatory overtime.",
"Gitlow worked as a cutter in the garment industry after being blacklisted from the retail sales industry.",
"Ben Gitlow joined the Socialist Party of America after turning 18.",
"Gitlow was a delegate to the New York state convention of the SPA in 1910, the year after he joined the party.",
"Gitlow was elected on the Socialist ticket to the New York State Assembly in the fall of 1917.",
"He was one of 10 Socialists from New York City who were elected to the Assembly of 1918.",
"Ben Gitlow had a belief in revolutionary Socialism despite being a Socialist parliamentarian.",
"Gitlow was an adherent of the Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party and worked closely with John Reed.",
"The New York Communist was established in 1919 by the Left Wing of the Socialist Party of Local Greater New York.",
"Reed was named the editor of the publication and Cohen was the business manager.",
"Ben Gitlow assumed the post of business manager after Max Cohen left the scene.",
"Reed's New York Communist was merged with the older and better established newspaper of the Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party, Local Boston, The Revolutionary Age, edited by Louis C. Fraina.",
"The publication was moved to New York and recognized as the \"National Organ of the Left Wing Section, Socialist Party,\" with the former New Yorker Fraina continuing as editor and Ben Gitlow taking over as business manager.",
"The editor of Voice of Labor was John Reed.",
"The Communist Labor Party adopted this publication shortly before it was terminated due to lack of finances.",
"During the night of November 7, 1919, Benjamin Gitlow was targeted for arrest by New York state authorities and the Department of Justice because of his connection to the staff of The Revolutionary Age.",
"The criminal anarchy law of New York made it a crime to encourage the violent overthrow of government.",
"The Left Wing Manifesto was published earlier that year by The Revolutionary Age.",
"On January 22, 1920, Ben Gitlow's trial began in New York City and went to the jury on February 5.",
"Gitlow told the jury that he was charged in the case with publishing and distributing a paper known as The Revolutionary Age, in which a document known as the Left Wing Manifesto and Program was printed.",
"The document supports the overthrow of government by force, violence, and unlawful means.",
"The document is a broad analysis of conditions, economic conditions, and historical events in the world today.",
"The document is based on the principles of socialism.",
"The document only broadens those principles in the light of modern events.",
"The change from capitalism to socialism would be a fundamental change, that is, we would have a complete reorganization of society, that this change would not be a question of reform, and that the capitalist system of society would give way.",
"In the eyes of the present day society, I am a revolutionist because the socialist philosophy has always been a revolutionary philosophy and people who adhere to it were always considered revolutionists.",
"The attempt by the Gitlow defense to make the publication of the Left Wing Manifesto an expression of historical analysis was unsuccessful.",
"On February 11, 1920, Gitlow was sentenced to 5 to 10 years in prison for the charge against him.",
"He was released on bail after serving over two years at Sing Sing prison.",
"Gitlow's appeal motion was granted on December 13, 1922.",
"Ben Gitlow was made a full-time employee of the Communist Party of America after he was released from prison.",
"The governing Central Executive Committee named him as Industrial Organizer for a large area which stretched from New York City to Philadelphia and encompassed the entire New England region.",
"He was elected as a delegate to the August 1922 convention of the Communist Party, which was infiltrated by a Justice Department spy and was raided by police.",
"Gitlow was released on bail after he was arrested.",
"William Z., the trade union leader, said that only 2 of the delegates were tried.",
"Foster was freed when the jury failed to agree.",
"Ruthenberg died before the sentence was imposed.",
"Gitlow was a devoted partisan of the party group headed by C.E. from May 1923 until early in 1924.",
"The opponent of the group headed by William Z. was Ruthenberg.",
"Despite Gitlow's faltering familiarity with the language, Foster was named the editor of the Workers' Party's Yiddish language daily.",
"Gitlow was removed from the paper as soon as the Foster group took control of the party apparatus.",
"Gitlow was the candidate of the Workers Party of America for Vice President of the United States in 1924.",
"The US Supreme Court upheld his conviction in the case of Gitlow v. New York by a vote of 7 to 2, three years after his release on bail.",
"Ben Gitlow was about to return to jail.",
"Gitlow was ordered back to Sing Sing Prison by the court in 1925.",
"This wouldn't be hard time.",
"Gitlow was moved to a new section of the prison located on a hill, a much more comfortable facility than the one he had been in.",
"Gitlow only spent about one hour on the cleaning detail.",
"The cells had fresh air, a comfortable mattress, hot water in the basin, and clean, smoothly painted steel walls.",
"It would have been equivalent to a good small room in a modern hotel if a bath had been included.",
"Gitlow anticipated a short stay in the facility as the American Civil Liberties Union assured him that he would be pardoned quickly.",
"Gitlow was told by his wife that if he agreed to the conditions of his release, he would be free to leave Sing Sing on parole.",
"Gitlow considered this an unfortunate turn of events, as he sought freedom to continue his political activities without the constraint of parole supervision and the threat of a rapid return to jail.",
"Gitlow's wife was told by phone that the Governor had decided to grant him a full pardon and that his decision on whether to accept a parole was over.",
"Gitlow received a hero's welcome when he arrived at a packed Grand Central Station after being freed from jail.",
"Gitlow ran for Governor of New York on the ticket of the Workers Party of America.",
"Gitlow was once again named the candidate of the Workers Party of America for Vice President of the United States, this time on a ticket headed by William Z.",
"Foster.",
"Gitlow assumed the post of Executive Secretary of the Communist Party on March 16, 1929, when he was named to the three-man secretariat.",
"As part of a 10-person delegation, he boarded an ocean liner for Moscow on March 23 to appeal the Comintern's decision to expel Jay Lovestone from the Communist Party.",
"Robert Minor took over the job of Executive Secretary.",
"The world Communist movement lurched towards the revolutionary left in 1929 as the Communist Parties around the world were wiped out of so-called \"right oppositions\".",
"Ben Gitlow and his co-thinker Jay Lovestone were kicked out of the party for their opposition to the hardline group of Joseph Stalin.",
"The expelled Communists followed Lovestone into a new organization, the so-called Communist Party (Majority Group), which included a small fraction of the membership of the regular Communist Party.",
"Gitlow was named a member of the National Council in October 1929.",
"Gitlow was elected Secretary of the Lovestone political organization at the 1st National Conference of the organization in New York City in 1930.",
"Gitlow was sent on a month-long tour of the United States in the fall of 1930, taking him to Detroit, Chicago, and Superior, Wisconsin, before returning to the east coast.",
"During the first 5 years of its existence, the Lovestone organization continued to seek accommodations with the Communist Party.",
"Gitlow's views had changed over time.",
"The Workers Communist League merged with a group around B.J. after he and Lazar Becker split from the Lovestoneites.",
"The Organization Committee for a Revolutionary Workers Party will be formed next year.",
"Gitlow became an outspoken anti-communist after briefly rejoining the Socialist Party in 1934.",
"He testified against the Communist Party before the House Committee on Un-American Activities.",
"I Confess: The Truth About American Communism was published in 1940 by Gitlow.",
"The book pushed Gitlow into the public eye as a leading opponent of American Communism.",
"The book is an important document for the study of American Communism in the 1920s and 1930s.",
"The Whole of Their Lives: Communism in America was written by Gitlow in 1948.",
"Non-specialists should use the historical accounts in this later book, written as a potboiler for the popular market, with great caution as some of its details are at variance with the same stories told by the same author nearly a decade earlier.",
"He joined the American Jewish League Against Communism in 1948.",
"On May 1, 1950, in Mosinee, Wisconsin, a local American Legion outpost staged a mock Communist takeover to show what life would be like under Soviet rule.",
"The General Secretary of the \"United Soviet States of America\" was played by Gitlow, while the new head of the \"Moskva\" town was played by the ex-Communist.",
"There is a Soviet flag in front of the American Legion outpost.",
"Billy James Hargis' Christian Crusade Ministries published Ben Gitlow's final pamphlets in the early 1960s.",
"Gitlow married Badana Zeitlin in 1924.",
"On July 19, 1965, Benjamin Gitlow died.",
"Gitlow's papers are located in Palo Alto, California, and the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.",
"The \"Red Ruby\" was published by Benjamin Gitlow.",
"The Communist Labor Party of America was founded in New York in 1920.",
"speeches of acceptance",
"With William Z.",
"Foster.",
"New York: Workers Library Publishers.",
"There are some plain words on communist unity.",
"New York: Workers Age Publishing Association.",
"There is an alternate link for America for the People.",
"There is a Farmer Labor Party.",
"The Labor Party Association was founded in New York.",
"Why are people boycotting Nazi Germany?",
"The British section of the World Non- Sectarian Anti-Nazi Council to Champion Human Rights was formed in the middle of the 1930s.",
"I confess the truth about American Communism.",
"New York: E. P. Dutton.",
"The whole of their lives is Communism in America.",
"Charles Scribner's Sons was in New York in 1948.",
"Think about Communism.",
"The Graphics Group was in Whitestone, New York.",
"There is a reprint of selections from \"The Whole of Their Lives.\"",
"The Downgrading of Stalin was done by Nikita Sergeyevich Khrushchev.",
"The Christian Crusade took place in Oklahoma in 1962.",
"Communism is a world-wide failure.",
"The Christian Crusade took place in Oklahoma in 1962.",
"The Negro asked about the Communist Civil War Policy.",
"The Christian Crusade took place in Oklahoma in 1962.",
"Is the Stalin general line correct? Kate Gitlow wrote New York: United Council of Working Women, 1924.",
"The Workers Communist League was founded in New York.",
"There are external links to Benjamin Gitlow Papers.",
"Max Shachtman wrote aFootnote for Historians in New International.",
"377–377.",
"The 20th-century American politicians include people of Russian-Jewish descent, who were members of the New York State Assembly."
] | <mask> "Ben<mask> (December 22, 1891 – July 19, 1965) was a prominent American socialist politician of the early 20th century and a founding member of the Communist Party USA. During the end of the 1930s, <mask> turned to conservatism and wrote two sensational exposés of American Communism, books which were very influential during the McCarthy period. <mask> remained a leading anti-communist up to the time of his death. Background
<mask> was born on December 22, 1891, in Elizabethport, New Jersey. His parents were Jewish immigrants from the Russian Empire; his father, <mask>, moved to the United States in 1888, followed by his mother, Katherine, in 1889. In the United States, his father worked part-time for insufficient hours in various factories, while his mother helped the impoverished family to make ends meet by stitching piecework at home for garment factories. Radicalism seems to have run deeply in the family.Guests to the family home told stories about their personal and political experiences in Tsarist Russia. <mask> later recalled this experience as formative to his own political development: I would listen intently to the adventures of the Russian revolutionary leaders, of their experiences with the police, the days and years spent in prisons and their exile to the wastes of Siberia. I would grow indignant hearing how the Tsar mistreated the people. I thrilled at the stories of the underground movement, of the conspiring activities, how deeds of violence against the Tsarist oppressors were planned... The stories of personal experiences when raids were made by the secret police upon revolutionists' homes held me spellbound. I anticipated every incident that would be related. I also listened to discussions, very idealistic in their essence, in which the participants showed how Socialism would transform the world, and to arguments over methods of how Socialism would be achieved.In later years, his mother achieved some notice as an important Communist women's leader, serving as Secretary of the Women's Committee of the Workers Party of America in 1924. Career
<mask> studied law while working as a retail clerk in a department store in Newark, New Jersey. He helped to organize the Retail Clerks Union, political activity for which he was discharged from his job and blacklisted by the Merchants' Association. In June 1914, <mask> testified before the US Commission on Industrial Relations on conditions prevalent in U.S. department stores. His testimony included descriptions of mandatory overtime, spying on workers, and quid pro quo sexual harassment. Following his blacklisting from the retail sales industry, <mask> worked briefly as a cutter in the garment industry before entering the world of radical journalism in 1919. Entry into radical politics
As soon as he turned 18 and became eligible for membership, <mask> joined the Socialist Party of America.<mask> was a committed and active member of the party and he was elected a delegate to the New York state convention of the SPA in 1910, the year after his joining. In the fall of 1917, <mask> was elected on the Socialist ticket to the New York State Assembly (Bronx Co., 3rd D.), and sat in the 141st New York State Legislature. He was one of 10 Socialists elected to the Assembly of 1918, all of them from New York City. Despite (or perhaps because of) his two years as a Socialist parliamentarian, <mask> professed a belief in revolutionary Socialism. From its earliest days in 1919, <mask> was an adherent of the proto-Communist Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party, working closely with renowned radical journalist and war correspondent John Reed. In April 1919, the Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party of Local Greater New York established an official weekly newspaper called The New York Communist. Reed was named the editor of the new publication, with Maximilian Cohen handling the day-to-day operations of the publication as its business manager.Effective with the June 14, 1919, issue, Max Cohen exited the scene and <mask> assumed the post of business manager. Following the Left Wing National Conference in June 1919, Reed's New York Communist was merged with the older and better established newspaper of the Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party, Local Boston, The Revolutionary Age, edited by Louis C. Fraina. This publication was moved to New York and thereafter recognized as the "National Organ of the Left Wing Section, Socialist Party," with the former New Yorker Fraina continuing as editor and <mask> taking over as business manager. John Reed was named the editor of the a new monthly labor magazine of the Left Wing Section, called Voice of Labor. <mask> also served as business manager of this publication, which was adopted by the Communist Labor Party in the fall, shortly before its termination due to lack of finances. Arrest and trial
For his publicized connection on the staff of The Revolutionary Age <mask> was targeted for arrest during the coordinated raid of the Communist movement conducted by New York state authorities and the Department of Justice during the night of November 7/8, 1919. <mask> was charged with violation of the New York Criminal Anarchy Law of 1902, which made it a crime to encourage the violent overthrow of government.It was contended that the publication of the Left Wing Manifesto by The Revolutionary Age earlier that year constituted such illegal action. <mask>'s widely publicized trial began in New York City on January 22, 1920, and went to the jury on February 5. <mask> addressed the jury in his own defense in the case, saying: I am charged in this case with publishing and distributing a paper known as The Revolutionary Age, in which paper was printed a document known as the Left Wing Manifesto and Program. It is held that that document advocates the overthrow of government by force, violence, and unlawful means. The document itself, the Left Wing Manifesto, is a broad analysis of conditions, economic conditions, and historical events in the world today. It is a document based upon the principles of socialism from their earliest inception. The only thing that the document does is to broaden those principles in the light of modern events....The socialists have always maintained that the change from capitalism to socialism would be a fundamental change, that is, we would have a complete reorganization of society, that this change would not be a question of reform; that the capitalist system of society would be completely changed and that that system would give way to a new system of society based on a new code of laws, based on a new code of ethics, and based on a new form of government. For that reason, the socialist philosophy has always been a revolutionary philosophy and people who adhered to the socialist program and philosophy were always considered revolutionists, and I as one who maintain that, in the eyes of the present day society, I am a revolutionist. The attempt of the <mask> defense to declare the publication of the Left Wing Manifesto an expression of historical analysis rather than an act of practical advocacy was unsuccessful, however. <mask> was convicted of the charge against him and on February 11, 1920, was sentenced to 5 to 10 years in prison. He served over two years at Sing Sing prison before being released on bail related to his filing of a writ of error. <mask>'s appeal motion was ultimately granted on December 13, 1922, followed by further hearings by the state. Political activity after prison
Following his release from prison on bail in the spring of 1922, <mask> was made a full-time employee of the Communist Party of America.The governing Central Executive Committee named him as Industrial Organizer (party organizer in the unions) for a large area which stretched from New York City to Philadelphia and which encompassed the entire New England region. He was elected as a delegate to the Communist Party's ill-fated August 1922 convention held at Bridgman, Michigan, a gathering which was infiltrated by a Justice Department spy and raided by police. <mask> was arrested and jailed in the aftermath, eventually released on bail. Ultimately only 2 of the delegates to this convention were tried, trade union leader William Z. Foster (freed when the jury failed to agree) and Workers Party Executive Secretary C.E. Ruthenberg, who was convicted but who died before appeals were finalized and the sentence imposed. From May 1923 until early in 1924, <mask> — a devoted partisan of the party faction headed by C.E.Ruthenberg and an opponent of the faction headed by William Z. Foster — was named the editor of the Workers' Party's Yiddish language daily, the Morgen Freiheit, this despite the American-born and educated <mask>'s faltering familiarity with the language. The appointment was political in nature and <mask> was removed from the paper as soon as the Foster faction achieved majority control of the party apparatus. In 1924, <mask> was named the candidate of the Workers Party of America for Vice President of the United States. Return to prison
Three years after his release on bail, on June 8, 1925, the US Supreme Court upheld his conviction in the case of <mask> v. New York, by a vote of 7 to 2, confirming that the publication of the Left Wing Manifesto in The Revolutionary Age did, in fact, constitute a punishable act under the law. As the legal wrangling and backstage politics continued, <mask> prepared to return to jail. In November 1925, <mask> was ordered back to Sing Sing Prison by the court to finish his sentence.This would not be "hard time," however. <mask> was immediately transferred to a new section of the prison located on a hill, a much more comfortable facility than that in which he had previously been confined. <mask> was assigned to a cleaning detail that occupied only about one hour of his time. The cells had fresh air, a comfortable mattress, hot water in the basin, and clean, smoothly painted steel walls. <mask> later recalled that "had a bath been included, it would have been equivalent to a good small room in a modern hotel." <mask> anticipated a short stay in the facility as the American Civil Liberties Union assured him that it had obtained a verbal commitment from Governor Al Smith that <mask> would be pardoned expeditiously. On December 11, 1925, <mask>'s first wedding anniversary, he was visited by his wife, who showed him a letter from an ACLU attorney stating that he would be free to leave Sing Sing on parole if he agreed to the conditions of his release.<mask> considered this an unfortunate turn of events, as he sought freedom to continue his political activities without the constraint of parole supervision and the threat of a rapid return to jail. <mask>'s wife received word by telephone at that time that his decision on whether to accept a parole was moot, however, as the Governor had decided to grant him a full pardon. Freed from jail the next day, <mask> arrived by train to a packed Grand Central Station, where he received a rousing hero's welcome from the assembled party members and friends. In 1926, <mask> ran on the ticket of the Workers Party of America for Governor of New York. In 1928, <mask> was once again named the candidate of the Workers Party of America for Vice President of the United States, running for a second time on a ticket headed by William Z. Foster. <mask> reached the summit of his political life as a Communist Party leader shortly after the conclusion of the 1928 campaign, when on March 16, 1929, <mask> was named to the three-man Secretariat at the helm of the Communist Party, assuming the post of Executive Secretary.His time at the top proved to be momentary, however, as on March 23 he boarded an ocean liner for Moscow as part of a 10-person delegation seeking to appeal the Comintern's decision to expel Jay Lovestone from the Communist Party. The job of Executive Secretary was turned over to factional ally Robert Minor in the interim. Radical oppositionist
In 1929 Communist Parties around the world were purged of so-called "Right Oppositions" by the Communist International as the world Communist movement lurched towards the revolutionary left. Together with his factional co-thinker Jay Lovestone, <mask> was expelled from the party as purported supporters of Nikolai Bukharin in the USSR in opposition to the hardline faction of Joseph Stalin. The expelled Communists followed Lovestone into a new organization, the so-called Communist Party (Majority Group), which actually included a small fraction of the membership of the regular Communist Party. <mask> was named a member of the governing National Council of the CP(MG) in October 1929. At the 1st National Conference of the organization, held July 4–6, 1930 in New York City, <mask> was elected Secretary of the Lovestone political organization, a role in which he continued at least through 1932.In the fall of 1930, <mask> was sent on a month-long tour of the United States on behalf of the Lovestoneites, taking him to Detroit, Chicago, and Superior, Wisconsin, before returning to the east coast. Throughout the first 5 years of its existence the Lovestone organization continued to seek accommodation with the regular Communist Party. <mask>'s own views had gradually changed, however. In May 1933 he and Lazar Becker split from the Lovestoneites to found the Workers Communist League, which in turn merged with a group around B.J. Field to form the Organization Committee for a Revolutionary Workers Party the next year. Anti-Communist years
After briefly rejoining the Socialist Party in 1934, <mask> became disillusioned with radicalism of all shades and emerged as an outspoken anti-communist. In 1939, he publicly rejected the Communist Party in testimony before the House Committee on Un-American Activities, chaired by Martin Dies, Jr. of Texas.In 1940, <mask> published his first work of political autobiography, I Confess: The Truth About American Communism. The book was controversial and widely noticed, pushing <mask> into the public eye as a leading opponent of American Communism. The book remains an important primary document for the study of American Communism in the 1920s and 1930s. In 1948, <mask> followed his 1940 memoir with a steamier retelling of old tales called The Whole of Their Lives: Communism in America. Non-specialists should use the historical accounts in this later book, written as a potboiler for the popular market, with great caution as some of its details are at variance with the same stories told by the same author nearly a decade earlier. Also in 1948, he joined the American Jewish League Against Communism. On May 1, 1950, in Mosinee, Wisconsin, a local American Legion outpost staged a mock Communist takeover to illustrate what life under Soviet conquest might be like.<mask> played the role of General Secretary of the "United Soviet States of America", while ex-Communist Joseph Zack Kornfeder played the new commissar of the newly renamed town of "Moskva." A Soviet flag flew in front of the American Legion outpost. <mask>'s final pamphlets, written in the early 1960s, were published by fundamentalist preacher Billy James Hargis's Christian Crusade Ministries, an organization committed to stopping the spread of Communism in the world. Personal life and death
In 1924, <mask> married Badana Zeitlin. <mask> died in Crompond, New York, on July 19, 1965. <mask>'s papers are housed at the Hoover Institution Archives, located at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, and at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. Publications by <mask>
The "Red Ruby": Address to the Jury; Also, Darrow; The Judge; Giovanitti.n.c. [New York]: Communist Labor Party of America, n.d. [1920]. Acceptance speeches. With William Z. Foster. New York: Workers Library Publishers, 1928. Some Plain Words on Communist Unity. New York: Workers Age Publishing Association, n.d. [1932].alternate link
America for the People! : Why We Need a Farmer Labor Party. New York: Labor Party Association, 1933. Why the Boycott of Nazi Germany? London: British Section of the World Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi Council to Champion Human Rights, n.d. [middle 1930s]. I Confess: The Truth About American Communism. New York:E. P. Dutton, 1940.The Whole of Their Lives: Communism in America: A Personal History and Intimate Portrayal of Its Leaders. New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1948. How to Think about Communism. Whitestone, N.Y., Graphics Group, 1949. — Illustrated reprint of selections from "The Whole of Their Lives." Nikita Sergeyevich Khrushchev and the Downgrading of Stalin. Tulsa, OK: Christian Crusade, n.d. [c. 1962].Communism — A World-Wide Failure? Tulsa, OK: Christian Crusade, n.d. [c. 1962]. The Negro Question: Communist Civil War Policy. Tulsa, OK: Christian Crusade, n.d. [c. 1962]. Related Publications
Women in politics by <mask> New York: United Council of Working Women, 1924
Is the Stalin general line correct? New York, N.Y: Workers Communist League, 1933. References
External links
<mask> Papers:, J. Murrey Atkins Library, University of North Carolina-Charlotte."Footnote for Historians" by Max Shachtman in New International, Vol.4, No.12 (Dec. 1938), pp. 377–379. 1891 births
1965 deaths
20th-century American politicians
American people of Russian-Jewish descent
Jewish American state legislators in New York (state)
Communist Party USA politicians
Members of the New York State Assembly
Politicians from Elizabeth, New Jersey
Retail clerks
Right Opposition
Socialist Party of America politicians from New York (state)
1924 United States vice-presidential candidates
1928 United States vice-presidential candidates
Former Marxists
Politicians from the Bronx | [
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] | The founding member of the Communist Party USA was <mask> "Ben<mask>. During the McCarthy period, <mask> wrote two books about American Communism which were very influential. <mask> was a leading anti-communist. On December 22, 1891, <mask> was born in Elizabethport, New Jersey. His parents were Jewish immigrants from the Russian Empire and his father moved to the United States in 1889. In the United States, his father worked part-time for insufficient hours in various factories, while his mother helped the impoverished family to make ends meet by stitching piecework at home for garment factories. It seems that radicalism has run in the family.People who were guests at the family home told stories about their experiences in Russia. I would listen intently to the adventures of the Russian revolutionary leaders, of their experiences with the police, the days and years spent in prisons, and their exile to the wastes of Siberia. I would be angry when I heard how the people were treated. The stories of the underground movement, the conspiring activities, and the planned violence against the oppressors were wonderful. I was spellbound by the stories of personal experiences when the secret police raided the homes of revolutionists. I knew every incident would be related. I listened to discussions in which the participants showed how Socialism would transform the world, and to arguments over methods of how Socialism would be achieved.His mother was the Secretary of the Women's Committee of the Workers Party of America in 1924. <mask> studied law while working as a retail clerk. He was kicked out of his job and blacklisted by the Merchants' Association for helping to organize the Retail Clerks Union. In June 1914, <mask> testified before the US Commission on Industrial Relations about the conditions in U.S. department stores. He described quid pro quo sexual harassment and mandatory overtime. Gitlow worked as a cutter in the garment industry after being blacklisted from the retail sales industry. <mask> joined the Socialist Party of America after turning 18.<mask> was a delegate to the New York state convention of the SPA in 1910, the year after he joined the party. <mask> was elected on the Socialist ticket to the New York State Assembly in the fall of 1917. He was one of 10 Socialists from New York City who were elected to the Assembly of 1918. <mask> had a belief in revolutionary Socialism despite being a Socialist parliamentarian. <mask> was an adherent of the Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party and worked closely with John Reed. The New York Communist was established in 1919 by the Left Wing of the Socialist Party of Local Greater New York. Reed was named the editor of the publication and Cohen was the business manager.<mask> assumed the post of business manager after Max Cohen left the scene. Reed's New York Communist was merged with the older and better established newspaper of the Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party, Local Boston, The Revolutionary Age, edited by Louis C. Fraina. The publication was moved to New York and recognized as the "National Organ of the Left Wing Section, Socialist Party," with the former New Yorker Fraina continuing as editor and <mask> taking over as business manager. The editor of Voice of Labor was John Reed. The Communist Labor Party adopted this publication shortly before it was terminated due to lack of finances. During the night of November 7, 1919, <mask> was targeted for arrest by New York state authorities and the Department of Justice because of his connection to the staff of The Revolutionary Age. The criminal anarchy law of New York made it a crime to encourage the violent overthrow of government.The Left Wing Manifesto was published earlier that year by The Revolutionary Age. On January 22, 1920, <mask>'s trial began in New York City and went to the jury on February 5. <mask> told the jury that he was charged in the case with publishing and distributing a paper known as The Revolutionary Age, in which a document known as the Left Wing Manifesto and Program was printed. The document supports the overthrow of government by force, violence, and unlawful means. The document is a broad analysis of conditions, economic conditions, and historical events in the world today. The document is based on the principles of socialism. The document only broadens those principles in the light of modern events.The change from capitalism to socialism would be a fundamental change, that is, we would have a complete reorganization of society, that this change would not be a question of reform, and that the capitalist system of society would give way. In the eyes of the present day society, I am a revolutionist because the socialist philosophy has always been a revolutionary philosophy and people who adhere to it were always considered revolutionists. The attempt by the <mask> defense to make the publication of the Left Wing Manifesto an expression of historical analysis was unsuccessful. On February 11, 1920, <mask> was sentenced to 5 to 10 years in prison for the charge against him. He was released on bail after serving over two years at Sing Sing prison. <mask>'s appeal motion was granted on December 13, 1922. <mask> was made a full-time employee of the Communist Party of America after he was released from prison.The governing Central Executive Committee named him as Industrial Organizer for a large area which stretched from New York City to Philadelphia and encompassed the entire New England region. He was elected as a delegate to the August 1922 convention of the Communist Party, which was infiltrated by a Justice Department spy and was raided by police. <mask> was released on bail after he was arrested. William Z., the trade union leader, said that only 2 of the delegates were tried. Foster was freed when the jury failed to agree. Ruthenberg died before the sentence was imposed. <mask> was a devoted partisan of the party group headed by C.E. from May 1923 until early in 1924.The opponent of the group headed by William Z. was Ruthenberg. Despite <mask>'s faltering familiarity with the language, Foster was named the editor of the Workers' Party's Yiddish language daily. <mask> was removed from the paper as soon as the Foster group took control of the party apparatus. <mask> was the candidate of the Workers Party of America for Vice President of the United States in 1924. The US Supreme Court upheld his conviction in the case of <mask> v. New York by a vote of 7 to 2, three years after his release on bail. <mask> was about to return to jail. <mask> was ordered back to Sing Sing Prison by the court in 1925.This wouldn't be hard time. <mask> was moved to a new section of the prison located on a hill, a much more comfortable facility than the one he had been in. <mask> only spent about one hour on the cleaning detail. The cells had fresh air, a comfortable mattress, hot water in the basin, and clean, smoothly painted steel walls. It would have been equivalent to a good small room in a modern hotel if a bath had been included. <mask> anticipated a short stay in the facility as the American Civil Liberties Union assured him that he would be pardoned quickly. <mask> was told by his wife that if he agreed to the conditions of his release, he would be free to leave Sing Sing on parole.<mask> considered this an unfortunate turn of events, as he sought freedom to continue his political activities without the constraint of parole supervision and the threat of a rapid return to jail. <mask>'s wife was told by phone that the Governor had decided to grant him a full pardon and that his decision on whether to accept a parole was over. <mask> received a hero's welcome when he arrived at a packed Grand Central Station after being freed from jail. <mask> ran for Governor of New York on the ticket of the Workers Party of America. <mask> was once again named the candidate of the Workers Party of America for Vice President of the United States, this time on a ticket headed by William Z. Foster. <mask> assumed the post of Executive Secretary of the Communist Party on March 16, 1929, when he was named to the three-man secretariat.As part of a 10-person delegation, he boarded an ocean liner for Moscow on March 23 to appeal the Comintern's decision to expel Jay Lovestone from the Communist Party. Robert Minor took over the job of Executive Secretary. The world Communist movement lurched towards the revolutionary left in 1929 as the Communist Parties around the world were wiped out of so-called "right oppositions". <mask> and his co-thinker Jay Lovestone were kicked out of the party for their opposition to the hardline group of Joseph Stalin. The expelled Communists followed Lovestone into a new organization, the so-called Communist Party (Majority Group), which included a small fraction of the membership of the regular Communist Party. <mask> was named a member of the National Council in October 1929. <mask> was elected Secretary of the Lovestone political organization at the 1st National Conference of the organization in New York City in 1930.<mask> was sent on a month-long tour of the United States in the fall of 1930, taking him to Detroit, Chicago, and Superior, Wisconsin, before returning to the east coast. During the first 5 years of its existence, the Lovestone organization continued to seek accommodations with the Communist Party. <mask>'s views had changed over time. The Workers Communist League merged with a group around B.J. after he and Lazar Becker split from the Lovestoneites. The Organization Committee for a Revolutionary Workers Party will be formed next year. <mask> became an outspoken anti-communist after briefly rejoining the Socialist Party in 1934. He testified against the Communist Party before the House Committee on Un-American Activities.I Confess: The Truth About American Communism was published in 1940 by <mask>. The book pushed <mask> into the public eye as a leading opponent of American Communism. The book is an important document for the study of American Communism in the 1920s and 1930s. The Whole of Their Lives: Communism in America was written by <mask> in 1948. Non-specialists should use the historical accounts in this later book, written as a potboiler for the popular market, with great caution as some of its details are at variance with the same stories told by the same author nearly a decade earlier. He joined the American Jewish League Against Communism in 1948. On May 1, 1950, in Mosinee, Wisconsin, a local American Legion outpost staged a mock Communist takeover to show what life would be like under Soviet rule.The General Secretary of the "United Soviet States of America" was played by <mask>, while the new head of the "Moskva" town was played by the ex-Communist. There is a Soviet flag in front of the American Legion outpost. Billy James Hargis' Christian Crusade Ministries published <mask>'s final pamphlets in the early 1960s. <mask> married Badana Zeitlin in 1924. On July 19, 1965, <mask> died. <mask>'s papers are located in Palo Alto, California, and the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. The "Red Ruby" was published by <mask>.The Communist Labor Party of America was founded in New York in 1920. speeches of acceptance With William Z. Foster. New York: Workers Library Publishers. There are some plain words on communist unity. New York: Workers Age Publishing Association.There is an alternate link for America for the People. There is a Farmer Labor Party. The Labor Party Association was founded in New York. Why are people boycotting Nazi Germany? The British section of the World Non- Sectarian Anti-Nazi Council to Champion Human Rights was formed in the middle of the 1930s. I confess the truth about American Communism. New York: E. P. Dutton.The whole of their lives is Communism in America. Charles Scribner's Sons was in New York in 1948. Think about Communism. The Graphics Group was in Whitestone, New York. There is a reprint of selections from "The Whole of Their Lives." The Downgrading of Stalin was done by Nikita Sergeyevich Khrushchev. The Christian Crusade took place in Oklahoma in 1962.Communism is a world-wide failure. The Christian Crusade took place in Oklahoma in 1962. The Negro asked about the Communist Civil War Policy. The Christian Crusade took place in Oklahoma in 1962. Is the Stalin general line correct? <mask> wrote New York: United Council of Working Women, 1924. The Workers Communist League was founded in New York. There are external links to Benjamin Gitlow Papers.Max Shachtman wrote aFootnote for Historians in New International. 377–377. The 20th-century American politicians include people of Russian-Jewish descent, who were members of the New York State Assembly. | [
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46260801 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terry%20Rozier | Terry Rozier | Terry William Rozier III (born March 17, 1994) is an American professional basketball player for the Charlotte Hornets of the National Basketball Association (NBA). He played college basketball for the Louisville Cardinals before being selected with the 16th overall pick in the 2015 NBA draft by the Boston Celtics.
Early life
Rozier was born in Youngstown, Ohio, in 1994. His father, Terry Rozier Sr., was sent to prison for eight years two months after his birth. Then, in 2005, Rozier Jr. spent a few months with his father, who had just been released from prison, before he was arrested again on charges of involuntary manslaughter for his involvement in a robbery and kidnapping from 2003 that had led to the accidental death of an accomplice. Rozier Sr. was then sentenced to thirteen years in prison. As a consequence, Rozier was raised primarily by his mother, Gina Tucker, and his grandmother, Amanda Tucker, as well as alongside his brother and half sister.
High school career
Rozier starred at Shaker Heights High School in Shaker Heights, Ohio, graduating in 2012. In his senior year, he averaged 25.6 points, 6.5 rebounds, 4.5 assists and 4.7 steals per game while leading Shaker to a 21–3 record and taking them to the regional semifinals as a senior for the first time since 2002. He was named an All-Lake Erie League selection for three years and was 74th in recruiting ranking on ESPNU's Top 100 Players list in 2012.
As he needed to improve his grades, Rozier initially played at Hargrave Military Academy before joining Louisville. In his 2012–13 campaign at Hargrave, Rozier averaged 29.3 points, 7.8 rebounds, and 5.6 assists while the team went 38–8; he also earned the 2012 Kentucky Derby Festival Basketball Classic MVP and placed second in the dunk and three-point contest that season.
College career
As a freshman at Louisville in 2013–14, Rozier averaged 7.0 points and 3.1 rebounds per game in 37 games, and made the ACC All-Rookie Team. As a sophomore in 2014–15, Rozier led the Cardinals in scoring with 17.1 points per game, and was named second-team All-ACC. On March 30, 2015, Rozier and Louisville teammate Montrezl Harrell declared for the 2015 NBA draft.
Professional career
Boston Celtics (2015–2019)
2015–16 season
On June 25, 2015, Rozier was selected by the Boston Celtics with the 16th overall pick in the 2015 NBA draft. On July 27, 2015, he signed his rookie scale contract with the Celtics. Entering his rookie season, he drew comparisons to Damian Lillard. During his rookie season, he received multiple assignments to the Maine Red Claws, Boston's D-League affiliate. He appeared in 39 regular season games for the Celtics in 2015–16, scoring a season-high seven points twice. In his first playoff game, he scored 10 points on 4-of-7 shooting against the Atlanta Hawks.
2016–17 season
On November 12, 2016, Rozier scored a career-high 11 points in a 105–99 win over the Indiana Pacers. He topped that mark nine days later, scoring 12 points in a 99–93 win over the Minnesota Timberwolves. On December 7, he had a 16-point game in a 117–87 win over the Orlando Magic. On March 19, 2017, he recorded his first career double-double with 14 points and 10 rebounds in a 105–99 loss to the Philadelphia 76ers.
2017–18 season
On November 24, 2017, Rozier had a career-high 23 points in a 118–103 win over the Orlando Magic. On December 18, he made a steal and go-ahead dunk with 1.5 seconds remaining that gave the Celtics a 112–111 victory over the Indiana Pacers. On January 3, 2018, Rozier had a game-high 20 points in a 102-88 win over the Cleveland Cavaliers. On January 31, Rozier logged his first career triple-double in his first NBA start to help the Celtics to a 103–73 victory over the New York Knicks. He recorded 17 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists to become just the second player in NBA history with a triple-double in his first start, joining Tony Wroten, who set the initial record on November 13, 2013, with the Philadelphia 76ers. Two days later, in his second career start, Rozier scored a career-high 31 points in a 119–110 win over the Hawks. On March 25, in his sixth start in place of the injured Kyrie Irving, Rozier scored a career-high 33 points in a 104–93 win over the Sacramento Kings. He also had five rebounds and three assists, and shot 12 of 16 from the field, including 8 of 12 on 3-pointers. In Game 2 of the Celtics' first-round playoff series against the Milwaukee Bucks, Rozier scored 23 points in helping Boston take a 2–0 series lead with a 120–106 win. In Game 7, Rozier scored 26 points in a 112–96 win over the Bucks. In Game 1 of their second-round series against the 76ers, Rozier recorded 29 points, eight rebounds and six assists in a 117–101 win. In Game 6 of the Eastern Conference Finals, Rozier scored 28 points in a 109–99 loss to the Cavaliers. In Game 7, Rozier missed all 10 of his 3-point attempts, as the Celtics bowed out of the playoffs with an 87–79 loss.
2018–19 season
In early November, Rozier was reportedly unhappy with his playing time to begin the 2018–19 season, having gone from starting in the playoffs to coming off the bench. On November 9, Rozier scored a then season-high 22 points in a 123–115 loss to the Utah Jazz, making his first start of the season in place of Irving. On January 23, he scored 22 of his 26 points in the first half of the Celtics' 123–103 win over the Cleveland Cavaliers. He became the first Celtics player to score 20 or more points in a half on perfect shooting since Paul Pierce went 7 for 7 and had 20 in the second half against the Chicago Bulls on October 30, 2009. On January 30, he had 17 points and tied a career high with 10 assists in a 126–94 win over the Charlotte Hornets. On March 11, he had 26 points in a 140–115 loss to the Los Angeles Clippers.
Charlotte Hornets (2019–present)
On July 6, 2019, Rozier was traded to the Charlotte Hornets, as part of a sign-and-trade deal involving Kemba Walker. The contract was for three years and $56.7 million. On December 18, 2019, he scored a then career-high 35 points in a 100–98 loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers. He would surpass that on March 8, 2020, scoring 40 points in a 143–138 double overtime loss to the Atlanta Hawks.
On December 23, 2020, Rozier put up a career-high 42 points, along with three rebounds, two assists, two steals, and one block, in a 121–114 loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers.
Career statistics
NBA
Regular season
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"| Boston
| 39 || 0 || 8.0 || .274 || .222 || .800 || 1.6 || .9 || .2 || .0 || 1.8
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"| Boston
| 74 || 0 || 17.1 || .367 || .318 || .773 || 3.1 || 1.8 || .6 || .1 || 5.5
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"| Boston
| 80 || 16 || 25.9 || .395 || .381 || .772 || 4.7 || 2.9 || 1.0 || .2 || 11.3
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"| Boston
| 79 || 14 || 22.7 || .387 || .353 || .785 || 3.9 || 2.9 || .9 || .3 || 9.0
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"| Charlotte
| 63 || 63 || 34.3 || .423 || .407 || .874 || 4.4 || 4.1 || 1.0 || .2 || 18.0
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"| Charlotte
| 69 || 69 || 34.5 || .450 || .389 || .817 || 4.4 || 4.2 || 1.3 || .4 || 20.4
|- class="sortbottom"
| style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Career
| 404 || 162 || 24.7 || .410 || .376 || .814 || 3.8 || 2.9 || .9 || .2 || 11.5
Playoffs
|-
| style="text-align:left;"| 2016
| style="text-align:left;"| Boston
| 5 || 0 || 19.8 || .391 || .364 || 1.000 || 3.4 || 1.2 || .2 || .6 || 4.8
|-
| style="text-align:left;"| 2017
| style="text-align:left;"| Boston
| 17 || 0 || 16.3 || .402 || .368 || .800 || 2.6 || 1.9 || .6 || .2 || 5.6
|-
| style="text-align:left;"| 2018
| style="text-align:left;"| Boston
| 19 || 19 || 36.6 || .406 || .347 || .821 || 5.3 || 5.7 || 1.3 || .3 || 16.5
|-
| style="text-align:left;"| 2019
| style="text-align:left;"| Boston
| 9 || 0 || 18.0 || .322 || .235 || .750 || 4.3 || 1.9 || .4 || .2 || 6.4
|- class="sortbottom"
| style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Career
| 50 || 19 || 24.7 || .393 || .335 || .809 || 4.0 || 3.3 || .8 || .3 || 9.8
College
|-
| style="text-align:left;"| 2013–14
| style="text-align:left;"| Louisville
| 37 || 10 || 18.9 || .401 || .371 || .712 || 3.1 || 1.8 || 1.0 || .1 || 7.0
|-
| style="text-align:left;"| 2014–15
| style="text-align:left;"| Louisville
| 36 || 35 || 35.0 || .411 || .306 || .790 || 5.6 || 3.0 || 2.0 || .2 || 17.1
|- class="sortbottom"
| style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Career
| 73 || 45 || 26.8 || .408 || .331 || .772 || 4.3 || 2.4 || 1.5 || .1 || 12.0
References
External links
Louisville Cardinals bio
1994 births
Living people
African-American basketball players
American men's basketball players
Basketball players from Youngstown, Ohio
Boston Celtics draft picks
Boston Celtics players
Charlotte Hornets players
Louisville Cardinals men's basketball players
Maine Red Claws players
Point guards
Shooting guards
Sportspeople from Shaker Heights, Ohio
21st-century African-American sportspeople | [
"Terry William Rozier III (born March 17, 1994) is an American professional basketball player for the Charlotte Hornets of the National Basketball Association (NBA).",
"He played college basketball for the Louisville Cardinals before being selected with the 16th overall pick in the 2015 NBA draft by the Boston Celtics.",
"Early life\nRozier was born in Youngstown, Ohio, in 1994.",
"His father, Terry Rozier Sr., was sent to prison for eight years two months after his birth.",
"Then, in 2005, Rozier Jr. spent a few months with his father, who had just been released from prison, before he was arrested again on charges of involuntary manslaughter for his involvement in a robbery and kidnapping from 2003 that had led to the accidental death of an accomplice.",
"Rozier Sr. was then sentenced to thirteen years in prison.",
"As a consequence, Rozier was raised primarily by his mother, Gina Tucker, and his grandmother, Amanda Tucker, as well as alongside his brother and half sister.",
"High school career\nRozier starred at Shaker Heights High School in Shaker Heights, Ohio, graduating in 2012.",
"In his senior year, he averaged 25.6 points, 6.5 rebounds, 4.5 assists and 4.7 steals per game while leading Shaker to a 21–3 record and taking them to the regional semifinals as a senior for the first time since 2002.",
"He was named an All-Lake Erie League selection for three years and was 74th in recruiting ranking on ESPNU's Top 100 Players list in 2012.",
"As he needed to improve his grades, Rozier initially played at Hargrave Military Academy before joining Louisville.",
"In his 2012–13 campaign at Hargrave, Rozier averaged 29.3 points, 7.8 rebounds, and 5.6 assists while the team went 38–8; he also earned the 2012 Kentucky Derby Festival Basketball Classic MVP and placed second in the dunk and three-point contest that season.",
"College career\nAs a freshman at Louisville in 2013–14, Rozier averaged 7.0 points and 3.1 rebounds per game in 37 games, and made the ACC All-Rookie Team.",
"As a sophomore in 2014–15, Rozier led the Cardinals in scoring with 17.1 points per game, and was named second-team All-ACC.",
"On March 30, 2015, Rozier and Louisville teammate Montrezl Harrell declared for the 2015 NBA draft.",
"Professional career\n\nBoston Celtics (2015–2019)\n\n2015–16 season\nOn June 25, 2015, Rozier was selected by the Boston Celtics with the 16th overall pick in the 2015 NBA draft.",
"On July 27, 2015, he signed his rookie scale contract with the Celtics.",
"Entering his rookie season, he drew comparisons to Damian Lillard.",
"During his rookie season, he received multiple assignments to the Maine Red Claws, Boston's D-League affiliate.",
"He appeared in 39 regular season games for the Celtics in 2015–16, scoring a season-high seven points twice.",
"In his first playoff game, he scored 10 points on 4-of-7 shooting against the Atlanta Hawks.",
"2016–17 season\n\nOn November 12, 2016, Rozier scored a career-high 11 points in a 105–99 win over the Indiana Pacers.",
"He topped that mark nine days later, scoring 12 points in a 99–93 win over the Minnesota Timberwolves.",
"On December 7, he had a 16-point game in a 117–87 win over the Orlando Magic.",
"On March 19, 2017, he recorded his first career double-double with 14 points and 10 rebounds in a 105–99 loss to the Philadelphia 76ers.",
"2017–18 season\nOn November 24, 2017, Rozier had a career-high 23 points in a 118–103 win over the Orlando Magic.",
"On December 18, he made a steal and go-ahead dunk with 1.5 seconds remaining that gave the Celtics a 112–111 victory over the Indiana Pacers.",
"On January 3, 2018, Rozier had a game-high 20 points in a 102-88 win over the Cleveland Cavaliers.",
"On January 31, Rozier logged his first career triple-double in his first NBA start to help the Celtics to a 103–73 victory over the New York Knicks.",
"He recorded 17 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists to become just the second player in NBA history with a triple-double in his first start, joining Tony Wroten, who set the initial record on November 13, 2013, with the Philadelphia 76ers.",
"Two days later, in his second career start, Rozier scored a career-high 31 points in a 119–110 win over the Hawks.",
"On March 25, in his sixth start in place of the injured Kyrie Irving, Rozier scored a career-high 33 points in a 104–93 win over the Sacramento Kings.",
"He also had five rebounds and three assists, and shot 12 of 16 from the field, including 8 of 12 on 3-pointers.",
"In Game 2 of the Celtics' first-round playoff series against the Milwaukee Bucks, Rozier scored 23 points in helping Boston take a 2–0 series lead with a 120–106 win.",
"In Game 7, Rozier scored 26 points in a 112–96 win over the Bucks.",
"In Game 1 of their second-round series against the 76ers, Rozier recorded 29 points, eight rebounds and six assists in a 117–101 win.",
"In Game 6 of the Eastern Conference Finals, Rozier scored 28 points in a 109–99 loss to the Cavaliers.",
"In Game 7, Rozier missed all 10 of his 3-point attempts, as the Celtics bowed out of the playoffs with an 87–79 loss.",
"2018–19 season\nIn early November, Rozier was reportedly unhappy with his playing time to begin the 2018–19 season, having gone from starting in the playoffs to coming off the bench.",
"On November 9, Rozier scored a then season-high 22 points in a 123–115 loss to the Utah Jazz, making his first start of the season in place of Irving.",
"On January 23, he scored 22 of his 26 points in the first half of the Celtics' 123–103 win over the Cleveland Cavaliers.",
"He became the first Celtics player to score 20 or more points in a half on perfect shooting since Paul Pierce went 7 for 7 and had 20 in the second half against the Chicago Bulls on October 30, 2009.",
"On January 30, he had 17 points and tied a career high with 10 assists in a 126–94 win over the Charlotte Hornets.",
"On March 11, he had 26 points in a 140–115 loss to the Los Angeles Clippers.",
"Charlotte Hornets (2019–present)\nOn July 6, 2019, Rozier was traded to the Charlotte Hornets, as part of a sign-and-trade deal involving Kemba Walker.",
"The contract was for three years and $56.7 million.",
"On December 18, 2019, he scored a then career-high 35 points in a 100–98 loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers.",
"He would surpass that on March 8, 2020, scoring 40 points in a 143–138 double overtime loss to the Atlanta Hawks.",
"On December 23, 2020, Rozier put up a career-high 42 points, along with three rebounds, two assists, two steals, and one block, in a 121–114 loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers."
] | [
"Terry William Rozier III is an American professional basketball player for the Charlotte Hornets of the National Basketball Association.",
"He was selected with the 16th overall pick in the NBA draft by the Boston Celtics.",
"Rozier was born in 1994.",
"His father was sent to prison for eight years after he was born.",
"Rozier Jr. spent a few months with his father, who had just been released from prison, before he was arrested again on charges of manslaughter for his involvement in a robbery and kidnapping from 2003 that led to the accidental death of an associate.",
"Rozier was sentenced to 13 years in prison.",
"Rozier was raised by his mother, grandmother, brother and half sister.",
"Rozier graduated from Shaker Heights High School in 2012",
"In his senior year, he averaged 25.6 points, 6.5 rebound, 4.5 assists and 4.7 steals per game, while leading Shaker to a 21–3 record and the regional semifinals for the first time since 2002.",
"He was an All-Lake Erie League selection for three years and was 74th in the recruiting rankings.",
"Before joining Louisville, Rozier played at Hargrave Military Academy.",
"In the 2012–13 season at Hargrave, Rozier averaged 29.3 points, 7.8 rebounds, and 5.6 assists while the team went 38–8; he also earned the 2012 Kentucky Derby Festival Basketball ClassicMVP and placed second in the dunk and three-point contest that season.",
"In 37 games as a freshman at Louisville, Rozier averaged 7.0 points and 3.1 rebound per game.",
"In his sophomore year, Rozier led the team in scoring with 17.1 points per game, and was named second-team All-ACC.",
"On March 30, 2015, Rozier and Montrezl Harrell declared for the NBA draft.",
"On June 25, 2015, Rozier was selected by the Boston Celtics with the 16th overall pick in the NBA draft.",
"He signed his scale contract with the Celtics.",
"He drew comparisons to Damian Lillard.",
"He was assigned multiple times to the Maine Red Claws, Boston's D-League affiliate.",
"He scored a season-high seven points twice in the regular season for the Celtics.",
"He scored 10 points on 4-of-7 shooting in his first playoff game.",
"In a 105–99 win over the Indiana Pacers, Rozier scored a career-high 11 points.",
"He scored 12 points in a 99–93 win over the Minnesota Timberwolves nine days later.",
"He had a 16-point game in a win over the Magic.",
"He recorded his first career double-double in a 105–99 loss to the Philadelphia 76ers.",
"Rozier had a career-high 23 points in a 118–103 win over the Magic.",
"He made a steal and dunk with 1.5 seconds remaining to give the Celtics a 112–111 victory over the Pacers.",
"Rozier had a game-high 20 points in a win over Cleveland.",
"On January 31, Rozier recorded his first career triple-double in his first NBA start, helping the Celtics to a 103– 73 victory over the New York Knicks.",
"He became the second player in NBA history with a triple-double in his first start, joining Tony Wroten, who did it with the Philadelphia 76ers.",
"In his second career start, Rozier scored a career-high 31 points in a win over the Hawks.",
"In his sixth start in place of the injured Irving, Rozier scored a career-high 33 points in a 104–93 win over the Kings.",
"He shot 12 of 16 from the field and 8 of 12 on 3-pointers.",
"In Game 2 of the Celtics' first-round playoff series against the Milwaukee Bucks, Rozier scored 23 points in helping Boston take a 2–0 series lead with a 120–106 win.",
"In the 7th game of the series, Rozier scored 26 points.",
"Rozier was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"In the Eastern Conference Finals, Rozier scored 28 points in a loss.",
"Rozier missed all 10 of his 3-point attempts as the Celtics bowed out of the playoffs with an 87–79.",
"In early November, Rozier was unhappy with his playing time, having gone from starting in the playoffs to coming off the bench.",
"In a 123–115 loss to the Utah Jazz on November 9, Rozier made his first start of the season in place of Irving and scored a season-high 22 points.",
"He scored 22 of his 26 points in the first half of the Celtics' win over Cleveland.",
"He became the first Celtics player to score 20 or more points in a half on perfect shooting since Paul Pierce had 20 in the second half against the Chicago Bulls on October 30, 2009.",
"He had 17 points and 10 assists in a 126–94 win over the Charlotte Hornets on January 30.",
"He had 26 points in a loss to the Clippers.",
"Rozier was traded to the Charlotte Hornets as part of a sign-and-trade deal involving Kemba Walker.",
"The contract was for over fifty million dollars.",
"He scored a career-high 35 points in a 100–98 loss to Cleveland.",
"He scored 40 points in a loss to the Atlanta Hawks on March 8, 2020.",
"Rozier scored a career-high 42 points in a 121–114 loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers on December 23, 2020."
] | <mask> (born March 17, 1994) is an American professional basketball player for the Charlotte Hornets of the National Basketball Association (NBA). He played college basketball for the Louisville Cardinals before being selected with the 16th overall pick in the 2015 NBA draft by the Boston Celtics. Early life
<mask> was born in Youngstown, Ohio, in 1994. His father, <mask>., was sent to prison for eight years two months after his birth. Then, in 2005, <mask>. spent a few months with his father, who had just been released from prison, before he was arrested again on charges of involuntary manslaughter for his involvement in a robbery and kidnapping from 2003 that had led to the accidental death of an accomplice. <mask>. was then sentenced to thirteen years in prison. As a consequence, Rozier was raised primarily by his mother, Gina Tucker, and his grandmother, Amanda Tucker, as well as alongside his brother and half sister.High school career
<mask> starred at Shaker Heights High School in Shaker Heights, Ohio, graduating in 2012. In his senior year, he averaged 25.6 points, 6.5 rebounds, 4.5 assists and 4.7 steals per game while leading Shaker to a 21–3 record and taking them to the regional semifinals as a senior for the first time since 2002. He was named an All-Lake Erie League selection for three years and was 74th in recruiting ranking on ESPNU's Top 100 Players list in 2012. As he needed to improve his grades, Rozier initially played at Hargrave Military Academy before joining Louisville. In his 2012–13 campaign at Hargrave, Rozier averaged 29.3 points, 7.8 rebounds, and 5.6 assists while the team went 38–8; he also earned the 2012 Kentucky Derby Festival Basketball Classic MVP and placed second in the dunk and three-point contest that season. College career
As a freshman at Louisville in 2013–14, Rozier averaged 7.0 points and 3.1 rebounds per game in 37 games, and made the ACC All-Rookie Team. As a sophomore in 2014–15, Rozier led the Cardinals in scoring with 17.1 points per game, and was named second-team All-ACC.On March 30, 2015, <mask> and Louisville teammate Montrezl Harrell declared for the 2015 NBA draft. Professional career
Boston Celtics (2015–2019)
2015–16 season
On June 25, 2015, <mask> was selected by the Boston Celtics with the 16th overall pick in the 2015 NBA draft. On July 27, 2015, he signed his rookie scale contract with the Celtics. Entering his rookie season, he drew comparisons to Damian Lillard. During his rookie season, he received multiple assignments to the Maine Red Claws, Boston's D-League affiliate. He appeared in 39 regular season games for the Celtics in 2015–16, scoring a season-high seven points twice. In his first playoff game, he scored 10 points on 4-of-7 shooting against the Atlanta Hawks.2016–17 season
On November 12, 2016, <mask> scored a career-high 11 points in a 105–99 win over the Indiana Pacers. He topped that mark nine days later, scoring 12 points in a 99–93 win over the Minnesota Timberwolves. On December 7, he had a 16-point game in a 117–87 win over the Orlando Magic. On March 19, 2017, he recorded his first career double-double with 14 points and 10 rebounds in a 105–99 loss to the Philadelphia 76ers. 2017–18 season
On November 24, 2017, <mask> had a career-high 23 points in a 118–103 win over the Orlando Magic. On December 18, he made a steal and go-ahead dunk with 1.5 seconds remaining that gave the Celtics a 112–111 victory over the Indiana Pacers. On January 3, 2018, Rozier had a game-high 20 points in a 102-88 win over the Cleveland Cavaliers.On January 31, <mask> logged his first career triple-double in his first NBA start to help the Celtics to a 103–73 victory over the New York Knicks. He recorded 17 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists to become just the second player in NBA history with a triple-double in his first start, joining Tony Wroten, who set the initial record on November 13, 2013, with the Philadelphia 76ers. Two days later, in his second career start, <mask> scored a career-high 31 points in a 119–110 win over the Hawks. On March 25, in his sixth start in place of the injured Kyrie Irving, <mask> scored a career-high 33 points in a 104–93 win over the Sacramento Kings. He also had five rebounds and three assists, and shot 12 of 16 from the field, including 8 of 12 on 3-pointers. In Game 2 of the Celtics' first-round playoff series against the Milwaukee Bucks, <mask> scored 23 points in helping Boston take a 2–0 series lead with a 120–106 win. In Game 7, <mask> scored 26 points in a 112–96 win over the Bucks.In Game 1 of their second-round series against the 76ers, <mask> recorded 29 points, eight rebounds and six assists in a 117–101 win. In Game 6 of the Eastern Conference Finals, <mask> scored 28 points in a 109–99 loss to the Cavaliers. In Game 7, <mask> missed all 10 of his 3-point attempts, as the Celtics bowed out of the playoffs with an 87–79 loss. 2018–19 season
In early November, <mask> was reportedly unhappy with his playing time to begin the 2018–19 season, having gone from starting in the playoffs to coming off the bench. On November 9, <mask> scored a then season-high 22 points in a 123–115 loss to the Utah Jazz, making his first start of the season in place of Irving. On January 23, he scored 22 of his 26 points in the first half of the Celtics' 123–103 win over the Cleveland Cavaliers. He became the first Celtics player to score 20 or more points in a half on perfect shooting since Paul Pierce went 7 for 7 and had 20 in the second half against the Chicago Bulls on October 30, 2009.On January 30, he had 17 points and tied a career high with 10 assists in a 126–94 win over the Charlotte Hornets. On March 11, he had 26 points in a 140–115 loss to the Los Angeles Clippers. Charlotte Hornets (2019–present)
On July 6, 2019, <mask> was traded to the Charlotte Hornets, as part of a sign-and-trade deal involving Kemba Walker. The contract was for three years and $56.7 million. On December 18, 2019, he scored a then career-high 35 points in a 100–98 loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers. He would surpass that on March 8, 2020, scoring 40 points in a 143–138 double overtime loss to the Atlanta Hawks. On December 23, 2020, <mask> put up a career-high 42 points, along with three rebounds, two assists, two steals, and one block, in a 121–114 loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers. | [
"Terry William Rozier III",
"Rozier",
"Terry Rozier Sr",
"Rozier Jr",
"Rozier Sr",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier"
] | <mask> is an American professional basketball player for the Charlotte Hornets of the National Basketball Association. He was selected with the 16th overall pick in the NBA draft by the Boston Celtics. <mask> was born in 1994. His father was sent to prison for eight years after he was born. <mask>. spent a few months with his father, who had just been released from prison, before he was arrested again on charges of manslaughter for his involvement in a robbery and kidnapping from 2003 that led to the accidental death of an associate. Rozier was sentenced to 13 years in prison. Rozier was raised by his mother, grandmother, brother and half sister.Rozier graduated from Shaker Heights High School in 2012 In his senior year, he averaged 25.6 points, 6.5 rebound, 4.5 assists and 4.7 steals per game, while leading Shaker to a 21–3 record and the regional semifinals for the first time since 2002. He was an All-Lake Erie League selection for three years and was 74th in the recruiting rankings. Before joining Louisville, Rozier played at Hargrave Military Academy. In the 2012–13 season at Hargrave, Rozier averaged 29.3 points, 7.8 rebounds, and 5.6 assists while the team went 38–8; he also earned the 2012 Kentucky Derby Festival Basketball ClassicMVP and placed second in the dunk and three-point contest that season. In 37 games as a freshman at Louisville, Rozier averaged 7.0 points and 3.1 rebound per game. In his sophomore year, Rozier led the team in scoring with 17.1 points per game, and was named second-team All-ACC.On March 30, 2015, <mask> and Montrezl Harrell declared for the NBA draft. On June 25, 2015, <mask> was selected by the Boston Celtics with the 16th overall pick in the NBA draft. He signed his scale contract with the Celtics. He drew comparisons to Damian Lillard. He was assigned multiple times to the Maine Red Claws, Boston's D-League affiliate. He scored a season-high seven points twice in the regular season for the Celtics. He scored 10 points on 4-of-7 shooting in his first playoff game.In a 105–99 win over the Indiana Pacers, <mask> scored a career-high 11 points. He scored 12 points in a 99–93 win over the Minnesota Timberwolves nine days later. He had a 16-point game in a win over the Magic. He recorded his first career double-double in a 105–99 loss to the Philadelphia 76ers. <mask> had a career-high 23 points in a 118–103 win over the Magic. He made a steal and dunk with 1.5 seconds remaining to give the Celtics a 112–111 victory over the Pacers. <mask> had a game-high 20 points in a win over Cleveland.On January 31, <mask> recorded his first career triple-double in his first NBA start, helping the Celtics to a 103– 73 victory over the New York Knicks. He became the second player in NBA history with a triple-double in his first start, joining Tony Wroten, who did it with the Philadelphia 76ers. In his second career start, <mask> scored a career-high 31 points in a win over the Hawks. In his sixth start in place of the injured Irving, <mask> scored a career-high 33 points in a 104–93 win over the Kings. He shot 12 of 16 from the field and 8 of 12 on 3-pointers. In Game 2 of the Celtics' first-round playoff series against the Milwaukee Bucks, <mask> scored 23 points in helping Boston take a 2–0 series lead with a 120–106 win. In the 7th game of the series, Rozier scored 26 points.Rozier was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 In the Eastern Conference Finals, Rozier scored 28 points in a loss. Rozier missed all 10 of his 3-point attempts as the Celtics bowed out of the playoffs with an 87–79. In early November, Rozier was unhappy with his playing time, having gone from starting in the playoffs to coming off the bench. In a 123–115 loss to the Utah Jazz on November 9, Rozier made his first start of the season in place of Irving and scored a season-high 22 points. He scored 22 of his 26 points in the first half of the Celtics' win over Cleveland. He became the first Celtics player to score 20 or more points in a half on perfect shooting since Paul Pierce had 20 in the second half against the Chicago Bulls on October 30, 2009.He had 17 points and 10 assists in a 126–94 win over the Charlotte Hornets on January 30. He had 26 points in a loss to the Clippers. <mask> was traded to the Charlotte Hornets as part of a sign-and-trade deal involving Kemba Walker. The contract was for over fifty million dollars. He scored a career-high 35 points in a 100–98 loss to Cleveland. He scored 40 points in a loss to the Atlanta Hawks on March 8, 2020. <mask> scored a career-high 42 points in a 121–114 loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers on December 23, 2020. | [
"Terry William Rozier III",
"Rozier",
"Rozier Jr",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier",
"Rozier"
] |
4577759 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jay%20Triano | Jay Triano | Howard James "Jay" Triano (born September 21, 1958) is a Canadian basketball coach and former professional player, who is currently the lead assistant coach of the Charlotte Hornets of the National Basketball Association (NBA). He previously served as the head coach of the NBA's Toronto Raptors and the interim head coach of the Phoenix Suns. A former Canadian national team player who competed in two Olympics, he has also had two stints as head coach of the national team.
Early life and family
Triano was born in Tillsonburg, Ontario and raised in Niagara Falls, Ontario, where he attended A. N. Myer Secondary School. He is of Italian descent through his great-grandfather, who landed on Ellis Island, then made his way to Welland, Ontario. His younger brother Jeff was a draft pick of the Toronto Maple Leafs in the 1982 NHL Entry Draft, after playing OHL hockey for the Toronto Marlboros. Brady Heslip, his nephew and son of his sister Jody, played basketball at Baylor University and played for the Canadian national team.
Playing career
As a student at Simon Fraser University, the 6 ft 4 in, 194 lb Triano broke or equalled eleven school men's basketball records, including having the most career points with 2,616. At Simon Fraser, he befriended Canadian athlete and activist Terry Fox. He was drafted in the eighth round of the 1981 NBA Draft by the Los Angeles Lakers, but was cut during training camp and never played in the NBA. The same year, he was also drafted by the Calgary Stampeders in the sixth round of the 1981 CFL Draft.
Triano was a national team player from 1977 to 1988, captained the team from 1981 to 1988, and played in the 1984 and 1988 Olympics. He led the Canadian team that won Gold at the 1983 World University Games in Edmonton, Alberta, defeating the United States in the semi-finals, which was led by Karl Malone and Charles Barkley, and Yugoslavia in the final, led by Dražen Petrović. He played three seasons of professional basketball, two in Mexico and one (1985–86 season for Fenerbahçe Istanbul) in Turkey.
Coaching career
After retiring as a player in 1988, Triano became head coach at his alma mater, Simon Fraser. He attempted to recruit high school star Steve Nash and later served as his mentor. In 1995, when the nearby Vancouver Grizzlies debuted, he became team Director of Community Relations and worked as the colour commentator for their radio broadcasts. In 1998, Triano became the head coach of the Canadian men's national basketball team. He coached the Nash-led team to a 5–2 record and a seventh-place finish in the 2000 Sydney Olympics, losing to France by five points in the quarter-finals. Two years later, he became an assistant coach for the Toronto Raptors, becoming the second Canadian-born coach in the NBA. He served under Lenny Wilkens, Kevin O'Neill, and Sam Mitchell.
In 2004, Triano was fired as national team head coach, and replaced by Leo Rautins the following year.
In 2008, Triano was named an assistant coach for United States national team. On February 13, 2008, Triano served as head coach of the Toronto Raptors in their 109–91 victory over the New Jersey Nets, in place of head coach Sam Mitchell, who was absent from the team as a result of the death of his father-in-law, making history as the first Canadian to serve as head coach for a regular-season NBA game.
On December 3, 2008, Triano was named interim head coach of the Raptors after Mitchell was relieved of his coaching duties. He became the first Canadian-born head coach in NBA history and first Canadian head coach in NBA history. Triano guided the Raptors to a 25–40 mark.
On May 12, 2009, Triano was given a three-year deal to remain head coach of the Raptors.
In Triano's first full season as the Raptors head coach in the 2009–10 season, Toronto missed the playoffs by one game to the Chicago Bulls, going 2–5 in their last 7 games. The team finished 40–42.
In the 2010–11 season, without Chris Bosh on the roster, Triano led the Raptors to a dismal 22–60 record.
On June 1, 2011, the Raptors announced they would not be picking up the option on Triano's contract, but gave him another position within the organization, the Vice-President of Pro Scouting.
On August 17, 2012, Triano was named as an assistant coach for the Portland Trail Blazers. The following week, Triano was also named head coach of Canada's national team for the second time in his career.
On May 18, 2016, it was announced that Triano would take on the associate head coach role (lead assistant) for the Phoenix Suns. He was reunited with head coach Earl Watson, who played for the Trail Blazers during his final season in the NBA, and was considered a major influence on transitioning to being a full-time coach. The subsequent hiring of Turkish-born Mehmet Okur to the Suns' coaching staff as a player development coach on September 13 in the same year, marked the first time in franchise history that multiple non-American coaches served on the coaching staff in the same season.
On October 22, 2017, after a 0–3 start to the season, including one of the worst losses in Suns history and the worst loss to open up a regular season in league history, Triano was promoted to interim head coach of the Suns after the firing of Earl Watson. In his first game as head coach since 2011, Triano guided the team, which had suffered 40+ point losses earlier in the year, to leads as much as 22 points before winning 117–115 on October 23, against the Sacramento Kings for their first win of the season. On December 26, 2017, Triano became the first foreign born head coach in NBA history to win 100 games in the league with a 99–97 win over the Memphis Grizzlies. However, the Suns would finish the season with a 21–58 record under his tenure, and he did not return as head coach after that season. On May 24, 2018, the Charlotte Hornets announced that Triano would join their staff as lead assistant coach.
Head coaching record
|-
| align="left"|Toronto
| align="left"|
| 65||25||40|||| align="center"|4th in Atlantic||—||—||—||—
| align="center"|Missed playoffs
|-
| align="left"|Toronto
| align="left"|
| 82||40||42|||| align="center"|2nd in Atlantic||—||—||—||—
| align="center"|Missed playoffs
|-
| align="left"|Toronto
| align="left"|
| 82||22||60|||| align="center"|5th in Atlantic||—||—||—||—
| align="center"|Missed playoffs
|-
| align="left"|Phoenix
| align="left"|
| 79||21||58|||| align="center"|5th in Pacific||—||—||—||—
| align="center"|Missed playoffs
|-class="sortbottom"
! colspan="2"|Career
! 308||108||200|||| ||—||—||—||—||
See also
List of foreign NBA coaches
Sources
External links
NBA.com profile
Basketball-Reference.com profile
Niagara Falls Hall of Fame profile
Jay Triano Brings Experience and Much More to the Trail Blazers Coaching Staff
1958 births
Living people
Basketball people from Ontario
Basketball players at the 1984 Summer Olympics
Basketball players at the 1988 Summer Olympics
Canadian expatriate basketball people in Turkey
Canadian expatriate basketball people in the United States
Canadian expatriate basketball people in Mexico
Canadian football defensive backs
Canadian men's basketball coaches
Canadian men's basketball players
1978 FIBA World Championship players
1982 FIBA World Championship players
Canadian people of Italian descent
Canadian radio sportscasters
Canadian television sportscasters
Charlotte Hornets assistant coaches
Fenerbahçe men's basketball players
Guards (basketball)
Los Angeles Lakers draft picks
Medalists at the 1983 Summer Universiade
Medalists at the 1985 Summer Universiade
National Basketball Association broadcasters
Olympic basketball players of Canada
Phoenix Suns assistant coaches
Phoenix Suns head coaches
Players of Canadian football from Ontario
Portland Trail Blazers assistant coaches
Sportspeople from Tillsonburg
Simon Fraser Clan men's basketball players
Simon Fraser Clan football players
Sportspeople from Niagara Falls, Ontario
Toronto Raptors assistant coaches
Toronto Raptors head coaches
Vancouver Grizzlies announcers
Universiade medalists in basketball
Universiade gold medalists for Canada
Universiade bronze medalists for Canada | [
"Howard James \"Jay\" Triano (born September 21, 1958) is a Canadian basketball coach and former professional player, who is currently the lead assistant coach of the Charlotte Hornets of the National Basketball Association (NBA).",
"He previously served as the head coach of the NBA's Toronto Raptors and the interim head coach of the Phoenix Suns.",
"A former Canadian national team player who competed in two Olympics, he has also had two stints as head coach of the national team.",
"Early life and family\nTriano was born in Tillsonburg, Ontario and raised in Niagara Falls, Ontario, where he attended A. N. Myer Secondary School.",
"He is of Italian descent through his great-grandfather, who landed on Ellis Island, then made his way to Welland, Ontario.",
"His younger brother Jeff was a draft pick of the Toronto Maple Leafs in the 1982 NHL Entry Draft, after playing OHL hockey for the Toronto Marlboros.",
"Brady Heslip, his nephew and son of his sister Jody, played basketball at Baylor University and played for the Canadian national team.",
"Playing career\nAs a student at Simon Fraser University, the 6 ft 4 in, 194 lb Triano broke or equalled eleven school men's basketball records, including having the most career points with 2,616.",
"At Simon Fraser, he befriended Canadian athlete and activist Terry Fox.",
"He was drafted in the eighth round of the 1981 NBA Draft by the Los Angeles Lakers, but was cut during training camp and never played in the NBA.",
"The same year, he was also drafted by the Calgary Stampeders in the sixth round of the 1981 CFL Draft.",
"Triano was a national team player from 1977 to 1988, captained the team from 1981 to 1988, and played in the 1984 and 1988 Olympics.",
"He led the Canadian team that won Gold at the 1983 World University Games in Edmonton, Alberta, defeating the United States in the semi-finals, which was led by Karl Malone and Charles Barkley, and Yugoslavia in the final, led by Dražen Petrović.",
"He played three seasons of professional basketball, two in Mexico and one (1985–86 season for Fenerbahçe Istanbul) in Turkey.",
"Coaching career\nAfter retiring as a player in 1988, Triano became head coach at his alma mater, Simon Fraser.",
"He attempted to recruit high school star Steve Nash and later served as his mentor.",
"In 1995, when the nearby Vancouver Grizzlies debuted, he became team Director of Community Relations and worked as the colour commentator for their radio broadcasts.",
"In 1998, Triano became the head coach of the Canadian men's national basketball team.",
"He coached the Nash-led team to a 5–2 record and a seventh-place finish in the 2000 Sydney Olympics, losing to France by five points in the quarter-finals.",
"Two years later, he became an assistant coach for the Toronto Raptors, becoming the second Canadian-born coach in the NBA.",
"He served under Lenny Wilkens, Kevin O'Neill, and Sam Mitchell.",
"In 2004, Triano was fired as national team head coach, and replaced by Leo Rautins the following year.",
"In 2008, Triano was named an assistant coach for United States national team.",
"On February 13, 2008, Triano served as head coach of the Toronto Raptors in their 109–91 victory over the New Jersey Nets, in place of head coach Sam Mitchell, who was absent from the team as a result of the death of his father-in-law, making history as the first Canadian to serve as head coach for a regular-season NBA game.",
"On December 3, 2008, Triano was named interim head coach of the Raptors after Mitchell was relieved of his coaching duties.",
"He became the first Canadian-born head coach in NBA history and first Canadian head coach in NBA history.",
"Triano guided the Raptors to a 25–40 mark.",
"On May 12, 2009, Triano was given a three-year deal to remain head coach of the Raptors.",
"In Triano's first full season as the Raptors head coach in the 2009–10 season, Toronto missed the playoffs by one game to the Chicago Bulls, going 2–5 in their last 7 games.",
"The team finished 40–42.",
"In the 2010–11 season, without Chris Bosh on the roster, Triano led the Raptors to a dismal 22–60 record.",
"On June 1, 2011, the Raptors announced they would not be picking up the option on Triano's contract, but gave him another position within the organization, the Vice-President of Pro Scouting.",
"On August 17, 2012, Triano was named as an assistant coach for the Portland Trail Blazers.",
"The following week, Triano was also named head coach of Canada's national team for the second time in his career.",
"On May 18, 2016, it was announced that Triano would take on the associate head coach role (lead assistant) for the Phoenix Suns.",
"He was reunited with head coach Earl Watson, who played for the Trail Blazers during his final season in the NBA, and was considered a major influence on transitioning to being a full-time coach.",
"The subsequent hiring of Turkish-born Mehmet Okur to the Suns' coaching staff as a player development coach on September 13 in the same year, marked the first time in franchise history that multiple non-American coaches served on the coaching staff in the same season.",
"On October 22, 2017, after a 0–3 start to the season, including one of the worst losses in Suns history and the worst loss to open up a regular season in league history, Triano was promoted to interim head coach of the Suns after the firing of Earl Watson.",
"In his first game as head coach since 2011, Triano guided the team, which had suffered 40+ point losses earlier in the year, to leads as much as 22 points before winning 117–115 on October 23, against the Sacramento Kings for their first win of the season.",
"On December 26, 2017, Triano became the first foreign born head coach in NBA history to win 100 games in the league with a 99–97 win over the Memphis Grizzlies.",
"However, the Suns would finish the season with a 21–58 record under his tenure, and he did not return as head coach after that season.",
"On May 24, 2018, the Charlotte Hornets announced that Triano would join their staff as lead assistant coach.",
"Head coaching record\n\n|- \n| align=\"left\"|Toronto\n| align=\"left\"|\n| 65||25||40|||| align=\"center\"|4th in Atlantic||—||—||—||—\n| align=\"center\"|Missed playoffs\n|-\n| align=\"left\"|Toronto\n| align=\"left\"|\n| 82||40||42|||| align=\"center\"|2nd in Atlantic||—||—||—||—\n| align=\"center\"|Missed playoffs\n|-\n| align=\"left\"|Toronto\n| align=\"left\"|\n| 82||22||60|||| align=\"center\"|5th in Atlantic||—||—||—||—\n| align=\"center\"|Missed playoffs\n|-\n| align=\"left\"|Phoenix\n| align=\"left\"|\n| 79||21||58|||| align=\"center\"|5th in Pacific||—||—||—||—\n| align=\"center\"|Missed playoffs\n|-class=\"sortbottom\"\n!",
"colspan=\"2\"|Career\n!"
] | [
"The lead assistant coach of the Charlotte Hornets of the National Basketball Association is a Canadian named Howard James \"Jay\" Triano.",
"He was the interim head coach of the Phoenix Suns and the head coach of the Toronto Raptors.",
"He was a member of the Canadian national team and competed in two Olympics.",
"Triano grew up in Tillsonburg, Ontario and attended A. N. Myer Secondary School in Ontario.",
"He is descended from a man who landed on Ellis Island and went to Welland, Ontario.",
"Jeff was drafted by the Toronto Maple Leafs in the 1982 NHL Entry Draft after playing for the Toronto Marlboros.",
"Brady Heslip, nephew and son of Jody Heslip, played basketball for the Canadian national team.",
"As a student at Simon Fraser University, Triano broke or equalled eleven school men's basketball records, including having the most career points with 2,616.",
"Terry Fox befriended him at Simon Fraser.",
"He was drafted by the Los Angeles Lakers in 1981 but never played in the NBA.",
"He was drafted by the Stamps in the sixth round of the 1981 draft.",
"Triano captained the team from 1981 to 1988 and played in the 1984 and 1988 Olympics.",
"He was the leader of the Canadian team that won the gold medal at the World University Games in 1983, defeating the United States in the semi-finals and Yugoslavia in the final.",
"He played three seasons of professional basketball, two in Mexico and one in Turkey.",
"After retiring as a player, Triano became the head coach at Simon Fraser.",
"He served as his mentor after trying to recruit Steve Nash.",
"He became the Director of Community Relations and the colour commentator for the team's radio broadcasts in 1995.",
"In 1998, Triano became the head coach of the Canadian men's national basketball team.",
"He led the team to a 5–2 record and a seventh-place finish in the 2000 Olympics, but they lost to France in the quarter-finals.",
"He became an assistant coach for the Toronto Raptors, becoming the second Canadian-born coach in the NBA.",
"He served under a number of people.",
"Triano was fired as national team head coach in 2004.",
"The United States national team named Triano an assistant coach.",
"On February 13, 2008, Triano served as head coach of the Toronto Raptors in place of Sam Mitchell who was absent from the team due to the death of his father-in-law.",
"Triano was named interim head coach of the Raptors after Mitchell was relieved of his duties.",
"He is the first Canadian head coach in NBA history.",
"The Raptors were guided by Triano.",
"Triano was given a three-year deal to remain as head coach of the Raptors.",
"In Triano's first full season as the Raptors head coach, Toronto missed the playoffs by one game, going 2–5 in their last 7 games.",
"The team had a final score of 40–42.",
"Without Chris Bosh on the roster, Triano led the Raptors to a poor 22–60 record.",
"The Raptors didn't pick up the option on Triano's contract, but gave him another position within the organization, the Vice-President of Pro Scouting.",
"On August 17, 2012 Triano was named as an assistant coach.",
"Triano was named head coach of Canada's national team for the second time in his career.",
"On May 18, 2016 it was announced that Triano would be the lead assistant for the Phoenix Suns.",
"A major influence on transitioning to being a full-time coach was the relationship he had with head coach Earl Watson, who played for the Trail Blazers during his final season in the NBA.",
"The hiring of Mehmet Okur to the Suns' coaching staff as a player development coach on September 13 in the same year marked the first time in franchise history that multiple non-American coaches served on the coaching staff in the same season.",
"After a 0–3 start to the season, including one of the worst losses in Suns history and the worst loss to open a regular season in league history, Triano was promoted to interim head coach of the Suns.",
"In his first game as head coach since 2011, Triano guided the team, which had suffered 40+ point losses earlier in the year, to leads as much as 22 points before winning 117–115 against the Sacramento Kings for their first win of the season.",
"On December 26, 2017, Triano became the first foreign born head coach in NBA history to win 100 games with a 99–97 win over Memphis.",
"He did not return as head coach after the Suns finished their season with a 21–58 record.",
"On May 24, the Charlotte Hornets announced that Triano would join their staff.",
"The head coaching record is as follows: Toronto, align left; 4th in Atlantic, align center; and missed playoffs, align left.",
"colspan is a career"
] | Howard James "<mask>" <mask> (born September 21, 1958) is a Canadian basketball coach and former professional player, who is currently the lead assistant coach of the Charlotte Hornets of the National Basketball Association (NBA). He previously served as the head coach of the NBA's Toronto Raptors and the interim head coach of the Phoenix Suns. A former Canadian national team player who competed in two Olympics, he has also had two stints as head coach of the national team. Early life and family
<mask> was born in Tillsonburg, Ontario and raised in Niagara Falls, Ontario, where he attended A. N. Myer Secondary School. He is of Italian descent through his great-grandfather, who landed on Ellis Island, then made his way to Welland, Ontario. His younger brother Jeff was a draft pick of the Toronto Maple Leafs in the 1982 NHL Entry Draft, after playing OHL hockey for the Toronto Marlboros. Brady Heslip, his nephew and son of his sister Jody, played basketball at Baylor University and played for the Canadian national team.Playing career
As a student at Simon Fraser University, the 6 ft 4 in, 194 lb <mask> broke or equalled eleven school men's basketball records, including having the most career points with 2,616. At Simon Fraser, he befriended Canadian athlete and activist Terry Fox. He was drafted in the eighth round of the 1981 NBA Draft by the Los Angeles Lakers, but was cut during training camp and never played in the NBA. The same year, he was also drafted by the Calgary Stampeders in the sixth round of the 1981 CFL Draft. <mask> was a national team player from 1977 to 1988, captained the team from 1981 to 1988, and played in the 1984 and 1988 Olympics. He led the Canadian team that won Gold at the 1983 World University Games in Edmonton, Alberta, defeating the United States in the semi-finals, which was led by Karl Malone and Charles Barkley, and Yugoslavia in the final, led by Dražen Petrović. He played three seasons of professional basketball, two in Mexico and one (1985–86 season for Fenerbahçe Istanbul) in Turkey.Coaching career
After retiring as a player in 1988, <mask> became head coach at his alma mater, Simon Fraser. He attempted to recruit high school star Steve Nash and later served as his mentor. In 1995, when the nearby Vancouver Grizzlies debuted, he became team Director of Community Relations and worked as the colour commentator for their radio broadcasts. In 1998, <mask> became the head coach of the Canadian men's national basketball team. He coached the Nash-led team to a 5–2 record and a seventh-place finish in the 2000 Sydney Olympics, losing to France by five points in the quarter-finals. Two years later, he became an assistant coach for the Toronto Raptors, becoming the second Canadian-born coach in the NBA. He served under Lenny Wilkens, Kevin O'Neill, and Sam Mitchell.In 2004, <mask> was fired as national team head coach, and replaced by Leo Rautins the following year. In 2008, <mask> was named an assistant coach for United States national team. On February 13, 2008, <mask> served as head coach of the Toronto Raptors in their 109–91 victory over the New Jersey Nets, in place of head coach Sam Mitchell, who was absent from the team as a result of the death of his father-in-law, making history as the first Canadian to serve as head coach for a regular-season NBA game. On December 3, 2008, <mask> was named interim head coach of the Raptors after Mitchell was relieved of his coaching duties. He became the first Canadian-born head coach in NBA history and first Canadian head coach in NBA history. <mask> guided the Raptors to a 25–40 mark. On May 12, 2009, <mask> was given a three-year deal to remain head coach of the Raptors.In <mask>'s first full season as the Raptors head coach in the 2009–10 season, Toronto missed the playoffs by one game to the Chicago Bulls, going 2–5 in their last 7 games. The team finished 40–42. In the 2010–11 season, without Chris Bosh on the roster, <mask> led the Raptors to a dismal 22–60 record. On June 1, 2011, the Raptors announced they would not be picking up the option on <mask>'s contract, but gave him another position within the organization, the Vice-President of Pro Scouting. On August 17, 2012, <mask> was named as an assistant coach for the Portland Trail Blazers. The following week, <mask> was also named head coach of Canada's national team for the second time in his career. On May 18, 2016, it was announced that <mask> would take on the associate head coach role (lead assistant) for the Phoenix Suns.He was reunited with head coach Earl Watson, who played for the Trail Blazers during his final season in the NBA, and was considered a major influence on transitioning to being a full-time coach. The subsequent hiring of Turkish-born Mehmet Okur to the Suns' coaching staff as a player development coach on September 13 in the same year, marked the first time in franchise history that multiple non-American coaches served on the coaching staff in the same season. On October 22, 2017, after a 0–3 start to the season, including one of the worst losses in Suns history and the worst loss to open up a regular season in league history, <mask> was promoted to interim head coach of the Suns after the firing of Earl Watson. In his first game as head coach since 2011, <mask> guided the team, which had suffered 40+ point losses earlier in the year, to leads as much as 22 points before winning 117–115 on October 23, against the Sacramento Kings for their first win of the season. On December 26, 2017, <mask> became the first foreign born head coach in NBA history to win 100 games in the league with a 99–97 win over the Memphis Grizzlies. However, the Suns would finish the season with a 21–58 record under his tenure, and he did not return as head coach after that season. On May 24, 2018, the Charlotte Hornets announced that <mask> would join their staff as lead assistant coach.Head coaching record
|-
| align="left"|Toronto
| align="left"|
| 65||25||40|||| align="center"|4th in Atlantic||—||—||—||—
| align="center"|Missed playoffs
|-
| align="left"|Toronto
| align="left"|
| 82||40||42|||| align="center"|2nd in Atlantic||—||—||—||—
| align="center"|Missed playoffs
|-
| align="left"|Toronto
| align="left"|
| 82||22||60|||| align="center"|5th in Atlantic||—||—||—||—
| align="center"|Missed playoffs
|-
| align="left"|Phoenix
| align="left"|
| 79||21||58|||| align="center"|5th in Pacific||—||—||—||—
| align="center"|Missed playoffs
|-class="sortbottom"
! colspan="2"|Career
! | [
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"Triano",
"Triano",
"Triano",
"Triano",
"Triano",
"Triano",
"Triano",
"Triano",
"Triano",
"Triano",
"Triano",
"Triano",
"Triano",
"Triano",
"Triano",
"Triano",
"Triano",
"Triano",
"Triano",
"Triano",
"Triano"
] | The lead assistant coach of the Charlotte Hornets of the National Basketball Association is a Canadian named Howard James "<mask>" <mask>. He was the interim head coach of the Phoenix Suns and the head coach of the Toronto Raptors. He was a member of the Canadian national team and competed in two Olympics. <mask> grew up in Tillsonburg, Ontario and attended A. N. Myer Secondary School in Ontario. He is descended from a man who landed on Ellis Island and went to Welland, Ontario. Jeff was drafted by the Toronto Maple Leafs in the 1982 NHL Entry Draft after playing for the Toronto Marlboros. Brady Heslip, nephew and son of Jody Heslip, played basketball for the Canadian national team.As a student at Simon Fraser University, <mask> broke or equalled eleven school men's basketball records, including having the most career points with 2,616. Terry Fox befriended him at Simon Fraser. He was drafted by the Los Angeles Lakers in 1981 but never played in the NBA. He was drafted by the Stamps in the sixth round of the 1981 draft. <mask> captained the team from 1981 to 1988 and played in the 1984 and 1988 Olympics. He was the leader of the Canadian team that won the gold medal at the World University Games in 1983, defeating the United States in the semi-finals and Yugoslavia in the final. He played three seasons of professional basketball, two in Mexico and one in Turkey.After retiring as a player, <mask> became the head coach at Simon Fraser. He served as his mentor after trying to recruit Steve Nash. He became the Director of Community Relations and the colour commentator for the team's radio broadcasts in 1995. In 1998, <mask> became the head coach of the Canadian men's national basketball team. He led the team to a 5–2 record and a seventh-place finish in the 2000 Olympics, but they lost to France in the quarter-finals. He became an assistant coach for the Toronto Raptors, becoming the second Canadian-born coach in the NBA. He served under a number of people.<mask> was fired as national team head coach in 2004. The United States national team named <mask> an assistant coach. On February 13, 2008, <mask> served as head coach of the Toronto Raptors in place of Sam Mitchell who was absent from the team due to the death of his father-in-law. <mask> was named interim head coach of the Raptors after Mitchell was relieved of his duties. He is the first Canadian head coach in NBA history. The Raptors were guided by <mask>. <mask> was given a three-year deal to remain as head coach of the Raptors.In <mask>'s first full season as the Raptors head coach, Toronto missed the playoffs by one game, going 2–5 in their last 7 games. The team had a final score of 40–42. Without Chris Bosh on the roster, <mask> led the Raptors to a poor 22–60 record. The Raptors didn't pick up the option on <mask>'s contract, but gave him another position within the organization, the Vice-President of Pro Scouting. On August 17, 2012 <mask> was named as an assistant coach. <mask> was named head coach of Canada's national team for the second time in his career. On May 18, 2016 it was announced that <mask> would be the lead assistant for the Phoenix Suns.A major influence on transitioning to being a full-time coach was the relationship he had with head coach Earl Watson, who played for the Trail Blazers during his final season in the NBA. The hiring of Mehmet Okur to the Suns' coaching staff as a player development coach on September 13 in the same year marked the first time in franchise history that multiple non-American coaches served on the coaching staff in the same season. After a 0–3 start to the season, including one of the worst losses in Suns history and the worst loss to open a regular season in league history, <mask> was promoted to interim head coach of the Suns. In his first game as head coach since 2011, <mask> guided the team, which had suffered 40+ point losses earlier in the year, to leads as much as 22 points before winning 117–115 against the Sacramento Kings for their first win of the season. On December 26, 2017, <mask> became the first foreign born head coach in NBA history to win 100 games with a 99–97 win over Memphis. He did not return as head coach after the Suns finished their season with a 21–58 record. On May 24, the Charlotte Hornets announced that <mask> would join their staff.The head coaching record is as follows: Toronto, align left; 4th in Atlantic, align center; and missed playoffs, align left. colspan is a career | [
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"Triano",
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] |
51007944 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doris%20Meissner | Doris Meissner | Doris Marie Meissner (born November 3, 1941) is a former Commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), the agency previously responsible for immigration enforcement in the United States. She headed the INS from October 18, 1993 (nominated June 1993) to November 18, 2000, under United States President Bill Clinton and United States Attorney General Janet Reno. She is currently Senior Fellow and Director of the U.S. Immigration Policy Program at the Migration Policy Institute and has previously worked at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
Early life and education
Meissner was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on November 3, 1941 to Hertha and Fred Borst, emigrants to the United States from Germany, who had arrived in the country via the Ellis Island inspection station in the 1920s. Meissner has cited her personal experience as a second-generation immigrant in a family speaking a foreign language as critical to helping her better empathize with the migrant perspective as she took on key roles in managing the United States immigration enforcement apparatus. Recalling an incident where her father, who had arrived in 1927, lost his naturalization papers in a fire, and was anxious if he could get a copy, she said: "When your parents are immigrants, you grow up understanding immigration in a way that you never could from a textbook: how precious and difficult it is."
She earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1963 and a Master of Arts degrees in 1969 (the latter in political science) from the University of Wisconsin–Madison.
While still a student, she managed the political campaign of Democratic politician Midge Miller, an opponent of the Vietnam War. The campaign was successful, with Miller defeating her opponent, a 20-year incumbent, in the Wisconsin state legislature, and assuming office in 1971.
Professional life
Before 1973
Meissner began her career as Assistant Director of Student Financial Aid at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.
With assistance from Midge Miller, whose campaign she had managed, Meissner became a founding member of the National Women's Political Caucus and its executive director in 1971. During the 1972 Democratic National Convention and Republican National Convention, she and groups of volunteers worked to change party rules to mandate larger rules for women in both parties.
1973 to 1993
In 1973, Meissner joined the U.S. Department of Justice as a White House Fellow and Special Assistant to the Attorney General. She served in a number of policy posts:
1975: Became Assistant Director of the Office of Policy and Planning
1976: Became Executive Director of the Cabinet Committee on Illegal Aliens
1977: Became Deputy Associate Attorney General (a post she held until 1980)
In 1981, under the Presidency of Ronald Reagan, she became Acting Commissioner of the INS and then Executive Associate Commissioner, then the third-ranking post.
In 1986, Meissner moved to the private sector as Senior Associate and Director of the Immigration Policy Project at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, D.C.
Tenure as INS Commissioner (1993 to 2000)
In June 1993, Meissner was nominated by then United States President Bill Clinton and worked as INS Commissioner under then United States Attorney General Janet Reno. The nomination came at a time when there was a growing demand for stronger but humane immigration and border enforcement. It occurred shortly after the accident where the Golden Venture, a cargo ship smuggling 286 undocumented immigrants from China ran aground on the beach in New York.
According to The New York Times, Meissner's appointment was viewed favorably because of her knowledge of the domain acquired through years of experience under both Democratic and Republican administrations, as well as the non-political nature of the appointment. A later New York Times article reviewing her first few years in office described her mandate as "keeping open America's front door while slamming shut the back."
Meissner's tenure at the INS was a critical time for the agency. Border enforcement was significantly ramped up under her watch, starting with preliminary measures like Operation Gatekeeper and Operation Hold the Line. She oversaw the agency's workforce double to 32,000 employees, and its annual budget triple to $4.3 billion. She also worked on cutting down the wait time for naturalization applications from two years to nine months, and reduced the backlog from 2 million to 800,000.
Many immigration advocacy groups and administration personnel praised Meissner's work. Frank Sharry of the National Immigration Forum said that she "performed admirably and impressively in an impossible job." Her boss, Janet Reno, the Attorney General at the time, called her "everyone's idea of the perfect public servant."
The INS, and Meissner personally, came under criticism for not doing enough to control the borders, at a time when cross-border movement was higher than in any previous period. The criticism came from Texas Representative Lamar Smith, chairman of the United States House Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration and Border Security. Others who made withering criticisms of Meissner's record included T. J. Bonner, president of the National Border Patrol Council, and Dan Stein, executive director of Federation for American Immigration Reform. Specific issues that created controversy included plans to release 1500 nonviolent criminals to reduce crowding in detention centers as well as a naturalization drive that mistakenly allowed hundreds of criminals to become citizens due to flawed background checks. A U.S. Department of Justice report lambasted the INS for a malfunctioning fingerprinting process and a computer system so antiquated that officials couldn't determine exactly how many applicants they had. Other one-off issues, such as the return of Elián González to Cuba and INS' efforts to deport Hany Kiareldeen based on secret evidence (that were ultimately withdrawn), also put the INS and Meissner in the limelight.
Return to the Carnegie Endowment and subsequent work at the Migration Policy Institute
After finishing her tenure at the INS, Meissner' returned to work at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, on the Immigration Policy Project. In July 2001, Kathleen Newland and Demetrios G. Papademetriou created the Migration Policy Institute from the International Migration Policy Program at the Carnegie Endowment, and Meissner's Immigration Policy Project subsequently moved to MPI. Meissner currently holds the title of Senior Fellow and Director of the U.S. Immigration Policy Program.
Other affiliations and honors
Meissner is currently serving or has previously served on a number of distinguished boards and panels. These include the National Academy of Public Administration (Senior Fellow, 2003 to present) and the Administrative Conference of the United States. She is also a member of Washington D.C. based think tank the Inter-American Dialogue.
Among the honors she has received are the White House Fellowship mentioned above, a Department of Justice Special Commendation Award, and listings in Who's Who in America and Outstanding Young Women of America.
Personal life
Meissner was married to Charles F. Meissner, who worked as an economist at the World Bank and later served as assistant commerce secretary under the administration of Bill Clinton. The two had met while undergraduates at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Charles died in a plane crash in Croatia, along with Commerce Secretary Ronald H. Brown and 31 others. The couple has two grown children.
See also
Kathleen Newland, co-founder of the Migration Policy Institute
United States Secretary of Homeland Security, the position that would (approximately) replace that of INS Commissioner, after the restructuring of the INS as sub-agencies of the newly created U.S. Department of Homeland Security. The first few Secretaries of Homeland Security were Tom Ridge, Michael Chertoff, Janet Napolitano, and Jeh Johnson
USCIS Commissioner, another position that could be considered a successor to the position of INS Commissioner. The first few USCIS Commissioners were Eduardo Aguirre, Emilio T. Gonzalez, Alejandro Mayorkas, and León Rodríguez.
References
External links
1941 births
Living people
Politicians from Milwaukee
Women in Wisconsin politics
Wisconsin Democrats
University of Wisconsin–Madison College of Letters and Science alumni
University of Wisconsin–Madison staff
United States Department of Justice officials
21st-century American women
Members of the Inter-American Dialogue | [
"Doris Marie Meissner (born November 3, 1941) is a former Commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), the agency previously responsible for immigration enforcement in the United States.",
"She headed the INS from October 18, 1993 (nominated June 1993) to November 18, 2000, under United States President Bill Clinton and United States Attorney General Janet Reno.",
"She is currently Senior Fellow and Director of the U.S. Immigration Policy Program at the Migration Policy Institute and has previously worked at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.",
"Early life and education \nMeissner was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on November 3, 1941 to Hertha and Fred Borst, emigrants to the United States from Germany, who had arrived in the country via the Ellis Island inspection station in the 1920s.",
"Meissner has cited her personal experience as a second-generation immigrant in a family speaking a foreign language as critical to helping her better empathize with the migrant perspective as she took on key roles in managing the United States immigration enforcement apparatus.",
"Recalling an incident where her father, who had arrived in 1927, lost his naturalization papers in a fire, and was anxious if he could get a copy, she said: \"When your parents are immigrants, you grow up understanding immigration in a way that you never could from a textbook: how precious and difficult it is.\"",
"She earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1963 and a Master of Arts degrees in 1969 (the latter in political science) from the University of Wisconsin–Madison.",
"While still a student, she managed the political campaign of Democratic politician Midge Miller, an opponent of the Vietnam War.",
"The campaign was successful, with Miller defeating her opponent, a 20-year incumbent, in the Wisconsin state legislature, and assuming office in 1971.",
"Professional life\n\nBefore 1973 \nMeissner began her career as Assistant Director of Student Financial Aid at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.",
"With assistance from Midge Miller, whose campaign she had managed, Meissner became a founding member of the National Women's Political Caucus and its executive director in 1971.",
"During the 1972 Democratic National Convention and Republican National Convention, she and groups of volunteers worked to change party rules to mandate larger rules for women in both parties.",
"1973 to 1993 \nIn 1973, Meissner joined the U.S. Department of Justice as a White House Fellow and Special Assistant to the Attorney General.",
"She served in a number of policy posts:\n\n 1975: Became Assistant Director of the Office of Policy and Planning\n 1976: Became Executive Director of the Cabinet Committee on Illegal Aliens\n 1977: Became Deputy Associate Attorney General (a post she held until 1980)\n\nIn 1981, under the Presidency of Ronald Reagan, she became Acting Commissioner of the INS and then Executive Associate Commissioner, then the third-ranking post.",
"In 1986, Meissner moved to the private sector as Senior Associate and Director of the Immigration Policy Project at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, D.C.",
"Tenure as INS Commissioner (1993 to 2000) \nIn June 1993, Meissner was nominated by then United States President Bill Clinton and worked as INS Commissioner under then United States Attorney General Janet Reno.",
"The nomination came at a time when there was a growing demand for stronger but humane immigration and border enforcement.",
"It occurred shortly after the accident where the Golden Venture, a cargo ship smuggling 286 undocumented immigrants from China ran aground on the beach in New York.",
"According to The New York Times, Meissner's appointment was viewed favorably because of her knowledge of the domain acquired through years of experience under both Democratic and Republican administrations, as well as the non-political nature of the appointment.",
"A later New York Times article reviewing her first few years in office described her mandate as \"keeping open America's front door while slamming shut the back.\"",
"Meissner's tenure at the INS was a critical time for the agency.",
"Border enforcement was significantly ramped up under her watch, starting with preliminary measures like Operation Gatekeeper and Operation Hold the Line.",
"She oversaw the agency's workforce double to 32,000 employees, and its annual budget triple to $4.3 billion.",
"She also worked on cutting down the wait time for naturalization applications from two years to nine months, and reduced the backlog from 2 million to 800,000.",
"Many immigration advocacy groups and administration personnel praised Meissner's work.",
"Frank Sharry of the National Immigration Forum said that she \"performed admirably and impressively in an impossible job.\"",
"Her boss, Janet Reno, the Attorney General at the time, called her \"everyone's idea of the perfect public servant.\"",
"The INS, and Meissner personally, came under criticism for not doing enough to control the borders, at a time when cross-border movement was higher than in any previous period.",
"The criticism came from Texas Representative Lamar Smith, chairman of the United States House Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration and Border Security.",
"Others who made withering criticisms of Meissner's record included T. J. Bonner, president of the National Border Patrol Council, and Dan Stein, executive director of Federation for American Immigration Reform.",
"Specific issues that created controversy included plans to release 1500 nonviolent criminals to reduce crowding in detention centers as well as a naturalization drive that mistakenly allowed hundreds of criminals to become citizens due to flawed background checks.",
"A U.S. Department of Justice report lambasted the INS for a malfunctioning fingerprinting process and a computer system so antiquated that officials couldn't determine exactly how many applicants they had.",
"Other one-off issues, such as the return of Elián González to Cuba and INS' efforts to deport Hany Kiareldeen based on secret evidence (that were ultimately withdrawn), also put the INS and Meissner in the limelight.",
"Return to the Carnegie Endowment and subsequent work at the Migration Policy Institute \nAfter finishing her tenure at the INS, Meissner' returned to work at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, on the Immigration Policy Project.",
"In July 2001, Kathleen Newland and Demetrios G. Papademetriou created the Migration Policy Institute from the International Migration Policy Program at the Carnegie Endowment, and Meissner's Immigration Policy Project subsequently moved to MPI.",
"Meissner currently holds the title of Senior Fellow and Director of the U.S. Immigration Policy Program.",
"Other affiliations and honors \nMeissner is currently serving or has previously served on a number of distinguished boards and panels.",
"These include the National Academy of Public Administration (Senior Fellow, 2003 to present) and the Administrative Conference of the United States.",
"She is also a member of Washington D.C. based think tank the Inter-American Dialogue.",
"Among the honors she has received are the White House Fellowship mentioned above, a Department of Justice Special Commendation Award, and listings in Who's Who in America and Outstanding Young Women of America.",
"Personal life\nMeissner was married to Charles F. Meissner, who worked as an economist at the World Bank and later served as assistant commerce secretary under the administration of Bill Clinton.",
"The two had met while undergraduates at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.",
"Charles died in a plane crash in Croatia, along with Commerce Secretary Ronald H. Brown and 31 others.",
"The couple has two grown children.",
"See also \n Kathleen Newland, co-founder of the Migration Policy Institute\n United States Secretary of Homeland Security, the position that would (approximately) replace that of INS Commissioner, after the restructuring of the INS as sub-agencies of the newly created U.S. Department of Homeland Security.",
"The first few Secretaries of Homeland Security were Tom Ridge, Michael Chertoff, Janet Napolitano, and Jeh Johnson\n USCIS Commissioner, another position that could be considered a successor to the position of INS Commissioner.",
"The first few USCIS Commissioners were Eduardo Aguirre, Emilio T. Gonzalez, Alejandro Mayorkas, and León Rodríguez.",
"References\n\nExternal links\n\n1941 births\nLiving people\nPoliticians from Milwaukee\nWomen in Wisconsin politics\nWisconsin Democrats\nUniversity of Wisconsin–Madison College of Letters and Science alumni\nUniversity of Wisconsin–Madison staff\nUnited States Department of Justice officials\n21st-century American women\nMembers of the Inter-American Dialogue"
] | [
"The Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) was once responsible for immigration enforcement in the United States.",
"Under Bill Clinton and Janet Reno, she headed the INS from October 18, 1993 to November 18, 2000.",
"She is the Director of the U.S. Immigration Policy Program at the Migration Policy Institute.",
"Meissner was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on November 3, 1941 to Hertha and Fred Borst, who had arrived in the country via the Ellis Island inspection station in the 1920s.",
"As she took on key roles in managing the United States immigration enforcement apparatus, she cited her personal experience as a second-generation immigrant in a family speaking a foreign language as critical to helping her better empathise with the migrant perspective.",
"She said that when her father arrived in 1927, he lost his naturalization papers in a fire, and was anxious if he could get a copy.",
"She received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1963, and a Master of Arts degree in 1969 from the University of Wisconsin–Madison.",
"She was a student when she managed the political campaign of Midge Miller, an opponent of the Vietnam War.",
"Miller assumed office in 1971 after defeating her opponent in the Wisconsin state legislature.",
"At the University of Wisconsin–Madison, she was the assistant director of student financial aid.",
"In 1971 she became a founding member of the National Women's Political Caucus with the help of Midge Miller.",
"During the 1972 Democratic National Convention and Republican National Convention, she and groups of volunteers worked to change party rules to mandate larger rules for women in both parties.",
"In 1973, Meissner joined the U.S. Department of Justice as a White House Fellow and Special Assistant to the Attorney General.",
"She was an assistant director of the Office of Policy and Planning and an executive director of the Cabinet Committee on Illegal Aliens.",
"The Senior Associate and Director of the Immigration Policy Project at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace moved to the private sector in 1986.",
"The INS Commissioner from 1993 to 2000 was nominated by Bill Clinton and worked under Janet Reno.",
"There was a growing demand for more humane immigration and border enforcement when the nomination came.",
"After the Golden Venture ran aground on the beach in New York, there was an accident.",
"According to The New York Times, the appointment of Meissner was viewed favorably because of her knowledge of the domain acquired through years of experience under both Democratic and Republican administrations.",
"In her first few years in office, she was described as keeping open America's front door while slamming shut the back.",
"It was a critical time for the INS.",
"Her watch started with measures like Operation Gatekeeper and Hold the Line.",
"She oversaw the doubling of the agency's workforce to over 30,000 employees.",
"She was able to reduce the wait time for naturalization applications from two years to nine months.",
"Several immigration advocacy groups and administration personnel praised the work of Meissner.",
"Frank Sharry of the National Immigration Forum said that she did a great job.",
"Janet Reno, the Attorney General at the time, called her \"everyone's idea of the perfect public servant.\"",
"At a time when cross-border movement was higher than in any previous period, the INS was criticized for not doing enough to control the borders.",
"Lamar Smith is the chairman of the United States House Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration and Border Security.",
"Dan Stein, executive director of Federation for American Immigration Reform, and T. J. Bonner, president of the National Border Patrol Council, made withering criticisms of Meissner's record.",
"Plans to release 1500 non-violent criminals to reduce crowding in detention centers as well as a naturalization drive that mistakenly allowed hundreds of criminals to become citizens caused controversy.",
"A Department of Justice report lambasted the INS for a malfunctioning fingerprinting process and a computer system so antiquated that officials couldn't determine exactly how many applicants they had.",
"Other one-off issues, such as the return of Elin Gonzlez to Cuba and INS' efforts to deport Hany Kiareldeen based on secret evidence, put the INS and Meissner in the spotlight.",
"After leaving the INS, she returned to work at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace on the Immigration Policy Project.",
"The Immigration Policy Project moved to the Migration Policy Institute after Kathleen Newland and Demetrios G. Papademetriou created it.",
"He is the Director of the U.S. Immigration Policy Program.",
"There are a number of distinguished boards and panels that Meissner has previously served on.",
"The National Academy of Public Administration and the Administrative Conference of the United States are included.",
"She is a member of the Inter-American Dialogue.",
"She received a White House fellowship, a Department of Justice Special Commendation Award, and listings in Who's Who in America and Outstanding Young Women of America.",
"Charles F. Meissner was an economist at the World Bank and later served as assistant commerce secretary under Bill Clinton.",
"The two met at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.",
"Ronald H. Brown, along with Charles, died in a plane crash.",
"There are two children with the couple.",
"After the restructuring of the INS as sub-agencies of the newly created U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Kathleen Newland would become the United States Secretary of Homeland Security.",
"A successor to the position of INS Commissioner could be found in the first few Secretaries of Homeland Security.",
"The first few Commissioners were Eduardo Aguirre, Alejandro Mayorkas, and Len Rodrguez.",
"References External links 1941 births Living people Politicians from Milwaukee Women in Wisconsin politics Wisconsin Democrats University of Wisconsin–Madison College of Letters and Science alumni United States Department of Justice officials 21st-century American women"
] | <mask> (born November 3, 1941) is a former Commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), the agency previously responsible for immigration enforcement in the United States. She headed the INS from October 18, 1993 (nominated June 1993) to November 18, 2000, under United States President Bill Clinton and United States Attorney General Janet Reno. She is currently Senior Fellow and Director of the U.S. Immigration Policy Program at the Migration Policy Institute and has previously worked at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Early life and education
<mask> was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on November 3, 1941 to Hertha and Fred Borst, emigrants to the United States from Germany, who had arrived in the country via the Ellis Island inspection station in the 1920s. Meissner has cited her personal experience as a second-generation immigrant in a family speaking a foreign language as critical to helping her better empathize with the migrant perspective as she took on key roles in managing the United States immigration enforcement apparatus. Recalling an incident where her father, who had arrived in 1927, lost his naturalization papers in a fire, and was anxious if he could get a copy, she said: "When your parents are immigrants, you grow up understanding immigration in a way that you never could from a textbook: how precious and difficult it is." She earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1963 and a Master of Arts degrees in 1969 (the latter in political science) from the University of Wisconsin–Madison.While still a student, she managed the political campaign of Democratic politician Midge Miller, an opponent of the Vietnam War. The campaign was successful, with Miller defeating her opponent, a 20-year incumbent, in the Wisconsin state legislature, and assuming office in 1971. Professional life
Before 1973
Meissner began her career as Assistant Director of Student Financial Aid at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. With assistance from Midge Miller, whose campaign she had managed, Meissner became a founding member of the National Women's Political Caucus and its executive director in 1971. During the 1972 Democratic National Convention and Republican National Convention, she and groups of volunteers worked to change party rules to mandate larger rules for women in both parties. 1973 to 1993
In 1973, Meissner joined the U.S. Department of Justice as a White House Fellow and Special Assistant to the Attorney General. She served in a number of policy posts:
1975: Became Assistant Director of the Office of Policy and Planning
1976: Became Executive Director of the Cabinet Committee on Illegal Aliens
1977: Became Deputy Associate Attorney General (a post she held until 1980)
In 1981, under the Presidency of Ronald Reagan, she became Acting Commissioner of the INS and then Executive Associate Commissioner, then the third-ranking post.In 1986, Meissner moved to the private sector as Senior Associate and Director of the Immigration Policy Project at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, D.C. Tenure as INS Commissioner (1993 to 2000)
In June 1993, Meissner was nominated by then United States President Bill Clinton and worked as INS Commissioner under then United States Attorney General Janet Reno. The nomination came at a time when there was a growing demand for stronger but humane immigration and border enforcement. It occurred shortly after the accident where the Golden Venture, a cargo ship smuggling 286 undocumented immigrants from China ran aground on the beach in New York. According to The New York Times, Meissner's appointment was viewed favorably because of her knowledge of the domain acquired through years of experience under both Democratic and Republican administrations, as well as the non-political nature of the appointment. A later New York Times article reviewing her first few years in office described her mandate as "keeping open America's front door while slamming shut the back." Meissner's tenure at the INS was a critical time for the agency.Border enforcement was significantly ramped up under her watch, starting with preliminary measures like Operation Gatekeeper and Operation Hold the Line. She oversaw the agency's workforce double to 32,000 employees, and its annual budget triple to $4.3 billion. She also worked on cutting down the wait time for naturalization applications from two years to nine months, and reduced the backlog from 2 million to 800,000. Many immigration advocacy groups and administration personnel praised Meissner's work. Frank Sharry of the National Immigration Forum said that she "performed admirably and impressively in an impossible job." Her boss, Janet Reno, the Attorney General at the time, called her "everyone's idea of the perfect public servant." The INS, and Meissner personally, came under criticism for not doing enough to control the borders, at a time when cross-border movement was higher than in any previous period.The criticism came from Texas Representative Lamar Smith, chairman of the United States House Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration and Border Security. Others who made withering criticisms of Meissner's record included T. J. Bonner, president of the National Border Patrol Council, and Dan Stein, executive director of Federation for American Immigration Reform. Specific issues that created controversy included plans to release 1500 nonviolent criminals to reduce crowding in detention centers as well as a naturalization drive that mistakenly allowed hundreds of criminals to become citizens due to flawed background checks. A U.S. Department of Justice report lambasted the INS for a malfunctioning fingerprinting process and a computer system so antiquated that officials couldn't determine exactly how many applicants they had. Other one-off issues, such as the return of Elián González to Cuba and INS' efforts to deport Hany Kiareldeen based on secret evidence (that were ultimately withdrawn), also put the INS and Meissner in the limelight. Return to the Carnegie Endowment and subsequent work at the Migration Policy Institute
After finishing her tenure at the INS, Meissner' returned to work at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, on the Immigration Policy Project. In July 2001, Kathleen Newland and Demetrios G. Papademetriou created the Migration Policy Institute from the International Migration Policy Program at the Carnegie Endowment, and Meissner's Immigration Policy Project subsequently moved to MPI.Meissner currently holds the title of Senior Fellow and Director of the U.S. Immigration Policy Program. Other affiliations and honors
Meissner is currently serving or has previously served on a number of distinguished boards and panels. These include the National Academy of Public Administration (Senior Fellow, 2003 to present) and the Administrative Conference of the United States. She is also a member of Washington D.C. based think tank the Inter-American Dialogue. Among the honors she has received are the White House Fellowship mentioned above, a Department of Justice Special Commendation Award, and listings in Who's Who in America and Outstanding Young Women of America. Personal life
<mask> was married to Charles F<mask>, who worked as an economist at the World Bank and later served as assistant commerce secretary under the administration of Bill Clinton. The two had met while undergraduates at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.Charles died in a plane crash in Croatia, along with Commerce Secretary Ronald H. Brown and 31 others. The couple has two grown children. See also
Kathleen Newland, co-founder of the Migration Policy Institute
United States Secretary of Homeland Security, the position that would (approximately) replace that of INS Commissioner, after the restructuring of the INS as sub-agencies of the newly created U.S. Department of Homeland Security. The first few Secretaries of Homeland Security were Tom Ridge, Michael Chertoff, Janet Napolitano, and Jeh Johnson
USCIS Commissioner, another position that could be considered a successor to the position of INS Commissioner. The first few USCIS Commissioners were Eduardo Aguirre, Emilio T. Gonzalez, Alejandro Mayorkas, and León Rodríguez. References
External links
1941 births
Living people
Politicians from Milwaukee
Women in Wisconsin politics
Wisconsin Democrats
University of Wisconsin–Madison College of Letters and Science alumni
University of Wisconsin–Madison staff
United States Department of Justice officials
21st-century American women
Members of the Inter-American Dialogue | [
"Doris Marie Meissner",
"Meissner",
"Meissner",
". Meissner"
] | The Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) was once responsible for immigration enforcement in the United States. Under Bill Clinton and Janet Reno, she headed the INS from October 18, 1993 to November 18, 2000. She is the Director of the U.S. Immigration Policy Program at the Migration Policy Institute. Meissner was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on November 3, 1941 to Hertha and Fred Borst, who had arrived in the country via the Ellis Island inspection station in the 1920s. As she took on key roles in managing the United States immigration enforcement apparatus, she cited her personal experience as a second-generation immigrant in a family speaking a foreign language as critical to helping her better empathise with the migrant perspective. She said that when her father arrived in 1927, he lost his naturalization papers in a fire, and was anxious if he could get a copy. She received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1963, and a Master of Arts degree in 1969 from the University of Wisconsin–Madison.She was a student when she managed the political campaign of Midge Miller, an opponent of the Vietnam War. Miller assumed office in 1971 after defeating her opponent in the Wisconsin state legislature. At the University of Wisconsin–Madison, she was the assistant director of student financial aid. In 1971 she became a founding member of the National Women's Political Caucus with the help of Midge Miller. During the 1972 Democratic National Convention and Republican National Convention, she and groups of volunteers worked to change party rules to mandate larger rules for women in both parties. In 1973, Meissner joined the U.S. Department of Justice as a White House Fellow and Special Assistant to the Attorney General. She was an assistant director of the Office of Policy and Planning and an executive director of the Cabinet Committee on Illegal Aliens.The Senior Associate and Director of the Immigration Policy Project at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace moved to the private sector in 1986. The INS Commissioner from 1993 to 2000 was nominated by Bill Clinton and worked under Janet Reno. There was a growing demand for more humane immigration and border enforcement when the nomination came. After the Golden Venture ran aground on the beach in New York, there was an accident. According to The New York Times, the appointment of Meissner was viewed favorably because of her knowledge of the domain acquired through years of experience under both Democratic and Republican administrations. In her first few years in office, she was described as keeping open America's front door while slamming shut the back. It was a critical time for the INS.Her watch started with measures like Operation Gatekeeper and Hold the Line. She oversaw the doubling of the agency's workforce to over 30,000 employees. She was able to reduce the wait time for naturalization applications from two years to nine months. Several immigration advocacy groups and administration personnel praised the work of Meissner. Frank Sharry of the National Immigration Forum said that she did a great job. Janet Reno, the Attorney General at the time, called her "everyone's idea of the perfect public servant." At a time when cross-border movement was higher than in any previous period, the INS was criticized for not doing enough to control the borders.Lamar Smith is the chairman of the United States House Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration and Border Security. Dan Stein, executive director of Federation for American Immigration Reform, and T. J. Bonner, president of the National Border Patrol Council, made withering criticisms of Meissner's record. Plans to release 1500 non-violent criminals to reduce crowding in detention centers as well as a naturalization drive that mistakenly allowed hundreds of criminals to become citizens caused controversy. A Department of Justice report lambasted the INS for a malfunctioning fingerprinting process and a computer system so antiquated that officials couldn't determine exactly how many applicants they had. Other one-off issues, such as the return of Elin Gonzlez to Cuba and INS' efforts to deport Hany Kiareldeen based on secret evidence, put the INS and Meissner in the spotlight. After leaving the INS, she returned to work at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace on the Immigration Policy Project. The Immigration Policy Project moved to the Migration Policy Institute after Kathleen Newland and Demetrios G. Papademetriou created it.He is the Director of the U.S. Immigration Policy Program. There are a number of distinguished boards and panels that Meissner has previously served on. The National Academy of Public Administration and the Administrative Conference of the United States are included. She is a member of the Inter-American Dialogue. She received a White House fellowship, a Department of Justice Special Commendation Award, and listings in Who's Who in America and Outstanding Young Women of America. Charles F<mask> was an economist at the World Bank and later served as assistant commerce secretary under Bill Clinton. The two met at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.Ronald H. Brown, along with Charles, died in a plane crash. There are two children with the couple. After the restructuring of the INS as sub-agencies of the newly created U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Kathleen Newland would become the United States Secretary of Homeland Security. A successor to the position of INS Commissioner could be found in the first few Secretaries of Homeland Security. The first few Commissioners were Eduardo Aguirre, Alejandro Mayorkas, and Len Rodrguez. References External links 1941 births Living people Politicians from Milwaukee Women in Wisconsin politics Wisconsin Democrats University of Wisconsin–Madison College of Letters and Science alumni United States Department of Justice officials 21st-century American women | [
". Meissner"
] |
5806040 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hrithik%20Roshan | Hrithik Roshan | Hrithik Roshan (; born 10 January 1974) is an Indian actor who works in Hindi films. He has portrayed a variety of characters and is known for his dancing skills. One of the highest-paid actors in India, he has won many awards, including six Filmfares, four for Best Actor and one each for Best Debut and Best Actor (Critics). Starting in 2012, he appeared several times in Forbes India Celebrity 100 based on his income and popularity.
Roshan has frequently collaborated with his father, Rakesh Roshan. He made brief appearances as a child actor in several films in the 1980s and later worked as an assistant director on four of his father's films. His first leading role was in the box-office success Kaho Naa... Pyaar Hai (2000), for which he received several awards. Performances in the 2000 terrorism drama Fiza and the 2001 ensemble melodrama Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham... consolidated his reputation but were followed by several poorly received films.
The 2003 science fiction film Koi... Mil Gaya, for which Roshan won two Filmfare Awards, was a turning point in his film career; he also appeared in its sequels: Krrish (2006) and Krrish 3 (2013). He earned praise for his portrayal of a thief in Dhoom 2 (2006), Mughal emperor Akbar in Jodhaa Akbar (2008) and a quadriplegic in Guzaarish (2010). He achieved further commercial success by playing the lead in the 2011 drama Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara, the 2012 revenge film Agneepath, the 2014 action comedy Bang Bang!, the 2019 biopic Super 30, and the 2019 action thriller War, which ranks as his highest-grossing release.
Roshan has also performed on stage and debuted on television with Just Dance (2011). As a judge on the latter, he became the highest-paid film star on Indian television. He is involved with a number of humanitarian causes, endorses several brands and products and has launched his own clothing line. Roshan was married for fourteen years to Sussanne Khan, with whom he has two children.
Early life and background
Roshan was born on 10 January 1974 in Bombay to a family prominent in Bollywood. He is of Punjabi and Bengali descent on his paternal side. Hrithik's paternal grandmother Ira Roshan was a Bengali. His father, film director Rakesh Roshan, is the son of music director Roshanlal Nagrath; his mother, Pinky, is the daughter of producer and director J. Om Prakash. His uncle, Rajesh, is a music composer. Roshan has an older sister, Sunaina, and was educated at the Bombay Scottish School. Roshan belongs to a Hindu family, though he considers himself more spiritual than religious.
Roshan felt isolated as a child; he was born with an extra thumb fused to the one on his right hand, which led some of his peers to avoid him. He has stammered since the age of six; this caused him problems at school, and he feigned injury and illness to avoid oral tests. He was helped by daily speech therapy.
Roshan's grandfather, Prakash first brought him on-screen at the age of six in the film Aasha (1980); he danced in a song enacted by Jeetendra, for which Prakash paid him 100. Roshan made uncredited appearances in various family film projects, including his father's production Aap Ke Deewane (1980). In Prakash's Aas Paas (1981), he appeared in the song "Shehar Main Charcha Hai". The actor's only speaking role during this period came when he was 12; he was seen as Govinda, the title character's adopted son, in Prakash's Bhagwaan Dada (1986). Roshan decided that he wanted to be a full-time actor, but his father insisted that he focus on his studies. In his early 20s, he was diagnosed with scoliosis that would not allow him to dance or perform stunts. Initially devastated, he eventually decided to become an actor anyway. Around a year after the diagnosis, he took a chance by jogging on a beach when he was caught in a downpour. There was no pain, and becoming more confident, he was able to increase his pace with no adverse effects. Roshan sees this day as "the turning point of [his] life."
Roshan attended Sydenham College, where he took part in dance and music festivals while studying, graduating in commerce. Roshan assisted his father on four films—Khudgarz (1987), King Uncle (1993), Karan Arjun (1995) and Koyla (1997)—while also sweeping the floor and making tea for the crew. After pack-up, Roshan would enact Shah Rukh Khan's scenes from Koyla and film himself to make a judgement about his performance as an actor. While he assisted his father, he studied acting under Kishore Namit Kapoor.
Film career
2000–2002: Debut, success and setback
Roshan was originally scheduled to make his screen debut as a lead actor opposite Preity Zinta in the cancelled film Shekhar Kapur's Tara Rum Pum Pum. Instead, he starred in his father's romantic drama Kaho Naa... Pyaar Hai (2000) opposite another debutante, Ameesha Patel. Roshan played dual roles: Rohit, an aspiring singer brutally killed after witnessing a murder, and Raj, an NRI who falls in love with Patel's character. To prepare, he trained with the actor Salman Khan to bulk up physically, worked to improve his diction and took lessons in acting, singing, dancing, fencing and riding. With global revenues of , Kaho Naa... Pyaar Hai became one of the highest-grossing Indian films of 2000. His performance was acclaimed by critics; Suggu Kanchana on Rediff.com wrote, "[Roshan] is good. The ease and style with which he dances, emotes, fights, makes one forget this is his debut film ... He seems to be the most promising among the recent lot of star sons we have been subjected to." For the role, Roshan received Best Male Debut and Best Actor Awards at the annual Filmfare Awards, IIFA Awards, and Zee Cine Awards. He became the first actor to win both Filmfare Best Debut and Best Actor awards the same year. The film established Roshan as a prominent actor in Bollywood. The actor found life hard after his overnight success, particularly the demands on his time.
In his second release, Khalid Mohammed's crime drama Fiza, Roshan played Amaan, an innocent Muslim boy who becomes a terrorist after the 1992–93 Bombay riots. Roshan appeared in the film to expand his horizons as an actor. Co-starring Karisma Kapoor and Jaya Bachchan, Fiza was moderately successful at the box office, and Roshan's performance earned him a second nomination for Best Actor at the Filmfare ceremony. Taran Adarsh of Bollywood Hungama praised him as the production's prime asset, commending his "body language, his diction, his expressions, [and] his overall persona." Roshan next appeared in Vidhu Vinod Chopra's action drama Mission Kashmir (2000) alongside Sanjay Dutt, Preity Zinta, and Jackie Shroff. Set in the valley of Kashmir during the Indo-Pakistani conflicts, the film addressed the topics of terrorism and crime, and was a financial success. Roshan was drawn to his complex role of a young man traumatised by the discovery that his adoptive father had been responsible for the death of his entire birth family. In Adarsh's opinion, Roshan "brightens up the screen with his magnetic presence. His body language, coupled with his expressions, is sure to win him plaudits."
In 2001, Roshan appeared in two films, the first of which was Subhash Ghai's Yaadein, a romantic drama which paired him with Kareena Kapoor and reunited him with Shroff. Although highly anticipated, Yaadein was reviled by critics; in The Hindu, Ziya Us Salam criticised the director for relying on Roshan's commercial appeal. Roshan next had a supporting role in Karan Johar's ensemble melodrama Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham... alongside Amitabh Bachchan, Jaya Bachchan, Shah Rukh Khan, Kajol and Kareena Kapoor. He was cast as Rohan Raichand—the younger son of Bachchan's character who plots to reunite him with his adopted son (played by Khan)—after Johar had watched a rough cut of Kaho Naa... Pyaar Hai. Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham... finished as India's highest-grossing film of the year, and among the most successful Bollywood films in the overseas market, earning worldwide. Writing for Rediff.com, Anjum N described Roshan as "the surprise scene-stealer", praising him for holding his own against the established actors. Roshan received a nomination for the Filmfare Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance.
In 2002 Vikram Bhatt's romance Aap Mujhe Achche Lagne Lage reunited him with Ameesha Patel but failed at the box office, as did Arjun Sablok's romance Na Tum Jaano Na Hum (2002). Roshan's final role that year was in a Yash Raj Films production, the high-profile Mujhse Dosti Karoge! co-starring Rani Mukerji and Kareena Kapoor. The romantic drama was heavily promoted before its release and made money internationally, though not in India. In another commercial failure, Sooraj R. Barjatya's Main Prem Ki Diwani Hoon, Roshan was cast alongside Kareena Kapoor for the fourth time, and Abhishek Bachchan. The press labelled Roshan a "one-trick pony" and suggested that the failure of these films would end his career.
2003–2008: Revival and awards success
Roshan's career began to revive with a starring role in Koi... Mil Gaya (2003). The film, directed and produced by his father, centers on his character Rohit Mehra, a developmentally disabled young man, who comes in contact with an extraterrestrial being—a role that required him to lose nearly . Roshan recalls the experience of starring in the film fondly: "I could live my childhood [again]. I could eat as many chocolates as I wanted. I became a baby and everybody was so caring towards me." In the book Film Sequels, Carolyn Jess-Cooke drew similarities between the character and Forrest Gump, portrayed by Tom Hanks in the titular film, but this idea was dismissed by Roshan. Film critics were polarised on their view of the film—some of them negatively compared its storyline to the 1982 Hollywood release E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial—but were unanimous in their praise for Roshan. In a 2010 retrospective of the Top 80 Iconic Performances of Bollywood, Filmfare noted "how flesh and blood Hrithik's act is. Simply because he believes he is the part. Watch him laugh, cry or bond with his remote controlled alien friend and note his nuanced turn." A Rediff.com critic agreed that Roshan was "the turbojet that propels the film to the realm of the extraordinary." Koi... Mil Gaya was one of the most popular Bollywood film of the year, earning worldwide and Roshan won both Filmfare Awards for Best Actor and Best Actor (Critics).
The following year, Roshan collaborated with Amitabh Bachchan and Preity Zinta on Farhan Akhtar's Lakshya (2004), a fictionalised coming-of-age story set against events from the 1999 Kargil War. He also featured in the item number "Main Aisa Kyun Hoon" (choreographed by Prabhu Deva) which proved popular with audiences. The film earned Roshan Best Actor nominations at the Filmfare and Zee Cine ceremony. Manish Gajjar of the BBC praised Roshan's versatility and his transformation from a carefree youth to a determined and courageous soldier.
Roshan was not seen on screen again until 2006, with three new releases, including a cameo at the end of the year in the romance I See You. He co-starred with Naseeruddin Shah and Priyanka Chopra in his father's superhero production Krrish. A follow-up to his family's production Koi... Mil Gaya, it saw him play dual roles—the title superhero and his character from the original film. Before production, Roshan travelled to China to train with Tony Ching for the cable work that would be needed to make his character fly. Among the several injuries he sustained during production, Roshan tore the hamstring in his right leg and broke his thumb and toe. Krrish became the third-highest-grossing Bollywood film of 2006 with a worldwide revenue of . It garnered him Best Actor awards at the 2007 Screen and the International Indian Film Academy Awards. Ronnie Scheib of Variety considered Roshan a prime asset of the film, noting that he "pulls off the pic's wilder absurdities with considerable panache."
For his role as an enigmatic master thief in Dhoom 2 (2006)—an action sequel co-starring Aishwarya Rai, Bipasha Basu and Abhishek Bachchan—Roshan won his third Filmfare Award for Best Actor. The film critic Rajeev Masand called him "the heart, the soul, and the spirit of the film", and praised his stunts, concluding that he "holds the film together and even manages to take your attention away from its many flaws." Bored by playing the "good guy", Roshan was excited to play a anti- hero who lacks heroic attributes, for the first time. At the request of the film's producer Aditya Chopra, Roshan lost for the role, and learned skateboarding, snow boarding, rollerblading and sand surfing. With earnings of , Dhoom 2 became the highest grossing Indian film at that time, a distinction that was held for two years. In the 2007 melodrama Om Shanti Om, he made a cameo alongside several Bollywood stars.
In 2008, Roshan was cast in Ashutosh Gowariker's Jodhaa Akbar, a partly fictionalised account of a marriage of convenience between the Mughal emperor Jalaluddin Muhammad Akbar (played by Roshan) and the Rajput princess Jodha Bai (played by Rai). Gowariker believed Roshan possessed the regal bearing and physique required to play the role of a king. For the role, Roshan learned sword-fighting and horse-riding, and also took Urdu lessons. Jodhaa Akbar earned worldwide. Roshan's performance earned him his fourth Filmfare Best Actor Award. Critics were generally appreciative of Roshan's performance. Raja Sen of Rediff.com thought that Roshan "proves a very good Akbar. There are times when his inflection seems too modern, but the actor gives the performance his all, slipping into the skin of the character and staying there." Roshan ended 2008 with an appearance in the popular item number "Krazzy 4" from the film of same name.
2009–2012: Critical acclaim
Following a small role in Zoya Akhtar's Luck by Chance in 2009, Roshan starred in and recorded "Kites in the Sky" for the multi-national romantic thriller Kites (2010). In the film, produced by his father, he played a man running a green card scam in Las Vegas in which he has married 11 different women in exchange for money. Kites opened on a record-breaking 3000 screens, and became the first Bollywood film to break into the North American top 10. However, the film eventually underperformed at India's box office and received negative reviews from critics. The website Box Office India attributed this failure to its multilingual dialogues. In a review for Rediff.com, Matthew Schneeberger thought that Roshan "overacts. A lot. In Kites, he nails a few scenes, but bungles many more, particularly the film's catastrophically bad ending."
Roshan then collaborated with director Sanjay Leela Bhansali on the drama Guzaarish (2010) in which he had the role of Ethan Mascarenhas, a former magician suffering from quadriplegia, who after years of struggle, files an appeal for euthanasia. Roshan had reservations about the role but agreed to the project after reading the film's story. To understand his role better, he interacted with paraplegic patients. In his own words, "I used to spend six hours with the patients, initially once a week and then once a month. I used to go to understand what they go through, what they think, what their needs are. They have taught me a lot of things." He also trained with a Ukrainian magician to perform the film's magic stunts, and put on weight to look the part. The film failed at the box office, though it and Roshan's performance were positively received by critics. A writer for Zee News praised the chemistry between Roshan and Rai, adding that they "break the Bollywood mould of stereotypes." Roshan received the Zee Cine Award for Best Actor (Critics) and nominations for Filmfare, IIFA and Zee Cine Award for Best Actor.
In 2011, Roshan appeared in Zoya Akhtar's ensemble comedy-drama Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara alongside Abhay Deol and Farhan Akhtar as three friends who embark on a bachelor trip where they overcome their insecurities. Zoya cast Roshan in the role of an uptight workaholic as she considers him her favourite actor. For the film's soundtrack, Roshan recorded the song "Señorita" with his co-stars and María del Mar Fernández. Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara was released to positive reviews and Roshan's performance was praised. Rajeev Masand wrote, "Hrithik Roshan once again brings real depth to his character with a spectacular performance. He's shy and restrained, then lets go with such fantastic intensity that you make the inward journey with his character." The film grossed worldwide and became Roshan's first commercial success in three years. Later that year, he made a special appearance in Farhan's Don 2.
Roshan's only screen appearance in 2012 was in Karan Malhotra's Agneepath, a retelling of the 1990 film of the same name. Cast alongside Rishi Kapoor, Sanjay Dutt and Priyanka Chopra, Roshan reinterpreted the character Vijay Deenanath Chauhan (originally played by Amitabh Bachchan), a common man who seeks revenge against an unscrupulous man for framing and murdering his father. Roshan was initially sceptical of taking up a role earlier played by Bachchan, and thought hard before accepting. He did not watch the original film for inspiration as he found his role to be completely different. In one of several accidents to happen during production, Roshan suffered a painful back injury. He deemed Agneepath "the hardest [project] I've ever worked in my life" owing to the exhaustion he felt while filming. The film broke Bollywood's highest opening-day earnings record, and had a worldwide gross of . A Firstpost reviewer thought Roshan "breathes fire and soul into Agneepath". The actor received a third consecutive Stardust Award for Best Actor in a Drama, having won previously for Guzaarish and Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara.
2013–present: Commercial success with limited work
Roshan appeared in the third instalment of the Krrish film series—Krrish 3 (2013) which also starred Priyanka Chopra, Vivek Oberoi and Kangana Ranaut. During production, Roshan was injured when he fell down, which resulted in back pain. Critics thought that the film was entertaining but lacking in originality, though Roshan's performance garnered praise. The editor Komal Nahta lauded Roshan for playing three different characters in the film. Krrish 3 grossed worldwide, becoming one of the highest-grossing Indian films of all time. Roshan received a fourth and fifth consecutive Filmfare nomination for his performances in Krrish 3, and the 2014 action comedy Bang Bang!, a remake of the 2010 Hollywood release Knight and Day and one of the most expensive Bollywood films. Playing the role of an eccentric secret agent who plots to track down a terrorist, Roshan became the first actor to perform a flyboarding stunt in film. While filming in Thailand, Roshan suffered a head injury from a stunt accident and underwent brain surgery at the Hinduja Hospital performed by Dr. B. K. Misra to relieve subacute-subdural hematoma. Writing for Bollywood news website Koimoi, critic Mohar Basu noted that Roshan was "pitch perfect" and "breez[ed] through his part brilliantly." The film earned in global ticket sales, making it among the highest-grossing Indian films.
For playing the role of a farmer in 2016 BC who travels to Mohenjo-daro in Ashutosh Gowariker's Mohenjo Daro (2016), Roshan was paid , a record-breaking remuneration for an Indian actor. He underwent a three-month training to achieve the "lithe" and "agile" physique required for his role. Despite being a highly anticipated release, it failed commercially, and critics were generally unenthusiastic. Dismissing the film as an "unintentional comedy", Anupama Chopra wrote that Roshan "pours his soul into every scene. But the burden of carrying this leaden, cartoon-like narrative proves too much even for his Herculean shoulders." Roshan was next seen alongside Yami Gautam in Sanjay Gupta's Kaabil (2017), a romantic thriller about a blind man who avenges the rape of his blind wife. To ensure authenticity in his portrayal, Roshan locked himself in a room for four days and avoided contact with people. Reviews for the film were generally positive with particular praise for Roshan's performance. Meena Iyer of The Times of India found his performance to be his best to date, and Shubhra Gupta on The Indian Express considered him "the only bright spot in this dispirited mess of a movie." The film accumulated worldwide.
After two years of screen absence, Roshan starred in two films in 2019, first in Vikas Bahl's biographical film Super 30, based on the mathematician Anand Kumar and his eponymous educational program. For the role, Roshan hired a trainer from Bhagalpur to learn Bihari accent. The film was released to mixed reviews but was a commercial success, grossing worldwide. While NDTV's Saibal Chatterjee found Roshan miscast in his role, Michael Gomes of Khaleej Times called it one of his best performances. Roshan found his biggest commercial success in the highest-grossing Bollywood film of 2019, the -earning action thriller War. The film, Roshan's first with Yash Raj Films since Dhoom 2, tells the story of an Indian soldier (Tiger Shroff) tasked with eliminating his former mentor (Roshan) who has gone rogue. Reviews for the film and the performances were positive; Rajeev Masand praised Roshan and Shroff for their commitment to the action, "bringing swag to the big stylish sequences and a visceral energy to the one-on-one punch-ups in the movie".
Upcoming projects
Roshan will star in a remake of Vikram Vedha, in which he will reunite with Saif Ali Khan since Na Tum Jaano Na Hum (2002). It is scheduled for release on 30 September 2022. On 10 January 2021, Roshan confirmed he would star in Fighter, his third film with director Siddharth Anand, and first with actors Deepika Padukone and Anil Kapoor. It is expected to release on 26 January 2023.
Other work
Roshan has performed on stage, appeared on television, and launched a clothing line. His first tour (Heartthrobs: Live in Concert (2002) with Kareena Kapoor, Karisma Kapoor, Arjun Rampal and Aftab Shivdasani) was successful in the United States and Canada. At the end of that year, he danced on stage with Amitabh Bachchan, Sanjay Dutt, Kareena Kapoor, Rani Mukerji and Shah Rukh Khan at Kings Park Stadium in Durban, South Africa in the show Now or Never. In 2011, Roshan served as a judge alongside Farah Khan and Vaibhavi Merchant for the dance competition reality show, Just Dance. He became the highest-paid film star on Indian television after he was paid per episode. The show ran from June to October 2011. In November 2013, Roshan launched his clothing line, the casual wear brand HRx.
Roshan is vocal about his childhood stammer. He actively supports the Dilkhush Special School for mentally challenged children in Mumbai. In 2008, he donated to the Nanavati Hospital for the treatment of stammering children. Roshan set up a charity foundation in 2009 that aims to work for handicapped people. He donates roughly for charity every month, and believes that people should publicise their philanthropic work to set an example for others. In 2013, he took part in a festivity at Ghatkopar, whose proceeds went to an NGO supporting tribal girls suffering from malnutrition and starvation. Also that year, he donated to help the victims of the 2013 North India floods.
Alongside other Bollywood stars, Roshan played a football match for charity organised by Aamir Khan's daughter, Ira, in 2014. The following year, he appeared with Sonam Kapoor in the music video for "Dheere Dheere", whose profits were donated to charity. Later that year, Roshan became the Indian brand ambassador for UNICEF and the Global Goals campaign's World's Largest Lesson that aims to educate children in over 100 countries about the Sustainable Development Goals. In 2016, Roshan and other Bollywood actors made donations for building homes for families affected by the 2015 South Indian floods.
Following his debut film, Roshan signed on for endorsement deals with Coca-Cola, Tamarind and Hero Honda, all for three years and for at least . As of 2010, he is celebrity endorser for such brands and products as Provogue, Parle Hide and Seek, Reliance Communications and Hero Honda and recently roshan has completed six years with Rado.The Times of India reported that Roshan received to for each endorsement, making him one of the highest-paid male celebrity endorsers. In 2016, Duff & Phelps estimated his brand value to be US$34.1 million, the eighth highest of Indian celebrities. In 2017, Roshan was signed as the brand ambassador of a Health and wellness startup Cure.fit and is touted as one of the largest endorsement deal signed by an Indian startup.
Personal life
On 20 December 2000, Roshan married Sussanne Khan in a private ceremony in Bangalore. Despite their religious difference—Roshan is a Hindu and Khan is a Muslim—Roshan says that he equally valued her beliefs. The couple has two sons, Hrehaan (born in 2006) and Hridhaan (born in 2008). They separated in December 2013 and their divorce was finalised in November 2014.
Roshan and Sussanne maintained that they parted amicably. In 2016, he filed a lawsuit against his Krrish 3 co-star Kangana Ranaut, accusing her of cyber stalking and harassment. Denying the charges, Ranaut filed a counter-charge against Roshan, claiming that his lawsuit was an attempt to cover up their affair. Owing to a lack of evidence, the Mumbai Police closed the case later that year.
Roshan considered quitting the film industry after two assailants fired bullets at his father in 2000. Later that December, he was involved in a controversy when Nepalese newspapers accused him of stating in a Star Plus interview that he hated Nepal and its people. This led to protests in the country, a ban on screening of his films, and four people's deaths after street violence. Nepalese people threatened to "bury [him] alive" if he ever visited the country. Star Plus, for its part, stated that Roshan "did not touch upon Nepal." The violence calmed down after Roshan wrote a two-page rejoinder in which he denied having made any claim against the country. Nepali actress Manisha Koirala helped distribute it to newspapers and a local television station.
Artistry and media image
As the son of the filmmaker Rakesh, Roshan faced the media spotlight from a young age. Discussing nepotism in Bollywood, Shama Rana views him as one of several actors who managed film careers with the help of family relations in the industry. On the other hand, Roshan is acknowledged in the media as one of the most talented Indian actors of his generation, for his devotion to his work and for his ability to commit heavily to each role. He insists on learning any necessary skills and performing stunts himself, and is particularly known for his professionalism. The director Ashutosh Gowariker praised Roshan when he continued filming Mohenjo Daro despite several injuries and being in a troubled state of mind. Zoya Akhtar, who considers Roshan her favourite actor, and directed him in Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara, remarks on his ability to display a range of emotions on screen.
In an attempt to avoid typecasting, Roshan takes on diverse parts . He looks at the scripts as a platform to inspire with the strength and courage of his characters and to make his audiences smile. Roshan was noted by critics for his versatility in portraying a variety of characters in Koi... Mil Gaya (2003), Lakshya (2004), Jodhaa Akbar (2008), and Guzaarish (2010). Box Office India ranked him first on its top actors listing in 2000 and later included him in 2003, 2004, 2006 and 2007. Roshan topped Rediff.com's list of best Bollywood actors in 2003, and was ranked fourth in 2006. Filmfare magazine included two of his performances—from Koi... Mil Gaya and Lakshya—on its 2010 list of 80 Iconic Performances. In March 2011, Roshan placed fourth on Rediff.com's list of Top 10 Actors of 2000–2010. Roshan's dancing ability has also drawn praise from the media, an opinion he disagrees with. The Los Angeles Times finds him to be "a sensational dancer" who "has the dashing, chiseled looks of a silent movie matinee idol." Some critics also believe that he is only able to dance and act in his father's films. His inclination towards "glamorous, albeit empty parts", which conform to character stereotypes, has been criticised.
Roshan is among Bollywood's highest-paid actors. Discussing his success ratio at the box office in a 2014 article, Daily News and Analysis credited him as "the most bankable star" in Bollywood. One of the most high-profile Indian celebrities, he was named the second most powerful Indian film star by Forbes in 2001. He ranked fourth in Filmfare Power List in 2007. In a 2009 poll conducted by Daily News and Analysis Roshan was voted one of India's most popular icons. At the 2009 FICCI-IIFA Awards, Roshan was one of the ten recipients of the most powerful Bollywood entertainers of the 2000s. From 2012 to 2018, Roshan was placed on Forbes India Celebrity 100—a list based on the income and popularity of Indian celebrities—peaking at ninth position in 2014 with an annual income of .
Roshan has established himself as a sex symbol and a style icon in India. In 2006, Roshan was one of the four Bollywood actors, along with Priyanka Chopra, Kajol and Shah Rukh Khan, whose miniature dolls were launched in the United Kingdom, under the name of "Bollywood Legends". He topped The Times of India listing of 50 Most Desirable Men in 2010 and ranked among the top five for the next five years. In 2010 and 2012, the Indian edition of GQ included him in their listing of Bollywood's best dressed men. A life-size, wax figure of him was installed at London's Madame Tussauds museum in January 2011, making him the fifth Indian actor to have been replicated as a wax statue there. Versions of the statue were installed at Madame Tussauds' museums in New York, Washington and other cities in the world. Roshan regularly features in the magazine Eastern Eye listing of the 50 Sexiest Asian Men. He topped the list in 2011, 2012 and 2014, and featured among the top five in 2010, 2013 and 2015 to 2018.
See also
List of awards and nominations received by Hrithik Roshan
Hrithik Roshan filmography
List of Indian film actors
References
External links
1974 births
20th-century Indian male actors
21st-century Indian male actors
Dancers from Maharashtra
Filmfare Awards winners
Indian male dancers
Indian male film actors
Indian male voice actors
Living people
Male actors from Mumbai
Male actors in Hindi cinema
Popping dancers
Punjabi people
Bengali people
Zee Cine Awards winners
Indian male child actors
People with polydactyly | [
"Hrithik Roshan (; born 10 January 1974) is an Indian actor who works in Hindi films.",
"He has portrayed a variety of characters and is known for his dancing skills.",
"One of the highest-paid actors in India, he has won many awards, including six Filmfares, four for Best Actor and one each for Best Debut and Best Actor (Critics).",
"Starting in 2012, he appeared several times in Forbes India Celebrity 100 based on his income and popularity.",
"Roshan has frequently collaborated with his father, Rakesh Roshan.",
"He made brief appearances as a child actor in several films in the 1980s and later worked as an assistant director on four of his father's films.",
"His first leading role was in the box-office success Kaho Naa... Pyaar Hai (2000), for which he received several awards.",
"Performances in the 2000 terrorism drama Fiza and the 2001 ensemble melodrama Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham... consolidated his reputation but were followed by several poorly received films.",
"The 2003 science fiction film Koi... Mil Gaya, for which Roshan won two Filmfare Awards, was a turning point in his film career; he also appeared in its sequels: Krrish (2006) and Krrish 3 (2013).",
"He earned praise for his portrayal of a thief in Dhoom 2 (2006), Mughal emperor Akbar in Jodhaa Akbar (2008) and a quadriplegic in Guzaarish (2010).",
"He achieved further commercial success by playing the lead in the 2011 drama Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara, the 2012 revenge film Agneepath, the 2014 action comedy Bang Bang!, the 2019 biopic Super 30, and the 2019 action thriller War, which ranks as his highest-grossing release.",
"Roshan has also performed on stage and debuted on television with Just Dance (2011).",
"As a judge on the latter, he became the highest-paid film star on Indian television.",
"He is involved with a number of humanitarian causes, endorses several brands and products and has launched his own clothing line.",
"Roshan was married for fourteen years to Sussanne Khan, with whom he has two children.",
"Early life and background \nRoshan was born on 10 January 1974 in Bombay to a family prominent in Bollywood.",
"He is of Punjabi and Bengali descent on his paternal side.",
"Hrithik's paternal grandmother Ira Roshan was a Bengali.",
"His father, film director Rakesh Roshan, is the son of music director Roshanlal Nagrath; his mother, Pinky, is the daughter of producer and director J. Om Prakash.",
"His uncle, Rajesh, is a music composer.",
"Roshan has an older sister, Sunaina, and was educated at the Bombay Scottish School.",
"Roshan belongs to a Hindu family, though he considers himself more spiritual than religious.",
"Roshan felt isolated as a child; he was born with an extra thumb fused to the one on his right hand, which led some of his peers to avoid him.",
"He has stammered since the age of six; this caused him problems at school, and he feigned injury and illness to avoid oral tests.",
"He was helped by daily speech therapy.",
"Roshan's grandfather, Prakash first brought him on-screen at the age of six in the film Aasha (1980); he danced in a song enacted by Jeetendra, for which Prakash paid him 100.",
"Roshan made uncredited appearances in various family film projects, including his father's production Aap Ke Deewane (1980).",
"In Prakash's Aas Paas (1981), he appeared in the song \"Shehar Main Charcha Hai\".",
"The actor's only speaking role during this period came when he was 12; he was seen as Govinda, the title character's adopted son, in Prakash's Bhagwaan Dada (1986).",
"Roshan decided that he wanted to be a full-time actor, but his father insisted that he focus on his studies.",
"In his early 20s, he was diagnosed with scoliosis that would not allow him to dance or perform stunts.",
"Initially devastated, he eventually decided to become an actor anyway.",
"Around a year after the diagnosis, he took a chance by jogging on a beach when he was caught in a downpour.",
"There was no pain, and becoming more confident, he was able to increase his pace with no adverse effects.",
"Roshan sees this day as \"the turning point of [his] life.\"",
"Roshan attended Sydenham College, where he took part in dance and music festivals while studying, graduating in commerce.",
"Roshan assisted his father on four films—Khudgarz (1987), King Uncle (1993), Karan Arjun (1995) and Koyla (1997)—while also sweeping the floor and making tea for the crew.",
"After pack-up, Roshan would enact Shah Rukh Khan's scenes from Koyla and film himself to make a judgement about his performance as an actor.",
"While he assisted his father, he studied acting under Kishore Namit Kapoor.",
"Film career\n\n2000–2002: Debut, success and setback\nRoshan was originally scheduled to make his screen debut as a lead actor opposite Preity Zinta in the cancelled film Shekhar Kapur's Tara Rum Pum Pum.",
"Instead, he starred in his father's romantic drama Kaho Naa... Pyaar Hai (2000) opposite another debutante, Ameesha Patel.",
"Roshan played dual roles: Rohit, an aspiring singer brutally killed after witnessing a murder, and Raj, an NRI who falls in love with Patel's character.",
"To prepare, he trained with the actor Salman Khan to bulk up physically, worked to improve his diction and took lessons in acting, singing, dancing, fencing and riding.",
"With global revenues of , Kaho Naa... Pyaar Hai became one of the highest-grossing Indian films of 2000.",
"His performance was acclaimed by critics; Suggu Kanchana on Rediff.com wrote, \"[Roshan] is good.",
"The ease and style with which he dances, emotes, fights, makes one forget this is his debut film ...",
"He seems to be the most promising among the recent lot of star sons we have been subjected to.\"",
"For the role, Roshan received Best Male Debut and Best Actor Awards at the annual Filmfare Awards, IIFA Awards, and Zee Cine Awards.",
"He became the first actor to win both Filmfare Best Debut and Best Actor awards the same year.",
"The film established Roshan as a prominent actor in Bollywood.",
"The actor found life hard after his overnight success, particularly the demands on his time.",
"In his second release, Khalid Mohammed's crime drama Fiza, Roshan played Amaan, an innocent Muslim boy who becomes a terrorist after the 1992–93 Bombay riots.",
"Roshan appeared in the film to expand his horizons as an actor.",
"Co-starring Karisma Kapoor and Jaya Bachchan, Fiza was moderately successful at the box office, and Roshan's performance earned him a second nomination for Best Actor at the Filmfare ceremony.",
"Taran Adarsh of Bollywood Hungama praised him as the production's prime asset, commending his \"body language, his diction, his expressions, [and] his overall persona.\"",
"Roshan next appeared in Vidhu Vinod Chopra's action drama Mission Kashmir (2000) alongside Sanjay Dutt, Preity Zinta, and Jackie Shroff.",
"Set in the valley of Kashmir during the Indo-Pakistani conflicts, the film addressed the topics of terrorism and crime, and was a financial success.",
"Roshan was drawn to his complex role of a young man traumatised by the discovery that his adoptive father had been responsible for the death of his entire birth family.",
"In Adarsh's opinion, Roshan \"brightens up the screen with his magnetic presence.",
"His body language, coupled with his expressions, is sure to win him plaudits.\"",
"In 2001, Roshan appeared in two films, the first of which was Subhash Ghai's Yaadein, a romantic drama which paired him with Kareena Kapoor and reunited him with Shroff.",
"Although highly anticipated, Yaadein was reviled by critics; in The Hindu, Ziya Us Salam criticised the director for relying on Roshan's commercial appeal.",
"Roshan next had a supporting role in Karan Johar's ensemble melodrama Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham... alongside Amitabh Bachchan, Jaya Bachchan, Shah Rukh Khan, Kajol and Kareena Kapoor.",
"He was cast as Rohan Raichand—the younger son of Bachchan's character who plots to reunite him with his adopted son (played by Khan)—after Johar had watched a rough cut of Kaho Naa... Pyaar Hai.",
"Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham... finished as India's highest-grossing film of the year, and among the most successful Bollywood films in the overseas market, earning worldwide.",
"Writing for Rediff.com, Anjum N described Roshan as \"the surprise scene-stealer\", praising him for holding his own against the established actors.",
"Roshan received a nomination for the Filmfare Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance.",
"In 2002 Vikram Bhatt's romance Aap Mujhe Achche Lagne Lage reunited him with Ameesha Patel but failed at the box office, as did Arjun Sablok's romance Na Tum Jaano Na Hum (2002).",
"Roshan's final role that year was in a Yash Raj Films production, the high-profile Mujhse Dosti Karoge!",
"co-starring Rani Mukerji and Kareena Kapoor.",
"The romantic drama was heavily promoted before its release and made money internationally, though not in India.",
"In another commercial failure, Sooraj R. Barjatya's Main Prem Ki Diwani Hoon, Roshan was cast alongside Kareena Kapoor for the fourth time, and Abhishek Bachchan.",
"The press labelled Roshan a \"one-trick pony\" and suggested that the failure of these films would end his career.",
"2003–2008: Revival and awards success\nRoshan's career began to revive with a starring role in Koi... Mil Gaya (2003).",
"The film, directed and produced by his father, centers on his character Rohit Mehra, a developmentally disabled young man, who comes in contact with an extraterrestrial being—a role that required him to lose nearly .",
"Roshan recalls the experience of starring in the film fondly: \"I could live my childhood [again].",
"I could eat as many chocolates as I wanted.",
"I became a baby and everybody was so caring towards me.\"",
"In the book Film Sequels, Carolyn Jess-Cooke drew similarities between the character and Forrest Gump, portrayed by Tom Hanks in the titular film, but this idea was dismissed by Roshan.",
"Film critics were polarised on their view of the film—some of them negatively compared its storyline to the 1982 Hollywood release E.T.",
"the Extra-Terrestrial—but were unanimous in their praise for Roshan.",
"In a 2010 retrospective of the Top 80 Iconic Performances of Bollywood, Filmfare noted \"how flesh and blood Hrithik's act is.",
"Simply because he believes he is the part.",
"Watch him laugh, cry or bond with his remote controlled alien friend and note his nuanced turn.\"",
"A Rediff.com critic agreed that Roshan was \"the turbojet that propels the film to the realm of the extraordinary.\"",
"Koi... Mil Gaya was one of the most popular Bollywood film of the year, earning worldwide and Roshan won both Filmfare Awards for Best Actor and Best Actor (Critics).",
"The following year, Roshan collaborated with Amitabh Bachchan and Preity Zinta on Farhan Akhtar's Lakshya (2004), a fictionalised coming-of-age story set against events from the 1999 Kargil War.",
"He also featured in the item number \"Main Aisa Kyun Hoon\" (choreographed by Prabhu Deva) which proved popular with audiences.",
"The film earned Roshan Best Actor nominations at the Filmfare and Zee Cine ceremony.",
"Manish Gajjar of the BBC praised Roshan's versatility and his transformation from a carefree youth to a determined and courageous soldier.",
"Roshan was not seen on screen again until 2006, with three new releases, including a cameo at the end of the year in the romance I See You.",
"He co-starred with Naseeruddin Shah and Priyanka Chopra in his father's superhero production Krrish.",
"A follow-up to his family's production Koi... Mil Gaya, it saw him play dual roles—the title superhero and his character from the original film.",
"Before production, Roshan travelled to China to train with Tony Ching for the cable work that would be needed to make his character fly.",
"Among the several injuries he sustained during production, Roshan tore the hamstring in his right leg and broke his thumb and toe.",
"Krrish became the third-highest-grossing Bollywood film of 2006 with a worldwide revenue of .",
"It garnered him Best Actor awards at the 2007 Screen and the International Indian Film Academy Awards.",
"Ronnie Scheib of Variety considered Roshan a prime asset of the film, noting that he \"pulls off the pic's wilder absurdities with considerable panache.\"",
"For his role as an enigmatic master thief in Dhoom 2 (2006)—an action sequel co-starring Aishwarya Rai, Bipasha Basu and Abhishek Bachchan—Roshan won his third Filmfare Award for Best Actor.",
"The film critic Rajeev Masand called him \"the heart, the soul, and the spirit of the film\", and praised his stunts, concluding that he \"holds the film together and even manages to take your attention away from its many flaws.\"",
"Bored by playing the \"good guy\", Roshan was excited to play a anti- hero who lacks heroic attributes, for the first time.",
"At the request of the film's producer Aditya Chopra, Roshan lost for the role, and learned skateboarding, snow boarding, rollerblading and sand surfing.",
"With earnings of , Dhoom 2 became the highest grossing Indian film at that time, a distinction that was held for two years.",
"In the 2007 melodrama Om Shanti Om, he made a cameo alongside several Bollywood stars.",
"In 2008, Roshan was cast in Ashutosh Gowariker's Jodhaa Akbar, a partly fictionalised account of a marriage of convenience between the Mughal emperor Jalaluddin Muhammad Akbar (played by Roshan) and the Rajput princess Jodha Bai (played by Rai).",
"Gowariker believed Roshan possessed the regal bearing and physique required to play the role of a king.",
"For the role, Roshan learned sword-fighting and horse-riding, and also took Urdu lessons.",
"Jodhaa Akbar earned worldwide.",
"Roshan's performance earned him his fourth Filmfare Best Actor Award.",
"Critics were generally appreciative of Roshan's performance.",
"Raja Sen of Rediff.com thought that Roshan \"proves a very good Akbar.",
"There are times when his inflection seems too modern, but the actor gives the performance his all, slipping into the skin of the character and staying there.\"",
"Roshan ended 2008 with an appearance in the popular item number \"Krazzy 4\" from the film of same name.",
"2009–2012: Critical acclaim\nFollowing a small role in Zoya Akhtar's Luck by Chance in 2009, Roshan starred in and recorded \"Kites in the Sky\" for the multi-national romantic thriller Kites (2010).",
"In the film, produced by his father, he played a man running a green card scam in Las Vegas in which he has married 11 different women in exchange for money.",
"Kites opened on a record-breaking 3000 screens, and became the first Bollywood film to break into the North American top 10.",
"However, the film eventually underperformed at India's box office and received negative reviews from critics.",
"The website Box Office India attributed this failure to its multilingual dialogues.",
"In a review for Rediff.com, Matthew Schneeberger thought that Roshan \"overacts.",
"A lot.",
"In Kites, he nails a few scenes, but bungles many more, particularly the film's catastrophically bad ending.\"",
"Roshan then collaborated with director Sanjay Leela Bhansali on the drama Guzaarish (2010) in which he had the role of Ethan Mascarenhas, a former magician suffering from quadriplegia, who after years of struggle, files an appeal for euthanasia.",
"Roshan had reservations about the role but agreed to the project after reading the film's story.",
"To understand his role better, he interacted with paraplegic patients.",
"In his own words, \"I used to spend six hours with the patients, initially once a week and then once a month.",
"I used to go to understand what they go through, what they think, what their needs are.",
"They have taught me a lot of things.\"",
"He also trained with a Ukrainian magician to perform the film's magic stunts, and put on weight to look the part.",
"The film failed at the box office, though it and Roshan's performance were positively received by critics.",
"A writer for Zee News praised the chemistry between Roshan and Rai, adding that they \"break the Bollywood mould of stereotypes.\"",
"Roshan received the Zee Cine Award for Best Actor (Critics) and nominations for Filmfare, IIFA and Zee Cine Award for Best Actor.",
"In 2011, Roshan appeared in Zoya Akhtar's ensemble comedy-drama Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara alongside Abhay Deol and Farhan Akhtar as three friends who embark on a bachelor trip where they overcome their insecurities.",
"Zoya cast Roshan in the role of an uptight workaholic as she considers him her favourite actor.",
"For the film's soundtrack, Roshan recorded the song \"Señorita\" with his co-stars and María del Mar Fernández.",
"Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara was released to positive reviews and Roshan's performance was praised.",
"Rajeev Masand wrote, \"Hrithik Roshan once again brings real depth to his character with a spectacular performance.",
"He's shy and restrained, then lets go with such fantastic intensity that you make the inward journey with his character.\"",
"The film grossed worldwide and became Roshan's first commercial success in three years.",
"Later that year, he made a special appearance in Farhan's Don 2.",
"Roshan's only screen appearance in 2012 was in Karan Malhotra's Agneepath, a retelling of the 1990 film of the same name.",
"Cast alongside Rishi Kapoor, Sanjay Dutt and Priyanka Chopra, Roshan reinterpreted the character Vijay Deenanath Chauhan (originally played by Amitabh Bachchan), a common man who seeks revenge against an unscrupulous man for framing and murdering his father.",
"Roshan was initially sceptical of taking up a role earlier played by Bachchan, and thought hard before accepting.",
"He did not watch the original film for inspiration as he found his role to be completely different.",
"In one of several accidents to happen during production, Roshan suffered a painful back injury.",
"He deemed Agneepath \"the hardest [project] I've ever worked in my life\" owing to the exhaustion he felt while filming.",
"The film broke Bollywood's highest opening-day earnings record, and had a worldwide gross of .",
"A Firstpost reviewer thought Roshan \"breathes fire and soul into Agneepath\".",
"The actor received a third consecutive Stardust Award for Best Actor in a Drama, having won previously for Guzaarish and Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara.",
"2013–present: Commercial success with limited work\nRoshan appeared in the third instalment of the Krrish film series—Krrish 3 (2013) which also starred Priyanka Chopra, Vivek Oberoi and Kangana Ranaut.",
"During production, Roshan was injured when he fell down, which resulted in back pain.",
"Critics thought that the film was entertaining but lacking in originality, though Roshan's performance garnered praise.",
"The editor Komal Nahta lauded Roshan for playing three different characters in the film.",
"Krrish 3 grossed worldwide, becoming one of the highest-grossing Indian films of all time.",
"Roshan received a fourth and fifth consecutive Filmfare nomination for his performances in Krrish 3, and the 2014 action comedy Bang Bang!, a remake of the 2010 Hollywood release Knight and Day and one of the most expensive Bollywood films.",
"Playing the role of an eccentric secret agent who plots to track down a terrorist, Roshan became the first actor to perform a flyboarding stunt in film.",
"While filming in Thailand, Roshan suffered a head injury from a stunt accident and underwent brain surgery at the Hinduja Hospital performed by Dr. B. K. Misra to relieve subacute-subdural hematoma.",
"Writing for Bollywood news website Koimoi, critic Mohar Basu noted that Roshan was \"pitch perfect\" and \"breez[ed] through his part brilliantly.\"",
"The film earned in global ticket sales, making it among the highest-grossing Indian films.",
"For playing the role of a farmer in 2016 BC who travels to Mohenjo-daro in Ashutosh Gowariker's Mohenjo Daro (2016), Roshan was paid , a record-breaking remuneration for an Indian actor.",
"He underwent a three-month training to achieve the \"lithe\" and \"agile\" physique required for his role.",
"Despite being a highly anticipated release, it failed commercially, and critics were generally unenthusiastic.",
"Dismissing the film as an \"unintentional comedy\", Anupama Chopra wrote that Roshan \"pours his soul into every scene.",
"But the burden of carrying this leaden, cartoon-like narrative proves too much even for his Herculean shoulders.\"",
"Roshan was next seen alongside Yami Gautam in Sanjay Gupta's Kaabil (2017), a romantic thriller about a blind man who avenges the rape of his blind wife.",
"To ensure authenticity in his portrayal, Roshan locked himself in a room for four days and avoided contact with people.",
"Reviews for the film were generally positive with particular praise for Roshan's performance.",
"Meena Iyer of The Times of India found his performance to be his best to date, and Shubhra Gupta on The Indian Express considered him \"the only bright spot in this dispirited mess of a movie.\"",
"The film accumulated worldwide.",
"After two years of screen absence, Roshan starred in two films in 2019, first in Vikas Bahl's biographical film Super 30, based on the mathematician Anand Kumar and his eponymous educational program.",
"For the role, Roshan hired a trainer from Bhagalpur to learn Bihari accent.",
"The film was released to mixed reviews but was a commercial success, grossing worldwide.",
"While NDTV's Saibal Chatterjee found Roshan miscast in his role, Michael Gomes of Khaleej Times called it one of his best performances.",
"Roshan found his biggest commercial success in the highest-grossing Bollywood film of 2019, the -earning action thriller War.",
"The film, Roshan's first with Yash Raj Films since Dhoom 2, tells the story of an Indian soldier (Tiger Shroff) tasked with eliminating his former mentor (Roshan) who has gone rogue.",
"Reviews for the film and the performances were positive; Rajeev Masand praised Roshan and Shroff for their commitment to the action, \"bringing swag to the big stylish sequences and a visceral energy to the one-on-one punch-ups in the movie\".",
"Upcoming projects\nRoshan will star in a remake of Vikram Vedha, in which he will reunite with Saif Ali Khan since Na Tum Jaano Na Hum (2002).",
"It is scheduled for release on 30 September 2022.",
"On 10 January 2021, Roshan confirmed he would star in Fighter, his third film with director Siddharth Anand, and first with actors Deepika Padukone and Anil Kapoor.",
"It is expected to release on 26 January 2023.",
"Other work\nRoshan has performed on stage, appeared on television, and launched a clothing line.",
"His first tour (Heartthrobs: Live in Concert (2002) with Kareena Kapoor, Karisma Kapoor, Arjun Rampal and Aftab Shivdasani) was successful in the United States and Canada.",
"At the end of that year, he danced on stage with Amitabh Bachchan, Sanjay Dutt, Kareena Kapoor, Rani Mukerji and Shah Rukh Khan at Kings Park Stadium in Durban, South Africa in the show Now or Never.",
"In 2011, Roshan served as a judge alongside Farah Khan and Vaibhavi Merchant for the dance competition reality show, Just Dance.",
"He became the highest-paid film star on Indian television after he was paid per episode.",
"The show ran from June to October 2011.",
"In November 2013, Roshan launched his clothing line, the casual wear brand HRx.",
"Roshan is vocal about his childhood stammer.",
"He actively supports the Dilkhush Special School for mentally challenged children in Mumbai.",
"In 2008, he donated to the Nanavati Hospital for the treatment of stammering children.",
"Roshan set up a charity foundation in 2009 that aims to work for handicapped people.",
"He donates roughly for charity every month, and believes that people should publicise their philanthropic work to set an example for others.",
"In 2013, he took part in a festivity at Ghatkopar, whose proceeds went to an NGO supporting tribal girls suffering from malnutrition and starvation.",
"Also that year, he donated to help the victims of the 2013 North India floods.",
"Alongside other Bollywood stars, Roshan played a football match for charity organised by Aamir Khan's daughter, Ira, in 2014.",
"The following year, he appeared with Sonam Kapoor in the music video for \"Dheere Dheere\", whose profits were donated to charity.",
"Later that year, Roshan became the Indian brand ambassador for UNICEF and the Global Goals campaign's World's Largest Lesson that aims to educate children in over 100 countries about the Sustainable Development Goals.",
"In 2016, Roshan and other Bollywood actors made donations for building homes for families affected by the 2015 South Indian floods.",
"Following his debut film, Roshan signed on for endorsement deals with Coca-Cola, Tamarind and Hero Honda, all for three years and for at least .",
"As of 2010, he is celebrity endorser for such brands and products as Provogue, Parle Hide and Seek, Reliance Communications and Hero Honda and recently roshan has completed six years with Rado.The Times of India reported that Roshan received to for each endorsement, making him one of the highest-paid male celebrity endorsers.",
"In 2016, Duff & Phelps estimated his brand value to be US$34.1 million, the eighth highest of Indian celebrities.",
"In 2017, Roshan was signed as the brand ambassador of a Health and wellness startup Cure.fit and is touted as one of the largest endorsement deal signed by an Indian startup.",
"Personal life \n\nOn 20 December 2000, Roshan married Sussanne Khan in a private ceremony in Bangalore.",
"Despite their religious difference—Roshan is a Hindu and Khan is a Muslim—Roshan says that he equally valued her beliefs.",
"The couple has two sons, Hrehaan (born in 2006) and Hridhaan (born in 2008).",
"They separated in December 2013 and their divorce was finalised in November 2014.",
"Roshan and Sussanne maintained that they parted amicably.",
"In 2016, he filed a lawsuit against his Krrish 3 co-star Kangana Ranaut, accusing her of cyber stalking and harassment.",
"Denying the charges, Ranaut filed a counter-charge against Roshan, claiming that his lawsuit was an attempt to cover up their affair.",
"Owing to a lack of evidence, the Mumbai Police closed the case later that year.",
"Roshan considered quitting the film industry after two assailants fired bullets at his father in 2000.",
"Later that December, he was involved in a controversy when Nepalese newspapers accused him of stating in a Star Plus interview that he hated Nepal and its people.",
"This led to protests in the country, a ban on screening of his films, and four people's deaths after street violence.",
"Nepalese people threatened to \"bury [him] alive\" if he ever visited the country.",
"Star Plus, for its part, stated that Roshan \"did not touch upon Nepal.\"",
"The violence calmed down after Roshan wrote a two-page rejoinder in which he denied having made any claim against the country.",
"Nepali actress Manisha Koirala helped distribute it to newspapers and a local television station.",
"Artistry and media image\nAs the son of the filmmaker Rakesh, Roshan faced the media spotlight from a young age.",
"Discussing nepotism in Bollywood, Shama Rana views him as one of several actors who managed film careers with the help of family relations in the industry.",
"On the other hand, Roshan is acknowledged in the media as one of the most talented Indian actors of his generation, for his devotion to his work and for his ability to commit heavily to each role.",
"He insists on learning any necessary skills and performing stunts himself, and is particularly known for his professionalism.",
"The director Ashutosh Gowariker praised Roshan when he continued filming Mohenjo Daro despite several injuries and being in a troubled state of mind.",
"Zoya Akhtar, who considers Roshan her favourite actor, and directed him in Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara, remarks on his ability to display a range of emotions on screen.",
"In an attempt to avoid typecasting, Roshan takes on diverse parts .",
"He looks at the scripts as a platform to inspire with the strength and courage of his characters and to make his audiences smile.",
"Roshan was noted by critics for his versatility in portraying a variety of characters in Koi... Mil Gaya (2003), Lakshya (2004), Jodhaa Akbar (2008), and Guzaarish (2010).",
"Box Office India ranked him first on its top actors listing in 2000 and later included him in 2003, 2004, 2006 and 2007.",
"Roshan topped Rediff.com's list of best Bollywood actors in 2003, and was ranked fourth in 2006.",
"Filmfare magazine included two of his performances—from Koi... Mil Gaya and Lakshya—on its 2010 list of 80 Iconic Performances.",
"In March 2011, Roshan placed fourth on Rediff.com's list of Top 10 Actors of 2000–2010.",
"Roshan's dancing ability has also drawn praise from the media, an opinion he disagrees with.",
"The Los Angeles Times finds him to be \"a sensational dancer\" who \"has the dashing, chiseled looks of a silent movie matinee idol.\"",
"Some critics also believe that he is only able to dance and act in his father's films.",
"His inclination towards \"glamorous, albeit empty parts\", which conform to character stereotypes, has been criticised.",
"Roshan is among Bollywood's highest-paid actors.",
"Discussing his success ratio at the box office in a 2014 article, Daily News and Analysis credited him as \"the most bankable star\" in Bollywood.",
"One of the most high-profile Indian celebrities, he was named the second most powerful Indian film star by Forbes in 2001.",
"He ranked fourth in Filmfare Power List in 2007.",
"In a 2009 poll conducted by Daily News and Analysis Roshan was voted one of India's most popular icons.",
"At the 2009 FICCI-IIFA Awards, Roshan was one of the ten recipients of the most powerful Bollywood entertainers of the 2000s.",
"From 2012 to 2018, Roshan was placed on Forbes India Celebrity 100—a list based on the income and popularity of Indian celebrities—peaking at ninth position in 2014 with an annual income of .",
"Roshan has established himself as a sex symbol and a style icon in India.",
"In 2006, Roshan was one of the four Bollywood actors, along with Priyanka Chopra, Kajol and Shah Rukh Khan, whose miniature dolls were launched in the United Kingdom, under the name of \"Bollywood Legends\".",
"He topped The Times of India listing of 50 Most Desirable Men in 2010 and ranked among the top five for the next five years.",
"In 2010 and 2012, the Indian edition of GQ included him in their listing of Bollywood's best dressed men.",
"A life-size, wax figure of him was installed at London's Madame Tussauds museum in January 2011, making him the fifth Indian actor to have been replicated as a wax statue there.",
"Versions of the statue were installed at Madame Tussauds' museums in New York, Washington and other cities in the world.",
"Roshan regularly features in the magazine Eastern Eye listing of the 50 Sexiest Asian Men.",
"He topped the list in 2011, 2012 and 2014, and featured among the top five in 2010, 2013 and 2015 to 2018.",
"See also\n\n List of awards and nominations received by Hrithik Roshan\n Hrithik Roshan filmography\n List of Indian film actors\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links\n\n \n \n \n \n\n1974 births\n20th-century Indian male actors\n21st-century Indian male actors\nDancers from Maharashtra\nFilmfare Awards winners\nIndian male dancers\nIndian male film actors\nIndian male voice actors\nLiving people\nMale actors from Mumbai\nMale actors in Hindi cinema\nPopping dancers\nPunjabi people\nBengali people\nZee Cine Awards winners\nIndian male child actors\nPeople with polydactyly"
] | [
"Hrithik is an Indian actor who works in Hindi films.",
"He is known for his dancing skills.",
"One of the highest-paid actors in India, he has won many awards, including six Filmfares, four for Best actor and one for Best Debut and Best actor.",
"He appeared in Forbes India Celebrity 100 based on his income and popularity.",
"He has collaborated with his father.",
"He worked as an assistant director on four of his father's films after making brief appearances as a child actor.",
"He received several awards for his role in the box-office success Kaho Naa... Pyaar Hai.",
"The 2000 terrorism drama Fiza and the 2001 ensemble melodrama Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham... consolidated his reputation but were followed by several poorly received films.",
"A turning point in his film career was when he appeared in Krrish and Krrish 3.",
"He was praised for his portrayal of a thief in Dhoom 2 and Mughal Akbar in Jodhaa Akbar emperor.",
"He achieved further commercial success by playing the lead in several films, including the action film War, which is his highest-grossing release.",
"He made his television debut with Just Dance in 2011.",
"He became the highest-paid film star on Indian television as a judge.",
"He has launched his own clothing line and is involved with a number of humanitarian causes.",
"He has two children with his wife, who was married for fourteen years.",
"A family prominent in Bollywood had a child named Roshan who was born on January 10, 1974 in Bombay.",
"He is a descendant of both Bengali and Punjabi people.",
"Hrithik's paternal grandmother was a Bengali.",
"His mother is the daughter of a producer and director, while his father is the son of a music director.",
"His uncle is a musician.",
"Sunaina was educated at the Bombay Scottish School.",
"He considers himself more spiritual than religious because he belongs to a Hindu family.",
"Some of his peers avoided him because he was born with an extra thumb fused to his right hand.",
"He feigned injury and illness to avoid oral tests because of his stutter, which caused him problems at school.",
"He received daily speech therapy.",
"At the age of six, Roshan was brought on-screen by his grandfather, who paid him 100 for dancing in a song.",
"His father's production Aap Ke Deewane was one of the films where he made uncredited appearances.",
"He was in the song \"Shehar Main Charcha Hai\" in Aas Paas.",
"The actor's only speaking role during this period was when he was 12 years old, and he played the title character's adopted son in a movie.",
"His father insisted that he focus on his studies even though he wanted to be an actor.",
"In his early 20s, he was diagnosed with a condition that would not allow him to dance or perform stunts.",
"He decided to become an actor even though he was devastated.",
"He was jogging on the beach when he was caught in the rain around a year after the diagnosis.",
"He was able to increase his pace without any adverse effects.",
"He sees this day as the turning point of his life.",
"While studying at Sydenham College, he took part in dance and music festivals.",
"While assisting his father on four films, he also swept the floor and made tea for the crew.",
"After pack-up, he would make a judgement about his performance as an actor by filming himself.",
"He studied acting under his father.",
"He was supposed to make his screen debut as a lead actor in Tara Rum Pum Pum, but the film was canceled.",
"He starred in his father's movie.",
"An aspiring singer brutally killed after witnessing a murder, and Raj, an NRI who falls in love with the character, were both played by Roshan.",
"He took lessons in acting, singing, dancing, fencing and riding in order to prepare for the event.",
"One of the highest-grossing Indian films of 2000 was Kaho Naa... Pyaar Hai.",
"Suggu Kanchana wrote on Rediff.com that Rohan is good.",
"The ease and style with which he dances makes one forget this is his debut film.",
"He seems to be the most promising of the recent stars.",
"At the Filmfare Awards, he received Best Male Debut and Best Actor Awards.",
"He was the first actor to win two Filmfare awards in the same year.",
"A prominent actor in Bollywood was established by the film.",
"The actor was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"In his second film, Khalid Mohammed's crime drama Fiza, he played Amaan, an innocent Muslim boy who becomes a terrorist after the 1992–93 Bombay riots.",
"In the film, he appeared as an actor.",
"Fiza was moderately successful at the box office, and the performance of Roshan earned him a second nomination for Best actor at the Filmfare ceremony.",
"He was praised for his \"body language, his diction, his expressions, and his overall persona.\"",
"Mission Kashmir (2000) was an action movie starring Preity Zinta, Sanjay Dutt, andJackie Shroff.",
"The film addressed the topics of terrorism and crime and was a financial success.",
"Roshan was drawn to his role as a young man traumatised by the discovery that his adoptive father had been responsible for the death of his entire birth family.",
"In Adarsh's opinion, he is bright up the screen with his magnetic presence.",
"His expressions and body language are sure to win him praise.",
"In 2001, he appeared in two films, the first of which was a romantic drama called Yaadein, which starred him and Shroff.",
"Yaadein was reviled by critics but praised by the director for his commercial appeal.",
"The actor had a supporting role in the film.",
"He was cast as Rohan Raichand after watching a rough cut of the movie.",
"The film was India's highest-grossing film of the year, and among the most successful Bollywood films in the overseas market.",
"Anjum N said that he was the \"surprise scene-stealer\" and praised him for holding his own against the established actors.",
"He received a nomination for the Filmfare Award for his performance.",
"In 2002, Aap Mujhe Achche Lagne Lage and Na Tum Jaano Na Hum both failed at the box office.",
"The high-profile Mujhse Dosti Karoge was Roshan's final role that year.",
"The movie was co-starring Rani Mukerji.",
"The romantic drama made money internationally despite not being in India.",
"For the fourth time, Hrishikesh was cast in a film by Sooraj R. Barjatya called Main Prem Ki Diwani Hoon.",
"The press thought that the failure of these films would end his career.",
"The revival and awards success of Roshan's career began in 2003 with a starring role.",
"The film, directed and produced by his father, is about a young man with a learning disability who comes in contact with an extraterrestrial being.",
"I could live my childhood again after starring in the film, says Roshan.",
"I was able to eat as many chocolates as I wanted.",
"Everybody was very caring towards me when I was a baby.",
"In the book Film Sequels, Carolyn Jess-Cooke drew similarities between the character and Forrest Gump, which was portrayed by Tom Hanks in the film.",
"Some film critics compared the film's storyline to that of E.T., which was released in 1982.",
"They were unanimous in their praise for Roshan.",
"Filmfare noted how flesh and blood Hrithik's act is in a 2010 retrospective of the Top 80 Iconic Performances of Bollywood.",
"He believes he is the part.",
"You can watch him laugh, cry or bond with his alien friend.",
"A Rediff.com critic said that the film was propelled to the realm of the extraordinary by Roshan.",
"One of the most popular Bollywood films of the year, Koi...Mil Gaya, won two Filmfare Awards, one for Best Actor and one for Best Actress.",
"The film was a fictionalised coming-of-age story set against events from the 1999 Kargil War.",
"The item number \"Main Aisa Kyun Hoon\" was popular with audiences.",
"The film was nominated for best actor at the Filmfare ceremony.",
"Roshan's transformation from a free-spirited youth to a determined and brave soldier was praised by Gajjar.",
"In 2006 there were three new releases, including a brief appearance in the romance I See You at the end of the year.",
"In his father's film Krrish, he co-starred with Naseeruddin Shah.",
"He played the title superhero and his character from the original film in the follow-up to his family's production.",
"The cable work that would be needed to make his character fly was the reason why he traveled to China.",
"He tore his right leg and broke his thumb and toe during production.",
"Krrish was the third-highest-grossing Bollywood film of 2006 with a worldwide revenue.",
"He won the Best actor award at the International Indian Film Academy Awards.",
"He pulls off the pic's wilder absurdities with considerable panache and is considered a prime asset of the film.",
"Rohan won his third Filmfare Award for Best actor for his role as a master thief in Dhoom 2.",
"The film critic called him \"the heart, the soul, and the spirit of the film\" and praised his stunts, concluding that he \"holds the film together and even manages to take your attention away from its many flaws.\"",
"For the first time, Roshan was excited to play a anti- hero who lacks heroic attributes, because he was Bored by playing the good guy.",
"At the request of the film's producer, he lost for the role and learned skateboarding, snow boarding, rollerblading and sand surfing.",
"The highest grossing Indian film at that time was Dhoom 2, which was held for two years.",
"He made a brief appearance in the movie Om Shanti Om.",
"Ashutosh Gowariker's Jodhaa Akbar was a partly fictionalised account of a marriage of convenience between the Mughal emperor Jalaluddin Muhammad Akbar and the Rajput princess Jodha Bai.",
"Gowariker believed that Roshan could play the role of a king.",
"For the role, he learned sword-fighting and horse-riding.",
"Jodhaa Akbar earned a lot.",
"He won his fourth Filmfare Best Actor Award.",
"Critics were happy with the performance.",
"According to Raja Sen of Rediff.com, Roshan proves to be a very good Akbar.",
"The actor gives the performance his all but sometimes he seems too modern, slipping into the skin of the character and staying there.",
"The item number \"Krazzy 4\" was a hit in the film of the same name.",
"In 2009, after a small role in Luck by Chance, Roshan starred in and recorded \"Kites in the Sky\" for Kites.",
"He played a man in a film who was running a green card scam in Las Vegas in which he married 11 different women in exchange for money.",
"Kites was the first Bollywood film to break into the North American top 10.",
"The film did not do well at India's box office and received negative reviews.",
"Box Office India blamed the failure on its multilingual dialogues.",
"Matthew Schneeberger wrote a review for Rediff.com.",
"A lot.",
"The film's catastrophically bad ending is one of the things he bungles in Kites.",
"In the film Guzaarish, he played the role of a former magician who files an appeal for his death after years of struggle.",
"After reading the film's story, he agreed to the role.",
"He interacted with paraplegic patients to better understand his role.",
"I used to spend six hours with the patients, initially once a week and then once a month.",
"I used to go to understand what they were going through.",
"They have taught me a lot.",
"He put on weight to look the part of a magician in the film.",
"The film failed at the box office, but it was well received by the critics.",
"The chemistry between Roshan and Rai is something that \"breaks the Bollywood mould of stereotypes,\" according to a writer for Zee News.",
"He received nominations for Filmfare, IIFA and the Zee Cine Award for Best actor.",
"In the movie, three friends embark on a bachelor trip where they overcome their insecurities, and they are joined by Abhay Deol and Farhan Akhtar.",
"She considers him her favourite actor and cast him in the role of an uptight workaholic.",
"The song \"Seorita\" was recorded with his co-stars and Mara del Mar Fernndez.",
"The performance of Roshan was praised in the reviews.",
"Hrithik Roshan once again brings real depth to his character with a spectacular performance.",
"He's shy and restrained, then lets go with such fantastic intensity that you make the inward journey with his character.",
"The film became Roshan's first commercial success in three years.",
"He made a special appearance in Don 2.",
"Agneepath, a remake of the 1990 film of the same name, was the only screen appearance of Roshan in 2012",
"The character of the common man who seeks revenge against an unscrupulous man for framing and murdering his father was brought to life by the cast.",
"Before agreeing to take up the role that was previously played by Big B, Roshan thought hard about it.",
"He didn't watch the original film because he found his role completely different.",
"In one of the accidents, Roshan had a back injury.",
"Agneepath was the hardest project he had ever worked on due to the exhaustion he felt while filming.",
"Bollywood's highest opening-day earnings record was broken by the film.",
"A reviewer thought that Roshan \"breathes fire and soul into Agneepath\".",
"The actor won for the third year in a row for best actor in a drama.",
"The third film in the Krrish film series, Krrish 3, was a commercial success with limited work.",
"When he fell down, he had back pain.",
"The critics thought the film was entertaining but lacking in creativity.",
"Roshan played three different characters in the film.",
"One of the highest-grossing Indian films of all time was Krrish 3.",
"The actor received a fourth and fifth nomination for his performance in Krrish 3 and the remake of Knight and Day, one of the most expensive Bollywood films.",
"Playing the role of an eccentric secret agent who plots to track down a terrorist, Roshan became the first actor to perform a flyboarding stunt in a film.",
"While filming in Thailand, Roshan suffered a head injury from a stunt accident and underwent brain surgery at the Hinduja Hospital performed by Dr. B. K. Misra to relieve subacute-subdural hematoma.",
"Writing for Bollywood news website Koimoi, critic Mohar Basu said that he was \"pitch perfect\" and \"brilliant\" in his part.",
"The film was one of the highest-grossing Indian films.",
"Ashutosh Gowariker paid a record-breaking remuneration for an Indian actor to play the role of a farmer in his movie.",
"The \"agile\" and \"lithe\" required for his role were achieved through three months of training.",
"It failed commercially despite being a highly anticipated release.",
"The film was described as an \"unintentional comedy\" by Anupama Chopra.",
"Even for his Herculean shoulders, the burden of carrying this leaden, cartoon-like narrative proves too much.",
"Kaabil is a romantic thriller about a blind man who avenges the rape of his blind wife.",
"To ensure authenticity in his portrayal, Roshan locked himself in a room for four days and avoided contact with people.",
"The reviews for the film were generally positive.",
"Meena Iyer of The Times of India found his performance to be his best to date, and Shubhra Gupta of The Indian Express considered him \"the only bright spot in this dispirited mess of a movie.\"",
"The film was shown all over the world.",
"After two years of screen absence, Roshan starred in two films in 2019.",
"A trainer was hired to learn the Bihari accent for the role.",
"The film was a commercial success despite mixed reviews.",
"One of his best performances was called one of the worst by Saibal and Michael.",
"War was the highest-grossing Bollywood film of the year.",
"The story of an Indian soldier tasked with eliminating his former mentor is told in the film.",
"The reviews for the film were positive, with one saying that the actors brought \"swag to the big stylish sequences and a visceral energy to the one-on-one punch-ups in the movie\".",
"Upcoming projects will include a remake of Vikram Vedha, in which he will reprise his role from Na Tum Jaano Na Hum.",
"It will be released on September 30, 2022.",
"On January 10, 2021, he confirmed that he would star in Fighter, his third film with director Siddharth Anand, and first with actors.",
"On January 26, 2023, it is expected to release.",
"He launched a clothing line, appeared on television, and performed on stage.",
"His first tour was successful in the United States and Canada.",
"At the end of that year, he danced on stage with many other people in the show Now or Never at Kings Park Stadium in South Africa.",
"Just Dance was a dance competition reality show in which Roshan was a judge.",
"He was the highest-paid film star on Indian television.",
"The show ended in October 2011.",
"The casual wear brand HRx was launched in November.",
"He talks about his childhood stutter.",
"He supports the Dilkhush Special School.",
"He donated to the hospital for the treatment of stammering children.",
"The charity foundation was set up by Roshan to help the handicapped.",
"He believes that people should publicise their philanthropic work to set an example for others.",
"He took part in a festival at Ghatkopar in which the proceeds went to a charity.",
"He donated to the victims of the North India floods.",
"The charity football match was organised by the daughter of a Bollywood star.",
"The profits from the \"Dheere Dheere\" music video were donated to charity.",
"The Global Goals campaign's World's Largest Lesson aims to educate children in over 100 countries about the sustainable development goals and later that year, Roshan became the Indian brand ambassador for the campaign.",
"Bollywood actors donated money to build homes for families affected by the 2015 South Indian floods.",
"For at least three years, he signed on for endorsement deals with Coca-Cola, Tamarind and Hero Honda.",
"The Times of India reported that he received for each endorsement, making him one of the highest-earning celebrity endorsers.",
"His brand value in 2016 was estimated to be US$34.1 million, the eighth highest of Indian celebrities.",
"One of the largest endorsement deals signed by an Indian startup was signed by the brand ambassador of Cure.fit.",
"On December 20, 2000, Roshan married Sussanne Khan in a private ceremony.",
"Roshan is a Hindu and Khan is a Muslim.",
"They have two sons, Hrehaan and Hridhaan.",
"Their divorce was finalized in November of last year.",
"They said that they parted amicably.",
"He filed a lawsuit against his co-star, accusing her of cyber stalking and harassment.",
"Ranaut said that his lawsuit was an attempt to cover up their affair.",
"The case was closed by the Mumbai Police due to lack of evidence.",
"After his father was shot in 2000, Roshan considered quitting the film industry.",
"Nepalese newspapers accused him of saying in a Star Plus interview that he hated Nepal and its people.",
"This led to protests in the country, a ban on screening of his films, and four people's deaths after street violence.",
"If he ever visited the country, Nepalese people threatened to bury him alive.",
"According to Star Plus, Roshan didn't touch upon Nepal.",
"After he denied making a claim against the country, the violence subsided.",
"The movie was distributed to newspapers and a local television station.",
"From a young age, the son of a film maker faced the media spotlight.",
"Shama Rana thinks that he is one of the actors who managed film careers with the help of family relations.",
"On the other hand, Roshan is acknowledged in the media as one of the most talented Indian actors of his generation, for his devotion to his work and for his ability to commit heavily to each role.",
"He is known for his professionalism because he insists on learning any necessary skills and performing stunts himself.",
"Despite being in a troubled state of mind, the director Ashutosh Gowariker praised the actor when he continued filming.",
"He can display a range of emotions on screen, according to the director who considers him her favourite actor.",
"Roshan tries to avoid typecasting by taking on diverse parts.",
"He looks at the script to inspire with the strength and courage of his characters and to make his audience smile.",
"Critics noted that he was versatile in portraying a variety of characters.",
"In 2000, Box Office India ranked him first on its top actors list.",
"Rediff.com had a list of the best Bollywood actors in 2003 and 2006.",
"Filmfare magazine included two of his performances.",
"Rediff.com has a list of the Top 10 Actors of 2000–2010.",
"He disagrees with the media's opinion of Roshan's dancing ability.",
"He is a sensational dancer who has the looks of a silent movie star, according to the Los Angeles Times.",
"He is only able to dance and act in his father's films according to some critics.",
"His inclination towards \"glamorous, albeit empty parts\" has been criticized.",
"He is one of Bollywood's highest-paid actors.",
"According to Daily News and Analysis, he was the most bankable star in Bollywood.",
"He was named the second most powerful Indian film star by Forbes in 2001.",
"He was ranked fourth in the filmfare power list.",
"One of India's most popular icons was voted one by Daily News and Analysis.",
"One of the ten most powerful Bollywood entertainers of the 2000s was Roshan.",
"The Forbes India Celebrity 100 list is based on the income and popularity of Indian celebrities, and from 2012 to the present, Roshan was placed on the list.",
"He is a sex symbol and a style icon in India.",
"Four Bollywood actors, including Roshan, launched miniature dolls in the United Kingdom under the name of \"Bollywood legends\".",
"He was ranked among the top five for the next five years by The Times of India.",
"In 2010 and 2012 he was included in the list of Bollywood's best dressed men.",
"A life-size, wax figure of him was installed at London's Madame Tussauds museum in January 2011, making him the fifth Indian actor to have been replicated as a wax statue there.",
"The Madame Tussauds' museums in New York, Washington and other cities have versions of the statue.",
"The magazine Eastern Eye has a listing of the 50 Sexiest Asian Men.",
"He was among the top five in five of the last six years.",
"List of awards and nominations received by Hrithik Roshan list of Indian film actors list of Indian male actors list of Indian male actors list of Indian male actors list of Indian male actors list of Indian male actors list of Indian male actors list of Indian male actors list of Indian male actors list of"
] | <mask> (; born 10 January 1974) is an Indian actor who works in Hindi films. He has portrayed a variety of characters and is known for his dancing skills. One of the highest-paid actors in India, he has won many awards, including six Filmfares, four for Best Actor and one each for Best Debut and Best Actor (Critics). Starting in 2012, he appeared several times in Forbes India Celebrity 100 based on his income and popularity. <mask> has frequently collaborated with his father, <mask>. He made brief appearances as a child actor in several films in the 1980s and later worked as an assistant director on four of his father's films. His first leading role was in the box-office success Kaho Naa... Pyaar Hai (2000), for which he received several awards.Performances in the 2000 terrorism drama Fiza and the 2001 ensemble melodrama Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham... consolidated his reputation but were followed by several poorly received films. The 2003 science fiction film Koi... Mil Gaya, for which Roshan won two Filmfare Awards, was a turning point in his film career; he also appeared in its sequels: Krrish (2006) and Krrish 3 (2013). He earned praise for his portrayal of a thief in Dhoom 2 (2006), Mughal emperor Akbar in Jodhaa Akbar (2008) and a quadriplegic in Guzaarish (2010). He achieved further commercial success by playing the lead in the 2011 drama Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara, the 2012 revenge film Agneepath, the 2014 action comedy Bang Bang!, the 2019 biopic Super 30, and the 2019 action thriller War, which ranks as his highest-grossing release. <mask> has also performed on stage and debuted on television with Just Dance (2011). As a judge on the latter, he became the highest-paid film star on Indian television. He is involved with a number of humanitarian causes, endorses several brands and products and has launched his own clothing line.<mask> was married for fourteen years to Sussanne Khan, with whom he has two children. Early life and background
<mask> was born on 10 January 1974 in Bombay to a family prominent in Bollywood. He is of Punjabi and Bengali descent on his paternal side. <mask>'s paternal grandmother <mask> was a Bengali. His father, film director Rakesh <mask>, is the son of music director <mask> Nagrath; his mother, Pinky, is the daughter of producer and director J. Om Prakash. His uncle, Rajesh, is a music composer. <mask> has an older sister, Sunaina, and was educated at the Bombay Scottish School.<mask> belongs to a Hindu family, though he considers himself more spiritual than religious. Roshan felt isolated as a child; he was born with an extra thumb fused to the one on his right hand, which led some of his peers to avoid him. He has stammered since the age of six; this caused him problems at school, and he feigned injury and illness to avoid oral tests. He was helped by daily speech therapy. <mask>'s grandfather, Prakash first brought him on-screen at the age of six in the film Aasha (1980); he danced in a song enacted by Jeetendra, for which Prakash paid him 100. <mask> made uncredited appearances in various family film projects, including his father's production Aap Ke Deewane (1980). In Prakash's Aas Paas (1981), he appeared in the song "Shehar Main Charcha Hai".The actor's only speaking role during this period came when he was 12; he was seen as Govinda, the title character's adopted son, in Prakash's Bhagwaan Dada (1986). Roshan decided that he wanted to be a full-time actor, but his father insisted that he focus on his studies. In his early 20s, he was diagnosed with scoliosis that would not allow him to dance or perform stunts. Initially devastated, he eventually decided to become an actor anyway. Around a year after the diagnosis, he took a chance by jogging on a beach when he was caught in a downpour. There was no pain, and becoming more confident, he was able to increase his pace with no adverse effects. Roshan sees this day as "the turning point of [his] life."Roshan attended Sydenham College, where he took part in dance and music festivals while studying, graduating in commerce. Roshan assisted his father on four films—Khudgarz (1987), King Uncle (1993), Karan Arjun (1995) and Koyla (1997)—while also sweeping the floor and making tea for the crew. After pack-up, Roshan would enact Shah Rukh Khan's scenes from Koyla and film himself to make a judgement about his performance as an actor. While he assisted his father, he studied acting under Kishore Namit Kapoor. Film career
2000–2002: Debut, success and setback
<mask> was originally scheduled to make his screen debut as a lead actor opposite Preity Zinta in the cancelled film Shekhar Kapur's Tara Rum Pum Pum. Instead, he starred in his father's romantic drama Kaho Naa... Pyaar Hai (2000) opposite another debutante, Ameesha Patel. Roshan played dual roles: Rohit, an aspiring singer brutally killed after witnessing a murder, and Raj, an NRI who falls in love with Patel's character.To prepare, he trained with the actor Salman Khan to bulk up physically, worked to improve his diction and took lessons in acting, singing, dancing, fencing and riding. With global revenues of , Kaho Naa... Pyaar Hai became one of the highest-grossing Indian films of 2000. His performance was acclaimed by critics; Suggu Kanchana on Rediff.com wrote, "[<mask>] is good. The ease and style with which he dances, emotes, fights, makes one forget this is his debut film ... He seems to be the most promising among the recent lot of star sons we have been subjected to." For the role, <mask> received Best Male Debut and Best Actor Awards at the annual Filmfare Awards, IIFA Awards, and Zee Cine Awards. He became the first actor to win both Filmfare Best Debut and Best Actor awards the same year.The film established <mask> as a prominent actor in Bollywood. The actor found life hard after his overnight success, particularly the demands on his time. In his second release, Khalid Mohammed's crime drama Fiza, <mask> played Amaan, an innocent Muslim boy who becomes a terrorist after the 1992–93 Bombay riots. <mask> appeared in the film to expand his horizons as an actor. Co-starring Karisma Kapoor and Jaya Bachchan, Fiza was moderately successful at the box office, and <mask>'s performance earned him a second nomination for Best Actor at the Filmfare ceremony. Taran Adarsh of Bollywood Hungama praised him as the production's prime asset, commending his "body language, his diction, his expressions, [and] his overall persona." <mask> next appeared in Vidhu Vinod Chopra's action drama Mission Kashmir (2000) alongside Sanjay Dutt, Preity Zinta, and Jackie Shroff.Set in the valley of Kashmir during the Indo-Pakistani conflicts, the film addressed the topics of terrorism and crime, and was a financial success. <mask> was drawn to his complex role of a young man traumatised by the discovery that his adoptive father had been responsible for the death of his entire birth family. In Adarsh's opinion, Roshan "brightens up the screen with his magnetic presence. His body language, coupled with his expressions, is sure to win him plaudits." In 2001, Roshan appeared in two films, the first of which was Subhash Ghai's Yaadein, a romantic drama which paired him with Kareena Kapoor and reunited him with Shroff. Although highly anticipated, Yaadein was reviled by critics; in The Hindu, Ziya Us Salam criticised the director for relying on <mask>'s commercial appeal. <mask> next had a supporting role in Karan Johar's ensemble melodrama Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham... alongside Amitabh Bachchan, Jaya Bachchan, Shah Rukh Khan, Kajol and Kareena Kapoor.He was cast as Rohan Raichand—the younger son of Bachchan's character who plots to reunite him with his adopted son (played by Khan)—after Johar had watched a rough cut of Kaho Naa... Pyaar Hai. Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham... finished as India's highest-grossing film of the year, and among the most successful Bollywood films in the overseas market, earning worldwide. Writing for Rediff.com, Anjum N described Roshan as "the surprise scene-stealer", praising him for holding his own against the established actors. <mask> received a nomination for the Filmfare Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance. In 2002 Vikram Bhatt's romance Aap Mujhe Achche Lagne Lage reunited him with Ameesha Patel but failed at the box office, as did Arjun Sablok's romance Na Tum Jaano Na Hum (2002). <mask>'s final role that year was in a Yash Raj Films production, the high-profile Mujhse Dosti Karoge! co-starring Rani Mukerji and Kareena Kapoor.The romantic drama was heavily promoted before its release and made money internationally, though not in India. In another commercial failure, Sooraj R. Barjatya's Main Prem Ki Diwani Hoon, <mask> was cast alongside Kareena Kapoor for the fourth time, and Abhishek Bachchan. The press labelled Roshan a "one-trick pony" and suggested that the failure of these films would end his career. 2003–2008: Revival and awards success
<mask>'s career began to revive with a starring role in Koi... Mil Gaya (2003). The film, directed and produced by his father, centers on his character Rohit Mehra, a developmentally disabled young man, who comes in contact with an extraterrestrial being—a role that required him to lose nearly . <mask> recalls the experience of starring in the film fondly: "I could live my childhood [again]. I could eat as many chocolates as I wanted.I became a baby and everybody was so caring towards me." In the book Film Sequels, Carolyn Jess-Cooke drew similarities between the character and Forrest Gump, portrayed by Tom Hanks in the titular film, but this idea was dismissed by Roshan. Film critics were polarised on their view of the film—some of them negatively compared its storyline to the 1982 Hollywood release E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial—but were unanimous in their praise for Roshan. In a 2010 retrospective of the Top 80 Iconic Performances of Bollywood, Filmfare noted "how flesh and blood Hrithik's act is. Simply because he believes he is the part. Watch him laugh, cry or bond with his remote controlled alien friend and note his nuanced turn."A Rediff.com critic agreed that <mask> was "the turbojet that propels the film to the realm of the extraordinary." Koi... Mil Gaya was one of the most popular Bollywood film of the year, earning worldwide and <mask> won both Filmfare Awards for Best Actor and Best Actor (Critics). The following year, <mask> collaborated with Amitabh Bachchan and Preity Zinta on Farhan Akhtar's Lakshya (2004), a fictionalised coming-of-age story set against events from the 1999 Kargil War. He also featured in the item number "Main Aisa Kyun Hoon" (choreographed by Prabhu Deva) which proved popular with audiences. The film earned Roshan Best Actor nominations at the Filmfare and Zee Cine ceremony. Manish Gajjar of the BBC praised <mask>'s versatility and his transformation from a carefree youth to a determined and courageous soldier. <mask> was not seen on screen again until 2006, with three new releases, including a cameo at the end of the year in the romance I See You.He co-starred with Naseeruddin Shah and Priyanka Chopra in his father's superhero production Krrish. A follow-up to his family's production Koi... Mil Gaya, it saw him play dual roles—the title superhero and his character from the original film. Before production, Roshan travelled to China to train with Tony Ching for the cable work that would be needed to make his character fly. Among the several injuries he sustained during production, Roshan tore the hamstring in his right leg and broke his thumb and toe. Krrish became the third-highest-grossing Bollywood film of 2006 with a worldwide revenue of . It garnered him Best Actor awards at the 2007 Screen and the International Indian Film Academy Awards. Ronnie Scheib of Variety considered Roshan a prime asset of the film, noting that he "pulls off the pic's wilder absurdities with considerable panache."For his role as an enigmatic master thief in Dhoom 2 (2006)—an action sequel co-starring Aishwarya Rai, Bipasha Basu and Abhishek Bachchan—<mask> won his third Filmfare Award for Best Actor. The film critic Rajeev Masand called him "the heart, the soul, and the spirit of the film", and praised his stunts, concluding that he "holds the film together and even manages to take your attention away from its many flaws." Bored by playing the "good guy", Roshan was excited to play a anti- hero who lacks heroic attributes, for the first time. At the request of the film's producer Aditya Chopra, Roshan lost for the role, and learned skateboarding, snow boarding, rollerblading and sand surfing. With earnings of , Dhoom 2 became the highest grossing Indian film at that time, a distinction that was held for two years. In the 2007 melodrama Om Shanti Om, he made a cameo alongside several Bollywood stars. In 2008, <mask> was cast in Ashutosh Gowariker's Jodhaa Akbar, a partly fictionalised account of a marriage of convenience between the Mughal emperor Jalaluddin Muhammad Akbar (played by <mask>) and the Rajput princess Jodha Bai (played by Rai).Gowariker believed Roshan possessed the regal bearing and physique required to play the role of a king. For the role, Roshan learned sword-fighting and horse-riding, and also took Urdu lessons. Jodhaa Akbar earned worldwide. <mask>'s performance earned him his fourth Filmfare Best Actor Award. Critics were generally appreciative of <mask>'s performance. Raja Sen of Rediff.com thought that Roshan "proves a very good Akbar. There are times when his inflection seems too modern, but the actor gives the performance his all, slipping into the skin of the character and staying there."Roshan ended 2008 with an appearance in the popular item number "Krazzy 4" from the film of same name. 2009–2012: Critical acclaim
Following a small role in Zoya Akhtar's Luck by Chance in 2009, Roshan starred in and recorded "Kites in the Sky" for the multi-national romantic thriller Kites (2010). In the film, produced by his father, he played a man running a green card scam in Las Vegas in which he has married 11 different women in exchange for money. Kites opened on a record-breaking 3000 screens, and became the first Bollywood film to break into the North American top 10. However, the film eventually underperformed at India's box office and received negative reviews from critics. The website Box Office India attributed this failure to its multilingual dialogues. In a review for Rediff.com, Matthew Schneeberger thought that Roshan "overacts.A lot. In Kites, he nails a few scenes, but bungles many more, particularly the film's catastrophically bad ending." <mask> then collaborated with director Sanjay Leela Bhansali on the drama Guzaarish (2010) in which he had the role of Ethan Mascarenhas, a former magician suffering from quadriplegia, who after years of struggle, files an appeal for euthanasia. Roshan had reservations about the role but agreed to the project after reading the film's story. To understand his role better, he interacted with paraplegic patients. In his own words, "I used to spend six hours with the patients, initially once a week and then once a month. I used to go to understand what they go through, what they think, what their needs are.They have taught me a lot of things." He also trained with a Ukrainian magician to perform the film's magic stunts, and put on weight to look the part. The film failed at the box office, though it and <mask>'s performance were positively received by critics. A writer for Zee News praised the chemistry between <mask> and Rai, adding that they "break the Bollywood mould of stereotypes." <mask> received the Zee Cine Award for Best Actor (Critics) and nominations for Filmfare, IIFA and Zee Cine Award for Best Actor. In 2011, <mask> appeared in Zoya Akhtar's ensemble comedy-drama Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara alongside Abhay Deol and Farhan Akhtar as three friends who embark on a bachelor trip where they overcome their insecurities. Zoya cast <mask> in the role of an uptight workaholic as she considers him her favourite actor.For the film's soundtrack, <mask> recorded the song "Señorita" with his co-stars and María del Mar Fernández. Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara was released to positive reviews and <mask>'s performance was praised. Rajeev Masand wrote, "<mask> Roshan once again brings real depth to his character with a spectacular performance. He's shy and restrained, then lets go with such fantastic intensity that you make the inward journey with his character." The film grossed worldwide and became <mask>'s first commercial success in three years. Later that year, he made a special appearance in Farhan's Don 2. <mask>'s only screen appearance in 2012 was in Karan Malhotra's Agneepath, a retelling of the 1990 film of the same name.Cast alongside Rishi Kapoor, Sanjay Dutt and Priyanka Chopra, <mask> reinterpreted the character Vijay Deenanath Chauhan (originally played by Amitabh Bachchan), a common man who seeks revenge against an unscrupulous man for framing and murdering his father. Roshan was initially sceptical of taking up a role earlier played by Bachchan, and thought hard before accepting. He did not watch the original film for inspiration as he found his role to be completely different. In one of several accidents to happen during production, Roshan suffered a painful back injury. He deemed Agneepath "the hardest [project] I've ever worked in my life" owing to the exhaustion he felt while filming. The film broke Bollywood's highest opening-day earnings record, and had a worldwide gross of . A Firstpost reviewer thought Roshan "breathes fire and soul into Agneepath".The actor received a third consecutive Stardust Award for Best Actor in a Drama, having won previously for Guzaarish and Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara. 2013–present: Commercial success with limited work
<mask> appeared in the third instalment of the Krrish film series—Krrish 3 (2013) which also starred Priyanka Chopra, Vivek Oberoi and Kangana Ranaut. During production, <mask> was injured when he fell down, which resulted in back pain. Critics thought that the film was entertaining but lacking in originality, though <mask>'s performance garnered praise. The editor Komal Nahta lauded <mask> for playing three different characters in the film. Krrish 3 grossed worldwide, becoming one of the highest-grossing Indian films of all time. <mask> received a fourth and fifth consecutive Filmfare nomination for his performances in Krrish 3, and the 2014 action comedy Bang Bang!, a remake of the 2010 Hollywood release Knight and Day and one of the most expensive Bollywood films.Playing the role of an eccentric secret agent who plots to track down a terrorist, Roshan became the first actor to perform a flyboarding stunt in film. While filming in Thailand, Roshan suffered a head injury from a stunt accident and underwent brain surgery at the Hinduja Hospital performed by Dr. B. K. Misra to relieve subacute-subdural hematoma. Writing for Bollywood news website Koimoi, critic Mohar Basu noted that <mask> was "pitch perfect" and "breez[ed] through his part brilliantly." The film earned in global ticket sales, making it among the highest-grossing Indian films. For playing the role of a farmer in 2016 BC who travels to Mohenjo-daro in Ashutosh Gowariker's Mohenjo Daro (2016), Roshan was paid , a record-breaking remuneration for an Indian actor. He underwent a three-month training to achieve the "lithe" and "agile" physique required for his role. Despite being a highly anticipated release, it failed commercially, and critics were generally unenthusiastic.Dismissing the film as an "unintentional comedy", Anupama Chopra wrote that <mask> "pours his soul into every scene. But the burden of carrying this leaden, cartoon-like narrative proves too much even for his Herculean shoulders." <mask> was next seen alongside Yami Gautam in Sanjay Gupta's Kaabil (2017), a romantic thriller about a blind man who avenges the rape of his blind wife. To ensure authenticity in his portrayal, Roshan locked himself in a room for four days and avoided contact with people. Reviews for the film were generally positive with particular praise for <mask>'s performance. Meena Iyer of The Times of India found his performance to be his best to date, and Shubhra Gupta on The Indian Express considered him "the only bright spot in this dispirited mess of a movie." The film accumulated worldwide.After two years of screen absence, <mask> starred in two films in 2019, first in Vikas Bahl's biographical film Super 30, based on the mathematician Anand Kumar and his eponymous educational program. For the role, Roshan hired a trainer from Bhagalpur to learn Bihari accent. The film was released to mixed reviews but was a commercial success, grossing worldwide. While NDTV's Saibal Chatterjee found Roshan miscast in his role, Michael Gomes of Khaleej Times called it one of his best performances. <mask> found his biggest commercial success in the highest-grossing Bollywood film of 2019, the -earning action thriller War. The film, <mask>'s first with Yash Raj Films since Dhoom 2, tells the story of an Indian soldier (Tiger Shroff) tasked with eliminating his former mentor (<mask>) who has gone rogue. Reviews for the film and the performances were positive; Rajeev Masand praised <mask> and Shroff for their commitment to the action, "bringing swag to the big stylish sequences and a visceral energy to the one-on-one punch-ups in the movie".Upcoming projects
<mask> will star in a remake of Vikram Vedha, in which he will reunite with Saif Ali Khan since Na Tum Jaano Na Hum (2002). It is scheduled for release on 30 September 2022. On 10 January 2021, <mask> confirmed he would star in Fighter, his third film with director Siddharth Anand, and first with actors Deepika Padukone and Anil Kapoor. It is expected to release on 26 January 2023. Other work
<mask> has performed on stage, appeared on television, and launched a clothing line. His first tour (Heartthrobs: Live in Concert (2002) with Kareena Kapoor, Karisma Kapoor, Arjun Rampal and Aftab Shivdasani) was successful in the United States and Canada. At the end of that year, he danced on stage with Amitabh Bachchan, Sanjay Dutt, Kareena Kapoor, Rani Mukerji and Shah Rukh Khan at Kings Park Stadium in Durban, South Africa in the show Now or Never.In 2011, Roshan served as a judge alongside Farah Khan and Vaibhavi Merchant for the dance competition reality show, Just Dance. He became the highest-paid film star on Indian television after he was paid per episode. The show ran from June to October 2011. In November 2013, <mask> launched his clothing line, the casual wear brand HRx. <mask> is vocal about his childhood stammer. He actively supports the Dilkhush Special School for mentally challenged children in Mumbai. In 2008, he donated to the Nanavati Hospital for the treatment of stammering children.<mask> set up a charity foundation in 2009 that aims to work for handicapped people. He donates roughly for charity every month, and believes that people should publicise their philanthropic work to set an example for others. In 2013, he took part in a festivity at Ghatkopar, whose proceeds went to an NGO supporting tribal girls suffering from malnutrition and starvation. Also that year, he donated to help the victims of the 2013 North India floods. Alongside other Bollywood stars, Roshan played a football match for charity organised by Aamir Khan's daughter, Ira, in 2014. The following year, he appeared with Sonam Kapoor in the music video for "Dheere Dheere", whose profits were donated to charity. Later that year, Roshan became the Indian brand ambassador for UNICEF and the Global Goals campaign's World's Largest Lesson that aims to educate children in over 100 countries about the Sustainable Development Goals.In 2016, <mask> and other Bollywood actors made donations for building homes for families affected by the 2015 South Indian floods. Following his debut film, <mask> signed on for endorsement deals with Coca-Cola, Tamarind and Hero Honda, all for three years and for at least . As of 2010, he is celebrity endorser for such brands and products as Provogue, Parle Hide and Seek, Reliance Communications and Hero Honda and recently roshan has completed six years with Rado.The Times of India reported that Roshan received to for each endorsement, making him one of the highest-paid male celebrity endorsers. In 2016, Duff & Phelps estimated his brand value to be US$34.1 million, the eighth highest of Indian celebrities. In 2017, Roshan was signed as the brand ambassador of a Health and wellness startup Cure.fit and is touted as one of the largest endorsement deal signed by an Indian startup. Personal life
On 20 December 2000, <mask> married Sussanne Khan in a private ceremony in Bangalore. Despite their religious difference—<mask> is a Hindu and Khan is a Muslim—Roshan says that he equally valued her beliefs.The couple has two sons, Hrehaan (born in 2006) and Hridhaan (born in 2008). They separated in December 2013 and their divorce was finalised in November 2014. <mask> and Sussanne maintained that they parted amicably. In 2016, he filed a lawsuit against his Krrish 3 co-star Kangana Ranaut, accusing her of cyber stalking and harassment. Denying the charges, Ranaut filed a counter-charge against Roshan, claiming that his lawsuit was an attempt to cover up their affair. Owing to a lack of evidence, the Mumbai Police closed the case later that year. <mask> considered quitting the film industry after two assailants fired bullets at his father in 2000.Later that December, he was involved in a controversy when Nepalese newspapers accused him of stating in a Star Plus interview that he hated Nepal and its people. This led to protests in the country, a ban on screening of his films, and four people's deaths after street violence. Nepalese people threatened to "bury [him] alive" if he ever visited the country. Star Plus, for its part, stated that Roshan "did not touch upon Nepal." The violence calmed down after Roshan wrote a two-page rejoinder in which he denied having made any claim against the country. Nepali actress Manisha Koirala helped distribute it to newspapers and a local television station. Artistry and media image
As the son of the filmmaker Rakesh, Roshan faced the media spotlight from a young age.Discussing nepotism in Bollywood, Shama Rana views him as one of several actors who managed film careers with the help of family relations in the industry. On the other hand, <mask> is acknowledged in the media as one of the most talented Indian actors of his generation, for his devotion to his work and for his ability to commit heavily to each role. He insists on learning any necessary skills and performing stunts himself, and is particularly known for his professionalism. The director Ashutosh Gowariker praised <mask> when he continued filming Mohenjo Daro despite several injuries and being in a troubled state of mind. Zoya Akhtar, who considers Roshan her favourite actor, and directed him in Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara, remarks on his ability to display a range of emotions on screen. In an attempt to avoid typecasting, Roshan takes on diverse parts . He looks at the scripts as a platform to inspire with the strength and courage of his characters and to make his audiences smile.<mask> was noted by critics for his versatility in portraying a variety of characters in Koi... Mil Gaya (2003), Lakshya (2004), Jodhaa Akbar (2008), and Guzaarish (2010). Box Office India ranked him first on its top actors listing in 2000 and later included him in 2003, 2004, 2006 and 2007. <mask> topped Rediff.com's list of best Bollywood actors in 2003, and was ranked fourth in 2006. Filmfare magazine included two of his performances—from Koi... Mil Gaya and Lakshya—on its 2010 list of 80 Iconic Performances. In March 2011, <mask> placed fourth on Rediff.com's list of Top 10 Actors of 2000–2010. Roshan's dancing ability has also drawn praise from the media, an opinion he disagrees with. The Los Angeles Times finds him to be "a sensational dancer" who "has the dashing, chiseled looks of a silent movie matinee idol."Some critics also believe that he is only able to dance and act in his father's films. His inclination towards "glamorous, albeit empty parts", which conform to character stereotypes, has been criticised. <mask> is among Bollywood's highest-paid actors. Discussing his success ratio at the box office in a 2014 article, Daily News and Analysis credited him as "the most bankable star" in Bollywood. One of the most high-profile Indian celebrities, he was named the second most powerful Indian film star by Forbes in 2001. He ranked fourth in Filmfare Power List in 2007. In a 2009 poll conducted by Daily News and Analysis <mask> was voted one of India's most popular icons.At the 2009 FICCI-IIFA Awards, <mask> was one of the ten recipients of the most powerful Bollywood entertainers of the 2000s. From 2012 to 2018, <mask> was placed on Forbes India Celebrity 100—a list based on the income and popularity of Indian celebrities—peaking at ninth position in 2014 with an annual income of . <mask> has established himself as a sex symbol and a style icon in India. In 2006, <mask> was one of the four Bollywood actors, along with Priyanka Chopra, Kajol and Shah Rukh Khan, whose miniature dolls were launched in the United Kingdom, under the name of "Bollywood Legends". He topped The Times of India listing of 50 Most Desirable Men in 2010 and ranked among the top five for the next five years. In 2010 and 2012, the Indian edition of GQ included him in their listing of Bollywood's best dressed men. A life-size, wax figure of him was installed at London's Madame Tussauds museum in January 2011, making him the fifth Indian actor to have been replicated as a wax statue there.Versions of the statue were installed at Madame Tussauds' museums in New York, Washington and other cities in the world. <mask> regularly features in the magazine Eastern Eye listing of the 50 Sexiest Asian Men. He topped the list in 2011, 2012 and 2014, and featured among the top five in 2010, 2013 and 2015 to 2018. See also
List of awards and nominations received by <mask> Roshan
Hrithik Roshan filmography
List of Indian film actors
References
External links
1974 births
20th-century Indian male actors
21st-century Indian male actors
Dancers from Maharashtra
Filmfare Awards winners
Indian male dancers
Indian male film actors
Indian male voice actors
Living people
Male actors from Mumbai
Male actors in Hindi cinema
Popping dancers
Punjabi people
Bengali people
Zee Cine Awards winners
Indian male child actors
People with polydactyly | [
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] | <mask> is an Indian actor who works in Hindi films. He is known for his dancing skills. One of the highest-paid actors in India, he has won many awards, including six Filmfares, four for Best actor and one for Best Debut and Best actor. He appeared in Forbes India Celebrity 100 based on his income and popularity. He has collaborated with his father. He worked as an assistant director on four of his father's films after making brief appearances as a child actor. He received several awards for his role in the box-office success Kaho Naa... Pyaar Hai.The 2000 terrorism drama Fiza and the 2001 ensemble melodrama Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham... consolidated his reputation but were followed by several poorly received films. A turning point in his film career was when he appeared in Krrish and Krrish 3. He was praised for his portrayal of a thief in Dhoom 2 and Mughal Akbar in Jodhaa Akbar emperor. He achieved further commercial success by playing the lead in several films, including the action film War, which is his highest-grossing release. He made his television debut with Just Dance in 2011. He became the highest-paid film star on Indian television as a judge. He has launched his own clothing line and is involved with a number of humanitarian causes.He has two children with his wife, who was married for fourteen years. A family prominent in Bollywood had a child named <mask> who was born on January 10, 1974 in Bombay. He is a descendant of both Bengali and Punjabi people. <mask>'s paternal grandmother was a Bengali. His mother is the daughter of a producer and director, while his father is the son of a music director. His uncle is a musician. Sunaina was educated at the Bombay Scottish School.He considers himself more spiritual than religious because he belongs to a Hindu family. Some of his peers avoided him because he was born with an extra thumb fused to his right hand. He feigned injury and illness to avoid oral tests because of his stutter, which caused him problems at school. He received daily speech therapy. At the age of six, Roshan was brought on-screen by his grandfather, who paid him 100 for dancing in a song. His father's production Aap Ke Deewane was one of the films where he made uncredited appearances. He was in the song "Shehar Main Charcha Hai" in Aas Paas.The actor's only speaking role during this period was when he was 12 years old, and he played the title character's adopted son in a movie. His father insisted that he focus on his studies even though he wanted to be an actor. In his early 20s, he was diagnosed with a condition that would not allow him to dance or perform stunts. He decided to become an actor even though he was devastated. He was jogging on the beach when he was caught in the rain around a year after the diagnosis. He was able to increase his pace without any adverse effects. He sees this day as the turning point of his life.While studying at Sydenham College, he took part in dance and music festivals. While assisting his father on four films, he also swept the floor and made tea for the crew. After pack-up, he would make a judgement about his performance as an actor by filming himself. He studied acting under his father. He was supposed to make his screen debut as a lead actor in Tara Rum Pum Pum, but the film was canceled. He starred in his father's movie. An aspiring singer brutally killed after witnessing a murder, and Raj, an NRI who falls in love with the character, were both played by Roshan.He took lessons in acting, singing, dancing, fencing and riding in order to prepare for the event. One of the highest-grossing Indian films of 2000 was Kaho Naa... Pyaar Hai. Suggu Kanchana wrote on Rediff.com that Rohan is good. The ease and style with which he dances makes one forget this is his debut film. He seems to be the most promising of the recent stars. At the Filmfare Awards, he received Best Male Debut and Best Actor Awards. He was the first actor to win two Filmfare awards in the same year.A prominent actor in Bollywood was established by the film. The actor was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 In his second film, Khalid Mohammed's crime drama Fiza, he played Amaan, an innocent Muslim boy who becomes a terrorist after the 1992–93 Bombay riots. In the film, he appeared as an actor. Fiza was moderately successful at the box office, and the performance of Roshan earned him a second nomination for Best actor at the Filmfare ceremony. He was praised for his "body language, his diction, his expressions, and his overall persona." Mission Kashmir (2000) was an action movie starring Preity Zinta, Sanjay Dutt, andJackie Shroff.The film addressed the topics of terrorism and crime and was a financial success. <mask> was drawn to his role as a young man traumatised by the discovery that his adoptive father had been responsible for the death of his entire birth family. In Adarsh's opinion, he is bright up the screen with his magnetic presence. His expressions and body language are sure to win him praise. In 2001, he appeared in two films, the first of which was a romantic drama called Yaadein, which starred him and Shroff. Yaadein was reviled by critics but praised by the director for his commercial appeal. The actor had a supporting role in the film.He was cast as Rohan Raichand after watching a rough cut of the movie. The film was India's highest-grossing film of the year, and among the most successful Bollywood films in the overseas market. Anjum N said that he was the "surprise scene-stealer" and praised him for holding his own against the established actors. He received a nomination for the Filmfare Award for his performance. In 2002, Aap Mujhe Achche Lagne Lage and Na Tum Jaano Na Hum both failed at the box office. The high-profile Mujhse Dosti Karoge was <mask>'s final role that year. The movie was co-starring Rani Mukerji.The romantic drama made money internationally despite not being in India. For the fourth time, Hrishikesh was cast in a film by Sooraj R. Barjatya called Main Prem Ki Diwani Hoon. The press thought that the failure of these films would end his career. The revival and awards success of <mask>'s career began in 2003 with a starring role. The film, directed and produced by his father, is about a young man with a learning disability who comes in contact with an extraterrestrial being. I could live my childhood again after starring in the film, says Roshan. I was able to eat as many chocolates as I wanted.Everybody was very caring towards me when I was a baby. In the book Film Sequels, Carolyn Jess-Cooke drew similarities between the character and Forrest Gump, which was portrayed by Tom Hanks in the film. Some film critics compared the film's storyline to that of E.T., which was released in 1982. They were unanimous in their praise for Roshan. Filmfare noted how flesh and blood Hrithik's act is in a 2010 retrospective of the Top 80 Iconic Performances of Bollywood. He believes he is the part. You can watch him laugh, cry or bond with his alien friend.A Rediff.com critic said that the film was propelled to the realm of the extraordinary by Roshan. One of the most popular Bollywood films of the year, Koi...Mil Gaya, won two Filmfare Awards, one for Best Actor and one for Best Actress. The film was a fictionalised coming-of-age story set against events from the 1999 Kargil War. The item number "Main Aisa Kyun Hoon" was popular with audiences. The film was nominated for best actor at the Filmfare ceremony. <mask>'s transformation from a free-spirited youth to a determined and brave soldier was praised by Gajjar. In 2006 there were three new releases, including a brief appearance in the romance I See You at the end of the year.In his father's film Krrish, he co-starred with Naseeruddin Shah. He played the title superhero and his character from the original film in the follow-up to his family's production. The cable work that would be needed to make his character fly was the reason why he traveled to China. He tore his right leg and broke his thumb and toe during production. Krrish was the third-highest-grossing Bollywood film of 2006 with a worldwide revenue. He won the Best actor award at the International Indian Film Academy Awards. He pulls off the pic's wilder absurdities with considerable panache and is considered a prime asset of the film.Rohan won his third Filmfare Award for Best actor for his role as a master thief in Dhoom 2. The film critic called him "the heart, the soul, and the spirit of the film" and praised his stunts, concluding that he "holds the film together and even manages to take your attention away from its many flaws." For the first time, <mask> was excited to play a anti- hero who lacks heroic attributes, because he was Bored by playing the good guy. At the request of the film's producer, he lost for the role and learned skateboarding, snow boarding, rollerblading and sand surfing. The highest grossing Indian film at that time was Dhoom 2, which was held for two years. He made a brief appearance in the movie Om Shanti Om. Ashutosh Gowariker's Jodhaa Akbar was a partly fictionalised account of a marriage of convenience between the Mughal emperor Jalaluddin Muhammad Akbar and the Rajput princess Jodha Bai.Gowariker believed that Roshan could play the role of a king. For the role, he learned sword-fighting and horse-riding. Jodhaa Akbar earned a lot. He won his fourth Filmfare Best Actor Award. Critics were happy with the performance. According to Raja Sen of Rediff.com, <mask> proves to be a very good Akbar. The actor gives the performance his all but sometimes he seems too modern, slipping into the skin of the character and staying there.The item number "Krazzy 4" was a hit in the film of the same name. In 2009, after a small role in Luck by Chance, <mask> starred in and recorded "Kites in the Sky" for Kites. He played a man in a film who was running a green card scam in Las Vegas in which he married 11 different women in exchange for money. Kites was the first Bollywood film to break into the North American top 10. The film did not do well at India's box office and received negative reviews. Box Office India blamed the failure on its multilingual dialogues. Matthew Schneeberger wrote a review for Rediff.com.A lot. The film's catastrophically bad ending is one of the things he bungles in Kites. In the film Guzaarish, he played the role of a former magician who files an appeal for his death after years of struggle. After reading the film's story, he agreed to the role. He interacted with paraplegic patients to better understand his role. I used to spend six hours with the patients, initially once a week and then once a month. I used to go to understand what they were going through.They have taught me a lot. He put on weight to look the part of a magician in the film. The film failed at the box office, but it was well received by the critics. The chemistry between <mask> and Rai is something that "breaks the Bollywood mould of stereotypes," according to a writer for Zee News. He received nominations for Filmfare, IIFA and the Zee Cine Award for Best actor. In the movie, three friends embark on a bachelor trip where they overcome their insecurities, and they are joined by Abhay Deol and Farhan Akhtar. She considers him her favourite actor and cast him in the role of an uptight workaholic.The song "Seorita" was recorded with his co-stars and Mara del Mar Fernndez. The performance of Roshan was praised in the reviews. <mask> Roshan once again brings real depth to his character with a spectacular performance. He's shy and restrained, then lets go with such fantastic intensity that you make the inward journey with his character. The film became Roshan's first commercial success in three years. He made a special appearance in Don 2. Agneepath, a remake of the 1990 film of the same name, was the only screen appearance of Roshan in 2012The character of the common man who seeks revenge against an unscrupulous man for framing and murdering his father was brought to life by the cast. Before agreeing to take up the role that was previously played by Big B, Roshan thought hard about it. He didn't watch the original film because he found his role completely different. In one of the accidents, Roshan had a back injury. Agneepath was the hardest project he had ever worked on due to the exhaustion he felt while filming. Bollywood's highest opening-day earnings record was broken by the film. A reviewer thought that Roshan "breathes fire and soul into Agneepath".The actor won for the third year in a row for best actor in a drama. The third film in the Krrish film series, Krrish 3, was a commercial success with limited work. When he fell down, he had back pain. The critics thought the film was entertaining but lacking in creativity. <mask> played three different characters in the film. One of the highest-grossing Indian films of all time was Krrish 3. The actor received a fourth and fifth nomination for his performance in Krrish 3 and the remake of Knight and Day, one of the most expensive Bollywood films.Playing the role of an eccentric secret agent who plots to track down a terrorist, Roshan became the first actor to perform a flyboarding stunt in a film. While filming in Thailand, Roshan suffered a head injury from a stunt accident and underwent brain surgery at the Hinduja Hospital performed by Dr. B. K. Misra to relieve subacute-subdural hematoma. Writing for Bollywood news website Koimoi, critic Mohar Basu said that he was "pitch perfect" and "brilliant" in his part. The film was one of the highest-grossing Indian films. Ashutosh Gowariker paid a record-breaking remuneration for an Indian actor to play the role of a farmer in his movie. The "agile" and "lithe" required for his role were achieved through three months of training. It failed commercially despite being a highly anticipated release.The film was described as an "unintentional comedy" by Anupama Chopra. Even for his Herculean shoulders, the burden of carrying this leaden, cartoon-like narrative proves too much. Kaabil is a romantic thriller about a blind man who avenges the rape of his blind wife. To ensure authenticity in his portrayal, Roshan locked himself in a room for four days and avoided contact with people. The reviews for the film were generally positive. Meena Iyer of The Times of India found his performance to be his best to date, and Shubhra Gupta of The Indian Express considered him "the only bright spot in this dispirited mess of a movie." The film was shown all over the world.After two years of screen absence, <mask> starred in two films in 2019. A trainer was hired to learn the Bihari accent for the role. The film was a commercial success despite mixed reviews. One of his best performances was called one of the worst by Saibal and Michael. War was the highest-grossing Bollywood film of the year. The story of an Indian soldier tasked with eliminating his former mentor is told in the film. The reviews for the film were positive, with one saying that the actors brought "swag to the big stylish sequences and a visceral energy to the one-on-one punch-ups in the movie".Upcoming projects will include a remake of Vikram Vedha, in which he will reprise his role from Na Tum Jaano Na Hum. It will be released on September 30, 2022. On January 10, 2021, he confirmed that he would star in Fighter, his third film with director Siddharth Anand, and first with actors. On January 26, 2023, it is expected to release. He launched a clothing line, appeared on television, and performed on stage. His first tour was successful in the United States and Canada. At the end of that year, he danced on stage with many other people in the show Now or Never at Kings Park Stadium in South Africa.Just Dance was a dance competition reality show in which <mask> was a judge. He was the highest-paid film star on Indian television. The show ended in October 2011. The casual wear brand HRx was launched in November. He talks about his childhood stutter. He supports the Dilkhush Special School. He donated to the hospital for the treatment of stammering children.The charity foundation was set up by <mask> to help the handicapped. He believes that people should publicise their philanthropic work to set an example for others. He took part in a festival at Ghatkopar in which the proceeds went to a charity. He donated to the victims of the North India floods. The charity football match was organised by the daughter of a Bollywood star. The profits from the "Dheere Dheere" music video were donated to charity. The Global Goals campaign's World's Largest Lesson aims to educate children in over 100 countries about the sustainable development goals and later that year, <mask> became the Indian brand ambassador for the campaign.Bollywood actors donated money to build homes for families affected by the 2015 South Indian floods. For at least three years, he signed on for endorsement deals with Coca-Cola, Tamarind and Hero Honda. The Times of India reported that he received for each endorsement, making him one of the highest-earning celebrity endorsers. His brand value in 2016 was estimated to be US$34.1 million, the eighth highest of Indian celebrities. One of the largest endorsement deals signed by an Indian startup was signed by the brand ambassador of Cure.fit. On December 20, 2000, <mask> married Sussanne Khan in a private ceremony. <mask> is a Hindu and Khan is a Muslim.They have two sons, Hrehaan and Hridhaan. Their divorce was finalized in November of last year. They said that they parted amicably. He filed a lawsuit against his co-star, accusing her of cyber stalking and harassment. Ranaut said that his lawsuit was an attempt to cover up their affair. The case was closed by the Mumbai Police due to lack of evidence. After his father was shot in 2000, Roshan considered quitting the film industry.Nepalese newspapers accused him of saying in a Star Plus interview that he hated Nepal and its people. This led to protests in the country, a ban on screening of his films, and four people's deaths after street violence. If he ever visited the country, Nepalese people threatened to bury him alive. According to Star Plus, Roshan didn't touch upon Nepal. After he denied making a claim against the country, the violence subsided. The movie was distributed to newspapers and a local television station. From a young age, the son of a film maker faced the media spotlight.Shama Rana thinks that he is one of the actors who managed film careers with the help of family relations. On the other hand, <mask> is acknowledged in the media as one of the most talented Indian actors of his generation, for his devotion to his work and for his ability to commit heavily to each role. He is known for his professionalism because he insists on learning any necessary skills and performing stunts himself. Despite being in a troubled state of mind, the director Ashutosh Gowariker praised the actor when he continued filming. He can display a range of emotions on screen, according to the director who considers him her favourite actor. Roshan tries to avoid typecasting by taking on diverse parts. He looks at the script to inspire with the strength and courage of his characters and to make his audience smile.Critics noted that he was versatile in portraying a variety of characters. In 2000, Box Office India ranked him first on its top actors list. Rediff.com had a list of the best Bollywood actors in 2003 and 2006. Filmfare magazine included two of his performances. Rediff.com has a list of the Top 10 Actors of 2000–2010. He disagrees with the media's opinion of Roshan's dancing ability. He is a sensational dancer who has the looks of a silent movie star, according to the Los Angeles Times.He is only able to dance and act in his father's films according to some critics. His inclination towards "glamorous, albeit empty parts" has been criticized. He is one of Bollywood's highest-paid actors. According to Daily News and Analysis, he was the most bankable star in Bollywood. He was named the second most powerful Indian film star by Forbes in 2001. He was ranked fourth in the filmfare power list. One of India's most popular icons was voted one by Daily News and Analysis.One of the ten most powerful Bollywood entertainers of the 2000s was <mask>. The Forbes India Celebrity 100 list is based on the income and popularity of Indian celebrities, and from 2012 to the present, <mask> was placed on the list. He is a sex symbol and a style icon in India. Four Bollywood actors, including <mask>, launched miniature dolls in the United Kingdom under the name of "Bollywood legends". He was ranked among the top five for the next five years by The Times of India. In 2010 and 2012 he was included in the list of Bollywood's best dressed men. A life-size, wax figure of him was installed at London's Madame Tussauds museum in January 2011, making him the fifth Indian actor to have been replicated as a wax statue there.The Madame Tussauds' museums in New York, Washington and other cities have versions of the statue. The magazine Eastern Eye has a listing of the 50 Sexiest Asian Men. He was among the top five in five of the last six years. List of awards and nominations received by <mask> Roshan list of Indian film actors list of Indian male actors list of Indian male actors list of Indian male actors list of Indian male actors list of Indian male actors list of Indian male actors list of Indian male actors list of Indian male actors list of | [
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] |
56129514 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baker%20Boy | Baker Boy | Danzal James Baker (born 10 October 1996), known professionally as Baker Boy, is an Indigenous Australian rapper, dancer, artist, and actor. A Yolngu man, Baker Boy is known for performing original hip-hop songs incorporating both English and Yolŋu Matha.
He was made Young Australian of the Year in 2019, and his song "Cool as Hell" was nominated in several categories in the 2019 ARIA Awards. In 2018, he won two awards at the National Indigenous Music Awards, and was named Male Artist of the Year in the National Dreamtime Awards. His debut album, Gela, was released on 15 October 2021.
Early life
Danzal James Baker was born on 10 October 1996 in Darwin, Northern Territory, and grew up in the Arnhem Land communities of Milingimbi and Maningrida. He has one brother. His totem is the Olive python, his moiety is Dhuwa and his skin name is Burralung / Gela boy.
He completed Year 12 at Shalom Christian College in Townsville, Queensland, before attending the Aboriginal Centre for the Performing Arts in Brisbane. He developed his love of dancing and acting there, and was an original member of the Djuki Mala dance troupe, which toured Australia.
In 2016, Baker appeared on the "Indigenous" episode of the first series of Australian television series You Can't Ask That on ABC TV.
In 2016, Baker Boy featured in the video for "Yolngu Style", a modern contemporary dance music video created by a group of artists to inspire the world to dance, move and absorb the Yolngu style.
Personal life
Baker currently resides in Bendigo, Victoria, with his partner Aurie Spencer-Gill and his bulldog.
He has said that he wants to be an inspiration to indigenous kids living in remote communities, and to combat "shame."
Career
In 2017, Baker Boy attracted national attention as the winner of the Triple J Unearthed National Indigenous Music Awards (NIMAs) Competition. releasing the singles "Cloud 9" featuring Kian and "Marryuna" featuring Yirrmal in the same year. Both singles were featured in Triple J's Hottest 100 of 2017.
In 2018, he performed with acts such as Yothu Yindi and Dizzee Rascal.
He performed as an opening act for American rapper 50 Cent in January 2018, along with A.B. Original.
His third single, "Mr. La Di Da Di" was released in April 2018. "Black Magic" featuring Dallas Woods, was released in July 2018.
On 25 January 2019, Baker released "Cool as Hell" Two days later, "Mr. La Di Da Di" was voted into Triple J's Hottest 100 of. 2018.
In June 2019, Baker released "In Control". On 7 July, Baker Boy appeared on the children's television show, Play School and performed "Hickory Dickory Dock" as part of NAIDOC Week.
Baker Boy was the headline act at the opening night of the 2019 Tarnanthi exhibition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art at the Art Gallery of South Australia on 17 October 2019, performing outside the Gallery on North Terrace, Adelaide.
Baker made his acting debut in True History of the Kelly Gang, released in cinemas in early January 2019 and later released on streaming service provider Stan from 26 January.
2020–present: Gela
On 16 September 2020, Baker began teasing a new song on social media, posting images of himself alongside Dallas Woods and Sampa the Great. On 23 September 2020, Baker released the single "Better Days".
On 25 September 2021, Baker Boy performed as part of the pre-match entertainment at the 2021 AFL Grand Final at Perth Stadium. On 15 October 2021, he released his debut studio album Gela.
Discography
Studio albums
Singles
As lead artist
As featured artist
Filmography
Music videos
Awards and nominations
AIR Awards
The Australian Independent Record Awards (known informally as the AIR Awards) is an annual awards night to recognise, promote and celebrate the success of Australia's Independent Music sector.
!
|-
! scope="row" rowspan="3"| 2018
| Himself
| Best Independent Artist
|
| rowspan="3"|
|-
| "Marryuna"
| Best Independent Single or EP
|
|-
| Himself
| Breakthrough Independent Artist
|
|}
APRA Awards
The APRA Awards are held in Australia and New Zealand by the Australasian Performing Right Association to recognise songwriting skills, sales and airplay performance by its members annually. Baker Boy has been nominated for two awards.
!
|-
! scope="row"| 2019
| "Marryuna"
| Urban Work of the Year
|
|
|-
! scope="row"| 2020
| "Cool as Hell"
| Most Performed Urban Work of the Year
|
|
|}
ARIA Music Awards
The ARIA Music Awards is an annual award ceremony event celebrating the Australian music industry. At the ARIA Music Awards of 2019, Baker Boy was nominated for three categories, and received three more nominations in 2020.
!
|-
! scope="row" rowspan="3"| 2019
| rowspan="2"| "Cool as Hell"
| Best Hip Hop Release
|
| rowspan="3"|
|-
| Best Video
|
|-
| Cool as Hell Tour
| Best Australian Live Act
|
|-
! scope="row" rowspan="3"| 2020
| rowspan="2"| "Meditjin" (featuring JessB)
| Best Hip Hop Release
|
| rowspan="4"|
|-
| Best Video
|
|-
| Falls Festival
| Best Australian Live Act
|
|}
Australian Music Prize
The Australian Music Prize (the AMP) is an annual award of $30,000 given to an Australian band or solo artist in recognition of the merit of an album released during the year of award. It commenced in 2005.
|-
! scope="row"| 2021
| Gala
| Australian Music Prize
|
J Awards
The J Awards are an annual series of Australian music awards that were established by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's youth-focused radio station Triple J. They commenced in 2005.
!
|-
! scope="row"| 2017
| Himself
| Unearthed Artist of the Year
|
|
|-
! scope="row"| 2021
| Gela
| Australian Album of the Year
|
|
|}
MTV Europe Music Awards
The MTV Europe Music Awards is an award presented by Viacom International Media Networks to honour artists and music in pop culture.
!
|-
! scope="row"| 2020
| Himself
| Best Australian Act
|
|
|}
Music Victoria Awards
The Music Victoria Awards, are an annual awards night celebrating Victorian music. The commenced in 2005.
!
|-
! scope="row" rowspan="7"| 2018
| rowspan="6"| Himself
| Best Solo Act
|
| rowspan="7"|
|-
| Best Male Musician
|
|-
| Best Live Act
|
|-
| Best Hip Hop Act
|
|-
| Victorian Breakthrough Act
|
|-
| Archie Roach Award for Emerging Talent
|
|-
| "Marryuna"
| Best Song
|
|-
! scope="row"| 2019
| Himself
| Best Solo Act
|
|
|-
! scope="row" rowspan="2"| 2020
| "Move"
| Best Victorian Song
|
| rowspan="2"|
|-
| Himself
| Best Solo Artist
|
|-
! scope="row" rowspan="2"| 2021
| rowspan="2"| Himself
| Best Regional/Outer Suburban Act
|
| rowspan="2"|
|-
| Best Solo Act
|
National Dreamtime Awards
The National Dreamtime Awards, (also known as The Dreamtime Awards), are an annual celebration of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander achievement in sport, arts, academic and community.
!
|-
! scope="row"| 2018
| Himself
| Male Artist of the Year
|
|
|}
National Indigenous Music Awards
The National Indigenous Music Awards (NIMAs) recognise excellence, dedication, innovation and outstanding contribution to the Northern Territory music industry.
!
|-
! scope="row" rowspan="3"| 2018
| Himself
| Best New Talent
|
| rowspan="3"|
|-
| rowspan="2"| "Marryuna"
| Film Clip of the Year
|
|-
| Song of the Year
|
|-
! scope="row" rowspan="2"| 2019
| Himself
| Artist of the Year
|
| rowspan="2"|
|-
| "Black Magic"
| Song of the Year
|
|-
! scope="row" rowspan="3"| 2020
| Himself
| Artist of the Year
|
| rowspan="3"|
|-
| rowspan="2"| "Meditjin" (featuring JessB)
| Film Clip of the Year
|
|-
| Song of the Year
|
|-
! scope="row" rowspan="3"| 2021
| Himself
| Artist of the Year
|
| rowspan="3"|
|-
| "Better Days" (with Dallas Woods & Sampa the Great)
| Song of the Year
|
|-
| "Ride" (featuring Yirrmal)
| Film Clip of the Year
|
|}
National Live Music Awards
The National Live Music Awards (NLMAs) are a broad recognition of Australia's diverse live industry, celebrating the success of the Australian live scene. The awards commenced in 2016.
!
|-
! scope="row" rowspan="4"| 2018
| rowspan="6"| Himself
| Live Act of the Year
|
| rowspan="4"|
|-
| Best New Act
|
|-
| Live Hip Hop Act of the Year
|
|-
| Northern Territory Live Act of the Year
|
|-
! scope="row" rowspan="2"| 2019
| Live Hip Hop Act of the Year
|
| rowspan="2"|
|-
| Northern Territory Live Act of the Year
|
|}
Vanda & Young Global Songwriting Competition
The Vanda & Young Global Songwriting Competition is an annual competition that "acknowledges great songwriting whilst supporting and raising money for Nordoff-Robbins" and is coordinated by Albert Music and APRA AMCOS. It commenced in 2009.
!
|-
! scope="row"| 2020
| "Meditjin"
| Vanda & Young Global Songwriting Competition
| style="background:silver;"| 2nd
|
|}
Young Australian of the Year 2019
In 2019, Baker Boy was awarded Young Australian of the Year. He delivered his acceptance speech in both English and Yolngu Matha.
Order of Australia Medal
In the 2021 Australia Day Honours, Baker was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) for service to the performing arts as a singer and musician.
Tours
Baker has performed at venues and events such as Yabun 2018, Bigsound, Groovin' the Moo, the Woodford Folk Festival, 2021 AFL Grand Final, Laneway Festival, WOMADelaide, and Golden Plains Festival.
References
73. Check out stellar line-up Yabun 2018
External links
1996 births
Australian male dancers
Australian male rappers
Indigenous Australian musicians
Living people
Recipients of the Medal of the Order of Australia
Yolngu | [
"Danzal James Baker (born 10 October 1996), known professionally as Baker Boy, is an Indigenous Australian rapper, dancer, artist, and actor.",
"A Yolngu man, Baker Boy is known for performing original hip-hop songs incorporating both English and Yolŋu Matha.",
"He was made Young Australian of the Year in 2019, and his song \"Cool as Hell\" was nominated in several categories in the 2019 ARIA Awards.",
"In 2018, he won two awards at the National Indigenous Music Awards, and was named Male Artist of the Year in the National Dreamtime Awards.",
"His debut album, Gela, was released on 15 October 2021.",
"Early life\n\nDanzal James Baker was born on 10 October 1996 in Darwin, Northern Territory, and grew up in the Arnhem Land communities of Milingimbi and Maningrida.",
"He has one brother.",
"His totem is the Olive python, his moiety is Dhuwa and his skin name is Burralung / Gela boy.",
"He completed Year 12 at Shalom Christian College in Townsville, Queensland, before attending the Aboriginal Centre for the Performing Arts in Brisbane.",
"He developed his love of dancing and acting there, and was an original member of the Djuki Mala dance troupe, which toured Australia.",
"In 2016, Baker appeared on the \"Indigenous\" episode of the first series of Australian television series You Can't Ask That on ABC TV.",
"In 2016, Baker Boy featured in the video for \"Yolngu Style\", a modern contemporary dance music video created by a group of artists to inspire the world to dance, move and absorb the Yolngu style.",
"Personal life\nBaker currently resides in Bendigo, Victoria, with his partner Aurie Spencer-Gill and his bulldog.",
"He has said that he wants to be an inspiration to indigenous kids living in remote communities, and to combat \"shame.\"",
"Career\nIn 2017, Baker Boy attracted national attention as the winner of the Triple J Unearthed National Indigenous Music Awards (NIMAs) Competition.",
"releasing the singles \"Cloud 9\" featuring Kian and \"Marryuna\" featuring Yirrmal in the same year.",
"Both singles were featured in Triple J's Hottest 100 of 2017.",
"In 2018, he performed with acts such as Yothu Yindi and Dizzee Rascal.",
"He performed as an opening act for American rapper 50 Cent in January 2018, along with A.B.",
"Original.",
"His third single, \"Mr. La Di Da Di\" was released in April 2018.",
"\"Black Magic\" featuring Dallas Woods, was released in July 2018.",
"On 25 January 2019, Baker released \"Cool as Hell\" Two days later, \"Mr. La Di Da Di\" was voted into Triple J's Hottest 100 of.",
"2018.",
"In June 2019, Baker released \"In Control\".",
"On 7 July, Baker Boy appeared on the children's television show, Play School and performed \"Hickory Dickory Dock\" as part of NAIDOC Week.",
"Baker Boy was the headline act at the opening night of the 2019 Tarnanthi exhibition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art at the Art Gallery of South Australia on 17 October 2019, performing outside the Gallery on North Terrace, Adelaide.",
"Baker made his acting debut in True History of the Kelly Gang, released in cinemas in early January 2019 and later released on streaming service provider Stan from 26 January.",
"2020–present: Gela\n\nOn 16 September 2020, Baker began teasing a new song on social media, posting images of himself alongside Dallas Woods and Sampa the Great.",
"On 23 September 2020, Baker released the single \"Better Days\".",
"On 25 September 2021, Baker Boy performed as part of the pre-match entertainment at the 2021 AFL Grand Final at Perth Stadium.",
"On 15 October 2021, he released his debut studio album Gela.",
"Discography\n\nStudio albums\n\nSingles\n\nAs lead artist\n\nAs featured artist\n\nFilmography\n\nMusic videos\n\nAwards and nominations\n\nAIR Awards\nThe Australian Independent Record Awards (known informally as the AIR Awards) is an annual awards night to recognise, promote and celebrate the success of Australia's Independent Music sector.\n\n!",
"|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\" rowspan=\"3\"| 2018\n| Himself\n| Best Independent Artist\n| \n| rowspan=\"3\"| \n|-\n| \"Marryuna\"\n| Best Independent Single or EP\n| \n|-\n| Himself\n| Breakthrough Independent Artist\n| \n|}\n\nAPRA Awards\nThe APRA Awards are held in Australia and New Zealand by the Australasian Performing Right Association to recognise songwriting skills, sales and airplay performance by its members annually.",
"Baker Boy has been nominated for two awards.\n\n!",
"|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\"| 2019\n| \"Marryuna\"\n| Urban Work of the Year\n| \n| \n|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\"| 2020\n| \"Cool as Hell\"\n| Most Performed Urban Work of the Year\n| \n| \n|}\n\nARIA Music Awards\nThe ARIA Music Awards is an annual award ceremony event celebrating the Australian music industry.",
"At the ARIA Music Awards of 2019, Baker Boy was nominated for three categories, and received three more nominations in 2020.\n\n!",
"|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\" rowspan=\"3\"| 2019\n| rowspan=\"2\"| \"Cool as Hell\"\n| Best Hip Hop Release\n| \n| rowspan=\"3\"| \n|-\n| Best Video\n| \n|-\n| Cool as Hell Tour\n| Best Australian Live Act\n| \n|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\" rowspan=\"3\"| 2020\n| rowspan=\"2\"| \"Meditjin\" (featuring JessB)\n| Best Hip Hop Release\n| \n| rowspan=\"4\"| \n|-\n| Best Video\n| \n|-\n| Falls Festival \n| Best Australian Live Act\n| \n|}\n\nAustralian Music Prize\nThe Australian Music Prize (the AMP) is an annual award of $30,000 given to an Australian band or solo artist in recognition of the merit of an album released during the year of award.",
"It commenced in 2005.",
"|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\"| 2021\n| Gala\n| Australian Music Prize\n|\n\nJ Awards\nThe J Awards are an annual series of Australian music awards that were established by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's youth-focused radio station Triple J.",
"They commenced in 2005.\n\n!",
"|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\"| 2017\n| Himself\n| Unearthed Artist of the Year\n| \n| \n|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\"| 2021\n| Gela\n| Australian Album of the Year\n| \n| \n|}\n\nMTV Europe Music Awards\nThe MTV Europe Music Awards is an award presented by Viacom International Media Networks to honour artists and music in pop culture.\n\n!",
"|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\"| 2020\n| Himself\n| Best Australian Act\n| \n| \n|}\n\nMusic Victoria Awards\nThe Music Victoria Awards, are an annual awards night celebrating Victorian music.",
"The commenced in 2005.\n\n!",
"|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\" rowspan=\"7\"| 2018\n| rowspan=\"6\"| Himself\n| Best Solo Act\n| \n| rowspan=\"7\"| \n|-\n| Best Male Musician\n| \n|-\n| Best Live Act\n| \n|-\n| Best Hip Hop Act\n| \n|-\n| Victorian Breakthrough Act\n| \n|-\n| Archie Roach Award for Emerging Talent\n| \n|-\n| \"Marryuna\"\n| Best Song\n| \n|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\"| 2019\n| Himself\n| Best Solo Act\n| \n| \n|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\" rowspan=\"2\"| 2020\n| \"Move\"\n| Best Victorian Song\n| \n| rowspan=\"2\"| \n|-\n| Himself\n| Best Solo Artist\n| \n|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\" rowspan=\"2\"| 2021\n| rowspan=\"2\"| Himself\n| Best Regional/Outer Suburban Act\n| \n| rowspan=\"2\"|\n|-\n| Best Solo Act\n|\n\nNational Dreamtime Awards\nThe National Dreamtime Awards, (also known as The Dreamtime Awards), are an annual celebration of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander achievement in sport, arts, academic and community.\n\n!",
"|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\"| 2018\n| Himself\n| Male Artist of the Year\n| \n| \n|}\n\nNational Indigenous Music Awards\nThe National Indigenous Music Awards (NIMAs) recognise excellence, dedication, innovation and outstanding contribution to the Northern Territory music industry.\n\n!",
"|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\" rowspan=\"3\"| 2018\n| Himself\n| Best New Talent\n| \n| rowspan=\"3\"| \n|-\n| rowspan=\"2\"| \"Marryuna\"\n| Film Clip of the Year\n| \n|-\n| Song of the Year\n| \n|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\" rowspan=\"2\"| 2019\n| Himself\n| Artist of the Year\n| \n| rowspan=\"2\"| \n|-\n| \"Black Magic\"\n| Song of the Year\n| \n|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\" rowspan=\"3\"| 2020\n| Himself\n| Artist of the Year\n| \n| rowspan=\"3\"| \n|-\n| rowspan=\"2\"| \"Meditjin\" (featuring JessB)\n| Film Clip of the Year\n| \n|-\n| Song of the Year\n| \n|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\" rowspan=\"3\"| 2021\n| Himself\n| Artist of the Year\n| \n| rowspan=\"3\"| \n|-\n| \"Better Days\" (with Dallas Woods & Sampa the Great)\n| Song of the Year\n| \n|-\n| \"Ride\" (featuring Yirrmal)\n| Film Clip of the Year\n| \n|}\n\nNational Live Music Awards\nThe National Live Music Awards (NLMAs) are a broad recognition of Australia's diverse live industry, celebrating the success of the Australian live scene.",
"The awards commenced in 2016.\n\n!",
"|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\" rowspan=\"4\"| 2018\n| rowspan=\"6\"| Himself\n| Live Act of the Year\n| \n| rowspan=\"4\"| \n|-\n| Best New Act\n| \n|-\n| Live Hip Hop Act of the Year\n| \n|-\n| Northern Territory Live Act of the Year\n| \n|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\" rowspan=\"2\"| 2019\n| Live Hip Hop Act of the Year\n| \n| rowspan=\"2\"| \n|-\n| Northern Territory Live Act of the Year\n| \n|}\n\nVanda & Young Global Songwriting Competition\nThe Vanda & Young Global Songwriting Competition is an annual competition that \"acknowledges great songwriting whilst supporting and raising money for Nordoff-Robbins\" and is coordinated by Albert Music and APRA AMCOS.",
"It commenced in 2009.\n\n!",
"|-\n!",
"scope=\"row\"| 2020\n| \"Meditjin\"\n| Vanda & Young Global Songwriting Competition\n| style=\"background:silver;\"| 2nd\n| \n|}\n\nYoung Australian of the Year 2019\nIn 2019, Baker Boy was awarded Young Australian of the Year.",
"He delivered his acceptance speech in both English and Yolngu Matha.",
"Order of Australia Medal\nIn the 2021 Australia Day Honours, Baker was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) for service to the performing arts as a singer and musician.",
"Tours\n\nBaker has performed at venues and events such as Yabun 2018, Bigsound, Groovin' the Moo, the Woodford Folk Festival, 2021 AFL Grand Final, Laneway Festival, WOMADelaide, and Golden Plains Festival.",
"References\n73.",
"Check out stellar line-up Yabun 2018\n\nExternal links\n\n \n\n1996 births\nAustralian male dancers\nAustralian male rappers\nIndigenous Australian musicians\nLiving people\nRecipients of the Medal of the Order of Australia\nYolngu"
] | [
"Baker Boy is an Indigenous Australian rapper, dancer, artist, and actor.",
"Baker Boy performs original hip-hop songs incorporating both English and Yolu Matha.",
"His song \"Cool as Hell\" was nominated in several categories in the ARIA Awards, and he was made Young Australian of the Year in 2019.",
"He won two awards at the National Indigenous Music Awards and was named Male Artist of the Year at the National Dreamtime Awards.",
"His debut album was called Gela.",
"Danzal James Baker was born on October 10, 1996 in Darwin, Northern Territory, and grew up in the communities of Milingimbi and Maningrida.",
"He has a sibling.",
"His skin name is Burralung and his moiety is Dhuwa.",
"He attended the Aboriginal Centre for the Performing Arts in Brisbane after finishing Year 12 at Shalom Christian College.",
"He was an original member of the Djuki Mala dance troupe, which toured Australia, and developed his love of dancing and acting there.",
"Baker appeared on the \"Indigenous\" episode of the first series of Australian television series You Can't Ask That.",
"The video for \"Yolngu Style\" was created by a group of artists to inspire the world to dance, move and absorb the Yolngu style.",
"Baker and his partner Aurie Spencer-Gill have a dog.",
"He wants to be an inspiration to indigenous kids living in remote communities.",
"Baker Boy was the winner of the Triple J Unearthed National Indigenous Music Awards.",
"The singles \"Cloud 9\" featuring Kian and \"Marryuna\" featuring Yirrmal were released in the same year.",
"The singles were in Triple J's Hottest 100.",
"He performed with Yothu Yindi and Dizzee Rascal.",
"He was an opening act for American rapper 50 Cent.",
"It was original.",
"\"Mr. La Di Da Di\" was his third single.",
"\"Black Magic\" features Dallas Woods.",
"Two days after \"Cool as Hell\" was released, Mr. La Di Da Di was voted into Triple J's Hottest 100.",
"A year ago.",
"\"In Control\" was released in June 2019.",
"Baker Boy appeared on the children's television show, Play School, and performed \"Hickory Dickory Dock\" as part of NAIDOC Week.",
"At the opening night of the Tarnanthi exhibition at the Art Gallery of South Australia, Baker Boy performed outside on North Terrace.",
"Baker made his acting debut in True History of the Kelly Gang, which was released in cinemas in early January and then on Stan from 26 January.",
"On 16 September 2020, Baker began teasing a new song on social media, posting images of himself alongside Dallas Woods and Sampa the Great.",
"\"Better days\" was released on September 23, 2020.",
"Baker Boy performed as part of the pre-game entertainment at the grand final.",
"He released his first studio album, Gela, on October 15, 2021.",
"The Australian Independent Record Awards (known informally as the AIR Awards) is an annual awards night to recognise, promote and celebrate the success of Australia's Independent Music sector.",
"!",
"\"Marryuna\" is the best independent single of the year.",
"There are two awards that Baker Boy has been nominated for.",
"!",
"\"Marryuna\" is the Urban Work of the Year.",
"The ARIA Music Awards celebrate the Australian music industry.",
"Baker Boy was nominated for three different categories at the ARIA Music Awards.",
"!",
"\"Cool as Hell\" is the best hip hop release of 2019.",
"\"Meditjin\" ( featuring JessB) is the Best Hip Hop Release of 2020.",
"It started in 2005.",
"!",
"The J Awards are an annual series of Australian music awards that were established by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's youth-focused radio station Triple J.",
"They started in 2005.",
"!",
"The Unearthed Artist of the Year is Himself.",
"The MTV Europe Music Awards honor artists and music in pop culture.",
"!",
"The Music Victoria Awards are an annual awards night celebrating Victorian music.",
"The started in 2005.",
"!",
"Best male musician, best live act, best hip hop act, Victorian breakthrough act, best solo act,",
"The best solo act of 2019: Himself.",
"\"Move\" is the best Victorian song of 2020 and it's the best solo artist.",
"The National Dreamtime Awards are known as the Best Regional/Outer Suburban Act.",
"!",
"The National Indigenous Music Awards recognise excellence, dedication, innovation and outstanding contribution to the Northern Territory music industry.",
"!",
"\"Marryuna\" is the film clip of the year.",
"\"Black Magic\" is the Song of the Year.",
"\"Meditjin\" ( featuring JessB) is a film clip of the year.",
"\"Ride\" (with Yirrmal) is the Song of the Year.",
"In 2016 the awards began.",
"!",
"The Live Hip Hop Act of the Year is from the Northern Territory.",
"The Vanda & Young Global Songwriting Competition is an annual competition.",
"It started in 2009.",
"!",
"Baker Boy was awarded Young Australian of the Year in 2019.",
"He gave his acceptance speech in both languages.",
"Baker was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) for service to the performing arts as a singer and musician.",
"Yabun, Bigsound, Groovin' the Moo, Woodford Folk Festival, Laneway Festival,WOMADelaide, and Golden Plains Festival are some of the venues and events Tours Baker has performed at.",
"There are references to 73.",
"Check out the stellar line-up of Yabun."
] | <mask> (born 10 October 1996), known professionally as <mask>, is an Indigenous Australian rapper, dancer, artist, and actor. A Yolngu man, <mask> is known for performing original hip-hop songs incorporating both English and Yolŋu Matha. He was made Young Australian of the Year in 2019, and his song "Cool as Hell" was nominated in several categories in the 2019 ARIA Awards. In 2018, he won two awards at the National Indigenous Music Awards, and was named Male Artist of the Year in the National Dreamtime Awards. His debut album, Gela, was released on 15 October 2021. Early life
<mask> was born on 10 October 1996 in Darwin, Northern Territory, and grew up in the Arnhem Land communities of Milingimbi and Maningrida. He has one brother.His totem is the Olive python, his moiety is Dhuwa and his skin name is Burralung / Gela boy. He completed Year 12 at Shalom Christian College in Townsville, Queensland, before attending the Aboriginal Centre for the Performing Arts in Brisbane. He developed his love of dancing and acting there, and was an original member of the Djuki Mala dance troupe, which toured Australia. In 2016, <mask> appeared on the "Indigenous" episode of the first series of Australian television series You Can't Ask That on ABC TV. In 2016, <mask> featured in the video for "Yolngu Style", a modern contemporary dance music video created by a group of artists to inspire the world to dance, move and absorb the Yolngu style. Personal life
<mask> currently resides in Bendigo, Victoria, with his partner Aurie Spencer-Gill and his bulldog. He has said that he wants to be an inspiration to indigenous kids living in remote communities, and to combat "shame."Career
In 2017, <mask> attracted national attention as the winner of the Triple J Unearthed National Indigenous Music Awards (NIMAs) Competition. releasing the singles "Cloud 9" featuring Kian and "Marryuna" featuring Yirrmal in the same year. Both singles were featured in Triple J's Hottest 100 of 2017. In 2018, he performed with acts such as Yothu Yindi and Dizzee Rascal. He performed as an opening act for American rapper 50 Cent in January 2018, along with A.B. Original. His third single, "Mr. La Di Da Di" was released in April 2018."Black Magic" featuring Dallas Woods, was released in July 2018. On 25 January 2019, <mask> released "Cool as Hell" Two days later, "Mr. La Di Da Di" was voted into Triple J's Hottest 100 of. 2018. In June 2019, <mask> released "In Control". On 7 July, <mask> appeared on the children's television show, Play School and performed "Hickory Dickory Dock" as part of NAIDOC Week. <mask> was the headline act at the opening night of the 2019 Tarnanthi exhibition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art at the Art Gallery of South Australia on 17 October 2019, performing outside the Gallery on North Terrace, Adelaide. <mask> made his acting debut in True History of the Kelly Gang, released in cinemas in early January 2019 and later released on streaming service provider Stan from 26 January.2020–present: Gela
On 16 September 2020, <mask> began teasing a new song on social media, posting images of himself alongside Dallas Woods and Sampa the Great. On 23 September 2020, <mask> released the single "Better Days". On 25 September 2021, <mask> performed as part of the pre-match entertainment at the 2021 AFL Grand Final at Perth Stadium. On 15 October 2021, he released his debut studio album Gela. Discography
Studio albums
Singles
As lead artist
As featured artist
Filmography
Music videos
Awards and nominations
AIR Awards
The Australian Independent Record Awards (known informally as the AIR Awards) is an annual awards night to recognise, promote and celebrate the success of Australia's Independent Music sector.
! |-
! scope="row" rowspan="3"| 2018
| Himself
| Best Independent Artist
|
| rowspan="3"|
|-
| "Marryuna"
| Best Independent Single or EP
|
|-
| Himself
| Breakthrough Independent Artist
|
|}
APRA Awards
The APRA Awards are held in Australia and New Zealand by the Australasian Performing Right Association to recognise songwriting skills, sales and airplay performance by its members annually.Baker Boy has been nominated for two awards.
! |-
! scope="row"| 2019
| "Marryuna"
| Urban Work of the Year
|
|
|-
! scope="row"| 2020
| "Cool as Hell"
| Most Performed Urban Work of the Year
|
|
|}
ARIA Music Awards
The ARIA Music Awards is an annual award ceremony event celebrating the Australian music industry. At the ARIA Music Awards of 2019, Baker Boy was nominated for three categories, and received three more nominations in 2020.
! |-
! scope="row" rowspan="3"| 2019
| rowspan="2"| "Cool as Hell"
| Best Hip Hop Release
|
| rowspan="3"|
|-
| Best Video
|
|-
| Cool as Hell Tour
| Best Australian Live Act
|
|-
!scope="row" rowspan="3"| 2020
| rowspan="2"| "Meditjin" (featuring JessB)
| Best Hip Hop Release
|
| rowspan="4"|
|-
| Best Video
|
|-
| Falls Festival
| Best Australian Live Act
|
|}
Australian Music Prize
The Australian Music Prize (the AMP) is an annual award of $30,000 given to an Australian band or solo artist in recognition of the merit of an album released during the year of award. It commenced in 2005. |-
! scope="row"| 2021
| Gala
| Australian Music Prize
|
J Awards
The J Awards are an annual series of Australian music awards that were established by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's youth-focused radio station Triple J. They commenced in 2005.
! |-
! scope="row"| 2017
| Himself
| Unearthed Artist of the Year
|
|
|-
!scope="row"| 2021
| Gela
| Australian Album of the Year
|
|
|}
MTV Europe Music Awards
The MTV Europe Music Awards is an award presented by Viacom International Media Networks to honour artists and music in pop culture.
! |-
! scope="row"| 2020
| Himself
| Best Australian Act
|
|
|}
Music Victoria Awards
The Music Victoria Awards, are an annual awards night celebrating Victorian music. The commenced in 2005.
! |-
! scope="row" rowspan="7"| 2018
| rowspan="6"| Himself
| Best Solo Act
|
| rowspan="7"|
|-
| Best Male Musician
|
|-
| Best Live Act
|
|-
| Best Hip Hop Act
|
|-
| Victorian Breakthrough Act
|
|-
| Archie Roach Award for Emerging Talent
|
|-
| "Marryuna"
| Best Song
|
|-
! scope="row"| 2019
| Himself
| Best Solo Act
|
|
|-
!scope="row" rowspan="2"| 2020
| "Move"
| Best Victorian Song
|
| rowspan="2"|
|-
| Himself
| Best Solo Artist
|
|-
! scope="row" rowspan="2"| 2021
| rowspan="2"| Himself
| Best Regional/Outer Suburban Act
|
| rowspan="2"|
|-
| Best Solo Act
|
National Dreamtime Awards
The National Dreamtime Awards, (also known as The Dreamtime Awards), are an annual celebration of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander achievement in sport, arts, academic and community.
! |-
! scope="row"| 2018
| Himself
| Male Artist of the Year
|
|
|}
National Indigenous Music Awards
The National Indigenous Music Awards (NIMAs) recognise excellence, dedication, innovation and outstanding contribution to the Northern Territory music industry.
! |-
! scope="row" rowspan="3"| 2018
| Himself
| Best New Talent
|
| rowspan="3"|
|-
| rowspan="2"| "Marryuna"
| Film Clip of the Year
|
|-
| Song of the Year
|
|-
! scope="row" rowspan="2"| 2019
| Himself
| Artist of the Year
|
| rowspan="2"|
|-
| "Black Magic"
| Song of the Year
|
|-
!scope="row" rowspan="3"| 2020
| Himself
| Artist of the Year
|
| rowspan="3"|
|-
| rowspan="2"| "Meditjin" (featuring JessB)
| Film Clip of the Year
|
|-
| Song of the Year
|
|-
! scope="row" rowspan="3"| 2021
| Himself
| Artist of the Year
|
| rowspan="3"|
|-
| "Better Days" (with Dallas Woods & Sampa the Great)
| Song of the Year
|
|-
| "Ride" (featuring Yirrmal)
| Film Clip of the Year
|
|}
National Live Music Awards
The National Live Music Awards (NLMAs) are a broad recognition of Australia's diverse live industry, celebrating the success of the Australian live scene. The awards commenced in 2016.
! |-
! scope="row" rowspan="4"| 2018
| rowspan="6"| Himself
| Live Act of the Year
|
| rowspan="4"|
|-
| Best New Act
|
|-
| Live Hip Hop Act of the Year
|
|-
| Northern Territory Live Act of the Year
|
|-
! scope="row" rowspan="2"| 2019
| Live Hip Hop Act of the Year
|
| rowspan="2"|
|-
| Northern Territory Live Act of the Year
|
|}
Vanda & Young Global Songwriting Competition
The Vanda & Young Global Songwriting Competition is an annual competition that "acknowledges great songwriting whilst supporting and raising money for Nordoff-Robbins" and is coordinated by Albert Music and APRA AMCOS. It commenced in 2009.
!|-
! scope="row"| 2020
| "Meditjin"
| Vanda & Young Global Songwriting Competition
| style="background:silver;"| 2nd
|
|}
Young Australian of the Year 2019
In 2019, <mask> was awarded Young Australian of the Year. He delivered his acceptance speech in both English and Yolngu Matha. Order of Australia Medal
In the 2021 Australia Day Honours, <mask> was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) for service to the performing arts as a singer and musician. Tours
<mask> has performed at venues and events such as Yabun 2018, Bigsound, Groovin' the Moo, the Woodford Folk Festival, 2021 AFL Grand Final, Laneway Festival, WOMADelaide, and Golden Plains Festival. References
73. Check out stellar line-up Yabun 2018
External links
1996 births
Australian male dancers
Australian male rappers
Indigenous Australian musicians
Living people
Recipients of the Medal of the Order of Australia
Yolngu | [
"Danzal James Baker",
"Baker Boy",
"Baker Boy",
"Danzal James Baker",
"Baker",
"Baker Boy",
"Baker",
"Baker Boy",
"Baker",
"Baker",
"Baker Boy",
"Baker Boy",
"Baker",
"Baker",
"Baker",
"Baker Boy",
"Baker Boy",
"Baker",
"Baker"
] | <mask> is an Indigenous Australian rapper, dancer, artist, and actor. <mask> performs original hip-hop songs incorporating both English and Yolu Matha. His song "Cool as Hell" was nominated in several categories in the ARIA Awards, and he was made Young Australian of the Year in 2019. He won two awards at the National Indigenous Music Awards and was named Male Artist of the Year at the National Dreamtime Awards. His debut album was called Gela. <mask> was born on October 10, 1996 in Darwin, Northern Territory, and grew up in the communities of Milingimbi and Maningrida. He has a sibling.His skin name is Burralung and his moiety is Dhuwa. He attended the Aboriginal Centre for the Performing Arts in Brisbane after finishing Year 12 at Shalom Christian College. He was an original member of the Djuki Mala dance troupe, which toured Australia, and developed his love of dancing and acting there. <mask> appeared on the "Indigenous" episode of the first series of Australian television series You Can't Ask That. The video for "Yolngu Style" was created by a group of artists to inspire the world to dance, move and absorb the Yolngu style. <mask> and his partner Aurie Spencer-Gill have a dog. He wants to be an inspiration to indigenous kids living in remote communities.<mask> was the winner of the Triple J Unearthed National Indigenous Music Awards. The singles "Cloud 9" featuring Kian and "Marryuna" featuring Yirrmal were released in the same year. The singles were in Triple J's Hottest 100. He performed with Yothu Yindi and Dizzee Rascal. He was an opening act for American rapper 50 Cent. It was original. "Mr. La Di Da Di" was his third single."Black Magic" features Dallas Woods. Two days after "Cool as Hell" was released, Mr. La Di Da Di was voted into Triple J's Hottest 100. A year ago. "In Control" was released in June 2019. <mask> appeared on the children's television show, Play School, and performed "Hickory Dickory Dock" as part of NAIDOC Week. At the opening night of the Tarnanthi exhibition at the Art Gallery of South Australia, <mask> performed outside on North Terrace. <mask> made his acting debut in True History of the Kelly Gang, which was released in cinemas in early January and then on Stan from 26 January.On 16 September 2020, <mask> began teasing a new song on social media, posting images of himself alongside Dallas Woods and Sampa the Great. "Better days" was released on September 23, 2020. <mask> performed as part of the pre-game entertainment at the grand final. He released his first studio album, Gela, on October 15, 2021. The Australian Independent Record Awards (known informally as the AIR Awards) is an annual awards night to recognise, promote and celebrate the success of Australia's Independent Music sector. ! "Marryuna" is the best independent single of the year.There are two awards that <mask> has been nominated for. ! "Marryuna" is the Urban Work of the Year. The ARIA Music Awards celebrate the Australian music industry. <mask> was nominated for three different categories at the ARIA Music Awards. ! "Cool as Hell" is the best hip hop release of 2019."Meditjin" ( featuring JessB) is the Best Hip Hop Release of 2020. It started in 2005. ! The J Awards are an annual series of Australian music awards that were established by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's youth-focused radio station Triple J. They started in 2005. ! The Unearthed Artist of the Year is Himself.The MTV Europe Music Awards honor artists and music in pop culture. ! The Music Victoria Awards are an annual awards night celebrating Victorian music. The started in 2005. ! Best male musician, best live act, best hip hop act, Victorian breakthrough act, best solo act, The best solo act of 2019: Himself."Move" is the best Victorian song of 2020 and it's the best solo artist. The National Dreamtime Awards are known as the Best Regional/Outer Suburban Act. ! The National Indigenous Music Awards recognise excellence, dedication, innovation and outstanding contribution to the Northern Territory music industry. ! "Marryuna" is the film clip of the year. "Black Magic" is the Song of the Year."Meditjin" ( featuring JessB) is a film clip of the year. "Ride" (with Yirrmal) is the Song of the Year. In 2016 the awards began. ! The Live Hip Hop Act of the Year is from the Northern Territory. The Vanda & Young Global Songwriting Competition is an annual competition. It started in 2009.! <mask> was awarded Young Australian of the Year in 2019. He gave his acceptance speech in both languages. <mask> was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) for service to the performing arts as a singer and musician. Yabun, Bigsound, Groovin' the Moo, Woodford Folk Festival, Laneway Festival,WOMADelaide, and Golden Plains Festival are some of the venues and events Tours <mask> has performed at. There are references to 73. Check out the stellar line-up of Yabun. | [
"Baker Boy",
"Baker Boy",
"Danzal James Baker",
"Baker",
"Baker",
"Baker Boy",
"Baker Boy",
"Baker Boy",
"Baker",
"Baker",
"Baker Boy",
"Baker Boy",
"Baker Boy",
"Baker Boy",
"Baker",
"Baker"
] |
7307261 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stjepan%20Mitrov%20Ljubi%C5%A1a | Stjepan Mitrov Ljubiša | Stjepan (modernist: Stefan) Mitrov Ljubiša (; 29 February 1824 – 11 November 1878), was a Serbian and Montenegrin writer and politician. He is famous for his unique short stories, generally ranked among the masterpieces of Serbian literature in its day. These stories are also a symbol of the Serbian rebirth, both for its patriotic message and because it was a fundamental milestone in the Serbian language reform.
Biography
Although born in the town of Budva, Austrian Empire, Ljubiša traced his ancestry to the hinterland and the Paštrovići clan, a fact he was always proud to stress. One of his cousins was Visarion Ljubiša (1823–84), who later became the Metropolitan of the Serbian Orthodox Church from 1882 to 1884. His father Mitar (therefore the patronymic Mitrov) was a seaman whom he rarely saw and died when Stjepan was only 14 years old. His education, mostly in the Italian language, went irregularly since he had to work to help support his family from an early age. Therefore, Ljubiša became an autodidact, educating himself from the books he could find. But the love for national literature revealed itself through the writings of Vuk Karadžić, and his association with Vuk Vrčević, Karadžić's faithful collaborator.
When only 19, he was elected to the post of the secretary of the town of Budva. This job forced him into learning more on current laws and was soon considered by the plain folks to be a lawyer and was often approached as such. He started writing court records and even operated as a defender in the local court of law. This self-thought knowledge of his was then acknowledged by the authorities and without taking a judiciary exam he became a public notary.
In the revolutionary 1848, Ljubiša was an active member of the ad hoc assembly of Boka Kotorska in Prčanj and held a number of speeches against the Italian cultural dominance and for South-Slav unity.
In 1861 he was elected as the deputy of Boka in the Dalmatian parliament in Zadar and not long afterwards he was sent to the parliament in Vienna as an MP of the National Party (then still gathering both Serbs and Croats). From then on he was constantly re-elected to the parliaments in Vienna, and in Zadar. From 1870 to 1878, he was the president of the Dalmatian parliament. In 1878, he was overthrown by the clerical Croat fraction in the National Party led by Mihovil Pavlinović. In his political efforts, he fought against the ethnic Italian domination in Dalmatian politics and culture, for the equality of religions and languages, for the emancipation of Serb populace in Dalmatia, the economic benefit of the province but also for the autonomy of Dalmatia and against the unification with Croatia-Slavonia.
Literary critic and historian Jovan Skerlić points out in his book that Ljubiša wrote: Izmeću Bara i Zadra bilo u izobraženoj vrsti samo sedam ljudi, koji nijesu bili izgubili svijest svog imena i porekla. "Between Bar and Zadar there were approximately only seven people, who had not lost track of their ancestral name and descent," demonstrating the extent of Italian influence on the Dalmatian and Montenegrin littoral.
His literary work started in 1845 when, led by the ethnographical example of Vuk Karadžić's collaborator, Vuk Vrčević, who eventually became Ljubiša's friend. Ljubiša then went on to publish in "Serbian-Dalmatian Magazine" (Сербско-далматиснки магазин, Serbsko-dalmatinski magazin) notes on life and customs of his Paštrovići clan. In 1868, he also published the first edition of Njegoš’s "Mountain Wreath" in Serbian Latin script. His first short story, Sćepan the Little (Шћепан Мали, Šćepan Mali), was published only in 1868. He sailed in literary waters more actively from 1870, continuing with short stories. All of them appeared in magazines and newspapers his only book being the 1875 "Montenegrin and Littoral Stories" (Приповијести црногорске и приморске, Pripovijesti crnogorske i primorske). In 1877, he started with publishing one hundred short stories named "The Storytelling of Vuk Dojčević" of which only 37 appeared, owing to his premature death. In 1878 in "Serb Dawn" (Српска зора, Srpska zora) magazine in Vienna he published his autobiography.
Skerlić compared Ljubiša with his contemporaries, stating that "What Joksim Nović-Otočanin and Jovan Sundečić did for poetry, Ljubiša did for prose writing."
Visiting Cetinje to attend the consecration of his cousin Visarion Ljubiša, who was being elevated to a Metropolitan bishop of the Serbian Orthodox Church, Ljubiša fell ill and on his return to Vienna died on 11 November 1878. His earthly remains were transferred to Budva in 1885.
His great-great-granddaughter is Marina Perazić, one of the most popular pop singers in the former Yugoslavia during the 1980s.
Literary work
Coming from the rural background and treasuring all his life contacts with the peasants, Ljubiša wrote in excellent Serbian, which was his strongest source of inspiration. His stories are full with folklore elements, sayings, vivid characters that all showed the character of Serbian people in the Littoral. Comparing his inspiration, national orientation and closed relation with folklore he was dubbed "Njegoš in prose". Although he spent his life in the time of romanticism, his works have an intention of closer and more genuine representation of folk life and therefore Ljubiša is considered one of the first realists in Serb literature. His works remain popular to this very date.
His best known works are;
Boj na Visu
Ščepan Mali
Pripovijesti crnogorske i primorske (Dubrovnik, 1875; Belgrade, 1876)
The Sale of Patriarch Brkić (Prodaja partijare Brkića)
Kanjoš Macedonović
Jump Girl (Skočidjevojka)
Priest Andrović, the new Obilić (Pop Andrović, novi Obilić)
Stealing and Re-Stealing of the Bell (Kradja i prekradja zvona)
Storytelling of Vuk Dojčević (Pričanja Vuka Dojčevića)
He is also recognized as an excellent translator of the works of Horace, Dante, and Ariosto.
Nationality
When in 1878 he was disposed and booed by the Croats in the Dalmatian parliament, he replied: "I know why you can’t stand me – because I’m a Serb by nationality and of Orthodox faith."
Literature
S. M. Ljubiša, Pripovetke, Novi Sad – Beograd, 1957
Miroslav Luketić, Budva, Sveti Stefan, Petrovac, Budva – Cetinje 1966
References
Further reading
Jovan Skerlić, Istorija Nove Srpske Književnosti/History of New Serbian Literature (Belgrade, 1914, 1921), pages 326–330.
External links
Pripovijesti crnogorske i primorske, with a foreword by Marko Car (in Serbian)
1824 births
1878 deaths
People from Budva
People from the Kingdom of Dalmatia
Serbs of Montenegro
Montenegrin writers
Montenegrin politicians
Serbian writers
Serbian politicians
Members of the Serbian Orthodox Church
Eastern Orthodox Christians from Montenegro
Burials at Serbian Orthodox monasteries and churches | [
"Stjepan (modernist: Stefan) Mitrov Ljubiša (; 29 February 1824 – 11 November 1878), was a Serbian and Montenegrin writer and politician.",
"He is famous for his unique short stories, generally ranked among the masterpieces of Serbian literature in its day.",
"These stories are also a symbol of the Serbian rebirth, both for its patriotic message and because it was a fundamental milestone in the Serbian language reform.",
"Biography\nAlthough born in the town of Budva, Austrian Empire, Ljubiša traced his ancestry to the hinterland and the Paštrovići clan, a fact he was always proud to stress.",
"One of his cousins was Visarion Ljubiša (1823–84), who later became the Metropolitan of the Serbian Orthodox Church from 1882 to 1884.",
"His father Mitar (therefore the patronymic Mitrov) was a seaman whom he rarely saw and died when Stjepan was only 14 years old.",
"His education, mostly in the Italian language, went irregularly since he had to work to help support his family from an early age.",
"Therefore, Ljubiša became an autodidact, educating himself from the books he could find.",
"But the love for national literature revealed itself through the writings of Vuk Karadžić, and his association with Vuk Vrčević, Karadžić's faithful collaborator.",
"When only 19, he was elected to the post of the secretary of the town of Budva.",
"This job forced him into learning more on current laws and was soon considered by the plain folks to be a lawyer and was often approached as such.",
"He started writing court records and even operated as a defender in the local court of law.",
"This self-thought knowledge of his was then acknowledged by the authorities and without taking a judiciary exam he became a public notary.",
"In the revolutionary 1848, Ljubiša was an active member of the ad hoc assembly of Boka Kotorska in Prčanj and held a number of speeches against the Italian cultural dominance and for South-Slav unity.",
"In 1861 he was elected as the deputy of Boka in the Dalmatian parliament in Zadar and not long afterwards he was sent to the parliament in Vienna as an MP of the National Party (then still gathering both Serbs and Croats).",
"From then on he was constantly re-elected to the parliaments in Vienna, and in Zadar.",
"From 1870 to 1878, he was the president of the Dalmatian parliament.",
"In 1878, he was overthrown by the clerical Croat fraction in the National Party led by Mihovil Pavlinović.",
"In his political efforts, he fought against the ethnic Italian domination in Dalmatian politics and culture, for the equality of religions and languages, for the emancipation of Serb populace in Dalmatia, the economic benefit of the province but also for the autonomy of Dalmatia and against the unification with Croatia-Slavonia.",
"Literary critic and historian Jovan Skerlić points out in his book that Ljubiša wrote: Izmeću Bara i Zadra bilo u izobraženoj vrsti samo sedam ljudi, koji nijesu bili izgubili svijest svog imena i porekla.",
"\"Between Bar and Zadar there were approximately only seven people, who had not lost track of their ancestral name and descent,\" demonstrating the extent of Italian influence on the Dalmatian and Montenegrin littoral.",
"His literary work started in 1845 when, led by the ethnographical example of Vuk Karadžić's collaborator, Vuk Vrčević, who eventually became Ljubiša's friend.",
"Ljubiša then went on to publish in \"Serbian-Dalmatian Magazine\" (Сербско-далматиснки магазин, Serbsko-dalmatinski magazin) notes on life and customs of his Paštrovići clan.",
"In 1868, he also published the first edition of Njegoš’s \"Mountain Wreath\" in Serbian Latin script.",
"His first short story, Sćepan the Little (Шћепан Мали, Šćepan Mali), was published only in 1868.",
"He sailed in literary waters more actively from 1870, continuing with short stories.",
"All of them appeared in magazines and newspapers his only book being the 1875 \"Montenegrin and Littoral Stories\" (Приповијести црногорске и приморске, Pripovijesti crnogorske i primorske).",
"In 1877, he started with publishing one hundred short stories named \"The Storytelling of Vuk Dojčević\" of which only 37 appeared, owing to his premature death.",
"In 1878 in \"Serb Dawn\" (Српска зора, Srpska zora) magazine in Vienna he published his autobiography.",
"Skerlić compared Ljubiša with his contemporaries, stating that \"What Joksim Nović-Otočanin and Jovan Sundečić did for poetry, Ljubiša did for prose writing.\"",
"Visiting Cetinje to attend the consecration of his cousin Visarion Ljubiša, who was being elevated to a Metropolitan bishop of the Serbian Orthodox Church, Ljubiša fell ill and on his return to Vienna died on 11 November 1878.",
"His earthly remains were transferred to Budva in 1885.",
"His great-great-granddaughter is Marina Perazić, one of the most popular pop singers in the former Yugoslavia during the 1980s.",
"Literary work\nComing from the rural background and treasuring all his life contacts with the peasants, Ljubiša wrote in excellent Serbian, which was his strongest source of inspiration.",
"His stories are full with folklore elements, sayings, vivid characters that all showed the character of Serbian people in the Littoral.",
"Comparing his inspiration, national orientation and closed relation with folklore he was dubbed \"Njegoš in prose\".",
"Although he spent his life in the time of romanticism, his works have an intention of closer and more genuine representation of folk life and therefore Ljubiša is considered one of the first realists in Serb literature.",
"His works remain popular to this very date.",
"His best known works are;\nBoj na Visu\nŠčepan Mali\nPripovijesti crnogorske i primorske (Dubrovnik, 1875; Belgrade, 1876)\nThe Sale of Patriarch Brkić (Prodaja partijare Brkića)\nKanjoš Macedonović\nJump Girl (Skočidjevojka)\nPriest Andrović, the new Obilić (Pop Andrović, novi Obilić)\nStealing and Re-Stealing of the Bell (Kradja i prekradja zvona)\nStorytelling of Vuk Dojčević (Pričanja Vuka Dojčevića)\n\nHe is also recognized as an excellent translator of the works of Horace, Dante, and Ariosto.",
"Nationality\n\nWhen in 1878 he was disposed and booed by the Croats in the Dalmatian parliament, he replied: \"I know why you can’t stand me – because I’m a Serb by nationality and of Orthodox faith.\"",
"Literature\nS. M. Ljubiša, Pripovetke, Novi Sad – Beograd, 1957\nMiroslav Luketić, Budva, Sveti Stefan, Petrovac, Budva – Cetinje 1966\n\nReferences\n\nFurther reading\nJovan Skerlić, Istorija Nove Srpske Književnosti/History of New Serbian Literature (Belgrade, 1914, 1921), pages 326–330.",
"External links\n\n \n Pripovijesti crnogorske i primorske, with a foreword by Marko Car (in Serbian)\n\n1824 births\n1878 deaths\nPeople from Budva\nPeople from the Kingdom of Dalmatia\nSerbs of Montenegro\nMontenegrin writers\nMontenegrin politicians\nSerbian writers\nSerbian politicians\nMembers of the Serbian Orthodox Church\nEastern Orthodox Christians from Montenegro\nBurials at Serbian Orthodox monasteries and churches"
] | [
"Stjepan was a Serbian and Montenegrin writer and politician.",
"He is ranked among the masterpieces of Serbian literature for his unique short stories.",
"The Serbian rebirth, both for its patriotic message and because it was a fundamental milestone in the Serbian language reform, can be seen in the stories.",
"Ljubia traced his ancestry to the hinterland and the Patrovii clan, a fact he was always proud of.",
"The Metropolitan of the Serbian Orthodox Church was one of his cousins.",
"Stjepan's father was a seaman who died when he was 14 years old.",
"Since he had to work to support his family at an early age, his education was mostly in the Italian language.",
"Ljubia became an autodidact, learning from the books he could find.",
"The love for national literature was revealed by the writings of Vuk Karadi and his association with Vuk Vrevi.",
"He became the secretary of the town of Budva when he was 19 years old.",
"He was forced to learn more about current laws and was soon considered a lawyer by the plain people.",
"He was a defender in the local court of law.",
"He became a public notary after the authorities acknowledged his knowledge and he didn't have to take a judiciary exam.",
"Ljubia was an active member of the ad hoc assembly of Boka Kotorska and held a number of speeches against the Italian culture.",
"After being elected as the deputy of Boka in the Dalmatian parliament in Zadar, he was sent to the parliament in Vienna as a member of the National Party.",
"He was re-elected to the parliaments in Vienna and Zadar many times.",
"He was the president of the Dalmatian parliament from 1870 to 1878.",
"He was overthrown by the clerical Croat fraction in the National Party.",
"He fought against the ethnic Italian domination in Dalmatian politics and culture, for the equality of religions and languages, for the emancipation of Serb populace in Dalmatia, the economic benefit of the province, and against the unification with Croatia.",
"In his book, Skerli points out that Ljubia wrote: Izmeu Bara i Zadra bilo.",
"The extent of Italian influence on the Dalmatian and Montenegrin littoral was demonstrated by the fact that only seven people had not lost track of their ancestral name and descent.",
"The ethnographical example of Vuk Vrevi, who became Ljubia's friend, started his literary work in 1845.",
"Ljubia wrote about his life and customs in a magazine.",
"He published the first edition of the novel in Serbian Latin script in 1868.",
"His first short story, Sepan the Little, was published in 1868.",
"He continued with short stories after 1870.",
"His only book was the \"Montenegrin and Littoral Stories\" which was published in 1875.",
"He published one hundred short stories called \"The Storytelling of Vuk Dojevi\" in 1877, but only 37 appeared due to his death.",
"His autobiography was published in \"Serb Dawn\" in Vienna.",
"Ljubia did for prose writing what Joksim Novi-Otoan 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266",
"Visiting Cetinje to attend the consecration of his cousin Visarion Ljubia, who was being elevated to a Metropolitan bishop of the Serbian Orthodox Church, Ljubia fell ill and died on his return to Vienna.",
"Budva received his remains in 1885.",
"The pop singer Marina Perazi is his great-great-granddaughter.",
"Ljubia wrote in excellent Serbian, his strongest source of inspiration, because he treasuring all his life contacts with the peasants.",
"His stories were full of folklore elements and vivid characters that showed the character of Serbian people.",
"He was dubbed \"Njego in prose\" for comparing his inspiration, national orientation and closed relation with folklore.",
"Ljubia is considered to be one of the first realists in Serb literature because his works have an intention of closer and more genuine representation of folk life.",
"His works are still popular.",
"Boj na Visu epan Mali Pripovijesti crnogorske i primorske is one of his best known works.",
"He was booed by the Croats in the Dalmatian parliament because he was a Serb by nationality and Orthodox faith.",
"Literature S. M. Ljubia, Pripovetke, Novi Sad - Beograd, 1957",
"Pripovijesti crnogorske i primorske has a foreword by Marko Car."
] | Stjepan (modernist: Stefan<mask> (; 29 February 1824 – 11 November 1878), was a Serbian and Montenegrin writer and politician. He is famous for his unique short stories, generally ranked among the masterpieces of Serbian literature in its day. These stories are also a symbol of the Serbian rebirth, both for its patriotic message and because it was a fundamental milestone in the Serbian language reform. Biography
Although born in the town of Budva, Austrian Empire, <mask> traced his ancestry to the hinterland and the Paštrovići clan, a fact he was always proud to stress. One of his cousins was <mask> (1823–84), who later became the Metropolitan of the Serbian Orthodox Church from 1882 to 1884. His father Mitar (therefore the patronymic Mitrov) was a seaman whom he rarely saw and died when Stjepan was only 14 years old. His education, mostly in the Italian language, went irregularly since he had to work to help support his family from an early age.Therefore, <mask> became an autodidact, educating himself from the books he could find. But the love for national literature revealed itself through the writings of Vuk Karadžić, and his association with Vuk Vrčević, Karadžić's faithful collaborator. When only 19, he was elected to the post of the secretary of the town of Budva. This job forced him into learning more on current laws and was soon considered by the plain folks to be a lawyer and was often approached as such. He started writing court records and even operated as a defender in the local court of law. This self-thought knowledge of his was then acknowledged by the authorities and without taking a judiciary exam he became a public notary. In the revolutionary 1848, <mask> was an active member of the ad hoc assembly of Boka Kotorska in Prčanj and held a number of speeches against the Italian cultural dominance and for South-Slav unity.In 1861 he was elected as the deputy of Boka in the Dalmatian parliament in Zadar and not long afterwards he was sent to the parliament in Vienna as an MP of the National Party (then still gathering both Serbs and Croats). From then on he was constantly re-elected to the parliaments in Vienna, and in Zadar. From 1870 to 1878, he was the president of the Dalmatian parliament. In 1878, he was overthrown by the clerical Croat fraction in the National Party led by Mihovil Pavlinović. In his political efforts, he fought against the ethnic Italian domination in Dalmatian politics and culture, for the equality of religions and languages, for the emancipation of Serb populace in Dalmatia, the economic benefit of the province but also for the autonomy of Dalmatia and against the unification with Croatia-Slavonia. Literary critic and historian Jovan Skerlić points out in his book that Ljubiša wrote: Izmeću Bara i Zadra bilo u izobraženoj vrsti samo sedam ljudi, koji nijesu bili izgubili svijest svog imena i porekla. "Between Bar and Zadar there were approximately only seven people, who had not lost track of their ancestral name and descent," demonstrating the extent of Italian influence on the Dalmatian and Montenegrin littoral.His literary work started in 1845 when, led by the ethnographical example of Vuk Karadžić's collaborator, Vuk Vrčević, who eventually became <mask>'s friend. <mask> then went on to publish in "Serbian-Dalmatian Magazine" (Сербско-далматиснки магазин, Serbsko-dalmatinski magazin) notes on life and customs of his Paštrovići clan. In 1868, he also published the first edition of Njegoš’s "Mountain Wreath" in Serbian Latin script. His first short story, Sćepan the Little (Шћепан Мали, Šćepan Mali), was published only in 1868. He sailed in literary waters more actively from 1870, continuing with short stories. All of them appeared in magazines and newspapers his only book being the 1875 "Montenegrin and Littoral Stories" (Приповијести црногорске и приморске, Pripovijesti crnogorske i primorske). In 1877, he started with publishing one hundred short stories named "The Storytelling of Vuk Dojčević" of which only 37 appeared, owing to his premature death.In 1878 in "Serb Dawn" (Српска зора, Srpska zora) magazine in Vienna he published his autobiography. Skerlić compared <mask> with his contemporaries, stating that "What Joksim Nović-Otočanin and Jovan Sundečić did for poetry, <mask> did for prose writing." Visiting Cetinje to attend the consecration of his cousin Visarion <mask>, who was being elevated to a Metropolitan bishop of the Serbian Orthodox Church, Ljubiša fell ill and on his return to Vienna died on 11 November 1878. His earthly remains were transferred to Budva in 1885. His great-great-granddaughter is Marina Perazić, one of the most popular pop singers in the former Yugoslavia during the 1980s. Literary work
Coming from the rural background and treasuring all his life contacts with the peasants, <mask> wrote in excellent Serbian, which was his strongest source of inspiration. His stories are full with folklore elements, sayings, vivid characters that all showed the character of Serbian people in the Littoral.Comparing his inspiration, national orientation and closed relation with folklore he was dubbed "Njegoš in prose". Although he spent his life in the time of romanticism, his works have an intention of closer and more genuine representation of folk life and therefore <mask> is considered one of the first realists in Serb literature. His works remain popular to this very date. His best known works are;
Boj na Visu
Ščepan Mali
Pripovijesti crnogorske i primorske (Dubrovnik, 1875; Belgrade, 1876)
The Sale of Patriarch Brkić (Prodaja partijare Brkića)
Kanjoš Macedonović
Jump Girl (Skočidjevojka)
Priest Andrović, the new Obilić (Pop Andrović, novi Obilić)
Stealing and Re-Stealing of the Bell (Kradja i prekradja zvona)
Storytelling of Vuk Dojčević (Pričanja Vuka Dojčevića)
He is also recognized as an excellent translator of the works of Horace, Dante, and Ariosto. Nationality
When in 1878 he was disposed and booed by the Croats in the Dalmatian parliament, he replied: "I know why you can’t stand me – because I’m a Serb by nationality and of Orthodox faith." Literature
S. M<mask>, Pripovetke, Novi Sad – Beograd, 1957
Miroslav Luketić, Budva, Sveti Stefan, Petrovac, Budva – Cetinje 1966
References
Further reading
Jovan Skerlić, Istorija Nove Srpske Književnosti/History of New Serbian Literature (Belgrade, 1914, 1921), pages 326–330. External links
Pripovijesti crnogorske i primorske, with a foreword by Marko Car (in Serbian)
1824 births
1878 deaths
People from Budva
People from the Kingdom of Dalmatia
Serbs of Montenegro
Montenegrin writers
Montenegrin politicians
Serbian writers
Serbian politicians
Members of the Serbian Orthodox Church
Eastern Orthodox Christians from Montenegro
Burials at Serbian Orthodox monasteries and churches | [
") Mitrov Ljubiša",
"Ljubiša",
"Visarion Ljubiša",
"Ljubiša",
"Ljubiša",
"Ljubiša",
"Ljubiša",
"Ljubiša",
"Ljubiša",
"Ljubiša",
"Ljubiša",
"Ljubiša",
". Ljubiša"
] | <mask> was a Serbian and Montenegrin writer and politician. He is ranked among the masterpieces of Serbian literature for his unique short stories. The Serbian rebirth, both for its patriotic message and because it was a fundamental milestone in the Serbian language reform, can be seen in the stories. Ljubia traced his ancestry to the hinterland and the Patrovii clan, a fact he was always proud of. The Metropolitan of the Serbian Orthodox Church was one of his cousins. <mask>'s father was a seaman who died when he was 14 years old. Since he had to work to support his family at an early age, his education was mostly in the Italian language.Ljubia became an autodidact, learning from the books he could find. The love for national literature was revealed by the writings of Vuk Karadi and his association with Vuk Vrevi. He became the secretary of the town of Budva when he was 19 years old. He was forced to learn more about current laws and was soon considered a lawyer by the plain people. He was a defender in the local court of law. He became a public notary after the authorities acknowledged his knowledge and he didn't have to take a judiciary exam. Ljubia was an active member of the ad hoc assembly of Boka Kotorska and held a number of speeches against the Italian culture.After being elected as the deputy of Boka in the Dalmatian parliament in Zadar, he was sent to the parliament in Vienna as a member of the National Party. He was re-elected to the parliaments in Vienna and Zadar many times. He was the president of the Dalmatian parliament from 1870 to 1878. He was overthrown by the clerical Croat fraction in the National Party. He fought against the ethnic Italian domination in Dalmatian politics and culture, for the equality of religions and languages, for the emancipation of Serb populace in Dalmatia, the economic benefit of the province, and against the unification with Croatia. In his book, Skerli points out that Ljubia wrote: Izmeu Bara i Zadra bilo. The extent of Italian influence on the Dalmatian and Montenegrin littoral was demonstrated by the fact that only seven people had not lost track of their ancestral name and descent.The ethnographical example of Vuk Vrevi, who became Ljubia's friend, started his literary work in 1845. Ljubia wrote about his life and customs in a magazine. He published the first edition of the novel in Serbian Latin script in 1868. His first short story, Sepan the Little, was published in 1868. He continued with short stories after 1870. His only book was the "Montenegrin and Littoral Stories" which was published in 1875. He published one hundred short stories called "The Storytelling of Vuk Dojevi" in 1877, but only 37 appeared due to his death.His autobiography was published in "Serb Dawn" in Vienna. Ljubia did for prose writing what Joksim Novi-Otoan 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 Visiting Cetinje to attend the consecration of his cousin Visarion Ljubia, who was being elevated to a Metropolitan bishop of the Serbian Orthodox Church, Ljubia fell ill and died on his return to Vienna. Budva received his remains in 1885. The pop singer Marina Perazi is his great-great-granddaughter. Ljubia wrote in excellent Serbian, his strongest source of inspiration, because he treasuring all his life contacts with the peasants. His stories were full of folklore elements and vivid characters that showed the character of Serbian people.He was dubbed "Njego in prose" for comparing his inspiration, national orientation and closed relation with folklore. Ljubia is considered to be one of the first realists in Serb literature because his works have an intention of closer and more genuine representation of folk life. His works are still popular. Boj na Visu epan Mali Pripovijesti crnogorske i primorske is one of his best known works. He was booed by the Croats in the Dalmatian parliament because he was a Serb by nationality and Orthodox faith. Literature S. M. Ljubia, Pripovetke, Novi Sad - Beograd, 1957 Pripovijesti crnogorske i primorske has a foreword by Marko Car. | [
"Stjepan",
"Stjepan"
] |
62375428 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna%20Belfer-Cohen | Anna Belfer-Cohen | Anna Belfer-Cohen (; born November 3, 1949) is an Israeli archaeologist and paleoanthropologist and Professor Emeritus at the Institute of Archaeology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Belfer-Cohen excavated and studied many important prehistoric sites in Israel including Hayonim and Kebara Caves and open-air sites such as Nahal Ein Gev I and Nahal Neqarot. She has also worked for many years in the Republic of Georgia, where she made important contributions to the study of the Paleolithic sequence of the Caucasus following her work at the cave sites of Dzoudzuana, Kotias and Satsrublia. She is a specialist in biological Anthropology, prehistoric art, lithic technology, the Upper Paleolithic and modern humans, the Natufian-Neolithic interface and the transition to village life.
Belfer-Cohen has published hundreds of papers and co-edited several books. Her work is widely cited in the field of Prehistoric Archaeology and especially the Natufian culture.
Belfer-Cohen is married with two children and four grandchildren and currently resides in Jerusalem.
Early life and education
Anna Belfer-Cohen was born in Rivne, Ukraine in 1949 to Halina (Ala) and Yehuda Belfer. The family immigrated to Israel in 1956. After completing high school in her home town Petah Tikva, she began studying toward her first degree in archaeology at the Institute of Archaeology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where she also earned her MA (1981) and PhD (1988). Already in her undergraduate studies she participated in many archaeological expeditions in Israel, Cyprus and Sinai. Belfer-Cohen's PhD dissertation (supervised by Professor Ofer Bar-Yosef) was dedicated to the Natufian culture.
She was appointed full professor at the Institute of Archaeology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, in 2002. From 2005–2009, she served as the head of the university's Institute of Archaeology. From 2014 to 2018 she was the head of the Authority for Research Students (non-experimental Sciences).
Scientific contributions
Early in her career, Belfer-Cohen participated in excavations at the Lower Paleolithic site of ‘Ubeiydia in the Jordan Valley (the oldest site in Israel), at Upper Paleolithic and Epipaleolithic prehistoric sites in the northern Sinai Desert, at the burial sites from the Chalcolithic age and Early Bronze Age in the southern Sinai.
During her MA studies, Belfer-Cohen analyzed the lithics and bone tools from the Aurignacian layer at Hayonim cave (dated to 35,000 years ago). In her work she identified the Levantine Aurignacian and its uniqueness in the Upper Paleolithic sequence in the area. Through the years she helped understanding the interactions of this hunter-gatherer culture with its European counterpart.
In her PhD Belfer-Cohen discussed the technological and spatial aspects of the Natufian material remains from Hayonim Cave in the Galilee, including architecture, burials, lithic assemblages, ground-stone tools and personal ornaments. In this work she provided the basis for the modern study of the Natufian culture and shaped the important research questions, which are still employed by the current research.
Belfer-Cohen took part in many archaeological projects, some that lasted several decades, such as Kebara and Hayonim caves, where she was involved in the study and publication of the findings. Selected recent research projects and contributions include:
The First Cemeteries – The nature and meaning of Burial practices in the Natufian Society. Cultural Complexity on the eve of the transition to agriculture. Studies of skeletal material as well as material finds from the sites of Hayonim and Hilazon Tachtit caves jointly with Prof. Leore Grosman (Hebrew University).
Reconstruction of the Upper Paleolithic to Neolithic sequence of Georgia, the southern Caucasus. This is a joint Georgian-USA-Israeli project directed by her on behalf of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, in collaboration with Dr. Tengis Meshviliani, Georgia State Museum and Prof. Ofer Bar-Yosef from Harvard University. In this project the team established the chronology of the local Upper Paleolithic, with the arrival of Homo sapiens, and their local adjustment as compared to the Neanderthals of the preceding Middle Paleolithic. The project includes excavations at Dzudzuana cave, 1996-2001; 2006–7. Another central question in the project was aimed at establishing whether the transformation from hunter-gatherers unto agriculturalists wan an endemic innovation, acculturation of ideas from elsewhere, or the result of invasions of foreign groups. This entailed excavations at the Kotias Klde rockshelter in 2002-2005; 2008–2010. Currently the team excavates at Satsurblia Cave (2010- to present), with Prof. Ron Pinhasi (Vienna University).
Selected publications
Belfer-Cohen, A. and E. Hovers 1992 Burial is in the Eye of the Beholder: Middle Palaeolithic and Natufian Burials in the Levant. Current Anthropology 33: 463–71.
Belfer-Cohen, A. and N. Goren-Inbar 1994 Cognition and Communication in the Levantine Lower Palaeolithic. World Archaeology 26(2):144-157.
Arensburg, B. and A. Belfer-Cohen 1998 “Sapiens and Neanderthals: Rethinking the Levantine Middle Paleolithic Hominids”. In: Neanderthals and Modern Humans in West Asia, eds. T. Akazawa, K. Aoki and O. Bar-Yosef, pp. 311–322. New-York: Plenum Press.
Belfer-Cohen, A. and O. Bar-Yosef 2000 Early Sedentism in the Near East - A Bumpy Ride to Village Life”. In: Life in Neolithic Farming Communities. Social Organization, Identity, and Differentiation, ed. I. Kuijt, pp. 19–37. New-York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers.
Belfer-Cohen, A. and A. N. Goring-Morris 2002 “Why Microliths? Microlithisation in the Levant”. In: Thinking Small: Global Perspectives on Microlithization, eds. R. G. Elston and S.L. Kuhn, pp. 57–68. Washington, D.C.: American Anthropological Association.
Goring-Morris, N. and A. Belfer-Coehn. 2003. More Than Meets the Eye. Studies on Upper Palaeolithic Diversity in the Near East, Oxford: Oxbow Books.
Meshveliani, T., O. Bar-Yosef and A. Belfer-Cohen 2004 “The Upper Palaeolithic in Western Georgia”. In: The Early Upper Paleolithic Beyond Western Europe, eds. P. J. Brantingham, S. L. Kuhn and K. W. Kerry, pp. 129–143. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Hovers E. and A. Belfer-Cohen 2006 "Now You See it, Now You Don’t" - Modern Human Behavior in the Middle Paleolithic. In: Transitions Before The Transition. Evolution and Stability in the Middle Paleolithic and Middle Stone Age, eds. E. Hovers and S. L. Kuhn, pp. 295–304. New York: Springer.
Belfer-Cohen, A. and A. N. Goring-Morris 2007. "From the Beginning: Levantine Upper Palaeolithic Cultural Continuity". In: Rethinking the Human Revolution, eds. P. Mellars, K. Boyle, O. Bar-Yosef and C. Stringer, pp. 199–206. Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research University of Cambridge.
Goring-Morris, A. N., and A. Belfer-Cohen 2010. "Different Ways of Being, Different Ways of Seeing... Changing Worldviews in the Near East". In: Landscapes in Transition: Understanding Hunter-Gatherer and Farming Landscapes in the Early Holocene of Europe and the Levant, eds. B. Finlayson and G. Warren, pp. 9–22. London: Levant Supplementary Series & CBRL.
Belfer-Cohen, A. and A. N. Goring-Morris 2013. Breaking the Mold: Phases and Facies in the Natufian of the Mediterranean Zone. In: Natufian Foragers in the Levant. Terminal Pleistocene Social Changes in Western Asia. Eds.O. Bar-Yosef and F.R. Valla. Pp. 544–561. Archaeological Series 19. Ann Arbor: International Monographs in Prehistory.
See also
Ofer Bar-Yosef
Nigel Goring-Morris
References
External links
Anna Belfer-Cohen's page at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
1949 births
Israeli archaeologists
Israeli women archaeologists
Archaeologists of the Near East
Prehistorians
Hebrew University of Jerusalem faculty
20th-century archaeologists
21st-century archaeologists
Living people
Hebrew University of Jerusalem alumni | [
"Anna Belfer-Cohen (; born November 3, 1949) is an Israeli archaeologist and paleoanthropologist and Professor Emeritus at the Institute of Archaeology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem.",
"Belfer-Cohen excavated and studied many important prehistoric sites in Israel including Hayonim and Kebara Caves and open-air sites such as Nahal Ein Gev I and Nahal Neqarot.",
"She has also worked for many years in the Republic of Georgia, where she made important contributions to the study of the Paleolithic sequence of the Caucasus following her work at the cave sites of Dzoudzuana, Kotias and Satsrublia.",
"She is a specialist in biological Anthropology, prehistoric art, lithic technology, the Upper Paleolithic and modern humans, the Natufian-Neolithic interface and the transition to village life.",
"Belfer-Cohen has published hundreds of papers and co-edited several books.",
"Her work is widely cited in the field of Prehistoric Archaeology and especially the Natufian culture.",
"Belfer-Cohen is married with two children and four grandchildren and currently resides in Jerusalem.",
"Early life and education\n\nAnna Belfer-Cohen was born in Rivne, Ukraine in 1949 to Halina (Ala) and Yehuda Belfer.",
"The family immigrated to Israel in 1956.",
"After completing high school in her home town Petah Tikva, she began studying toward her first degree in archaeology at the Institute of Archaeology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where she also earned her MA (1981) and PhD (1988).",
"Already in her undergraduate studies she participated in many archaeological expeditions in Israel, Cyprus and Sinai.",
"Belfer-Cohen's PhD dissertation (supervised by Professor Ofer Bar-Yosef) was dedicated to the Natufian culture.",
"She was appointed full professor at the Institute of Archaeology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, in 2002.",
"From 2005–2009, she served as the head of the university's Institute of Archaeology.",
"From 2014 to 2018 she was the head of the Authority for Research Students (non-experimental Sciences).",
"Scientific contributions\n\nEarly in her career, Belfer-Cohen participated in excavations at the Lower Paleolithic site of ‘Ubeiydia in the Jordan Valley (the oldest site in Israel), at Upper Paleolithic and Epipaleolithic prehistoric sites in the northern Sinai Desert, at the burial sites from the Chalcolithic age and Early Bronze Age in the southern Sinai.",
"During her MA studies, Belfer-Cohen analyzed the lithics and bone tools from the Aurignacian layer at Hayonim cave (dated to 35,000 years ago).",
"In her work she identified the Levantine Aurignacian and its uniqueness in the Upper Paleolithic sequence in the area.",
"Through the years she helped understanding the interactions of this hunter-gatherer culture with its European counterpart.",
"In her PhD Belfer-Cohen discussed the technological and spatial aspects of the Natufian material remains from Hayonim Cave in the Galilee, including architecture, burials, lithic assemblages, ground-stone tools and personal ornaments.",
"In this work she provided the basis for the modern study of the Natufian culture and shaped the important research questions, which are still employed by the current research.",
"Belfer-Cohen took part in many archaeological projects, some that lasted several decades, such as Kebara and Hayonim caves, where she was involved in the study and publication of the findings.",
"Selected recent research projects and contributions include:\n The First Cemeteries – The nature and meaning of Burial practices in the Natufian Society.",
"Cultural Complexity on the eve of the transition to agriculture.",
"Studies of skeletal material as well as material finds from the sites of Hayonim and Hilazon Tachtit caves jointly with Prof. Leore Grosman (Hebrew University).",
"Reconstruction of the Upper Paleolithic to Neolithic sequence of Georgia, the southern Caucasus.",
"This is a joint Georgian-USA-Israeli project directed by her on behalf of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, in collaboration with Dr. Tengis Meshviliani, Georgia State Museum and Prof. Ofer Bar-Yosef from Harvard University.",
"In this project the team established the chronology of the local Upper Paleolithic, with the arrival of Homo sapiens, and their local adjustment as compared to the Neanderthals of the preceding Middle Paleolithic.",
"The project includes excavations at Dzudzuana cave, 1996-2001; 2006–7.",
"Another central question in the project was aimed at establishing whether the transformation from hunter-gatherers unto agriculturalists wan an endemic innovation, acculturation of ideas from elsewhere, or the result of invasions of foreign groups.",
"This entailed excavations at the Kotias Klde rockshelter in 2002-2005; 2008–2010.",
"Currently the team excavates at Satsurblia Cave (2010- to present), with Prof. Ron Pinhasi (Vienna University).",
"Selected publications \n \n \n \n \n Belfer-Cohen, A. and E. Hovers 1992 Burial is in the Eye of the Beholder: Middle Palaeolithic and Natufian Burials in the Levant.",
"Current Anthropology 33: 463–71.",
"Belfer-Cohen, A. and N. Goren-Inbar 1994 Cognition and Communication in the Levantine Lower Palaeolithic.",
"World Archaeology 26(2):144-157.",
"Arensburg, B. and A. Belfer-Cohen 1998 “Sapiens and Neanderthals: Rethinking the Levantine Middle Paleolithic Hominids”.",
"In: Neanderthals and Modern Humans in West Asia, eds.",
"T. Akazawa, K. Aoki and O. Bar-Yosef, pp.",
"311–322.",
"New-York: Plenum Press.",
"Belfer-Cohen, A. and O. Bar-Yosef 2000 Early Sedentism in the Near East - A Bumpy Ride to Village Life”.",
"In: Life in Neolithic Farming Communities.",
"Social Organization, Identity, and Differentiation, ed.",
"I. Kuijt, pp.",
"19–37.",
"New-York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers.",
"Belfer-Cohen, A. and A. N. Goring-Morris 2002 “Why Microliths?",
"Microlithisation in the Levant”.",
"In: Thinking Small: Global Perspectives on Microlithization, eds.",
"R. G. Elston and S.L.",
"Kuhn, pp.",
"57–68.",
"Washington, D.C.: American Anthropological Association.",
"Goring-Morris, N. and A. Belfer-Coehn.",
"2003.",
"More Than Meets the Eye.",
"Studies on Upper Palaeolithic Diversity in the Near East, Oxford: Oxbow Books.",
"Meshveliani, T., O. Bar-Yosef and A. Belfer-Cohen 2004 “The Upper Palaeolithic in Western Georgia”.",
"In: The Early Upper Paleolithic Beyond Western Europe, eds.",
"P. J. Brantingham, S. L. Kuhn and K. W. Kerry, pp.",
"129–143.",
"Berkeley: University of California Press.",
"Hovers E. and A. Belfer-Cohen 2006 \"Now You See it, Now You Don’t\" - Modern Human Behavior in the Middle Paleolithic.",
"In: Transitions Before The Transition.",
"Evolution and Stability in the Middle Paleolithic and Middle Stone Age, eds.",
"E. Hovers and S. L. Kuhn, pp.",
"295–304.",
"New York: Springer.",
"Belfer-Cohen, A. and A. N. Goring-Morris 2007.",
"\"From the Beginning: Levantine Upper Palaeolithic Cultural Continuity\".",
"In: Rethinking the Human Revolution, eds.",
"P. Mellars, K. Boyle, O. Bar-Yosef and C. Stringer, pp.",
"199–206.",
"Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research University of Cambridge.",
"Goring-Morris, A. N., and A. Belfer-Cohen 2010.",
"\"Different Ways of Being, Different Ways of Seeing... Changing Worldviews in the Near East\".",
"In: Landscapes in Transition: Understanding Hunter-Gatherer and Farming Landscapes in the Early Holocene of Europe and the Levant, eds.",
"B. Finlayson and G. Warren, pp.",
"9–22.",
"London: Levant Supplementary Series & CBRL.",
"Belfer-Cohen, A. and A. N. Goring-Morris 2013.",
"Breaking the Mold: Phases and Facies in the Natufian of the Mediterranean Zone.",
"In: Natufian Foragers in the Levant.",
"Terminal Pleistocene Social Changes in Western Asia.",
"Eds.O.",
"Bar-Yosef and F.R.",
"Valla.",
"Pp.",
"544–561.",
"Archaeological Series 19.",
"Ann Arbor: International Monographs in Prehistory.",
"See also \n\n Ofer Bar-Yosef\n Nigel Goring-Morris\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links \n Anna Belfer-Cohen's page at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem\n \n\n1949 births\nIsraeli archaeologists\nIsraeli women archaeologists\nArchaeologists of the Near East\nPrehistorians\nHebrew University of Jerusalem faculty\n20th-century archaeologists\n21st-century archaeologists\nLiving people\nHebrew University of Jerusalem alumni"
] | [
"Anna Belfer-Cohen is a professor at the Institute of Archaeology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem.",
"Many important prehistoric sites in Israel were excavated and studied by Belfer-Cohen.",
"She worked for many years in the Republic of Georgia, where she made important contributions to the study of the Paleolithic sequence of the Caucasus.",
"She is a specialist in biological anthropology, prehistoric art, lithic technology, Upper Paleolithic and modern humans, the Natufian-Neolithic interface and the transition to village life.",
"Several books were co-edited by Belfer-Cohen.",
"Her work is used in the field of Prehistoric Archaeology.",
"Belfer-Cohen lives in Jerusalem with her two children and four grandchildren.",
"Anna Belfer-Cohen was born in Rivne, Ukraine in 1949 to Halina and Yehuda Belfer.",
"The family moved to Israel.",
"After graduating from high school in Petah Tikva, she began studying at the Institute of Archaeology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where she earned her first degree in archaeology.",
"She was involved in many archaeological expeditions in Israel, Cyprus and Sinai.",
"Belfer-Cohen's PhD was dedicated to the Natufian culture.",
"She was appointed full professor at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 2002.",
"She was the head of the Institute of Archaeology from 2005 to 2009.",
"She was the head of the authority for research students.",
"Belfer-Cohen was involved in excavations at the Lower Paleolithic site of Ubeiydia in the Jordan Valley, as well as the Upper Paleolithic and Epipaleolithic prehistoric sites in the northern Sinai Desert.",
"Belfer-Cohen studied the lithics and bone tools from the Aurignacian layer at Hayonim cave.",
"The Levantine Aurignacian is unique in the Upper Paleolithic sequence.",
"She helped understand the hunter-gatherer culture with its European counterpart.",
"Belfer-Cohen discussed the technological and spatial aspects of the Natufian material remains from Hayonim Cave in the Galilee in her PhD.",
"The basis for the modern study of the Natufian culture was provided by her work.",
"Belfer-Cohen was involved in the study and publication of the findings of the archaeological projects she was involved in.",
"The nature and meaning of Burial practices in the Natufian Society is a recent research project.",
"On the eve of the transition to agriculture, there is cultural complexity.",
"The sites of Hayonim and Hilazon Tachtit caves were studied with the help of Prof. Leore Grosman.",
"The Upper Paleolithic to Neolithic sequence of Georgia was reconstructed.",
"The project was directed by her on behalf of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, as well as the Georgia State Museum and Prof. Ofer Bar-Yosef from Harvard University.",
"The local Upper Paleolithic was established with the arrival of Homo sapiens and their local adjustment as compared to the Neanderthals of the preceding Middle Paleolithic.",
"The project includes excavations at the cave.",
"The question of whether the transformation from hunter-gatherers to agriculturalists has an endemic innovation, acculturation of ideas from elsewhere, or the result of invasions of foreign groups was one of the central questions in the project.",
"Excavations were done at the rockshelter in 2002-2005 and 2008-2010.",
"The team is currently excavating at Satsurblia Cave.",
"Burial is in the Eye of the Beholder: Middle Palaeolithic and Natufian Burials in the Levant was published in 1992.",
"Current Anthropology 33 is about anthropology.",
"Belfer-Cohen and Goren-Inbar wrote about communication in the lower Palaeolithic.",
"The World Archaeology 26 (2) is about archaeology.",
"Arensburg and Belfer-Cohen wrote a book about Neanderthals and the Middle Paleolithic.",
"The book is about Neanderthals and Modern Humans in West Asia.",
"The authors are T. Akazawa, K. Aoki and O. Bar-Yosef.",
"31–22.",
"The Plenum Press is in New-York.",
"Belfer-Cohen and O. Bar-Yosef wrote about early seismology in the Near East.",
"Life in Neolithic Farming Communities.",
"Social Organization, Identity, and Differentiation is a ed.",
"I. Kuijt, pp.",
"19–37.",
"Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers is in New-York.",
"Belfer-Cohen and A. N. Goring-Morris wrote about why microliths are important.",
"Microlithisation in the Levant.",
"In: Thinking Small: Global Perspectives on Microlithization.",
"R. G. Elston and S.L.",
"pp.",
"57–68.",
"The American Anthropological Association is in Washington, D.C.",
"N. and A. Belfer- Coehn are authors.",
"In 2003",
"There is more than meets the eye.",
"Oxbow Books has studies on Upper Palaeolithic Diversity in the Near East.",
"O. Bar-Yosef and A. Belfer-Cohen wrote about the Upper Palaeolithic in Western Georgia.",
"In: The Early Upper Paleolithic Beyond Western Europe.",
"S. L. Kuhn and K. W. Kerry are authors.",
"The score was 129–143.",
"The University of California Press is in Berkeley.",
"\"Now You See it, Now You Don't\" is a novel about modern human behavior in the Middle Paleolithic.",
"Transitions before the transition",
"The Evolution and Stability in the Middle Paleolithic and Middle Stone Age is a book.",
"The authors are E. Hovers and S. L. Kuhn.",
"295–4.",
"New York: Springer.",
"Belfer-Cohen and A. N. Goring-Morris.",
"\"From the Beginning: Levantine Upper Palaeolithic Cultural Continuity\".",
"The book is called Rethinking the Human Revolution.",
"800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"199–6.",
"The McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research is located in Cambridge.",
"A. N., and A. Belfer-Cohen were authors.",
"Changing Worldviews in the Near East are different ways of being.",
"In: Understanding Hunter-Gatherer and Farming in the Early Holocene of Europe and the Levant.",
"B. Finlayson and G. Warren.",
"9–22.",
"The Levant Supplementary Series is in London.",
"Belfer-Cohen and A. N.",
"The Natufian of the Mediterranean Zone contains phases and fissures.",
"In: Natufian Foragers.",
"Western Asia experienced terminal Pleistocene social changes.",
"Eds.O.",
"Bar-Yosef and F.R.",
"Valla.",
"There are some pages.",
"544–561",
"The Archaeological Series 19.",
"The International Monographs in Prehistory are located in Ann Arbor.",
"External links include Anna Belfer-Cohen's page at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem."
] | <mask> (; born November 3, 1949) is an Israeli archaeologist and paleoanthropologist and Professor Emeritus at the Institute of Archaeology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Belfer-Cohen excavated and studied many important prehistoric sites in Israel including Hayonim and Kebara Caves and open-air sites such as Nahal Ein Gev I and Nahal Neqarot. She has also worked for many years in the Republic of Georgia, where she made important contributions to the study of the Paleolithic sequence of the Caucasus following her work at the cave sites of Dzoudzuana, Kotias and Satsrublia. She is a specialist in biological Anthropology, prehistoric art, lithic technology, the Upper Paleolithic and modern humans, the Natufian-Neolithic interface and the transition to village life. Belfer-Cohen has published hundreds of papers and co-edited several books. Her work is widely cited in the field of Prehistoric Archaeology and especially the Natufian culture. Belfer-Cohen is married with two children and four grandchildren and currently resides in Jerusalem.Early life and education
<mask>-Cohen was born in Rivne, Ukraine in 1949 to Halina (Ala) and Yehuda Belfer. The family immigrated to Israel in 1956. After completing high school in her home town Petah Tikva, she began studying toward her first degree in archaeology at the Institute of Archaeology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where she also earned her MA (1981) and PhD (1988). Already in her undergraduate studies she participated in many archaeological expeditions in Israel, Cyprus and Sinai. Belfer-Cohen's PhD dissertation (supervised by Professor Ofer Bar-Yosef) was dedicated to the Natufian culture. She was appointed full professor at the Institute of Archaeology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, in 2002. From 2005–2009, she served as the head of the university's Institute of Archaeology.From 2014 to 2018 she was the head of the Authority for Research Students (non-experimental Sciences). Scientific contributions
Early in her career, Belfer-Cohen participated in excavations at the Lower Paleolithic site of ‘Ubeiydia in the Jordan Valley (the oldest site in Israel), at Upper Paleolithic and Epipaleolithic prehistoric sites in the northern Sinai Desert, at the burial sites from the Chalcolithic age and Early Bronze Age in the southern Sinai. During her MA studies, Belfer-Cohen analyzed the lithics and bone tools from the Aurignacian layer at Hayonim cave (dated to 35,000 years ago). In her work she identified the Levantine Aurignacian and its uniqueness in the Upper Paleolithic sequence in the area. Through the years she helped understanding the interactions of this hunter-gatherer culture with its European counterpart. In her PhD Belfer-Cohen discussed the technological and spatial aspects of the Natufian material remains from Hayonim Cave in the Galilee, including architecture, burials, lithic assemblages, ground-stone tools and personal ornaments. In this work she provided the basis for the modern study of the Natufian culture and shaped the important research questions, which are still employed by the current research.Belfer-Cohen took part in many archaeological projects, some that lasted several decades, such as Kebara and Hayonim caves, where she was involved in the study and publication of the findings. Selected recent research projects and contributions include:
The First Cemeteries – The nature and meaning of Burial practices in the Natufian Society. Cultural Complexity on the eve of the transition to agriculture. Studies of skeletal material as well as material finds from the sites of Hayonim and Hilazon Tachtit caves jointly with Prof. Leore Grosman (Hebrew University). Reconstruction of the Upper Paleolithic to Neolithic sequence of Georgia, the southern Caucasus. This is a joint Georgian-USA-Israeli project directed by her on behalf of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, in collaboration with Dr. Tengis Meshviliani, Georgia State Museum and Prof. Ofer Bar-Yosef from Harvard University. In this project the team established the chronology of the local Upper Paleolithic, with the arrival of Homo sapiens, and their local adjustment as compared to the Neanderthals of the preceding Middle Paleolithic.The project includes excavations at Dzudzuana cave, 1996-2001; 2006–7. Another central question in the project was aimed at establishing whether the transformation from hunter-gatherers unto agriculturalists wan an endemic innovation, acculturation of ideas from elsewhere, or the result of invasions of foreign groups. This entailed excavations at the Kotias Klde rockshelter in 2002-2005; 2008–2010. Currently the team excavates at Satsurblia Cave (2010- to present), with Prof. Ron Pinhasi (Vienna University). Selected publications
Belfer-Cohen, A. and E. Hovers 1992 Burial is in the Eye of the Beholder: Middle Palaeolithic and Natufian Burials in the Levant. Current Anthropology 33: 463–71. Belfer-Cohen, A. and N. Goren-Inbar 1994 Cognition and Communication in the Levantine Lower Palaeolithic.World Archaeology 26(2):144-157. Arensburg, B. and A. Belfer-Cohen 1998 “Sapiens and Neanderthals: Rethinking the Levantine Middle Paleolithic Hominids”. In: Neanderthals and Modern Humans in West Asia, eds. T. Akazawa, K. Aoki and O. Bar-Yosef, pp. 311–322. New-York: Plenum Press. Belfer-Cohen, A. and O. Bar-Yosef 2000 Early Sedentism in the Near East - A Bumpy Ride to Village Life”.In: Life in Neolithic Farming Communities. Social Organization, Identity, and Differentiation, ed. I. Kuijt, pp. 19–37. New-York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers. Belfer-Cohen, A. and A. N. Goring-Morris 2002 “Why Microliths? Microlithisation in the Levant”.In: Thinking Small: Global Perspectives on Microlithization, eds. R. G. Elston and S.L. Kuhn, pp. 57–68. Washington, D.C.: American Anthropological Association. Goring-Morris, N. and A. Belfer-Coehn. 2003.More Than Meets the Eye. Studies on Upper Palaeolithic Diversity in the Near East, Oxford: Oxbow Books. Meshveliani, T., O. Bar-Yosef and A. Belfer-Cohen 2004 “The Upper Palaeolithic in Western Georgia”. In: The Early Upper Paleolithic Beyond Western Europe, eds. P. J. Brantingham, S. L. Kuhn and K. W. Kerry, pp. 129–143. Berkeley: University of California Press.Hovers E. and A. Belfer-Cohen 2006 "Now You See it, Now You Don’t" - Modern Human Behavior in the Middle Paleolithic. In: Transitions Before The Transition. Evolution and Stability in the Middle Paleolithic and Middle Stone Age, eds. E. Hovers and S. L. Kuhn, pp. 295–304. New York: Springer. Belfer-Cohen, A. and A. N. Goring-Morris 2007."From the Beginning: Levantine Upper Palaeolithic Cultural Continuity". In: Rethinking the Human Revolution, eds. P. Mellars, K. Boyle, O. Bar-Yosef and C. Stringer, pp. 199–206. Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research University of Cambridge. Goring-Morris, A. N., and A. Belfer-Cohen 2010. "Different Ways of Being, Different Ways of Seeing... Changing Worldviews in the Near East".In: Landscapes in Transition: Understanding Hunter-Gatherer and Farming Landscapes in the Early Holocene of Europe and the Levant, eds. B. Finlayson and G. Warren, pp. 9–22. London: Levant Supplementary Series & CBRL. Belfer-Cohen, A. and A. N. Goring-Morris 2013. Breaking the Mold: Phases and Facies in the Natufian of the Mediterranean Zone. In: Natufian Foragers in the Levant.Terminal Pleistocene Social Changes in Western Asia. Eds.O. Bar-Yosef and F.R. Valla. Pp. 544–561. Archaeological Series 19.Ann Arbor: International Monographs in Prehistory. See also
Ofer Bar-Yosef
Nigel Goring-Morris
References
External links
<mask>-Cohen's page at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
1949 births
Israeli archaeologists
Israeli women archaeologists
Archaeologists of the Near East
Prehistorians
Hebrew University of Jerusalem faculty
20th-century archaeologists
21st-century archaeologists
Living people
Hebrew University of Jerusalem alumni | [
"Anna Belfer Cohen",
"Anna Belfer",
"Anna Belfer"
] | <mask> is a professor at the Institute of Archaeology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Many important prehistoric sites in Israel were excavated and studied by Belfer-Cohen. She worked for many years in the Republic of Georgia, where she made important contributions to the study of the Paleolithic sequence of the Caucasus. She is a specialist in biological anthropology, prehistoric art, lithic technology, Upper Paleolithic and modern humans, the Natufian-Neolithic interface and the transition to village life. Several books were co-edited by Belfer-Cohen. Her work is used in the field of Prehistoric Archaeology. Belfer-Cohen lives in Jerusalem with her two children and four grandchildren.<mask>-Cohen was born in Rivne, Ukraine in 1949 to Halina and Yehuda Belfer. The family moved to Israel. After graduating from high school in Petah Tikva, she began studying at the Institute of Archaeology, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where she earned her first degree in archaeology. She was involved in many archaeological expeditions in Israel, Cyprus and Sinai. Belfer-Cohen's PhD was dedicated to the Natufian culture. She was appointed full professor at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 2002. She was the head of the Institute of Archaeology from 2005 to 2009.She was the head of the authority for research students. Belfer-Cohen was involved in excavations at the Lower Paleolithic site of Ubeiydia in the Jordan Valley, as well as the Upper Paleolithic and Epipaleolithic prehistoric sites in the northern Sinai Desert. Belfer-Cohen studied the lithics and bone tools from the Aurignacian layer at Hayonim cave. The Levantine Aurignacian is unique in the Upper Paleolithic sequence. She helped understand the hunter-gatherer culture with its European counterpart. Belfer-Cohen discussed the technological and spatial aspects of the Natufian material remains from Hayonim Cave in the Galilee in her PhD. The basis for the modern study of the Natufian culture was provided by her work.Belfer-Cohen was involved in the study and publication of the findings of the archaeological projects she was involved in. The nature and meaning of Burial practices in the Natufian Society is a recent research project. On the eve of the transition to agriculture, there is cultural complexity. The sites of Hayonim and Hilazon Tachtit caves were studied with the help of Prof. Leore Grosman. The Upper Paleolithic to Neolithic sequence of Georgia was reconstructed. The project was directed by her on behalf of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, as well as the Georgia State Museum and Prof. Ofer Bar-Yosef from Harvard University. The local Upper Paleolithic was established with the arrival of Homo sapiens and their local adjustment as compared to the Neanderthals of the preceding Middle Paleolithic.The project includes excavations at the cave. The question of whether the transformation from hunter-gatherers to agriculturalists has an endemic innovation, acculturation of ideas from elsewhere, or the result of invasions of foreign groups was one of the central questions in the project. Excavations were done at the rockshelter in 2002-2005 and 2008-2010. The team is currently excavating at Satsurblia Cave. Burial is in the Eye of the Beholder: Middle Palaeolithic and Natufian Burials in the Levant was published in 1992. Current Anthropology 33 is about anthropology. Belfer-Cohen and Goren-Inbar wrote about communication in the lower Palaeolithic.The World Archaeology 26 (2) is about archaeology. Arensburg and Belfer-Cohen wrote a book about Neanderthals and the Middle Paleolithic. The book is about Neanderthals and Modern Humans in West Asia. The authors are T. Akazawa, K. Aoki and O. Bar-Yosef. 31–22. The Plenum Press is in New-York. Belfer-Cohen and O. Bar-Yosef wrote about early seismology in the Near East.Life in Neolithic Farming Communities. Social Organization, Identity, and Differentiation is a ed. I. Kuijt, pp. 19–37. Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers is in New-York. Belfer-Cohen and A. N. Goring-Morris wrote about why microliths are important. Microlithisation in the Levant.In: Thinking Small: Global Perspectives on Microlithization. R. G. Elston and S.L. pp. 57–68. The American Anthropological Association is in Washington, D.C. N. and A. Belfer- Coehn are authors. In 2003There is more than meets the eye. Oxbow Books has studies on Upper Palaeolithic Diversity in the Near East. O. Bar-Yosef and A. Belfer-Cohen wrote about the Upper Palaeolithic in Western Georgia. In: The Early Upper Paleolithic Beyond Western Europe. S. L. Kuhn and K. W. Kerry are authors. The score was 129–143. The University of California Press is in Berkeley."Now You See it, Now You Don't" is a novel about modern human behavior in the Middle Paleolithic. Transitions before the transition The Evolution and Stability in the Middle Paleolithic and Middle Stone Age is a book. The authors are E. Hovers and S. L. Kuhn. 295–4. New York: Springer. Belfer-Cohen and A. N. Goring-Morris."From the Beginning: Levantine Upper Palaeolithic Cultural Continuity". The book is called Rethinking the Human Revolution. 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 199–6. The McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research is located in Cambridge. A. N., and A. Belfer-Cohen were authors. Changing Worldviews in the Near East are different ways of being.In: Understanding Hunter-Gatherer and Farming in the Early Holocene of Europe and the Levant. B. Finlayson and G. Warren. 9–22. The Levant Supplementary Series is in London. Belfer-Cohen and A. N. The Natufian of the Mediterranean Zone contains phases and fissures. In: Natufian Foragers.Western Asia experienced terminal Pleistocene social changes. Eds.O. Bar-Yosef and F.R. Valla. There are some pages. 544–561 The Archaeological Series 19.The International Monographs in Prehistory are located in Ann Arbor. External links include <mask>-Cohen's page at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. | [
"Anna Belfer Cohen",
"Anna Belfer",
"Anna Belfer"
] |
9039487 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruce%20Seton | Bruce Seton | Sir Bruce Lovat Seton, 11th Baronet (29 May 1909 – 28 September 1969) was a British actor and soldier.
He is best remembered for his eponymous lead role in Fabian of the Yard.
Early life
Bruce Lovat Seton was born in Simla, British India, the younger of two sons of Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Bruce Gordon Seton of Abercorn (1868–1934), 9th Baronet and his wife, Elma Armstrong (died 1960). He was educated at Edinburgh Academy and then trained at the Royal Military College, Sandhurst.
Military career
Seton was commissioned into the Black Watch in 1929 as a second lieutenant, but resigned his commission in 1932. A brief interruption in his acting career came during the Second World War and in November 1939 he held the rank of captain in the 10th Battalion, Cameronians (Scottish Rifles), ending the war as major (temporary). His service number was 44304 and he was awarded the Medal of Freedom.
Acting
Seton began his acting career in the chorus line at Drury Lane Theatre and starred in Ralph Ince's film Blue Smoke (1935) as Don Chinko.
He played Inspector Fabian of Scotland Yard in the television series Fabian of the Yard (1954–1956). The series was based on the career of the former Scotland Yard Detective Inspector Robert Fabian, who usually appeared briefly before the final fade-out to wind up the story.
Seton's last role was as the voice of Beadle in The Wonderful World of Disney (1962–1963).
He fenced and boxed in the Army and was a founder member with other actors of the Lord's Taverners, a charity which raises funds to support participation in cricket.
Later career
His address in the 1940s was 15 Learmonth Gardens in western Edinburgh.
In 1963, on 7 February, the death of his brother, Alexander (Sandy) Hay Seton (who had no male heirs), Bruce became the 11th Seton baronet.
Since Bruce also had no male heirs at the time of his death, in 1969, the title passed to his cousin, Christopher Bruce Seton (1909–1988).
Personal life
He met fellow actor Tamara Desni Willhelm (1911–2008) on the set of Blue Smoke in 1935, became her second husband in 1937 in London and divorced in 1940.
He married his second wife, actress Antoinette Cellier (Florence Antoinette Glossop Cellier), in 1940 in London. They had a daughter, Lydia Antoinette Gordon Seton, born on 14 November 1941.
Selected filmography
Flame in the Heather (1935) – Murray
Blue Smoke (1935) – Don Chinko
The Vandergilt Diamond Mystery (1936) – Hardcastle
Wedding Group (1936) – Dr. Jock Carnegie
The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (1936) – Mark
Melody of My Heart (1936) – Jim Brent
The End of the Road (1936) – Donald Carson
Jack of All Trades (1936) – Dancer (uncredited)
Love from a Stranger (1937) – Ronald Bruce
Cafe Colette (1937) – Roger Manning
Racing Romance (1937) – Harry Stone
Fifty-Shilling Boxer (1937) – Jack Foster
Father Steps Out (1937) – Johnnie Miller
The Green Cockatoo (1937) – Madison – Tall Henchman
Weddings Are Wonderful (1938) – John Smith
You're the Doctor (1938) – Appleby
Miracles Do Happen (1939) – Rodney Gilmore
Annie Laurie (1939) – Jamie Turner
Old Mother Riley Joins Up (1939) – Lt. Travers
Lucky to Me (1939) – Lord 'Tiny' Tyneside
Return to Yesterday (1940) – Journalist (uncredited)
The Middle Watch (1940) – Captain Randall
The Curse of the Wraydons (1946) – Jack Wraydon / Spring-Heeled Jack
Bond Street (1948) – Sergeant
The Story of Shirley Yorke (1948) – Captain Sharp
Bonnie Prince Charlie (1948) – Allan Macrae (uncredited)
Scott of the Antarctic (1948) – Lt. H. Pennell R.N.
Look Before You Love (1948) – Johns
Whisky Galore! (1949) – Sergeant Odd
The Blue Lamp (1950) – PC Campbell
Paul Temple's Triumph (1950) – Bill Bryant
Seven Days to Noon (1950) – Brigadier Grant (uncredited)
Portrait of Clare (1950) – Lord Steven Wolverbury
Blackmailed (1951) – Supt. Crowe
Worm's Eye View (1951) – Squadron Leader Briarly
White Corridors (1951) – Policeman
High Treason (1951)
Take Me to Paris (1951) – Gerald Vane
Emergency Call (1952) – Sgt. Bellamy
The Second Mrs Tanqueray (1952) – Gordon Jayne
The Cruel Sea (1953) – Tallow
Mogambo (1953) – Wilson (uncredited)
Eight O'Clock Walk (1954) – D. C. I.
Doctor in the House (1954) – Police Driver (uncredited)
Delayed Action (1954) – Sellars
Man of the Moment (1955) – Fabian of the Yard (uncredited)
Breakaway (1956) – Webb
Morning Call (1957) – Inspector S.G. Brown
There's Always a Thursday (1957) – James Pelly
West of Suez (1957) – Major Osborne
The Crooked Sky (1957) – Inspector 'Mac' Macauley
Undercover Girl (1958) – Ted Austin
The Heart of a Man (1959) – River Police Inspector (uncredited)
Strictly Confidential (1959) – Inspector Shearing
Make Mine a Million (1959) – Supt. James
Violent Moment (1959) – Inspector Davis
The 39 Steps (1959) – Policeman on Train (uncredited)
John Paul Jones (1959) – 1st Villager
Carry On Constable (1960) – (uncredited)
Trouble with Eve (1960) – Col. Digby-Phillpotts
Operation Cupid (1960) – Representative
The League of Gentlemen (1960) – Patrolman (uncredited)
Just Joe (1960) – Charlie
Freedom to Die (1961) – Felix
Gorgo (1961) – Prof. Flaherty
Greyfriars Bobby: The True Story of a Dog (1961) – Prosecutor
The Frightened City (1961) – Assistant Commissioner
Ambush in Leopard Street (1962) – Nimmo
The Pot Carriers (1962) – Prison Officer I / C Cell Block
Dead Man's Evidence (1962) – Colonel James Somerset
Dr. Syn, Alias the Scarecrow (1963) – Beadle
Honours
7 February 1963 Baronet, 11th baronet, of Abercorn (cr. 1663)
1947 Medal of Freedom
Arms
Sources
Burke's Peerage & Gentry, 107th edition
References
External links
Whirligig TV
Baronets in the Baronetage of Nova Scotia
British male film actors
British Army personnel of World War II
Black Watch officers
Cameronians officers
Graduates of the Royal Military College, Sandhurst
1909 births
1969 deaths
People educated at Edinburgh Academy
People from Shimla
British male television actors
20th-century British male actors
Bruce | [
"Sir Bruce Lovat Seton, 11th Baronet (29 May 1909 – 28 September 1969) was a British actor and soldier.",
"He is best remembered for his eponymous lead role in Fabian of the Yard.",
"Early life\nBruce Lovat Seton was born in Simla, British India, the younger of two sons of Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Bruce Gordon Seton of Abercorn (1868–1934), 9th Baronet and his wife, Elma Armstrong (died 1960).",
"He was educated at Edinburgh Academy and then trained at the Royal Military College, Sandhurst.",
"Military career \nSeton was commissioned into the Black Watch in 1929 as a second lieutenant, but resigned his commission in 1932.",
"A brief interruption in his acting career came during the Second World War and in November 1939 he held the rank of captain in the 10th Battalion, Cameronians (Scottish Rifles), ending the war as major (temporary).",
"His service number was 44304 and he was awarded the Medal of Freedom.",
"Acting \nSeton began his acting career in the chorus line at Drury Lane Theatre and starred in Ralph Ince's film Blue Smoke (1935) as Don Chinko.",
"He played Inspector Fabian of Scotland Yard in the television series Fabian of the Yard (1954–1956).",
"The series was based on the career of the former Scotland Yard Detective Inspector Robert Fabian, who usually appeared briefly before the final fade-out to wind up the story.",
"Seton's last role was as the voice of Beadle in The Wonderful World of Disney (1962–1963).",
"He fenced and boxed in the Army and was a founder member with other actors of the Lord's Taverners, a charity which raises funds to support participation in cricket.",
"Later career \nHis address in the 1940s was 15 Learmonth Gardens in western Edinburgh.",
"In 1963, on 7 February, the death of his brother, Alexander (Sandy) Hay Seton (who had no male heirs), Bruce became the 11th Seton baronet.",
"Since Bruce also had no male heirs at the time of his death, in 1969, the title passed to his cousin, Christopher Bruce Seton (1909–1988).",
"Personal life\n\nHe met fellow actor Tamara Desni Willhelm (1911–2008) on the set of Blue Smoke in 1935, became her second husband in 1937 in London and divorced in 1940.",
"He married his second wife, actress Antoinette Cellier (Florence Antoinette Glossop Cellier), in 1940 in London.",
"They had a daughter, Lydia Antoinette Gordon Seton, born on 14 November 1941.",
"Look Before You Love (1948) – Johns\n Whisky Galore!",
"(1949) – Sergeant Odd\n The Blue Lamp (1950) – PC Campbell\n Paul Temple's Triumph (1950) – Bill Bryant\n Seven Days to Noon (1950) – Brigadier Grant (uncredited)\n Portrait of Clare (1950) – Lord Steven Wolverbury\n Blackmailed (1951) – Supt.",
"Crowe\n Worm's Eye View (1951) – Squadron Leader Briarly\n White Corridors (1951) – Policeman\n High Treason (1951)\n Take Me to Paris (1951) – Gerald Vane\n Emergency Call (1952) – Sgt.",
"Bellamy\n The Second Mrs Tanqueray (1952) – Gordon Jayne\n The Cruel Sea (1953) – Tallow\n Mogambo (1953) – Wilson (uncredited)\n Eight O'Clock Walk (1954) – D. C. I.",
"Doctor in the House (1954) – Police Driver (uncredited)\n Delayed Action (1954) – Sellars\n Man of the Moment (1955) – Fabian of the Yard (uncredited)\n Breakaway (1956) – Webb\n Morning Call (1957) – Inspector S.G. Brown\n There's Always a Thursday (1957) – James Pelly\n West of Suez (1957) – Major Osborne\n The Crooked Sky (1957) – Inspector 'Mac' Macauley\n Undercover Girl (1958) – Ted Austin\n The Heart of a Man (1959) – River Police Inspector (uncredited)\n Strictly Confidential (1959) – Inspector Shearing\n Make Mine a Million (1959) – Supt.",
"James\n Violent Moment (1959) – Inspector Davis\n The 39 Steps (1959) – Policeman on Train (uncredited)\n John Paul Jones (1959) – 1st Villager\n Carry On Constable (1960) – (uncredited)\n Trouble with Eve (1960) – Col. Digby-Phillpotts\n Operation Cupid (1960) – Representative\n The League of Gentlemen (1960) – Patrolman (uncredited)\n Just Joe (1960) – Charlie\n Freedom to Die (1961) – Felix\n Gorgo (1961) – Prof. Flaherty\n Greyfriars Bobby: The True Story of a Dog (1961) – Prosecutor\n The Frightened City (1961) – Assistant Commissioner\n Ambush in Leopard Street (1962) – Nimmo\n The Pot Carriers (1962) – Prison Officer I / C Cell Block\n Dead Man's Evidence (1962) – Colonel James Somerset\n Dr. Syn, Alias the Scarecrow (1963) – Beadle\n\nHonours\n7 February 1963 Baronet, 11th baronet, of Abercorn (cr.",
"1663)\n1947 Medal of Freedom\n\nArms\n\nSources\nBurke's Peerage & Gentry, 107th edition\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links\n\nWhirligig TV\n\nBaronets in the Baronetage of Nova Scotia\nBritish male film actors\nBritish Army personnel of World War II\nBlack Watch officers\nCameronians officers\nGraduates of the Royal Military College, Sandhurst\n1909 births\n1969 deaths\nPeople educated at Edinburgh Academy\nPeople from Shimla\nBritish male television actors\n20th-century British male actors\nBruce"
] | [
"Sir Bruce Lovat Seton, 11th Baronet, was a British actor and soldier.",
"He is best known for his role in Fabian of the Yard.",
"The younger of two sons of Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Bruce Gordon Seton of Abercorn, Bruce Lovat was born in Simla, British India.",
"He trained at the Royal Military College, Sandhurst after graduating from Edinburgh Academy.",
"After being commissioned into the Black Watch in 1929 as a second lieutenant, he resigned his commission in 1932.",
"During the Second World War, he had a brief interruption in his acting career and in November 1939 he held the rank of captain in the 10th Battalion, Cameronians, ending the war as major.",
"He was awarded the medal of freedom for his service.",
"He began his acting career in the chorus line at the Drury Lane Theatre and starred in the film Blue Smoke as Don Chinko.",
"In the television series, he played Inspector Fabian of Scotland Yard.",
"The series was based on the career of the former Scotland Yard Detective Inspector Robert Fabian, who usually appeared briefly before the final fade-out to wind up the story.",
"His last role was as the voice of Beadle in The Wonderful World of Disney.",
"He was a founder member of the Lord's Taverners, a charity which raises funds to support participation in cricket.",
"He had an address in western Edinburgh in the 1940s.",
"Bruce became the 11th Seton baronet after his brother Alexander died.",
"Bruce had no male heirs at the time of his death, so the title was given to his cousin.",
"He met another actor on the set of Blue Smoke in 1935, became her second husband in 1937 in London, and divorced in 1940.",
"He married his second wife in 1940.",
"Lydia Antoinette Gordon Seton was born on November 14, 1941.",
"Look Before You Love!",
"Sergeant Odd The Blue Lamp (1949), PC Campbell Paul Temple's Triumph (1950), Bill Bryant Sevendays to Noon (1950), and Portrait of Clare (1950) were all written by PC Campbell Paul Temple.",
"Squadron Leader Briarly White Corridors, Policeman High Treason, and Gerald Vane Emergency Call are from the film Take Me to Paris.",
"The Second Mrs Tanqueray was written in 1952.",
"Doctor in the House, Delayed Action and Sellars Man of the Moment are uncredited.",
"Trouble with Eve (1960) and 1st Villager Carry On Constable (1960) are uncredited.",
"External links include Whirligig TV Baronets in the Baronetage of Nova Scotia, British male film actors, British Army personnel of World War II, Black Watch officers, and graduates of the Royal Military."
] | <mask>, 11th Baronet (29 May 1909 – 28 September 1969) was a British actor and soldier. He is best remembered for his eponymous lead role in Fabian of the Yard. Early life
<mask> was born in Simla, British India, the younger of two sons of Lieutenant-Colonel Sir <mask> of Abercorn (1868–1934), 9th Baronet and his wife, Elma Armstrong (died 1960). He was educated at Edinburgh Academy and then trained at the Royal Military College, Sandhurst. Military career
<mask> was commissioned into the Black Watch in 1929 as a second lieutenant, but resigned his commission in 1932. A brief interruption in his acting career came during the Second World War and in November 1939 he held the rank of captain in the 10th Battalion, Cameronians (Scottish Rifles), ending the war as major (temporary). His service number was 44304 and he was awarded the Medal of Freedom.Acting
<mask> began his acting career in the chorus line at Drury Lane Theatre and starred in Ralph Ince's film Blue Smoke (1935) as Don Chinko. He played Inspector Fabian of Scotland Yard in the television series Fabian of the Yard (1954–1956). The series was based on the career of the former Scotland Yard Detective Inspector Robert Fabian, who usually appeared briefly before the final fade-out to wind up the story. <mask>'s last role was as the voice of Beadle in The Wonderful World of Disney (1962–1963). He fenced and boxed in the Army and was a founder member with other actors of the Lord's Taverners, a charity which raises funds to support participation in cricket. Later career
His address in the 1940s was 15 Learmonth Gardens in western Edinburgh. In 1963, on 7 February, the death of his brother, Alexander (Sandy) Hay <mask> (who had no male heirs), <mask> became the 11th <mask> baronet.Since <mask> also had no male heirs at the time of his death, in 1969, the title passed to his cousin, <mask> <mask> (1909–1988). Personal life
He met fellow actor Tamara Desni Willhelm (1911–2008) on the set of Blue Smoke in 1935, became her second husband in 1937 in London and divorced in 1940. He married his second wife, actress Antoinette Cellier (Florence Antoinette Glossop Cellier), in 1940 in London. They had a daughter, Lydia Antoinette <mask>, born on 14 November 1941. Look Before You Love (1948) – Johns
Whisky Galore! (1949) – Sergeant Odd
The Blue Lamp (1950) – PC Campbell
Paul Temple's Triumph (1950) – Bill Bryant
Seven Days to Noon (1950) – Brigadier Grant (uncredited)
Portrait of Clare (1950) – Lord Steven Wolverbury
Blackmailed (1951) – Supt. Crowe
Worm's Eye View (1951) – Squadron Leader Briarly
White Corridors (1951) – Policeman
High Treason (1951)
Take Me to Paris (1951) – Gerald Vane
Emergency Call (1952) – Sgt.Bellamy
The Second Mrs Tanqueray (1952) – Gordon Jayne
The Cruel Sea (1953) – Tallow
Mogambo (1953) – Wilson (uncredited)
Eight O'Clock Walk (1954) – D. C. I. Doctor in the House (1954) – Police Driver (uncredited)
Delayed Action (1954) – Sellars
Man of the Moment (1955) – Fabian of the Yard (uncredited)
Breakaway (1956) – Webb
Morning Call (1957) – Inspector S.G. Brown
There's Always a Thursday (1957) – James Pelly
West of Suez (1957) – Major Osborne
The Crooked Sky (1957) – Inspector 'Mac' Macauley
Undercover Girl (1958) – Ted Austin
The Heart of a Man (1959) – River Police Inspector (uncredited)
Strictly Confidential (1959) – Inspector Shearing
Make Mine a Million (1959) – Supt. James
Violent Moment (1959) – Inspector Davis
The 39 Steps (1959) – Policeman on Train (uncredited)
John Paul Jones (1959) – 1st Villager
Carry On Constable (1960) – (uncredited)
Trouble with Eve (1960) – Col. Digby-Phillpotts
Operation Cupid (1960) – Representative
The League of Gentlemen (1960) – Patrolman (uncredited)
Just Joe (1960) – Charlie
Freedom to Die (1961) – Felix
Gorgo (1961) – Prof. Flaherty
Greyfriars Bobby: The True Story of a Dog (1961) – Prosecutor
The Frightened City (1961) – Assistant Commissioner
Ambush in Leopard Street (1962) – Nimmo
The Pot Carriers (1962) – Prison Officer I / C Cell Block
Dead Man's Evidence (1962) – Colonel James Somerset
Dr. Syn, Alias the Scarecrow (1963) – Beadle
Honours
7 February 1963 Baronet, 11th baronet, of Abercorn (cr. 1663)
1947 Medal of Freedom
Arms
Sources
Burke's Peerage & Gentry, 107th edition
References
External links
Whirligig TV
Baronets in the Baronetage of Nova Scotia
British male film actors
British Army personnel of World War II
Black Watch officers
Cameronians officers
Graduates of the Royal Military College, Sandhurst
1909 births
1969 deaths
People educated at Edinburgh Academy
People from Shimla
British male television actors
20th-century British male actors
<mask> | [
"Sir Bruce Lovat Seton",
"Bruce Lovat Seton",
"Bruce Gordon Seton",
"Seton",
"Seton",
"Seton",
"Seton",
"Bruce",
"Seton",
"Bruce",
"Christopher Bruce",
"Seton",
"Gordon Seton",
"Bruce"
] | <mask>, 11th Baronet, was a British actor and soldier. He is best known for his role in Fabian of the Yard. The younger of two sons of Lieutenant-Colonel Sir <mask> of Abercorn, <mask> was born in Simla, British India. He trained at the Royal Military College, Sandhurst after graduating from Edinburgh Academy. After being commissioned into the Black Watch in 1929 as a second lieutenant, he resigned his commission in 1932. During the Second World War, he had a brief interruption in his acting career and in November 1939 he held the rank of captain in the 10th Battalion, Cameronians, ending the war as major. He was awarded the medal of freedom for his service.He began his acting career in the chorus line at the Drury Lane Theatre and starred in the film Blue Smoke as Don Chinko. In the television series, he played Inspector Fabian of Scotland Yard. The series was based on the career of the former Scotland Yard Detective Inspector Robert Fabian, who usually appeared briefly before the final fade-out to wind up the story. His last role was as the voice of Beadle in The Wonderful World of Disney. He was a founder member of the Lord's Taverners, a charity which raises funds to support participation in cricket. He had an address in western Edinburgh in the 1940s. <mask> became the 11th Seton baronet after his brother Alexander died.<mask> had no male heirs at the time of his death, so the title was given to his cousin. He met another actor on the set of Blue Smoke in 1935, became her second husband in 1937 in London, and divorced in 1940. He married his second wife in 1940. Lydia Antoinette <mask> was born on November 14, 1941. Look Before You Love! Sergeant Odd The Blue Lamp (1949), PC Campbell Paul Temple's Triumph (1950), Bill Bryant Sevendays to Noon (1950), and Portrait of Clare (1950) were all written by PC Campbell Paul Temple. Squadron Leader Briarly White Corridors, Policeman High Treason, and Gerald Vane Emergency Call are from the film Take Me to Paris.The Second Mrs Tanqueray was written in 1952. Doctor in the House, Delayed Action and Sellars Man of the Moment are uncredited. Trouble with Eve (1960) and 1st Villager Carry On Constable (1960) are uncredited. External links include Whirligig TV Baronets in the Baronetage of Nova Scotia, British male film actors, British Army personnel of World War II, Black Watch officers, and graduates of the Royal Military. | [
"Sir Bruce Lovat Seton",
"Bruce Gordon Seton",
"Bruce Lovat",
"Bruce",
"Bruce",
"Gordon Seton"
] |
68634509 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Djon%20Mundine | Djon Mundine | Djon Mundine , born in Grafton NSW in 1941. He is a curator, writer, artist and activist. He is a proud Wehbal man from the West Bundjalung Nation, an Australian Aboriginal people, from the Northern Rivers of New South Wales. He is also a descendant of the Gumbaynggirr, Yuin people.
Early life
Djon was born in Grafton NSW in 1941. He is one of 11 children born to Roy Mundine and Olive Bridgette Mundine (nee Donovan). His siblings include Roy, Anne, Olive, Kaye, Charles, Peter, Philip, Warren Mundine, James and Graeme.
Mundine spent his early life growing up in South Grafton NSW. In 1963, his family settled in the western Sydney suburb of Auburn. Mundine went to the Catholic Benedict Marist Brothers College and went onto commence study at Macquarie University.
Career
Mundine is a curator, writer, artist and activist and is celebrated as a foundational figure in the criticism and exhibition of contemporary Aboriginal art.
Mundine has held many senior curatorial positions in both national and international institutions, some of which include the National Museum of Australia, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Art Gallery of New South Wales and Campbelltown Art Centre.
Between the years 1979 and 1995, Mundine was the Art Advisor at Milingimbi and curator at Bula-bula Arts in Ramingining, Arnhem Land for sixteen years. Mundine was the concept artist and producer of the ‘Aboriginal Memorial’. The Aboriginal Memorial is a work of contemporary Indigenous Australian art from the late 1980s, and comprises 200 decorated hollow log coffins. The work was realised by 43 artists from Ramingining and neighbouring communities of Central Arnhem Land, in the Northern Territory. Artists who participated in its creation included David Malangi and George Milpurrurru.The work was created to coincide with the Australian Bicentenary and commemorates those Indigenous Australians who died as a result of European settlement. It was acquired by the National Gallery of Australia, where it is on permanent display. Its first exhibition was at the Sydney Biennale in 1988, and it was the centrepiece of an exhibition of Indigenous art at Russia's Hermitage Museum in 2000. As of 2014 it stands at the entry to the National Gallery's new wing that opened in September 2010. The Memorial was central to the 1988 Biennale of Sydney and remains on permanent display at the National Gallery of Australia in the main entrance hall.
In 1993, Mundine received the Medal of the Order of Australia for service to the promotion and development of Aboriginal arts, crafts and culture.
In 1994 he co-curated (with Fiona Foley) I Shall never Become a Whiteman, for the Havana Biennale and Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney. Tyerabowbarwarryaou was the first exhibition to exhibit contemporary Aboriginal art at the MCA. Tyerabarrbowaryaou aimed to present a new voice of Aboriginal culture. Mundine was a curator for 'Aratjara’ exhibition (Dusseldorf, London, and Denmark, 1993–94). In 1994 Mundine and Foley worked together to co-create the MCA Aboriginal Art: The Arnott's Collection exhibition. The exhibition was the first public display of the Arnott’s Biscuits Collection of Aboriginal Bark Paintings. The Arnott’s Biscuits Collection of Aboriginal Bark Paintings comprises 275 bark paintings donated to the MCA in June 1993 by Arnott’s Biscuits Limited. The collection features works from the 1960s through to the early 1980s by important artists from the creative hubs in and around Groote Eylandt, Yirrkala, Galiwin’ku, Milingimbi, Maningrida, Ramingining, Gunbalanya, Wadeye and the Tiwi islands; places still significant today for their ongoing contribution to contemporary Aboriginal art practice. The collection is widely considered to be one of the most important collections of bark paintings in the world.
The Native Born (1996, MCA), is an exhibition and publication showing ceremonial and utilitarian weaving and artistic work from Ramingining community. This led to the inclusion of artists such as Robyn Djunginy in the 1998 Sydney Biennale. Other major exhibitions include 'They are Meditating: Bark Paintings from the Museum of Contemporary Art’s Arnott’s Collection’ (2008)
In 2017 Mundine was the inaugural recipient of the Power Publications Award for Indigenous Art Writing for his essay ‘The Aboriginal Memorial: Australia’s Forgotten War’, published in Artlink The Power Publications Award for Indigenous Art Writing seeks to recognise and encourage the work of Indigenous writers who are producing compelling, persuasively argued texts, and whose body of work constitutes a rich engagement with visual culture.
Between 2005 and 2006 Mundine was resident at the National Museum of Ethnology (Minpaku) in Osaka, Japan as a Research Professor in the Department of Social Research.
In 2020 Mundine won The Australia Council’s Red Ochre Award for Lifetime Achievement
Mundine is currently an independent curator of contemporary First Nation art and cultural mentor for fellow First Nation artists.
Exhibitions
Boards, Committees and Associations
Judge, Patronage, Advisor
2020 Patron: King & Wood Mallesons Contemporary First Nation Art Award
2018 Patron: King & Wood Mallesons Contemporary First Nation Art Prize
2018 Judge: Woollahra Small Sculpture Award,
2007 Judge: Telstra National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Art Award
2000 Judge: The Art of Place: The 5th National Indigenous Heritage Art Awards, Department of Heritage and Environment
1993 Curator: Bayside Council's First Nations Art Competition
1988 Judge: Telstra National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Art Award
1985-87 Aboriginal Art Adviser, Art Bank
1996 Judge: Telstra National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Art Award
Honours and Awards
1993 Medal of the Order of Australia for service to the promotion and development of aboriginal arts, crafts and culture
2015 Exhibition of the Year Award and Indigenous Exhibition of the Year for Bungaree’s Farm, Australian Museum & Galleries Association
2016 Best in Heritage Conference, Dubrovnik, Showcased entry and finalist, Bungaree’s Farm.
2017 Power Publications Award for Indigenous Art Writing
2020 Red Ochre Award - Australia Council for the Arts
References
External links
Djon Mundine website
Red Ochre Award
Bungarees Farm - Mosman Art Gallery
Bungaree The First Australian 2012
Parliament of New South Wales Aboriginal Art Prize
Power Publications Award for Indigenous Art Writing
Living people
People from New South Wales
Bundjalung people
Recipients of the Medal of the Order of Australia
Year of birth missing (living people) | [
"Djon Mundine , born in Grafton NSW in 1941.",
"He is a curator, writer, artist and activist.",
"He is a proud Wehbal man from the West Bundjalung Nation, an Australian Aboriginal people, from the Northern Rivers of New South Wales.",
"He is also a descendant of the Gumbaynggirr, Yuin people.",
"Early life\nDjon was born in Grafton NSW in 1941.",
"He is one of 11 children born to Roy Mundine and Olive Bridgette Mundine (nee Donovan).",
"His siblings include Roy, Anne, Olive, Kaye, Charles, Peter, Philip, Warren Mundine, James and Graeme.",
"Mundine spent his early life growing up in South Grafton NSW.",
"In 1963, his family settled in the western Sydney suburb of Auburn.",
"Mundine went to the Catholic Benedict Marist Brothers College and went onto commence study at Macquarie University.",
"Career \nMundine is a curator, writer, artist and activist and is celebrated as a foundational figure in the criticism and exhibition of contemporary Aboriginal art.",
"Mundine has held many senior curatorial positions in both national and international institutions, some of which include the National Museum of Australia, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Art Gallery of New South Wales and Campbelltown Art Centre.",
"Between the years 1979 and 1995, Mundine was the Art Advisor at Milingimbi and curator at Bula-bula Arts in Ramingining, Arnhem Land for sixteen years.",
"Mundine was the concept artist and producer of the ‘Aboriginal Memorial’.",
"The Aboriginal Memorial is a work of contemporary Indigenous Australian art from the late 1980s, and comprises 200 decorated hollow log coffins.",
"The work was realised by 43 artists from Ramingining and neighbouring communities of Central Arnhem Land, in the Northern Territory.",
"Artists who participated in its creation included David Malangi and George Milpurrurru.The work was created to coincide with the Australian Bicentenary and commemorates those Indigenous Australians who died as a result of European settlement.",
"It was acquired by the National Gallery of Australia, where it is on permanent display.",
"Its first exhibition was at the Sydney Biennale in 1988, and it was the centrepiece of an exhibition of Indigenous art at Russia's Hermitage Museum in 2000.",
"As of 2014 it stands at the entry to the National Gallery's new wing that opened in September 2010.",
"The Memorial was central to the 1988 Biennale of Sydney and remains on permanent display at the National Gallery of Australia in the main entrance hall.",
"In 1993, Mundine received the Medal of the Order of Australia for service to the promotion and development of Aboriginal arts, crafts and culture.",
"In 1994 he co-curated (with Fiona Foley) I Shall never Become a Whiteman, for the Havana Biennale and Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney.",
"Tyerabowbarwarryaou was the first exhibition to exhibit contemporary Aboriginal art at the MCA.",
"Tyerabarrbowaryaou aimed to present a new voice of Aboriginal culture.",
"Mundine was a curator for 'Aratjara’ exhibition (Dusseldorf, London, and Denmark, 1993–94).",
"In 1994 Mundine and Foley worked together to co-create the MCA Aboriginal Art: The Arnott's Collection exhibition.",
"The exhibition was the first public display of the Arnott’s Biscuits Collection of Aboriginal Bark Paintings.",
"The Arnott’s Biscuits Collection of Aboriginal Bark Paintings comprises 275 bark paintings donated to the MCA in June 1993 by Arnott’s Biscuits Limited.",
"The collection features works from the 1960s through to the early 1980s by important artists from the creative hubs in and around Groote Eylandt, Yirrkala, Galiwin’ku, Milingimbi, Maningrida, Ramingining, Gunbalanya, Wadeye and the Tiwi islands; places still significant today for their ongoing contribution to contemporary Aboriginal art practice.",
"The collection is widely considered to be one of the most important collections of bark paintings in the world.",
"The Native Born (1996, MCA), is an exhibition and publication showing ceremonial and utilitarian weaving and artistic work from Ramingining community.",
"This led to the inclusion of artists such as Robyn Djunginy in the 1998 Sydney Biennale.",
"Other major exhibitions include 'They are Meditating: Bark Paintings from the Museum of Contemporary Art’s Arnott’s Collection’ (2008)\n\nIn 2017 Mundine was the inaugural recipient of the Power Publications Award for Indigenous Art Writing for his essay ‘The Aboriginal Memorial: Australia’s Forgotten War’, published in Artlink The Power Publications Award for Indigenous Art Writing seeks to recognise and encourage the work of Indigenous writers who are producing compelling, persuasively argued texts, and whose body of work constitutes a rich engagement with visual culture.",
"Between 2005 and 2006 Mundine was resident at the National Museum of Ethnology (Minpaku) in Osaka, Japan as a Research Professor in the Department of Social Research.",
"In 2020 Mundine won The Australia Council’s Red Ochre Award for Lifetime Achievement \n\nMundine is currently an independent curator of contemporary First Nation art and cultural mentor for fellow First Nation artists.",
"Exhibitions\n\nBoards, Committees and Associations\n\nJudge, Patronage, Advisor \n\n 2020 Patron: King & Wood Mallesons Contemporary First Nation Art Award\n 2018 Patron: King & Wood Mallesons Contemporary First Nation Art Prize\n 2018 Judge: Woollahra Small Sculpture Award, \n 2007 Judge: Telstra National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Art Award\n 2000 Judge: The Art of Place: The 5th National Indigenous Heritage Art Awards, Department of Heritage and Environment\n 1993 Curator: Bayside Council's First Nations Art Competition\n 1988 Judge: Telstra National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Art Award\n 1985-87 Aboriginal Art Adviser, Art Bank\n 1996 Judge: Telstra National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Art Award\n\nHonours and Awards\n1993 Medal of the Order of Australia for service to the promotion and development of aboriginal arts, crafts and culture\n2015 Exhibition of the Year Award and Indigenous Exhibition of the Year for Bungaree’s Farm, Australian Museum & Galleries Association \n2016 Best in Heritage Conference, Dubrovnik, Showcased entry and finalist, Bungaree’s Farm.",
"2017 Power Publications Award for Indigenous Art Writing\n2020 Red Ochre Award - Australia Council for the Arts\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links\n Djon Mundine website\nRed Ochre Award\nBungarees Farm - Mosman Art Gallery\nBungaree The First Australian 2012\nParliament of New South Wales Aboriginal Art Prize\nPower Publications Award for Indigenous Art Writing\n\nLiving people\nPeople from New South Wales\nBundjalung people\nRecipients of the Medal of the Order of Australia\nYear of birth missing (living people)"
] | [
"He was born in Grafton in 1941.",
"He is an activist.",
"He is a proud Wehbal man from the West Bundjalung Nation in Australia.",
"He is a descendant of the Yuin people.",
"Djon was born in 1941.",
"Roy and Olive Bridgette Mundine had 11 children.",
"His siblings include Roy, Anne, Kaye, Charles, Peter, Philip, Warren and James.",
"South Grafton is where Mundine grew up.",
"In 1963, he and his family moved to the western suburb of auburn.",
"The Catholic Benedict Marist Brothers College was where Mundine began his studies.",
"Career Mundine is an important figure in the criticism and exhibition of contemporary Aboriginal art.",
"The National Museum of Australia, the Museum of Contemporary Art, the Art Gallery of New South Wales and the Campbelltown Art Centre are some of the institutions where Mundine has held senior curatorial positions.",
"In the 1980's and 90's, Mundine was the Art Advisor at Milingimbi and the Curator at Bula-bula Arts in Ramingining.",
"The concept artist for theAboriginal Memorial was Mundine.",
"There are 200 decorated hollow log coffins in the Aboriginal Memorial.",
"The work was realised by 43 artists in the Northern Territory.",
"The work was created to coincide with the Australian Bicentenary and commemorates those Indigenous Australians who died as a result of European settlement.",
"It is on permanent display at the National Gallery of Australia.",
"It was the centerpiece of an exhibition of Indigenous art at Russia's Hermitage Museum in 2000.",
"The entry to the National Gallery's new wing was opened in September 2010.",
"The National Gallery of Australia has a permanent display of the Memorial in the main entrance hall.",
"The promotion and development of Aboriginal arts, crafts and culture was the focus of the service that Mundine received from the Order of Australia.",
"In 1994 he co-curated I Shall never Become a Whiteman for the Havana Biennale and Museum of Contemporary Art.",
"Tyerabowbarwarryaou was the first contemporary Aboriginal art exhibition.",
"Tyerabarrbowaryaou wanted to give a new voice to the culture.",
"The 'Aratjara' exhibition was held inDusseldorf, London, andDenmark.",
"The MCA Aboriginal Art: The Arnott's Collection exhibition was created in 1994.",
"The Arnott's Biscuits Collection of Aboriginal Bark Paintings were on display for the first time.",
"The Arnott's Biscuits Collection of Aboriginal Bark Paintings is a collection of bark paintings.",
"The collection features works from the 1960s to the early 1980s by important artists from the creative hubs in and around Groote Eylandt.",
"The collection is considered to be one of the most important collections of bark paintings in the world.",
"The exhibition and publication, The Native Born, features weaving and artistic work from the Ramingining community.",
"The inclusion of artists such as Djunginy was a result of this.",
"\"They are Meditating: Bark Paintings from the Museum of Contemporary Art's Arnott's Collection\" is one of the major exhibitions.",
"At the National Museum of Ethnology in Osaka, Japan, between 2005 and 2006 Mundine was a Research Professor in the Department of Social Research.",
"In 2020 Mundine won The Australia Council's Red Ochre Award for Lifetime Achievement.",
"The 2020 patron is King & Wood Mallesons Contemporary First Nation Art Award.",
"Power Publications won the Red Ochre Award for Indigenous Art Writing."
] | <mask> , born in Grafton NSW in 1941. He is a curator, writer, artist and activist. He is a proud Wehbal man from the West Bundjalung Nation, an Australian Aboriginal people, from the Northern Rivers of New South Wales. He is also a descendant of the Gumbaynggirr, Yuin people. Early life
<mask> was born in Grafton NSW in 1941. He is one of 11 children born to <mask> and <mask> (nee Donovan). His siblings include Roy, Anne, Olive, Kaye, Charles, Peter, Philip, Warren Mundine, James and Graeme.Mundine spent his early life growing up in South Grafton NSW. In 1963, his family settled in the western Sydney suburb of Auburn. Mundine went to the Catholic Benedict Marist Brothers College and went onto commence study at Macquarie University. Career
Mundine is a curator, writer, artist and activist and is celebrated as a foundational figure in the criticism and exhibition of contemporary Aboriginal art. Mundine has held many senior curatorial positions in both national and international institutions, some of which include the National Museum of Australia, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Art Gallery of New South Wales and Campbelltown Art Centre. Between the years 1979 and 1995, Mundine was the Art Advisor at Milingimbi and curator at Bula-bula Arts in Ramingining, Arnhem Land for sixteen years. Mundine was the concept artist and producer of the ‘Aboriginal Memorial’.The Aboriginal Memorial is a work of contemporary Indigenous Australian art from the late 1980s, and comprises 200 decorated hollow log coffins. The work was realised by 43 artists from Ramingining and neighbouring communities of Central Arnhem Land, in the Northern Territory. Artists who participated in its creation included David Malangi and George Milpurrurru.The work was created to coincide with the Australian Bicentenary and commemorates those Indigenous Australians who died as a result of European settlement. It was acquired by the National Gallery of Australia, where it is on permanent display. Its first exhibition was at the Sydney Biennale in 1988, and it was the centrepiece of an exhibition of Indigenous art at Russia's Hermitage Museum in 2000. As of 2014 it stands at the entry to the National Gallery's new wing that opened in September 2010. The Memorial was central to the 1988 Biennale of Sydney and remains on permanent display at the National Gallery of Australia in the main entrance hall.In 1993, <mask> received the Medal of the Order of Australia for service to the promotion and development of Aboriginal arts, crafts and culture. In 1994 he co-curated (with Fiona Foley) I Shall never Become a Whiteman, for the Havana Biennale and Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney. Tyerabowbarwarryaou was the first exhibition to exhibit contemporary Aboriginal art at the MCA. Tyerabarrbowaryaou aimed to present a new voice of Aboriginal culture. Mundine was a curator for 'Aratjara’ exhibition (Dusseldorf, London, and Denmark, 1993–94). In 1994 <mask> and Foley worked together to co-create the MCA Aboriginal Art: The Arnott's Collection exhibition. The exhibition was the first public display of the Arnott’s Biscuits Collection of Aboriginal Bark Paintings.The Arnott’s Biscuits Collection of Aboriginal Bark Paintings comprises 275 bark paintings donated to the MCA in June 1993 by Arnott’s Biscuits Limited. The collection features works from the 1960s through to the early 1980s by important artists from the creative hubs in and around Groote Eylandt, Yirrkala, Galiwin’ku, Milingimbi, Maningrida, Ramingining, Gunbalanya, Wadeye and the Tiwi islands; places still significant today for their ongoing contribution to contemporary Aboriginal art practice. The collection is widely considered to be one of the most important collections of bark paintings in the world. The Native Born (1996, MCA), is an exhibition and publication showing ceremonial and utilitarian weaving and artistic work from Ramingining community. This led to the inclusion of artists such as Robyn Djunginy in the 1998 Sydney Biennale. Other major exhibitions include 'They are Meditating: Bark Paintings from the Museum of Contemporary Art’s Arnott’s Collection’ (2008)
In 2017 <mask> was the inaugural recipient of the Power Publications Award for Indigenous Art Writing for his essay ‘The Aboriginal Memorial: Australia’s Forgotten War’, published in Artlink The Power Publications Award for Indigenous Art Writing seeks to recognise and encourage the work of Indigenous writers who are producing compelling, persuasively argued texts, and whose body of work constitutes a rich engagement with visual culture. Between 2005 and 2006 Mundine was resident at the National Museum of Ethnology (Minpaku) in Osaka, Japan as a Research Professor in the Department of Social Research.In 2020 Mundine won The Australia Council’s Red Ochre Award for Lifetime Achievement
Mundine is currently an independent curator of contemporary First Nation art and cultural mentor for fellow First Nation artists. Exhibitions
Boards, Committees and Associations
Judge, Patronage, Advisor
2020 Patron: King & Wood Mallesons Contemporary First Nation Art Award
2018 Patron: King & Wood Mallesons Contemporary First Nation Art Prize
2018 Judge: Woollahra Small Sculpture Award,
2007 Judge: Telstra National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Art Award
2000 Judge: The Art of Place: The 5th National Indigenous Heritage Art Awards, Department of Heritage and Environment
1993 Curator: Bayside Council's First Nations Art Competition
1988 Judge: Telstra National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Art Award
1985-87 Aboriginal Art Adviser, Art Bank
1996 Judge: Telstra National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Art Award
Honours and Awards
1993 Medal of the Order of Australia for service to the promotion and development of aboriginal arts, crafts and culture
2015 Exhibition of the Year Award and Indigenous Exhibition of the Year for Bungaree’s Farm, Australian Museum & Galleries Association
2016 Best in Heritage Conference, Dubrovnik, Showcased entry and finalist, Bungaree’s Farm. 2017 Power Publications Award for Indigenous Art Writing
2020 Red Ochre Award - Australia Council for the Arts
References
External links
<mask> Mundine website
Red Ochre Award
Bungarees Farm - Mosman Art Gallery
Bungaree The First Australian 2012
Parliament of New South Wales Aboriginal Art Prize
Power Publications Award for Indigenous Art Writing
Living people
People from New South Wales
Bundjalung people
Recipients of the Medal of the Order of Australia
Year of birth missing (living people) | [
"Djon Mundine",
"Djon",
"Roy Mundine",
"Olive Bridgette Mundine",
"Mundine",
"Mundine",
"Mundine",
"Djon"
] | He was born in Grafton in 1941. He is an activist. He is a proud Wehbal man from the West Bundjalung Nation in Australia. He is a descendant of the Yuin people. <mask> was born in 1941. Roy and Olive Bridgette Mundine had 11 children. His siblings include Roy, Anne, Kaye, Charles, Peter, Philip, Warren and James.South Grafton is where Mundine grew up. In 1963, he and his family moved to the western suburb of auburn. The Catholic Benedict Marist Brothers College was where Mundine began his studies. Career Mundine is an important figure in the criticism and exhibition of contemporary Aboriginal art. The National Museum of Australia, the Museum of Contemporary Art, the Art Gallery of New South Wales and the Campbelltown Art Centre are some of the institutions where Mundine has held senior curatorial positions. In the 1980's and 90's, Mundine was the Art Advisor at Milingimbi and the Curator at Bula-bula Arts in Ramingining. The concept artist for theAboriginal Memorial was Mundine.There are 200 decorated hollow log coffins in the Aboriginal Memorial. The work was realised by 43 artists in the Northern Territory. The work was created to coincide with the Australian Bicentenary and commemorates those Indigenous Australians who died as a result of European settlement. It is on permanent display at the National Gallery of Australia. It was the centerpiece of an exhibition of Indigenous art at Russia's Hermitage Museum in 2000. The entry to the National Gallery's new wing was opened in September 2010. The National Gallery of Australia has a permanent display of the Memorial in the main entrance hall.The promotion and development of Aboriginal arts, crafts and culture was the focus of the service that Mundine received from the Order of Australia. In 1994 he co-curated I Shall never Become a Whiteman for the Havana Biennale and Museum of Contemporary Art. Tyerabowbarwarryaou was the first contemporary Aboriginal art exhibition. Tyerabarrbowaryaou wanted to give a new voice to the culture. The 'Aratjara' exhibition was held inDusseldorf, London, andDenmark. The MCA Aboriginal Art: The Arnott's Collection exhibition was created in 1994. The Arnott's Biscuits Collection of Aboriginal Bark Paintings were on display for the first time.The Arnott's Biscuits Collection of Aboriginal Bark Paintings is a collection of bark paintings. The collection features works from the 1960s to the early 1980s by important artists from the creative hubs in and around Groote Eylandt. The collection is considered to be one of the most important collections of bark paintings in the world. The exhibition and publication, The Native Born, features weaving and artistic work from the Ramingining community. The inclusion of artists such as Djunginy was a result of this. "They are Meditating: Bark Paintings from the Museum of Contemporary Art's Arnott's Collection" is one of the major exhibitions. At the National Museum of Ethnology in Osaka, Japan, between 2005 and 2006 <mask> was a Research Professor in the Department of Social Research.In 2020 Mundine won The Australia Council's Red Ochre Award for Lifetime Achievement. The 2020 patron is King & Wood Mallesons Contemporary First Nation Art Award. Power Publications won the Red Ochre Award for Indigenous Art Writing. | [
"Djon",
"Mundine"
] |
12651146 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucy%20Boynton | Lucy Boynton | Lucy Boynton (born 17 January 1994) is a British-American actress. Raised in London, she made her professional debut as the young Beatrix Potter in Miss Potter (2006). She starred in television productions Ballet Shoes (2007), Sense and Sensibility (2008) and Mo (2010), making guest appearances on Borgia, Endeavour, and Law & Order: UK. Boynton portrayed writer Angelica Garnett on Life in Squares, which aired on BBC. She appeared as an isolated popular girl in The Blackcoat's Daughter (2015) and starred as a bold aspiring model in Sing Street (2016), which met with critical acclaim. She appeared in horror films I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House (2016) and Don't Knock Twice (2016), receiving praise for her performance in the latter.
Boynton portrayed J. D. Salinger's wife in Rebel in the Rye (2017), which had a negative reception. She played Countess Andrenyi in Murder on the Orient Express (2017), which was a commercial success. Boynton portrayed an addict in Netflix's Gypsy (2017) and the daughter of a cult leader in Apostle (2018). Boynton gained recognition for starring as Mary Austin in the biopic Bohemian Rhapsody (2018), which received numerous accolades and was a box office success. She appeared in HBO Max's Locked Down (2021). Boynton stars as the privileged antagonist Astrid Sloan in the Netflix series The Politician and appeared in the second season of Modern Love. She will portray singer Marianne Faithfull in the upcoming biopic Faithfull and is set to star in ITV's The Ipcress File (2022).
Early life and education
Boynton was born on 17 January 1994 in New York City to English parents, journalists Graham Boynton and Adriaane Pielou. The younger of two daughters, Boynton was raised in southeast London. She retains dual citizenship of the United Kingdom and the United States. Boynton realized she wanted to act when she was ten, after a drama teacher taught her that "acting was not playing pretend; it was understanding the human mind and why people function as they do." She attended the private Blackheath High School, followed by James Allen's Girls' School in Dulwich.
Career
2006–2014: Early roles
Boynton's made her professional debut at age twelve as young Beatrix Potter in the biographical film Miss Potter (2006). She was asked to audition after being spotted by a casting director sitting in on her drama class. Additional scenes were written for her character after a test screening responded positively to her role. Boynton wore corsets and padded clothing to portray Potter as a teenager. Boynton stated that the first day of filming was "the best day of [her] life". In 2007, she was nominated for the Young Artist Award for Best Supporting Actress, for Miss Potter. Boynton starred as Posy Fossil in the BBC film Ballet Shoes (2007). A body double was used in some scenes to display her character's "remarkable dancing skill". The film was praised by critics.
Boynton portrayed Margaret Dashwood in the 2008 television adaptation of Jane Austen's novel Sense and Sensibility. The miniseries premiered to high viewership and positive reviews. Boynton has described experiencing a "difficult period" from ages 16 to 17 for being "too old for child roles, but too young to play the leading lady." She played Mo Mowlam's stepdaughter in television film Mo (2010). In 2011, She appeared in an episode of the ITV drama Lewis. In 2013, she starred in Saint Raymond's music video for the lead single from his debut extended play, "Fall At Your Feet". Boynton appeared in period drama Copperhead (2013) based on the novel of the same name by Harold Frederic. In 2014, she guest-starred in the television series Borgia, Endeavour, and Law & Order: UK. She played Angelica Garnett, a member of the Bloomsbury Group, in the BBC miniseries Life in Squares, which aired in 2015. To prepare for the part, she read Garnett's memoir, Deceived with Kindness, in which most of her scenes were detailed, which she described as "a dream for any actor". The series was reviewed positively.
2015–present: Film work and recognition
Boynton appeared as "sullen mean girl" Rose alongside Emma Roberts and Kiernan Shipka in The Blackcoat's Daughter (2015). She prepared for the film by watching films that dealt with isolation and grief, such as Rosemary’s Baby on the recommendation of director Oz Perkins. Chuck Bowen of Slant Magazine wrote that Roberts, Shipka, and Boyton were "poignant in their minimalist roles". Boynton starred in the coming-of-age film Sing Street (2016) as Raphina, an aspiring model with "huge hair, bright make-up and colorful clothes". Boynton described her role as "the muse character, in a way, but only because she has put herself there". She adopted an Irish accent for the film and was instructed by director John Carney to create a backstory "in much more detail than [she] had before." The film premiered to critical praise at the Sundance Film Festival and garnered a Golden Globe nomination for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. She appeared as ghostly bride Polly Parsons in the gothic-horror film I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House (2016), which opened at the Toronto International Film Festival to mixed reception. Boynton starred alongside Katee Sackhoff in indie-horror Don't Knock Twice (2016). Noel Murray of the Los Angeles Times praised Sackhoff and Boynton's "volatile chemistry", stating that "they bring so much life to the material that it’s almost like they’ve been tricked into thinking they’re in a better movie."
She portrayed in J. D. Salinger's second wife, Claire Douglas, in Rebel in the Rye (2017). Rebel in the Rye premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and was panned by critics. Boynton played Countess Helena Andrenyi in the 2017 adaptation of Murder on the Orient Express. The film was a box office success and received mixed reviews, though the performances of the cast were praised. In the same year, Boynton starred as Allison Adams, a college student turned drug addict, in the Netflix series Gypsy (2017). Boynton empathised with her character's desire to regress into childhood while struggling with control. Daniel Fienberg of The Hollywood Reporter cited Boynton as "splendid-but-underused" and among the "best of the supporting turns". She appeared as Andrea, the daughter of a cult leader, in Apostle (2018), which was praised by critics.
Boynton starred opposite Rami Malek as Freddie Mercury's partner Mary Austin in Bohemian Rhapsody (2018). She watched Austin's interviews to "gauge what she was happy to be open about" and spoke to Brian May to research the role. The film became the highest-grossing biographical film of all time and met mixed criticism. Time praised her for playing the role with "charm and vigor" while the Irish Independent wrote that her scenes were the "quietest, most touching moments" of the film. Bohemian Rhapsody received four Academy Awards and earned the cast a nomination for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture at the 25th Screen Actors Guild Awards. Since 2019, Boynton has starred in the Netflix series The Politician, portraying Astrid Sloane, the protagonist's "ruthless" and "hyperbolically privileged" rival. Boynton described the experience "liberating", saying that playing an antagonistic character added depth to the role. The Hollywood Reporter praised Boynton's "razor-sharp delivery" but remarked that her written dialogue prevented her from being "spectacular". Boynton had a supporting role as Charlotte, a Harrods shop assistant, in Locked Down (2021), released on HBO Max. The film received mixed reviews. Boynton guest-starred opposite Kit Harington in the second season of Amazon Video's anthology series Modern Love.
Upcoming projects
Boynton will appear opposite Taron Egerton in Glimpse, a short virtual reality animated film which will premiere at the Virtual Reality showcase of the Venice Film Festival. In February 2020, it was announced that Boynton would executive produce and star as Marianne Faithfull in the upcoming biopic, Faithfull. Production was originally due to begin in October 2020, but was delayed indefinitely due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. The film will cover Faithfull's rise to fame until the age of 23. Boynton will star in ITV's six-part miniseries adaption of The Ipcress File as Jean Courtney, Harry Palmer's assistant, as well as in the Stephen Williams-directed biographical film Chevalier as Marie Antoinette. She is also slated to appear in BritBox's three-part adaptation of Why Didn't They Ask Evans?, as well as Netflix's The Pale Blue Eye, a film based on Louis Bayard's Gothic thriller novel of the same name.
Personal life
Boynton splits her time between London, New York, and Los Angeles, though she considers herself to be "painfully British". Since 2018, she has been in a relationship with her Bohemian Rhapsody co-star Rami Malek. Boynton supports the Black Lives Matter movement and has shared educational resources for racial justice on her social media pages.
Filmography
Film
Television
Music videos
See also
List of British actors
Notes
External links
Lucy Boynton on Rotten Tomatoes
1994 births
Actresses from London
American child actresses
American film actresses
American television actresses
American people of English descent
British child actresses
British film actresses
British television actresses
Living people
People educated at Blackheath High School
People educated at James Allen's Girls' School
21st-century British actresses
21st-century American actresses
21st-century English women
21st-century English people | [
"Lucy Boynton (born 17 January 1994) is a British-American actress.",
"Raised in London, she made her professional debut as the young Beatrix Potter in Miss Potter (2006).",
"She starred in television productions Ballet Shoes (2007), Sense and Sensibility (2008) and Mo (2010), making guest appearances on Borgia, Endeavour, and Law & Order: UK.",
"Boynton portrayed writer Angelica Garnett on Life in Squares, which aired on BBC.",
"She appeared as an isolated popular girl in The Blackcoat's Daughter (2015) and starred as a bold aspiring model in Sing Street (2016), which met with critical acclaim.",
"She appeared in horror films I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House (2016) and Don't Knock Twice (2016), receiving praise for her performance in the latter.",
"Boynton portrayed J. D. Salinger's wife in Rebel in the Rye (2017), which had a negative reception.",
"She played Countess Andrenyi in Murder on the Orient Express (2017), which was a commercial success.",
"Boynton portrayed an addict in Netflix's Gypsy (2017) and the daughter of a cult leader in Apostle (2018).",
"Boynton gained recognition for starring as Mary Austin in the biopic Bohemian Rhapsody (2018), which received numerous accolades and was a box office success.",
"She appeared in HBO Max's Locked Down (2021).",
"Boynton stars as the privileged antagonist Astrid Sloan in the Netflix series The Politician and appeared in the second season of Modern Love.",
"She will portray singer Marianne Faithfull in the upcoming biopic Faithfull and is set to star in ITV's The Ipcress File (2022).",
"Early life and education \nBoynton was born on 17 January 1994 in New York City to English parents, journalists Graham Boynton and Adriaane Pielou.",
"The younger of two daughters, Boynton was raised in southeast London.",
"She retains dual citizenship of the United Kingdom and the United States.",
"Boynton realized she wanted to act when she was ten, after a drama teacher taught her that \"acting was not playing pretend; it was understanding the human mind and why people function as they do.\"",
"She attended the private Blackheath High School, followed by James Allen's Girls' School in Dulwich.",
"Career\n\n2006–2014: Early roles\n\nBoynton's made her professional debut at age twelve as young Beatrix Potter in the biographical film Miss Potter (2006).",
"She was asked to audition after being spotted by a casting director sitting in on her drama class.",
"Additional scenes were written for her character after a test screening responded positively to her role.",
"Boynton wore corsets and padded clothing to portray Potter as a teenager.",
"Boynton stated that the first day of filming was \"the best day of [her] life\".",
"In 2007, she was nominated for the Young Artist Award for Best Supporting Actress, for Miss Potter.",
"Boynton starred as Posy Fossil in the BBC film Ballet Shoes (2007).",
"A body double was used in some scenes to display her character's \"remarkable dancing skill\".",
"The film was praised by critics.",
"Boynton portrayed Margaret Dashwood in the 2008 television adaptation of Jane Austen's novel Sense and Sensibility.",
"The miniseries premiered to high viewership and positive reviews.",
"Boynton has described experiencing a \"difficult period\" from ages 16 to 17 for being \"too old for child roles, but too young to play the leading lady.\"",
"She played Mo Mowlam's stepdaughter in television film Mo (2010).",
"In 2011, She appeared in an episode of the ITV drama Lewis.",
"In 2013, she starred in Saint Raymond's music video for the lead single from his debut extended play, \"Fall At Your Feet\".",
"Boynton appeared in period drama Copperhead (2013) based on the novel of the same name by Harold Frederic.",
"In 2014, she guest-starred in the television series Borgia, Endeavour, and Law & Order: UK.",
"She played Angelica Garnett, a member of the Bloomsbury Group, in the BBC miniseries Life in Squares, which aired in 2015.",
"To prepare for the part, she read Garnett's memoir, Deceived with Kindness, in which most of her scenes were detailed, which she described as \"a dream for any actor\".",
"The series was reviewed positively.",
"2015–present: Film work and recognition\nBoynton appeared as \"sullen mean girl\" Rose alongside Emma Roberts and Kiernan Shipka in The Blackcoat's Daughter (2015).",
"She prepared for the film by watching films that dealt with isolation and grief, such as Rosemary’s Baby on the recommendation of director Oz Perkins.",
"Chuck Bowen of Slant Magazine wrote that Roberts, Shipka, and Boyton were \"poignant in their minimalist roles\".",
"Boynton starred in the coming-of-age film Sing Street (2016) as Raphina, an aspiring model with \"huge hair, bright make-up and colorful clothes\".",
"Boynton described her role as \"the muse character, in a way, but only because she has put herself there\".",
"She adopted an Irish accent for the film and was instructed by director John Carney to create a backstory \"in much more detail than [she] had before.\"",
"The film premiered to critical praise at the Sundance Film Festival and garnered a Golden Globe nomination for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy.",
"She appeared as ghostly bride Polly Parsons in the gothic-horror film I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House (2016), which opened at the Toronto International Film Festival to mixed reception.",
"Boynton starred alongside Katee Sackhoff in indie-horror Don't Knock Twice (2016).",
"Noel Murray of the Los Angeles Times praised Sackhoff and Boynton's \"volatile chemistry\", stating that \"they bring so much life to the material that it’s almost like they’ve been tricked into thinking they’re in a better movie.\"",
"She portrayed in J. D. Salinger's second wife, Claire Douglas, in Rebel in the Rye (2017).",
"Rebel in the Rye premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and was panned by critics.",
"Boynton played Countess Helena Andrenyi in the 2017 adaptation of Murder on the Orient Express.",
"The film was a box office success and received mixed reviews, though the performances of the cast were praised.",
"In the same year, Boynton starred as Allison Adams, a college student turned drug addict, in the Netflix series Gypsy (2017).",
"Boynton empathised with her character's desire to regress into childhood while struggling with control.",
"Daniel Fienberg of The Hollywood Reporter cited Boynton as \"splendid-but-underused\" and among the \"best of the supporting turns\".",
"She appeared as Andrea, the daughter of a cult leader, in Apostle (2018), which was praised by critics.",
"Boynton starred opposite Rami Malek as Freddie Mercury's partner Mary Austin in Bohemian Rhapsody (2018).",
"She watched Austin's interviews to \"gauge what she was happy to be open about\" and spoke to Brian May to research the role.",
"The film became the highest-grossing biographical film of all time and met mixed criticism.",
"Time praised her for playing the role with \"charm and vigor\" while the Irish Independent wrote that her scenes were the \"quietest, most touching moments\" of the film.",
"Bohemian Rhapsody received four Academy Awards and earned the cast a nomination for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture at the 25th Screen Actors Guild Awards.",
"Since 2019, Boynton has starred in the Netflix series The Politician, portraying Astrid Sloane, the protagonist's \"ruthless\" and \"hyperbolically privileged\" rival.",
"Boynton described the experience \"liberating\", saying that playing an antagonistic character added depth to the role.",
"The Hollywood Reporter praised Boynton's \"razor-sharp delivery\" but remarked that her written dialogue prevented her from being \"spectacular\".",
"Boynton had a supporting role as Charlotte, a Harrods shop assistant, in Locked Down (2021), released on HBO Max.",
"The film received mixed reviews.",
"Boynton guest-starred opposite Kit Harington in the second season of Amazon Video's anthology series Modern Love.",
"Upcoming projects\nBoynton will appear opposite Taron Egerton in Glimpse, a short virtual reality animated film which will premiere at the Virtual Reality showcase of the Venice Film Festival.",
"In February 2020, it was announced that Boynton would executive produce and star as Marianne Faithfull in the upcoming biopic, Faithfull.",
"Production was originally due to begin in October 2020, but was delayed indefinitely due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.",
"The film will cover Faithfull's rise to fame until the age of 23.",
"Boynton will star in ITV's six-part miniseries adaption of The Ipcress File as Jean Courtney, Harry Palmer's assistant, as well as in the Stephen Williams-directed biographical film Chevalier as Marie Antoinette.",
"She is also slated to appear in BritBox's three-part adaptation of Why Didn't They Ask Evans?, as well as Netflix's The Pale Blue Eye, a film based on Louis Bayard's Gothic thriller novel of the same name.",
"Personal life\nBoynton splits her time between London, New York, and Los Angeles, though she considers herself to be \"painfully British\".",
"Since 2018, she has been in a relationship with her Bohemian Rhapsody co-star Rami Malek.",
"Boynton supports the Black Lives Matter movement and has shared educational resources for racial justice on her social media pages.",
"Filmography\n\nFilm\n\nTelevision\n\nMusic videos\n\nSee also\n List of British actors\n\nNotes\n\nExternal links\n \n Lucy Boynton on Rotten Tomatoes\n \n\n1994 births\nActresses from London\nAmerican child actresses\nAmerican film actresses\nAmerican television actresses\nAmerican people of English descent\nBritish child actresses\nBritish film actresses\nBritish television actresses\nLiving people\nPeople educated at Blackheath High School\nPeople educated at James Allen's Girls' School\n21st-century British actresses\n21st-century American actresses\n21st-century English women\n21st-century English people"
] | [
"Lucy is a British-American actress.",
"She played the young Beatrix Potter in Miss Potter.",
"She made guest appearances on Borgia and Law & Order: UK.",
"Life in Squares aired on the British Broadcasting Corporation.",
"She appeared as an isolated popular girl in The Blackcoat's Daughter and starred as a bold aspiring model in Sing Street.",
"She was praised for her performance in Don't Knock Twice, one of the two horror films she appeared in.",
"The character of J. D. Salinger's wife had a negative reception.",
"Murder on the Orient Express was a commercial success.",
"The daughter of a cult leader was portrayed by Boynton.",
"The film was a box office success, with Boynton starring as Mary Austin.",
"She appeared in a movie.",
"In the second season of Modern Love, she played a role in the series The Politician.",
"She will play a singer in the upcoming movie Faithfull and will also star in a TV show.",
"Boynton was born in New York City in January of 1994 to English parents.",
"She was raised in southeast London.",
"She is a dual citizen of the United Kingdom and the United States.",
"When she was ten, a drama teacher told her that acting was understanding the human mind and why people function as they do.",
"She attended both James Allen's Girls' School and the private Blackheath High School.",
"She made her professional debut at age twelve as young Beatrix Potter in the biographical film Miss Potter.",
"After being spotted by a casting director in her drama class, she was asked to try out.",
"There were more scenes written for her character after the test screening.",
"corsets and padded clothing were used to portray Potter as a teenager.",
"The best day of her life was the first day of filming.",
"Miss Potter was nominated for the Young Artist Award for Best Supporting Actress.",
"In Ballet Shoes, Boynton played Posy Fossil.",
"A body double was used to show her character's dancing skills.",
"Critics liked the film.",
"Margaret Dashwood was portrayed in the 2008 television adaptation of Sense and Sensibility.",
"The miniseries had high ratings and positive reviews.",
"Being too old for child roles but too young to play the leading lady was a difficult period for Boynton.",
"She played Mo Mowlam's stepdaughter in a film.",
"She appeared in an episode of Lewis.",
"She was in the music video for the lead single from Saint Raymond's play \"Fall At Your Feet\".",
"The novel of the same name by Harold Frederic was the basis for the period drama Copperhead.",
"She appeared in Borgia, Endeavour, and Law & Order: UK.",
"She played a member of the group in Life in Squares.",
"She read the memoir Deceived with Kindness, which she described as a dream for any actor, to prepare for the part.",
"The series was reviewed well.",
"In The Blackcoat's Daughter, Boynton appeared as \"sullen mean girl\" Rose.",
"She watched films that dealt with isolation and grief, such as Rosemary's Baby, on the recommendation of the director.",
"The author of Slant Magazine wrote that Roberts, Shipka, and Boyton were \"poignant in their minimalist roles\".",
"Raphina in Sing Street was an aspiring model with huge hair, bright make-up and colorful clothes.",
"She described her role as \"the muse character, in a way, but only because she has put herself there\".",
"She adopted an Irish accent for the film and was instructed by the director to create a backstory that was much more detail than she had before.",
"The film was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy.",
"She played a bride in the gothic-horror film I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House, which opened at the Toronto International Film Festival to a mixed reception.",
"Katee Sackhoff starred in Don't Knock Twice.",
"\"They bring so much life to the material that it's almost like they've been tricked into thinking they're in a better movie,\" said Noel Murray of the Los Angeles Times.",
"In the film, she played the second wife of J. D. Salinger.",
"Critics panned the film at the festival.",
"Murder on the Orient Express was a film starring Boynton.",
"The film received mixed reviews but the performances of the cast were praised.",
"In the same year, she starred as Allison Adams, a college student who was turned into a drug user.",
"Her character's desire to return to childhood while struggling with control was something she empathised with.",
"The best of the supporting turns was cited by Daniel Fienberg of The Hollywood Reporter.",
"She played the daughter of a cult leader in Apostle, which was praised by critics.",
"Mary Austin was Freddie Mercury's partner in the movie.",
"She spoke to Brian May to research the role and watched Austin's interviews to gauge what she was happy to be open about.",
"The film met mixed reviews and became the highest-grossing biographical film of all time.",
"She was praised by both Time and the Irish Independent for her performance in the film.",
"The cast of the movie received a nomination for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture at the Screen Actors Guild Awards.",
"In the series The Politician, Boynton has played the role of the \"hyperbolically privileged\" rival of the main character.",
"The experience was \"liberating\", and INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals",
"The Hollywood Reporter said that her written dialogue prevented her from being \"spectacular\".",
"Charlotte, a shop assistant in Locked Down, was a supporting role.",
"There were mixed reviews of the film.",
"The second season of Amazon Video's anthology series Modern Love had a guest starring role by Boynton.",
"Glimpse, a short virtual reality animated film which will premiere at the Virtual Reality showcase of the Venice Film Festival, will feature Boynton and Taron Egerton.",
"In February 2020, it was announced that Boynton would executive produce and star in the upcoming movie, Faithfull.",
"Production was supposed to begin in October 2020, but was delayed indefinitely due to the ongoing COVID-19 Pandemic.",
"Faithfull's rise to fame will be covered in the film.",
"In the Stephen Williams-directed biographical film Chevalier, Boynton will play the role of Jean Courtney, Harry Palmer's assistant.",
"She is set to appear in BritBox's three-part adaptation of Why Didn't They Ask Evans?, as well as The Pale Blue Eye, a film based on Louis Bayard's Gothic thriller novel of the same name.",
"She splits her time between London, New York, and Los Angeles, but she considers herself to be \"painfully British\".",
"She has been in a relationship with her co-star.",
"She has shared educational resources for racial justice on her social media pages.",
"Lucy Boynton is on the list of British actors."
] | <mask> (born 17 January 1994) is a British-American actress. Raised in London, she made her professional debut as the young Beatrix Potter in Miss Potter (2006). She starred in television productions Ballet Shoes (2007), Sense and Sensibility (2008) and Mo (2010), making guest appearances on Borgia, Endeavour, and Law & Order: UK. <mask> portrayed writer Angelica Garnett on Life in Squares, which aired on BBC. She appeared as an isolated popular girl in The Blackcoat's Daughter (2015) and starred as a bold aspiring model in Sing Street (2016), which met with critical acclaim. She appeared in horror films I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House (2016) and Don't Knock Twice (2016), receiving praise for her performance in the latter. <mask> portrayed J. D. Salinger's wife in Rebel in the Rye (2017), which had a negative reception.She played Countess Andrenyi in Murder on the Orient Express (2017), which was a commercial success. <mask> portrayed an addict in Netflix's Gypsy (2017) and the daughter of a cult leader in Apostle (2018). <mask> gained recognition for starring as Mary Austin in the biopic Bohemian Rhapsody (2018), which received numerous accolades and was a box office success. She appeared in HBO Max's Locked Down (2021). <mask> stars as the privileged antagonist Astrid Sloan in the Netflix series The Politician and appeared in the second season of Modern Love. She will portray singer Marianne Faithfull in the upcoming biopic Faithfull and is set to star in ITV's The Ipcress File (2022). Early life and education
<mask> was born on 17 January 1994 in New York City to English parents, journalists <mask> and Adriaane Pielou.The younger of two daughters, <mask> was raised in southeast London. She retains dual citizenship of the United Kingdom and the United States. <mask> realized she wanted to act when she was ten, after a drama teacher taught her that "acting was not playing pretend; it was understanding the human mind and why people function as they do." She attended the private Blackheath High School, followed by James Allen's Girls' School in Dulwich. Career
2006–2014: Early roles
<mask>'s made her professional debut at age twelve as young Beatrix Potter in the biographical film Miss Potter (2006). She was asked to audition after being spotted by a casting director sitting in on her drama class. Additional scenes were written for her character after a test screening responded positively to her role.<mask> wore corsets and padded clothing to portray Potter as a teenager. <mask> stated that the first day of filming was "the best day of [her] life". In 2007, she was nominated for the Young Artist Award for Best Supporting Actress, for Miss Potter. <mask> starred as Posy Fossil in the BBC film Ballet Shoes (2007). A body double was used in some scenes to display her character's "remarkable dancing skill". The film was praised by critics. <mask> portrayed Margaret Dashwood in the 2008 television adaptation of Jane Austen's novel Sense and Sensibility.The miniseries premiered to high viewership and positive reviews. <mask> has described experiencing a "difficult period" from ages 16 to 17 for being "too old for child roles, but too young to play the leading lady." She played Mo Mowlam's stepdaughter in television film Mo (2010). In 2011, She appeared in an episode of the ITV drama Lewis. In 2013, she starred in Saint Raymond's music video for the lead single from his debut extended play, "Fall At Your Feet". <mask> appeared in period drama Copperhead (2013) based on the novel of the same name by Harold Frederic. In 2014, she guest-starred in the television series Borgia, Endeavour, and Law & Order: UK.She played Angelica Garnett, a member of the Bloomsbury Group, in the BBC miniseries Life in Squares, which aired in 2015. To prepare for the part, she read Garnett's memoir, Deceived with Kindness, in which most of her scenes were detailed, which she described as "a dream for any actor". The series was reviewed positively. 2015–present: Film work and recognition
<mask> appeared as "sullen mean girl" Rose alongside Emma Roberts and Kiernan Shipka in The Blackcoat's Daughter (2015). She prepared for the film by watching films that dealt with isolation and grief, such as Rosemary’s Baby on the recommendation of director Oz Perkins. Chuck Bowen of Slant Magazine wrote that Roberts, Shipka, and Boyton were "poignant in their minimalist roles". <mask> starred in the coming-of-age film Sing Street (2016) as Raphina, an aspiring model with "huge hair, bright make-up and colorful clothes".<mask> described her role as "the muse character, in a way, but only because she has put herself there". She adopted an Irish accent for the film and was instructed by director John Carney to create a backstory "in much more detail than [she] had before." The film premiered to critical praise at the Sundance Film Festival and garnered a Golden Globe nomination for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. She appeared as ghostly bride Polly Parsons in the gothic-horror film I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House (2016), which opened at the Toronto International Film Festival to mixed reception. <mask> starred alongside Katee Sackhoff in indie-horror Don't Knock Twice (2016). Noel Murray of the Los Angeles Times praised Sackhoff and <mask>'s "volatile chemistry", stating that "they bring so much life to the material that it’s almost like they’ve been tricked into thinking they’re in a better movie." She portrayed in J. D. Salinger's second wife, Claire Douglas, in Rebel in the Rye (2017).Rebel in the Rye premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and was panned by critics. <mask> played Countess Helena Andrenyi in the 2017 adaptation of Murder on the Orient Express. The film was a box office success and received mixed reviews, though the performances of the cast were praised. In the same year, <mask> starred as Allison Adams, a college student turned drug addict, in the Netflix series Gypsy (2017). <mask> empathised with her character's desire to regress into childhood while struggling with control. Daniel Fienberg of The Hollywood Reporter cited <mask> as "splendid-but-underused" and among the "best of the supporting turns". She appeared as Andrea, the daughter of a cult leader, in Apostle (2018), which was praised by critics.<mask> starred opposite Rami Malek as Freddie Mercury's partner Mary Austin in Bohemian Rhapsody (2018). She watched Austin's interviews to "gauge what she was happy to be open about" and spoke to Brian May to research the role. The film became the highest-grossing biographical film of all time and met mixed criticism. Time praised her for playing the role with "charm and vigor" while the Irish Independent wrote that her scenes were the "quietest, most touching moments" of the film. Bohemian Rhapsody received four Academy Awards and earned the cast a nomination for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture at the 25th Screen Actors Guild Awards. Since 2019, <mask> has starred in the Netflix series The Politician, portraying Astrid Sloane, the protagonist's "ruthless" and "hyperbolically privileged" rival. <mask> described the experience "liberating", saying that playing an antagonistic character added depth to the role.The Hollywood Reporter praised <mask>'s "razor-sharp delivery" but remarked that her written dialogue prevented her from being "spectacular". <mask> had a supporting role as Charlotte, a Harrods shop assistant, in Locked Down (2021), released on HBO Max. The film received mixed reviews. <mask> guest-starred opposite Kit Harington in the second season of Amazon Video's anthology series Modern Love. Upcoming projects
<mask> will appear opposite Taron Egerton in Glimpse, a short virtual reality animated film which will premiere at the Virtual Reality showcase of the Venice Film Festival. In February 2020, it was announced that <mask> would executive produce and star as Marianne Faithfull in the upcoming biopic, Faithfull. Production was originally due to begin in October 2020, but was delayed indefinitely due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.The film will cover Faithfull's rise to fame until the age of 23. <mask> will star in ITV's six-part miniseries adaption of The Ipcress File as Jean Courtney, Harry Palmer's assistant, as well as in the Stephen Williams-directed biographical film Chevalier as Marie Antoinette. She is also slated to appear in BritBox's three-part adaptation of Why Didn't They Ask Evans?, as well as Netflix's The Pale Blue Eye, a film based on Louis Bayard's Gothic thriller novel of the same name. Personal life
<mask> splits her time between London, New York, and Los Angeles, though she considers herself to be "painfully British". Since 2018, she has been in a relationship with her Bohemian Rhapsody co-star Rami Malek. <mask> supports the Black Lives Matter movement and has shared educational resources for racial justice on her social media pages. Filmography
Film
Television
Music videos
See also
List of British actors
Notes
External links
<mask>nton on Rotten Tomatoes
1994 births
Actresses from London
American child actresses
American film actresses
American television actresses
American people of English descent
British child actresses
British film actresses
British television actresses
Living people
People educated at Blackheath High School
People educated at James Allen's Girls' School
21st-century British actresses
21st-century American actresses
21st-century English women
21st-century English people | [
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] | <mask> is a British-American actress. She played the young Beatrix Potter in Miss Potter. She made guest appearances on Borgia and Law & Order: UK. Life in Squares aired on the British Broadcasting Corporation. She appeared as an isolated popular girl in The Blackcoat's Daughter and starred as a bold aspiring model in Sing Street. She was praised for her performance in Don't Knock Twice, one of the two horror films she appeared in. The character of J. D. Salinger's wife had a negative reception.Murder on the Orient Express was a commercial success. The daughter of a cult leader was portrayed by <mask>. The film was a box office success, with <mask> starring as Mary Austin. She appeared in a movie. In the second season of Modern Love, she played a role in the series The Politician. She will play a singer in the upcoming movie Faithfull and will also star in a TV show. <mask> was born in New York City in January of 1994 to English parents.She was raised in southeast London. She is a dual citizen of the United Kingdom and the United States. When she was ten, a drama teacher told her that acting was understanding the human mind and why people function as they do. She attended both James Allen's Girls' School and the private Blackheath High School. She made her professional debut at age twelve as young Beatrix Potter in the biographical film Miss Potter. After being spotted by a casting director in her drama class, she was asked to try out. There were more scenes written for her character after the test screening.corsets and padded clothing were used to portray Potter as a teenager. The best day of her life was the first day of filming. Miss Potter was nominated for the Young Artist Award for Best Supporting Actress. In Ballet Shoes, <mask> played Posy Fossil. A body double was used to show her character's dancing skills. Critics liked the film. Margaret Dashwood was portrayed in the 2008 television adaptation of Sense and Sensibility.The miniseries had high ratings and positive reviews. Being too old for child roles but too young to play the leading lady was a difficult period for <mask>. She played Mo Mowlam's stepdaughter in a film. She appeared in an episode of Lewis. She was in the music video for the lead single from Saint Raymond's play "Fall At Your Feet". The novel of the same name by Harold Frederic was the basis for the period drama Copperhead. She appeared in Borgia, Endeavour, and Law & Order: UK.She played a member of the group in Life in Squares. She read the memoir Deceived with Kindness, which she described as a dream for any actor, to prepare for the part. The series was reviewed well. In The Blackcoat's Daughter, <mask> appeared as "sullen mean girl" Rose. She watched films that dealt with isolation and grief, such as Rosemary's Baby, on the recommendation of the director. The author of Slant Magazine wrote that Roberts, Shipka, and Boyton were "poignant in their minimalist roles". Raphina in Sing Street was an aspiring model with huge hair, bright make-up and colorful clothes.She described her role as "the muse character, in a way, but only because she has put herself there". She adopted an Irish accent for the film and was instructed by the director to create a backstory that was much more detail than she had before. The film was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy. She played a bride in the gothic-horror film I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House, which opened at the Toronto International Film Festival to a mixed reception. Katee Sackhoff starred in Don't Knock Twice. "They bring so much life to the material that it's almost like they've been tricked into thinking they're in a better movie," said Noel Murray of the Los Angeles Times. In the film, she played the second wife of J. D. Salinger.Critics panned the film at the festival. Murder on the Orient Express was a film starring <mask>. The film received mixed reviews but the performances of the cast were praised. In the same year, she starred as Allison Adams, a college student who was turned into a drug user. Her character's desire to return to childhood while struggling with control was something she empathised with. The best of the supporting turns was cited by Daniel Fienberg of The Hollywood Reporter. She played the daughter of a cult leader in Apostle, which was praised by critics.Mary Austin was Freddie Mercury's partner in the movie. She spoke to Brian May to research the role and watched Austin's interviews to gauge what she was happy to be open about. The film met mixed reviews and became the highest-grossing biographical film of all time. She was praised by both Time and the Irish Independent for her performance in the film. The cast of the movie received a nomination for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture at the Screen Actors Guild Awards. In the series The Politician, <mask> has played the role of the "hyperbolically privileged" rival of the main character. The experience was "liberating", and INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDeals INRDealsThe Hollywood Reporter said that her written dialogue prevented her from being "spectacular". Charlotte, a shop assistant in Locked Down, was a supporting role. There were mixed reviews of the film. The second season of Amazon Video's anthology series Modern Love had a guest starring role by <mask>. Glimpse, a short virtual reality animated film which will premiere at the Virtual Reality showcase of the Venice Film Festival, will feature <mask> and Taron Egerton. In February 2020, it was announced that <mask> would executive produce and star in the upcoming movie, Faithfull. Production was supposed to begin in October 2020, but was delayed indefinitely due to the ongoing COVID-19 Pandemic.Faithfull's rise to fame will be covered in the film. In the Stephen Williams-directed biographical film Chevalier, <mask> will play the role of Jean Courtney, Harry Palmer's assistant. She is set to appear in BritBox's three-part adaptation of Why Didn't They Ask Evans?, as well as The Pale Blue Eye, a film based on Louis Bayard's Gothic thriller novel of the same name. She splits her time between London, New York, and Los Angeles, but she considers herself to be "painfully British". She has been in a relationship with her co-star. She has shared educational resources for racial justice on her social media pages. <mask> is on the list of British actors. | [
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202151 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George%20du%20Maurier | George du Maurier | George Louis Palmella Busson du Maurier (6 March 1834 – 8 October 1896) was a Franco-British cartoonist and writer known for work in Punch and a Gothic novel Trilby, featuring the character Svengali. His son was the actor Sir Gerald du Maurier. The writers Angela du Maurier and Dame Daphne du Maurier and the artist Jeanne du Maurier were all granddaughters of George. He was also father of Sylvia Llewelyn Davies and grandfather of the five boys who inspired J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan.
Early life
George du Maurier was born in Paris, France, son of Louis-Mathurin Busson du Maurier and wife Ellen Clarke, daughter of the Regency courtesan Mary Anne Clarke. He was brought up to believe his aristocratic grandparents had fled from France during the Revolution, leaving vast estates behind, to live in England as émigrés. In fact, du Maurier's grandfather, Robert-Mathurin Busson, was a tradesman who left Paris, France, in 1789 to avoid charges of fraud and later changed the family name to the grander-sounding du Maurier.
Du Maurier studied art in Paris, France, in the studio of Charles Gleyre, and moved to Antwerp, Belgium, where he lost the vision in his left eye. He consulted an oculist in Düsseldorf, Rhineland, Prussia, German Confederation. He was reportedly studying chemistry at University College, London, in 1851. He is recorded in the 1861 England Census as a lodger at 85 Newman St in Marylebone.
He met Emma Wightwick in 1853 and married her a decade later, on 3 January 1863, at St Marylebone, Westminster. Moving frequently over the course of their marriage, the couple first settled in Hampstead in 1869, initially at Gang Moor near the Whitestone Pond for three years, before moving to 27 Church Row and later at New Grove House in 1881. In 1891, the family is recorded as residing at 2 Porchester Rd in Paddington. They had five children: Beatrix (known as Trixy), Guy, Sylvia, Marie Louise (known as May) and Gerald.
Career
Cartoonist
Du Maurier became a member of staff at the British satirical magazine Punch in 1865, drawing two cartoons a week. His commonest targets were the affected manners of Victorian society, the bourgeoisie and members of Britain's growing middle class in particular. His most enduring cartoon, True Humility (1895), popularised the expressions "good in parts" and "a curate's egg". In it, a bishop addresses a humble curate, whom he has invited to breakfast: "I'm afraid you've got a bad egg, Mr. Jones." The curate replies, "Oh no, my Lord, I assure you – parts of it are excellent!" The gag was not original to du Maurier, however, as it had appeared in a similar cartoon a few months earlier in Judy, a less widely read competitor to Punch.<ref name=QI>{{Cite web |url=https://quoteinvestigator.com/2019/04/04/egg/|title=The Curate''s Egg: Parts of It Are Excellent|website=Quote Investigator|language=en|access-date=2019-03-05}}</ref> In an earlier (1884) cartoon, du Maurier coined the expression "bedside manner", with which he satirised medical care. Another of his notable cartoons depicted a fanciful videophone conversation in 1879, using a device he called "Edison's telephonoscope."
While producing black-and-white drawings for Punch, du Maurier created illustrations for several other popular periodicals: Harper's, The Graphic, The Illustrated Times, The Cornhill Magazine, and the religious periodical Good Words. Furthermore, he did illustrations for the serialisation of Charles Warren Adams's The Notting Hill Mystery, which is often seen as the first detective story of novel length to have appeared in English. Among several other novels he illustrated was Misunderstood by Florence Montgomery in 1873.
Writer
His deteriorating eyesight caused du Maurier to reduce his involvement with Punch in 1891 and settle in Hampstead, where he wrote three novels. His first, Peter Ibbetson (1891), was a modest success at the time and later adapted for stage and screen, most notably in a 1935 film, and as an opera.
His second novel, Trilby, published in 1894, fitted into the gothic horror genre that was undergoing a revival. Hugely popular, it tells of a poor artist's model, Trilby O'Ferrall, transformed into a diva under the spell of an evil musical genius, Svengali. Soap, songs, dances, toothpaste, and even the city of Trilby, Florida, were named after her, as was the variety of soft felt hat with an indented crown worn in the London stage dramatisation of the novel. The plot inspired Gaston Leroux's 1910 novel Phantom of the Opera and innumerable works derived from it. Du Maurier eventually came to dislike the persistent attention the novel was given.
The third novel was a long, largely autobiographical work entitled The Martian, published posthumously in 1898.
Death and legacy
Du Maurier died on 8 October 1898 and was buried in St John-at-Hampstead churchyard in Hampstead. The success of his writings and illustrations allowed du Maurier to leave a then staggering amount of £47,555 in his will.
Du Maurier was a close friend of Henry James, the novelist; their relationship was fictionalised in David Lodge's Author, Author (2004).
BibliographyPeter Ibbetson (1891), also 1917 play; adapted in 1935 by Henry Hathaway into a film starring Gary Cooper; also adapted as an opera by Deems Taylor in 1931Trilby (1894) published first as a magazine serial in 8 partsThe Martian (1898)Social Pictorial Satire (1898) (Harper's New Monthly Magazine)
Film adaptationsTrilby (1914), starring Herbert Beerbohm Tree and Viva Birkett Trilby (1915), starring Wilton Lackaye and Clara Kimball YoungForever (1921), starring Wallace Reid and Elsie FergusonTrilby (1923), starring Arthur Edmund Carewe and Andrée LafayetteSvengali (1927), starring Paul Wegener and Anita DorrisSvengali (1931), starring John Barrymore and Marian Marsh Peter Ibbetson (1935), starring Gary Cooper and Ann Harding The Guilt of Janet Ames (1947), starring Melvyn Douglas and Rosalind Russell Svengali (1954), starring Donald Wolfit and Hildegard KnefSvengali (1983), starring Peter O'Toole and Jodie Foster
See also
Trilbymania
References
Further reading
Simon Cooke and Paul Goldman. George Du Maurier: Illustrator, Author, Critic. Beyond Svengali. Routledge, 2016
Richard Kelly. George du Maurier. Twayne, 1983
Richard Kelly. The Art of George du Maurier. Scolar Press, 1996
Leonée Ormond. George du Maurier.'' Routledge & Kegan Paul, London, 1969
"Du Maurier", a poem by Florence Earle Coates first published in 1898
External links
Dictionary of National Biography, 1901 supplement: Du Maurier, George Louis Palmella Busson
Works by or about George du Maurier at HathiTrust
Works by or about George du Maurier at GoogleBooks
A gallery of George du Maurier works for Punch magazine
George du Maurier at The Victorian Web
George du Maurier at Lambiek.net
George du Maurier's cartoon Love-Agony satirizing the Aesthetic Movement and Oscar Wilde.
George du Maurier cartoons at CartoonStock (Commercial site)
Telephonoscope, a cartoon of a television/videophone in 1879
Blue Plaque at 91, Great Russell Street, Bloomsbury, London
George du Maurier at University of Exeter Special Collections
1834 births
1896 deaths
French emigrants to the United Kingdom
Artists from Paris
British cartoonists
British illustrators
Punch (magazine) cartoonists
Burials at St John-at-Hampstead
19th-century British writers
Writers of Gothic fiction
George
Victorian novelists | [
"George Louis Palmella Busson du Maurier (6 March 1834 – 8 October 1896) was a Franco-British cartoonist and writer known for work in Punch and a Gothic novel Trilby, featuring the character Svengali.",
"His son was the actor Sir Gerald du Maurier.",
"The writers Angela du Maurier and Dame Daphne du Maurier and the artist Jeanne du Maurier were all granddaughters of George.",
"He was also father of Sylvia Llewelyn Davies and grandfather of the five boys who inspired J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan.",
"Early life\nGeorge du Maurier was born in Paris, France, son of Louis-Mathurin Busson du Maurier and wife Ellen Clarke, daughter of the Regency courtesan Mary Anne Clarke.",
"He was brought up to believe his aristocratic grandparents had fled from France during the Revolution, leaving vast estates behind, to live in England as émigrés.",
"In fact, du Maurier's grandfather, Robert-Mathurin Busson, was a tradesman who left Paris, France, in 1789 to avoid charges of fraud and later changed the family name to the grander-sounding du Maurier.",
"Du Maurier studied art in Paris, France, in the studio of Charles Gleyre, and moved to Antwerp, Belgium, where he lost the vision in his left eye.",
"He consulted an oculist in Düsseldorf, Rhineland, Prussia, German Confederation.",
"He was reportedly studying chemistry at University College, London, in 1851.",
"He is recorded in the 1861 England Census as a lodger at 85 Newman St in Marylebone.",
"He met Emma Wightwick in 1853 and married her a decade later, on 3 January 1863, at St Marylebone, Westminster.",
"Moving frequently over the course of their marriage, the couple first settled in Hampstead in 1869, initially at Gang Moor near the Whitestone Pond for three years, before moving to 27 Church Row and later at New Grove House in 1881.",
"In 1891, the family is recorded as residing at 2 Porchester Rd in Paddington.",
"They had five children: Beatrix (known as Trixy), Guy, Sylvia, Marie Louise (known as May) and Gerald.",
"Career\n\nCartoonist\nDu Maurier became a member of staff at the British satirical magazine Punch in 1865, drawing two cartoons a week.",
"His commonest targets were the affected manners of Victorian society, the bourgeoisie and members of Britain's growing middle class in particular.",
"His most enduring cartoon, True Humility (1895), popularised the expressions \"good in parts\" and \"a curate's egg\".",
"In it, a bishop addresses a humble curate, whom he has invited to breakfast: \"I'm afraid you've got a bad egg, Mr.",
"Jones.\"",
"The curate replies, \"Oh no, my Lord, I assure you – parts of it are excellent!\"",
"The gag was not original to du Maurier, however, as it had appeared in a similar cartoon a few months earlier in Judy, a less widely read competitor to Punch.<ref name=QI>{{Cite web |url=https://quoteinvestigator.com/2019/04/04/egg/|title=The Curate''s Egg: Parts of It Are Excellent|website=Quote Investigator|language=en|access-date=2019-03-05}}</ref> In an earlier (1884) cartoon, du Maurier coined the expression \"bedside manner\", with which he satirised medical care.",
"Another of his notable cartoons depicted a fanciful videophone conversation in 1879, using a device he called \"Edison's telephonoscope.\"",
"While producing black-and-white drawings for Punch, du Maurier created illustrations for several other popular periodicals: Harper's, The Graphic, The Illustrated Times, The Cornhill Magazine, and the religious periodical Good Words.",
"Furthermore, he did illustrations for the serialisation of Charles Warren Adams's The Notting Hill Mystery, which is often seen as the first detective story of novel length to have appeared in English.",
"Among several other novels he illustrated was Misunderstood by Florence Montgomery in 1873.",
"Writer\n\nHis deteriorating eyesight caused du Maurier to reduce his involvement with Punch in 1891 and settle in Hampstead, where he wrote three novels.",
"His first, Peter Ibbetson (1891), was a modest success at the time and later adapted for stage and screen, most notably in a 1935 film, and as an opera.",
"His second novel, Trilby, published in 1894, fitted into the gothic horror genre that was undergoing a revival.",
"Hugely popular, it tells of a poor artist's model, Trilby O'Ferrall, transformed into a diva under the spell of an evil musical genius, Svengali.",
"Soap, songs, dances, toothpaste, and even the city of Trilby, Florida, were named after her, as was the variety of soft felt hat with an indented crown worn in the London stage dramatisation of the novel.",
"The plot inspired Gaston Leroux's 1910 novel Phantom of the Opera and innumerable works derived from it.",
"Du Maurier eventually came to dislike the persistent attention the novel was given.",
"The third novel was a long, largely autobiographical work entitled The Martian, published posthumously in 1898.",
"Death and legacy\nDu Maurier died on 8 October 1898 and was buried in St John-at-Hampstead churchyard in Hampstead.",
"The success of his writings and illustrations allowed du Maurier to leave a then staggering amount of £47,555 in his will.",
"Du Maurier was a close friend of Henry James, the novelist; their relationship was fictionalised in David Lodge's Author, Author (2004).",
"BibliographyPeter Ibbetson (1891), also 1917 play; adapted in 1935 by Henry Hathaway into a film starring Gary Cooper; also adapted as an opera by Deems Taylor in 1931Trilby (1894) published first as a magazine serial in 8 partsThe Martian (1898)Social Pictorial Satire (1898) (Harper's New Monthly Magazine)\n\nFilm adaptationsTrilby (1914), starring Herbert Beerbohm Tree and Viva Birkett Trilby (1915), starring Wilton Lackaye and Clara Kimball YoungForever (1921), starring Wallace Reid and Elsie FergusonTrilby (1923), starring Arthur Edmund Carewe and Andrée LafayetteSvengali (1927), starring Paul Wegener and Anita DorrisSvengali (1931), starring John Barrymore and Marian Marsh Peter Ibbetson (1935), starring Gary Cooper and Ann Harding The Guilt of Janet Ames (1947), starring Melvyn Douglas and Rosalind Russell Svengali (1954), starring Donald Wolfit and Hildegard KnefSvengali (1983), starring Peter O'Toole and Jodie Foster\n\nSee also\nTrilbymania\n\nReferences\n\nFurther reading\nSimon Cooke and Paul Goldman.",
"George Du Maurier: Illustrator, Author, Critic.",
"Beyond Svengali.",
"Routledge, 2016\nRichard Kelly.",
"George du Maurier.",
"Twayne, 1983\nRichard Kelly.",
"The Art of George du Maurier.",
"Scolar Press, 1996\nLeonée Ormond.",
"George du Maurier.''",
"Routledge & Kegan Paul, London, 1969\n\"Du Maurier\", a poem by Florence Earle Coates first published in 1898\n\nExternal links\n\nDictionary of National Biography, 1901 supplement: Du Maurier, George Louis Palmella Busson\n\nWorks by or about George du Maurier at HathiTrust\nWorks by or about George du Maurier at GoogleBooks\n\nA gallery of George du Maurier works for Punch magazine\nGeorge du Maurier at The Victorian Web\nGeorge du Maurier at Lambiek.net\n\nGeorge du Maurier's cartoon Love-Agony satirizing the Aesthetic Movement and Oscar Wilde.",
"George du Maurier cartoons at CartoonStock (Commercial site)\nTelephonoscope, a cartoon of a television/videophone in 1879\n\nBlue Plaque at 91, Great Russell Street, Bloomsbury, London\nGeorge du Maurier at University of Exeter Special Collections\n\n1834 births\n1896 deaths\nFrench emigrants to the United Kingdom\nArtists from Paris\nBritish cartoonists\nBritish illustrators\nPunch (magazine) cartoonists\nBurials at St John-at-Hampstead\n19th-century British writers\nWriters of Gothic fiction\nGeorge\nVictorian novelists"
] | [
"George Louis Palmella Busson du Maurier was a British and Franco-British writer who was known for his work in Punch and Trilby.",
"His son was an actor.",
"George's granddaughters were the writers and the artist.",
"He was the father of Sylvia Llewelyn Davies and grandfather of the five boys who inspired Peter Pan.",
"George du Maurier was the son of Louis-Mathurin Busson du Maurier and Ellen Clarke, daughter of the Regency courtesan Mary Anne Clarke.",
"He thought his grandparents had fled from France during the Revolution to live in England.",
"Robert-Mathurin Busson, du Maurier's grandfather, left Paris, France, in 1789 to avoid charges of fraud and later changed the family name to the grander-sounding du Maurier.",
"He lost the vision in his left eye after moving to Belgium, where he studied art in the studio of Charles Gleyre.",
"He consulted an oculist in Germany.",
"He was studying chemistry at University College in London.",
"In the 1861 England Census, he is recorded as a lodger at 85 Newman St.",
"He married Emma on January 3, 1863, a decade after they met.",
"After living in Gang Moor near the Whitestone Pond for three years, the couple moved to 27 Church Row and finally to New Grove House in the late 19th century.",
"The family lived in Paddington in 1891.",
"They had five children: Beatrix, Guy, Sylvia, Marie Louise and Gerald.",
"In 1865, Du Maurier became a member of staff at the British satirical magazine Punch, drawing two cartoons a week.",
"The affected manners of Victorian society, the bourgeoisie and members of Britain's growing middle class were his main targets.",
"The expressions \"good in parts\" and \"a curate's egg\" were popularised by True Humility.",
"\"I'm afraid you've got a bad egg, Mr.",
"Jones.",
"\"Oh no, my Lord, I assure you that parts of it are excellent!\" the curate said.",
"The gag was not original to du Maurier, as it had appeared in a similar cartoon a few months earlier in Judy, a less widely read competitor to Punch.",
"The 1879 cartoon depicted a fanciful videophone conversation using a device he called \"Edison's telephonoscope.\"",
"du Maurier created illustrations for a number of popular periodicals, including Good Words, The Graphic, and The Cornhill Magazine.",
"He did illustrations for the serialisation of Charles Warren Adams's The Notting Hill Mystery, which is often seen as the first detective story of novel length to have appeared in English.",
"Misunderstood by Florence Montgomery was one of the novels he illustrated.",
"After his eyesight deteriorated, du Maurier reduced his involvement with Punch and settled in Hampstead, where he wrote three novels.",
"Peter Ibbetson was a modest success at the time and later adapted for stage and screen, most notably in a 1935 film.",
"The gothic horror genre was undergoing a revival when his second novel, Trilby, was published in 1894.",
"It tells of a poor artist's model, Trilby O'Ferrall, who was transformed into a diva by an evil musical genius.",
"Soap, songs, dances, toothpaste, and even the city of Trilby, Florida, were named after her.",
"Leroux's 1910 novel Phantom of the Opera was inspired by the plot.",
"The novel was given a lot of attention.",
"The Martian, the third novel, was published posthumously in 1898.",
"On October 8, 1898, Du Maurier died and was buried in St John-at-Hampstead churchyard.",
"du Maurier left a huge amount of money in his will because of his success.",
"The relationship between Du Maurier and Henry James was fictionalized in David Lodge's Author, Author.",
"The Martian was published first as a magazine serial in 8 parts and adapted as an opera by Deems Taylor in 1931.",
"George Du Maurier is an author and a critic.",
"Beyond Svengali.",
"Richard Kelly.",
"George du Maurier was a man.",
"Twayne was named after Richard Kelly.",
"The art of George du Maurier.",
"Leonée Ormond was the author of Scolar Press.",
"George du Maurier.",
"Dictionary of National Biography, 1901 supplement: Du Maurier is a poem by George Louis Palmella Busson.",
"George du Maurier cartoons can be found on the Commercial site at Telephonoscope, a cartoon of a television/videophone in 1879."
] | <mask> (6 March 1834 – 8 October 1896) was a Franco-British cartoonist and writer known for work in Punch and a Gothic novel Trilby, featuring the character Svengali. His son was the actor Sir <mask>. The writers <mask> and Dame <mask> and the artist <mask> were all granddaughters of <mask>. He was also father of Sylvia Llewelyn Davies and grandfather of the five boys who inspired J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan. Early life
<mask> was born in Paris, France, son of <mask> and wife Ellen Clarke, daughter of the Regency courtesan Mary Anne Clarke. He was brought up to believe his aristocratic grandparents had fled from France during the Revolution, leaving vast estates behind, to live in England as émigrés. In fact, <mask>'s grandfather, Robert-Mathurin Busson, was a tradesman who left Paris, France, in 1789 to avoid charges of fraud and later changed the family name to the grander-sounding <mask>urier.<mask> studied art in Paris, France, in the studio of Charles Gleyre, and moved to Antwerp, Belgium, where he lost the vision in his left eye. He consulted an oculist in Düsseldorf, Rhineland, Prussia, German Confederation. He was reportedly studying chemistry at University College, London, in 1851. He is recorded in the 1861 England Census as a lodger at 85 Newman St in Marylebone. He met Emma Wightwick in 1853 and married her a decade later, on 3 January 1863, at St Marylebone, Westminster. Moving frequently over the course of their marriage, the couple first settled in Hampstead in 1869, initially at Gang Moor near the Whitestone Pond for three years, before moving to 27 Church Row and later at New Grove House in 1881. In 1891, the family is recorded as residing at 2 Porchester Rd in Paddington.They had five children: Beatrix (known as Trixy), Guy, Sylvia, Marie Louise (known as May) and Gerald. Career
Cartoonist
<mask> became a member of staff at the British satirical magazine Punch in 1865, drawing two cartoons a week. His commonest targets were the affected manners of Victorian society, the bourgeoisie and members of Britain's growing middle class in particular. His most enduring cartoon, True Humility (1895), popularised the expressions "good in parts" and "a curate's egg". In it, a bishop addresses a humble curate, whom he has invited to breakfast: "I'm afraid you've got a bad egg, Mr. Jones." The curate replies, "Oh no, my Lord, I assure you – parts of it are excellent!"The gag was not original to <mask>, however, as it had appeared in a similar cartoon a few months earlier in Judy, a less widely read competitor to Punch.<ref name=QI>{{Cite web |url=https://quoteinvestigator.com/2019/04/04/egg/|title=The Curate''s Egg: Parts of It Are Excellent|website=Quote Investigator|language=en|access-date=2019-03-05}}</ref> In an earlier (1884) cartoon, <mask> coined the expression "bedside manner", with which he satirised medical care. Another of his notable cartoons depicted a fanciful videophone conversation in 1879, using a device he called "Edison's telephonoscope." While producing black-and-white drawings for Punch, <mask> created illustrations for several other popular periodicals: Harper's, The Graphic, The Illustrated Times, The Cornhill Magazine, and the religious periodical Good Words. Furthermore, he did illustrations for the serialisation of Charles Warren Adams's The Notting Hill Mystery, which is often seen as the first detective story of novel length to have appeared in English. Among several other novels he illustrated was Misunderstood by Florence Montgomery in 1873. Writer
His deteriorating eyesight caused <mask> to reduce his involvement with Punch in 1891 and settle in Hampstead, where he wrote three novels. His first, Peter Ibbetson (1891), was a modest success at the time and later adapted for stage and screen, most notably in a 1935 film, and as an opera.His second novel, Trilby, published in 1894, fitted into the gothic horror genre that was undergoing a revival. Hugely popular, it tells of a poor artist's model, Trilby O'Ferrall, transformed into a diva under the spell of an evil musical genius, Svengali. Soap, songs, dances, toothpaste, and even the city of Trilby, Florida, were named after her, as was the variety of soft felt hat with an indented crown worn in the London stage dramatisation of the novel. The plot inspired Gaston Leroux's 1910 novel Phantom of the Opera and innumerable works derived from it. <mask> eventually came to dislike the persistent attention the novel was given. The third novel was a long, largely autobiographical work entitled The Martian, published posthumously in 1898. Death and legacy
<mask> died on 8 October 1898 and was buried in St John-at-Hampstead churchyard in Hampstead.The success of his writings and illustrations allowed <mask> to leave a then staggering amount of £47,555 in his will. <mask> was a close friend of Henry James, the novelist; their relationship was fictionalised in David Lodge's Author, Author (2004). BibliographyPeter Ibbetson (1891), also 1917 play; adapted in 1935 by Henry Hathaway into a film starring Gary Cooper; also adapted as an opera by Deems Taylor in 1931Trilby (1894) published first as a magazine serial in 8 partsThe Martian (1898)Social Pictorial Satire (1898) (Harper's New Monthly Magazine)
Film adaptationsTrilby (1914), starring Herbert Beerbohm Tree and Viva Birkett Trilby (1915), starring Wilton Lackaye and Clara Kimball YoungForever (1921), starring Wallace Reid and Elsie FergusonTrilby (1923), starring Arthur Edmund Carewe and Andrée LafayetteSvengali (1927), starring Paul Wegener and Anita DorrisSvengali (1931), starring John Barrymore and Marian Marsh Peter Ibbetson (1935), starring Gary Cooper and Ann Harding The Guilt of Janet Ames (1947), starring Melvyn Douglas and Rosalind Russell Svengali (1954), starring Donald Wolfit and Hildegard KnefSvengali (1983), starring Peter O'Toole and Jodie Foster
See also
Trilbymania
References
Further reading
Simon Cooke and Paul Goldman. <mask> <mask>: Illustrator, Author, Critic. Beyond Svengali. Routledge, 2016
Richard Kelly. <mask> <mask>.Twayne, 1983
Richard Kelly. The Art of <mask> <mask>. Scolar Press, 1996
Leonée Ormond. <mask> Maurier.'' Routledge & Kegan Paul, London, 1969
"Du Maurier", a poem by Florence Earle Coates first published in 1898
External links
Dictionary of National Biography, 1901 supplement: Du Maurier, <mask> Palmella Busson
Works by or about <mask> <mask> at HathiTrust
Works by or about <mask> <mask> at GoogleBooks
A gallery of <mask> <mask> works for Punch magazine
<mask> Maurier at The Victorian Web
<mask> Maurier at Lambiek.net
<mask> Maurier's cartoon Love-Agony satirizing the Aesthetic Movement and Oscar Wilde. <mask> Maurier cartoons at CartoonStock (Commercial site)
Telephonoscope, a cartoon of a television/videophone in 1879
Blue Plaque at 91, Great Russell Street, Bloomsbury, London
<mask> Maurier at University of Exeter Special Collections
1834 births
1896 deaths
French emigrants to the United Kingdom
Artists from Paris
British cartoonists
British illustrators
Punch (magazine) cartoonists
Burials at St John-at-Hampstead
19th-century British writers
Writers of Gothic fiction
George
Victorian novelists | [
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] | <mask> was a British and Franco-British writer who was known for his work in Punch and Trilby. His son was an actor. <mask>'s granddaughters were the writers and the artist. He was the father of Sylvia Llewelyn Davies and grandfather of the five boys who inspired Peter Pan. <mask> was the son of Louis-<mask> and Ellen Clarke, daughter of the Regency courtesan Mary Anne Clarke. He thought his grandparents had fled from France during the Revolution to live in England. Robert-Mathurin Busson, <mask>'s grandfather, left Paris, France, in 1789 to avoid charges of fraud and later changed the family name to the grander-sounding <mask>urier.He lost the vision in his left eye after moving to Belgium, where he studied art in the studio of Charles Gleyre. He consulted an oculist in Germany. He was studying chemistry at University College in London. In the 1861 England Census, he is recorded as a lodger at 85 Newman St. He married Emma on January 3, 1863, a decade after they met. After living in Gang Moor near the Whitestone Pond for three years, the couple moved to 27 Church Row and finally to New Grove House in the late 19th century. The family lived in Paddington in 1891.They had five children: Beatrix, Guy, Sylvia, Marie Louise and Gerald. In 1865, <mask> became a member of staff at the British satirical magazine Punch, drawing two cartoons a week. The affected manners of Victorian society, the bourgeoisie and members of Britain's growing middle class were his main targets. The expressions "good in parts" and "a curate's egg" were popularised by True Humility. "I'm afraid you've got a bad egg, Mr. Jones. "Oh no, my Lord, I assure you that parts of it are excellent!" the curate said.The gag was not original to <mask>, as it had appeared in a similar cartoon a few months earlier in Judy, a less widely read competitor to Punch. The 1879 cartoon depicted a fanciful videophone conversation using a device he called "Edison's telephonoscope." <mask> created illustrations for a number of popular periodicals, including Good Words, The Graphic, and The Cornhill Magazine. He did illustrations for the serialisation of Charles Warren Adams's The Notting Hill Mystery, which is often seen as the first detective story of novel length to have appeared in English. Misunderstood by Florence Montgomery was one of the novels he illustrated. After his eyesight deteriorated, <mask> reduced his involvement with Punch and settled in Hampstead, where he wrote three novels. Peter Ibbetson was a modest success at the time and later adapted for stage and screen, most notably in a 1935 film.The gothic horror genre was undergoing a revival when his second novel, Trilby, was published in 1894. It tells of a poor artist's model, Trilby O'Ferrall, who was transformed into a diva by an evil musical genius. Soap, songs, dances, toothpaste, and even the city of Trilby, Florida, were named after her. Leroux's 1910 novel Phantom of the Opera was inspired by the plot. The novel was given a lot of attention. The Martian, the third novel, was published posthumously in 1898. On October 8, 1898, <mask> died and was buried in St John-at-Hampstead churchyard.<mask> left a huge amount of money in his will because of his success. The relationship between <mask> and Henry James was fictionalized in David Lodge's Author, Author. The Martian was published first as a magazine serial in 8 parts and adapted as an opera by Deems Taylor in 1931. <mask> <mask> is an author and a critic. Beyond Svengali. Richard Kelly. <mask> <mask> was a man.Twayne was named after Richard Kelly. The art of <mask> <mask>. Leonée Ormond was the author of Scolar Press. <mask> Maurier. Dictionary of National Biography, 1901 supplement: Du Maurier is a poem by <mask> Palmella Busson. <mask> Maurier cartoons can be found on the Commercial site at Telephonoscope, a cartoon of a television/videophone in 1879. | [
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15113297 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marten%20van%20Cleve | Marten van Cleve | Marten van Cleve the Elder (Antwerp, c. 1527 – Antwerp, before 24 November 1581) was a Flemish painter and draftsman active in Antwerp between 1551 and 1581. Van Cleve is mainly known for his genre scenes with peasants and landscapes, which show a certain resemblance with the work of Pieter Bruegel the Elder. Marten van Cleve was one of the leading Flemish artists of his generation. His subjects and compositions were an important influence on the work of Pieter Brueghel the Younger and other genre painters of his generation.
Life
Details about the life of Marten van Cleve are scarce. He was born in Antwerp as the son of Willem van Cleve the Elder who had become a master in the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke in 1518. Based on his own declaration in a document dated 2 April 1567 that he was then 40 years of age, it is assumed van Cleve was born in 1526 or 1527. Marten's elder brother Hendrick van Cleve III and his younger brother Willem van Cleve the Younger were both painters.
Marten van Cleve first studied under his father. According to the early Flemish biographer Karel van Mander Marten van Cleve studied under Frans Floris, the leading Flemish history painter in the mid 16th century. There is no evidence for this apprenticeship. Some stylistic similarities with Frans Floris' works that appear in van Cleve's early work and the engravings after his inventions make the apprenticeship plausible. Van Mander also stated that van Cleve did not follow the 16th century trend of Flemish painters to study in Italy. This may explain why van Cleve's work does not show the influence of Italian Mannerism with its unrealistic deformations. Marten van Cleve became a master in the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke in 1551.
Marten van Cleve married Maria de Greve on 7 January 1556. The couple had four sons named Gillis, Marten (called 'Marten the Younger), Joris and Nicolaas who all became painters. Marten van Cleve had five registered pupils, one of whom became a master. One of his pupils may have been Hans Jordaens.
Between 1560 and 1570 Marten van Cleve operated an important workshop with a large output. The majority of the works were copies of Marten's original inventions. It is probable that his own sons also assisted in his studio. Van Cleve was a regular collaborator with a number of prominent landscape painters.
Marten van Cleve Marten died in 1581, at which time he was suffering from gout and rheumatism.
Work
Marten van Cleve was principally a genre painter, who specialized in peasant scenes and landscapes. Only about five of his works are signed and properly documented. He depicted predominantly low-life scenes of peasant weddings and dances, kermisses, brawling peasants and soldiers and plundering soldiers, which show his debt to the work of Pieter Bruegel the Elder. As the artist only left few signed works, the attributions of works to him has been difficult and several attributions have been rejected in recent years. Even the attributions by Dr. Klaus Ertz in his catalogue raisonné of Marten van Cleve's paintings and drawings published in 2014 have been questioned.
His oldest authenticated work is the Farm interior with important visitors (Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna), which was included in the 1659 inventory of Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria. It is regarded as a youth work and shows the large kitchen of a farm. A couple from the city are in the kitchen to visit their child which they have entrusted to a wet nurse. The work, which is probably dated to around 1555–1560, shows the influence of Frans Floris in its fluid brush stroke. The choice of subject matter was likely influenced by Pieter Aertsen's peasant scenes from the period 1550–1560. Unlike Aertsen, van Cleve's treatment of space is more modern and his work is free of the influence of the Manierism of the Flemish Romanists who were inspired by contemporary Italian art. The influence of Pieter Brueghel the Elder is not yet visible in this early work.
Van Cleve came under the influence of Pieter Bruegel the Elder's work in the 1560s. It is a certain resemblance with the work of Bruegel (particularly in the numbers of figures depicted), which has led to the often unjustifiable categorization of van Cleve as a follower of Bruegel. He was, however, never an imitator of that master. He took from Bruegel certain subjects and peasant types but was not interested in following some of the reactionary aspects of Bruegel's work such as the return to Hieronymus Bosch's surrealism and Joachim Patinir's world landscapes. On the whole van Cleve's scenes are descriptive rather than allegorical. Van Cleve attempted to correct or modernize Bruegel by a higher level of interest in realism. He also depicted his scenes from a lower viewpoint than Bruegel.
Another confirmed authentic work is the Slaughtered ox (Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna),which is monogrammed with 'M(v)G' in ligature and dated 1566. It is quite similar to a work of a Slaughtered pig by Joachim Beukelaer. While Beuckelaer's work is clearly a still life, van Cleve's composition is a genre work which emphasizes the anecdotal and genre aspects of the work. Van Cleve's composition may also have an allegorical meaning. A little boy sitting on the threshold of the door is blowing a bubble. The bubble is in fact the bladder of the ox, at the time a children's toy. It is possible that the bubble-blowing boy is a reference to the homo bulla motive, the idea that life is just a bubble that only lasts a very short time. The dead ox itself is a reminder of death and is thus linked to the 'memento mori' idea, the notion that humans should remember that they are mortal. Together with the Carnival in a village with beggars dancing dated 1579 (Hermitage Museum), the Slaughtered ox shows that van Cleve preferred a broad and free brushstroke. In the Carnival in a village with beggars dancing van Cleve has also used various motifs from Pieter Bruegel the Elder's works.
Van Cleve developed a number of new themes such as the King Drinks, the original of which is probably the painting sold at Kunsthandel Abels, Cologne in 1965. This theme invented by van Cleve became very popular in the next century. His 'The good shepherd' was another original creation, which was widely imitated. Many Flemish artists, and in particular Pieter Bruegel the Younger, were inspired by these subjects. Marten van Cleve is believed to have been an important influence on the development of Pieter Brueghel the Younger's style, along the more widely recognised precedent of his father, Pieter Bruegel the Elder. The peasant wedding was a favourite theme of Cleve. He returned frequently to this subject depicting its various rituals and ceremonies, mostly in the form of cycles of small-scale panels. His Wedding Procession was widely copied by his workshop as well as Pieter Bruegel the Younger. Another popular theme of van Cleve was The Massacre of the Innocents and his version of this subject was copied even more frequently than the version of Pieter Bruegel the Elder. The attribution to van Cleve and his workshop of the various versions of the Massacre of the Innocents has been questioned on stylistic grounds, in particular on the basis of the fact that the more painterly handling of paint that is ascribed to van Cleve is missing in this body of work.
Marten van Cleve collaborated with many prominent landscape painters, including Gillis van Coninxloo, Gillis Mostaert and Jacob Grimmer as well as his brother Hendrick for whom he painted the figures. Hendrick reciprocated and added to Marten's figure-pieces landscape backgrounds.
To Marten van Cleve have been attributed a lot of designs for prints published by the Antwerp printers and publishers including Willem van Haecht. It is believed that while apprenticed in the workshop of Frans Floris, Marten van Cleve assisted in the preparation of print designs after preliminary drawings made by Frans Floris. An example is van Cleve's signed drawing of Arachne (c. 1574, Kupferstichkabinett Berlin) made after Floris' design. This drawing was then used by Philip Galle as the basis for his engraving of Arachne or The textile industry. In his prints, van Cleve remained closer to his master Floris's designs. Prominent engravers such as the Wierix brothers, Hans Bol, Philip Fruytiers, Johann Sadeler, Balthazar van den Bos and Philip Galle engraved the prints after van Cleve's designs.
Notes
External links
Flemish Renaissance painters
Flemish landscape painters
Flemish genre painters
Artists from Antwerp
Painters from Antwerp | [
"Marten van Cleve the Elder (Antwerp, c. 1527 – Antwerp, before 24 November 1581) was a Flemish painter and draftsman active in Antwerp between 1551 and 1581.",
"Van Cleve is mainly known for his genre scenes with peasants and landscapes, which show a certain resemblance with the work of Pieter Bruegel the Elder.",
"Marten van Cleve was one of the leading Flemish artists of his generation.",
"His subjects and compositions were an important influence on the work of Pieter Brueghel the Younger and other genre painters of his generation.",
"Life\nDetails about the life of Marten van Cleve are scarce.",
"He was born in Antwerp as the son of Willem van Cleve the Elder who had become a master in the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke in 1518.",
"Based on his own declaration in a document dated 2 April 1567 that he was then 40 years of age, it is assumed van Cleve was born in 1526 or 1527.",
"Marten's elder brother Hendrick van Cleve III and his younger brother Willem van Cleve the Younger were both painters.",
"Marten van Cleve first studied under his father.",
"According to the early Flemish biographer Karel van Mander Marten van Cleve studied under Frans Floris, the leading Flemish history painter in the mid 16th century.",
"There is no evidence for this apprenticeship.",
"Some stylistic similarities with Frans Floris' works that appear in van Cleve's early work and the engravings after his inventions make the apprenticeship plausible.",
"Van Mander also stated that van Cleve did not follow the 16th century trend of Flemish painters to study in Italy.",
"This may explain why van Cleve's work does not show the influence of Italian Mannerism with its unrealistic deformations.",
"Marten van Cleve became a master in the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke in 1551.",
"Marten van Cleve married Maria de Greve on 7 January 1556.",
"The couple had four sons named Gillis, Marten (called 'Marten the Younger), Joris and Nicolaas who all became painters.",
"Marten van Cleve had five registered pupils, one of whom became a master.",
"One of his pupils may have been Hans Jordaens.",
"Between 1560 and 1570 Marten van Cleve operated an important workshop with a large output.",
"The majority of the works were copies of Marten's original inventions.",
"It is probable that his own sons also assisted in his studio.",
"Van Cleve was a regular collaborator with a number of prominent landscape painters.",
"Marten van Cleve Marten died in 1581, at which time he was suffering from gout and rheumatism.",
"Work\nMarten van Cleve was principally a genre painter, who specialized in peasant scenes and landscapes.",
"Only about five of his works are signed and properly documented.",
"He depicted predominantly low-life scenes of peasant weddings and dances, kermisses, brawling peasants and soldiers and plundering soldiers, which show his debt to the work of Pieter Bruegel the Elder.",
"As the artist only left few signed works, the attributions of works to him has been difficult and several attributions have been rejected in recent years.",
"Even the attributions by Dr. Klaus Ertz in his catalogue raisonné of Marten van Cleve's paintings and drawings published in 2014 have been questioned.",
"His oldest authenticated work is the Farm interior with important visitors (Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna), which was included in the 1659 inventory of Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria.",
"It is regarded as a youth work and shows the large kitchen of a farm.",
"A couple from the city are in the kitchen to visit their child which they have entrusted to a wet nurse.",
"The work, which is probably dated to around 1555–1560, shows the influence of Frans Floris in its fluid brush stroke.",
"The choice of subject matter was likely influenced by Pieter Aertsen's peasant scenes from the period 1550–1560.",
"Unlike Aertsen, van Cleve's treatment of space is more modern and his work is free of the influence of the Manierism of the Flemish Romanists who were inspired by contemporary Italian art.",
"The influence of Pieter Brueghel the Elder is not yet visible in this early work.",
"Van Cleve came under the influence of Pieter Bruegel the Elder's work in the 1560s.",
"It is a certain resemblance with the work of Bruegel (particularly in the numbers of figures depicted), which has led to the often unjustifiable categorization of van Cleve as a follower of Bruegel.",
"He was, however, never an imitator of that master.",
"He took from Bruegel certain subjects and peasant types but was not interested in following some of the reactionary aspects of Bruegel's work such as the return to Hieronymus Bosch's surrealism and Joachim Patinir's world landscapes.",
"On the whole van Cleve's scenes are descriptive rather than allegorical.",
"Van Cleve attempted to correct or modernize Bruegel by a higher level of interest in realism.",
"He also depicted his scenes from a lower viewpoint than Bruegel.",
"Another confirmed authentic work is the Slaughtered ox (Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna),which is monogrammed with 'M(v)G' in ligature and dated 1566.",
"It is quite similar to a work of a Slaughtered pig by Joachim Beukelaer.",
"While Beuckelaer's work is clearly a still life, van Cleve's composition is a genre work which emphasizes the anecdotal and genre aspects of the work.",
"Van Cleve's composition may also have an allegorical meaning.",
"A little boy sitting on the threshold of the door is blowing a bubble.",
"The bubble is in fact the bladder of the ox, at the time a children's toy.",
"It is possible that the bubble-blowing boy is a reference to the homo bulla motive, the idea that life is just a bubble that only lasts a very short time.",
"The dead ox itself is a reminder of death and is thus linked to the 'memento mori' idea, the notion that humans should remember that they are mortal.",
"Together with the Carnival in a village with beggars dancing dated 1579 (Hermitage Museum), the Slaughtered ox shows that van Cleve preferred a broad and free brushstroke.",
"In the Carnival in a village with beggars dancing van Cleve has also used various motifs from Pieter Bruegel the Elder's works.",
"Van Cleve developed a number of new themes such as the King Drinks, the original of which is probably the painting sold at Kunsthandel Abels, Cologne in 1965.",
"This theme invented by van Cleve became very popular in the next century.",
"His 'The good shepherd' was another original creation, which was widely imitated.",
"Many Flemish artists, and in particular Pieter Bruegel the Younger, were inspired by these subjects.",
"Marten van Cleve is believed to have been an important influence on the development of Pieter Brueghel the Younger's style, along the more widely recognised precedent of his father, Pieter Bruegel the Elder.",
"The peasant wedding was a favourite theme of Cleve.",
"He returned frequently to this subject depicting its various rituals and ceremonies, mostly in the form of cycles of small-scale panels.",
"His Wedding Procession was widely copied by his workshop as well as Pieter Bruegel the Younger.",
"Another popular theme of van Cleve was The Massacre of the Innocents and his version of this subject was copied even more frequently than the version of Pieter Bruegel the Elder.",
"The attribution to van Cleve and his workshop of the various versions of the Massacre of the Innocents has been questioned on stylistic grounds, in particular on the basis of the fact that the more painterly handling of paint that is ascribed to van Cleve is missing in this body of work.",
"Marten van Cleve collaborated with many prominent landscape painters, including Gillis van Coninxloo, Gillis Mostaert and Jacob Grimmer as well as his brother Hendrick for whom he painted the figures.",
"Hendrick reciprocated and added to Marten's figure-pieces landscape backgrounds.",
"To Marten van Cleve have been attributed a lot of designs for prints published by the Antwerp printers and publishers including Willem van Haecht.",
"It is believed that while apprenticed in the workshop of Frans Floris, Marten van Cleve assisted in the preparation of print designs after preliminary drawings made by Frans Floris.",
"An example is van Cleve's signed drawing of Arachne (c. 1574, Kupferstichkabinett Berlin) made after Floris' design.",
"This drawing was then used by Philip Galle as the basis for his engraving of Arachne or The textile industry.",
"In his prints, van Cleve remained closer to his master Floris's designs.",
"Prominent engravers such as the Wierix brothers, Hans Bol, Philip Fruytiers, Johann Sadeler, Balthazar van den Bos and Philip Galle engraved the prints after van Cleve's designs.",
"Notes\n\nExternal links\n\nFlemish Renaissance painters\nFlemish landscape painters\nFlemish genre painters\nArtists from Antwerp\nPainters from Antwerp"
] | [
"Between 1551 and 1581, Marten van Cleve the Elder was a Flemish painter and draftsman.",
"The genre scenes with peasants and landscapes that Van Cleve is known for have a resemblance to the work of the Elder.",
"One of the leading Flemish artists of his generation was Marten van Cleve.",
"His work influenced the work of other genre painters of his generation.",
"There are few details about the life of Marten van Cleve.",
"He was the son of a master in the guild of Saintluke in 1518.",
"Based on his own declaration in a document dated 2 April 1567 that he was 40 years of age, it is assumed he was born in 1526 or 1527.",
"Both of Marten's brothers were painters.",
"He studied under his father.",
"Frans Floris was the leading Flemish history painter in the mid 16th century.",
"There isn't any evidence for this apprenticeship.",
"The apprenticeship is plausible because of the similarities between van Cleve's early work and the engravings after his inventions.",
"The 16th century trend of Flemish painters to study in Italy was not followed by van Cleve.",
"This may explain why van Cleve's work doesn't show the influence of Italian Mannerism.",
"In 1551, Marten van Cleve became a master.",
"Maria de Greve was married to Marten van Cleve.",
"Four of the couple's sons became painters.",
"One of the five registered pupils became a master.",
"Hans Jordaens may have been one of his students.",
"An important workshop was operated by Marten van Cleve between 1560 and 1570.",
"Marten's original inventions were the majority of the works.",
"His own sons may have assisted in his studio.",
"A number of prominent landscape painters collaborated with Van Cleve.",
"Marten was suffering from gout and rheumatism when he died.",
"Marten van Cleve was a genre painter who 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110",
"Only a few of his works are signed.",
"He depicted mostly low-life scenes of peasant weddings and dances, kermisses, brawling peasants and soldiers, and plundering soldiers, which show his debt to the work of the Elder.",
"Attributions of works to the artist have been difficult as he only left a few signed works.",
"There are questions about the attributions by Dr. Klaus Ertz in his catalogue raisonné of Marten van Cleve's paintings and drawings.",
"The Farm interior with important visitors was included in the 1659 inventory of Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria.",
"The large kitchen of a farm is seen as a youth work.",
"A couple from the city are in the kitchen visiting their child with a wet nurse.",
"The work shows the influence of Frans Floris on its brush stroke.",
"The choice of subject matter may have been influenced by Aertsen's peasant scenes.",
"Aertsen's treatment of space was influenced by the Manierism of the Flemish Romanists who were inspired by contemporary Italian art.",
"The influence of the Elder is not visible in this work.",
"The influence of the Elder's work on Van Cleve was felt in the 1560s.",
"It is a certain resemblance with the work of Bruegel, which has led to the often unjustifiable categorization of van Cleve as a follower of Bruegel.",
"He was never an imitator of that master.",
"He didn't follow any of the reactionary aspects of Bruegel's work such as the return to Hieronymus Bosch's surrealism or the world landscapes of Patinir.",
"The scenes on the whole are descriptive.",
"Van Cleve had a higher level of interest in realism.",
"He depicted his scenes from a different perspective.",
"The Slaughtered ox (Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna) is a confirmed authentic work.",
"It is similar to a Slaughtered pig by Beukelaer.",
"While Beuckelaer's work is clearly a still life, van Cleve's composition is a genre work which emphasizes the anecdotal and genre aspects of the work.",
"The composition may have a meaning.",
"A little boy is blowing a bubble while sitting on the threshold.",
"The ox's bladder is where the bubble is located.",
"It is possible that the bubble-blowing boy is a reference to the idea that life is just a bubble that only lasts a short time.",
"The idea that humans should remember that they are mortal is linked to the dead ox.",
"The Slaughtered ox shows that van Cleve preferred a broad and free brushstroke.",
"In the Carnival in a village with beggars dancing van Cleve has used various motifs from the Elder's works.",
"The original painting of the King Drinks is thought to have been sold in Cologne in 1965.",
"In the next century, this theme became very popular.",
"The good shepherd was an original creation that was widely imitated.",
"Many Flemish artists were inspired by these subjects.",
"The precedent of his father's style is believed to have influenced the development of the Younger's style.",
"The wedding of peasants was a popular theme.",
"He returned frequently to this subject to show its various rituals and ceremonies, mostly in the form of small-scale panels.",
"His Wedding Procession was copied by many people.",
"The Massacre of the Innocents was one of the most popular themes of van Cleve and his version was copied more often than the version of the Elder.",
"The style of the paint used in the various versions of the Massacre of the Innocents has been questioned on the basis of the fact that it is not the same as that used by van Cleve.",
"Marten van Cleve collaborated with many prominent landscape painters, including his brother Hendrick, who painted the figures.",
"Marten's figure-pieces landscape background was added to by Hendrick.",
"A lot of designs for prints published by the Antwerp printers and publishers have been attributed to Marten van Cleve.",
"After preliminary drawings were made by Frans Floris, Marten van Cleve assisted in the preparation of print designs.",
"The signed drawing of Arachne is an example.",
"Philip Galle used this drawing as the basis for his engraving of Arachne.",
"His prints were closer to his master's designs.",
"The prints were engraved by prominent engravers such as Hans Bol and Philip Fruytiers.",
"There are links between Flemish Renaissance painters and Flemish genre painters."
] | <mask> (Antwerp, c. 1527 – Antwerp, before 24 November 1581) was a Flemish painter and draftsman active in Antwerp between 1551 and 1581. Van Cleve is mainly known for his genre scenes with peasants and landscapes, which show a certain resemblance with the work of Pieter Bruegel the Elder. <mask> was one of the leading Flemish artists of his generation. His subjects and compositions were an important influence on the work of Pieter Brueghel the Younger and other genre painters of his generation. Life
Details about the life of <mask> are scarce. He was born in Antwerp as the son of <mask> the Elder who had become a master in the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke in 1518. Based on his own declaration in a document dated 2 April 1567 that he was then 40 years of age, it is assumed <mask> was born in 1526 or 1527.<mask>'s elder brother Hendrick <mask> III and his younger brother <mask> <mask> the Younger were both painters. <mask> <mask> first studied under his father. According to the early Flemish biographer Karel <mask> <mask> <mask>e studied under Frans Floris, the leading Flemish history painter in the mid 16th century. There is no evidence for this apprenticeship. Some stylistic similarities with Frans Floris' works that appear in <mask>'s early work and the engravings after his inventions make the apprenticeship plausible. Van Mander also stated that <mask> did not follow the 16th century trend of Flemish painters to study in Italy. This may explain why <mask>'s work does not show the influence of Italian Mannerism with its unrealistic deformations.<mask> <mask> became a master in the Antwerp Guild of Saint Luke in 1551. <mask> <mask> married Maria de Greve on 7 January 1556. The couple had four sons named Gillis, <mask> (called '<mask> the Younger), Joris and Nicolaas who all became painters. <mask> <mask>e had five registered pupils, one of whom became a master. One of his pupils may have been Hans Jordaens. Between 1560 and 1570 <mask> <mask>e operated an important workshop with a large output. The majority of the works were copies of Marten's original inventions.It is probable that his own sons also assisted in his studio. Van Cleve was a regular collaborator with a number of prominent landscape painters. <mask> <mask> <mask> died in 1581, at which time he was suffering from gout and rheumatism. Work
<mask> <mask> was principally a genre painter, who specialized in peasant scenes and landscapes. Only about five of his works are signed and properly documented. He depicted predominantly low-life scenes of peasant weddings and dances, kermisses, brawling peasants and soldiers and plundering soldiers, which show his debt to the work of Pieter Bruegel the Elder. As the artist only left few signed works, the attributions of works to him has been difficult and several attributions have been rejected in recent years.Even the attributions by Dr. Klaus Ertz in his catalogue raisonné of <mask> <mask>'s paintings and drawings published in 2014 have been questioned. His oldest authenticated work is the Farm interior with important visitors (Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna), which was included in the 1659 inventory of Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria. It is regarded as a youth work and shows the large kitchen of a farm. A couple from the city are in the kitchen to visit their child which they have entrusted to a wet nurse. The work, which is probably dated to around 1555–1560, shows the influence of Frans Floris in its fluid brush stroke. The choice of subject matter was likely influenced by Pieter Aertsen's peasant scenes from the period 1550–1560. Unlike Aertsen, <mask>'s treatment of space is more modern and his work is free of the influence of the Manierism of the Flemish Romanists who were inspired by contemporary Italian art.The influence of Pieter Brueghel the Elder is not yet visible in this early work. Van Cleve came under the influence of Pieter Bruegel the Elder's work in the 1560s. It is a certain resemblance with the work of Bruegel (particularly in the numbers of figures depicted), which has led to the often unjustifiable categorization of <mask>e as a follower of Bruegel. He was, however, never an imitator of that master. He took from Bruegel certain subjects and peasant types but was not interested in following some of the reactionary aspects of Bruegel's work such as the return to Hieronymus Bosch's surrealism and Joachim Patinir's world landscapes. On the whole <mask>e's scenes are descriptive rather than allegorical. Van Cleve attempted to correct or modernize Bruegel by a higher level of interest in realism.He also depicted his scenes from a lower viewpoint than Bruegel. Another confirmed authentic work is the Slaughtered ox (Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna),which is monogrammed with 'M(v)G' in ligature and dated 1566. It is quite similar to a work of a Slaughtered pig by Joachim Beukelaer. While Beuckelaer's work is clearly a still life, <mask>'s composition is a genre work which emphasizes the anecdotal and genre aspects of the work. <mask>'s composition may also have an allegorical meaning. A little boy sitting on the threshold of the door is blowing a bubble. The bubble is in fact the bladder of the ox, at the time a children's toy.It is possible that the bubble-blowing boy is a reference to the homo bulla motive, the idea that life is just a bubble that only lasts a very short time. The dead ox itself is a reminder of death and is thus linked to the 'memento mori' idea, the notion that humans should remember that they are mortal. Together with the Carnival in a village with beggars dancing dated 1579 (Hermitage Museum), the Slaughtered ox shows that <mask>e preferred a broad and free brushstroke. In the Carnival in a village with beggars dancing <mask>e has also used various motifs from Pieter Bruegel the Elder's works. Van Cleve developed a number of new themes such as the King Drinks, the original of which is probably the painting sold at Kunsthandel Abels, Cologne in 1965. This theme invented by <mask>e became very popular in the next century. His 'The good shepherd' was another original creation, which was widely imitated.Many Flemish artists, and in particular Pieter Bruegel the Younger, were inspired by these subjects. <mask> <mask> is believed to have been an important influence on the development of Pieter Brueghel the Younger's style, along the more widely recognised precedent of his father, Pieter Bruegel the Elder. The peasant wedding was a favourite theme of Cleve. He returned frequently to this subject depicting its various rituals and ceremonies, mostly in the form of cycles of small-scale panels. His Wedding Procession was widely copied by his workshop as well as Pieter Bruegel the Younger. Another popular theme of <mask>e was The Massacre of the Innocents and his version of this subject was copied even more frequently than the version of Pieter Bruegel the Elder. The attribution to <mask>e and his workshop of the various versions of the Massacre of the Innocents has been questioned on stylistic grounds, in particular on the basis of the fact that the more painterly handling of paint that is ascribed to <mask>e is missing in this body of work.<mask> <mask> collaborated with many prominent landscape painters, including Gillis <mask>, Gillis Mostaert and Jacob Grimmer as well as his brother Hendrick for whom he painted the figures. Hendrick reciprocated and added to Marten's figure-pieces landscape backgrounds. To <mask> <mask>e have been attributed a lot of designs for prints published by the Antwerp printers and publishers including <mask> Haecht. It is believed that while apprenticed in the workshop of Frans Floris, <mask> <mask> assisted in the preparation of print designs after preliminary drawings made by Frans Floris. An example is <mask>'s signed drawing of Arachne (c. 1574, Kupferstichkabinett Berlin) made after Floris' design. This drawing was then used by Philip Galle as the basis for his engraving of Arachne or The textile industry. In his prints, <mask>e remained closer to his master Floris's designs.Prominent engravers such as the Wierix brothers, Hans Bol, Philip Fruytiers, Johann Sadeler, Balthazar <mask> Bos and Philip Galle engraved the prints after <mask>'s designs. Notes
External links
Flemish Renaissance painters
Flemish landscape painters
Flemish genre painters
Artists from Antwerp
Painters from Antwerp | [
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] | Between 1551 and 1581, <mask> the Elder was a Flemish painter and draftsman. The genre scenes with peasants and landscapes that Van Cleve is known for have a resemblance to the work of the Elder. One of the leading Flemish artists of his generation was <mask>. His work influenced the work of other genre painters of his generation. There are few details about the life of <mask>. He was the son of a master in the guild of Saintluke in 1518. Based on his own declaration in a document dated 2 April 1567 that he was 40 years of age, it is assumed he was born in 1526 or 1527.Both of <mask>'s brothers were painters. He studied under his father. Frans Floris was the leading Flemish history painter in the mid 16th century. There isn't any evidence for this apprenticeship. The apprenticeship is plausible because of the similarities between <mask>e's early work and the engravings after his inventions. The 16th century trend of Flemish painters to study in Italy was not followed by <mask>e. This may explain why <mask>'s work doesn't show the influence of Italian Mannerism.In 1551, <mask> <mask> became a master. Maria de Greve was married to <mask> <mask>. Four of the couple's sons became painters. One of the five registered pupils became a master. Hans Jordaens may have been one of his students. An important workshop was operated by <mask> <mask>e between 1560 and 1570. <mask>'s original inventions were the majority of the works.His own sons may have assisted in his studio. A number of prominent landscape painters collaborated with Van Cleve. <mask> was suffering from gout and rheumatism when he died. <mask> <mask>e was a genre painter who 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 Only a few of his works are signed. He depicted mostly low-life scenes of peasant weddings and dances, kermisses, brawling peasants and soldiers, and plundering soldiers, which show his debt to the work of the Elder. Attributions of works to the artist have been difficult as he only left a few signed works.There are questions about the attributions by Dr. Klaus Ertz in his catalogue raisonné of <mask> <mask>'s paintings and drawings. The Farm interior with important visitors was included in the 1659 inventory of Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria. The large kitchen of a farm is seen as a youth work. A couple from the city are in the kitchen visiting their child with a wet nurse. The work shows the influence of Frans Floris on its brush stroke. The choice of subject matter may have been influenced by Aertsen's peasant scenes. Aertsen's treatment of space was influenced by the Manierism of the Flemish Romanists who were inspired by contemporary Italian art.The influence of the Elder is not visible in this work. The influence of the Elder's work on Van Cleve was felt in the 1560s. It is a certain resemblance with the work of Bruegel, which has led to the often unjustifiable categorization of <mask>e as a follower of Bruegel. He was never an imitator of that master. He didn't follow any of the reactionary aspects of Bruegel's work such as the return to Hieronymus Bosch's surrealism or the world landscapes of Patinir. The scenes on the whole are descriptive. Van Cleve had a higher level of interest in realism.He depicted his scenes from a different perspective. The Slaughtered ox (Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna) is a confirmed authentic work. It is similar to a Slaughtered pig by Beukelaer. While Beuckelaer's work is clearly a still life, <mask>'s composition is a genre work which emphasizes the anecdotal and genre aspects of the work. The composition may have a meaning. A little boy is blowing a bubble while sitting on the threshold. The ox's bladder is where the bubble is located.It is possible that the bubble-blowing boy is a reference to the idea that life is just a bubble that only lasts a short time. The idea that humans should remember that they are mortal is linked to the dead ox. The Slaughtered ox shows that <mask>e preferred a broad and free brushstroke. In the Carnival in a village with beggars dancing <mask>e has used various motifs from the Elder's works. The original painting of the King Drinks is thought to have been sold in Cologne in 1965. In the next century, this theme became very popular. The good shepherd was an original creation that was widely imitated.Many Flemish artists were inspired by these subjects. The precedent of his father's style is believed to have influenced the development of the Younger's style. The wedding of peasants was a popular theme. He returned frequently to this subject to show its various rituals and ceremonies, mostly in the form of small-scale panels. His Wedding Procession was copied by many people. The Massacre of the Innocents was one of the most popular themes of <mask>e and his version was copied more often than the version of the Elder. The style of the paint used in the various versions of the Massacre of the Innocents has been questioned on the basis of the fact that it is not the same as that used by <mask>leve.<mask> <mask> collaborated with many prominent landscape painters, including his brother Hendrick, who painted the figures. <mask>'s figure-pieces landscape background was added to by Hendrick. A lot of designs for prints published by the Antwerp printers and publishers have been attributed to <mask> <mask>. After preliminary drawings were made by Frans Floris, <mask> <mask> assisted in the preparation of print designs. The signed drawing of Arachne is an example. Philip Galle used this drawing as the basis for his engraving of Arachne. 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348462 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erik%20Nielsen | Erik Nielsen | Erik Hersholt Nielsen (February 24, 1924 – September 4, 2008) was a Canadian lawyer and politician. He served as the longtime Progressive Conservative Member of Parliament for Yukon, and was Leader of the Opposition and the third deputy prime minister. He was the elder brother of actor Leslie Nielsen.
Early life, family, and education
Nielsen was born in Regina, Saskatchewan, the eldest of three boys. His mother, Mabel Elizabeth (née Davies), was an immigrant from Wales, and his father, Ingvard Eversen Nielsen (1900-1975), was a Danish-born constable in the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Nielsen's family lived mainly in Alberta during his formative years, and he graduated from high school in Edmonton in 1942.
World War II
Nielsen joined the Royal Canadian Air Force in 1942, just after graduation, and received his training mainly in Alberta. He flew 33 missions in No. 101 Squadron RAF in World War II, and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross (United Kingdom) for "courage and devotion to duty,". He earned the rank of lieutenant. He rejoined the RCAF, 1946–51, as a legal officer, while earning a law degree at Dalhousie. He established his law practice in Whitehorse, Yukon.
Parliament
Nielsen was elected to parliament in late 1957 (Nielsen lost in the 1957 federal election, but the result was controverted and Nielsen won the resulting byelection) and remained an MP without interruption for 30 years. He was a backbench MP during the Diefenbaker government but became prominent during the Conservative Party's long period in Opposition during the 1960s and 1970s joining the shadow cabinet in 1964. In 1978, he ran for the leadership of the newly formed Yukon Progressive Conservative Party as it prepared for the territory's first partisan elections but was defeated by Hilda Watson by one vote.
With the 1979 federal election, the Tories formed government for the first time in over 15 years and Nielsen was appointed Minister of Public Works in the short-lived minority government of Prime Minister Joe Clark. After the Tories were defeated in the 1980 election, he served as Opposition House Leader from 1981 until 1983, and engineered the "Bell Ringing Affair" to protest the Liberal government's omnibus energy bill. The business of the House of Commons of Canada ground to a halt for three weeks because the Opposition refused to respond to the bell summoning Members of Parliament to come to the chamber to vote.
Nielsen served as Leader of the Opposition in 1983 between the resignation of Joe Clark and the election of Brian Mulroney as PC leader, and continued to lead the party in the House until Mulroney won a seat in a by-election, at which point Nielsen returned to his previous position as House Leader.
When Mulroney became prime minister, he made Nielsen his deputy prime minister from 1984 to 1986, and President of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada from 1984 to 1985. Nielsen was effectively the senior Government House Leader in all but name. He also served as Minister of National Defence from 1985 to 1986.
Nielsen has been called "Yukon Erik", (a reference to wrestler Yukon Eric of the 1950s) but he has also been called "Velcro lips" for a tight-lipped reticence during his time in office. The tenaciousness and aggressiveness that made Nielsen a successful Opposition MP made him a liability as a Cabinet minister as he gave the impression of being secretive and disdainful of criticism by the Opposition and the media. His habit of stonewalling questions had the effect of prolonging the shelf life of political scandals in Parliament, and thus hurt the government's reputation. This became most apparent during the Sinclair Stevens conflict-of-interest scandal, in which Mulroney was out of Parliament for two weeks while the opposition barraged Nielsen with questions. Shortly after Mulroney returned in June 1986, he forced both Nielsen and Stevens to resign from cabinet.
Years afterward, future Deputy Prime Minister Sheila Copps would remark that the sacking of Nielsen made Mulroney "look decisive", when pointing out the importance of a deputy prime minister in protecting the prime minister from political damage during question period.
Nielsen resigned his seat in Parliament in January 1987 when he was given the position of chairman of the National Transportation Agency. He withdrew from the public service in 1992 to become president of Solar Engineering, Hawaii Inc. and Solar Electric Engineering Distributors Canada.
One of Nielsen's brothers was actor Leslie Nielsen. The relationship formed the premise of an HBO mockumentary titled The Canadian Conspiracy, comically alleging a Canadian subversion of the United States through its media. Nielsen was also a nephew of actor Jean Hersholt.
Nielsen wrote a memoir, The House Is Not a Home (1989, ), noted for its bracing directness both about his colleagues and about his own personal life.
He died at his home in Kelowna, British Columbia on September 4, 2008, from a massive heart attack. On December 15, the government of Yukon renamed the main airport at Whitehorse, the capital of the territory, to Erik Nielsen Whitehorse International Airport in Nielsen's memory.
References
External links
Leslie and Erik Nielsen laugh it up (audio) 1991 Peter Gzowski interview with Leslie and Erik Nielsen
1924 births
2008 deaths
Deputy Prime Ministers of Canada
Dalhousie University alumni
Defence ministers of Canada
Members of the 21st Canadian Ministry
Members of the 24th Canadian Ministry
Members of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada
Leaders of the Opposition (Canada)
Progressive Conservative Party of Canada MPs
Members of the House of Commons of Canada from Yukon
Canadian Anglicans
Canadian lawyers
Canadian Queen's Counsel
Canadian people of Danish descent
Canadian people of Welsh descent
Politicians from Regina, Saskatchewan
Canadian memoirists
Recipients of the Distinguished Flying Cross (United Kingdom)
Writers from Regina, Saskatchewan
Writers from Yukon
Royal Canadian Air Force personnel of World War II
Royal Canadian Air Force officers
20th-century lawyers
20th-century memoirists | [
"Erik Hersholt Nielsen (February 24, 1924 – September 4, 2008) was a Canadian lawyer and politician.",
"He served as the longtime Progressive Conservative Member of Parliament for Yukon, and was Leader of the Opposition and the third deputy prime minister.",
"He was the elder brother of actor Leslie Nielsen.",
"Early life, family, and education\nNielsen was born in Regina, Saskatchewan, the eldest of three boys.",
"His mother, Mabel Elizabeth (née Davies), was an immigrant from Wales, and his father, Ingvard Eversen Nielsen (1900-1975), was a Danish-born constable in the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.",
"Nielsen's family lived mainly in Alberta during his formative years, and he graduated from high school in Edmonton in 1942.",
"World War II\nNielsen joined the Royal Canadian Air Force in 1942, just after graduation, and received his training mainly in Alberta.",
"He flew 33 missions in No.",
"101 Squadron RAF in World War II, and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross (United Kingdom) for \"courage and devotion to duty,\".",
"He earned the rank of lieutenant.",
"He rejoined the RCAF, 1946–51, as a legal officer, while earning a law degree at Dalhousie.",
"He established his law practice in Whitehorse, Yukon.",
"Parliament\nNielsen was elected to parliament in late 1957 (Nielsen lost in the 1957 federal election, but the result was controverted and Nielsen won the resulting byelection) and remained an MP without interruption for 30 years.",
"He was a backbench MP during the Diefenbaker government but became prominent during the Conservative Party's long period in Opposition during the 1960s and 1970s joining the shadow cabinet in 1964.",
"In 1978, he ran for the leadership of the newly formed Yukon Progressive Conservative Party as it prepared for the territory's first partisan elections but was defeated by Hilda Watson by one vote.",
"With the 1979 federal election, the Tories formed government for the first time in over 15 years and Nielsen was appointed Minister of Public Works in the short-lived minority government of Prime Minister Joe Clark.",
"After the Tories were defeated in the 1980 election, he served as Opposition House Leader from 1981 until 1983, and engineered the \"Bell Ringing Affair\" to protest the Liberal government's omnibus energy bill.",
"The business of the House of Commons of Canada ground to a halt for three weeks because the Opposition refused to respond to the bell summoning Members of Parliament to come to the chamber to vote.",
"Nielsen served as Leader of the Opposition in 1983 between the resignation of Joe Clark and the election of Brian Mulroney as PC leader, and continued to lead the party in the House until Mulroney won a seat in a by-election, at which point Nielsen returned to his previous position as House Leader.",
"When Mulroney became prime minister, he made Nielsen his deputy prime minister from 1984 to 1986, and President of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada from 1984 to 1985.",
"Nielsen was effectively the senior Government House Leader in all but name.",
"He also served as Minister of National Defence from 1985 to 1986.",
"Nielsen has been called \"Yukon Erik\", (a reference to wrestler Yukon Eric of the 1950s) but he has also been called \"Velcro lips\" for a tight-lipped reticence during his time in office.",
"The tenaciousness and aggressiveness that made Nielsen a successful Opposition MP made him a liability as a Cabinet minister as he gave the impression of being secretive and disdainful of criticism by the Opposition and the media.",
"His habit of stonewalling questions had the effect of prolonging the shelf life of political scandals in Parliament, and thus hurt the government's reputation.",
"This became most apparent during the Sinclair Stevens conflict-of-interest scandal, in which Mulroney was out of Parliament for two weeks while the opposition barraged Nielsen with questions.",
"Shortly after Mulroney returned in June 1986, he forced both Nielsen and Stevens to resign from cabinet.",
"Years afterward, future Deputy Prime Minister Sheila Copps would remark that the sacking of Nielsen made Mulroney \"look decisive\", when pointing out the importance of a deputy prime minister in protecting the prime minister from political damage during question period.",
"Nielsen resigned his seat in Parliament in January 1987 when he was given the position of chairman of the National Transportation Agency.",
"He withdrew from the public service in 1992 to become president of Solar Engineering, Hawaii Inc. and Solar Electric Engineering Distributors Canada.",
"One of Nielsen's brothers was actor Leslie Nielsen.",
"The relationship formed the premise of an HBO mockumentary titled The Canadian Conspiracy, comically alleging a Canadian subversion of the United States through its media.",
"Nielsen was also a nephew of actor Jean Hersholt.",
"Nielsen wrote a memoir, The House Is Not a Home (1989, ), noted for its bracing directness both about his colleagues and about his own personal life.",
"He died at his home in Kelowna, British Columbia on September 4, 2008, from a massive heart attack.",
"On December 15, the government of Yukon renamed the main airport at Whitehorse, the capital of the territory, to Erik Nielsen Whitehorse International Airport in Nielsen's memory.",
"References\n\nExternal links\n \n Leslie and Erik Nielsen laugh it up (audio) 1991 Peter Gzowski interview with Leslie and Erik Nielsen\n\n1924 births\n2008 deaths\nDeputy Prime Ministers of Canada\nDalhousie University alumni\nDefence ministers of Canada\nMembers of the 21st Canadian Ministry\nMembers of the 24th Canadian Ministry\nMembers of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada\nLeaders of the Opposition (Canada)\nProgressive Conservative Party of Canada MPs\nMembers of the House of Commons of Canada from Yukon\nCanadian Anglicans\nCanadian lawyers\nCanadian Queen's Counsel\nCanadian people of Danish descent\nCanadian people of Welsh descent\nPoliticians from Regina, Saskatchewan\nCanadian memoirists\nRecipients of the Distinguished Flying Cross (United Kingdom)\nWriters from Regina, Saskatchewan\nWriters from Yukon\nRoyal Canadian Air Force personnel of World War II\nRoyal Canadian Air Force officers\n20th-century lawyers\n20th-century memoirists"
] | [
"He was a Canadian lawyer and politician.",
"He was the leader of the opposition and the third deputy prime minister.",
"He was the brother of an actor.",
"Early life, family, and education were all taken up by the eldest of three boys.",
"His mother and father were both in the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.",
"During his formative years, his family lived in Canada and he graduated from high school in 1942.",
"He joined the Royal Canadian Air Force in 1942 after graduating from college.",
"He flew 33 missions.",
"In World War II, 101 Squadron RAF was awarded theDistinguished Flying Cross for their \"courage and devotion to duty\".",
"He was given the rank of lieutenant.",
"He returned to the RCAF as a legal officer after earning a law degree.",
"He started his law practice in Whitehorse.",
"After losing in the 1957 federal election, Nielsen was elected to parliament in 1957 and remained an mp without interruption for 30 years.",
"During the Conservative Party's long period in opposition in the 1960s and 1970s, he became a prominent member of the shadow cabinet.",
"He ran for the leadership of the newly formed Whitehorse Progressive Conservative Party in 1978 but was defeated by a single vote.",
"With the 1979 federal election, the Conservatives formed government for the first time in over 15 years, and the Minister of Public Works was appointed by Prime Minister Joe Clark.",
"After the Conservatives were defeated in the 1980 election, he was the leader of the opposition and engineered the \"Bell Ringing Affair\" to protest the Liberal government's omnibus energy bill.",
"The business of the House of Commons of Canada was halted for three weeks because of the opposition's refusal to vote.",
"After the resignation of Joe Clark in 1983 and the election of Brian Mulroney as PC leader, the leader of the opposition in the house was returned to his previous position.",
"The President of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada was made by Mulroney when he became prime minister.",
"He was the senior Government House Leader.",
"He was the Minister of National Defence from 1985 to 1986.",
"He has been referred to as \"Yukon Eric\", a reference to a wrestler from the 1950s, but he has also been referred to as \"Velcro lips\" for a tight-lipped reticence during his time in office.",
"He gave the impression of being secretive and disdainful of criticism as a Cabinet minister because of his tenaciousness and aggressiveness.",
"The government's reputation was hurt by his habit of stonewalling questions.",
"During the conflict-of-interest scandal, Mulroney was out of Parliament for two weeks while the opposition grilled him.",
"After Mulroney came back in June 1986, he forced both Stevens and Nielsen to resign from the cabinet.",
"When pointing out the importance of a deputy prime minister in protecting the prime minister from political damage during question period, the future deputy prime minister remarked that the removal of Nielsen made Mulroney look decisive.",
"In January 1987 he resigned from Parliament to become the chairman of the National Transportation Agency.",
"In 1992 he left the public service to become president of Solar Engineering, Hawaii Inc.",
"One of the brothers was an actor.",
"The Canadian Conspiracy is a comedy about a Canadian subversion of the United States through its media.",
"Jean Hersholt is a nephew of the man who was also a nephew of SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA",
"The House Is Not a Home is noted for its bracing directness both about his colleagues and his own personal life.",
"He died of a massive heart attack at his home in British Columbia.",
"The main airport in Whitehorse, the capital of the territory, was renamed in the memory of the man.",
"In 1991 Peter Gzowski had an interview with the deputy prime minister of Canada and his wife."
] | <mask> (February 24, 1924 – September 4, 2008) was a Canadian lawyer and politician. He served as the longtime Progressive Conservative Member of Parliament for Yukon, and was Leader of the Opposition and the third deputy prime minister. He was the elder brother of actor <mask>. Early life, family, and education
<mask> was born in Regina, Saskatchewan, the eldest of three boys. His mother, Mabel Elizabeth (née Davies), was an immigrant from Wales, and his father, <mask> (1900-1975), was a Danish-born constable in the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. <mask>'s family lived mainly in Alberta during his formative years, and he graduated from high school in Edmonton in 1942. World War II
<mask> joined the Royal Canadian Air Force in 1942, just after graduation, and received his training mainly in Alberta.He flew 33 missions in No. 101 Squadron RAF in World War II, and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross (United Kingdom) for "courage and devotion to duty,". He earned the rank of lieutenant. He rejoined the RCAF, 1946–51, as a legal officer, while earning a law degree at Dalhousie. He established his law practice in Whitehorse, Yukon. Parliament
<mask> was elected to parliament in late 1957 (<mask> lost in the 1957 federal election, but the result was controverted and <mask> won the resulting byelection) and remained an MP without interruption for 30 years. He was a backbench MP during the Diefenbaker government but became prominent during the Conservative Party's long period in Opposition during the 1960s and 1970s joining the shadow cabinet in 1964.In 1978, he ran for the leadership of the newly formed Yukon Progressive Conservative Party as it prepared for the territory's first partisan elections but was defeated by Hilda Watson by one vote. With the 1979 federal election, the Tories formed government for the first time in over 15 years and <mask> was appointed Minister of Public Works in the short-lived minority government of Prime Minister Joe Clark. After the Tories were defeated in the 1980 election, he served as Opposition House Leader from 1981 until 1983, and engineered the "Bell Ringing Affair" to protest the Liberal government's omnibus energy bill. The business of the House of Commons of Canada ground to a halt for three weeks because the Opposition refused to respond to the bell summoning Members of Parliament to come to the chamber to vote. <mask> served as Leader of the Opposition in 1983 between the resignation of Joe Clark and the election of Brian Mulroney as PC leader, and continued to lead the party in the House until Mulroney won a seat in a by-election, at which point <mask> returned to his previous position as House Leader. When Mulroney became prime minister, he made <mask> his deputy prime minister from 1984 to 1986, and President of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada from 1984 to 1985. <mask> was effectively the senior Government House Leader in all but name.He also served as Minister of National Defence from 1985 to 1986. <mask> has been called "Yukon Erik", (a reference to wrestler Yukon Eric of the 1950s) but he has also been called "Velcro lips" for a tight-lipped reticence during his time in office. The tenaciousness and aggressiveness that made <mask> a successful Opposition MP made him a liability as a Cabinet minister as he gave the impression of being secretive and disdainful of criticism by the Opposition and the media. His habit of stonewalling questions had the effect of prolonging the shelf life of political scandals in Parliament, and thus hurt the government's reputation. This became most apparent during the Sinclair Stevens conflict-of-interest scandal, in which Mulroney was out of Parliament for two weeks while the opposition barraged <mask> with questions. Shortly after Mulroney returned in June 1986, he forced both <mask> and Stevens to resign from cabinet. Years afterward, future Deputy Prime Minister Sheila Copps would remark that the sacking of <mask> made Mulroney "look decisive", when pointing out the importance of a deputy prime minister in protecting the prime minister from political damage during question period.<mask> resigned his seat in Parliament in January 1987 when he was given the position of chairman of the National Transportation Agency. He withdrew from the public service in 1992 to become president of Solar Engineering, Hawaii Inc. and Solar Electric Engineering Distributors Canada. One of <mask>'s brothers was actor <mask>. The relationship formed the premise of an HBO mockumentary titled The Canadian Conspiracy, comically alleging a Canadian subversion of the United States through its media. <mask> was also a nephew of actor Jean Hersholt. <mask> wrote a memoir, The House Is Not a Home (1989, ), noted for its bracing directness both about his colleagues and about his own personal life. He died at his home in Kelowna, British Columbia on September 4, 2008, from a massive heart attack.On December 15, the government of Yukon renamed the main airport at Whitehorse, the capital of the territory, to <mask> Whitehorse International Airport in <mask>'s memory. References
External links
Leslie and <mask> laugh it up (audio) 1991 Peter Gzowski interview with Leslie and <mask>
1924 births
2008 deaths
Deputy Prime Ministers of Canada
Dalhousie University alumni
Defence ministers of Canada
Members of the 21st Canadian Ministry
Members of the 24th Canadian Ministry
Members of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada
Leaders of the Opposition (Canada)
Progressive Conservative Party of Canada MPs
Members of the House of Commons of Canada from Yukon
Canadian Anglicans
Canadian lawyers
Canadian Queen's Counsel
Canadian people of Danish descent
Canadian people of Welsh descent
Politicians from Regina, Saskatchewan
Canadian memoirists
Recipients of the Distinguished Flying Cross (United Kingdom)
Writers from Regina, Saskatchewan
Writers from Yukon
Royal Canadian Air Force personnel of World War II
Royal Canadian Air Force officers
20th-century lawyers
20th-century memoirists | [
"Erik Hersholt Nielsen",
"Leslie Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Ingvard Eversen Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Leslie Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Erik Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Erik Nielsen",
"Erik Nielsen"
] | He was a Canadian lawyer and politician. He was the leader of the opposition and the third deputy prime minister. He was the brother of an actor. Early life, family, and education were all taken up by the eldest of three boys. His mother and father were both in the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. During his formative years, his family lived in Canada and he graduated from high school in 1942. He joined the Royal Canadian Air Force in 1942 after graduating from college.He flew 33 missions. In World War II, 101 Squadron RAF was awarded theDistinguished Flying Cross for their "courage and devotion to duty". He was given the rank of lieutenant. He returned to the RCAF as a legal officer after earning a law degree. He started his law practice in Whitehorse. After losing in the 1957 federal election, <mask> was elected to parliament in 1957 and remained an mp without interruption for 30 years. During the Conservative Party's long period in opposition in the 1960s and 1970s, he became a prominent member of the shadow cabinet.He ran for the leadership of the newly formed Whitehorse Progressive Conservative Party in 1978 but was defeated by a single vote. With the 1979 federal election, the Conservatives formed government for the first time in over 15 years, and the Minister of Public Works was appointed by Prime Minister Joe Clark. After the Conservatives were defeated in the 1980 election, he was the leader of the opposition and engineered the "Bell Ringing Affair" to protest the Liberal government's omnibus energy bill. The business of the House of Commons of Canada was halted for three weeks because of the opposition's refusal to vote. After the resignation of Joe Clark in 1983 and the election of Brian Mulroney as PC leader, the leader of the opposition in the house was returned to his previous position. The President of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada was made by Mulroney when he became prime minister. He was the senior Government House Leader.He was the Minister of National Defence from 1985 to 1986. He has been referred to as "Yukon Eric", a reference to a wrestler from the 1950s, but he has also been referred to as "Velcro lips" for a tight-lipped reticence during his time in office. He gave the impression of being secretive and disdainful of criticism as a Cabinet minister because of his tenaciousness and aggressiveness. The government's reputation was hurt by his habit of stonewalling questions. During the conflict-of-interest scandal, Mulroney was out of Parliament for two weeks while the opposition grilled him. After Mulroney came back in June 1986, he forced both Stevens and <mask> to resign from the cabinet. When pointing out the importance of a deputy prime minister in protecting the prime minister from political damage during question period, the future deputy prime minister remarked that the removal of <mask> made Mulroney look decisive.In January 1987 he resigned from Parliament to become the chairman of the National Transportation Agency. In 1992 he left the public service to become president of Solar Engineering, Hawaii Inc. One of the brothers was an actor. The Canadian Conspiracy is a comedy about a Canadian subversion of the United States through its media. Jean Hersholt is a nephew of the man who was also a nephew of SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA SALVAGEDATA The House Is Not a Home is noted for its bracing directness both about his colleagues and his own personal life. He died of a massive heart attack at his home in British Columbia.The main airport in Whitehorse, the capital of the territory, was renamed in the memory of the man. In 1991 Peter Gzowski had an interview with the deputy prime minister of Canada and his wife. | [
"Nielsen",
"Nielsen",
"Nielsen"
] |
18183581 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parry%20Moon | Parry Moon | Parry Hiram Moon (; February 14, 1898 – March 4, 1988) was an American electrical engineer who, with Domina Eberle Spencer, co-wrote eight scientific books and over 200 papers on subjects including electromagnetic field theory, color harmony, nutrition, aesthetic measure and advanced mathematics. He also developed a theory of holors.
Biography
Moon was born in Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, to Ossian C. and Eleanor F. (Parry) Moon. He received a BSEE from University of Wisconsin in 1922 and an MSEE from MIT in 1924. Unfulfilled with his work in transformer design at Westinghouse, Moon obtained a position as research assistant at MIT under Vannevar Bush. He was hospitalized for six months after sustaining injuries from experimental work in the laboratory. He later continued his teaching and research as an associate professor in MIT's Electrical Engineering Department. He married Harriet Tiffany, with whom he had a son. In 1961, after the death of his first wife, he married his co-author, collaborator and former student, Domina Eberle Spencer, a professor of mathematics. They had one son. Moon retired from full-time teaching in the 1960s, but continued his research until his death in 1988.
Scientific contributions
Moon’s early career focused in optics applications for engineers. Collaborating with Spencer, he began researching electromagnetism and Amperian forces. The quantity of papers that followed culminated in Foundations of Electrodynamics, unique for its physical insights, and two field theory books, which became standard references for many years. Much later, Moon and Spencer unified the approach to collections of data (vectors, tensors, etc.), with a concept they coined "holors". Through their work, they became disillusioned with Albert Einstein's theory of relativity and sought neo-classical explanations for various phenomena.
Holors
Moon and Spencer invented the term "holor" (; Greek ὅλος "whole") for a mathematical entity that is made up of one or more "independent quantities", or "merates" (; Greek μέρος "part") as they are called in the theory of holors. With the definitions, properties and examples provided by Moon and Spencer, a holor is equivalent to an array of quantities, and any arbitrary array of quantities is a holor. (A holor with a single merate is equivalent to an array with one element.) The merates or component quantities themselves may be real or complex numbers or more complicated quantities such as matrices. For example, holors include particular representations of:
real numbers, complex numbers, quaternions and other hypercomplex numbers;
scalars, vectors and matrices;
(geometric) scalars, (geometric) vectors, and tensors;
non-tensorial geometric arrays of quantities such as the Levi-Civita symbol; and
non-tensorial non-geometric arrays of quantities such as neural network (node and/or link) values or indexed inventory tables.
Note that Moon and Spencer's usage of the term "tensor" may be more precisely interpreted as "tensorial array", and so the subtitle of their work, Theory of Holors: A Generalization of Tensors, may be more precisely interpreted as "a generalization of tensorial arrays". To explain the usefulness of coining this term, Moon and Spencer wrote the following:
And, as indicated in the promotional blurb on the back of the book, part of the value of holors is the associated notational conventions and terminologies, which can provide a unified setting for a variety of mathematical objects, as well as a general setting that "opens up the possibility to devise a holor for a new ... application, without being limited to a few conventional types of holor".
Although the terminology relating to holors is not currently commonly found online, academic and technical books and papers that use this terminology can be found in literature searches (for instance, using Google Scholar). For example, books and papers on general dynamical systems, Fourier transforms in audio signal processing, and topology in computer graphics contain this terminology.
At a high level of abstraction, a holor can be considered as a whole – as a quantitative object without regard to whether it can be broken into parts or not. In some cases, it may be manipulated algebraically or transformed symbolically without needing to know about its inner components. At a lower level of abstraction, one can see or investigate how many independent parts the holor can be separated into, or if it can't be broken into pieces at all. The meaning of "independent" and "separable" may depend upon the context. Although the examples of holors given by Moon and Spencer are all discrete finite sets of merates (with additional mathematical structure), holors could conceivably include infinite sets, whether countable or not (again, with additional mathematical structure that provides meaning for "made up of" and "independent"). At this lower level of abstraction, a particular context for how the parts can be identified and labeled will yield a particular structure for the relationships of merates within and across holors, and different ways that the merates can be organized for display or storage (for example, in a computer data structure and memory system). Different kinds of holors can then be framed as different kinds of general data types or data structures.
Holors include arbitrary arrays. A holor is an array of quantities, possibly a single-element array or a multi-element array with one or more indices to label each element. The context of the usage of the holor will determine what sorts of labels are appropriate, how many indices there should be, and what values the indices will range over. The representing array could be jagged (with different dimensionality per index) or of uniform dimensionality across indices. (An array with two or more indices is often called a "multidimensional array", referring to the dimensionality of the shape of the array rather than other degrees of freedom in the array. The term "multi-indexed" may be a less-ambiguous description. A multi-dimensional array is a holor, whether that refers to a single-indexed array of dimension two or greater, or a multi-element array with two or more indices.) A holor can thus be represented with a symbol and zero or more indices, such as —the symbol with the two indices and shown in superscript.
In the theory of holors, the number of indices used to label the merates is called the valence. This term is to remind one of the concept of chemical valence, indicating the "combining power" of a holor. (This "combining power" sense of valence is really only relevant in contexts where the holors can be combined, such as the case of tensor multiplication where indices pair up or "bond" to be summed-over.) The example holor above, , has a valence of two. For valence equal to 0, 1, 2, 3, etc., a holor can be said to be nilvalent, univalent, bivalent, trivalent, etc., respectively. For each index , there is number of values that the index may range over. That number is called the plethos of that index, indicating the "dimensionality" related to that index. For a holor with uniform dimensionality over all of its indices, the holor itself can be said to have a plethos equal to the plethos of each index. (Both terms, valence and plethos, thus help to resolve some of the ambiguity of referring to the "dimension" of a holor, as well as resolving ambiguity with similar terminology in other mathematical contexts. No special term, however, is provided for the total number of merates, which is another sense of the "dimension" of a holor.) So, in the special case of holors that are represented as arrays of N-cubic (or hypercubic) shape, they may be classified with respect to their plethos and valence , where the plethos is akin to the length of each edge of the and the number of merates is given by the "volume" of the hypercube.
If proper index conventions are maintained then certain relations of holor algebra are consistent with that of real algebra, i.e., addition and uncontracted multiplication are both commutative and associative. Moon and Spencer classify holors as either nongeometric objects or geometric objects. They further classify the geometric objects as either akinetors or oudors, where the (contravariant, univalent) akinetors transform as
and the oudors contain all other geometric objects (such as Christoffel symbols). The tensor is a special case of the akinetor where . Akinetors contain both tensors and pseudotensors in standard nomenclature.
Moon and Spencer also provide a novel classification of geometric figures in affine space with homogeneous coordinates. For example, a directed line segment that is free to slide along a given line is called a fixed rhabdor<ref>Greek ῥάβδος "rod".}} and corresponds to a sliding vector<ref>A vector whose direction and line of application are prescribed, but whose point of application is not prescribed.}} in standard nomenclature. Other objects in their classification scheme include free rhabdors, kineors, fixed strophors, free strophors, and helissors.
More can be said about the relationship between holors and tensors, and how holors may help clarify common confusion about tensors. A tensor is a mathematical object with particular properties, which can be represented as a (potentially multidimensional, multi-indexed) array of quantities—a tensorial array—if a basis for the related vector space is chosen for tensors of order greater than zero. A common misconception is that a tensor is simply a multidimensional array—a kind of generalization of vectors and matrices. But this is not the case (at least in dominant mathematical and physics contexts), since a tensor, when represented as a multidimensional array, must obey certain transformation properties when changing basis vectors or coordinates. So a tensorial array is an array, but an array is not necessarily a tensorial array. In particular, a tensorial array can be a multidimensional array, but a multidimensional array is not necessarily a tensorial array. (This may more sloppily be said as "a tensor can be a multidimensional array, but a multidimensional array is not necessarily a tensor", where "tensor" here refers to a tensorial array.)
The mathematical term "holor" was coined in part to help clear up this confusion. Holors, as arbitrary arrays, include tensorial arrays as a special case. Holors can be said to be a generalization of tensorial arrays, in particular because the notation and terminology associated with holors provides a general setting for the algebra and calculus that tensorial arrays are involved in, including providing names and categories for technically non-tensorial objects that tensorial arrays interact with (such as the Levi-Civita symbol and the Christoffel symbols). When encountering the term "tensor" generally, it may sometimes be more accurate to substitute inequivalent terms such as "holor" or "arbitrary array" or "multidimensional array", depending on the context and potential misusage.
Bibliography
Books
Parry Moon, The Scientific Basis of Illuminating Engineering, McGraw-Hill, 608pp. (1936) (ASIN B000J2QFAI).
Parry Moon, Lighting Design, Addison-Wesley Press, 191pp. (1948) (ASIN B0007DZUFA).
Parry Moon, A Proposed Musical Notation, (1952) (ASIN B0007JY81G).
Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, Foundations of Electrodynamics, D. Van Nostrand Co., 314pp. (1960) (ASIN B000OET7UQ).
Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, Field Theory for Engineers, D. Van Nostrand Co., 540pp. (1961) ().
Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, Field Theory Handbook: Including Coordinate Systems, Differential Equations and Their Solutions, Spring Verlag, 236pp. (1961) ().
Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, Vectors, D. Van Nostrand Co., 334pp. (1965) (ASIN B000OCMWTW).
Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, Partial Differential Equations, D. C. Heath, 322pp. (1969) (ASIN B0006DXDVE).
Parry Moon, The Abacus: Its History, Its Design, Its Possibilities in the Modern World, D. Gordon & Breach Science Pub., 179pp. (1971) ().
Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, The Photic Field, MIT Press, 267pp. (1981) ().
Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, Theory of Holors, Cambridge University Press, 392pp. (1986) ().
Papers
Notes
References
American electrical engineers
University of Wisconsin–Madison College of Engineering alumni
MIT School of Engineering alumni
MIT School of Engineering faculty
1898 births
1988 deaths
People from Beaver Dam, Wisconsin
20th-century American engineers | [
"Parry Hiram Moon (; February 14, 1898 – March 4, 1988) was an American electrical engineer who, with Domina Eberle Spencer, co-wrote eight scientific books and over 200 papers on subjects including electromagnetic field theory, color harmony, nutrition, aesthetic measure and advanced mathematics.",
"He also developed a theory of holors.",
"Biography\nMoon was born in Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, to Ossian C. and Eleanor F. (Parry) Moon.",
"He received a BSEE from University of Wisconsin in 1922 and an MSEE from MIT in 1924.",
"Unfulfilled with his work in transformer design at Westinghouse, Moon obtained a position as research assistant at MIT under Vannevar Bush.",
"He was hospitalized for six months after sustaining injuries from experimental work in the laboratory.",
"He later continued his teaching and research as an associate professor in MIT's Electrical Engineering Department.",
"He married Harriet Tiffany, with whom he had a son.",
"In 1961, after the death of his first wife, he married his co-author, collaborator and former student, Domina Eberle Spencer, a professor of mathematics.",
"They had one son.",
"Moon retired from full-time teaching in the 1960s, but continued his research until his death in 1988.",
"Scientific contributions\nMoon’s early career focused in optics applications for engineers.",
"Collaborating with Spencer, he began researching electromagnetism and Amperian forces.",
"The quantity of papers that followed culminated in Foundations of Electrodynamics, unique for its physical insights, and two field theory books, which became standard references for many years.",
"Much later, Moon and Spencer unified the approach to collections of data (vectors, tensors, etc.",
"), with a concept they coined \"holors\".",
"Through their work, they became disillusioned with Albert Einstein's theory of relativity and sought neo-classical explanations for various phenomena.",
"Holors\n\nMoon and Spencer invented the term \"holor\" (; Greek ὅλος \"whole\") for a mathematical entity that is made up of one or more \"independent quantities\", or \"merates\" (; Greek μέρος \"part\") as they are called in the theory of holors.",
"With the definitions, properties and examples provided by Moon and Spencer, a holor is equivalent to an array of quantities, and any arbitrary array of quantities is a holor.",
"(A holor with a single merate is equivalent to an array with one element.)",
"The merates or component quantities themselves may be real or complex numbers or more complicated quantities such as matrices.",
"For example, holors include particular representations of:\n real numbers, complex numbers, quaternions and other hypercomplex numbers;\n scalars, vectors and matrices;\n (geometric) scalars, (geometric) vectors, and tensors;\n non-tensorial geometric arrays of quantities such as the Levi-Civita symbol; and\n non-tensorial non-geometric arrays of quantities such as neural network (node and/or link) values or indexed inventory tables.",
"Note that Moon and Spencer's usage of the term \"tensor\" may be more precisely interpreted as \"tensorial array\", and so the subtitle of their work, Theory of Holors: A Generalization of Tensors, may be more precisely interpreted as \"a generalization of tensorial arrays\".",
"To explain the usefulness of coining this term, Moon and Spencer wrote the following:\n\nAnd, as indicated in the promotional blurb on the back of the book, part of the value of holors is the associated notational conventions and terminologies, which can provide a unified setting for a variety of mathematical objects, as well as a general setting that \"opens up the possibility to devise a holor for a new ... application, without being limited to a few conventional types of holor\".",
"Although the terminology relating to holors is not currently commonly found online, academic and technical books and papers that use this terminology can be found in literature searches (for instance, using Google Scholar).",
"For example, books and papers on general dynamical systems, Fourier transforms in audio signal processing, and topology in computer graphics contain this terminology.",
"At a high level of abstraction, a holor can be considered as a whole – as a quantitative object without regard to whether it can be broken into parts or not.",
"In some cases, it may be manipulated algebraically or transformed symbolically without needing to know about its inner components.",
"At a lower level of abstraction, one can see or investigate how many independent parts the holor can be separated into, or if it can't be broken into pieces at all.",
"The meaning of \"independent\" and \"separable\" may depend upon the context.",
"Although the examples of holors given by Moon and Spencer are all discrete finite sets of merates (with additional mathematical structure), holors could conceivably include infinite sets, whether countable or not (again, with additional mathematical structure that provides meaning for \"made up of\" and \"independent\").",
"At this lower level of abstraction, a particular context for how the parts can be identified and labeled will yield a particular structure for the relationships of merates within and across holors, and different ways that the merates can be organized for display or storage (for example, in a computer data structure and memory system).",
"Different kinds of holors can then be framed as different kinds of general data types or data structures.",
"Holors include arbitrary arrays.",
"A holor is an array of quantities, possibly a single-element array or a multi-element array with one or more indices to label each element.",
"The context of the usage of the holor will determine what sorts of labels are appropriate, how many indices there should be, and what values the indices will range over.",
"The representing array could be jagged (with different dimensionality per index) or of uniform dimensionality across indices.",
"(An array with two or more indices is often called a \"multidimensional array\", referring to the dimensionality of the shape of the array rather than other degrees of freedom in the array.",
"The term \"multi-indexed\" may be a less-ambiguous description.",
"A multi-dimensional array is a holor, whether that refers to a single-indexed array of dimension two or greater, or a multi-element array with two or more indices.)",
"A holor can thus be represented with a symbol and zero or more indices, such as —the symbol with the two indices and shown in superscript.",
"In the theory of holors, the number of indices used to label the merates is called the valence.",
"This term is to remind one of the concept of chemical valence, indicating the \"combining power\" of a holor.",
"(This \"combining power\" sense of valence is really only relevant in contexts where the holors can be combined, such as the case of tensor multiplication where indices pair up or \"bond\" to be summed-over.)",
"The example holor above, , has a valence of two.",
"For valence equal to 0, 1, 2, 3, etc., a holor can be said to be nilvalent, univalent, bivalent, trivalent, etc., respectively.",
"For each index , there is number of values that the index may range over.",
"That number is called the plethos of that index, indicating the \"dimensionality\" related to that index.",
"For a holor with uniform dimensionality over all of its indices, the holor itself can be said to have a plethos equal to the plethos of each index.",
"(Both terms, valence and plethos, thus help to resolve some of the ambiguity of referring to the \"dimension\" of a holor, as well as resolving ambiguity with similar terminology in other mathematical contexts.",
"No special term, however, is provided for the total number of merates, which is another sense of the \"dimension\" of a holor.)",
"So, in the special case of holors that are represented as arrays of N-cubic (or hypercubic) shape, they may be classified with respect to their plethos and valence , where the plethos is akin to the length of each edge of the and the number of merates is given by the \"volume\" of the hypercube.",
"If proper index conventions are maintained then certain relations of holor algebra are consistent with that of real algebra, i.e., addition and uncontracted multiplication are both commutative and associative.",
"Moon and Spencer classify holors as either nongeometric objects or geometric objects.",
"They further classify the geometric objects as either akinetors or oudors, where the (contravariant, univalent) akinetors transform as\n\n \n\nand the oudors contain all other geometric objects (such as Christoffel symbols).",
"The tensor is a special case of the akinetor where .",
"Akinetors contain both tensors and pseudotensors in standard nomenclature.",
"Moon and Spencer also provide a novel classification of geometric figures in affine space with homogeneous coordinates.",
"For example, a directed line segment that is free to slide along a given line is called a fixed rhabdor<ref>Greek ῥάβδος \"rod\".}}",
"and corresponds to a sliding vector<ref>A vector whose direction and line of application are prescribed, but whose point of application is not prescribed.}}",
"in standard nomenclature.",
"Other objects in their classification scheme include free rhabdors, kineors, fixed strophors, free strophors, and helissors.",
"More can be said about the relationship between holors and tensors, and how holors may help clarify common confusion about tensors.",
"A tensor is a mathematical object with particular properties, which can be represented as a (potentially multidimensional, multi-indexed) array of quantities—a tensorial array—if a basis for the related vector space is chosen for tensors of order greater than zero.",
"A common misconception is that a tensor is simply a multidimensional array—a kind of generalization of vectors and matrices.",
"But this is not the case (at least in dominant mathematical and physics contexts), since a tensor, when represented as a multidimensional array, must obey certain transformation properties when changing basis vectors or coordinates.",
"So a tensorial array is an array, but an array is not necessarily a tensorial array.",
"In particular, a tensorial array can be a multidimensional array, but a multidimensional array is not necessarily a tensorial array.",
"(This may more sloppily be said as \"a tensor can be a multidimensional array, but a multidimensional array is not necessarily a tensor\", where \"tensor\" here refers to a tensorial array.)",
"The mathematical term \"holor\" was coined in part to help clear up this confusion.",
"Holors, as arbitrary arrays, include tensorial arrays as a special case.",
"Holors can be said to be a generalization of tensorial arrays, in particular because the notation and terminology associated with holors provides a general setting for the algebra and calculus that tensorial arrays are involved in, including providing names and categories for technically non-tensorial objects that tensorial arrays interact with (such as the Levi-Civita symbol and the Christoffel symbols).",
"When encountering the term \"tensor\" generally, it may sometimes be more accurate to substitute inequivalent terms such as \"holor\" or \"arbitrary array\" or \"multidimensional array\", depending on the context and potential misusage.",
"Bibliography\n\nBooks\n Parry Moon, The Scientific Basis of Illuminating Engineering, McGraw-Hill, 608pp.",
"(1936) (ASIN B000J2QFAI).",
"Parry Moon, Lighting Design, Addison-Wesley Press, 191pp.",
"(1948) (ASIN B0007DZUFA).",
"Parry Moon, A Proposed Musical Notation, (1952) (ASIN B0007JY81G).",
"Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, Foundations of Electrodynamics, D. Van Nostrand Co., 314pp.",
"(1960) (ASIN B000OET7UQ).",
"Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, Field Theory for Engineers, D. Van Nostrand Co., 540pp.",
"(1961) ().",
"Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, Field Theory Handbook: Including Coordinate Systems, Differential Equations and Their Solutions, Spring Verlag, 236pp.",
"(1961) ().",
"Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, Vectors, D. Van Nostrand Co., 334pp.",
"(1965) (ASIN B000OCMWTW).",
"Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, Partial Differential Equations, D. C. Heath, 322pp.",
"(1969) (ASIN B0006DXDVE).",
"Parry Moon, The Abacus: Its History, Its Design, Its Possibilities in the Modern World, D. Gordon & Breach Science Pub., 179pp.",
"(1971) ().",
"Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, The Photic Field, MIT Press, 267pp.",
"(1981) ().",
"Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, Theory of Holors, Cambridge University Press, 392pp.",
"(1986) ().",
"Papers\n\nNotes\n\nReferences\n\nAmerican electrical engineers\nUniversity of Wisconsin–Madison College of Engineering alumni\nMIT School of Engineering alumni\nMIT School of Engineering faculty\n1898 births\n1988 deaths\nPeople from Beaver Dam, Wisconsin\n20th-century American engineers"
] | [
"The American electrical engineer who co- wrote eight scientific books and over 200 papers with Domina Eberle Spencer was named Parry Hiram Moon.",
"He developed a theory.",
"Moon was born to Ossian C. and Eleanor F.",
"He received a BSEE from the University of Wisconsin in 1922 and an MSEE from MIT in 1924.",
"Moon got a position as a research assistant at MIT because of his work in transformer design.",
"He was hospitalized for six months after sustaining injuries.",
"He was an associate professor in MIT's electrical engineering department.",
"He had a son with the woman he married.",
"He married Domina Eberle Spencer, a professor of mathematics, after the death of his first wife.",
"They had a boy.",
"Moon continued his research after he retired from full-time teaching.",
"Moon's early career was focused on applications for engineers.",
"He began researching Amperian forces with Spencer.",
"Two field theory books, which became standard references for many years, became a result of the quantity of papers that followed.",
"The approach to collections of data was unified by Moon and Spencer.",
"\"holors\" is a concept they came up with.",
"They became dissatisfied with Albert Einstein's theory of relativity and sought neo-classical explanations.",
"The term \"holor\" (Greek \"whole\") was invented by Spencer and Moon for a mathematical entity that is made up of one or more independent quantities.",
"A holor is equivalent to an array of quantities, and any arbitrary array of quantities is a holor.",
"A single merate is equivalent to an array with one element.",
"Real or complex numbers may be the merates or component quantities.",
"There are representations of real numbers, complex numbers, quaternions and other hypercomplex numbers.",
"Moon and Spencer's use of the term \"tensor\" may be more precisely interpreted as \"tensorial array\", and so the subtitle of their work, Theory of Holors: A Generalization of Tensors, may be more precisely interpreted as a generalization of the term.",
"In order to explain the usefulness of coining this term, Moon and Spencer wrote the following: And, as indicated in the promotional blurb on the back of the book, part of the value of holors is the associated notational conventions and terminologies, which can provide a unified setting",
"Literature searches can be used to find academic and technical books and papers that use this terminology.",
"This terminology can be found in books and papers on general dynamical systems.",
"A holor can be considered as a whole without regard to whether it can be broken into parts or not.",
"It may be transformed symbolically without needing to know about its inner components.",
"One can see how many parts of the holor can be separated from each other, or if it can't be broken into pieces at all.",
"Depending on the context, the meaning of \"independent\" and \"separable\" may be different.",
"With additional mathematical structure that provides meaning for \"made up of\" and \"independent\", the examples given by Moon and Spencer are all finite sets of merates.",
"A particular context for how the parts can be identified and labeled will yield a particular structure for the relationships of merates within and across holors, and different ways that the merates can be organized for display or storage.",
"Different kinds of holors can be seen as different kinds of general data types.",
"Panelists include an arbitrary array.",
"A holor is an array of quantities, possibly a single-element array or a multi-element array with one or more indices to label each element.",
"What sorts of labels are appropriate, how many indices there should be, and what values the indices will range over will be determined by the context of the usage of the holor.",
"The representing array could be jagged or uniform.",
"The term \"multidimensional array\" refers to the shape of the array rather than the degrees of freedom in it.",
"It is possible that the term \"multi-indexed\" is a less-ambiguous description.",
"A multi-dimensional array can be either a single-indexed array of dimensions two or greater, or a multi-element array with two or more indices.",
"A holor can be represented with a symbol and zero or more indices, such as the symbol with the two indices shown in superscript.",
"The number of indices used to label the merates is called the valence.",
"The term reminds one of the concept of chemical valence.",
"It's only relevant in contexts where the holors can be combined, such as the case of tensor multiplication where indices pair up or \"bond\" to be summed-over.",
"The example has a pair of electrons.",
"A holor can be said to be nilvalent, univalent, bivalent, trivalent, etc.",
"There are a number of values that the index can range over.",
"The \"dimensionality\" of that index is indicated by that number.",
"For a holor with uniform dimensionality over all of its indices, it can be said that it has a plethos equal to the one of each index.",
"Both terms help to resolve some of the ambiguity of referring to the \"dimension\" of a holor, as well as resolving similar terminology in other mathematical contexts.",
"There is no special term for the total number of merates.",
"The number of merates and the length of the plethos are related to each other and may be classified as a special case.",
"Adding and uncontracted multiplication are both commutative and associative if proper index conventions are maintained.",
"There are either nongeometric objects or geometric objects.",
"The geometric objects are classified as either akinetors or oudors, where the akinetors transform as and the oudors contain all other geometric objects.",
"There is a special case of the akinetor.",
"There are both tensors and pseudotensors in akinetors.",
"A novel classification of geometric figures in affine space is provided by Moon and Spencer.",
"A directed line segment that is free to slide along a given line is called a fixed rhabdor.",
"The direction and line of application are prescribed, but the point of application is not.",
"It's in standard terminology.",
"Other objects include free rhabdors, kineors, fixed strophors, and free strophors.",
"There is more that can be said about the relationship between holors and tensors.",
"A tensor is a mathematical object with certain properties, which can be represented as a (potentially multidimensional, multi-indexed) array of quantities, if a basis for the related vector space is chosen.",
"A common misconception is that a tensor is just a multidimensional array.",
"In mathematical and physics contexts, since a multidimensional array must obey certain transformation properties when changing basis vectors or coordinates, this is not the case.",
"An array is not necessarily a tensorial array.",
"A multidimensional array is not necessarily a tensorial array.",
"A multidimensional array is not a tensor, where \"tensor\" here refers to a tensorial array.",
"The term \"holor\" was used to help clear up the confusion.",
"tensorial array is a special case.",
"The terminology associated with holors provides a general setting for the algebra and calculus that tensorial array are involved in, as well as providing names and categories for technically non-tensorial objects.",
"It is possible to substitute \"holor\" or \"arbitrary array\" or \"multidimensional array\" for the term \"tensor\", depending on the context.",
"The Scientific Basis of Illuminating Engineering is a book by Parry Moon.",
"ASIN B000J2QFai was issued in the late 19th century.",
"Parry Moon is the author of Lighting Design.",
"There is aSIN B0007DZUFA.",
"A proposed musical notation is called Parry Moon.",
"Foundations of Electrodynamics was written by Parry Moon and Domina Eberle Spencer.",
"ASIN B000OET7UQ was issued in 1960.",
"Field Theory for Engineers was written by Parry Moon and Domina Eberle Spencer.",
"The year 1961.",
"The Field Theory Handbook: Including Coordinate Systems, Differential Equations and Their Solutions was written by Parry Moon and Domina Eberle Spencer.",
"The year 1961.",
"Parry Moon and Domina Eberle Spencer are authors.",
"There is aSIN B000OCMW.",
"Parry Moon and Domina Eberle Spencer wrote Partial Differential Equations.",
"ASIN B0006DXDVE was issued in 1969.",
"The Abacus: Its History, Its Design, Its Possibilities in the Modern World is a book.",
"The film was released in 1971.",
"The Photic Field is a book by Parry Moon and Domina Eberle Spencer.",
"(1981)",
"The Theory of Holors was written by Parry Moon and Domina Eberle Spencer.",
"The year 1986.",
"The University of Wisconsin–Madison College of Engineering alumni MIT School of Engineering faculty births 1898 deaths."
] | <mask> (; February 14, 1898 – March 4, 1988) was an American electrical engineer who, with Domina Eberle Spencer, co-wrote eight scientific books and over 200 papers on subjects including electromagnetic field theory, color harmony, nutrition, aesthetic measure and advanced mathematics. He also developed a theory of holors. Biography
<mask> was born in Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, to Ossian C. and Eleanor F. (<mask><mask>. He received a BSEE from University of Wisconsin in 1922 and an MSEE from MIT in 1924. Unfulfilled with his work in transformer design at Westinghouse, <mask> obtained a position as research assistant at MIT under Vannevar Bush. He was hospitalized for six months after sustaining injuries from experimental work in the laboratory. He later continued his teaching and research as an associate professor in MIT's Electrical Engineering Department.He married Harriet Tiffany, with whom he had a son. In 1961, after the death of his first wife, he married his co-author, collaborator and former student, Domina Eberle Spencer, a professor of mathematics. They had one son. <mask> retired from full-time teaching in the 1960s, but continued his research until his death in 1988. Scientific contributions
<mask>’s early career focused in optics applications for engineers. Collaborating with Spencer, he began researching electromagnetism and Amperian forces. The quantity of papers that followed culminated in Foundations of Electrodynamics, unique for its physical insights, and two field theory books, which became standard references for many years.Much later, <mask> and Spencer unified the approach to collections of data (vectors, tensors, etc. ), with a concept they coined "holors". Through their work, they became disillusioned with Albert Einstein's theory of relativity and sought neo-classical explanations for various phenomena. Holors
<mask> and Spencer invented the term "holor" (; Greek ὅλος "whole") for a mathematical entity that is made up of one or more "independent quantities", or "merates" (; Greek μέρος "part") as they are called in the theory of holors. With the definitions, properties and examples provided by <mask> and Spencer, a holor is equivalent to an array of quantities, and any arbitrary array of quantities is a holor. (A holor with a single merate is equivalent to an array with one element.) The merates or component quantities themselves may be real or complex numbers or more complicated quantities such as matrices.For example, holors include particular representations of:
real numbers, complex numbers, quaternions and other hypercomplex numbers;
scalars, vectors and matrices;
(geometric) scalars, (geometric) vectors, and tensors;
non-tensorial geometric arrays of quantities such as the Levi-Civita symbol; and
non-tensorial non-geometric arrays of quantities such as neural network (node and/or link) values or indexed inventory tables. Note that <mask> and Spencer's usage of the term "tensor" may be more precisely interpreted as "tensorial array", and so the subtitle of their work, Theory of Holors: A Generalization of Tensors, may be more precisely interpreted as "a generalization of tensorial arrays". To explain the usefulness of coining this term, <mask> and Spencer wrote the following:
And, as indicated in the promotional blurb on the back of the book, part of the value of holors is the associated notational conventions and terminologies, which can provide a unified setting for a variety of mathematical objects, as well as a general setting that "opens up the possibility to devise a holor for a new ... application, without being limited to a few conventional types of holor". Although the terminology relating to holors is not currently commonly found online, academic and technical books and papers that use this terminology can be found in literature searches (for instance, using Google Scholar). For example, books and papers on general dynamical systems, Fourier transforms in audio signal processing, and topology in computer graphics contain this terminology. At a high level of abstraction, a holor can be considered as a whole – as a quantitative object without regard to whether it can be broken into parts or not. In some cases, it may be manipulated algebraically or transformed symbolically without needing to know about its inner components.At a lower level of abstraction, one can see or investigate how many independent parts the holor can be separated into, or if it can't be broken into pieces at all. The meaning of "independent" and "separable" may depend upon the context. Although the examples of holors given by <mask> and Spencer are all discrete finite sets of merates (with additional mathematical structure), holors could conceivably include infinite sets, whether countable or not (again, with additional mathematical structure that provides meaning for "made up of" and "independent"). At this lower level of abstraction, a particular context for how the parts can be identified and labeled will yield a particular structure for the relationships of merates within and across holors, and different ways that the merates can be organized for display or storage (for example, in a computer data structure and memory system). Different kinds of holors can then be framed as different kinds of general data types or data structures. Holors include arbitrary arrays. A holor is an array of quantities, possibly a single-element array or a multi-element array with one or more indices to label each element.The context of the usage of the holor will determine what sorts of labels are appropriate, how many indices there should be, and what values the indices will range over. The representing array could be jagged (with different dimensionality per index) or of uniform dimensionality across indices. (An array with two or more indices is often called a "multidimensional array", referring to the dimensionality of the shape of the array rather than other degrees of freedom in the array. The term "multi-indexed" may be a less-ambiguous description. A multi-dimensional array is a holor, whether that refers to a single-indexed array of dimension two or greater, or a multi-element array with two or more indices.) A holor can thus be represented with a symbol and zero or more indices, such as —the symbol with the two indices and shown in superscript. In the theory of holors, the number of indices used to label the merates is called the valence.This term is to remind one of the concept of chemical valence, indicating the "combining power" of a holor. (This "combining power" sense of valence is really only relevant in contexts where the holors can be combined, such as the case of tensor multiplication where indices pair up or "bond" to be summed-over.) The example holor above, , has a valence of two. For valence equal to 0, 1, 2, 3, etc., a holor can be said to be nilvalent, univalent, bivalent, trivalent, etc., respectively. For each index , there is number of values that the index may range over. That number is called the plethos of that index, indicating the "dimensionality" related to that index. For a holor with uniform dimensionality over all of its indices, the holor itself can be said to have a plethos equal to the plethos of each index.(Both terms, valence and plethos, thus help to resolve some of the ambiguity of referring to the "dimension" of a holor, as well as resolving ambiguity with similar terminology in other mathematical contexts. No special term, however, is provided for the total number of merates, which is another sense of the "dimension" of a holor.) So, in the special case of holors that are represented as arrays of N-cubic (or hypercubic) shape, they may be classified with respect to their plethos and valence , where the plethos is akin to the length of each edge of the and the number of merates is given by the "volume" of the hypercube. If proper index conventions are maintained then certain relations of holor algebra are consistent with that of real algebra, i.e., addition and uncontracted multiplication are both commutative and associative. <mask> and Spencer classify holors as either nongeometric objects or geometric objects. They further classify the geometric objects as either akinetors or oudors, where the (contravariant, univalent) akinetors transform as
and the oudors contain all other geometric objects (such as Christoffel symbols). The tensor is a special case of the akinetor where .Akinetors contain both tensors and pseudotensors in standard nomenclature. <mask> and Spencer also provide a novel classification of geometric figures in affine space with homogeneous coordinates. For example, a directed line segment that is free to slide along a given line is called a fixed rhabdor<ref>Greek ῥάβδος "rod".}} and corresponds to a sliding vector<ref>A vector whose direction and line of application are prescribed, but whose point of application is not prescribed.}} in standard nomenclature. Other objects in their classification scheme include free rhabdors, kineors, fixed strophors, free strophors, and helissors. More can be said about the relationship between holors and tensors, and how holors may help clarify common confusion about tensors.A tensor is a mathematical object with particular properties, which can be represented as a (potentially multidimensional, multi-indexed) array of quantities—a tensorial array—if a basis for the related vector space is chosen for tensors of order greater than zero. A common misconception is that a tensor is simply a multidimensional array—a kind of generalization of vectors and matrices. But this is not the case (at least in dominant mathematical and physics contexts), since a tensor, when represented as a multidimensional array, must obey certain transformation properties when changing basis vectors or coordinates. So a tensorial array is an array, but an array is not necessarily a tensorial array. In particular, a tensorial array can be a multidimensional array, but a multidimensional array is not necessarily a tensorial array. (This may more sloppily be said as "a tensor can be a multidimensional array, but a multidimensional array is not necessarily a tensor", where "tensor" here refers to a tensorial array.) The mathematical term "holor" was coined in part to help clear up this confusion.Holors, as arbitrary arrays, include tensorial arrays as a special case. Holors can be said to be a generalization of tensorial arrays, in particular because the notation and terminology associated with holors provides a general setting for the algebra and calculus that tensorial arrays are involved in, including providing names and categories for technically non-tensorial objects that tensorial arrays interact with (such as the Levi-Civita symbol and the Christoffel symbols). When encountering the term "tensor" generally, it may sometimes be more accurate to substitute inequivalent terms such as "holor" or "arbitrary array" or "multidimensional array", depending on the context and potential misusage. Bibliography
Books
<mask>, The Scientific Basis of Illuminating Engineering, McGraw-Hill, 608pp. (1936) (ASIN B000J2QFAI). <mask>, Lighting Design, Addison-Wesley Press, 191pp. (1948) (ASIN B0007DZUFA).<mask>, A Proposed Musical Notation, (1952) (ASIN B0007JY81G). Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, Foundations of Electrodynamics, D. Van Nostrand Co., 314pp. (1960) (ASIN B000OET7UQ). Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, Field Theory for Engineers, D. Van Nostrand Co., 540pp. (1961) (). Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, Field Theory Handbook: Including Coordinate Systems, Differential Equations and Their Solutions, Spring Verlag, 236pp. (1961) ().Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, Vectors, D. Van Nostrand Co., 334pp. (1965) (ASIN B000OCMWTW). Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, Partial Differential Equations, D. C. Heath, 322pp. (1969) (ASIN B0006DXDVE). <mask> Moon, The Abacus: Its History, Its Design, Its Possibilities in the Modern World, D. Gordon & Breach Science Pub., 179pp. (1971) (). Parry Moon & Domina Eberle Spencer, The Photic Field, MIT Press, 267pp.(1981) (). <mask> & Domina Eberle Spencer, Theory of Holors, Cambridge University Press, 392pp. (1986) (). Papers
Notes
References
American electrical engineers
University of Wisconsin–Madison College of Engineering alumni
MIT School of Engineering alumni
MIT School of Engineering faculty
1898 births
1988 deaths
People from Beaver Dam, Wisconsin
20th-century American engineers | [
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Two field theory books, which became standard references for many years, became a result of the quantity of papers that followed.The approach to collections of data was unified by <mask> and Spencer. "holors" is a concept they came up with. They became dissatisfied with Albert Einstein's theory of relativity and sought neo-classical explanations. The term "holor" (Greek "whole") was invented by Spencer and <mask> for a mathematical entity that is made up of one or more independent quantities. A holor is equivalent to an array of quantities, and any arbitrary array of quantities is a holor. A single merate is equivalent to an array with one element. Real or complex numbers may be the merates or component quantities.There are representations of real numbers, complex numbers, quaternions and other hypercomplex numbers. <mask> and Spencer's use of the term "tensor" may be more precisely interpreted as "tensorial array", and so the subtitle of their work, Theory of Holors: A Generalization of Tensors, may be more precisely interpreted as a generalization of the term. In order to explain the usefulness of coining this term, <mask> and Spencer wrote the following: And, as indicated in the promotional blurb on the back of the book, part of the value of holors is the associated notational conventions and terminologies, which can provide a unified setting Literature searches can be used to find academic and technical books and papers that use this terminology. This terminology can be found in books and papers on general dynamical systems. A holor can be considered as a whole without regard to whether it can be broken into parts or not. It may be transformed symbolically without needing to know about its inner components.One can see how many parts of the holor can be separated from each other, or if it can't be broken into pieces at all. Depending on the context, the meaning of "independent" and "separable" may be different. With additional mathematical structure that provides meaning for "made up of" and "independent", the examples given by <mask> and Spencer are all finite sets of merates. A particular context for how the parts can be identified and labeled will yield a particular structure for the relationships of merates within and across holors, and different ways that the merates can be organized for display or storage. Different kinds of holors can be seen as different kinds of general data types. Panelists include an arbitrary array. A holor is an array of quantities, possibly a single-element array or a multi-element array with one or more indices to label each element.What sorts of labels are appropriate, how many indices there should be, and what values the indices will range over will be determined by the context of the usage of the holor. The representing array could be jagged or uniform. The term "multidimensional array" refers to the shape of the array rather than the degrees of freedom in it. It is possible that the term "multi-indexed" is a less-ambiguous description. A multi-dimensional array can be either a single-indexed array of dimensions two or greater, or a multi-element array with two or more indices. A holor can be represented with a symbol and zero or more indices, such as the symbol with the two indices shown in superscript. The number of indices used to label the merates is called the valence.The term reminds one of the concept of chemical valence. It's only relevant in contexts where the holors can be combined, such as the case of tensor multiplication where indices pair up or "bond" to be summed-over. The example has a pair of electrons. A holor can be said to be nilvalent, univalent, bivalent, trivalent, etc. There are a number of values that the index can range over. The "dimensionality" of that index is indicated by that number. For a holor with uniform dimensionality over all of its indices, it can be said that it has a plethos equal to the one of each index.Both terms help to resolve some of the ambiguity of referring to the "dimension" of a holor, as well as resolving similar terminology in other mathematical contexts. There is no special term for the total number of merates. The number of merates and the length of the plethos are related to each other and may be classified as a special case. Adding and uncontracted multiplication are both commutative and associative if proper index conventions are maintained. There are either nongeometric objects or geometric objects. The geometric objects are classified as either akinetors or oudors, where the akinetors transform as and the oudors contain all other geometric objects. There is a special case of the akinetor.There are both tensors and pseudotensors in akinetors. A novel classification of geometric figures in affine space is provided by <mask> and Spencer. A directed line segment that is free to slide along a given line is called a fixed rhabdor. The direction and line of application are prescribed, but the point of application is not. It's in standard terminology. Other objects include free rhabdors, kineors, fixed strophors, and free strophors. There is more that can be said about the relationship between holors and tensors.A tensor is a mathematical object with certain properties, which can be represented as a (potentially multidimensional, multi-indexed) array of quantities, if a basis for the related vector space is chosen. A common misconception is that a tensor is just a multidimensional array. In mathematical and physics contexts, since a multidimensional array must obey certain transformation properties when changing basis vectors or coordinates, this is not the case. An array is not necessarily a tensorial array. A multidimensional array is not necessarily a tensorial array. A multidimensional array is not a tensor, where "tensor" here refers to a tensorial array. The term "holor" was used to help clear up the confusion.tensorial array is a special case. The terminology associated with holors provides a general setting for the algebra and calculus that tensorial array are involved in, as well as providing names and categories for technically non-tensorial objects. It is possible to substitute "holor" or "arbitrary array" or "multidimensional array" for the term "tensor", depending on the context. The Scientific Basis of Illuminating Engineering is a book by <mask>. ASIN B000J2QFai was issued in the late 19th century. <mask> is the author of Lighting Design. There is aSIN B0007DZUFA.A proposed musical notation is called <mask>. Foundations of Electrodynamics was written by <mask> and Domina Eberle Spencer. ASIN B000OET7UQ was issued in 1960. Field Theory for Engineers was written by <mask> and Domina Eberle Spencer. The year 1961. The Field Theory Handbook: Including Coordinate Systems, Differential Equations and Their Solutions was written by <mask> and Domina Eberle Spencer. The year 1961.<mask> and Domina Eberle Spencer are authors. There is aSIN B000OCMW. <mask> and Domina Eberle Spencer wrote Partial Differential Equations. ASIN B0006DXDVE was issued in 1969. The Abacus: Its History, Its Design, Its Possibilities in the Modern World is a book. The film was released in 1971. The Photic Field is a book by <mask> and Domina Eberle Spencer.(1981) The Theory of Holors was written by <mask> and Domina Eberle Spencer. The year 1986. The University of Wisconsin–Madison College of Engineering alumni MIT School of Engineering faculty births 1898 deaths. | [
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519079 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulsidas | Tulsidas | Tulsidas (; 1532–1623), also known as Goswami Tulsidas, was a Ramanandi Vaishnava Hindu saint and poet, renowned for his devotion to the deity Rama. He wrote several popular works in Sanskrit and Awadhi, but is best known as the author of the epic Ramcharitmanas, a retelling of the Sanskrit Ramayana based on Rama's life in the vernacular Awadhi.
Tulsidas spent most of his life in the city of Varanasi and Ayodhya. The Tulsi Ghat on the Ganges River in Varanasi is named after him. He founded the Sankatmochan Temple dedicated to Lord Hanuman in Varanasi, believed to stand at the place where he had the sight of the deity. Tulsidas started the Ramlila plays, a folk-theatre adaption of the Ramayana.
He has been acclaimed as one of the greatest poets in Hindi, Indian, and world literature. The impact of Tulsidas and his works on the art, culture and society in India is widespread and is seen to date in vernacular language, Ramlila plays, Hindustani classical music, popular music, and television series.
Transliteration and etymology
The Sanskrit name of Tulsidas can be transliterated in two ways. Using the original Sanskrit, the name is written as Tulasīdāsa. Using the Hunterian transliteration system, it is written as Tulsidas or Tulsīdās reflecting the vernacular pronunciation (since the written Indian languages maintain the vestigial letters that are no longer pronounced). The lost vowels are an aspect of the Schwa deletion in Indo-Aryan languages and can vary between regions. The name is a compound of two Sanskrit words: Tulasī, which is an Indian variety of the basil plant considered auspicious by Vaishnavas (devotees of god Vishnu and his avatars like Rama), and Dāsa, which means slave or servant and by extension, devotee.
Sources
Tulsidas himself has given only a few facts and hints about events of his life in various works. Till late nineteenth century, the two widely known ancient sources on Tulsidas' life were the Bhaktamal composed by Nabhadas between 1583 and 1639, and a commentary on Bhaktamal titled Bhaktirasbodhini composed by Priyadas in 1712. Nabhadas was a contemporary of Tulsidas and wrote a six-line stanza on Tulsidas describing him as an incarnation of Valmiki. Priyadas' work was composed around a hundred years after the death of Tulsidas and had eleven additional stanzas, describing seven miracles or spiritual experiences from the life of Tulsidas. During the 1920s, two more ancient biographies of Tulsidas were published based on old manuscripts – the Mula Gosain Charit composed by Veni Madhav Das in 1630 and the Gosain Charit composed by Dasanidas (also known as Bhavanidas) around 1770. Veni Madhav Das was a disciple and contemporary of Tulsidas and his work gave a new date for Tulsidas' birth. The work by Bhavanidas presented more narratives in greater detail as compared to the work by Priyadas. In the 1950s a fifth ancient account was published based on an old manuscript, the Gautam Chandrika composed by Krishnadatta Misra of Varanasi in 1624. Krishnadatta Misra's father was a close companion of Tulsidas. The accounts published later are not considered authentic by some modern scholars, whereas some other scholars have been unwilling to dismiss them. Together, these five works form a set of traditional biographies on which modern biographies of Tulsidas are based.
Incarnation of Valmiki
He is believed by many to be a rebirth of Valmiki. In the Hindu scripture Bhavishyottar Purana, the god Shiva tells his wife Parvati how Valmiki, who got a boon from Hanuman to sing the glory of Rama in vernacular language, will incarnate in future in the Kali Yuga (the present and last Yuga or epoch within a cycle of four Yugas).
Nabhadas writes in his Bhaktamal (literally, the Garland of bhakt or devotee) that Tulsidas was the re-incarnation of Valmiki in the Kali Yuga. The Ramanandi sect believes that it was Valmiki himself who incarnated as Tulsidas in the Kali Yuga.
According to a traditional account, Hanuman went to Valmiki numerous times to hear him sing the Ramayana, but Valmiki turned down the request saying that Hanuman being a monkey was unworthy of hearing the epic. After the victory of Rama over Ravana, Hanuman went to the Himalayas to continue his worship of Rama. There he scripted a play version of the Ramayana called Mahanataka or Hanuman Nataka engraved on the Himalayan rocks using his nails. When Valmiki saw the play written by Hanuman, he anticipated that the beauty of the Mahanataka would eclipse his own Ramayana. Hanuman was saddened at Valmiki's state of mind and, being a true bhakta without any desire for glory, Hanuman cast all the rocks into the ocean, some parts of which are believed to be available today as Hanuman Nataka. After this, Valmiki was instructed by Hanuman to take birth as Tulsidas and compose the Ramayana in the vernacular.
Early life
Birth
Tulsidas was born on Saptami, the seventh day of Shukla Paksha, the bright half of the lunar Hindu calendar month Shraavana (July–August). This correlates with 13 August 1532 of the Gregorian calendar. Although as many as three places are mentioned as his birthplace, most scholars identify the place with Sookar Kshetra Soron, District Kasganj in Uttar Pradesh, a village on the banks of the river Ganga. In 2012 Sukarkhet Soron was declared officially by the government of Uttar Pradesh as the birthplace of Tulsi Das. His parents were Hulsi and Atmaram Dubey. Most sources identify him as a Saryupareen Brahmin of the Parashar Gotra (lineage), although some sources claim he was a Kanyakubja or Sanadhya Brahmin.
There is difference of opinion among biographers regarding the year of birth of Tulsidas. Many sources rely on Veni Madhav Das' account in the Mula Gosain Charita, which gives the year of Tulsidas' birth as Vikrami Samvat 1554 (1497 CE). These sources include Shivlal Pathak, popular editions of Ramcharitmanas (Gita Press, Naval Kishore Press and Venkateshvar Press), Edwin Greaves, Hanuman Prasad Poddar, Ramanand Sarasvati, Ayodhyanath Sharma, Ramchandra Shukla, Narayandas, and Rambhadracharya. A second group of biographers led by Sant Tulsi Sahib of Hathras and Sir George Grierson give the year as Vikram 1568 (1511 CE). These biographers include Ramkrishna Gopal Bhandarkar, Ramghulam Dwivedi, James Lochtefeld, Swami Sivananda and others. The year 1497 appears in many current-day biographies in India and in popular culture. Biographers who disagree with this year argue that it makes the life span of Tulsidas equal 126 years, which in their opinion is unlikely if not impossible. In contrast, Ramchandra Shukla says that an age of 126 is not impossible for a Mahatma (great soul) like Tulsidas. The Government of India and provincial governments celebrated the 500th birth anniversary of Tulsidas in the year 1997 CE, according to the year of Tulsidas' birth in popular culture.
Childhood
Legend goes that Tulsidas was born after staying in the womb for twelve months, he had all thirty two teeth in his mouth at birth, his health and looks were like that of a five-year-old boy, and he did not cry at the time of his birth but uttered Rama instead. He was therefore named Rambola (literally, he who uttered Rama), as Tulsidas himself states in Vinaya Patrika. As per the Mula Gosain Charita, he was born under the Abhuktamūla constellation, which according to Jyotisha (Hindu astrology) causes immediate danger to the life of the father. Due to the inauspicious events at the time of his birth, he was abandoned by his parents on the fourth night, sent away with Chuniya (some sources call her Muniya), a female servant of Hulsi. In his works Kavitavali and Vinayapatrika, Tulsidas attests to his parents abandoning him after birth due to an inauspicious astrological configuration.
Chuniya took the child to her village of Haripur and looked after him for five and a half years after which she died. Rambola was left to fend for himself as an impoverished orphan, and wandered from door to door begging for alms. It is believed that the goddess Parvati assumed the form of a Brahmin woman and fed Rambola every day.
Initiation from guru and learning
At the age of six, Rambola was adopted by Narharidas, a Vaishnava ascetic of Ramananda's monastic order who is believed to be the fourth disciple of Ramananda, or alternately, the disciple of Anantacharya. Rambola was given the Virakta Diksha (Vairagi initiation) with the new name of Tulsidas. Tulsidas narrates the dialogue that took place during the first meeting with his guru in a passage in the Vinayapatrika. When he was seven years old, his Upanayana ("sacred thread ceremony") was performed by Narharidas on the fifth day of the bright half of the month of Magha (January–February) at Ayodhya, a pilgrimage-site related to Rama. Tulsidas started his learning at Ayodhya. After some time, Narharidas took him to a particular Varaha Kshetra Soron (a holy place with temple dedicated to Varaha – the boar avatar of Vishnu), where he first narrated the Ramayana to Tulsidas. Tulsidas mentions this in the Ramcharitmanas.
Most authors identify the Varaha Kshetra referred to by Tulsidas with the Sookarkshetra is the Soron Varaha Kshetra in modern-day Kasganj, Tulsidas further mentions in the Ramcharitmanas that his guru repeatedly narrated the Ramayana to him, which led him to understand it somewhat.
Tulsidas later came to the sacred city of Varanasi and studied Sanskrit grammar, four Vedas, six Vedangas, Jyotisha and the six schools of Hindu philosophy over a period of 15–16 years from guru Shesha Sanatana who was based at the Pancaganga Ghat in Varanasi. Shesha Sanatana was a friend of Narharidas and a renowned scholar on literature and philosophy.
Marriage and renunciation
There are two contrasting views regarding the marital status of Tulsidas. According to the Mula Gosain Charita and some other works, Tulsidas was married to Ratnavali on the thirteenth day of the bright half of the Jyeshta month (May–June) in Vikram 1583 (1526 CE). Ratnavali was the daughter of Dinbandhu Pathak, a Brahmin of the Bharadwaja Gotra, who belonged to Mahewa village of Kaushambi district. They had a son named Tarak who died as a toddler. Once when Tulsidas had gone to a Hanuman temple, Ratnavali went to her father's home with her brother. When Tulsidas came to know this, he swam across the Yamuna river in the night to meet his wife. Ratnavali chided Tulsidas for this, and remarked that if Tulsidas was even half as devoted to God as he was to her body of flesh and blood, he would have been redeemed. Tulsidas left her instantly and left for the holy city of Prayag. Here, he renounced the Grihastha (householder's life) stage and became a Sadhu (Hindu ascetic).
Some authors consider the marriage episode of Tulsidas to be a later interpolation and maintain among that he was a bachelor. They include Rambhadracharya, who cite two verses in the Vinayapatrika and Hanuman Bahuka to mean that Tulsidas never married and was a Sadhu from childhood.
Later life
Travels
After renunciation, Tulsidas spent most of his time at Varanasi, Prayag, Ayodhya, and Chitrakuta but visited many other nearby and far-off places. He travelled across India to many places, studying different people, meeting saints and Sadhus and meditating. The Mula Gosain Charita gives an account of his travels to the four pilgrimages of Hindus (Badrinath, Dwarka, Puri and Rameshwaram) and the Himalayas. He visited the Manasarovar lake in current-day Tibet, where tradition holds he had Darshan (sight) of Kakabhushundi, the crow who is one of the four narrators in the Ramcharitmanas.
Darshan of Hanuman
Tulsidas hints at several places in his works, that he had met face to face with Hanuman and Rama. The detailed account of his meetings with Hanuman and Rama are given in the Bhaktirasbodhini of Priyadas. According to Priyadas' account, Tulsidas used to visit the woods outside Varanasi for his morning ablutions with a water pot. On his return to the city, he used to offer the remaining water to a certain tree. This quenched the thirst of a Preta (a type of ghost believed to be ever thirsty for water), who appeared to Tulsidas and offered him a boon. Tulsidas said he wished to see Rama with his eyes, to which the Preta responded that it was beyond him. However, the Preta said that he could guide Tulsidas to Hanuman, who could grant the boon Tulsidas asked for. The Preta told Tulsidas that Hanuman comes everyday disguised in the mean attire of a leper to listen to his Katha, he is the first to arrive and last to leave.
That evening Tulsidas noted that the first listener to arrive at his discourse was an old leper, who sat at the end of the gathering. After the Katha was over, Tulsidas quietly followed the leper to the woods. In the woods, at the spot where the Sankat Mochan Temple stands today, Tulsidas firmly fell at the leper's feet, shouting "I know who you are" and "You cannot escape me". At first the leper feigned ignorance but Tulsidas did not relent. Then the leper revealed his original form of Hanuman and blessed Tulsidas. When granted a boon, Tulsidas told Hanuman he wanted to see Rama face to face. Hanuman told him to go to Chitrakuta where he would see Rama with his own eyes.
At the beginning of the Ramcharitmanas, Tulsidas bows down to a particular Preta and asks for his grace (Ramcharitmanas, Doha 1.7). According to Rambhadracharya, this is the same Preta which led Tulsidas to Hanuman.
Darshan of Rama
As per Priyadas' account, Tulsidas followed the instruction of Hanumana and started living in an Ashram at Ramghat in Chitrakoot Dham. One day Tulsidas went to perform the Parikrama (circumambulation) of the Kamadgiri mountain. He saw two princes, one dark and the other fair, dressed in green robes pass by mounted on horsebacks. Tulsidas was enraptured at the sight, however he could not recognise them and took his eyes off them. Later Hanuman asked Tulsidas if he saw Rama and his brother Lakshmana on horses. Tulsidas was disappointed and repentful. Hanuman assured Tulsidas that he would have the sight of Rama once again the next morning. Tulsidas recalls this incident in a song of the Gitavali and laments how "his eyes turned his own enemies" by staying fixed to the ground and how everything happened in a trice.
On the next morning, Wednesday, the new-moon day of Magha, Vikram 1607 (1551 CE) or 1621 (1565 CE) as per some sources, Rama again appeared to Tulsidas, this time as a child. Tulsidas was making sandalwood paste when a child came and asked for a sandalwood Tilaka (a religious mark on the forehead). This time Hanuman gave a hint to Tulsidas and he had a full view of Rama. Tulsidas was so charmed that he forgot about the sandalwood. Rama took the sandalwood paste and put a Tilaka himself on his forehead and Tulsidas' forehead before disappearing. This famous incidence is described in the verse चित्रकूट के घाट पर हुई संतन की भीर तुलसीदास चन्दन घिसे तिलक देते रघुबीर.
In a verse in the Vinayapatrika, Tulsidas alludes to a certain "miracle at Chitrakuta", and thanks Rama for what he did for him at Chitrakuta. Some biographers conclude that the deed of Rama at Chitrakuta referred to by Tulsidas is the Darshan of Rama.
Darshan of Yajnavalkya and Bharadvaja
In Vikram 1628 (1572 CE), Tulsidas left Chitrakuta for Prayag where he stayed during the Magha Mela (the annual fair in January). Six days after the Mela ended, he had the Darshan of the sages Yajnavalkya and Bharadvaja under a banyan tree. In one of the four dialogues in the Ramcharitmanas, Yajnavalkya is the speaker and Bharadvaja the listener. Tulsidas describes the meeting between Yajnavalkya and Bharadvaja after a Magha Mela festival in the Ramcharitmanas, it is this meeting where Yajnavalkya narrates the Ramcharitmanas to Bharadvaja.
Attributed miracles
Most stories about Tulsidas tend to be apocryphal, and have been carried forward by word of mouth. None of them were related by Tulsi himself, thus making it difficult to separate fact from lore and fiction. In Priyadas' biography, Tulsidas is attributed with the power of working miracles. In one such miracle, he is believed to have brought back a dead Brahmin to life. While the Brahmin was being taken for cremation, his widow bowed down to Tulsidas on the way who addressed her as Saubhagyavati (a woman whose husband is alive). The widow told Tulsidas her husband had just died, so his words could not be true. Tulsidas said that the word has passed his lips and so he would restore the dead man to life. He asked everybody present to close their eyes and uttered the name of lord Rama, on doing which the dead Brahmin was raised back to life.
Tulsidas was acclaimed in his lifetime to be a reincarnation of Valmiki, the composer of the original Ramayana in Sanskrit. He is also considered to be the composer of the Hanuman Chalisa, a popular devotional hymn dedicated to Hanuman,the monkey god and divine devotee of lord Rama.
In another miracle described by Priyadas, the Mughal Emperor Akbar summoned Tulsidas on hearing of his bringing back a dead man to life. Tulsidas declined to go as he was too engrossed in creating his verses but he was later forcibly brought before the Akbar and was asked to perform a miracle, which Tulsidas declined by saying "It's a lie, all I know is Rama." The emperor imprisoned Tulsidas at Fatehpur Sikri, "We will see this Rama." Tulsidas refused to bow to Akbar and created a verse in praise of Hanuman and chanted it (Hanuman Chalisa) for forty days and suddenly an army of monkeys descended upon the town and wreaked havoc in all corners of Fatehpur Sikri, entering each home and the emperor's harem, scratching people and throwing bricks from ramparts. An old Hafiz told the emperor that this was the miracle of the imprisoned Fakir. The emperor fell at Tulsidas' feet, released him and apologised. Tulsidas stopped the menace of monkeys and asked the emperor to abandon the place. The emperor agreed and moved back to Delhi. Ever since Akbar became a close friend of Tulsidas and he also ordered a firman that followers of lord Rama, lord Hanuman & other Hindus, should not be harassed in his kingdom.
Priyadas narrates a miracle of Tulsidas at Vrindavan, when he visited a temple of Krishna. When he began bowing down to the idol of Krishna, the Mahant of the temple named Parshuram decided to test Tulsidas. He told Tulsidas that he who bows down to any deity except their Ishta Devata (cherished form of divinity) is a fool, as Tulsidas' Ishta Devata was Rama. In response, Tulsidas recited the following extemporaneously composed couplet
When Tulsidas recited this couplet, the idol of Krishna holding the flute and stick in hands changed to the idol of Rama holding the bow and arrow in hands. Some authors have expressed doubts on the couplet being composed by Tulsidas.
Literary life
Tulsidas started composing poetry in Sanskrit in Varanasi on the Prahlada Ghat. Tradition holds that all the verses that he composed during the day, would get lost in the night. This happened daily for eight days. On the eighth night, Shiva – whose famous Kashi Vishwanath Temple is located in Varanasi – is believed to have ordered Tulsidas in a dream to compose poetry in the vernacular instead of Sanskrit. Tulsidas woke up and saw both Shiva and Parvati who blessed him. Shiva ordered Tulsidas to go to Ayodhya and compose poetry in Awadhi. Shiva also predicted that Tulsidas' poetry would fructify like the Sama Veda. In the Ramcharitmanas, Tulsidas hints at having the Darshan of Shiva and Parvati in both dream and awakened state.
Tulsidas is also credited with having composed a number of wise sayings and dohas containing lessons for life. A popular one among them is:
आवत ही हरसय नहीं, नैनन नहीं सनोह ।
तुलसी वहाँ न जाइये, चाहे कञ्चन बरसे मेर ॥ सिया पति राम चन्द्र जी की जय , जय जय बजरंगबली ।।
(Aawat hi harshe nahin, nainan nahin saneh. Tulsi tahan na jaiye, chahe kanchan barse megh. Lit. A place where people are not happy or welcoming when you come, where their eyes have no affection for you, Don't go there, even if a mountain of gold is showered.)
Composition of Ramcharitmanas
In the year Vikram 1631 (1575 CE), Tulsidas started composing the Ramcharitmanas in Ayodhya on Sunday, Ramnavami day (ninth day of the bright half of the Chaitra month, which is the birthday of Rama). Tulsidas himself attests this date in the Ramcharitmanas. He composed the epic over two years, seven months and twenty-six days, and completed the work in Vikram 1633 (1577 CE) on the Vivaha Panchami day (fifth day of the bright half of the Margashirsha month, which commenrates the wedding of Rama and his wife Sita).
Tulsidas came to Varanasi and recited the Ramcharitmanas to Shiva (Vishwanath) and Parvati (Annapurna) at the Kashi Vishwanath Temple. A popular legend goes that the Brahmins of Varanasi, who were critical of Tulsidas for having rendered the Sanskrit Ramayana in the Awadhi, decided to test the worth of the work. A manuscript of the Ramcharitmanas was kept at the bottom of pile of Sanskrit scriptures in the sanctum sanctorum of the Vishvanath temple in the night, and the doors of the sanctum sanctorum were locked. In the morning when the doors were opened, the Ramcharitmanas was found at the top of the pile. The words Satyam Shivam Sundaram (Sanskrit: सत्यं शिवं सुन्दरम्, literally "truth, auspiciousness, beauty") were inscribed on the manuscript with the signature of Shiva. The words were also heard by the people present.
Per traditional accounts, some Brahmins of Varanasi were still not satisfied, and sent two thieves to steal the manuscript. The thieves tried to break into the Ashram of Tulsidas, but were confronted by two guards with bows and arrows, of dark and fair complexion. The thieves had a change of heart and came to Tulsidas in the morning to ask who the two guards were. Believing that the two guards could be none other than Rama and Lakshmana, Tulsidas was aggrieved to know that they were guarding his home at night. He sent the manuscript of Ramcharitmanas to his friend Todar Mal, the finance minister of Akbar, and donated all his money. The thieves were reformed and became devotees of Rama.
Last compositions
Around Vikram 1664 (1607 CE), Tulsidas was afflicted by acute pain all over his body, especially in his arms. He then composed the Hanuman Bahuk, where he describes his bodily pain and suffering in several stanzas. He was relieved of his pain after this composition. Later he was also afflicted by Bartod boils (Hindi: बरतोड़, furuncles caused by pulling out of the hair), which may have been the cause of his death.
The Vinaypatrika is considered as the last compositions of Tulsidas, believed to be written when Kali Yuga started troubling him. In this work of 279 stanzas, he beseeches Rama to give him Bhakti ("devotion"), and to accept his petition. Tulsidas attests in the last stanza of Vinaypatrika that Rama himself signed the manuscript of the work. The 45th stanza of the Vinaypatrika is sung as the evening Aarti by many Hindus.
Death
Tulsidas died at the age of 91 on 31 July 1623 (Shravan month of the year Vikram 1680) in Assi Ghat on the bank of the river Ganga. Like the year of his birth, traditional accounts and biographers do not agree on the exact date of his death.
Works
Twelve works are widely considered by biographers to be written by Tulsidas, six major works and six minor works. Based on the language of the works, they have been classified into two groups as follows–
Awadhi works – Ramcharitmanas, Ramlala Nahachhu, Barvai Ramayan, Parvati Mangal, Janaki Mangal and Ramagya Prashna.
Braja works – Krishna Gitavali, Gitavali, Sahitya Ratna, Dohavali, Vairagya Sandipani and Vinaya Patrika.
Besides these twelve works, four more works are popularly believed to be composed by Tulsidas which include Hanuman Chalisa, Hanuman Ashtak, Hanuman Bahuk and Tulsi Satsai.
Ramcharitmanas
Ramacharitamanas (रामचरितमानस, 1574–1576), "The Mānasa lake brimming over with the exploits of Lord Rāma" is an Awadhi rendering of the Ramayana narrative. It is the longest and earliest work of Tulsidas, and draws from various sources including the Ramayana of Valmiki, the Adhyatma Ramayana, the Prasannaraghava and Hanuman Nataka. The work consists of around 12,800 lines divided into 1073 stanzas, which are groups of Chaupais separated by Dohas or Sorthas. It is divided into seven books (Kands) like the Ramayana of Valmiki, and is around one-third of the size of Valmiki's Ramayana. The work is composed in 18 metres which include ten Sanskrit metres (Anushtup, Shardulvikridit, Vasantatilaka, Vamshashta, Upajati, Pramanika, Malini, Sragdhara, Rathoddhata and Bhujangaprayata) and eight Prakrit metres (Soratha, Doha, Chaupai, Harigitika, Tribhangi, Chaupaiya, Trotaka and Tomara). It is popularly referred to as Tulsikrit Ramayana, literally The Ramayana composed by Tulsidas. The work has been acclaimed as "the living sum of Indian culture", "the tallest tree in the magic garden of medieval Indian poesy", "the greatest book of all devotional literature", "the Bible of Northern India", and "the best and most trustworthy guide to the popular living faith of its people."But, as he has said "हरि अनंत हरि कथा अनंता।( The story of the lord is endless as are his glories)
Several manuscripts of the Ramcharitmanas are claimed to have been written down by Tulsidas himself. Grierson wrote in the late nineteenth century, two copies of the epic were said to have existed in the poet's own handwriting. One manuscript was kept at Rajapur, of which only the Ayodhyakand is left now, which bears marks of water. A legend goes that the manuscript was stolen and thrown into Yamuna river when the thief was being pursued, and only the second book of the epic could be rescued. Grierson wrote that the other copy was at Malihabad in Lucknow district, of which only one leaf was missing. Another manuscript of the Ayodhyakanda claimed to be in the poet's own hand exists at Soron in Etah district, one of the places claimed to be Tulsidas' birthplace. One manuscript of Balakanda, dated Samvat 1661, nineteen years before the poet's death, claimed to be corrected by Tulsidas, is at Ayodhya. Some other ancient manuscripts are found in Varanasi, including one in possession of the Maharaja of Benares that was written in Vikram 1704 (1647), twenty-four years after the death of Tulsidas.
Other major works
The five major works of Tulsidas apart from Ramcharitmanas include:
Dohavali (दोहावली, 1581), literally Collection of Dohas, is a work consisting of 573 miscellaneous Doha and Sortha verses mainly in Braja with some verses in Awadhi. The verses are aphorisms on topics related to tact, political wisdom, righteousness and the purpose of life. 85 Dohas from this work are also found in the Ramcharitmanas, 35 in Ramagya Prashna, two in Vairagya Sandipani and some in Rama Satsai, another work of 700 Dohas attributed to Tulsidas.
sahitya ratna or ratna Ramayan (1608–1614), literally Collection of Kavittas, is a Braja rendering of the Ramayana, composed entirely in metres of the Kavitta family – Kavitta, Savaiya, Ghanakshari and Chhappaya. It consists of 325 verses including 183 verses in the Uttarkand. Like the Ramcharitmanas, it is divided into seven Kands or books and many episodes in this work are different from the Ramcharitmanas.
Gitavali (गीतावली), literally Collection of Songs, is a Braja rendering of the Ramayana in songs. All the verses are set to Ragas of Hindustani classical music and are suitable for singing. It consists of 328 songs divided into seven Kands or books. Many episodes of the Ramayana are elaborated while many others are abridged.
Krishna Gitavali or Krishnavali (कृष्णगीतावली, 1607), literally Collection of Songs to Krishna, is a collection of 61 songs in honour of Krishna in Braja. There are 32 songs devoted to the childhood sports (Balalila) and Rasa Lila of Krishna, 27 songs form the dialogue between Krishna and Uddhava, and two songs describe the episode of disrobing of Draupadi.
Vinaya Patrika (विनयपत्रिका), literally Petition of Humility, is a Braja work consisting of 279 stanzas or hymns. The stanzas form a petition in the court of Rama asking for Bhakti. It is considered to be the second best work of Tulsidas after the Ramcharitmanas, and is regarded as important from the viewpoints of philosophy, erudition, and eulogistic and poetic style of Tulsidas. The first 43 hymns are addressed to various deities and Rama's courtiers and attendants, and remaining are addressed to Rama.
Minor works
Minor works of Tulsidas include:
Barvai Ramayana (बरवै रामायण, 1612), literally The Ramayana in Barvai metre, is an abridged rendering of the Ramayana in Awadhi. The works consists of 69 verses composed in the Barvai metre, and is divided into seven Kands or books. The work is based on a psychological framework.
Parvati Mangal (पार्वती मंगल), literally The marriage of Parvati, is an Awadhi work of 164 verses describing the penance of Parvati and the marriage of Parvati and Shiva. It consists of 148 verses in the Sohar metre and 16 verses in the Harigitika metre.
Janaki Mangal (जानकी मंगल), literally The marriage of Sita, is an Awadhi work of 216 verses describing the episode of marriage of Sita and Rama from the Ramayana. The work includes 192 verses in the Hamsagati metre and 24 verses in the Harigitika metres. The narrative differs from the Ramcharitmanas at several places.
Ramalala Nahachhu (रामलला नहछू), literally The Nahachhu ceremony of the child Rama, is an Awadhi work of 20 verses composed in the Sohar metre. The Nahachhu ceremony involves cutting the nails of the feet before the Hindu Samskaras (rituals) of Chudakarana, Upanayana, Vedarambha, Samavartana or Vivaha. In the work, events take place in the city of Ayodhya, so it is considered to describe the Nahachhu before Upanayana, Vedarambha and Samavartana.
Ramajna Prashna (रामाज्ञा प्रश्न), literally Querying the Will of Rama, is an Awadhi work related to both Ramayana and Jyotisha (astrology). It consists of seven Kands or books, each of which is divided into seven Saptakas or Septets of seven Dohas each. Thus it contains 343 Dohas in all. The work narrates the Ramayana non-sequentially, and gives a method to look up the Shakuna (omen or portent) for astrological predictions.
Vairagya Sandipini (वैराग्य संदीपनी, 1612), literally Kindling of Detachment, is a philosophical work of 60 verses in Braja which describe the state of Jnana (realisation) and Vairagya (dispassion), the nature and greatness of saints, and moral conduct. It consists of 46 Dohas, 2 Sorathas and 12 Chaupai metres.
Popularly attributed works
The following four works are popularly attributed to Tulsidas–
Hanuman Chalisa (हनुमान चालीसा), literally, Forty Verses to Hanuman, is an Awadhi work of 40 Chaupais and two Dohas in obeisance to Hanuman. Popular belief holds the work to be authored by Tulsidas, and it contains his signature, though some authors do not think the work was written by him. It is one of the most read short religious texts in northern India, and is recited by millions of Hindus on Tuesdays and Saturdays. It is believed to have been uttered by Tulsidas in a state of Samadhi at the Kumbh Mela in Haridwar.
Sankatmochan Hanumanashtak (संकटमोचन हनुमानाष्टक), literally Eight verses for Hanuman, the Remover of Afflictions, is an Awadhi work of eight verses in the Mattagajendra metre, devoted to Hanuman. It is believed to have been composed by Tulsidas on the occasion of the founding of the Sankatmochan Temple in Varanasi. The work is usually published along with Hanuman Chalisa.
Hanuman Bahuka (हनुमान बाहुक), literally The Arm of Hanuman, is a Braja work of 44 verses believed to have been composed by Tulsidas when he suffered acute pain in his arms at an advanced age. Tulsidas describes the pain in his arms and also prays to Hanuman for freedom from the suffering. The work has two, one, five and 36 verses respectively in the Chhappaya, Jhulna, Savaiya and Ghanakshari metre.
Tulsi Satsai (तुलसी सतसई), literally Seven Hundred Verses by Tulsidas, is a work in both Awadhi and Braja and contains 747 Dohas divided in seven Sargas or cantos. The verses are same as those in Dohavali and Ramagya Prashna but the order is different.
Doctrine
The philosophy and principles of Tulsidas are found across his works, and are especially outlined in the dialogue between Kakbhushundi and Garuda in the Uttar Kand of the Ramcharitmanas. Tulsidas' doctrine has been described as an assimilation and reconciliation of the diverse tenets and cultures of Hinduism. At the beginning of the Ramcharitmanas, Tulsidas says that his work is in accordance with various scriptures – the Puranas, Vedas, Upavedas, Tantra and Smriti. Ram Chandra Shukla in his critical work Hindi Sahitya Ka Itihaas elaborates on Tulsidas' Lokmangal as the doctrine for social upliftment which made this great poet immortal and comparable to any other world littérateur.
Nirguna and Saguna Brahman
As per Tulsidas, the Nirguna Brahman (quality-less impersonal absolute) and Saguna Brahman (personal God with qualities) are one and the same. Both, Saguna (qualified Brahman) and Aguna (or Nirguna - unqualified Brahman) are Akath (unspeakable), Agaadh (unfathomable), Anaadi (without beginning, in existence since eternity) and Anupa (without parallel) (अगुन सगुन दुइ ब्रह्म सरूपा। अकथ अगाध अनादि अनूपा॥). It is the devotion (Bhakti) of the devotee that forces the Nirguna Brahman which is quality-less, formless, invisible and unborn, to become Saguna Brahman with qualities. Tulsidas gives the example of water, snow and hail to explain this – the substance is the same in all three, but the same formless water solidifies to become hail or a mountain of snow – both of which have a form. Tulsidas also gives the simile of a lake – the Nirguna Brahman is like the lake with just water, while the Saguna Brahman is a lake resplendent with blooming lotuses. In the Uttar Kand of Ramcharitmanas, Tulsidas describes in detail a debate between Kakbhushundi and Lomasa about whether God is Nirguna (as argued by Lomasa adhering to monism) or Saguna (as argued by Kakbhushundi adhering to dualism). Kakbhushundi repeatedly refutes all the arguments of Lomasa, to the point when Lomasa becomes angry and curses Kakbhushundi to be a crow. Lomasa repents later when Kakbhushundi happily accepts the curse but refuses to give up the Bhakti of Rama, the Saguna Brahman. Though Tulsidas holds both aspects of God to be equal, he favours the qualified Saguna aspect and the devotees of the highest category in the Ramcharitmanas repeatedly ask for the qualified Saguna aspect of Rama to dwell in their mind. Some authors contend from a few couplets in Ramcharitmanas and Vinay Patrika that Tulsidas has vigorously contradicted the denial of Avatar by Kabir. In several of his works, Kabir had said that the actual Rama is not the son of Dasharatha. In the Balkand of Ramcharitmanas, Shiva tells Parvati – those who say that the Rama whom the Vedas sing of and whom the sages contemplate on is different from the Rama of Raghu's race are possessed by the devil of delusion and do not know the difference between truth and falsehood. However, such allusions are based on interpretations of the text and do not hold much water when considered in the context of Ramcharitmanas. Tulsidas, in none of his works, has ever mentioned Kabir.
The name of Rama
At the beginning of the Ramcharitmanas, there is a section devoted to the veneration of the name of Rama. As per Tulsidas, repeating the name of Rama is the only means to attain God in the Kali age where the means suited for other ages like meditation, Karma, and Puja are ineffective. He says in Kavitavali that his own redemption is because of the power, glory and majesty of the name of Rama. In a couplet in the Gitavali, Tulsidas says that wishing for liberation without refuge in the name of Rama is like wishing to climb to the sky by holding on to the falling rain. In his view, the name of Rama is greater than both Nirguna and Saguna aspects of God – it controls both of them and is illuminates both like a bilingual interpreter. In a verse in the Dohavali, Tulsidas says that the Nirguna Brahman resides in his heart, the Saguna Brahman resides in his eyes and the name of Rama resides on his tongue, as if a radiant gemstone is kept between the lower and upper halves of a golden casket. He holds that Rama is superior to all other names of God, and argues that ra and ma being are the only two consonants that are written above all other consonants in the conjunct form in Sanskrit because they are the two sounds in the word Rama.
Rama as Brahman
At several places in Tulsidas' works, Rama is seen to be the higher than Vishnu and not as an avatar of Vishnu, which is the general portrayal of Rama.
In the episode of the delusion of Sati in Ramcharitmanas, Sati sees many a Shiva, Brahma and Vishnu serving Rama and bowing at his feet. When Manu and Shatarupa perform penance, they crave to see that Supreme Lord "from a part of whose being emanate a number of Shivas, Brahmas and Vishnus." Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva come to them many times tempting them with a boon, but Manu and Shatarupa do not stop their penance. They are finally satisfied only by the appearance of Rama, on whose left side is Sita, from a part of whom are born "countless Lakshmis, Umas (Parvatis) and Brahmanis (Sarasvatis)." In the episode of marriage of Sita and Rama in Balkand, the trio of Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva is present – Brahma is astounded as he finds nowhere anything that is his own handiwork, while Vishnu is enchanted with Lakhmi on seeing Rama. In the Sundarkand, Hanuman tells Ravana that Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva can create, preserve and destroy by the might of Rama. In the Lankakand, Tulsidas presents the universe as the cosmic form of Rama, in which Shiva is the consciousness, Brahma is the reason and Vishnu is his intelligence. As per Tulsidas, Rama is not only an avatar, but also the source of avatars – Krishna is also an Avatar of Rama. Thus, Tulsidas clearly considers Rama as supreme brahman and not an avatar of Vishnu.
In the opinion of Urvashi Soorati, the Rama of Tulsidas is an amalgamation of Vishnu who takes avatars, Vishnu in the abode of Ksheera Sagara, Brahman and the Para manifestation of the Pancharatra. Macfie concludes that Tulsidas makes a "double claim", i.e. Rama is an incarnation of both Vishnu and Brahman. In the words of Lutgendorf, Tulsidas' Rama is at once "Valmiki's exemplary prince, the cosmic Vishnu of Puranas, and the transcendent brahman of the Advaitins."
Vedanta, World and Maya
In the Sundarkand of Ramcharitmanas, Tulsidas says that Rama is knowable by Vedanta.
As per Tulsidas, Rama is the efficient and material cause (Nimitta and Upadana) of the world, which is real since Rama is real. In several verses of the Ramcharitmanas, Tulsidas says that the animate and inanimate world is a manifestation of Rama, and the universe is the cosmic form of Rama. Authors interpret these verses to mean that the world is real according to Tulsidas, in keeping with the Vishishtadvaita philosophy of Ramanuja. However, at some places in the Ramcharitmanas and Kavitavali, Tulsidas compares the world to a night or a dream and says it is Mithya (false or unreal). Some commentators interpret these verses to mean that in Tulsidas' opinion the world is unreal as per the Vivartavada doctrine of Adi Shankara, while some others interpret them to mean that the world is transient yet real as per the Satkhyativada doctrine of Ramananda. Uday Bhanu Singh concludes that in Tulsidas' view, the world is essentially the form of Rama and appears to be different from Rama due to Maya. Its visible form is transient, which is what Tulsidas means by Mithya.
In the Vinayapatrika, Tulsidas says that the world in itself is neither true (Satya), nor false (Asatya), nor both true and false together (Satyasatya) – one who casts aside all these three illusions, knows oneself. This has been interpreted to mean that as per Tulsidas, the entire world is a Lila of Rama. At the beginning of the Ramcharitmanas, Tulsidas performs Samasti Vandana (obeisance to all beings) in which he bows down to the world also, saying it is "pervaded by" or "born out of" Sita and Rama. As per some verses in Ramcharitmanas and Vinaypatrika, when a Jiva (living being) knows the Self, Maya and Rama, it sees the world as being pervaded by Rama.
In the Balkand episode of the marriage of the princes of Ayodhya with the princesses of Mithila, Tulsidas presents a metaphor in which the four brides are compared with the four states of consciousness – the waking state (Jagrat), sleep with dreams (Swapna), dreamless sleep (Sushupti) and the fourth self-conscious state (Turiya). The four grooms are compared with the presiding divinity (Vibhu) of the four states – Vishva, Taijasa, Prajna and Brahman. Tulsidas says as the four states of consciousness with their presiding divinities reside in the mind of a Jiva, so the four brides with their grooms are resplendent in the same pavilion.
Tulsidas identifies Maya with Sita, the inseparable energy of Rama which takes avatar along with Rama. In his view, Maya is of two types – Vidya and Avidya. Vidya Maya is the cause of creation and the liberation of Jiva. Avidya Maya is the cause of illusion and bondage of the Jiva. The entire world is under the control of Maya. Maya is essentially the same but the two divisions are made for cognitive purposes, this view of Tulsidas is in accordance with Vaishnava teachers of Vedanta.
Views on other Hindu deities
As per Tulsidas, there is no incompatibility between devotion to Rama and attachment to Shiva. Tulsidas equates the Guru as an incarnation of Shiva, and a considerable part of the Balkand of Ramcharitmanas is devoted to the narrative of Shiva including the abandonment of Sati, the penance of Parvati, the burning of Kamadeva and the marriage of Parvati and Shiva. In addition, Tulsidas venerates the whole Hindu pantheon. The Ramcharitmanas begins with reverence of Ganesh, Sarasvati, Parvati, Shiva, the Guru, Valmiki and Hanuman. At the beginning of the Vinayapatrika, he bows to Ganesh, Surya, Shiva, Devi, Ganga, Yamuna, Varanasi and Chitrakoot, asking them for devotion towards Rama.
Bhakti
The practical end of all his writings is to inculcate bhakti addressed to Rama as the greatest means of salvation and emancipation from the chain of births and deaths, a salvation which is as free and open to men of the lowest caste as to Brahmins.
Critical reception
From his time, Tulsidas has been acclaimed by Indian and Western scholars alike for his poetry and his impact on the Hindu society. Tulsidas mentions in his work Kavitavali that he was considered a great sage in the world. Madhusūdana Sarasvatī, one of the most acclaimed philosophers of the Advaita Vedanta tradition based in Varanasi and the composer of Advaitasiddhi, was a contemporary of Tulsidas. On reading the Ramcharitmanas, he was astonished and composed the following Sanskrit verse in praise of the epic and the composer.
आनन्दकानने कश्चिज्जङ्गमस्तुल्सीतरुः ।
कविता मञ्जरी यस्य रामभ्रमरभूषिता ॥
ānandakānane kaścijjaṅgamastulsītaruḥ ।
kavitā mañjarī yasya rāmabhramarabhūṣitā ॥
Sur, a devotee of Krishna and a contemporary of Tulsidas, called Tulsidas as Sant Shiromani (the highest jewel among holy men) in an eight-line verse extolling Ramcharitmanas and Tulsidas. Abdur Rahim Khankhana, famous Muslim poet who was one of the Navaratnas (nine-gems) in the court of the Mughal emperor Akbar, was a personal friend of Tulsidas. Rahim composed the following couplet describing the Ramcharitmanas of Tulsidas –
रामचरितमानस बिमल संतनजीवन प्रान ।
हिन्दुवान को बेद सम जवनहिं प्रगट कुरान ॥
rāmacaritamānasa bimala santanajīvana prāna ।
hinduvāna ko beda sama javanahi̐ pragaṭa kurāna ॥
The historian Vincent Smith, the author of a biography of Tulsidas' contemporary Akbar, called Tulsidas the greatest man of his age in India and greater than even Akbar himself. The Indologist and linguist Sir George Grierson called Tulsidas "the greatest leader of the people after the Buddha" and "the greatest of Indian authors of modern times"; and the epic Ramcharitmanas "worthy of the greatest poet of any age." The work Ramcharitmanas has been called "the Bible of North India" by both nineteenth century Indologists including Ralph Griffith, who translated the four Vedas and Valmiki's Ramayana into English, and modern writers. Mahatma Gandhi held Tulsidas in high esteem and regarded the Ramcharitmanas as the "greatest book in all devotional literature". The Hindi poet Suryakant Tripathi 'Nirala' called Tulsidas "the most fragrant branch of flowers in the garden of the world's poetry, blossoming in the creeper of Hindi". Nirala considered Tulsidas to be a greater poet than Rabindranath Tagore, and in the same league as Kalidasa, Vyasa, Valmiki, Homer, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and William Shakespeare. Hindi litterateur Hazari Prasad Dwivedi wrote that Tulsidas established a "sovereign rule on the kingdom of Dharma in northern India", which was comparable to the impact of Buddha. Edmour J. Babineau, author of the book Love and God and Social Duty in Ramacaritmanasa, says that if Tulsidas was born in Europe or the Americas, he would be considered a greater personality than William Shakespeare. In the words of the archaeologist F. R. Allchin, who translated Vinaypatrika and Kavitavali into English, "for people of a large part of North India Tulsidas claims reverence comparable to that accorded to Luther as translator of the Bible into the native German". Allchin also mentions that the work Ramcharitmanas has been compared to not only the Ramayana of Valmiki, but the Vedas themselves, the Bhagavad Gita, the Quran and the Bible. Ernest Wood in his work An Englishman Defends Mother India considered the Ramcharitmanas to be "superior to the best books of the Latin and Greek languages." Tulsidas is also referred to as Bhaktaśiromaṇi, meaning the highest jewel among devotees.
Specifically about his poetry, Tulsidas has been called the "emperor of the metaphor" and one who excels in similes by several critics. The Hindi poet Ayodhyasingh Upadhyay 'Hariaudh' said of Tulsidas –
कविता करके तुलसी न लसे
कविता लसी पा तुलसी की कला ।
kavitā karake tulasī na lase
kavitā lasī pā tulasī kī kalā ।
The Hindi poet Mahadevi Verma said commenting on Tulsidas that in the turbulent Middle Ages, India got light from Tulsidas. She further went on to say that the Indian society as it exists today is an edifice built by Tulsidas, and the Rama as we know today is the Rama of Tulsidas.
See also
Hanuman Chalisa
Ramcharitmanas
Shri Ramachandra Kripalu
Thumak Chalat Ram Chandra
Bhakti movement
Notes
References
External links
The Ramcharitmanas of Tulasidas, published by Gita Press
Tulsidas Biography
Indian male poets
Hindi-language poets
Hindu poets
Epic poets
Sant Mat
1497 births
1532 births
1623 deaths
Hindu revivalists
Translators of the Ramayana
Indian Hindu saints
Scholars from Varanasi
16th-century Hindu religious leaders
16th-century Indian poets
16th-century Indian scholars
Bhakti movement
Poets from Uttar Pradesh
Writers from Varanasi
Vaishnava saints
Longevity claims | [
"Tulsidas (; 1532–1623), also known as Goswami Tulsidas, was a Ramanandi Vaishnava Hindu saint and poet, renowned for his devotion to the deity Rama.",
"He wrote several popular works in Sanskrit and Awadhi, but is best known as the author of the epic Ramcharitmanas, a retelling of the Sanskrit Ramayana based on Rama's life in the vernacular Awadhi.",
"Tulsidas spent most of his life in the city of Varanasi and Ayodhya.",
"The Tulsi Ghat on the Ganges River in Varanasi is named after him.",
"He founded the Sankatmochan Temple dedicated to Lord Hanuman in Varanasi, believed to stand at the place where he had the sight of the deity.",
"Tulsidas started the Ramlila plays, a folk-theatre adaption of the Ramayana.",
"He has been acclaimed as one of the greatest poets in Hindi, Indian, and world literature.",
"The impact of Tulsidas and his works on the art, culture and society in India is widespread and is seen to date in vernacular language, Ramlila plays, Hindustani classical music, popular music, and television series.",
"Transliteration and etymology\n\nThe Sanskrit name of Tulsidas can be transliterated in two ways.",
"Using the original Sanskrit, the name is written as Tulasīdāsa.",
"Using the Hunterian transliteration system, it is written as Tulsidas or Tulsīdās reflecting the vernacular pronunciation (since the written Indian languages maintain the vestigial letters that are no longer pronounced).",
"The lost vowels are an aspect of the Schwa deletion in Indo-Aryan languages and can vary between regions.",
"The name is a compound of two Sanskrit words: Tulasī, which is an Indian variety of the basil plant considered auspicious by Vaishnavas (devotees of god Vishnu and his avatars like Rama), and Dāsa, which means slave or servant and by extension, devotee.",
"Sources\n\nTulsidas himself has given only a few facts and hints about events of his life in various works.",
"Till late nineteenth century, the two widely known ancient sources on Tulsidas' life were the Bhaktamal composed by Nabhadas between 1583 and 1639, and a commentary on Bhaktamal titled Bhaktirasbodhini composed by Priyadas in 1712.",
"Nabhadas was a contemporary of Tulsidas and wrote a six-line stanza on Tulsidas describing him as an incarnation of Valmiki.",
"Priyadas' work was composed around a hundred years after the death of Tulsidas and had eleven additional stanzas, describing seven miracles or spiritual experiences from the life of Tulsidas.",
"During the 1920s, two more ancient biographies of Tulsidas were published based on old manuscripts – the Mula Gosain Charit composed by Veni Madhav Das in 1630 and the Gosain Charit composed by Dasanidas (also known as Bhavanidas) around 1770.",
"Veni Madhav Das was a disciple and contemporary of Tulsidas and his work gave a new date for Tulsidas' birth.",
"The work by Bhavanidas presented more narratives in greater detail as compared to the work by Priyadas.",
"In the 1950s a fifth ancient account was published based on an old manuscript, the Gautam Chandrika composed by Krishnadatta Misra of Varanasi in 1624.",
"Krishnadatta Misra's father was a close companion of Tulsidas.",
"The accounts published later are not considered authentic by some modern scholars, whereas some other scholars have been unwilling to dismiss them.",
"Together, these five works form a set of traditional biographies on which modern biographies of Tulsidas are based.",
"Incarnation of Valmiki\n\nHe is believed by many to be a rebirth of Valmiki.",
"In the Hindu scripture Bhavishyottar Purana, the god Shiva tells his wife Parvati how Valmiki, who got a boon from Hanuman to sing the glory of Rama in vernacular language, will incarnate in future in the Kali Yuga (the present and last Yuga or epoch within a cycle of four Yugas).",
"Nabhadas writes in his Bhaktamal (literally, the Garland of bhakt or devotee) that Tulsidas was the re-incarnation of Valmiki in the Kali Yuga.",
"The Ramanandi sect believes that it was Valmiki himself who incarnated as Tulsidas in the Kali Yuga.",
"According to a traditional account, Hanuman went to Valmiki numerous times to hear him sing the Ramayana, but Valmiki turned down the request saying that Hanuman being a monkey was unworthy of hearing the epic.",
"After the victory of Rama over Ravana, Hanuman went to the Himalayas to continue his worship of Rama.",
"There he scripted a play version of the Ramayana called Mahanataka or Hanuman Nataka engraved on the Himalayan rocks using his nails.",
"When Valmiki saw the play written by Hanuman, he anticipated that the beauty of the Mahanataka would eclipse his own Ramayana.",
"Hanuman was saddened at Valmiki's state of mind and, being a true bhakta without any desire for glory, Hanuman cast all the rocks into the ocean, some parts of which are believed to be available today as Hanuman Nataka.",
"After this, Valmiki was instructed by Hanuman to take birth as Tulsidas and compose the Ramayana in the vernacular.",
"Early life\n\nBirth\nTulsidas was born on Saptami, the seventh day of Shukla Paksha, the bright half of the lunar Hindu calendar month Shraavana (July–August).",
"This correlates with 13 August 1532 of the Gregorian calendar.",
"Although as many as three places are mentioned as his birthplace, most scholars identify the place with Sookar Kshetra Soron, District Kasganj in Uttar Pradesh, a village on the banks of the river Ganga.",
"In 2012 Sukarkhet Soron was declared officially by the government of Uttar Pradesh as the birthplace of Tulsi Das.",
"His parents were Hulsi and Atmaram Dubey.",
"Most sources identify him as a Saryupareen Brahmin of the Parashar Gotra (lineage), although some sources claim he was a Kanyakubja or Sanadhya Brahmin.",
"There is difference of opinion among biographers regarding the year of birth of Tulsidas.",
"Many sources rely on Veni Madhav Das' account in the Mula Gosain Charita, which gives the year of Tulsidas' birth as Vikrami Samvat 1554 (1497 CE).",
"These sources include Shivlal Pathak, popular editions of Ramcharitmanas (Gita Press, Naval Kishore Press and Venkateshvar Press), Edwin Greaves, Hanuman Prasad Poddar, Ramanand Sarasvati, Ayodhyanath Sharma, Ramchandra Shukla, Narayandas, and Rambhadracharya.",
"A second group of biographers led by Sant Tulsi Sahib of Hathras and Sir George Grierson give the year as Vikram 1568 (1511 CE).",
"These biographers include Ramkrishna Gopal Bhandarkar, Ramghulam Dwivedi, James Lochtefeld, Swami Sivananda and others.",
"The year 1497 appears in many current-day biographies in India and in popular culture.",
"Biographers who disagree with this year argue that it makes the life span of Tulsidas equal 126 years, which in their opinion is unlikely if not impossible.",
"In contrast, Ramchandra Shukla says that an age of 126 is not impossible for a Mahatma (great soul) like Tulsidas.",
"The Government of India and provincial governments celebrated the 500th birth anniversary of Tulsidas in the year 1997 CE, according to the year of Tulsidas' birth in popular culture.",
"Childhood\n\nLegend goes that Tulsidas was born after staying in the womb for twelve months, he had all thirty two teeth in his mouth at birth, his health and looks were like that of a five-year-old boy, and he did not cry at the time of his birth but uttered Rama instead.",
"He was therefore named Rambola (literally, he who uttered Rama), as Tulsidas himself states in Vinaya Patrika.",
"As per the Mula Gosain Charita, he was born under the Abhuktamūla constellation, which according to Jyotisha (Hindu astrology) causes immediate danger to the life of the father.",
"Due to the inauspicious events at the time of his birth, he was abandoned by his parents on the fourth night, sent away with Chuniya (some sources call her Muniya), a female servant of Hulsi.",
"In his works Kavitavali and Vinayapatrika, Tulsidas attests to his parents abandoning him after birth due to an inauspicious astrological configuration.",
"Chuniya took the child to her village of Haripur and looked after him for five and a half years after which she died.",
"Rambola was left to fend for himself as an impoverished orphan, and wandered from door to door begging for alms.",
"It is believed that the goddess Parvati assumed the form of a Brahmin woman and fed Rambola every day.",
"Initiation from guru and learning\n\nAt the age of six, Rambola was adopted by Narharidas, a Vaishnava ascetic of Ramananda's monastic order who is believed to be the fourth disciple of Ramananda, or alternately, the disciple of Anantacharya.",
"Rambola was given the Virakta Diksha (Vairagi initiation) with the new name of Tulsidas.",
"Tulsidas narrates the dialogue that took place during the first meeting with his guru in a passage in the Vinayapatrika.",
"When he was seven years old, his Upanayana (\"sacred thread ceremony\") was performed by Narharidas on the fifth day of the bright half of the month of Magha (January–February) at Ayodhya, a pilgrimage-site related to Rama.",
"Tulsidas started his learning at Ayodhya.",
"After some time, Narharidas took him to a particular Varaha Kshetra Soron (a holy place with temple dedicated to Varaha – the boar avatar of Vishnu), where he first narrated the Ramayana to Tulsidas.",
"Tulsidas mentions this in the Ramcharitmanas.",
"Most authors identify the Varaha Kshetra referred to by Tulsidas with the Sookarkshetra is the Soron Varaha Kshetra in modern-day Kasganj, Tulsidas further mentions in the Ramcharitmanas that his guru repeatedly narrated the Ramayana to him, which led him to understand it somewhat.",
"Tulsidas later came to the sacred city of Varanasi and studied Sanskrit grammar, four Vedas, six Vedangas, Jyotisha and the six schools of Hindu philosophy over a period of 15–16 years from guru Shesha Sanatana who was based at the Pancaganga Ghat in Varanasi.",
"Shesha Sanatana was a friend of Narharidas and a renowned scholar on literature and philosophy.",
"Marriage and renunciation\n\nThere are two contrasting views regarding the marital status of Tulsidas.",
"According to the Mula Gosain Charita and some other works, Tulsidas was married to Ratnavali on the thirteenth day of the bright half of the Jyeshta month (May–June) in Vikram 1583 (1526 CE).",
"Ratnavali was the daughter of Dinbandhu Pathak, a Brahmin of the Bharadwaja Gotra, who belonged to Mahewa village of Kaushambi district.",
"They had a son named Tarak who died as a toddler.",
"Once when Tulsidas had gone to a Hanuman temple, Ratnavali went to her father's home with her brother.",
"When Tulsidas came to know this, he swam across the Yamuna river in the night to meet his wife.",
"Ratnavali chided Tulsidas for this, and remarked that if Tulsidas was even half as devoted to God as he was to her body of flesh and blood, he would have been redeemed.",
"Tulsidas left her instantly and left for the holy city of Prayag.",
"Here, he renounced the Grihastha (householder's life) stage and became a Sadhu (Hindu ascetic).",
"Some authors consider the marriage episode of Tulsidas to be a later interpolation and maintain among that he was a bachelor.",
"They include Rambhadracharya, who cite two verses in the Vinayapatrika and Hanuman Bahuka to mean that Tulsidas never married and was a Sadhu from childhood.",
"Later life\n\nTravels \nAfter renunciation, Tulsidas spent most of his time at Varanasi, Prayag, Ayodhya, and Chitrakuta but visited many other nearby and far-off places.",
"He travelled across India to many places, studying different people, meeting saints and Sadhus and meditating.",
"The Mula Gosain Charita gives an account of his travels to the four pilgrimages of Hindus (Badrinath, Dwarka, Puri and Rameshwaram) and the Himalayas.",
"He visited the Manasarovar lake in current-day Tibet, where tradition holds he had Darshan (sight) of Kakabhushundi, the crow who is one of the four narrators in the Ramcharitmanas.",
"Darshan of Hanuman \nTulsidas hints at several places in his works, that he had met face to face with Hanuman and Rama.",
"The detailed account of his meetings with Hanuman and Rama are given in the Bhaktirasbodhini of Priyadas.",
"According to Priyadas' account, Tulsidas used to visit the woods outside Varanasi for his morning ablutions with a water pot.",
"On his return to the city, he used to offer the remaining water to a certain tree.",
"This quenched the thirst of a Preta (a type of ghost believed to be ever thirsty for water), who appeared to Tulsidas and offered him a boon.",
"Tulsidas said he wished to see Rama with his eyes, to which the Preta responded that it was beyond him.",
"However, the Preta said that he could guide Tulsidas to Hanuman, who could grant the boon Tulsidas asked for.",
"The Preta told Tulsidas that Hanuman comes everyday disguised in the mean attire of a leper to listen to his Katha, he is the first to arrive and last to leave.",
"That evening Tulsidas noted that the first listener to arrive at his discourse was an old leper, who sat at the end of the gathering.",
"After the Katha was over, Tulsidas quietly followed the leper to the woods.",
"In the woods, at the spot where the Sankat Mochan Temple stands today, Tulsidas firmly fell at the leper's feet, shouting \"I know who you are\" and \"You cannot escape me\".",
"At first the leper feigned ignorance but Tulsidas did not relent.",
"Then the leper revealed his original form of Hanuman and blessed Tulsidas.",
"When granted a boon, Tulsidas told Hanuman he wanted to see Rama face to face.",
"Hanuman told him to go to Chitrakuta where he would see Rama with his own eyes.",
"At the beginning of the Ramcharitmanas, Tulsidas bows down to a particular Preta and asks for his grace (Ramcharitmanas, Doha 1.7).",
"According to Rambhadracharya, this is the same Preta which led Tulsidas to Hanuman.",
"Darshan of Rama \nAs per Priyadas' account, Tulsidas followed the instruction of Hanumana and started living in an Ashram at Ramghat in Chitrakoot Dham.",
"One day Tulsidas went to perform the Parikrama (circumambulation) of the Kamadgiri mountain.",
"He saw two princes, one dark and the other fair, dressed in green robes pass by mounted on horsebacks.",
"Tulsidas was enraptured at the sight, however he could not recognise them and took his eyes off them.",
"Later Hanuman asked Tulsidas if he saw Rama and his brother Lakshmana on horses.",
"Tulsidas was disappointed and repentful.",
"Hanuman assured Tulsidas that he would have the sight of Rama once again the next morning.",
"Tulsidas recalls this incident in a song of the Gitavali and laments how \"his eyes turned his own enemies\" by staying fixed to the ground and how everything happened in a trice.",
"On the next morning, Wednesday, the new-moon day of Magha, Vikram 1607 (1551 CE) or 1621 (1565 CE) as per some sources, Rama again appeared to Tulsidas, this time as a child.",
"Tulsidas was making sandalwood paste when a child came and asked for a sandalwood Tilaka (a religious mark on the forehead).",
"This time Hanuman gave a hint to Tulsidas and he had a full view of Rama.",
"Tulsidas was so charmed that he forgot about the sandalwood.",
"Rama took the sandalwood paste and put a Tilaka himself on his forehead and Tulsidas' forehead before disappearing.",
"This famous incidence is described in the verse चित्रकूट के घाट पर हुई संतन की भीर तुलसीदास चन्दन घिसे तिलक देते रघुबीर.",
"In a verse in the Vinayapatrika, Tulsidas alludes to a certain \"miracle at Chitrakuta\", and thanks Rama for what he did for him at Chitrakuta.",
"Some biographers conclude that the deed of Rama at Chitrakuta referred to by Tulsidas is the Darshan of Rama.",
"Darshan of Yajnavalkya and Bharadvaja \nIn Vikram 1628 (1572 CE), Tulsidas left Chitrakuta for Prayag where he stayed during the Magha Mela (the annual fair in January).",
"Six days after the Mela ended, he had the Darshan of the sages Yajnavalkya and Bharadvaja under a banyan tree.",
"In one of the four dialogues in the Ramcharitmanas, Yajnavalkya is the speaker and Bharadvaja the listener.",
"Tulsidas describes the meeting between Yajnavalkya and Bharadvaja after a Magha Mela festival in the Ramcharitmanas, it is this meeting where Yajnavalkya narrates the Ramcharitmanas to Bharadvaja.",
"Attributed miracles \n\nMost stories about Tulsidas tend to be apocryphal, and have been carried forward by word of mouth.",
"None of them were related by Tulsi himself, thus making it difficult to separate fact from lore and fiction.",
"In Priyadas' biography, Tulsidas is attributed with the power of working miracles.",
"In one such miracle, he is believed to have brought back a dead Brahmin to life.",
"While the Brahmin was being taken for cremation, his widow bowed down to Tulsidas on the way who addressed her as Saubhagyavati (a woman whose husband is alive).",
"The widow told Tulsidas her husband had just died, so his words could not be true.",
"Tulsidas said that the word has passed his lips and so he would restore the dead man to life.",
"He asked everybody present to close their eyes and uttered the name of lord Rama, on doing which the dead Brahmin was raised back to life.",
"Tulsidas was acclaimed in his lifetime to be a reincarnation of Valmiki, the composer of the original Ramayana in Sanskrit.",
"He is also considered to be the composer of the Hanuman Chalisa, a popular devotional hymn dedicated to Hanuman,the monkey god and divine devotee of lord Rama.",
"In another miracle described by Priyadas, the Mughal Emperor Akbar summoned Tulsidas on hearing of his bringing back a dead man to life.",
"Tulsidas declined to go as he was too engrossed in creating his verses but he was later forcibly brought before the Akbar and was asked to perform a miracle, which Tulsidas declined by saying \"It's a lie, all I know is Rama.\"",
"The emperor imprisoned Tulsidas at Fatehpur Sikri, \"We will see this Rama.\"",
"Tulsidas refused to bow to Akbar and created a verse in praise of Hanuman and chanted it (Hanuman Chalisa) for forty days and suddenly an army of monkeys descended upon the town and wreaked havoc in all corners of Fatehpur Sikri, entering each home and the emperor's harem, scratching people and throwing bricks from ramparts.",
"An old Hafiz told the emperor that this was the miracle of the imprisoned Fakir.",
"The emperor fell at Tulsidas' feet, released him and apologised.",
"Tulsidas stopped the menace of monkeys and asked the emperor to abandon the place.",
"The emperor agreed and moved back to Delhi.",
"Ever since Akbar became a close friend of Tulsidas and he also ordered a firman that followers of lord Rama, lord Hanuman & other Hindus, should not be harassed in his kingdom.",
"Priyadas narrates a miracle of Tulsidas at Vrindavan, when he visited a temple of Krishna.",
"When he began bowing down to the idol of Krishna, the Mahant of the temple named Parshuram decided to test Tulsidas.",
"He told Tulsidas that he who bows down to any deity except their Ishta Devata (cherished form of divinity) is a fool, as Tulsidas' Ishta Devata was Rama.",
"In response, Tulsidas recited the following extemporaneously composed couplet\n\nWhen Tulsidas recited this couplet, the idol of Krishna holding the flute and stick in hands changed to the idol of Rama holding the bow and arrow in hands.",
"Some authors have expressed doubts on the couplet being composed by Tulsidas.",
"Literary life\n\nTulsidas started composing poetry in Sanskrit in Varanasi on the Prahlada Ghat.",
"Tradition holds that all the verses that he composed during the day, would get lost in the night.",
"This happened daily for eight days.",
"On the eighth night, Shiva – whose famous Kashi Vishwanath Temple is located in Varanasi – is believed to have ordered Tulsidas in a dream to compose poetry in the vernacular instead of Sanskrit.",
"Tulsidas woke up and saw both Shiva and Parvati who blessed him.",
"Shiva ordered Tulsidas to go to Ayodhya and compose poetry in Awadhi.",
"Shiva also predicted that Tulsidas' poetry would fructify like the Sama Veda.",
"In the Ramcharitmanas, Tulsidas hints at having the Darshan of Shiva and Parvati in both dream and awakened state.",
"Tulsidas is also credited with having composed a number of wise sayings and dohas containing lessons for life.",
"A popular one among them is:\n\nआवत ही हरसय नहीं, नैनन नहीं सनोह ।\nतुलसी वहाँ न जाइये, चाहे कञ्चन बरसे मेर ॥ सिया पति राम चन्द्र जी की जय , जय जय बजरंगबली ।।\n(Aawat hi harshe nahin, nainan nahin saneh.",
"Tulsi tahan na jaiye, chahe kanchan barse megh.",
"Lit.",
"A place where people are not happy or welcoming when you come, where their eyes have no affection for you, Don't go there, even if a mountain of gold is showered.)",
"Composition of Ramcharitmanas\n\nIn the year Vikram 1631 (1575 CE), Tulsidas started composing the Ramcharitmanas in Ayodhya on Sunday, Ramnavami day (ninth day of the bright half of the Chaitra month, which is the birthday of Rama).",
"Tulsidas himself attests this date in the Ramcharitmanas.",
"He composed the epic over two years, seven months and twenty-six days, and completed the work in Vikram 1633 (1577 CE) on the Vivaha Panchami day (fifth day of the bright half of the Margashirsha month, which commenrates the wedding of Rama and his wife Sita).",
"Tulsidas came to Varanasi and recited the Ramcharitmanas to Shiva (Vishwanath) and Parvati (Annapurna) at the Kashi Vishwanath Temple.",
"A popular legend goes that the Brahmins of Varanasi, who were critical of Tulsidas for having rendered the Sanskrit Ramayana in the Awadhi, decided to test the worth of the work.",
"A manuscript of the Ramcharitmanas was kept at the bottom of pile of Sanskrit scriptures in the sanctum sanctorum of the Vishvanath temple in the night, and the doors of the sanctum sanctorum were locked.",
"In the morning when the doors were opened, the Ramcharitmanas was found at the top of the pile.",
"The words Satyam Shivam Sundaram (Sanskrit: सत्यं शिवं सुन्दरम्, literally \"truth, auspiciousness, beauty\") were inscribed on the manuscript with the signature of Shiva.",
"The words were also heard by the people present.",
"Per traditional accounts, some Brahmins of Varanasi were still not satisfied, and sent two thieves to steal the manuscript.",
"The thieves tried to break into the Ashram of Tulsidas, but were confronted by two guards with bows and arrows, of dark and fair complexion.",
"The thieves had a change of heart and came to Tulsidas in the morning to ask who the two guards were.",
"Believing that the two guards could be none other than Rama and Lakshmana, Tulsidas was aggrieved to know that they were guarding his home at night.",
"He sent the manuscript of Ramcharitmanas to his friend Todar Mal, the finance minister of Akbar, and donated all his money.",
"The thieves were reformed and became devotees of Rama.",
"Last compositions\nAround Vikram 1664 (1607 CE), Tulsidas was afflicted by acute pain all over his body, especially in his arms.",
"He then composed the Hanuman Bahuk, where he describes his bodily pain and suffering in several stanzas.",
"He was relieved of his pain after this composition.",
"Later he was also afflicted by Bartod boils (Hindi: बरतोड़, furuncles caused by pulling out of the hair), which may have been the cause of his death.",
"The Vinaypatrika is considered as the last compositions of Tulsidas, believed to be written when Kali Yuga started troubling him.",
"In this work of 279 stanzas, he beseeches Rama to give him Bhakti (\"devotion\"), and to accept his petition.",
"Tulsidas attests in the last stanza of Vinaypatrika that Rama himself signed the manuscript of the work.",
"The 45th stanza of the Vinaypatrika is sung as the evening Aarti by many Hindus.",
"Death\nTulsidas died at the age of 91 on 31 July 1623 (Shravan month of the year Vikram 1680) in Assi Ghat on the bank of the river Ganga.",
"Like the year of his birth, traditional accounts and biographers do not agree on the exact date of his death.",
"Works\n\nTwelve works are widely considered by biographers to be written by Tulsidas, six major works and six minor works.",
"Based on the language of the works, they have been classified into two groups as follows–\n Awadhi works – Ramcharitmanas, Ramlala Nahachhu, Barvai Ramayan, Parvati Mangal, Janaki Mangal and Ramagya Prashna.",
"Braja works – Krishna Gitavali, Gitavali, Sahitya Ratna, Dohavali, Vairagya Sandipani and Vinaya Patrika.",
"Besides these twelve works, four more works are popularly believed to be composed by Tulsidas which include Hanuman Chalisa, Hanuman Ashtak, Hanuman Bahuk and Tulsi Satsai.",
"Ramcharitmanas\n\nRamacharitamanas (रामचरितमानस, 1574–1576), \"The Mānasa lake brimming over with the exploits of Lord Rāma\" is an Awadhi rendering of the Ramayana narrative.",
"It is the longest and earliest work of Tulsidas, and draws from various sources including the Ramayana of Valmiki, the Adhyatma Ramayana, the Prasannaraghava and Hanuman Nataka.",
"The work consists of around 12,800 lines divided into 1073 stanzas, which are groups of Chaupais separated by Dohas or Sorthas.",
"It is divided into seven books (Kands) like the Ramayana of Valmiki, and is around one-third of the size of Valmiki's Ramayana.",
"The work is composed in 18 metres which include ten Sanskrit metres (Anushtup, Shardulvikridit, Vasantatilaka, Vamshashta, Upajati, Pramanika, Malini, Sragdhara, Rathoddhata and Bhujangaprayata) and eight Prakrit metres (Soratha, Doha, Chaupai, Harigitika, Tribhangi, Chaupaiya, Trotaka and Tomara).",
"It is popularly referred to as Tulsikrit Ramayana, literally The Ramayana composed by Tulsidas.",
"The work has been acclaimed as \"the living sum of Indian culture\", \"the tallest tree in the magic garden of medieval Indian poesy\", \"the greatest book of all devotional literature\", \"the Bible of Northern India\", and \"the best and most trustworthy guide to the popular living faith of its people.",
"\"But, as he has said \"हरि अनंत हरि कथा अनंता।( The story of the lord is endless as are his glories)\n\nSeveral manuscripts of the Ramcharitmanas are claimed to have been written down by Tulsidas himself.",
"Grierson wrote in the late nineteenth century, two copies of the epic were said to have existed in the poet's own handwriting.",
"One manuscript was kept at Rajapur, of which only the Ayodhyakand is left now, which bears marks of water.",
"A legend goes that the manuscript was stolen and thrown into Yamuna river when the thief was being pursued, and only the second book of the epic could be rescued.",
"Grierson wrote that the other copy was at Malihabad in Lucknow district, of which only one leaf was missing.",
"Another manuscript of the Ayodhyakanda claimed to be in the poet's own hand exists at Soron in Etah district, one of the places claimed to be Tulsidas' birthplace.",
"One manuscript of Balakanda, dated Samvat 1661, nineteen years before the poet's death, claimed to be corrected by Tulsidas, is at Ayodhya.",
"Some other ancient manuscripts are found in Varanasi, including one in possession of the Maharaja of Benares that was written in Vikram 1704 (1647), twenty-four years after the death of Tulsidas.",
"Other major works\n\nThe five major works of Tulsidas apart from Ramcharitmanas include:\n Dohavali (दोहावली, 1581), literally Collection of Dohas, is a work consisting of 573 miscellaneous Doha and Sortha verses mainly in Braja with some verses in Awadhi.",
"The verses are aphorisms on topics related to tact, political wisdom, righteousness and the purpose of life.",
"85 Dohas from this work are also found in the Ramcharitmanas, 35 in Ramagya Prashna, two in Vairagya Sandipani and some in Rama Satsai, another work of 700 Dohas attributed to Tulsidas.",
"sahitya ratna or ratna Ramayan (1608–1614), literally Collection of Kavittas, is a Braja rendering of the Ramayana, composed entirely in metres of the Kavitta family – Kavitta, Savaiya, Ghanakshari and Chhappaya.",
"It consists of 325 verses including 183 verses in the Uttarkand.",
"Like the Ramcharitmanas, it is divided into seven Kands or books and many episodes in this work are different from the Ramcharitmanas.",
"Gitavali (गीतावली), literally Collection of Songs, is a Braja rendering of the Ramayana in songs.",
"All the verses are set to Ragas of Hindustani classical music and are suitable for singing.",
"It consists of 328 songs divided into seven Kands or books.",
"Many episodes of the Ramayana are elaborated while many others are abridged.",
"Krishna Gitavali or Krishnavali (कृष्णगीतावली, 1607), literally Collection of Songs to Krishna, is a collection of 61 songs in honour of Krishna in Braja.",
"There are 32 songs devoted to the childhood sports (Balalila) and Rasa Lila of Krishna, 27 songs form the dialogue between Krishna and Uddhava, and two songs describe the episode of disrobing of Draupadi.",
"Vinaya Patrika (विनयपत्रिका), literally Petition of Humility, is a Braja work consisting of 279 stanzas or hymns.",
"The stanzas form a petition in the court of Rama asking for Bhakti.",
"It is considered to be the second best work of Tulsidas after the Ramcharitmanas, and is regarded as important from the viewpoints of philosophy, erudition, and eulogistic and poetic style of Tulsidas.",
"The first 43 hymns are addressed to various deities and Rama's courtiers and attendants, and remaining are addressed to Rama.",
"Minor works\nMinor works of Tulsidas include:\n Barvai Ramayana (बरवै रामायण, 1612), literally The Ramayana in Barvai metre, is an abridged rendering of the Ramayana in Awadhi.",
"The works consists of 69 verses composed in the Barvai metre, and is divided into seven Kands or books.",
"The work is based on a psychological framework.",
"Parvati Mangal (पार्वती मंगल), literally The marriage of Parvati, is an Awadhi work of 164 verses describing the penance of Parvati and the marriage of Parvati and Shiva.",
"It consists of 148 verses in the Sohar metre and 16 verses in the Harigitika metre.",
"Janaki Mangal (जानकी मंगल), literally The marriage of Sita, is an Awadhi work of 216 verses describing the episode of marriage of Sita and Rama from the Ramayana.",
"The work includes 192 verses in the Hamsagati metre and 24 verses in the Harigitika metres.",
"The narrative differs from the Ramcharitmanas at several places.",
"Ramalala Nahachhu (रामलला नहछू), literally The Nahachhu ceremony of the child Rama, is an Awadhi work of 20 verses composed in the Sohar metre.",
"The Nahachhu ceremony involves cutting the nails of the feet before the Hindu Samskaras (rituals) of Chudakarana, Upanayana, Vedarambha, Samavartana or Vivaha.",
"In the work, events take place in the city of Ayodhya, so it is considered to describe the Nahachhu before Upanayana, Vedarambha and Samavartana.",
"Ramajna Prashna (रामाज्ञा प्रश्न), literally Querying the Will of Rama, is an Awadhi work related to both Ramayana and Jyotisha (astrology).",
"It consists of seven Kands or books, each of which is divided into seven Saptakas or Septets of seven Dohas each.",
"Thus it contains 343 Dohas in all.",
"The work narrates the Ramayana non-sequentially, and gives a method to look up the Shakuna (omen or portent) for astrological predictions.",
"Vairagya Sandipini (वैराग्य संदीपनी, 1612), literally Kindling of Detachment, is a philosophical work of 60 verses in Braja which describe the state of Jnana (realisation) and Vairagya (dispassion), the nature and greatness of saints, and moral conduct.",
"It consists of 46 Dohas, 2 Sorathas and 12 Chaupai metres.",
"Popularly attributed works\nThe following four works are popularly attributed to Tulsidas–\n Hanuman Chalisa (हनुमान चालीसा), literally, Forty Verses to Hanuman, is an Awadhi work of 40 Chaupais and two Dohas in obeisance to Hanuman.",
"Popular belief holds the work to be authored by Tulsidas, and it contains his signature, though some authors do not think the work was written by him.",
"It is one of the most read short religious texts in northern India, and is recited by millions of Hindus on Tuesdays and Saturdays.",
"It is believed to have been uttered by Tulsidas in a state of Samadhi at the Kumbh Mela in Haridwar.",
"Sankatmochan Hanumanashtak (संकटमोचन हनुमानाष्टक), literally Eight verses for Hanuman, the Remover of Afflictions, is an Awadhi work of eight verses in the Mattagajendra metre, devoted to Hanuman.",
"It is believed to have been composed by Tulsidas on the occasion of the founding of the Sankatmochan Temple in Varanasi.",
"The work is usually published along with Hanuman Chalisa.",
"Hanuman Bahuka (हनुमान बाहुक), literally The Arm of Hanuman, is a Braja work of 44 verses believed to have been composed by Tulsidas when he suffered acute pain in his arms at an advanced age.",
"Tulsidas describes the pain in his arms and also prays to Hanuman for freedom from the suffering.",
"The work has two, one, five and 36 verses respectively in the Chhappaya, Jhulna, Savaiya and Ghanakshari metre.",
"Tulsi Satsai (तुलसी सतसई), literally Seven Hundred Verses by Tulsidas, is a work in both Awadhi and Braja and contains 747 Dohas divided in seven Sargas or cantos.",
"The verses are same as those in Dohavali and Ramagya Prashna but the order is different.",
"Doctrine\nThe philosophy and principles of Tulsidas are found across his works, and are especially outlined in the dialogue between Kakbhushundi and Garuda in the Uttar Kand of the Ramcharitmanas.",
"Tulsidas' doctrine has been described as an assimilation and reconciliation of the diverse tenets and cultures of Hinduism.",
"At the beginning of the Ramcharitmanas, Tulsidas says that his work is in accordance with various scriptures – the Puranas, Vedas, Upavedas, Tantra and Smriti.",
"Ram Chandra Shukla in his critical work Hindi Sahitya Ka Itihaas elaborates on Tulsidas' Lokmangal as the doctrine for social upliftment which made this great poet immortal and comparable to any other world littérateur.",
"Nirguna and Saguna Brahman\n\nAs per Tulsidas, the Nirguna Brahman (quality-less impersonal absolute) and Saguna Brahman (personal God with qualities) are one and the same.",
"Both, Saguna (qualified Brahman) and Aguna (or Nirguna - unqualified Brahman) are Akath (unspeakable), Agaadh (unfathomable), Anaadi (without beginning, in existence since eternity) and Anupa (without parallel) (अगुन सगुन दुइ ब्रह्म सरूपा। अकथ अगाध अनादि अनूपा॥).",
"It is the devotion (Bhakti) of the devotee that forces the Nirguna Brahman which is quality-less, formless, invisible and unborn, to become Saguna Brahman with qualities.",
"Tulsidas gives the example of water, snow and hail to explain this – the substance is the same in all three, but the same formless water solidifies to become hail or a mountain of snow – both of which have a form.",
"Tulsidas also gives the simile of a lake – the Nirguna Brahman is like the lake with just water, while the Saguna Brahman is a lake resplendent with blooming lotuses.",
"In the Uttar Kand of Ramcharitmanas, Tulsidas describes in detail a debate between Kakbhushundi and Lomasa about whether God is Nirguna (as argued by Lomasa adhering to monism) or Saguna (as argued by Kakbhushundi adhering to dualism).",
"Kakbhushundi repeatedly refutes all the arguments of Lomasa, to the point when Lomasa becomes angry and curses Kakbhushundi to be a crow.",
"Lomasa repents later when Kakbhushundi happily accepts the curse but refuses to give up the Bhakti of Rama, the Saguna Brahman.",
"Though Tulsidas holds both aspects of God to be equal, he favours the qualified Saguna aspect and the devotees of the highest category in the Ramcharitmanas repeatedly ask for the qualified Saguna aspect of Rama to dwell in their mind.",
"Some authors contend from a few couplets in Ramcharitmanas and Vinay Patrika that Tulsidas has vigorously contradicted the denial of Avatar by Kabir.",
"In several of his works, Kabir had said that the actual Rama is not the son of Dasharatha.",
"In the Balkand of Ramcharitmanas, Shiva tells Parvati – those who say that the Rama whom the Vedas sing of and whom the sages contemplate on is different from the Rama of Raghu's race are possessed by the devil of delusion and do not know the difference between truth and falsehood.",
"However, such allusions are based on interpretations of the text and do not hold much water when considered in the context of Ramcharitmanas.",
"Tulsidas, in none of his works, has ever mentioned Kabir.",
"The name of Rama\n\nAt the beginning of the Ramcharitmanas, there is a section devoted to the veneration of the name of Rama.",
"As per Tulsidas, repeating the name of Rama is the only means to attain God in the Kali age where the means suited for other ages like meditation, Karma, and Puja are ineffective.",
"He says in Kavitavali that his own redemption is because of the power, glory and majesty of the name of Rama.",
"In a couplet in the Gitavali, Tulsidas says that wishing for liberation without refuge in the name of Rama is like wishing to climb to the sky by holding on to the falling rain.",
"In his view, the name of Rama is greater than both Nirguna and Saguna aspects of God – it controls both of them and is illuminates both like a bilingual interpreter.",
"In a verse in the Dohavali, Tulsidas says that the Nirguna Brahman resides in his heart, the Saguna Brahman resides in his eyes and the name of Rama resides on his tongue, as if a radiant gemstone is kept between the lower and upper halves of a golden casket.",
"He holds that Rama is superior to all other names of God, and argues that ra and ma being are the only two consonants that are written above all other consonants in the conjunct form in Sanskrit because they are the two sounds in the word Rama.",
"Rama as Brahman\nAt several places in Tulsidas' works, Rama is seen to be the higher than Vishnu and not as an avatar of Vishnu, which is the general portrayal of Rama.",
"In the episode of the delusion of Sati in Ramcharitmanas, Sati sees many a Shiva, Brahma and Vishnu serving Rama and bowing at his feet.",
"When Manu and Shatarupa perform penance, they crave to see that Supreme Lord \"from a part of whose being emanate a number of Shivas, Brahmas and Vishnus.\"",
"Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva come to them many times tempting them with a boon, but Manu and Shatarupa do not stop their penance.",
"They are finally satisfied only by the appearance of Rama, on whose left side is Sita, from a part of whom are born \"countless Lakshmis, Umas (Parvatis) and Brahmanis (Sarasvatis).\"",
"In the episode of marriage of Sita and Rama in Balkand, the trio of Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva is present – Brahma is astounded as he finds nowhere anything that is his own handiwork, while Vishnu is enchanted with Lakhmi on seeing Rama.",
"In the Sundarkand, Hanuman tells Ravana that Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva can create, preserve and destroy by the might of Rama.",
"In the Lankakand, Tulsidas presents the universe as the cosmic form of Rama, in which Shiva is the consciousness, Brahma is the reason and Vishnu is his intelligence.",
"As per Tulsidas, Rama is not only an avatar, but also the source of avatars – Krishna is also an Avatar of Rama.",
"Thus, Tulsidas clearly considers Rama as supreme brahman and not an avatar of Vishnu.",
"In the opinion of Urvashi Soorati, the Rama of Tulsidas is an amalgamation of Vishnu who takes avatars, Vishnu in the abode of Ksheera Sagara, Brahman and the Para manifestation of the Pancharatra.",
"Macfie concludes that Tulsidas makes a \"double claim\", i.e.",
"Rama is an incarnation of both Vishnu and Brahman.",
"In the words of Lutgendorf, Tulsidas' Rama is at once \"Valmiki's exemplary prince, the cosmic Vishnu of Puranas, and the transcendent brahman of the Advaitins.\"",
"Vedanta, World and Maya\n\nIn the Sundarkand of Ramcharitmanas, Tulsidas says that Rama is knowable by Vedanta.",
"As per Tulsidas, Rama is the efficient and material cause (Nimitta and Upadana) of the world, which is real since Rama is real.",
"In several verses of the Ramcharitmanas, Tulsidas says that the animate and inanimate world is a manifestation of Rama, and the universe is the cosmic form of Rama.",
"Authors interpret these verses to mean that the world is real according to Tulsidas, in keeping with the Vishishtadvaita philosophy of Ramanuja.",
"However, at some places in the Ramcharitmanas and Kavitavali, Tulsidas compares the world to a night or a dream and says it is Mithya (false or unreal).",
"Some commentators interpret these verses to mean that in Tulsidas' opinion the world is unreal as per the Vivartavada doctrine of Adi Shankara, while some others interpret them to mean that the world is transient yet real as per the Satkhyativada doctrine of Ramananda.",
"Uday Bhanu Singh concludes that in Tulsidas' view, the world is essentially the form of Rama and appears to be different from Rama due to Maya.",
"Its visible form is transient, which is what Tulsidas means by Mithya.",
"In the Vinayapatrika, Tulsidas says that the world in itself is neither true (Satya), nor false (Asatya), nor both true and false together (Satyasatya) – one who casts aside all these three illusions, knows oneself.",
"This has been interpreted to mean that as per Tulsidas, the entire world is a Lila of Rama.",
"At the beginning of the Ramcharitmanas, Tulsidas performs Samasti Vandana (obeisance to all beings) in which he bows down to the world also, saying it is \"pervaded by\" or \"born out of\" Sita and Rama.",
"As per some verses in Ramcharitmanas and Vinaypatrika, when a Jiva (living being) knows the Self, Maya and Rama, it sees the world as being pervaded by Rama.",
"In the Balkand episode of the marriage of the princes of Ayodhya with the princesses of Mithila, Tulsidas presents a metaphor in which the four brides are compared with the four states of consciousness – the waking state (Jagrat), sleep with dreams (Swapna), dreamless sleep (Sushupti) and the fourth self-conscious state (Turiya).",
"The four grooms are compared with the presiding divinity (Vibhu) of the four states – Vishva, Taijasa, Prajna and Brahman.",
"Tulsidas says as the four states of consciousness with their presiding divinities reside in the mind of a Jiva, so the four brides with their grooms are resplendent in the same pavilion.",
"Tulsidas identifies Maya with Sita, the inseparable energy of Rama which takes avatar along with Rama.",
"In his view, Maya is of two types – Vidya and Avidya.",
"Vidya Maya is the cause of creation and the liberation of Jiva.",
"Avidya Maya is the cause of illusion and bondage of the Jiva.",
"The entire world is under the control of Maya.",
"Maya is essentially the same but the two divisions are made for cognitive purposes, this view of Tulsidas is in accordance with Vaishnava teachers of Vedanta.",
"Views on other Hindu deities\n\nAs per Tulsidas, there is no incompatibility between devotion to Rama and attachment to Shiva.",
"Tulsidas equates the Guru as an incarnation of Shiva, and a considerable part of the Balkand of Ramcharitmanas is devoted to the narrative of Shiva including the abandonment of Sati, the penance of Parvati, the burning of Kamadeva and the marriage of Parvati and Shiva.",
"In addition, Tulsidas venerates the whole Hindu pantheon.",
"The Ramcharitmanas begins with reverence of Ganesh, Sarasvati, Parvati, Shiva, the Guru, Valmiki and Hanuman.",
"At the beginning of the Vinayapatrika, he bows to Ganesh, Surya, Shiva, Devi, Ganga, Yamuna, Varanasi and Chitrakoot, asking them for devotion towards Rama.",
"Bhakti\nThe practical end of all his writings is to inculcate bhakti addressed to Rama as the greatest means of salvation and emancipation from the chain of births and deaths, a salvation which is as free and open to men of the lowest caste as to Brahmins.",
"Critical reception\n\nFrom his time, Tulsidas has been acclaimed by Indian and Western scholars alike for his poetry and his impact on the Hindu society.",
"Tulsidas mentions in his work Kavitavali that he was considered a great sage in the world.",
"Madhusūdana Sarasvatī, one of the most acclaimed philosophers of the Advaita Vedanta tradition based in Varanasi and the composer of Advaitasiddhi, was a contemporary of Tulsidas.",
"On reading the Ramcharitmanas, he was astonished and composed the following Sanskrit verse in praise of the epic and the composer.",
"आनन्दकानने कश्चिज्जङ्गमस्तुल्सीतरुः ।\nकविता मञ्जरी यस्य रामभ्रमरभूषिता ॥\n\nānandakānane kaścijjaṅgamastulsītaruḥ ।\nkavitā mañjarī yasya rāmabhramarabhūṣitā ॥\nSur, a devotee of Krishna and a contemporary of Tulsidas, called Tulsidas as Sant Shiromani (the highest jewel among holy men) in an eight-line verse extolling Ramcharitmanas and Tulsidas.",
"Abdur Rahim Khankhana, famous Muslim poet who was one of the Navaratnas (nine-gems) in the court of the Mughal emperor Akbar, was a personal friend of Tulsidas.",
"Rahim composed the following couplet describing the Ramcharitmanas of Tulsidas –\nरामचरितमानस बिमल संतनजीवन प्रान । \nहिन्दुवान को बेद सम जवनहिं प्रगट कुरान ॥ \n\nrāmacaritamānasa bimala santanajīvana prāna । \nhinduvāna ko beda sama javanahi̐ pragaṭa kurāna ॥ \nThe historian Vincent Smith, the author of a biography of Tulsidas' contemporary Akbar, called Tulsidas the greatest man of his age in India and greater than even Akbar himself.",
"The Indologist and linguist Sir George Grierson called Tulsidas \"the greatest leader of the people after the Buddha\" and \"the greatest of Indian authors of modern times\"; and the epic Ramcharitmanas \"worthy of the greatest poet of any age.\"",
"The work Ramcharitmanas has been called \"the Bible of North India\" by both nineteenth century Indologists including Ralph Griffith, who translated the four Vedas and Valmiki's Ramayana into English, and modern writers.",
"Mahatma Gandhi held Tulsidas in high esteem and regarded the Ramcharitmanas as the \"greatest book in all devotional literature\".",
"The Hindi poet Suryakant Tripathi 'Nirala' called Tulsidas \"the most fragrant branch of flowers in the garden of the world's poetry, blossoming in the creeper of Hindi\".",
"Nirala considered Tulsidas to be a greater poet than Rabindranath Tagore, and in the same league as Kalidasa, Vyasa, Valmiki, Homer, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and William Shakespeare.",
"Hindi litterateur Hazari Prasad Dwivedi wrote that Tulsidas established a \"sovereign rule on the kingdom of Dharma in northern India\", which was comparable to the impact of Buddha.",
"Edmour J. Babineau, author of the book Love and God and Social Duty in Ramacaritmanasa, says that if Tulsidas was born in Europe or the Americas, he would be considered a greater personality than William Shakespeare.",
"In the words of the archaeologist F. R. Allchin, who translated Vinaypatrika and Kavitavali into English, \"for people of a large part of North India Tulsidas claims reverence comparable to that accorded to Luther as translator of the Bible into the native German\".",
"Allchin also mentions that the work Ramcharitmanas has been compared to not only the Ramayana of Valmiki, but the Vedas themselves, the Bhagavad Gita, the Quran and the Bible.",
"Ernest Wood in his work An Englishman Defends Mother India considered the Ramcharitmanas to be \"superior to the best books of the Latin and Greek languages.\"",
"Tulsidas is also referred to as Bhaktaśiromaṇi, meaning the highest jewel among devotees.",
"Specifically about his poetry, Tulsidas has been called the \"emperor of the metaphor\" and one who excels in similes by several critics.",
"The Hindi poet Ayodhyasingh Upadhyay 'Hariaudh' said of Tulsidas –\nकविता करके तुलसी न लसे \nकविता लसी पा तुलसी की कला । \n\nkavitā karake tulasī na lase \nkavitā lasī pā tulasī kī kalā । \nThe Hindi poet Mahadevi Verma said commenting on Tulsidas that in the turbulent Middle Ages, India got light from Tulsidas.",
"She further went on to say that the Indian society as it exists today is an edifice built by Tulsidas, and the Rama as we know today is the Rama of Tulsidas.",
"See also\n\n Hanuman Chalisa\n Ramcharitmanas\n Shri Ramachandra Kripalu\n Thumak Chalat Ram Chandra\n Bhakti movement\n\nNotes\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links \n\n \n The Ramcharitmanas of Tulasidas, published by Gita Press\n Tulsidas Biography\n\nIndian male poets\nHindi-language poets\nHindu poets\nEpic poets\nSant Mat\n1497 births\n1532 births\n1623 deaths\nHindu revivalists\nTranslators of the Ramayana\nIndian Hindu saints\nScholars from Varanasi\n16th-century Hindu religious leaders\n16th-century Indian poets\n16th-century Indian scholars\nBhakti movement\nPoets from Uttar Pradesh\nWriters from Varanasi\nVaishnava saints\nLongevity claims"
] | [
"Tulsidas, also known as Goswami Tulsidas, was a Hindu saint and poet.",
"He wrote several works in Sanskrit and Awadhi, but is best known as the author of the epic Ramcharitmanas, which retells the Sanskrit version of the Ramayana.",
"The city of Varanasi was where Tulsidas spent most of his life.",
"The Ganga River in Varanasi is named after him.",
"He founded the Sankatmochan Temple in Varanasi because he believed it to be the place where he saw Lord Hanuman.",
"The Ramlila plays were started by Tulsidas.",
"He is one of the greatest poets in Hindi, Indian and world literature.",
"Ramlila plays, Hindustani classical music, popular music, and television series are examples of the impact of Tulsidas and his works on the art, culture and society in India.",
"The Sanskrit name of Tulsidas can be transliterated in two different ways.",
"Tulasdsa is a Sanskrit name.",
"Since the vestigial letters that are no longer pronounced are retained in the written Indian languages, it is written as Tulsidas or Tulsds.",
"The lost vowels are part of the Schwa deletion and can vary between regions.",
"Tulas is an Indian variety of the basil plant considered to be good luck by Vaishnavas and Dsa means slave or servant.",
"Sources have given only a few facts and hints about the life of Tulsidas.",
"The Bhaktamal composed by Nabhadas between 1583 and 1639 and a commentary on Bhaktamal titled Bhaktirasbodhini were the two ancient sources on Tulsidas' life.",
"Nabhadas described him as an incarnation of Valmiki in a six-line poem.",
"Around a hundred years after the death of Tulsidas, Priyadas wrote a work detailing seven miracles or spiritual experiences from his life.",
"Two more ancient biographies of Tulsidas were published in the 1920s, based on old manuscripts.",
"The work of Veni Madhav Das gave a new date for the birth of Tulsidas.",
"The work by Bhavanidas was more detailed than the work by Priyadas.",
"The fifth ancient account was published in the 1950s and was based on an old manuscript.",
"Krishnadatta Misra's father was close to Tulsidas.",
"The accounts published later are not considered authentic by some modern scholars.",
"These five works form a set of traditional biographies on which modern biographies of Tulsidas are based.",
"Many believe that he is a rebirth of Valmiki.",
"In the Hindu scriptures, the god Shiva tells his wife Parvati that Valmiki, who got a boon from Hanuman, will incarnate in the future in the Kali Yuga.",
"In his Bhaktamal, Nabhadas writes that Tulsidas was the re-incarnation of Valmiki in the Kali Yuga.",
"Valmiki is believed to have incarnated as Tulsidas in the Kali Yuga.",
"Valmiki turned down Hanuman's request to hear the epic because he was a monkey, according to a traditional account.",
"Hanuman went to the Himalayas after the victory of Rama.",
"He engraved Hanuman Nataka on the Himalayan rocks using his nails in a play version of the Ramayana.",
"Valmiki thought that the beauty of the Mahanataka would surpass his own.",
"Hanuman cast all the rocks into the ocean, some of which are believed to be available today as Hanuman Nataka, because he was sad at Valmiki's state of mind.",
"Valmiki was told by Hanuman to take birth as Tulsidas and write the Ramayana.",
"The bright half of the lunar Hindu calendar month Shraavana (July–August) is when Early life Birth Tulsidas was born.",
"13 August 1532 is the Gregorian calendar.",
"Most scholars identify the place where he was born as a village on the banks of the river Ganga.",
"The birthplace of Tulsi Das was officially declared in 2012 by the government of UP.",
"His parents were from India.",
"He is identified by most sources as a Saryupareen Brahmin of the Parashar Gotra.",
"There are differing opinions about the year of birth of Tulsidas.",
"The year of Tulsidas' birth is given in the Mula Gosain Charita by Veni Madhav Das.",
"These are some of the sources that include Shivlal Pathak, popular editions of Ramcharitmanas, and Hanuman Poddar.",
"The year was given as Vikram 1568 by a second group of biographers.",
"James Lochtefeld, Ramghulam Dwivedi, and others are biographers.",
"The year 1497 can be found in biographies in India and in popular culture.",
"Biographers who disagree with this year argue that the life span of Tulsidas is equal to 126 years, which is unlikely if not impossible.",
"Ramchandra Shukla says that an age of 126 is not impossible for a Mahatma like Tulsidas.",
"The 500th birth anniversary of Tulsidas was celebrated by the Government of India and provincial governments in 1997.",
"According to a childhood legend, Tulsidas was born after staying in the womb for twelve months, he had all thirty two teeth in his mouth at birth, and he did not cry at the time of his birth.",
"He was named Rambola because he uttered the name of the deity.",
"According to Jyotisha, he was born under the Abhuktamla constellation, which causes immediate danger to the life of the father.",
"He was abandoned by his parents on the fourth night after he was born due to the inauspicious events at the time.",
"Tulsidas claims in his works that his parents abandoned him after he was born due to an inauspicious astrological configuration.",
"She looked after the child for five and a half years after she died.",
"Rambola was an orphan and was left to fend for himself.",
"Parvati assumed the form of a Brahmin woman and fed Rambola.",
"At the age of six, Rambola was adopted by Narharidas, a Vaishnava ascetic who is believed to be the fourth disciple of Ramananda.",
"The name of the initiation was changed from Rambola to Tulsidas.",
"The dialogue that took place during the first meeting with his guru is narrated by Tulsidas.",
"He was seven years old when his Upanayana was performed by Narharidas on the fifth day of the bright half of the month of Magha.",
"Ayodhya was where Tulsidas began his learning.",
"After some time, Narharidas took him to the Varaha Kshetra Soron, which is a holy place with a temple dedicated to Varaha.",
"This is mentioned in the Ramcharitmanas by Tulsidas.",
"The Soron Varaha Kshetra in modern-day Kasganj is referred to by most authors as the Varaha Kshetra.",
"Over a period of 15 to 16 years, Tulsidas studied Sanskrit, four Vedas, six Jyotisha, and six schools of Hindu philosophy at the Pancaganga Ghat in Varanasi and later came to the sacred city of Varanasi.",
"Shesha was a friend of Narharidas and a renowned scholar.",
"There are differing views on the marital status of Tulsidas.",
"According to the Mula Gosain Charita, Tulsidas was married to Ratnavali on the 13th day of the bright half of the Jyeshta month.",
"Ratnavali was the daughter of a Brahmin of the Bharadwaja Gotra.",
"Tarak died as a toddler.",
"When Tulsidas went to a Hanuman temple, Ratnavali went to her father's home with her brother.",
"In the night, Tulsidas swam across the Yamuna river to meet his wife.",
"If Tulsidas was half as devoted to God as he was to her body of flesh and blood, he would have been redeemed.",
"The holy city of Prayag was where Tulsidas left her.",
"He became a Sadhu after abandoning the Grihastha stage.",
"The marriage episode of Tulsidas is thought to be a later interpolation by some authors.",
"According to Rambhadracharya, there are two quotes in the Vinayapatrika and Hanuman Bahuka that show that Tulsidas was a Sadhu from childhood.",
"After renunciation, Tulsidas spent most of his time at Varanasi, Prayag, and other nearby places.",
"He studied different people, met saints and Sadhus and meditated.",
"The Mula Gosain Charita gave an account of his travels to the four pilgrimages of Hindus.",
"He visited the current-day Tibet, where tradition says he had the sight of the crow who is one of the four narrators in the Ramcharitmanas.",
"Several places in his works hint at the fact that he met Hanuman and Rama face to face.",
"He gave a detailed account of his meetings with Hanuman and Rama.",
"Tulsidas used to visit the woods outside Varanasi for his morning ablutions with a water pot.",
"He used to give the remaining water to a tree.",
"The Preta, a type of ghost believed to be thirsty for water, appeared to Tulsidas and offered him a boon.",
"The Preta responded that it was beyond him after Tulsidas said he wanted to see Rama with his eyes.",
"The Preta said that he could help Hanuman grant the boon Tulsidas asked for.",
"Hanuman is the first to arrive and last to leave, according to the Preta.",
"An old leper sat at the end of the gathering and was the first person to listen to the discourse.",
"Tulsidas followed the leper to the woods.",
"At the spot where the Sankat Mochan Temple stands today, Tulsidas shouted \"I know who you are\" and \"You cannot escape me\" as he fell at the leper's feet.",
"At first the leper did not know what he was talking about.",
"The original form of Hanuman was revealed by the leper.",
"Hanuman was told by Tulsidas that he wanted to see Rama face to face.",
"He was told to go to Chitrakuta by Hanuman.",
"At the beginning of the Ramcharitmanas, Tulsidas bows down to a Preta and asks for his grace.",
"The same Preta led to Tulsidas and Hanuman.",
"Tulsidas followed the instructions of Hanumana and started living in an Ashram at Ramghat.",
"One day, Tulsidas went to the Kamadgiri mountain to perform acircumambulation.",
"He saw two princes, one dark and the other green, pass by on horseback.",
"He was enraptured by the sight, but he couldn't see them and took his eyes off them.",
"Hanuman asked if he saw Lakshmana and his brother on horses.",
"Tulsidas was sorry and disappointed.",
"Hanuman told Tulsidas that he would be able to see Rama again the next morning.",
"In a song of the Gitavali, Tulsidas recalls how his eyes turned his own enemies by staying fixed to the ground.",
"According to some sources, on the new-moon day of Magha, Vikram 1607 (1551CE) or 1621 (1565CE), Rama appeared to Tulsidas, this time as a child.",
"A child asked for a religious mark on the forehead while Tulsidas was making a paste.",
"Hanuman gave a hint to Tulsidas and he had a full view of Rama.",
"He forgot about the sandalwood because he was so enamored with him.",
"The Tilaka was put on his forehead and the Tulsidas was put on his forehead.",
"This famous incidence is described in a verse.",
"In a verse in the Vinayapatrika, Tulsidas thanks Rama for what he did for him at Chitrakuta.",
"According to some biographers, the Darshan of Rama was referred to by Tulsidas.",
"The annual fair in January is where Tulsidas stayed during the Magha Mela in 1628.",
"Six days after the Mela ended, he had the darshan of the two spiritual masters.",
"Yajnavalkya is the speaker and Bharadvaja is the listener in one of the Ramcharitmanas.",
"The meeting between Yajnavalkya and Bharadvaja happened after a Magha Mela festival.",
"Most stories about Tulsidas are apocryphal, and have been carried forward by word of mouth.",
"It was difficult to separate fact from lore and fiction because none of them were related to Tulsi.",
"Tulsidas is said to have the power of working miracles.",
"He is said to have brought a Brahmin back to life.",
"While the Brahmin was being taken for cremation, his widow bowed down to Tulsidas, who said that her husband was alive.",
"The widow told Tulsidas that her husband had died.",
"Tulsidas said that he would bring the dead man back to life.",
"The dead Brahmin was raised back to life after he was asked to close his eyes and say the name of the lord.",
"Tulsidas was thought to be a reincarnation of Valmiki, the composer of the original Ramayana in Sanskrit.",
"He is considered to be the composer of the Hanuman Chalisa, a popular devotional hymn dedicated to Hanuman, the monkey god.",
"The Mughal Emperor Akbar summoned Tulsidas after hearing that he brought back a dead man to life.",
"Tulsidas declined to perform a miracle when he was brought before the Akbar and asked to perform a lie, as he was too engrossed in creating his verse.",
"The emperor imprisoned Tulsidas.",
"After forty days, an army of monkeys descended upon the town and wreaked havoc, entering each home and the emperor's hare.",
"The emperor was told by an old man that this was the miracle of the imprisoned Fakir.",
"The emperor apologized after falling at Tulsidas' feet.",
"The emperor was asked to abandon the place by Tulsidas.",
"The emperor moved back to Delhi.",
"Since Akbar became a close friend of Tulsidas, he ordered a firman that followers of lord Hanuman and other Hindus should not be harassed in his kingdom.",
"The miracle of Tulsidas was narrated by Priyadas when he visited a temple of Krishna.",
"The Mahant of the temple named Parshuram decided to test Tulsidas when he bowed down to the idol of Krishna.",
"He told Tulsidas that he was a fool if he bows down to any deity other than their Ishta Devata.",
"The idol of Krishna holding the flute and stick in his hands changed to the one of Rama holding the bow and arrow.",
"Some authors have doubts about the couplet being composed.",
"The Prahlada Ghat is where the literary life of Tulsidas began.",
"Tradition says that the verse that he wrote during the day would get lost in the night.",
"For eight days, this happened daily.",
"On the eighth night, Shiva is said to have ordered Tulsidas to write poetry in the vernacular instead of Sanskrit.",
"Shiva and Parvati blessed Tulsidas when he woke up.",
"Tulsidas was ordered by Shiva to write poetry.",
"Shiva predicted that Vedadas' poetry wouldfructify.",
"The dream and awakened state of Shiva and Parvati can be seen in the Ramcharitmanas.",
"A number of wise sayings and dohas have been composed by Tulsidas.",
"A popular one is: .",
"Chahe kanchan barse megh, tahan na jaiye.",
"There is a poem.",
"If a mountain of gold is showered, don't go to a place where people are not happy or welcoming.",
"On theninth day of the bright half of the Chaitra month, Ramnavami day, Tulsidas began to compose the Ramcharitmanas.",
"This is the date that Tulsidas attests to.",
"The epic was composed over two years, seven months and twenty-six days, and was completed on the Vivaha Panchami day, the fifth day of the bright half of the Margashirsha month.",
"There is a temple in Varanasi called the Kashi Vishwanath Temple.",
"The Brahmins of Varanasi decided to test the worth of the work because they were critical of the work done by Tulsidas.",
"In the night, the doors of the sanctum sanctorum were locked and a manuscript of the Ramcharitmanas was kept at the bottom of a pile of Sanskrit scriptures.",
"The Ramcharitmanas were found at the top of the pile when the doors were opened in the morning.",
"The manuscript had the signature of Shiva and the words \"truth, auspiciousness, beauty\" written on it.",
"The people heard the words.",
"The Brahmins of Varanasi sent two thieves to steal the manuscript because they were dissatisfied.",
"Two guards with bows and arrows, of dark and fair complexion, confronted the thieves who tried to break into the Ashram of Tulsidas.",
"The thieves came to Tulsidas in the morning to find out who the two guards were.",
"Tulsidas was upset to know that the two guards were guarding his home at night.",
"He donated all of his money to Todar Mal, the finance minister of Akbar.",
"The thieves were reformed.",
"Tulsidas was in pain all over his body, especially in his arms.",
"He describes his pain and suffering in the Hanuman Bahuk.",
"After this composition, he was relieved of his pain.",
"The cause of his death may have been Bartod boil, a condition in which furuncles are caused by pulling out the hair.",
"The last compositions of Tulsidas are believed to have been written when Kali Yuga began troubling him.",
"He asked Rama to give him Bhakti and to accept his petition in this work.",
"According to Tulsidas, the manuscript of the work was signed by the author.",
"The evening Aarti is sung by many Hindus.",
"On July 31, 1623, Tulsidas died at the age of 91 in Assi Ghat on the bank of the river Ganga.",
"Traditional accounts and biographers don't agree on the exact date of his death, like the year of his birth.",
"Six major works and six minor works are considered by biographers to be written by Tulsidas.",
"The works have been categorized into two groups based on the language of the works.",
"Braja works on Krishna Gitavali, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya",
"There are four more works that are believed to have been composed by Tulsidas.",
"\"The Mnasa lake bursting over with the exploits of Lord Rma\" is a rendering of the Ramayana narrative.",
"It is the longest and earliest work of Tulsidas, and draws from many sources including the Ramayana of Valmiki, the Adhyatma Ramayana, the Prasannaraghava and Hanuman Nataka.",
"The work consists of around 12,800 lines that are divided into 1073 lines.",
"One-third of the size of Valmiki's Ramayana is divided into seven books.",
"The work is composed of 18 metres and 10 metres of Sanskrit.",
"It is referred to as The Ramayana composed by Tulsidas.",
"The work has been described as \"the living sum of Indian culture\", \"the tallest tree in the magic garden of medieval Indian poesy\", \"the greatest book of all devotional literature\", and \"the best and most trustworthy guide to Northern India\".",
"\"But, as he has said, the story of the lord is endless as are his glories.\"",
"Two copies of the epic were said to have been written in the poet's own handwriting.",
"The only manuscript left is at Rajapur, and it bears marks of water.",
"The second book of the epic could not be saved because the manuscript was thrown into the Yamuna river when the thief was being pursued.",
"One leaf was missing from the other copy in Lucknow district.",
"One of the places claimed to be the birthplace of Tulsidas has a manuscript of the poet's own hand.",
"Nineteen years before the poet's death, there is a manuscript that claims to be corrected by Tulsidas.",
"There is a manuscript in Varanasi that was written twenty-four years after the death of Tulsidas.",
"One of the major works of Tulsidas is the collection of Dohas, also known as the collection of Sortha, which consists of ",
"tact, political wisdom, righteousness and the purpose of life are some of the aphorisms in the verse.",
"Some of the work from this work can be found in the Ramcharitmanas, 35 in Ramagya Prashna, two in Vairagya Sandipani, and another work of 700 Dohas attributed to Tulsidas.",
"A Braja rendering of the Ramayana, composed entirely of metres of the Kavitta family, is called sahitya ratna.",
"There are 335 words including 183 words in the Uttarkand.",
"The work is divided into seven Kands or books and many of the episodes are different from the Ramcharitmanas.",
"The collection of songs is a Braja rendering of the Ramayana.",
"The lyrics are suitable for singing and are set to Ragas of Hindustani classical music.",
"The songs are divided into seven Kands or books.",
"Many episodes of the Ramayana are not complete.",
"The Collection of Songs to Krishna is a collection of 61 songs.",
"There are 32 songs about the childhood sports, 27 songs about the dialogue between Krishna and Uddhava, and two songs about the disrobing of Draupadi.",
"The Petition of Humility is a Braja work.",
"The petition was filed in the court of Rama.",
"It is considered to be the second best work of Tulsidas, and is important from the viewpoints of philosophy, erudition, and poetic style.",
"The first 43 hymns were addressed to various deities and Rama's courtiers and attendants.",
"The Barvai Ramayana is a minor work of the Tulsidas.",
"The works are composed in the Barvai metre and are divided into seven Kands or books.",
"The work is based on psychology.",
"The marriage of Parvati and Shiva is described in a work called Parvati Mangal.",
"The Sohar and Harigitikametres have 148 and 16 verses, respectively.",
"The marriage of the bride and groom is referred to as Janaki Mangal ( ), which means \"The marriage of the bride and groom\".",
"There are 192 words in the Hamsagatimetre and 24 words in the Harigitikametre.",
"The narrative is different at several places.",
"The Nahachhu ceremony of the child is called Ramalala Nahachhu.",
"The Nahachhu ceremony involves cutting the nails of the feet before the Hindu Samskaras.",
"In the work, events take place in the city of Ayodhya, so it is considered to describe the Nahachhu before Upanayana.",
"The work is related to both Ramayana and Jyotisha.",
"There are seven Kands or books, each of which is divided into seven Saptakas or Septets.",
"It has 343 Dohas in it.",
"The work gives a method to look up the Shakuna for astrological predictions, and narrates the Ramayana non-sequentially.",
"The nature and greatness of saints, moral conduct, and the state of Jnana are some of the things described in Vairagya Sandipini (, 1612).",
"It has 46 Dohas, 2 Sorathas and 12 Chaupai metres.",
"Forty Verses to Hanuman is one of the popular works attributed to Tulsidas.",
"Some authors don't think the work was written by Tulsidas, but the popular belief is that the work is authored by him.",
"Millions of Hindus read it on Tuesdays and Saturdays, and it is one of the most read short religious texts in northern India.",
"It is believed that it was said by Tulsidas in a state of Samadhi.",
"The Sankatmochan Hanumanashtak is a piece of art dedicated to Hanuman.",
"It is believed that it was composed on the occasion of the founding of the Sankatmochan Temple.",
"The work is published with Hanuman Chalisa.",
"The Arm of Hanuman, also known as The Arm of Hanuman, is a Braja work of 44 words that was written by Tulsidas when he suffered acute pain in his arms at an advanced age.",
"Tulsidas prays to Hanuman for freedom from the suffering and describes the pain in his arms.",
"There are two, one, five and 36 words in the work.",
"There are seven sargas and cantos in Tulsi Satsai, which is a work in both Braja and Awadhi.",
"The order of the verse is different than in the other places.",
"The philosophy and principles of Tulsidas can be found in many of his works.",
"The doctrine of Tulsidas has been described as an integration of the different tenets and cultures of Hinduism.",
"At the beginning of the Ramcharitmanas, Tulsidas says that his work is in accordance with various scriptures.",
"Ram Chandra Shukla in his critical work Hindi Sahitya Ka Itihaas elaborates on the doctrine of Lokmangal, which made this great poet immortal and comparable to any other world littérateur.",
"One and the same are the qualities of the Nirguna and Saguna Brahman.",
"Saguna, Akath, Agaadh, Anaadi, and Anupa are unqualified Brahmans.",
"The devotion of the devotees causes the Nirguna Brahman to become Saguna Brahman with qualities.",
"The example of water, snow and hail is the same in all three, but the same formless water becomes hail or a mountain of snow, both of which have a form.",
"The Saguna Brahman is a lake with blooms of lotuses, while the Nirguna Brahman is a lake with just water.",
"In the Uttar Kand of Ramcharitmanas, Tulsidas describes in detail a debate between Kakbhushundi and Lomasa about whether God is Nirguna or Saguna.",
"When Lomasa becomes angry and curses Kakbhushundi to be a crow, he repeatedly refutes all of his arguments.",
"When Kakbhushundi happily accepts the curse, he refuses to give up the Bhakti of Rama, the Saguna Brahman.",
"Devotees of the highest category in the Ramcharitmanas frequently ask for the qualified Saguna aspect of Rama to be dwelled in their mind because Tulsidas holds both aspects of God to be equal.",
"Some authors contend from a few couplets in Ramcharitmanas that Tulsidas was in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact",
"According to several of his works, the true son of Dasharatha is not Rama.",
"In the Balkand of Ramcharitmanas, Shiva tells Parvati that those who say the same thing about the same thing about the same thing is different from the same thing about the same thing is different from the same thing is different from the same thing is different from the same thing is different",
"The allusions are based on interpretations of the text and do not hold much water.",
"In his works, Tulsidas has never mentioned Kabir.",
"There is a section devoted to the veneration of the name of Rama.",
"The only way to attain God in the Kali age is by repeating the name of Rama, according to Tulsidas.",
"In Kavitavali, he says that his redemption is due to the power, glory and majesty of the name of Rama.",
"In a couplet in the Gitavali, Tulsidas says that wishing for liberation without refuge in the name of Rama is like wishing to climb to the sky by holding on to the falling rain.",
"He believes that the name of Rama is more important than both the Nirguna and Saguna aspects of God.",
"Tulsidas says in a verse that the Nirguna Brahman is in his heart, the Saguna Brahman is in his eyes, and the name of Rama is on his tongue.",
"He believes that the only two vowels that are written above all other vowels in the Sanskrit language are ma and Ra.",
"The general portrayal of Rama is that he is higher than Vishnu and not an incarnation of Vishnu.",
"In the episode of the delusion of Sati, there are many Shiva, Brahma, and Vishnu in the picture.",
"When they perform penance, they want to see that Supreme Lord from a part of who they are.",
"They are tempting them with a boon, but they do not stop their penance.",
"They are satisfied only by the appearance of Rama, who is on the left side of the picture.",
"In the episode of marriage of Sita and Rama in Balkand, the trio of Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva is present, while Vishnu is enchanted with Lakhmi.",
"In the Sundarkand, Hanuman tells Ravana that the three of them can destroy each other.",
"In the Lankakand, Tulsidas presents the universe as the Cosmic form of Rama, in which Shiva is the consciousness, Brahma is the reason and Vishnu is his intelligence.",
"According to Tulsidas, the source of theavatar is Krishna, who is also anavatar of Rama.",
"Tulsidas considers Rama to be the supreme brahman and not an incarnation of Vishnu.",
"In her opinion, the Rama of Tulsidas is an amalgam of Vishnu who is in the abode of Ksheera Sagara and the Para manifestations of the Pancharatra.",
"Macfie concludes that Tulsidas makes a double claim.",
"There is an incarnation of both Vishnu and Brahman.",
"\"Valmiki's exemplary prince, the Vishnu of Puranas, and the brahman of the Advaitins\" are all said to have been written by Tulsidas.",
"In the Sundarkand of Ramcharitmanas, Tulsidas says that there is a knowledge of the world and Maya.",
"The efficient and material cause of the world, which is real, is due to the fact that Rama is real.",
"The universe and the world are both manifestations of the same person, according to the Ramcharitmanas.",
"The authors believe that the world is real according to the philosophy of Ramanuja.",
"Tulsidas compares the world to a night or a dream in some places.",
"Some commentators interpret the verse to mean that the world is real as per the Vivartavada doctrine, while others interpret it to mean that the world is not real at all.",
"According to Uday Bhanu Singh, the world appears to be different from Rama due to Maya.",
"Its visible form is temporary.",
"The world in itself is neither true, nor false, nor both true and false together, says Tulsidas in the Vinayapatrika.",
"This has been interpreted to mean that the world is a place of worship.",
"In the beginning of the Ramcharitmanas, Tulsidas performs Samasti Vandana in which he bows down to all beings, saying it is \"born out of\" Sita and Ram.",
"When a Jiva knows the Self, Maya and Rama, it sees the world as being influenced by them.",
"The four brides are compared with the four states of consciousness, the waking state, sleep with dreams, and dreamless sleep, in the Balkand episode of the marriage of the princes of Ayodhya with the princesses of Mithila.",
"The four grooms are compared with the presiding divinity of the four states.",
"The four states of consciousness with their presiding divinities reside in the mind of a Jiva, so the four brides with their grooms are in the same pavilion.",
"The inseparable energy of Rama and Maya is identified by Tulsidas.",
"In his opinion, Maya is a mixture of two types.",
"The liberation of Jiva was caused by the cause of Vidya Maya.",
"The illusion and bondage of the Jiva is caused by Avidya Maya.",
"Maya controls the entire world.",
"Maya is essentially the same but the two divisions are made for cognitive purposes.",
"There is no incompatibility between devotion to Rama and attachment to Shiva according to Tulsidas.",
"A large part of the Balkand of Ramcharitmanas is devoted to the narrative of Shiva, including the abandonment of Sati, the penance of Parvati, and the marriage of Parvati and Shiva.",
"The whole Hindu pantheon is venerates by Tulsidas.",
"The Ramcharitmanas begin with reverence of Shiva, Parvati, Valmiki and Hanuman.",
"At the beginning of the Vinayapatrika, he bows his head and asks them to worship him.",
"The practical end of his writings is to encourage the men of the lowest caste to follow in the footsteps of the Brahmins and become free from the chains of births and deaths.",
"The impact of Tulsidas on the Hindu society has been acclaimed by both Indian and Western scholars.",
"In his work Kavitavali, Tulsidas mentions that he was considered a great leader in the world.",
"One of the most acclaimed philosophers of the Advaita Vedanta tradition based in Varanasi is the composer of Advaitasiddhi.",
"He composed a Sanskrit verse in praise of the epic and the composer after reading the Ramcharitmanas.",
"kavit majar.",
"The famous Muslim poet, who was one of the nine-gems in the court of the Mughal emperor Akbar, was a personal friend of Tulsidas.",
"The following couplet was composed by Rahim.",
"The great leader of the people after the Buddha was called the greatest leader of the people after the Buddha by the Indologist and linguist Sir George Grierson.",
"The bible of North India has been called \"the Bible of North India\" by both 19th century Indologists and modern writers.",
"Mahatma Gandhi regarded the Ramcharitmanas as the greatest book in all devotional literature, and he held Tulsidas in high esteem.",
"The most fragrant branch of flowers in the garden of the world's poetry is called Tulsidas by the Hindi poet Suryakant Tripathi 'Nirala'.",
"Tulsidas was considered to be a better poet than Rabindranath Tagore, and in the same league as Kalidasa, Vyasa, Valmiki, Homer and William Shakespeare.",
"The impact of Buddha was comparable to that of Tulsidas, who established a \"sovereign rule on the kingdom of Dharma in northern India\".",
"According to Edmour J. Babineau, if Tulsidas were born in Europe or the Americas, he would be considered a greater personality than William Shakespeare.",
"For people of a large part of North Indiadas claims reverence comparable to that accorded to Luther as translator of the Bible into the native German, according to the archaeologist F. R. Allchin.",
"According to Allchin, the work Ramcharitmanas has been compared to not only the Ramayana of Valmiki, but also the Vedas, the Quran and the Bible.",
"The Ramcharitmanas were considered superior to the best books of the Latin and Greek languages by Ernest Wood.",
"Bhaktairomai is the highest jewel among devotees.",
"Tulsidas was called the \"emperor of the metaphor\" and one who excelled in similes by several critics.",
"The Hindi poet said, \" kavit karake tulas na lase kavit.\"",
"She said that the Indian society as it exists today is an edifice built by Tulsidas and the same is true of the Rama.",
"The Ramcharitmanas of Tulasidas are published by Gita Pressdas."
] | <mask> (; 1532–1623), also known as <mask>, was a Ramanandi Vaishnava Hindu saint and poet, renowned for his devotion to the deity Rama. He wrote several popular works in Sanskrit and Awadhi, but is best known as the author of the epic Ramcharitmanas, a retelling of the Sanskrit Ramayana based on Rama's life in the vernacular Awadhi. <mask> spent most of his life in the city of Varanasi and Ayodhya. The Tulsi Ghat on the Ganges River in Varanasi is named after him. He founded the Sankatmochan Temple dedicated to Lord Hanuman in Varanasi, believed to stand at the place where he had the sight of the deity. <mask> started the Ramlila plays, a folk-theatre adaption of the Ramayana. He has been acclaimed as one of the greatest poets in Hindi, Indian, and world literature.The impact of <mask> and his works on the art, culture and society in India is widespread and is seen to date in vernacular language, Ramlila plays, Hindustani classical music, popular music, and television series. Transliteration and etymology
The Sanskrit name of <mask> can be transliterated in two ways. Using the original Sanskrit, the name is written as Tulasīdāsa. Using the Hunterian transliteration system, it is written as <mask> or Tulsīdās reflecting the vernacular pronunciation (since the written Indian languages maintain the vestigial letters that are no longer pronounced). The lost vowels are an aspect of the Schwa deletion in Indo-Aryan languages and can vary between regions. The name is a compound of two Sanskrit words: Tulasī, which is an Indian variety of the basil plant considered auspicious by Vaishnavas (devotees of god Vishnu and his avatars like Rama), and Dāsa, which means slave or servant and by extension, devotee. Sources
<mask> himself has given only a few facts and hints about events of his life in various works.Till late nineteenth century, the two widely known ancient sources on <mask>' life were the Bhaktamal composed by Nabhadas between 1583 and 1639, and a commentary on Bhaktamal titled Bhaktirasbodhini composed by Priyadas in 1712. Nabhadas was a contemporary of <mask> and wrote a six-line stanza on <mask> describing him as an incarnation of Valmiki. Priyadas' work was composed around a hundred years after the death of <mask> and had eleven additional stanzas, describing seven miracles or spiritual experiences from the life of <mask>. During the 1920s, two more ancient biographies of <mask> were published based on old manuscripts – the Mula Gosain Charit composed by Veni Madhav Das in 1630 and the Gosain Charit composed by Dasanidas (also known as Bhavanidas) around 1770. Veni Madhav Das was a disciple and contemporary of <mask> and his work gave a new date for <mask>' birth. The work by Bhavanidas presented more narratives in greater detail as compared to the work by Priyadas. In the 1950s a fifth ancient account was published based on an old manuscript, the Gautam Chandrika composed by Krishnadatta Misra of Varanasi in 1624.Krishnadatta Misra's father was a close companion of <mask>. The accounts published later are not considered authentic by some modern scholars, whereas some other scholars have been unwilling to dismiss them. Together, these five works form a set of traditional biographies on which modern biographies of <mask> are based. Incarnation of Valmiki
He is believed by many to be a rebirth of Valmiki. In the Hindu scripture Bhavishyottar Purana, the god Shiva tells his wife Parvati how Valmiki, who got a boon from Hanuman to sing the glory of Rama in vernacular language, will incarnate in future in the Kali Yuga (the present and last Yuga or epoch within a cycle of four Yugas). Nabhadas writes in his Bhaktamal (literally, the Garland of bhakt or devotee) that <mask> was the re-incarnation of Valmiki in the Kali Yuga. The Ramanandi sect believes that it was Valmiki himself who incarnated as <mask> in the Kali Yuga.According to a traditional account, Hanuman went to Valmiki numerous times to hear him sing the Ramayana, but Valmiki turned down the request saying that Hanuman being a monkey was unworthy of hearing the epic. After the victory of Rama over Ravana, Hanuman went to the Himalayas to continue his worship of Rama. There he scripted a play version of the Ramayana called Mahanataka or Hanuman Nataka engraved on the Himalayan rocks using his nails. When Valmiki saw the play written by Hanuman, he anticipated that the beauty of the Mahanataka would eclipse his own Ramayana. Hanuman was saddened at Valmiki's state of mind and, being a true bhakta without any desire for glory, Hanuman cast all the rocks into the ocean, some parts of which are believed to be available today as Hanuman Nataka. After this, Valmiki was instructed by Hanuman to take birth as <mask> and compose the Ramayana in the vernacular. Early life
Birth
<mask> was born on Saptami, the seventh day of Shukla Paksha, the bright half of the lunar Hindu calendar month Shraavana (July–August).This correlates with 13 August 1532 of the Gregorian calendar. Although as many as three places are mentioned as his birthplace, most scholars identify the place with Sookar Kshetra Soron, District Kasganj in Uttar Pradesh, a village on the banks of the river Ganga. In 2012 Sukarkhet Soron was declared officially by the government of Uttar Pradesh as the birthplace of Tulsi Das. His parents were Hulsi and Atmaram Dubey. Most sources identify him as a Saryupareen Brahmin of the Parashar Gotra (lineage), although some sources claim he was a Kanyakubja or Sanadhya Brahmin. There is difference of opinion among biographers regarding the year of birth of <mask>. Many sources rely on Veni Madhav Das' account in the Mula Gosain Charita, which gives the year of <mask>i Samvat 1554 (1497 CE).These sources include Shivlal Pathak, popular editions of Ramcharitmanas (Gita Press, Naval Kishore Press and Venkateshvar Press), Edwin Greaves, Hanuman Prasad Poddar, Ramanand Sarasvati, Ayodhyanath Sharma, Ramchandra Shukla, Narayandas, and Rambhadracharya. A second group of biographers led by Sant Tulsi Sahib of Hathras and Sir George Grierson give the year as Vikram 1568 (1511 CE). These biographers include Ramkrishna Gopal Bhandarkar, Ramghulam Dwivedi, James Lochtefeld, Swami Sivananda and others. The year 1497 appears in many current-day biographies in India and in popular culture. Biographers who disagree with this year argue that it makes the life span of <mask> equal 126 years, which in their opinion is unlikely if not impossible. In contrast, Ramchandra Shukla says that an age of 126 is not impossible for a Mahatma (great soul) like <mask>. The Government of India and provincial governments celebrated the 500th birth anniversary of <mask> in the year 1997 CE, according to the year of <mask>' birth in popular culture.Childhood
Legend goes that <mask> was born after staying in the womb for twelve months, he had all thirty two teeth in his mouth at birth, his health and looks were like that of a five-year-old boy, and he did not cry at the time of his birth but uttered Rama instead. He was therefore named Rambola (literally, he who uttered Rama), as <mask> himself states in Vinaya Patrika. As per the Mula Gosain Charita, he was born under the Abhuktamūla constellation, which according to Jyotisha (Hindu astrology) causes immediate danger to the life of the father. Due to the inauspicious events at the time of his birth, he was abandoned by his parents on the fourth night, sent away with Chuniya (some sources call her Muniya), a female servant of Hulsi. In his works Kavitavali and Vinayapatrika, <mask> attests to his parents abandoning him after birth due to an inauspicious astrological configuration. Chuniya took the child to her village of Haripur and looked after him for five and a half years after which she died. Rambola was left to fend for himself as an impoverished orphan, and wandered from door to door begging for alms.It is believed that the goddess Parvati assumed the form of a Brahmin woman and fed Rambola every day. Initiation from guru and learning
At the age of six, Rambola was adopted by Narharidas, a Vaishnava ascetic of Ramananda's monastic order who is believed to be the fourth disciple of Ramananda, or alternately, the disciple of Anantacharya. Rambola was given the Virakta Diksha (Vairagi initiation) with the new name of <mask>. <mask> narrates the dialogue that took place during the first meeting with his guru in a passage in the Vinayapatrika. When he was seven years old, his Upanayana ("sacred thread ceremony") was performed by Narharidas on the fifth day of the bright half of the month of Magha (January–February) at Ayodhya, a pilgrimage-site related to Rama. <mask> started his learning at Ayodhya. After some time, Narharidas took him to a particular Varaha Kshetra Soron (a holy place with temple dedicated to Varaha – the boar avatar of Vishnu), where he first narrated the Ramayana to <mask>.<mask> mentions this in the Ramcharitmanas. Most authors identify the Varaha Kshetra referred to by <mask> with the Sookarkshetra is the Soron Varaha Kshetra in modern-day Kasganj, <mask> further mentions in the Ramcharitmanas that his guru repeatedly narrated the Ramayana to him, which led him to understand it somewhat. <mask> later came to the sacred city of Varanasi and studied Sanskrit grammar, four Vedas, six Vedangas, Jyotisha and the six schools of Hindu philosophy over a period of 15–16 years from guru Shesha Sanatana who was based at the Pancaganga Ghat in Varanasi. Shesha Sanatana was a friend of Narharidas and a renowned scholar on literature and philosophy. Marriage and renunciation
There are two contrasting views regarding the marital status of <mask>. According to the Mula Gosain Charita and some other works, <mask> was married to Ratnavali on the thirteenth day of the bright half of the Jyeshta month (May–June) in Vikram 1583 (1526 CE). Ratnavali was the daughter of Dinbandhu Pathak, a Brahmin of the Bharadwaja Gotra, who belonged to Mahewa village of Kaushambi district.They had a son named Tarak who died as a toddler. Once when <mask> had gone to a Hanuman temple, Ratnavali went to her father's home with her brother. When <mask> came to know this, he swam across the Yamuna river in the night to meet his wife. Ratnavali chided <mask> for this, and remarked that if <mask> was even half as devoted to God as he was to her body of flesh and blood, he would have been redeemed. <mask> left her instantly and left for the holy city of Prayag. Here, he renounced the Grihastha (householder's life) stage and became a Sadhu (Hindu ascetic). Some authors consider the marriage episode of <mask> to be a later interpolation and maintain among that he was a bachelor.They include Rambhadracharya, who cite two verses in the Vinayapatrika and Hanuman Bahuka to mean that <mask> never married and was a Sadhu from childhood. Later life
Travels
After renunciation, <mask> spent most of his time at Varanasi, Prayag, Ayodhya, and Chitrakuta but visited many other nearby and far-off places. He travelled across India to many places, studying different people, meeting saints and Sadhus and meditating. The Mula Gosain Charita gives an account of his travels to the four pilgrimages of Hindus (Badrinath, Dwarka, Puri and Rameshwaram) and the Himalayas. He visited the Manasarovar lake in current-day Tibet, where tradition holds he had Darshan (sight) of Kakabhushundi, the crow who is one of the four narrators in the Ramcharitmanas. Darshan of Hanuman
<mask> hints at several places in his works, that he had met face to face with Hanuman and Rama. The detailed account of his meetings with Hanuman and Rama are given in the Bhaktirasbodhini of Priyadas.According to Priyadas' account, <mask> used to visit the woods outside Varanasi for his morning ablutions with a water pot. On his return to the city, he used to offer the remaining water to a certain tree. This quenched the thirst of a Preta (a type of ghost believed to be ever thirsty for water), who appeared to <mask> and offered him a boon. <mask> said he wished to see Rama with his eyes, to which the Preta responded that it was beyond him. However, the Preta said that he could guide <mask> to Hanuman, who could grant the boon <mask> asked for. The Preta told <mask> that Hanuman comes everyday disguised in the mean attire of a leper to listen to his Katha, he is the first to arrive and last to leave. That evening <mask> noted that the first listener to arrive at his discourse was an old leper, who sat at the end of the gathering.After the Katha was over, <mask> quietly followed the leper to the woods. In the woods, at the spot where the Sankat Mochan Temple stands today, <mask> firmly fell at the leper's feet, shouting "I know who you are" and "You cannot escape me". At first the leper feigned ignorance but <mask> did not relent. Then the leper revealed his original form of Hanuman and blessed <mask>. When granted a boon, <mask> told Hanuman he wanted to see Rama face to face. Hanuman told him to go to Chitrakuta where he would see Rama with his own eyes. At the beginning of the Ramcharitmanas, <mask> bows down to a particular Preta and asks for his grace (Ramcharitmanas, Doha 1.7).According to Rambhadracharya, this is the same Preta which led <mask> to Hanuman. Darshan of Rama
As per Priyadas' account, <mask> followed the instruction of Hanumana and started living in an Ashram at Ramghat in Chitrakoot Dham. One day <mask> went to perform the Parikrama (circumambulation) of the Kamadgiri mountain. He saw two princes, one dark and the other fair, dressed in green robes pass by mounted on horsebacks. <mask> was enraptured at the sight, however he could not recognise them and took his eyes off them. Later Hanuman asked <mask> if he saw Rama and his brother Lakshmana on horses. <mask> was disappointed and repentful.Hanuman assured <mask> that he would have the sight of Rama once again the next morning. <mask> recalls this incident in a song of the Gitavali and laments how "his eyes turned his own enemies" by staying fixed to the ground and how everything happened in a trice. On the next morning, Wednesday, the new-moon day of Magha, Vikram 1607 (1551 CE) or 1621 (1565 CE) as per some sources, Rama again appeared to <mask>, this time as a child. <mask> was making sandalwood paste when a child came and asked for a sandalwood Tilaka (a religious mark on the forehead). This time Hanuman gave a hint to <mask> and he had a full view of Rama. <mask> was so charmed that he forgot about the sandalwood. Rama took the sandalwood paste and put a Tilaka himself on his forehead and <mask>' forehead before disappearing.This famous incidence is described in the verse चित्रकूट के घाट पर हुई संतन की भीर तुलसीदास चन्दन घिसे तिलक देते रघुबीर. In a verse in the Vinayapatrika, <mask> alludes to a certain "miracle at Chitrakuta", and thanks Rama for what he did for him at Chitrakuta. Some biographers conclude that the deed of Rama at Chitrakuta referred to by <mask> is the Darshan of Rama. Darshan of Yajnavalkya and Bharadvaja
In Vikram 1628 (1572 CE), <mask> left Chitrakuta for Prayag where he stayed during the Magha Mela (the annual fair in January). Six days after the Mela ended, he had the Darshan of the sages Yajnavalkya and Bharadvaja under a banyan tree. In one of the four dialogues in the Ramcharitmanas, Yajnavalkya is the speaker and Bharadvaja the listener. <mask> describes the meeting between Yajnavalkya and Bharadvaja after a Magha Mela festival in the Ramcharitmanas, it is this meeting where Yajnavalkya narrates the Ramcharitmanas to Bharadvaja.Attributed miracles
Most stories about <mask> tend to be apocryphal, and have been carried forward by word of mouth. None of them were related by Tulsi himself, thus making it difficult to separate fact from lore and fiction. In Priyadas' biography, <mask> is attributed with the power of working miracles. In one such miracle, he is believed to have brought back a dead Brahmin to life. While the Brahmin was being taken for cremation, his widow bowed down to <mask> on the way who addressed her as Saubhagyavati (a woman whose husband is alive). The widow told <mask> her husband had just died, so his words could not be true. <mask> said that the word has passed his lips and so he would restore the dead man to life.He asked everybody present to close their eyes and uttered the name of lord Rama, on doing which the dead Brahmin was raised back to life. <mask> was acclaimed in his lifetime to be a reincarnation of Valmiki, the composer of the original Ramayana in Sanskrit. He is also considered to be the composer of the Hanuman Chalisa, a popular devotional hymn dedicated to Hanuman,the monkey god and divine devotee of lord Rama. In another miracle described by Priyadas, the Mughal Emperor Akbar summoned <mask> on hearing of his bringing back a dead man to life. <mask> declined to go as he was too engrossed in creating his verses but he was later forcibly brought before the Akbar and was asked to perform a miracle, which <mask> declined by saying "It's a lie, all I know is Rama." The emperor imprisoned <mask> at Fatehpur Sikri, "We will see this Rama." <mask> refused to bow to Akbar and created a verse in praise of Hanuman and chanted it (Hanuman Chalisa) for forty days and suddenly an army of monkeys descended upon the town and wreaked havoc in all corners of Fatehpur Sikri, entering each home and the emperor's harem, scratching people and throwing bricks from ramparts.An old Hafiz told the emperor that this was the miracle of the imprisoned Fakir. The emperor fell at <mask>' feet, released him and apologised. <mask> stopped the menace of monkeys and asked the emperor to abandon the place. The emperor agreed and moved back to Delhi. Ever since Akbar became a close friend of <mask> and he also ordered a firman that followers of lord Rama, lord Hanuman & other Hindus, should not be harassed in his kingdom. Priyadas narrates a miracle of <mask> at Vrindavan, when he visited a temple of Krishna. When he began bowing down to the idol of Krishna, the Mahant of the temple named Parshuram decided to test <mask>.He told <mask> that he who bows down to any deity except their Ishta Devata (cherished form of divinity) is a fool, as <mask>' Ishta Devata was Rama. In response, <mask> recited the following extemporaneously composed couplet
When <mask> recited this couplet, the idol of Krishna holding the flute and stick in hands changed to the idol of Rama holding the bow and arrow in hands. Some authors have expressed doubts on the couplet being composed by <mask>. Literary life
<mask> started composing poetry in Sanskrit in Varanasi on the Prahlada Ghat. Tradition holds that all the verses that he composed during the day, would get lost in the night. This happened daily for eight days. On the eighth night, Shiva – whose famous Kashi Vishwanath Temple is located in Varanasi – is believed to have ordered <mask> in a dream to compose poetry in the vernacular instead of Sanskrit.<mask> woke up and saw both Shiva and Parvati who blessed him. Shiva ordered <mask> to go to Ayodhya and compose poetry in Awadhi. Shiva also predicted that <mask>' poetry would fructify like the Sama Veda. In the Ramcharitmanas, <mask> hints at having the Darshan of Shiva and Parvati in both dream and awakened state. <mask> is also credited with having composed a number of wise sayings and dohas containing lessons for life. A popular one among them is:
आवत ही हरसय नहीं, नैनन नहीं सनोह ।
तुलसी वहाँ न जाइये, चाहे कञ्चन बरसे मेर ॥ सिया पति राम चन्द्र जी की जय , जय जय बजरंगबली ।।
(Aawat hi harshe nahin, nainan nahin saneh. Tulsi tahan na jaiye, chahe kanchan barse megh.Lit. A place where people are not happy or welcoming when you come, where their eyes have no affection for you, Don't go there, even if a mountain of gold is showered.) Composition of Ramcharitmanas
In the year Vikram 1631 (1575 CE), <mask> started composing the Ramcharitmanas in Ayodhya on Sunday, Ramnavami day (ninth day of the bright half of the Chaitra month, which is the birthday of Rama). <mask> himself attests this date in the Ramcharitmanas. He composed the epic over two years, seven months and twenty-six days, and completed the work in Vikram 1633 (1577 CE) on the Vivaha Panchami day (fifth day of the bright half of the Margashirsha month, which commenrates the wedding of Rama and his wife Sita). <mask> came to Varanasi and recited the Ramcharitmanas to Shiva (Vishwanath) and Parvati (Annapurna) at the Kashi Vishwanath Temple. A popular legend goes that the Brahmins of Varanasi, who were critical of <mask> for having rendered the Sanskrit Ramayana in the Awadhi, decided to test the worth of the work.A manuscript of the Ramcharitmanas was kept at the bottom of pile of Sanskrit scriptures in the sanctum sanctorum of the Vishvanath temple in the night, and the doors of the sanctum sanctorum were locked. In the morning when the doors were opened, the Ramcharitmanas was found at the top of the pile. The words Satyam Shivam Sundaram (Sanskrit: सत्यं शिवं सुन्दरम्, literally "truth, auspiciousness, beauty") were inscribed on the manuscript with the signature of Shiva. The words were also heard by the people present. Per traditional accounts, some Brahmins of Varanasi were still not satisfied, and sent two thieves to steal the manuscript. The thieves tried to break into the Ashram of Tulsidas, but were confronted by two guards with bows and arrows, of dark and fair complexion. The thieves had a change of heart and came to Tulsidas in the morning to ask who the two guards were.Believing that the two guards could be none other than Rama and Lakshmana, <mask> was aggrieved to know that they were guarding his home at night. He sent the manuscript of Ramcharitmanas to his friend Todar Mal, the finance minister of Akbar, and donated all his money. The thieves were reformed and became devotees of Rama. Last compositions
Around Vikram 1664 (1607 CE), <mask> was afflicted by acute pain all over his body, especially in his arms. He then composed the Hanuman Bahuk, where he describes his bodily pain and suffering in several stanzas. He was relieved of his pain after this composition. Later he was also afflicted by Bartod boils (Hindi: बरतोड़, furuncles caused by pulling out of the hair), which may have been the cause of his death.The Vinaypatrika is considered as the last compositions of <mask>, believed to be written when Kali Yuga started troubling him. In this work of 279 stanzas, he beseeches Rama to give him Bhakti ("devotion"), and to accept his petition. <mask> attests in the last stanza of Vinaypatrika that Rama himself signed the manuscript of the work. The 45th stanza of the Vinaypatrika is sung as the evening Aarti by many Hindus. Death
<mask> died at the age of 91 on 31 July 1623 (Shravan month of the year Vikram 1680) in Assi Ghat on the bank of the river Ganga. Like the year of his birth, traditional accounts and biographers do not agree on the exact date of his death. Works
Twelve works are widely considered by biographers to be written by <mask>, six major works and six minor works.Based on the language of the works, they have been classified into two groups as follows–
Awadhi works – Ramcharitmanas, Ramlala Nahachhu, Barvai Ramayan, Parvati Mangal, Janaki Mangal and Ramagya Prashna. Braja works – Krishna Gitavali, Gitavali, Sahitya Ratna, Dohavali, Vairagya Sandipani and Vinaya Patrika. Besides these twelve works, four more works are popularly believed to be composed by <mask> which include Hanuman Chalisa, Hanuman Ashtak, Hanuman Bahuk and Tulsi Satsai. Ramcharitmanas
Ramacharitamanas (रामचरितमानस, 1574–1576), "The Mānasa lake brimming over with the exploits of Lord Rāma" is an Awadhi rendering of the Ramayana narrative. It is the longest and earliest work of <mask>, and draws from various sources including the Ramayana of Valmiki, the Adhyatma Ramayana, the Prasannaraghava and Hanuman Nataka. The work consists of around 12,800 lines divided into 1073 stanzas, which are groups of Chaupais separated by Dohas or Sorthas. It is divided into seven books (Kands) like the Ramayana of Valmiki, and is around one-third of the size of Valmiki's Ramayana.The work is composed in 18 metres which include ten Sanskrit metres (Anushtup, Shardulvikridit, Vasantatilaka, Vamshashta, Upajati, Pramanika, Malini, Sragdhara, Rathoddhata and Bhujangaprayata) and eight Prakrit metres (Soratha, Doha, Chaupai, Harigitika, Tribhangi, Chaupaiya, Trotaka and Tomara). It is popularly referred to as Tulsikrit Ramayana, literally The Ramayana composed by <mask>. The work has been acclaimed as "the living sum of Indian culture", "the tallest tree in the magic garden of medieval Indian poesy", "the greatest book of all devotional literature", "the Bible of Northern India", and "the best and most trustworthy guide to the popular living faith of its people. "But, as he has said "हरि अनंत हरि कथा अनंता।( The story of the lord is endless as are his glories)
Several manuscripts of the Ramcharitmanas are claimed to have been written down by <mask> himself. Grierson wrote in the late nineteenth century, two copies of the epic were said to have existed in the poet's own handwriting. One manuscript was kept at Rajapur, of which only the Ayodhyakand is left now, which bears marks of water. A legend goes that the manuscript was stolen and thrown into Yamuna river when the thief was being pursued, and only the second book of the epic could be rescued.Grierson wrote that the other copy was at Malihabad in Lucknow district, of which only one leaf was missing. Another manuscript of the Ayodhyakanda claimed to be in the poet's own hand exists at Soron in Etah district, one of the places claimed to be <mask>anda, dated Samvat 1661, nineteen years before the poet's death, claimed to be corrected by <mask>, is at Ayodhya. Some other ancient manuscripts are found in Varanasi, including one in possession of the Maharaja of Benares that was written in Vikram 1704 (1647), twenty-four years after the death of <mask>. Other major works
The five major works of <mask> apart from Ramcharitmanas include:
Dohavali (दोहावली, 1581), literally Collection of Dohas, is a work consisting of 573 miscellaneous Doha and Sortha verses mainly in Braja with some verses in Awadhi. The verses are aphorisms on topics related to tact, political wisdom, righteousness and the purpose of life. 85 Dohas from this work are also found in the Ramcharitmanas, 35 in Ramagya Prashna, two in Vairagya Sandipani and some in Rama Satsai, another work of 700 Dohas attributed to Tulsidas.sahitya ratna or ratna Ramayan (1608–1614), literally Collection of Kavittas, is a Braja rendering of the Ramayana, composed entirely in metres of the Kavitta family – Kavitta, Savaiya, Ghanakshari and Chhappaya. It consists of 325 verses including 183 verses in the Uttarkand. Like the Ramcharitmanas, it is divided into seven Kands or books and many episodes in this work are different from the Ramcharitmanas. Gitavali (गीतावली), literally Collection of Songs, is a Braja rendering of the Ramayana in songs. All the verses are set to Ragas of Hindustani classical music and are suitable for singing. It consists of 328 songs divided into seven Kands or books. Many episodes of the Ramayana are elaborated while many others are abridged.Krishna Gitavali or Krishnavali (कृष्णगीतावली, 1607), literally Collection of Songs to Krishna, is a collection of 61 songs in honour of Krishna in Braja. There are 32 songs devoted to the childhood sports (Balalila) and Rasa Lila of Krishna, 27 songs form the dialogue between Krishna and Uddhava, and two songs describe the episode of disrobing of Draupadi. Vinaya Patrika (विनयपत्रिका), literally Petition of Humility, is a Braja work consisting of 279 stanzas or hymns. The stanzas form a petition in the court of Rama asking for Bhakti. It is considered to be the second best work of <mask> after the Ramcharitmanas, and is regarded as important from the viewpoints of philosophy, erudition, and eulogistic and poetic style of <mask>. The first 43 hymns are addressed to various deities and Rama's courtiers and attendants, and remaining are addressed to Rama. Minor works
Minor works of <mask> include:
Barvai Ramayana (बरवै रामायण, 1612), literally The Ramayana in Barvai metre, is an abridged rendering of the Ramayana in Awadhi.The works consists of 69 verses composed in the Barvai metre, and is divided into seven Kands or books. The work is based on a psychological framework. Parvati Mangal (पार्वती मंगल), literally The marriage of Parvati, is an Awadhi work of 164 verses describing the penance of Parvati and the marriage of Parvati and Shiva. It consists of 148 verses in the Sohar metre and 16 verses in the Harigitika metre. Janaki Mangal (जानकी मंगल), literally The marriage of Sita, is an Awadhi work of 216 verses describing the episode of marriage of Sita and Rama from the Ramayana. The work includes 192 verses in the Hamsagati metre and 24 verses in the Harigitika metres. The narrative differs from the Ramcharitmanas at several places.Ramalala Nahachhu (रामलला नहछू), literally The Nahachhu ceremony of the child Rama, is an Awadhi work of 20 verses composed in the Sohar metre. The Nahachhu ceremony involves cutting the nails of the feet before the Hindu Samskaras (rituals) of Chudakarana, Upanayana, Vedarambha, Samavartana or Vivaha. In the work, events take place in the city of Ayodhya, so it is considered to describe the Nahachhu before Upanayana, Vedarambha and Samavartana. Ramajna Prashna (रामाज्ञा प्रश्न), literally Querying the Will of Rama, is an Awadhi work related to both Ramayana and Jyotisha (astrology). It consists of seven Kands or books, each of which is divided into seven Saptakas or Septets of seven Dohas each. Thus it contains 343 Dohas in all. The work narrates the Ramayana non-sequentially, and gives a method to look up the Shakuna (omen or portent) for astrological predictions.Vairagya Sandipini (वैराग्य संदीपनी, 1612), literally Kindling of Detachment, is a philosophical work of 60 verses in Braja which describe the state of Jnana (realisation) and Vairagya (dispassion), the nature and greatness of saints, and moral conduct. It consists of 46 Dohas, 2 Sorathas and 12 Chaupai metres. Popularly attributed works
The following four works are popularly attributed to <mask>–
Hanuman Chalisa (हनुमान चालीसा), literally, Forty Verses to Hanuman, is an Awadhi work of 40 Chaupais and two Dohas in obeisance to Hanuman. Popular belief holds the work to be authored by <mask>, and it contains his signature, though some authors do not think the work was written by him. It is one of the most read short religious texts in northern India, and is recited by millions of Hindus on Tuesdays and Saturdays. It is believed to have been uttered by <mask> in a state of Samadhi at the Kumbh Mela in Haridwar. Sankatmochan Hanumanashtak (संकटमोचन हनुमानाष्टक), literally Eight verses for Hanuman, the Remover of Afflictions, is an Awadhi work of eight verses in the Mattagajendra metre, devoted to Hanuman.It is believed to have been composed by <mask> on the occasion of the founding of the Sankatmochan Temple in Varanasi. The work is usually published along with Hanuman Chalisa. Hanuman Bahuka (हनुमान बाहुक), literally The Arm of Hanuman, is a Braja work of 44 verses believed to have been composed by <mask> when he suffered acute pain in his arms at an advanced age. <mask> describes the pain in his arms and also prays to Hanuman for freedom from the suffering. The work has two, one, five and 36 verses respectively in the Chhappaya, Jhulna, Savaiya and Ghanakshari metre. Tulsi Satsai (तुलसी सतसई), literally Seven Hundred Verses by <mask>, is a work in both Awadhi and Braja and contains 747 Dohas divided in seven Sargas or cantos. The verses are same as those in Dohavali and Ramagya Prashna but the order is different.Doctrine
The philosophy and principles of <mask> are found across his works, and are especially outlined in the dialogue between Kakbhushundi and Garuda in the Uttar Kand of the Ramcharitmanas. <mask>' doctrine has been described as an assimilation and reconciliation of the diverse tenets and cultures of Hinduism. At the beginning of the Ramcharitmanas, <mask> says that his work is in accordance with various scriptures – the Puranas, Vedas, Upavedas, Tantra and Smriti. Ram Chandra Shukla in his critical work Hindi Sahitya Ka Itihaas elaborates on <mask>' Lokmangal as the doctrine for social upliftment which made this great poet immortal and comparable to any other world littérateur. Nirguna and Saguna Brahman
As per <mask>, the Nirguna Brahman (quality-less impersonal absolute) and Saguna Brahman (personal God with qualities) are one and the same. Both, Saguna (qualified Brahman) and Aguna (or Nirguna - unqualified Brahman) are Akath (unspeakable), Agaadh (unfathomable), Anaadi (without beginning, in existence since eternity) and Anupa (without parallel) (अगुन सगुन दुइ ब्रह्म सरूपा। अकथ अगाध अनादि अनूपा॥). It is the devotion (Bhakti) of the devotee that forces the Nirguna Brahman which is quality-less, formless, invisible and unborn, to become Saguna Brahman with qualities.<mask> gives the example of water, snow and hail to explain this – the substance is the same in all three, but the same formless water solidifies to become hail or a mountain of snow – both of which have a form. <mask> also gives the simile of a lake – the Nirguna Brahman is like the lake with just water, while the Saguna Brahman is a lake resplendent with blooming lotuses. In the Uttar Kand of Ramcharitmanas, <mask> describes in detail a debate between Kakbhushundi and Lomasa about whether God is Nirguna (as argued by Lomasa adhering to monism) or Saguna (as argued by Kakbhushundi adhering to dualism). Kakbhushundi repeatedly refutes all the arguments of Lomasa, to the point when Lomasa becomes angry and curses Kakbhushundi to be a crow. Lomasa repents later when Kakbhushundi happily accepts the curse but refuses to give up the Bhakti of Rama, the Saguna Brahman. Though <mask> holds both aspects of God to be equal, he favours the qualified Saguna aspect and the devotees of the highest category in the Ramcharitmanas repeatedly ask for the qualified Saguna aspect of Rama to dwell in their mind. Some authors contend from a few couplets in Ramcharitmanas and Vinay Patrika that <mask> has vigorously contradicted the denial of Avatar by Kabir.In several of his works, Kabir had said that the actual Rama is not the son of Dasharatha. In the Balkand of Ramcharitmanas, Shiva tells Parvati – those who say that the Rama whom the Vedas sing of and whom the sages contemplate on is different from the Rama of Raghu's race are possessed by the devil of delusion and do not know the difference between truth and falsehood. However, such allusions are based on interpretations of the text and do not hold much water when considered in the context of Ramcharitmanas. <mask>, in none of his works, has ever mentioned Kabir. The name of Rama
At the beginning of the Ramcharitmanas, there is a section devoted to the veneration of the name of Rama. As per <mask>, repeating the name of Rama is the only means to attain God in the Kali age where the means suited for other ages like meditation, Karma, and Puja are ineffective. He says in Kavitavali that his own redemption is because of the power, glory and majesty of the name of Rama.In a couplet in the Gitavali, <mask> says that wishing for liberation without refuge in the name of Rama is like wishing to climb to the sky by holding on to the falling rain. In his view, the name of Rama is greater than both Nirguna and Saguna aspects of God – it controls both of them and is illuminates both like a bilingual interpreter. In a verse in the Dohavali, <mask> says that the Nirguna Brahman resides in his heart, the Saguna Brahman resides in his eyes and the name of Rama resides on his tongue, as if a radiant gemstone is kept between the lower and upper halves of a golden casket. He holds that Rama is superior to all other names of God, and argues that ra and ma being are the only two consonants that are written above all other consonants in the conjunct form in Sanskrit because they are the two sounds in the word Rama. Rama as Brahman
At several places in <mask>' works, Rama is seen to be the higher than Vishnu and not as an avatar of Vishnu, which is the general portrayal of Rama. In the episode of the delusion of Sati in Ramcharitmanas, Sati sees many a Shiva, Brahma and Vishnu serving Rama and bowing at his feet. When Manu and Shatarupa perform penance, they crave to see that Supreme Lord "from a part of whose being emanate a number of Shivas, Brahmas and Vishnus."Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva come to them many times tempting them with a boon, but Manu and Shatarupa do not stop their penance. They are finally satisfied only by the appearance of Rama, on whose left side is Sita, from a part of whom are born "countless Lakshmis, Umas (Parvatis) and Brahmanis (Sarasvatis)." In the episode of marriage of Sita and Rama in Balkand, the trio of Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva is present – Brahma is astounded as he finds nowhere anything that is his own handiwork, while Vishnu is enchanted with Lakhmi on seeing Rama. In the Sundarkand, Hanuman tells Ravana that Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva can create, preserve and destroy by the might of Rama. In the Lankakand, <mask> presents the universe as the cosmic form of Rama, in which Shiva is the consciousness, Brahma is the reason and Vishnu is his intelligence. As per <mask>, Rama is not only an avatar, but also the source of avatars – Krishna is also an Avatar of Rama. Thus, <mask> clearly considers Rama as supreme brahman and not an avatar of Vishnu.In the opinion of Urvashi Soorati, the Rama of Tulsidas is an amalgamation of Vishnu who takes avatars, Vishnu in the abode of Ksheera Sagara, Brahman and the Para manifestation of the Pancharatra. Macfie concludes that <mask> makes a "double claim", i.e. Rama is an incarnation of both Vishnu and Brahman. In the words of Lutgendorf, <mask>' Rama is at once "Valmiki's exemplary prince, the cosmic Vishnu of Puranas, and the transcendent brahman of the Advaitins." Vedanta, World and Maya
In the Sundarkand of Ramcharitmanas, <mask> says that Rama is knowable by Vedanta. As per <mask>, Rama is the efficient and material cause (Nimitta and Upadana) of the world, which is real since Rama is real. In several verses of the Ramcharitmanas, <mask> says that the animate and inanimate world is a manifestation of Rama, and the universe is the cosmic form of Rama.Authors interpret these verses to mean that the world is real according to <mask>, in keeping with the Vishishtadvaita philosophy of Ramanuja. However, at some places in the Ramcharitmanas and Kavitavali, <mask> compares the world to a night or a dream and says it is Mithya (false or unreal). Some commentators interpret these verses to mean that in <mask>' opinion the world is unreal as per the Vivartavada doctrine of Adi Shankara, while some others interpret them to mean that the world is transient yet real as per the Satkhyativada doctrine of Ramananda. Uday Bhanu Singh concludes that in <mask>' view, the world is essentially the form of Rama and appears to be different from Rama due to Maya. Its visible form is transient, which is what <mask> means by Mithya. In the Vinayapatrika, <mask> says that the world in itself is neither true (Satya), nor false (Asatya), nor both true and false together (Satyasatya) – one who casts aside all these three illusions, knows oneself. This has been interpreted to mean that as per <mask>, the entire world is a Lila of Rama.At the beginning of the Ramcharitmanas, <mask> performs Samasti Vandana (obeisance to all beings) in which he bows down to the world also, saying it is "pervaded by" or "born out of" Sita and Rama. As per some verses in Ramcharitmanas and Vinaypatrika, when a Jiva (living being) knows the Self, Maya and Rama, it sees the world as being pervaded by Rama. In the Balkand episode of the marriage of the princes of Ayodhya with the princesses of Mithila, <mask> presents a metaphor in which the four brides are compared with the four states of consciousness – the waking state (Jagrat), sleep with dreams (Swapna), dreamless sleep (Sushupti) and the fourth self-conscious state (Turiya). The four grooms are compared with the presiding divinity (Vibhu) of the four states – Vishva, Taijasa, Prajna and Brahman. <mask> says as the four states of consciousness with their presiding divinities reside in the mind of a Jiva, so the four brides with their grooms are resplendent in the same pavilion. <mask> identifies Maya with Sita, the inseparable energy of Rama which takes avatar along with Rama. In his view, Maya is of two types – Vidya and Avidya.Vidya Maya is the cause of creation and the liberation of Jiva. Avidya Maya is the cause of illusion and bondage of the Jiva. The entire world is under the control of Maya. Maya is essentially the same but the two divisions are made for cognitive purposes, this view of <mask> is in accordance with Vaishnava teachers of Vedanta. Views on other Hindu deities
As per <mask>, there is no incompatibility between devotion to Rama and attachment to Shiva. <mask> equates the Guru as an incarnation of Shiva, and a considerable part of the Balkand of Ramcharitmanas is devoted to the narrative of Shiva including the abandonment of Sati, the penance of Parvati, the burning of Kamadeva and the marriage of Parvati and Shiva. In addition, <mask> venerates the whole Hindu pantheon.The Ramcharitmanas begins with reverence of Ganesh, Sarasvati, Parvati, Shiva, the Guru, Valmiki and Hanuman. At the beginning of the Vinayapatrika, he bows to Ganesh, Surya, Shiva, Devi, Ganga, Yamuna, Varanasi and Chitrakoot, asking them for devotion towards Rama. Bhakti
The practical end of all his writings is to inculcate bhakti addressed to Rama as the greatest means of salvation and emancipation from the chain of births and deaths, a salvation which is as free and open to men of the lowest caste as to Brahmins. Critical reception
From his time, <mask> has been acclaimed by Indian and Western scholars alike for his poetry and his impact on the Hindu society. <mask> mentions in his work Kavitavali that he was considered a great sage in the world. Madhusūdana Sarasvatī, one of the most acclaimed philosophers of the Advaita Vedanta tradition based in Varanasi and the composer of Advaitasiddhi, was a contemporary of <mask>. On reading the Ramcharitmanas, he was astonished and composed the following Sanskrit verse in praise of the epic and the composer.आनन्दकानने कश्चिज्जङ्गमस्तुल्सीतरुः ।
कविता मञ्जरी यस्य रामभ्रमरभूषिता ॥
ānandakānane kaścijjaṅgamastulsītaruḥ ।
kavitā mañjarī yasya rāmabhramarabhūṣitā ॥
Sur, a devotee of Krishna and a contemporary of <mask>, called <mask> as Sant Shiromani (the highest jewel among holy men) in an eight-line verse extolling Ramcharitmanas and <mask>. Abdur Rahim Khankhana, famous Muslim poet who was one of the Navaratnas (nine-gems) in the court of the Mughal emperor Akbar, was a personal friend of <mask>. Rahim composed the following couplet describing the Ramcharitmanas of <mask> –
रामचरितमानस बिमल संतनजीवन प्रान ।
हिन्दुवान को बेद सम जवनहिं प्रगट कुरान ॥
rāmacaritamānasa bimala santanajīvana prāna ।
hinduvāna ko beda sama javanahi̐ pragaṭa kurāna ॥
The historian Vincent Smith, the author of a biography of <mask>' contemporary Akbar, called <mask> the greatest man of his age in India and greater than even Akbar himself. The Indologist and linguist Sir George Grierson called <mask> "the greatest leader of the people after the Buddha" and "the greatest of Indian authors of modern times"; and the epic Ramcharitmanas "worthy of the greatest poet of any age." The work Ramcharitmanas has been called "the Bible of North India" by both nineteenth century Indologists including Ralph Griffith, who translated the four Vedas and Valmiki's Ramayana into English, and modern writers. Mahatma Gandhi held Tulsidas in high esteem and regarded the Ramcharitmanas as the "greatest book in all devotional literature". The Hindi poet Suryakant Tripathi 'Nirala' called Tulsidas "the most fragrant branch of flowers in the garden of the world's poetry, blossoming in the creeper of Hindi".Nirala considered <mask> to be a greater poet than Rabindranath Tagore, and in the same league as Kalidasa, Vyasa, Valmiki, Homer, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and William Shakespeare. Hindi litterateur Hazari Prasad Dwivedi wrote that <mask> established a "sovereign rule on the kingdom of Dharma in northern India", which was comparable to the impact of Buddha. Edmour J. Babineau, author of the book Love and God and Social Duty in Ramacaritmanasa, says that if <mask> was born in Europe or the Americas, he would be considered a greater personality than William Shakespeare. In the words of the archaeologist F. R. Allchin, who translated Vinaypatrika and Kavitavali into English, "for people of a large part of North India <mask> claims reverence comparable to that accorded to Luther as translator of the Bible into the native German". Allchin also mentions that the work Ramcharitmanas has been compared to not only the Ramayana of Valmiki, but the Vedas themselves, the Bhagavad Gita, the Quran and the Bible. Ernest Wood in his work An Englishman Defends Mother India considered the Ramcharitmanas to be "superior to the best books of the Latin and Greek languages." <mask> is also referred to as Bhaktaśiromaṇi, meaning the highest jewel among devotees.Specifically about his poetry, <mask> has been called the "emperor of the metaphor" and one who excels in similes by several critics. The Hindi poet Ayodhyasingh Upadhyay 'Hariaudh' said of <mask> –
कविता करके तुलसी न लसे
कविता लसी पा तुलसी की कला ।
kavitā karake tulasī na lase
kavitā lasī pā tulasī kī kalā ।
The Hindi poet Mahadevi Verma said commenting on <mask> that in the turbulent Middle Ages, India got light from <mask>. She further went on to say that the Indian society as it exists today is an edifice built by <mask>, and the Rama as we know today is the Rama of Tulsidas. See also
Hanuman Chalisa
Ramcharitmanas
Shri Ramachandra Kripalu
Thumak Chalat Ram Chandra
Bhakti movement
Notes
References
External links
The Ramcharitmanas of Tulasidas, published by Gita Press
Tulsidas Biography
Indian male poets
Hindi-language poets
Hindu poets
Epic poets
Sant Mat
1497 births
1532 births
1623 deaths
Hindu revivalists
Translators of the Ramayana
Indian Hindu saints
Scholars from Varanasi
16th-century Hindu religious leaders
16th-century Indian poets
16th-century Indian scholars
Bhakti movement
Poets from Uttar Pradesh
Writers from Varanasi
Vaishnava saints
Longevity claims | [
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] | <mask>, also known as <mask>, was a Hindu saint and poet. He wrote several works in Sanskrit and Awadhi, but is best known as the author of the epic Ramcharitmanas, which retells the Sanskrit version of the Ramayana. The city of Varanasi was where <mask> spent most of his life. The Ganga River in Varanasi is named after him. He founded the Sankatmochan Temple in Varanasi because he believed it to be the place where he saw Lord Hanuman. The Ramlila plays were started by <mask>. He is one of the greatest poets in Hindi, Indian and world literature.Ramlila plays, Hindustani classical music, popular music, and television series are examples of the impact of <mask> and his works on the art, culture and society in India. The Sanskrit name of Tulsidas can be transliterated in two different ways. Tulasdsa is a Sanskrit name. Since the vestigial letters that are no longer pronounced are retained in the written Indian languages, it is written as Tulsidas or Tulsds. The lost vowels are part of the Schwa deletion and can vary between regions. Tulas is an Indian variety of the basil plant considered to be good luck by Vaishnavas and Dsa means slave or servant. Sources have given only a few facts and hints about the life of <mask>.The Bhaktamal composed by Nabhadas between 1583 and 1639 and a commentary on Bhaktamal titled Bhaktirasbodhini were the two ancient sources on <mask>' life. Nabhadas described him as an incarnation of Valmiki in a six-line poem. Around a hundred years after the death of <mask>, Priyadas wrote a work detailing seven miracles or spiritual experiences from his life. Two more ancient biographies of <mask> were published in the 1920s, based on old manuscripts. The work of Veni Madhav Das gave a new date for the birth of <mask>. The work by Bhavanidas was more detailed than the work by Priyadas. The fifth ancient account was published in the 1950s and was based on an old manuscript.Krishnadatta Misra's father was close to <mask>. The accounts published later are not considered authentic by some modern scholars. These five works form a set of traditional biographies on which modern biographies of <mask> are based. Many believe that he is a rebirth of Valmiki. In the Hindu scriptures, the god Shiva tells his wife Parvati that Valmiki, who got a boon from Hanuman, will incarnate in the future in the Kali Yuga. In his Bhaktamal, Nabhadas writes that <mask> was the re-incarnation of Valmiki in the Kali Yuga. Valmiki is believed to have incarnated as <mask> in the Kali Yuga.Valmiki turned down Hanuman's request to hear the epic because he was a monkey, according to a traditional account. Hanuman went to the Himalayas after the victory of Rama. He engraved Hanuman Nataka on the Himalayan rocks using his nails in a play version of the Ramayana. Valmiki thought that the beauty of the Mahanataka would surpass his own. Hanuman cast all the rocks into the ocean, some of which are believed to be available today as Hanuman Nataka, because he was sad at Valmiki's state of mind. Valmiki was told by Hanuman to take birth as <mask> and write the Ramayana. The bright half of the lunar Hindu calendar month Shraavana (July–August) is when Early life Birth <mask> was born.13 August 1532 is the Gregorian calendar. Most scholars identify the place where he was born as a village on the banks of the river Ganga. The birthplace of Tulsi Das was officially declared in 2012 by the government of UP. His parents were from India. He is identified by most sources as a Saryupareen Brahmin of the Parashar Gotra. There are differing opinions about the year of birth of <mask>. The year of <mask>' birth is given in the Mula Gosain Charita by Veni Madhav Das.These are some of the sources that include Shivlal Pathak, popular editions of Ramcharitmanas, and Hanuman Poddar. The year was given as Vikram 1568 by a second group of biographers. James Lochtefeld, Ramghulam Dwivedi, and others are biographers. The year 1497 can be found in biographies in India and in popular culture. Biographers who disagree with this year argue that the life span of <mask> is equal to 126 years, which is unlikely if not impossible. Ramchandra Shukla says that an age of 126 is not impossible for a Mahatma like <mask>. The 500th birth anniversary of <mask> was celebrated by the Government of India and provincial governments in 1997.According to a childhood legend, <mask> was born after staying in the womb for twelve months, he had all thirty two teeth in his mouth at birth, and he did not cry at the time of his birth. He was named Rambola because he uttered the name of the deity. According to Jyotisha, he was born under the Abhuktamla constellation, which causes immediate danger to the life of the father. He was abandoned by his parents on the fourth night after he was born due to the inauspicious events at the time. <mask> claims in his works that his parents abandoned him after he was born due to an inauspicious astrological configuration. She looked after the child for five and a half years after she died. Rambola was an orphan and was left to fend for himself.Parvati assumed the form of a Brahmin woman and fed Rambola. At the age of six, Rambola was adopted by Narharidas, a Vaishnava ascetic who is believed to be the fourth disciple of Ramananda. The name of the initiation was changed from Rambola to <mask>. The dialogue that took place during the first meeting with his guru is narrated by <mask>. He was seven years old when his Upanayana was performed by Narharidas on the fifth day of the bright half of the month of Magha. Ayodhya was where <mask> began his learning. After some time, Narharidas took him to the Varaha Kshetra Soron, which is a holy place with a temple dedicated to Varaha.This is mentioned in the Ramcharitmanas by <mask>. The Soron Varaha Kshetra in modern-day Kasganj is referred to by most authors as the Varaha Kshetra. Over a period of 15 to 16 years, <mask> studied Sanskrit, four Vedas, six Jyotisha, and six schools of Hindu philosophy at the Pancaganga Ghat in Varanasi and later came to the sacred city of Varanasi. Shesha was a friend of Narharidas and a renowned scholar. There are differing views on the marital status of <mask>. According to the Mula Gosain Charita, <mask> was married to Ratnavali on the 13th day of the bright half of the Jyeshta month. Ratnavali was the daughter of a Brahmin of the Bharadwaja Gotra.Tarak died as a toddler. When <mask> went to a Hanuman temple, Ratnavali went to her father's home with her brother. In the night, <mask> swam across the Yamuna river to meet his wife. If <mask> was half as devoted to God as he was to her body of flesh and blood, he would have been redeemed. The holy city of Prayag was where <mask> left her. He became a Sadhu after abandoning the Grihastha stage. The marriage episode of <mask> is thought to be a later interpolation by some authors.According to Rambhadracharya, there are two quotes in the Vinayapatrika and Hanuman Bahuka that show that <mask> was a Sadhu from childhood. After renunciation, <mask> spent most of his time at Varanasi, Prayag, and other nearby places. He studied different people, met saints and Sadhus and meditated. The Mula Gosain Charita gave an account of his travels to the four pilgrimages of Hindus. He visited the current-day Tibet, where tradition says he had the sight of the crow who is one of the four narrators in the Ramcharitmanas. Several places in his works hint at the fact that he met Hanuman and Rama face to face. He gave a detailed account of his meetings with Hanuman and Rama.<mask> used to visit the woods outside Varanasi for his morning ablutions with a water pot. He used to give the remaining water to a tree. The Preta, a type of ghost believed to be thirsty for water, appeared to <mask> and offered him a boon. The Preta responded that it was beyond him after <mask> said he wanted to see Rama with his eyes. The Preta said that he could help Hanuman grant the boon <mask> asked for. Hanuman is the first to arrive and last to leave, according to the Preta. An old leper sat at the end of the gathering and was the first person to listen to the discourse.<mask> followed the leper to the woods. At the spot where the Sankat Mochan Temple stands today, <mask> shouted "I know who you are" and "You cannot escape me" as he fell at the leper's feet. At first the leper did not know what he was talking about. The original form of Hanuman was revealed by the leper. Hanuman was told by <mask> that he wanted to see Rama face to face. He was told to go to Chitrakuta by Hanuman. At the beginning of the Ramcharitmanas, <mask> bows down to a Preta and asks for his grace.The same Preta led to <mask> and Hanuman. <mask> followed the instructions of Hanumana and started living in an Ashram at Ramghat. One day, <mask> went to the Kamadgiri mountain to perform acircumambulation. He saw two princes, one dark and the other green, pass by on horseback. He was enraptured by the sight, but he couldn't see them and took his eyes off them. Hanuman asked if he saw Lakshmana and his brother on horses. <mask> was sorry and disappointed.Hanuman told <mask> that he would be able to see Rama again the next morning. In a song of the Gitavali, <mask> recalls how his eyes turned his own enemies by staying fixed to the ground. According to some sources, on the new-moon day of Magha, Vikram 1607 (1551CE) or 1621 (1565CE), Rama appeared to <mask>, this time as a child. A child asked for a religious mark on the forehead while <mask> was making a paste. Hanuman gave a hint to <mask> and he had a full view of Rama. He forgot about the sandalwood because he was so enamored with him. The Tilaka was put on his forehead and the Tulsidas was put on his forehead.This famous incidence is described in a verse. In a verse in the Vinayapatrika, <mask> thanks Rama for what he did for him at Chitrakuta. According to some biographers, the Darshan of Rama was referred to by <mask>. The annual fair in January is where <mask> stayed during the Magha Mela in 1628. Six days after the Mela ended, he had the darshan of the two spiritual masters. Yajnavalkya is the speaker and Bharadvaja is the listener in one of the Ramcharitmanas. The meeting between Yajnavalkya and Bharadvaja happened after a Magha Mela festival.Most stories about <mask> are apocryphal, and have been carried forward by word of mouth. It was difficult to separate fact from lore and fiction because none of them were related to Tulsi. <mask> is said to have the power of working miracles. He is said to have brought a Brahmin back to life. While the Brahmin was being taken for cremation, his widow bowed down to <mask>, who said that her husband was alive. The widow told <mask> that her husband had died. <mask> said that he would bring the dead man back to life.The dead Brahmin was raised back to life after he was asked to close his eyes and say the name of the lord. <mask> was thought to be a reincarnation of Valmiki, the composer of the original Ramayana in Sanskrit. He is considered to be the composer of the Hanuman Chalisa, a popular devotional hymn dedicated to Hanuman, the monkey god. The Mughal Emperor Akbar summoned <mask> after hearing that he brought back a dead man to life. <mask> declined to perform a miracle when he was brought before the Akbar and asked to perform a lie, as he was too engrossed in creating his verse. The emperor imprisoned <mask>. After forty days, an army of monkeys descended upon the town and wreaked havoc, entering each home and the emperor's hare.The emperor was told by an old man that this was the miracle of the imprisoned Fakir. The emperor apologized after falling at <mask>' feet. The emperor was asked to abandon the place by <mask>. The emperor moved back to Delhi. Since Akbar became a close friend of <mask>, he ordered a firman that followers of lord Hanuman and other Hindus should not be harassed in his kingdom. The miracle of <mask> was narrated by Priyadas when he visited a temple of Krishna. The Mahant of the temple named Parshuram decided to test <mask> when he bowed down to the idol of Krishna.He told <mask> that he was a fool if he bows down to any deity other than their Ishta Devata. The idol of Krishna holding the flute and stick in his hands changed to the one of Rama holding the bow and arrow. Some authors have doubts about the couplet being composed. The Prahlada Ghat is where the literary life of <mask> began. Tradition says that the verse that he wrote during the day would get lost in the night. For eight days, this happened daily. On the eighth night, Shiva is said to have ordered <mask> to write poetry in the vernacular instead of Sanskrit.Shiva and Parvati blessed <mask> when he woke up. <mask> was ordered by Shiva to write poetry. Shiva predicted that Vedadas' poetry wouldfructify. The dream and awakened state of Shiva and Parvati can be seen in the Ramcharitmanas. A number of wise sayings and dohas have been composed by <mask>. A popular one is: . Chahe kanchan barse megh, tahan na jaiye.There is a poem. If a mountain of gold is showered, don't go to a place where people are not happy or welcoming. On theninth day of the bright half of the Chaitra month, Ramnavami day, <mask> began to compose the Ramcharitmanas. This is the date that <mask> attests to. The epic was composed over two years, seven months and twenty-six days, and was completed on the Vivaha Panchami day, the fifth day of the bright half of the Margashirsha month. There is a temple in Varanasi called the Kashi Vishwanath Temple. The Brahmins of Varanasi decided to test the worth of the work because they were critical of the work done by <mask>.In the night, the doors of the sanctum sanctorum were locked and a manuscript of the Ramcharitmanas was kept at the bottom of a pile of Sanskrit scriptures. The Ramcharitmanas were found at the top of the pile when the doors were opened in the morning. The manuscript had the signature of Shiva and the words "truth, auspiciousness, beauty" written on it. The people heard the words. The Brahmins of Varanasi sent two thieves to steal the manuscript because they were dissatisfied. Two guards with bows and arrows, of dark and fair complexion, confronted the thieves who tried to break into the Ashram of Tulsidas. The thieves came to Tulsidas in the morning to find out who the two guards were.<mask> was upset to know that the two guards were guarding his home at night. He donated all of his money to Todar Mal, the finance minister of Akbar. The thieves were reformed. <mask> was in pain all over his body, especially in his arms. He describes his pain and suffering in the Hanuman Bahuk. After this composition, he was relieved of his pain. The cause of his death may have been Bartod boil, a condition in which furuncles are caused by pulling out the hair.The last compositions of <mask> are believed to have been written when Kali Yuga began troubling him. He asked Rama to give him Bhakti and to accept his petition in this work. According to <mask>, the manuscript of the work was signed by the author. The evening Aarti is sung by many Hindus. On July 31, 1623, <mask> died at the age of 91 in Assi Ghat on the bank of the river Ganga. Traditional accounts and biographers don't agree on the exact date of his death, like the year of his birth. Six major works and six minor works are considered by biographers to be written by <mask>.The works have been categorized into two groups based on the language of the works. Braja works on Krishna Gitavali, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya Ratna, Sahitya There are four more works that are believed to have been composed by <mask>. "The Mnasa lake bursting over with the exploits of Lord Rma" is a rendering of the Ramayana narrative. It is the longest and earliest work of <mask>ki's Ramayana is divided into seven books.The work is composed of 18 metres and 10 metres of Sanskrit. It is referred to as The Ramayana composed by <mask>. The work has been described as "the living sum of Indian culture", "the tallest tree in the magic garden of medieval Indian poesy", "the greatest book of all devotional literature", and "the best and most trustworthy guide to Northern India". "But, as he has said, the story of the lord is endless as are his glories." Two copies of the epic were said to have been written in the poet's own handwriting. The only manuscript left is at Rajapur, and it bears marks of water. The second book of the epic could not be saved because the manuscript was thrown into the Yamuna river when the thief was being pursued.One leaf was missing from the other copy in Lucknow district. One of the places claimed to be the birthplace of <mask> has a manuscript of the poet's own hand. Nineteen years before the poet's death, there is a manuscript that claims to be corrected by <mask>. There is a manuscript in Varanasi that was written twenty-four years after the death of <mask>. One of the major works of <mask> is the collection of Dohas, also known as the collection of Sortha, which consists of tact, political wisdom, righteousness and the purpose of life are some of the aphorisms in the verse. Some of the work from this work can be found in the Ramcharitmanas, 35 in Ramagya Prashna, two in Vairagya Sandipani, and another work of 700 Dohas attributed to <mask>.A Braja rendering of the Ramayana, composed entirely of metres of the Kavitta family, is called sahitya ratna. There are 335 words including 183 words in the Uttarkand. The work is divided into seven Kands or books and many of the episodes are different from the Ramcharitmanas. The collection of songs is a Braja rendering of the Ramayana. The lyrics are suitable for singing and are set to Ragas of Hindustani classical music. The songs are divided into seven Kands or books. Many episodes of the Ramayana are not complete.The Collection of Songs to Krishna is a collection of 61 songs. There are 32 songs about the childhood sports, 27 songs about the dialogue between Krishna and Uddhava, and two songs about the disrobing of Draupadi. The Petition of Humility is a Braja work. The petition was filed in the court of Rama. It is considered to be the second best work of <mask>, and is important from the viewpoints of philosophy, erudition, and poetic style. The first 43 hymns were addressed to various deities and Rama's courtiers and attendants. The Barvai Ramayana is a minor work of the Tulsidas.The works are composed in the Barvai metre and are divided into seven Kands or books. The work is based on psychology. The marriage of Parvati and Shiva is described in a work called Parvati Mangal. The Sohar and Harigitikametres have 148 and 16 verses, respectively. The marriage of the bride and groom is referred to as Janaki Mangal ( ), which means "The marriage of the bride and groom". There are 192 words in the Hamsagatimetre and 24 words in the Harigitikametre. The narrative is different at several places.The Nahachhu ceremony of the child is called Ramalala Nahachhu. The Nahachhu ceremony involves cutting the nails of the feet before the Hindu Samskaras. In the work, events take place in the city of Ayodhya, so it is considered to describe the Nahachhu before Upanayana. The work is related to both Ramayana and Jyotisha. There are seven Kands or books, each of which is divided into seven Saptakas or Septets. It has 343 Dohas in it. The work gives a method to look up the Shakuna for astrological predictions, and narrates the Ramayana non-sequentially.The nature and greatness of saints, moral conduct, and the state of Jnana are some of the things described in Vairagya Sandipini (, 1612). It has 46 Dohas, 2 Sorathas and 12 Chaupai metres. Forty Verses to Hanuman is one of the popular works attributed to <mask>. Some authors don't think the work was written by <mask>, but the popular belief is that the work is authored by him. Millions of Hindus read it on Tuesdays and Saturdays, and it is one of the most read short religious texts in northern India. It is believed that it was said by <mask> in a state of Samadhi. The Sankatmochan Hanumanashtak is a piece of art dedicated to Hanuman.It is believed that it was composed on the occasion of the founding of the Sankatmochan Temple. The work is published with Hanuman Chalisa. The Arm of Hanuman, also known as The Arm of Hanuman, is a Braja work of 44 words that was written by <mask> when he suffered acute pain in his arms at an advanced age. <mask> prays to Hanuman for freedom from the suffering and describes the pain in his arms. There are two, one, five and 36 words in the work. There are seven sargas and cantos in Tulsi Satsai, which is a work in both Braja and Awadhi. The order of the verse is different than in the other places.The philosophy and principles of <mask> can be found in many of his works. The doctrine of <mask> has been described as an integration of the different tenets and cultures of Hinduism. At the beginning of the Ramcharitmanas, <mask> says that his work is in accordance with various scriptures. Ram Chandra Shukla in his critical work Hindi Sahitya Ka Itihaas elaborates on the doctrine of Lokmangal, which made this great poet immortal and comparable to any other world littérateur. One and the same are the qualities of the Nirguna and Saguna Brahman. Saguna, Akath, Agaadh, Anaadi, and Anupa are unqualified Brahmans. The devotion of the devotees causes the Nirguna Brahman to become Saguna Brahman with qualities.The example of water, snow and hail is the same in all three, but the same formless water becomes hail or a mountain of snow, both of which have a form. The Saguna Brahman is a lake with blooms of lotuses, while the Nirguna Brahman is a lake with just water. In the Uttar Kand of Ramcharitmanas, <mask> describes in detail a debate between Kakbhushundi and Lomasa about whether God is Nirguna or Saguna. When Lomasa becomes angry and curses Kakbhushundi to be a crow, he repeatedly refutes all of his arguments. When Kakbhushundi happily accepts the curse, he refuses to give up the Bhakti of Rama, the Saguna Brahman. Devotees of the highest category in the Ramcharitmanas frequently ask for the qualified Saguna aspect of Rama to be dwelled in their mind because <mask> holds both aspects of God to be equal. Some authors contend from a few couplets in Ramcharitmanas that <mask> was in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in fact in factAccording to several of his works, the true son of Dasharatha is not Rama. In the Balkand of Ramcharitmanas, Shiva tells Parvati that those who say the same thing about the same thing about the same thing is different from the same thing about the same thing is different from the same thing is different from the same thing is different from the same thing is different The allusions are based on interpretations of the text and do not hold much water. In his works, <mask> has never mentioned Kabir. There is a section devoted to the veneration of the name of Rama. The only way to attain God in the Kali age is by repeating the name of Rama, according to <mask>. In Kavitavali, he says that his redemption is due to the power, glory and majesty of the name of Rama.In a couplet in the Gitavali, <mask> says that wishing for liberation without refuge in the name of Rama is like wishing to climb to the sky by holding on to the falling rain. He believes that the name of Rama is more important than both the Nirguna and Saguna aspects of God. <mask> says in a verse that the Nirguna Brahman is in his heart, the Saguna Brahman is in his eyes, and the name of Rama is on his tongue. He believes that the only two vowels that are written above all other vowels in the Sanskrit language are ma and Ra. The general portrayal of Rama is that he is higher than Vishnu and not an incarnation of Vishnu. In the episode of the delusion of Sati, there are many Shiva, Brahma, and Vishnu in the picture. When they perform penance, they want to see that Supreme Lord from a part of who they are.They are tempting them with a boon, but they do not stop their penance. They are satisfied only by the appearance of Rama, who is on the left side of the picture. In the episode of marriage of Sita and Rama in Balkand, the trio of Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva is present, while Vishnu is enchanted with Lakhmi. In the Sundarkand, Hanuman tells Ravana that the three of them can destroy each other. In the Lankakand, <mask> presents the universe as the Cosmic form of Rama, in which Shiva is the consciousness, Brahma is the reason and Vishnu is his intelligence. According to <mask>, the source of theavatar is Krishna, who is also anavatar of Rama. <mask> considers Rama to be the supreme brahman and not an incarnation of Vishnu.In her opinion, the Rama of Tulsidas is an amalgam of Vishnu who is in the abode of Ksheera Sagara and the Para manifestations of the Pancharatra. Macfie concludes that <mask> makes a double claim. There is an incarnation of both Vishnu and Brahman. "Valmiki's exemplary prince, the Vishnu of Puranas, and the brahman of the Advaitins" are all said to have been written by <mask>. In the Sundarkand of Ramcharitmanas, <mask> says that there is a knowledge of the world and Maya. The efficient and material cause of the world, which is real, is due to the fact that Rama is real. The universe and the world are both manifestations of the same person, according to the Ramcharitmanas.The authors believe that the world is real according to the philosophy of Ramanuja. <mask> compares the world to a night or a dream in some places. Some commentators interpret the verse to mean that the world is real as per the Vivartavada doctrine, while others interpret it to mean that the world is not real at all. According to Uday Bhanu Singh, the world appears to be different from Rama due to Maya. Its visible form is temporary. The world in itself is neither true, nor false, nor both true and false together, says <mask> in the Vinayapatrika. This has been interpreted to mean that the world is a place of worship.In the beginning of the Ramcharitmanas, <mask> performs Samasti Vandana in which he bows down to all beings, saying it is "born out of" Sita and Ram. When a Jiva knows the Self, Maya and Rama, it sees the world as being influenced by them. The four brides are compared with the four states of consciousness, the waking state, sleep with dreams, and dreamless sleep, in the Balkand episode of the marriage of the princes of Ayodhya with the princesses of Mithila. The four grooms are compared with the presiding divinity of the four states. The four states of consciousness with their presiding divinities reside in the mind of a Jiva, so the four brides with their grooms are in the same pavilion. The inseparable energy of Rama and Maya is identified by <mask>. In his opinion, Maya is a mixture of two types.The liberation of Jiva was caused by the cause of Vidya Maya. The illusion and bondage of the Jiva is caused by Avidya Maya. Maya controls the entire world. Maya is essentially the same but the two divisions are made for cognitive purposes. There is no incompatibility between devotion to Rama and attachment to Shiva according to <mask>. A large part of the Balkand of Ramcharitmanas is devoted to the narrative of Shiva, including the abandonment of Sati, the penance of Parvati, and the marriage of Parvati and Shiva. The whole Hindu pantheon is venerates by <mask>.The Ramcharitmanas begin with reverence of Shiva, Parvati, Valmiki and Hanuman. At the beginning of the Vinayapatrika, he bows his head and asks them to worship him. The practical end of his writings is to encourage the men of the lowest caste to follow in the footsteps of the Brahmins and become free from the chains of births and deaths. The impact of <mask> on the Hindu society has been acclaimed by both Indian and Western scholars. In his work Kavitavali, <mask> mentions that he was considered a great leader in the world. One of the most acclaimed philosophers of the Advaita Vedanta tradition based in Varanasi is the composer of Advaitasiddhi. He composed a Sanskrit verse in praise of the epic and the composer after reading the Ramcharitmanas.kavit majar. The famous Muslim poet, who was one of the nine-gems in the court of the Mughal emperor Akbar, was a personal friend of <mask>. The following couplet was composed by Rahim. The great leader of the people after the Buddha was called the greatest leader of the people after the Buddha by the Indologist and linguist Sir George Grierson. The bible of North India has been called "the Bible of North India" by both 19th century Indologists and modern writers. Mahatma Gandhi regarded the Ramcharitmanas as the greatest book in all devotional literature, and he held <mask> in high esteem. The most fragrant branch of flowers in the garden of the world's poetry is called Tulsidas by the Hindi poet Suryakant Tripathi 'Nirala'.<mask> was considered to be a better poet than Rabindranath Tagore, and in the same league as Kalidasa, Vyasa, Valmiki, Homer and William Shakespeare. The impact of Buddha was comparable to that of <mask>, who established a "sovereign rule on the kingdom of Dharma in northern India". According to Edmour J. Babineau, if <mask> were born in Europe or the Americas, he would be considered a greater personality than William Shakespeare. For people of a large part of North Indiadas claims reverence comparable to that accorded to Luther as translator of the Bible into the native German, according to the archaeologist F. R. Allchin. According to Allchin, the work Ramcharitmanas has been compared to not only the Ramayana of Valmiki, but also the Vedas, the Quran and the Bible. The Ramcharitmanas were considered superior to the best books of the Latin and Greek languages by Ernest Wood. Bhaktairomai is the highest jewel among devotees.<mask> was called the "emperor of the metaphor" and one who excelled in similes by several critics. The Hindi poet said, " kavit karake tulas na lase kavit." She said that the Indian society as it exists today is an edifice built by <mask> and the same is true of the Rama. The Ramcharitmanas of Tulasidas are published by Gita Pressdas. | [
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21174177 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Che%20Mills | Che Mills | Ché Mills (born 29 October 1982) is an English mixed martial artist who most recently competed in the Welterweight division of Cage Warriors. A professional competitor since 2003, he has also competed for the UFC, Cage Rage, BAMMA, and M-1 Global. He is the former Cage Rage British Welterweight Champion.
Mixed martial arts career
Spent early years training with Mark Weir.
Early career
Mills made his professional MMA debut in November 2003. After going 1-2 in his first three bouts, Mills amassed an impressive undefeated streak of 8-0 (1 NC) over the next three years. He was considered a top prospect in the UK and was invited to appear on The Ultimate Fighter.
The Ultimate Fighter
Mills appeared on the first episode of The Ultimate Fighter: United States vs. United Kingdom. However, he lost an elimination match via heel hook to the subsequent winner of the competition, James Wilks, and therefore was eliminated from the show.
Ultimate Fighting Championship
Mills signed a contract with Zuffa to fight against The Ultimate Fighter 13 alumni Chris Cope at UFC 138 on 5 November 2011 in Birmingham, England. He won his debut in impressive fashion, finishing Cope by TKO just 40 seconds into the first round and was awarded Knockout of the Night honours.
Mills next faced Rory MacDonald on 21 April 2012 at UFC 145. He lost the fight via TKO in the second round.
Mills defeated Duane Ludwig on 29 September 2012 at UFC on Fuel TV 5. The bout was stopped after Ludwig was unable to continue after tearing a knee ligament while attempting to defend a takedown in the opening round.
Mills then fought Matthew Riddle on 16 February 2013 at UFC on Fuel TV: Barão vs. McDonald. Mills lost the fight via split decision and was subsequently released from the promotion.
Post UFC
After his release from UFC, Mills fought current Cage Warriors and Cage Contender welterweight champion, Cathal Pendred. The fight was changed to a non-title fight as Mills failed to make weight and was subsequently docked 25% of his fight purse. Mills lost this fight via TKO.
After a 20-month layoff, Mills returns to action in Italy, under the Venator Fighting Championship banner, in a scheduled match against Italian prospect Roberto Rigamonti. to take place on 21 May 2016 in Turin, Italy
Championships and accomplishments
Mixed Martial Arts
Cage Rage
Cage Rage British Welterweight Champion
Ultimate Fighting Championship
Knockout of the Night (One time)
Mixed martial arts record
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 16–10 (3)
| Lew Long
| TKO (injury)
| Cage Warriors 83
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 0:18
| Newport, Wales
|
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 16–9 (3)
| Matt Inman
| Submission (triangle choke)
| Cage Warriors: Unplugged
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| 4:09
| London, England
|
|-
| NC
| align=center| 16–8 (3)
| Terry Montgomery
| NC (accidental illegal elbow)
| Venator FC 3
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center|2:58
| Milan, Italy
|
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 16–8 (2)
| Jack Marshman
| TKO (punches)
| Cage Warriors 72
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| 1:32
| Newport, Wales, United Kingdom
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 16–7 (2)
| Leeroy Barnes
| Submission (rear-naked choke)
| Cage Warriors 68
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 4:46
| Liverpool, England
|
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 15–7 (2)
| Faycal Hucin
| TKO (punches)
| CWFC Fight Night 9
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| 4:23
| Amman, Jordan
|
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 15–6 (2)
| Cathal Pendred
| TKO (corner stoppage)
| CWFC 55
|
| align=center| 3
| align=center| 1:47
| Dublin, Ireland
|
|-
| NC
| align=center| 15–5 (2)
| Matthew Riddle
| NC (overturned)
| UFC on Fuel TV: Barão vs. McDonald
|
| align=center| 3
| align=center| 5:00
| London, England
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 15–5 (1)
| Duane Ludwig
| TKO (knee injury)
| UFC on Fuel TV: Struve vs. Miocic
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 2:28
| Nottingham, England
|
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 14–5 (1)
| Rory MacDonald
| TKO (punches)
| UFC 145
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| 2:20
| Atlanta, Georgia, United States
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 14–4 (1)
| Chris Cope
| TKO (knees and punches)
| UFC 138
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 0:40
| Birmingham, England, United Kingdom
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 13–4 (1)
| Marcio Cesar
| KO (punches)
| BAMMA 6: Watson vs. Rua
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 4:05
| London, England, United Kingdom
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 12–4 (1)
| Magomed Shikhshabekov
| Decision (unanimous)
| M-1 Challenge 21: Guram vs. Garner
|
| align=center| 4
| align=center| 5:00
| St. Petersburg, Leningrad Oblast, Russia
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 11–4 (1)
| Jake Hecht
| Decision (unanimous)
| Cage Warriors 38: Young Guns
|
| align=center| 3
| align=center| 5:00
| North London, England, United Kingdom
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 10–4 (1)
| Manuel Garcia
| KO (knee)
| Cagemania: Carnage on the Costa
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 0:09
| Benalmádena, Spain
|
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 9–4 (1)
| Yuya Shirai
| Submission (armbar)
| Astra: Yoshida's Farewell
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 3:59
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 9–3 (1)
| Jim Wallhead
| Decision (unanimous)
| KUMMA 3: Mills vs. Wallhead
|
| align=center| 3
| align=center| 5:00
| Newport, Wales, United Kingdom
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 9–2 (1)
| Edgelson Lua
| Decision (unanimous)
| BAMMA 1
|
| align=center| 3
| align=center| 5:00
| London, England, United Kingdom
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 8–2 (1)
| Aidan Marron
| TKO (submission to punches)
| KUMMA 1: Mills vs. Marron
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| N/A
| Wells, Somerset, England, United Kingdom
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 7–2 (1)
| Marius Žaromskis
| TKO (doctor stoppage)
| Cage Rage 26
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 5:00
| London, United Kingdom
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 6–2 (1)
| Ross Mason
| Submission (rear-naked choke)
| Cage Rage 23
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 2:07
| London, England, United Kingdom
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 5–2 (1)
| Afnan Saeed
| TKO (punches)
| Cage Rage Contenders 5
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 1:22
| East London, United Kingdom
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 4–2 (1)
| Oriol Gaset
| Submission (rear-naked choke)
| CFS: D-Day
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 1:22
| England, United Kingdom
|
|-
| NC
| align=center| 3–2 (1)
| Paul Taylor
| NC (overturned)
| Cage Rage Contenders 3
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 2:37
| London, England, United Kingdom
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 3–2
| Marius Žaromskis
| KO (knee)
| Cage Rage Contenders 2
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 4:49
| Streatham, South London, United Kingdom
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 2–2
| Ross Mason
| TKO (punches)
| AM 9: Southern Agrrression 4
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 0:23
| Weston-super-Mare, England, United Kingdom
|
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 1–2
| Pedro Bessa
| Submission (americana)
| AM 5: Southern Agrrression 2
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| N/A
| Weston-super-Mare, England, United Kingdom
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 1–1
| Chris Taylor
| Submission (guillotine choke)
| UK: Storm
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 0:23
| Birmingham, England, United Kingdom
|
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 0–1
| Matt Thorpe
| Submission (armbar)
| XFC 2: The Perfect Storm
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 0:42
| Cornwall, England, United Kingdom
|
References
External links
Che Mills’s MySpace Profile
Living people
English male mixed martial artists
Welterweight mixed martial artists
Sportspeople from Gloucester
1982 births
Ultimate Fighting Championship male fighters | [
"Ché Mills (born 29 October 1982) is an English mixed martial artist who most recently competed in the Welterweight division of Cage Warriors.",
"A professional competitor since 2003, he has also competed for the UFC, Cage Rage, BAMMA, and M-1 Global.",
"He is the former Cage Rage British Welterweight Champion.",
"Mixed martial arts career\nSpent early years training with Mark Weir.",
"Early career\nMills made his professional MMA debut in November 2003.",
"After going 1-2 in his first three bouts, Mills amassed an impressive undefeated streak of 8-0 (1 NC) over the next three years.",
"He was considered a top prospect in the UK and was invited to appear on The Ultimate Fighter.",
"The Ultimate Fighter\nMills appeared on the first episode of The Ultimate Fighter: United States vs. United Kingdom.",
"However, he lost an elimination match via heel hook to the subsequent winner of the competition, James Wilks, and therefore was eliminated from the show.",
"Ultimate Fighting Championship\nMills signed a contract with Zuffa to fight against The Ultimate Fighter 13 alumni Chris Cope at UFC 138 on 5 November 2011 in Birmingham, England.",
"He won his debut in impressive fashion, finishing Cope by TKO just 40 seconds into the first round and was awarded Knockout of the Night honours.",
"Mills next faced Rory MacDonald on 21 April 2012 at UFC 145.",
"He lost the fight via TKO in the second round.",
"Mills defeated Duane Ludwig on 29 September 2012 at UFC on Fuel TV 5.",
"The bout was stopped after Ludwig was unable to continue after tearing a knee ligament while attempting to defend a takedown in the opening round.",
"Mills then fought Matthew Riddle on 16 February 2013 at UFC on Fuel TV: Barão vs. McDonald.",
"Mills lost the fight via split decision and was subsequently released from the promotion.",
"Post UFC\nAfter his release from UFC, Mills fought current Cage Warriors and Cage Contender welterweight champion, Cathal Pendred.",
"The fight was changed to a non-title fight as Mills failed to make weight and was subsequently docked 25% of his fight purse.",
"Mills lost this fight via TKO.",
"After a 20-month layoff, Mills returns to action in Italy, under the Venator Fighting Championship banner, in a scheduled match against Italian prospect Roberto Rigamonti."
] | [
"Mills is an English mixed martial artist who most recently competed in the Welterweight division of Cage Warriors.",
"He has competed in the UFC, Cage Rage, BAMMA, and M-1 Global.",
"He was the Cage Rage British Welterweight champion.",
"In the early years of his martial arts career, Mark Weir trained with mixed martial arts.",
"Mills made his MMA debut.",
"After going 1-2 in his first three bouts, Mills went 8-0 over the next three years.",
"He was invited to appear on The Ultimate Fighter and was considered a top prospect in the UK.",
"The first episode of The Ultimate Fighter: United States vs. United Kingdom featured The Ultimate Fighter Mills.",
"He was eliminated from the show after losing an elimination match to the winner of the competition.",
"The Ultimate Fighter 13 alumni Chris Cope will be fighting Mills at the UFC in November of 2011.",
"He was awarded the Knockout of the Night for finishing Cope by TKO just 40 seconds into the first round.",
"On April 21, 2012 Mills faced MacDonald at UFC 145.",
"He lost the fight in the second round.",
"At UFC on Fuel TV 5, Mills defeated Ludwig.",
"Ludwig was unable to continue after tearing a knee ligament while trying to defend a takedown in the opening round.",
"Matthew Riddle defeated Mills at UFC on Fuel TV: Baro vs. McDonald.",
"Mills was released from the promotion after he lost the fight.",
"Mills fought Pendred after his release from UFC.",
"Mills failed to make weight for the fight and was docked 25% of his purse.",
"Mills lost the fight.",
"Mills will return to action in Italy, under the Venator Fighting Championship banner, in a scheduled match against Roberto Rigamonti."
] | <mask> (born 29 October 1982) is an English mixed martial artist who most recently competed in the Welterweight division of Cage Warriors. A professional competitor since 2003, he has also competed for the UFC, Cage Rage, BAMMA, and M-1 Global. He is the former Cage Rage British Welterweight Champion. Mixed martial arts career
Spent early years training with Mark Weir. Early career
<mask> made his professional MMA debut in November 2003. After going 1-2 in his first three bouts, <mask> amassed an impressive undefeated streak of 8-0 (1 NC) over the next three years. He was considered a top prospect in the UK and was invited to appear on The Ultimate Fighter.The Ultimate Fighter
<mask> appeared on the first episode of The Ultimate Fighter: United States vs. United Kingdom. However, he lost an elimination match via heel hook to the subsequent winner of the competition, James Wilks, and therefore was eliminated from the show. Ultimate Fighting Championship
<mask> signed a contract with Zuffa to fight against The Ultimate Fighter 13 alumni Chris Cope at UFC 138 on 5 November 2011 in Birmingham, England. He won his debut in impressive fashion, finishing Cope by TKO just 40 seconds into the first round and was awarded Knockout of the Night honours. <mask> next faced Rory MacDonald on 21 April 2012 at UFC 145. He lost the fight via TKO in the second round. <mask> defeated Duane Ludwig on 29 September 2012 at UFC on Fuel TV 5.The bout was stopped after Ludwig was unable to continue after tearing a knee ligament while attempting to defend a takedown in the opening round. <mask> then fought Matthew Riddle on 16 February 2013 at UFC on Fuel TV: Barão vs. McDonald. <mask> lost the fight via split decision and was subsequently released from the promotion. Post UFC
After his release from UFC, <mask> fought current Cage Warriors and Cage Contender welterweight champion, Cathal Pendred. The fight was changed to a non-title fight as <mask> failed to make weight and was subsequently docked 25% of his fight purse. <mask> lost this fight via TKO. After a 20-month layoff, <mask> returns to action in Italy, under the Venator Fighting Championship banner, in a scheduled match against Italian prospect Roberto Rigamonti. | [
"Ché Mills",
"Mills",
"Mills",
"Mills",
"Mills",
"Mills",
"Mills",
"Mills",
"Mills",
"Mills",
"Mills",
"Mills",
"Mills"
] | <mask> is an English mixed martial artist who most recently competed in the Welterweight division of Cage Warriors. He has competed in the UFC, Cage Rage, BAMMA, and M-1 Global. He was the Cage Rage British Welterweight champion. In the early years of his martial arts career, Mark Weir trained with mixed martial arts. <mask> made his MMA debut. After going 1-2 in his first three bouts, <mask> went 8-0 over the next three years. He was invited to appear on The Ultimate Fighter and was considered a top prospect in the UK.The first episode of The Ultimate Fighter: United States vs. United Kingdom featured The Ultimate Fighter <mask>. He was eliminated from the show after losing an elimination match to the winner of the competition. The Ultimate Fighter 13 alumni Chris Cope will be fighting <mask> at the UFC in November of 2011. He was awarded the Knockout of the Night for finishing Cope by TKO just 40 seconds into the first round. On April 21, 2012 <mask> faced MacDonald at UFC 145. He lost the fight in the second round. At UFC on Fuel TV 5, <mask> defeated Ludwig.Ludwig was unable to continue after tearing a knee ligament while trying to defend a takedown in the opening round. Matthew Riddle defeated <mask> at UFC on Fuel TV: Baro vs. McDonald. <mask> was released from the promotion after he lost the fight. <mask> fought Pendred after his release from UFC. <mask> failed to make weight for the fight and was docked 25% of his purse. <mask> lost the fight. <mask> will return to action in Italy, under the Venator Fighting Championship banner, in a scheduled match against Roberto Rigamonti. | [
"Mills",
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] |
741267 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jess%20Willard | Jess Willard | Jess Myron Willard (December 29, 1881 – December 15, 1968) was an American world heavyweight boxing champion billed as the Pottawatomie Giant who knocked out Jack Johnson in April 1915 for the heavyweight title. Willard was known for size rather than skill, and though held the championship for more than four years, he defended it rarely and was in person reserved. In 1919, when he was 37 years of age he lost the title in an extremely one sided loss by declining to come out for the fourth round against Jack Dempsey, who became a more celebrated champion. Soon after the bout Willard began accusing Dempsey of using something with the effect of a knuckle duster. Dempsey did not grant Willard a return match, and at 42 years old he was KO'd, following which he retired from boxing, although for the rest of his life continued claiming Dempsey had cheated. Ferdie Pacheco expressed the opinion in a book that the surviving photographs of Willard's face during the Dempsey fight indicate fractures to Willard's facial bones suggesting a metal implement, and show he was bleeding heavily. The matter has never been resolved, with contemporaneous ringside sports journalist reporting by the NYT that Willard spat out at least one tooth and was "a fountain of blood" increasingly discounted in favor of a view that he had only a cut lip and a little bruising.
Early life
Jess Myron Willard was born on 29 December 1881 at Saint Clere, Kansas. In his teenage years and twenties he worked as a cowboy. He was of mostly English ancestry, which had been in North America since the colonial era. The first member of the Willard family arrived in Virginia in the 1630s.
Boxing career
A powerfully built and , Willard did not begin boxing until the age of 27, but proved successful, defeating top-ranked opponents to earn a chance to fight for the Championship. He said he started boxing because he did not have much of an education, but thought his size and strength could earn him a good living. He was a gentle and friendly person and did not enjoy boxing or hurting people, so often waited until his opponent attacked him before punching back, which made him feel at ease as if he were defending himself. He was often maligned as an uncoordinated oaf rather than a skilled boxer, but his counter-punching style, coupled with his enormous strength and stamina, proved successful against top fighters. His physical strength was so great that he was reputed to be able to kill a man with a single punch, which unfortunately proved to be a fact during his fight with Jack "Bull" Young in 1913, who was punched in the head and killed in the 9th round. Willard was charged with second-degree murder, but was successfully defended by lawyer Earl Rogers.
Jack Johnson fight
On April 5, 1915, in front of a huge crowd at the new Oriental Park Racetrack in Havana, Cuba, he knocked out champion Jack Johnson in the 26th round to win the world heavyweight boxing championship. Johnson later claimed to have intentionally lost the fight, despite the fact there is evidence of Willard winning fairly, which can be seen clearly in the recorded footage, as well as the comments Johnson made to his cornermen between rounds and immediately after the fight, and that he bet $2500 on himself to win. Willard said, "If he was going to throw the fight, I wish he'd done it sooner. It was hotter than hell out there." Johnson later acknowledged lying about throwing the fight after footage of the fight was made widely available in the United States. Shortly after the fight Jack Johnson had actually accepted defeat gracefully saying "Willard was too much for me, I just didn't have it."
Johnson found that he could not knock out the giant Willard, who fought as a counterpuncher, making Johnson do all the leading. Johnson began to tire after the 20th round, and was visibly hurt by heavy body punches from Willard in rounds preceding the 26th-round knockout. Johnson's claim of a "dive" gained momentum because most fans only saw a still photo of Johnson lying on the canvas shading his eyes from the broiling Cuban sun. No films of the fight were allowed to be shown in the United States because of an inter-state ban on the trafficking of fight films that was in effect at the time. Most boxing fans only saw the film of the Johnson-Willard fight when a copy was found in 1967.
Willard fought several times over the next four years, but made only one official title defense prior to 1919, defeating Frank Moran on March 25, 1916, at Madison Square Garden.
Jack Dempsey fight
At age 37, Willard lost his title to Dempsey on July 4, 1919, in Toledo. Dempsey knocked Willard down for the first time in his career with a left hook in the first round. Dempsey knocked Willard down seven times in the first round—although it should be remembered that rules at the time permitted standing almost over a knocked-down opponent and hitting him again as soon as both knees had left the canvas. At one point Dempsey left the ring mistakenly thinking the fight was over, and under the rules could have been disqualified, but Willard had economised by not employing professional cornermen and they failed to insist on application of the regulations. Dempsey won the title when Willard was unable to continue after the third round. In the fight, Willard was later reputed to have suffered a broken jaw, cheekbone, and ribs, as well as losing several teeth. His attempt to fight to the finish, ending when he was unable to come out for the fourth round, is considered one of the most courageous performances in boxing history. However, the extent of Willard's injuries have been highly disputed and are now unclear since multiple independent reports only a few days after the fight said that there were no traces of any damage other than a couple of bruises:
To take only one representative account, according to a reporter for the Topeka Daily Capital, July 16, 1919, p. 8, who interviewed Jess when he got back to Lawrence, "The ex-champion didn't have any black eye, nor any signs that he was injured in any way."
Concealed metal object theory
When interviewed by Harry Carpenter of the BBC Sport in the 1960s at his house in California, Willard said to the reporter, "I'll show you, how I was beaten." He then drew a metal bolt from a cardbox, saying that Dempsey held the bolt in his hand, not within the glove but at the palm of it, attached to the thumb sideways, and used the bolt rather for cutting-and-slicing-like moves to inflict blood-spilling cuts and pain, relinquishing it just as the bout was stopped, and according to Willard, the bolt was found on the floor of the ring at the end of the fight and he kept it. Mike Tyson, who studied the case in-depth and very thoroughly, later joined Carpenter to discuss the subject. Tyson, a great admirer of Dempsey, admitted that "he just did whatever Jack Kearns told him to do," and "in those days anything could have happened" for that there was no agency or other legal authority at the time, which was officially empowered to oversee and protect fighters from violations of such kind. However footage before the fight shows Dempsey putting on his gloves with no additional objects and in full view of Willard, his team and the crowd.
Comeback
After losing his title fight with Dempsey, Willard went into semiretirement from the ring, fighting only exhibition bouts for the next four years. On May 12, 1923, promoter Tex Rickard arranged for Willard to make a comeback, fighting Floyd Johnson as part of the first line-up of boxing matches at the newly opened Yankee Stadium in New York City. 63,000 spectators attended the match, which the 41-year-old Willard was widely expected to lose. However, after Willard took a beating for several rounds, he came back to knock down Johnson in the 9th and 11th rounds, and Willard earned a TKO victory. Damon Runyon wrote afterward: "Youth, take off your hat and bow low and respectfully to Age. For days and days, the sole topic of conversation in the world of sport will be Willard's astonishing comeback."
Willard followed up this victory by facing contender Luis Ángel Firpo on July 12, 1923. The fight was held at Boyle's Thirty Acres in New Jersey, in front of more than 75,000 spectators. Willard was knocked out in the eighth round, and then permanently retired from boxing.
Later years
Willard parlayed his boxing fame into an acting career of a sort. He acted in a vaudeville show, had a role in Buffalo Bill's Wild West show, and starred in a 1919 feature film The Challenge of Chance. In 1933, he appeared in a bit part in a boxing movie, The Prizefighter and the Lady, with Max Baer and Myrna Loy.
Death
Willard died on 15 December 1968, in Los Angeles, California, from congestive heart failure. He had been admitted to a hospital a week earlier for a heart condition, but left against a doctor's advice. He returned again after suffering a stroke and died 12 hours later.
Having died at age 86, Willard was the longest-lived heavyweight champion in history until he was surpassed by his old foe Jack Dempsey (who died in 1983, aged 87), then by Jack Sharkey (who died in 1994, aged 91), and finally by Max Schmeling (who died in 2005 at the age of 99, making him the longest-lived heavyweight champion in boxing history).
Willard's body was buried at Forest Lawn, Hollywood Hills Cemetery in Los Angeles.
Tributes
In 2003 he was inducted posthumously into the International Boxing Hall of Fame.
Cultural references
Willard and a dispute he had with Harry Houdini is the topic of Andy Duncan's Nebula Award nominated novella "The Pottawatomie Giant." In 2020, a television program Antiques Roadshow - Crocker Art Museum (Season 24, Episode 8, Part 2), showed a photograph from his 5 April 1915 championship winning match, and the commemorative pocket watch Willard carried which was estimated to be valued between $15,000 and $50,000.
Professional boxing record
All newspaper decisions are officially regarded as “no decision” bouts and are not counted as a win, loss or draw.
Family
Jess Willard was a 6th great-grandson (9th generation descendant) of the Massachusetts colonist Simon Willard (1605–1676).
(1605–1676)
See also
List of heavyweight boxing champions
References
Works cited
Further reading
Allen, Arly (2017). Jess Willard: Heavyweight Champion of the World (1915-1919). McFarland & Company, Jefferson, NC. .
External links
Jess Willard's Boxing Gear at Kansas Museum of History
Jess Willard - CBZ Profile
Boxing Hall of Fame
ESPN.com
|-
|-
|-
1881 births
1968 deaths
Burials at Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Hollywood Hills)
Heavyweight boxers
Boxers from Kansas
People from Pottawatomie County, Kansas
Vaudeville performers
World heavyweight boxing champions
World boxing champions
International Boxing Hall of Fame inductees
American male boxers | [
"Jess Myron Willard (December 29, 1881 – December 15, 1968) was an American world heavyweight boxing champion billed as the Pottawatomie Giant who knocked out Jack Johnson in April 1915 for the heavyweight title.",
"Willard was known for size rather than skill, and though held the championship for more than four years, he defended it rarely and was in person reserved.",
"In 1919, when he was 37 years of age he lost the title in an extremely one sided loss by declining to come out for the fourth round against Jack Dempsey, who became a more celebrated champion.",
"Soon after the bout Willard began accusing Dempsey of using something with the effect of a knuckle duster.",
"Dempsey did not grant Willard a return match, and at 42 years old he was KO'd, following which he retired from boxing, although for the rest of his life continued claiming Dempsey had cheated.",
"Ferdie Pacheco expressed the opinion in a book that the surviving photographs of Willard's face during the Dempsey fight indicate fractures to Willard's facial bones suggesting a metal implement, and show he was bleeding heavily.",
"The matter has never been resolved, with contemporaneous ringside sports journalist reporting by the NYT that Willard spat out at least one tooth and was \"a fountain of blood\" increasingly discounted in favor of a view that he had only a cut lip and a little bruising.",
"Early life\nJess Myron Willard was born on 29 December 1881 at Saint Clere, Kansas.",
"In his teenage years and twenties he worked as a cowboy.",
"He was of mostly English ancestry, which had been in North America since the colonial era.",
"The first member of the Willard family arrived in Virginia in the 1630s.",
"Boxing career\nA powerfully built and , Willard did not begin boxing until the age of 27, but proved successful, defeating top-ranked opponents to earn a chance to fight for the Championship.",
"He said he started boxing because he did not have much of an education, but thought his size and strength could earn him a good living.",
"He was a gentle and friendly person and did not enjoy boxing or hurting people, so often waited until his opponent attacked him before punching back, which made him feel at ease as if he were defending himself.",
"He was often maligned as an uncoordinated oaf rather than a skilled boxer, but his counter-punching style, coupled with his enormous strength and stamina, proved successful against top fighters.",
"His physical strength was so great that he was reputed to be able to kill a man with a single punch, which unfortunately proved to be a fact during his fight with Jack \"Bull\" Young in 1913, who was punched in the head and killed in the 9th round.",
"Willard was charged with second-degree murder, but was successfully defended by lawyer Earl Rogers.",
"Jack Johnson fight\nOn April 5, 1915, in front of a huge crowd at the new Oriental Park Racetrack in Havana, Cuba, he knocked out champion Jack Johnson in the 26th round to win the world heavyweight boxing championship.",
"Johnson later claimed to have intentionally lost the fight, despite the fact there is evidence of Willard winning fairly, which can be seen clearly in the recorded footage, as well as the comments Johnson made to his cornermen between rounds and immediately after the fight, and that he bet $2500 on himself to win.",
"Willard said, \"If he was going to throw the fight, I wish he'd done it sooner.",
"It was hotter than hell out there.\"",
"Johnson later acknowledged lying about throwing the fight after footage of the fight was made widely available in the United States.",
"Shortly after the fight Jack Johnson had actually accepted defeat gracefully saying \"Willard was too much for me, I just didn't have it.\"",
"Johnson found that he could not knock out the giant Willard, who fought as a counterpuncher, making Johnson do all the leading.",
"Johnson began to tire after the 20th round, and was visibly hurt by heavy body punches from Willard in rounds preceding the 26th-round knockout.",
"Johnson's claim of a \"dive\" gained momentum because most fans only saw a still photo of Johnson lying on the canvas shading his eyes from the broiling Cuban sun.",
"No films of the fight were allowed to be shown in the United States because of an inter-state ban on the trafficking of fight films that was in effect at the time.",
"Most boxing fans only saw the film of the Johnson-Willard fight when a copy was found in 1967.",
"Willard fought several times over the next four years, but made only one official title defense prior to 1919, defeating Frank Moran on March 25, 1916, at Madison Square Garden.",
"Jack Dempsey fight\n\nAt age 37, Willard lost his title to Dempsey on July 4, 1919, in Toledo.",
"Dempsey knocked Willard down for the first time in his career with a left hook in the first round.",
"Dempsey knocked Willard down seven times in the first round—although it should be remembered that rules at the time permitted standing almost over a knocked-down opponent and hitting him again as soon as both knees had left the canvas.",
"At one point Dempsey left the ring mistakenly thinking the fight was over, and under the rules could have been disqualified, but Willard had economised by not employing professional cornermen and they failed to insist on application of the regulations.",
"Dempsey won the title when Willard was unable to continue after the third round.",
"In the fight, Willard was later reputed to have suffered a broken jaw, cheekbone, and ribs, as well as losing several teeth.",
"His attempt to fight to the finish, ending when he was unable to come out for the fourth round, is considered one of the most courageous performances in boxing history.",
"However, the extent of Willard's injuries have been highly disputed and are now unclear since multiple independent reports only a few days after the fight said that there were no traces of any damage other than a couple of bruises:\n\nTo take only one representative account, according to a reporter for the Topeka Daily Capital, July 16, 1919, p. 8, who interviewed Jess when he got back to Lawrence, \"The ex-champion didn't have any black eye, nor any signs that he was injured in any way.\"",
"Concealed metal object theory\nWhen interviewed by Harry Carpenter of the BBC Sport in the 1960s at his house in California, Willard said to the reporter, \"I'll show you, how I was beaten.\"",
"He then drew a metal bolt from a cardbox, saying that Dempsey held the bolt in his hand, not within the glove but at the palm of it, attached to the thumb sideways, and used the bolt rather for cutting-and-slicing-like moves to inflict blood-spilling cuts and pain, relinquishing it just as the bout was stopped, and according to Willard, the bolt was found on the floor of the ring at the end of the fight and he kept it.",
"Mike Tyson, who studied the case in-depth and very thoroughly, later joined Carpenter to discuss the subject.",
"Tyson, a great admirer of Dempsey, admitted that \"he just did whatever Jack Kearns told him to do,\" and \"in those days anything could have happened\" for that there was no agency or other legal authority at the time, which was officially empowered to oversee and protect fighters from violations of such kind.",
"However footage before the fight shows Dempsey putting on his gloves with no additional objects and in full view of Willard, his team and the crowd.",
"Comeback\nAfter losing his title fight with Dempsey, Willard went into semiretirement from the ring, fighting only exhibition bouts for the next four years.",
"On May 12, 1923, promoter Tex Rickard arranged for Willard to make a comeback, fighting Floyd Johnson as part of the first line-up of boxing matches at the newly opened Yankee Stadium in New York City.",
"63,000 spectators attended the match, which the 41-year-old Willard was widely expected to lose.",
"However, after Willard took a beating for several rounds, he came back to knock down Johnson in the 9th and 11th rounds, and Willard earned a TKO victory.",
"Damon Runyon wrote afterward: \"Youth, take off your hat and bow low and respectfully to Age.",
"For days and days, the sole topic of conversation in the world of sport will be Willard's astonishing comeback.\"",
"Willard followed up this victory by facing contender Luis Ángel Firpo on July 12, 1923.",
"The fight was held at Boyle's Thirty Acres in New Jersey, in front of more than 75,000 spectators.",
"Willard was knocked out in the eighth round, and then permanently retired from boxing.",
"Later years\n\nWillard parlayed his boxing fame into an acting career of a sort.",
"He acted in a vaudeville show, had a role in Buffalo Bill's Wild West show, and starred in a 1919 feature film The Challenge of Chance.",
"In 1933, he appeared in a bit part in a boxing movie, The Prizefighter and the Lady, with Max Baer and Myrna Loy.",
"Death\nWillard died on 15 December 1968, in Los Angeles, California, from congestive heart failure.",
"He had been admitted to a hospital a week earlier for a heart condition, but left against a doctor's advice.",
"He returned again after suffering a stroke and died 12 hours later.",
"Having died at age 86, Willard was the longest-lived heavyweight champion in history until he was surpassed by his old foe Jack Dempsey (who died in 1983, aged 87), then by Jack Sharkey (who died in 1994, aged 91), and finally by Max Schmeling (who died in 2005 at the age of 99, making him the longest-lived heavyweight champion in boxing history).",
"Willard's body was buried at Forest Lawn, Hollywood Hills Cemetery in Los Angeles.",
"Tributes\nIn 2003 he was inducted posthumously into the International Boxing Hall of Fame.",
"Cultural references\nWillard and a dispute he had with Harry Houdini is the topic of Andy Duncan's Nebula Award nominated novella \"The Pottawatomie Giant.\"",
"In 2020, a television program Antiques Roadshow - Crocker Art Museum (Season 24, Episode 8, Part 2), showed a photograph from his 5 April 1915 championship winning match, and the commemorative pocket watch Willard carried which was estimated to be valued between $15,000 and $50,000.",
"Professional boxing record\n\nAll newspaper decisions are officially regarded as “no decision” bouts and are not counted as a win, loss or draw.",
"Family \nJess Willard was a 6th great-grandson (9th generation descendant) of the Massachusetts colonist Simon Willard (1605–1676).",
"(1605–1676)\n\nSee also\n List of heavyweight boxing champions\n\nReferences\n\nWorks cited\n\nFurther reading\nAllen, Arly (2017).",
"Jess Willard: Heavyweight Champion of the World (1915-1919).",
"McFarland & Company, Jefferson, NC. .",
"External links \n\n \nJess Willard's Boxing Gear at Kansas Museum of History\n\nJess Willard - CBZ Profile\nBoxing Hall of Fame\nESPN.com\n\n|-\n\n|-\n\n|-\n\n1881 births\n1968 deaths\nBurials at Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Hollywood Hills)\nHeavyweight boxers\nBoxers from Kansas\nPeople from Pottawatomie County, Kansas\nVaudeville performers\nWorld heavyweight boxing champions\nWorld boxing champions\nInternational Boxing Hall of Fame inductees\nAmerican male boxers"
] | [
"The Pottawatomie Giant, as he was known, knocked out Jack Johnson in April 1915 for the world title.",
"Though he held the championship for more than four years, he defended it rarely and was in person reserved.",
"In 1919, when he was 37 years of age, he lost the title in an extremely one sided loss by declining to come out for the fourth round against Jack Dempsey, who became a more celebrated champion.",
"The accusation of using something with the effect of a knuckle duster was made by Willard soon after the bout.",
"After he was knocked out at 42 years old, he retired from boxing, although he continued to claim that he had been cheated.",
"According to a book by Ferdie Pacheco, the photographs of Willard's face during the fight show he was bleeding heavily and had facial bones fractured.",
"The matter has never been resolved, with a ringside sports journalist reporting by the NYT that Willard spat out at least one tooth and was \"a fountain of blood\" in favor of a view that he had only a cut lip and a little bruised.",
"Jess Myron Willard was born on December 29, 1881.",
"He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"He had mostly English ancestry, which had been in North America since the colonial era.",
"The first member of the family arrived in Virginia in the 1630s.",
"After defeating top-ranked opponents to earn a chance to fight for the Championship, Willard did not begin boxing until the age of 27.",
"He started boxing because he thought his size and strength could earn him a good living, even though he didn't have much of an education.",
"He was a gentle and friendly person and did not enjoy boxing or hurting people, so often he waited until his opponent attacked him before punching back, which made him feel at ease as if he were defending himself.",
"He was often derided as an uncoordinated oaf rather than a skilled boxer, but his counter-punching style, coupled with his enormous strength and stamina, proved successful against top fighters.",
"During his fight with Jack \"Bull\" Young in 1913, he was said to be able to kill a man with a single punch, but unfortunately he was killed in the 9th round.",
"Lawyer Earl Rogers successfully defended his client, who was charged with second-degree murder.",
"On April 5, 1915, in front of a huge crowd at the new Oriental Park Racetrack in Havana, Cuba, he knocked out Jack Johnson in the 26th round to win the world title.",
"Johnson later claimed that he lost the fight because he bet on himself to win, despite the fact that there is evidence that Willard won fairly, as well as the comments he made to his cornermen between rounds and immediately after the fight.",
"If he was going to throw the fight, I wish he'd done it sooner.",
"It was very hot out there.",
"After footage of the fight was made widely available in the United States, Johnson admitted to lying about throwing the fight.",
"Jack Johnson accepted defeat gracefully after the fight, saying \"Willard was too much for me, I just didn't have it.\"",
"Johnson was forced to lead because he couldn't knock out the giant Willard, who fought as a counterpuncher.",
"Johnson was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"Johnson's claim of a \"dive\" gained traction because most fans only saw a still photo of him lying on the canvas.",
"Due to an inter-state ban on the trafficking of fight films, no films of the fight were allowed to be shown in the United States.",
"The film of the Johnson-Willard fight was only seen by a small percentage of boxing fans.",
"In 1916, Willard defeated Frank Moran at the Madison Square Garden in order to win the title.",
"On July 4, 1919, Jack Dempsey defeated Willard for the title.",
"In the first round, Dempsey knocked down his opponent with a left hook.",
"Although rules at the time permitted standing almost over a knocked-down opponent and hitting him again as soon as both knees had left the canvas, it should be remembered that this was not allowed at the time.",
"At one point, the fight could have been disqualified if they had employed professional cornermen, but they failed to insist on the application of the regulations.",
"After the third round, Willard was unable to continue.",
"In the fight, Willard was said to have suffered a broken jaw, cheekbone, and ribs, as well as losing several teeth.",
"His attempt to fight to the finish, ending when he was unable to come out for the fourth round, is considered one of the most brave performances in boxing history.",
"However, the extent of Willard's injuries have been highly disputed and are now unclear since multiple independent reports only a few days after the fight said that there were no traces of any damage other than a couple of bruises.",
"\"I'll show you, how I was beaten, when I was interviewed by Harry Carpenter of the BBC Sport in the 1960s at his house in California,\" he said to the reporter.",
"He said that he drew a metal bolt from a cardbox and used it for cutting-and-slicing-like moves instead of holding the bolt in his hand.",
"Mike Tyson studied the case in-depth and 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611",
"Even though there was no agency or other legal authority at the time, Tyson admitted that he did whatever Jack Kearns told him to do, and that in those days anything could have happened.",
"However footage before the fight shows Dempsey putting on his gloves and in full view of his team and the crowd.",
"After losing his title fight, Willard retired from the ring and only fought exhibition bouts for the next four years.",
"The first line-up of boxing matches at the newly opened Yankee Stadium in New York City included a fight between Floyd Johnson and Willard.",
"63,000 people watched the match, which the 41-year-old Willard was expected to lose.",
"In the 9th and 11th rounds, he knocked down Johnson and earned a victory.",
"\"Youth, take off your hat and bow low and respectfully to Age,\" wrote Runyon.",
"For days and days, the only topic of discussion in the world of sport will be Willard's amazing comeback.",
"On July 12, 1923, Willard faced Luis ngel Firpo.",
"The fight was held in New Jersey in front of a large crowd.",
"He retired from boxing after being knocked out in the eighth round.",
"He used his boxing fame to become an acting career.",
"He had roles in Buffalo Bill's Wild West show and the feature film The Challenge of Chance.",
"He was in a boxing movie called The Prizefighter and the Lady with Max Baer and Myrna Loy.",
"Death was found dead in Los Angeles, California, on December 15, 1968.",
"He left the hospital against a doctor's advice after being admitted for a heart condition.",
"He had a stroke and died 12 hours later.",
"After his death at the age of 86, he was surpassed by Jack Sharkey, who died in 1994, and finally by Max Schmeling, who died in 2005.",
"Forest Lawn, Hollywood Hills Cemetery is in Los Angeles.",
"He was posthumously inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame.",
"Andy Duncan's novella \"The Pottawatomie Giant\" is about a dispute he had with Harry Houdini.",
"A photograph from his 5 April 1915 championship winning match and a pocket watch which was estimated to be worth between $15,000 and $50,000 were shown in a television program in 2020.",
"Newspaper decisions are not counted as a win, loss or draw in professional boxing.",
"The Massachusetts colonist Simon Willard was a 6th great-grandson of Jess Willard.",
"Further reading Allen, Arly is one of the works cited.",
"The champion of the world was Jess Willard.",
"The company is located in Jefferson, NC.",
"Jess Willard's Boxing gear is at the Kansas Museum of History."
] | <mask> (December 29, 1881 – December 15, 1968) was an American world heavyweight boxing champion billed as the Pottawatomie Giant who knocked out Jack Johnson in April 1915 for the heavyweight title. <mask> was known for size rather than skill, and though held the championship for more than four years, he defended it rarely and was in person reserved. In 1919, when he was 37 years of age he lost the title in an extremely one sided loss by declining to come out for the fourth round against Jack Dempsey, who became a more celebrated champion. Soon after the bout <mask> began accusing Dempsey of using something with the effect of a knuckle duster. Dempsey did not grant <mask> a return match, and at 42 years old he was KO'd, following which he retired from boxing, although for the rest of his life continued claiming Dempsey had cheated. Ferdie Pacheco expressed the opinion in a book that the surviving photographs of <mask>'s face during the Dempsey fight indicate fractures to <mask>'s facial bones suggesting a metal implement, and show he was bleeding heavily. The matter has never been resolved, with contemporaneous ringside sports journalist reporting by the NYT that <mask> spat out at least one tooth and was "a fountain of blood" increasingly discounted in favor of a view that he had only a cut lip and a little bruising.Early life
<mask> <mask> was born on 29 December 1881 at Saint Clere, Kansas. In his teenage years and twenties he worked as a cowboy. He was of mostly English ancestry, which had been in North America since the colonial era. The first member of the <mask> family arrived in Virginia in the 1630s. Boxing career
A powerfully built and , <mask> did not begin boxing until the age of 27, but proved successful, defeating top-ranked opponents to earn a chance to fight for the Championship. He said he started boxing because he did not have much of an education, but thought his size and strength could earn him a good living. He was a gentle and friendly person and did not enjoy boxing or hurting people, so often waited until his opponent attacked him before punching back, which made him feel at ease as if he were defending himself.He was often maligned as an uncoordinated oaf rather than a skilled boxer, but his counter-punching style, coupled with his enormous strength and stamina, proved successful against top fighters. His physical strength was so great that he was reputed to be able to kill a man with a single punch, which unfortunately proved to be a fact during his fight with Jack "Bull" Young in 1913, who was punched in the head and killed in the 9th round. <mask> was charged with second-degree murder, but was successfully defended by lawyer Earl Rogers. Jack Johnson fight
On April 5, 1915, in front of a huge crowd at the new Oriental Park Racetrack in Havana, Cuba, he knocked out champion Jack Johnson in the 26th round to win the world heavyweight boxing championship. Johnson later claimed to have intentionally lost the fight, despite the fact there is evidence of <mask> winning fairly, which can be seen clearly in the recorded footage, as well as the comments Johnson made to his cornermen between rounds and immediately after the fight, and that he bet $2500 on himself to win. <mask> said, "If he was going to throw the fight, I wish he'd done it sooner. It was hotter than hell out there."Johnson later acknowledged lying about throwing the fight after footage of the fight was made widely available in the United States. Shortly after the fight Jack Johnson had actually accepted defeat gracefully saying "<mask> was too much for me, I just didn't have it." Johnson found that he could not knock out the giant <mask>, who fought as a counterpuncher, making Johnson do all the leading. Johnson began to tire after the 20th round, and was visibly hurt by heavy body punches from <mask> in rounds preceding the 26th-round knockout. Johnson's claim of a "dive" gained momentum because most fans only saw a still photo of Johnson lying on the canvas shading his eyes from the broiling Cuban sun. No films of the fight were allowed to be shown in the United States because of an inter-state ban on the trafficking of fight films that was in effect at the time. Most boxing fans only saw the film of the <mask> fight when a copy was found in 1967.<mask> fought several times over the next four years, but made only one official title defense prior to 1919, defeating Frank Moran on March 25, 1916, at Madison Square Garden. Jack Dempsey fight
At age 37, <mask> lost his title to Dempsey on July 4, 1919, in Toledo. Dempsey knocked <mask> down for the first time in his career with a left hook in the first round. Dempsey knocked <mask> down seven times in the first round—although it should be remembered that rules at the time permitted standing almost over a knocked-down opponent and hitting him again as soon as both knees had left the canvas. At one point Dempsey left the ring mistakenly thinking the fight was over, and under the rules could have been disqualified, but <mask> had economised by not employing professional cornermen and they failed to insist on application of the regulations. Dempsey won the title when <mask> was unable to continue after the third round. In the fight, <mask> was later reputed to have suffered a broken jaw, cheekbone, and ribs, as well as losing several teeth.His attempt to fight to the finish, ending when he was unable to come out for the fourth round, is considered one of the most courageous performances in boxing history. However, the extent of <mask>'s injuries have been highly disputed and are now unclear since multiple independent reports only a few days after the fight said that there were no traces of any damage other than a couple of bruises:
To take only one representative account, according to a reporter for the Topeka Daily Capital, July 16, 1919, p. 8, who interviewed <mask> when he got back to Lawrence, "The ex-champion didn't have any black eye, nor any signs that he was injured in any way." Concealed metal object theory
When interviewed by Harry Carpenter of the BBC Sport in the 1960s at his house in California, <mask> said to the reporter, "I'll show you, how I was beaten." He then drew a metal bolt from a cardbox, saying that Dempsey held the bolt in his hand, not within the glove but at the palm of it, attached to the thumb sideways, and used the bolt rather for cutting-and-slicing-like moves to inflict blood-spilling cuts and pain, relinquishing it just as the bout was stopped, and according to <mask>, the bolt was found on the floor of the ring at the end of the fight and he kept it. Mike Tyson, who studied the case in-depth and very thoroughly, later joined Carpenter to discuss the subject. Tyson, a great admirer of Dempsey, admitted that "he just did whatever Jack Kearns told him to do," and "in those days anything could have happened" for that there was no agency or other legal authority at the time, which was officially empowered to oversee and protect fighters from violations of such kind. However footage before the fight shows Dempsey putting on his gloves with no additional objects and in full view of <mask>, his team and the crowd.Comeback
After losing his title fight with Dempsey, <mask> went into semiretirement from the ring, fighting only exhibition bouts for the next four years. On May 12, 1923, promoter Tex Rickard arranged for <mask> to make a comeback, fighting Floyd Johnson as part of the first line-up of boxing matches at the newly opened Yankee Stadium in New York City. 63,000 spectators attended the match, which the 41-year-old <mask> was widely expected to lose. However, after <mask> took a beating for several rounds, he came back to knock down Johnson in the 9th and 11th rounds, and <mask> earned a TKO victory. Damon Runyon wrote afterward: "Youth, take off your hat and bow low and respectfully to Age. For days and days, the sole topic of conversation in the world of sport will be <mask>'s astonishing comeback." <mask> followed up this victory by facing contender Luis Ángel Firpo on July 12, 1923.The fight was held at Boyle's Thirty Acres in New Jersey, in front of more than 75,000 spectators. <mask> was knocked out in the eighth round, and then permanently retired from boxing. Later years
<mask> parlayed his boxing fame into an acting career of a sort. He acted in a vaudeville show, had a role in Buffalo Bill's Wild West show, and starred in a 1919 feature film The Challenge of Chance. In 1933, he appeared in a bit part in a boxing movie, The Prizefighter and the Lady, with Max Baer and Myrna Loy. Death
<mask> died on 15 December 1968, in Los Angeles, California, from congestive heart failure. He had been admitted to a hospital a week earlier for a heart condition, but left against a doctor's advice.He returned again after suffering a stroke and died 12 hours later. Having died at age 86, <mask> was the longest-lived heavyweight champion in history until he was surpassed by his old foe Jack Dempsey (who died in 1983, aged 87), then by Jack Sharkey (who died in 1994, aged 91), and finally by Max Schmeling (who died in 2005 at the age of 99, making him the longest-lived heavyweight champion in boxing history). <mask>'s body was buried at Forest Lawn, Hollywood Hills Cemetery in Los Angeles. Tributes
In 2003 he was inducted posthumously into the International Boxing Hall of Fame. Cultural references
<mask> and a dispute he had with Harry Houdini is the topic of Andy Duncan's Nebula Award nominated novella "The Pottawatomie Giant." In 2020, a television program Antiques Roadshow - Crocker Art Museum (Season 24, Episode 8, Part 2), showed a photograph from his 5 April 1915 championship winning match, and the commemorative pocket watch <mask> carried which was estimated to be valued between $15,000 and $50,000. Professional boxing record
All newspaper decisions are officially regarded as “no decision” bouts and are not counted as a win, loss or draw.Family
<mask> was a 6th great-grandson (9th generation descendant) of the Massachusetts colonist <mask> (1605–1676). (1605–1676)
See also
List of heavyweight boxing champions
References
Works cited
Further reading
Allen, Arly (2017). <mask>: Heavyweight Champion of the World (1915-1919). McFarland & Company, Jefferson, NC. . External links
<mask>'s Boxing Gear at Kansas Museum of History
<mask> - CBZ Profile
Boxing Hall of Fame
ESPN.com
|-
|-
|-
1881 births
1968 deaths
Burials at Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Hollywood Hills)
Heavyweight boxers
Boxers from Kansas
People from Pottawatomie County, Kansas
Vaudeville performers
World heavyweight boxing champions
World boxing champions
International Boxing Hall of Fame inductees
American male boxers | [
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] | The Pottawatomie Giant, as he was known, knocked out Jack Johnson in April 1915 for the world title. Though he held the championship for more than four years, he defended it rarely and was in person reserved. In 1919, when he was 37 years of age, he lost the title in an extremely one sided loss by declining to come out for the fourth round against Jack Dempsey, who became a more celebrated champion. The accusation of using something with the effect of a knuckle duster was made by <mask> soon after the bout. After he was knocked out at 42 years old, he retired from boxing, although he continued to claim that he had been cheated. According to a book by Ferdie Pacheco, the photographs of <mask>'s face during the fight show he was bleeding heavily and had facial bones fractured. The matter has never been resolved, with a ringside sports journalist reporting by the NYT that <mask> spat out at least one tooth and was "a fountain of blood" in favor of a view that he had only a cut lip and a little bruised.<mask> <mask> was born on December 29, 1881. He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 He had mostly English ancestry, which had been in North America since the colonial era. The first member of the family arrived in Virginia in the 1630s. After defeating top-ranked opponents to earn a chance to fight for the Championship, Willard did not begin boxing until the age of 27. He started boxing because he thought his size and strength could earn him a good living, even though he didn't have much of an education. He was a gentle and friendly person and did not enjoy boxing or hurting people, so often he waited until his opponent attacked him before punching back, which made him feel at ease as if he were defending himself.He was often derided as an uncoordinated oaf rather than a skilled boxer, but his counter-punching style, coupled with his enormous strength and stamina, proved successful against top fighters. During his fight with Jack "Bull" Young in 1913, he was said to be able to kill a man with a single punch, but unfortunately he was killed in the 9th round. Lawyer Earl Rogers successfully defended his client, who was charged with second-degree murder. On April 5, 1915, in front of a huge crowd at the new Oriental Park Racetrack in Havana, Cuba, he knocked out Jack Johnson in the 26th round to win the world title. Johnson later claimed that he lost the fight because he bet on himself to win, despite the fact that there is evidence that <mask> won fairly, as well as the comments he made to his cornermen between rounds and immediately after the fight. If he was going to throw the fight, I wish he'd done it sooner. It was very hot out there.After footage of the fight was made widely available in the United States, Johnson admitted to lying about throwing the fight. Jack Johnson accepted defeat gracefully after the fight, saying "<mask> was too much for me, I just didn't have it." Johnson was forced to lead because he couldn't knock out the giant <mask>, who fought as a counterpuncher. Johnson was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 Johnson's claim of a "dive" gained traction because most fans only saw a still photo of him lying on the canvas. Due to an inter-state ban on the trafficking of fight films, no films of the fight were allowed to be shown in the United States. The film of the Johnson-Willard fight was only seen by a small percentage of boxing fans.In 1916, <mask> defeated Frank Moran at the Madison Square Garden in order to win the title. On July 4, 1919, Jack Dempsey defeated <mask> for the title. In the first round, Dempsey knocked down his opponent with a left hook. Although rules at the time permitted standing almost over a knocked-down opponent and hitting him again as soon as both knees had left the canvas, it should be remembered that this was not allowed at the time. At one point, the fight could have been disqualified if they had employed professional cornermen, but they failed to insist on the application of the regulations. After the third round, <mask> was unable to continue. In the fight, <mask> was said to have suffered a broken jaw, cheekbone, and ribs, as well as losing several teeth.His attempt to fight to the finish, ending when he was unable to come out for the fourth round, is considered one of the most brave performances in boxing history. However, the extent of <mask>'s injuries have been highly disputed and are now unclear since multiple independent reports only a few days after the fight said that there were no traces of any damage other than a couple of bruises. "I'll show you, how I was beaten, when I was interviewed by Harry Carpenter of the BBC Sport in the 1960s at his house in California," he said to the reporter. He said that he drew a metal bolt from a cardbox and used it for cutting-and-slicing-like moves instead of holding the bolt in his hand. Mike Tyson studied the case in-depth and 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 Even though there was no agency or other legal authority at the time, Tyson admitted that he did whatever Jack Kearns told him to do, and that in those days anything could have happened. However footage before the fight shows Dempsey putting on his gloves and in full view of his team and the crowd.After losing his title fight, <mask> retired from the ring and only fought exhibition bouts for the next four years. The first line-up of boxing matches at the newly opened Yankee Stadium in New York City included a fight between Floyd Johnson and <mask>. 63,000 people watched the match, which the 41-year-old <mask> was expected to lose. In the 9th and 11th rounds, he knocked down Johnson and earned a victory. "Youth, take off your hat and bow low and respectfully to Age," wrote Runyon. For days and days, the only topic of discussion in the world of sport will be <mask>'s amazing comeback. On July 12, 1923, <mask> faced Luis ngel Firpo.The fight was held in New Jersey in front of a large crowd. He retired from boxing after being knocked out in the eighth round. He used his boxing fame to become an acting career. He had roles in Buffalo Bill's Wild West show and the feature film The Challenge of Chance. He was in a boxing movie called The Prizefighter and the Lady with Max Baer and Myrna Loy. Death was found dead in Los Angeles, California, on December 15, 1968. He left the hospital against a doctor's advice after being admitted for a heart condition.He had a stroke and died 12 hours later. After his death at the age of 86, he was surpassed by Jack Sharkey, who died in 1994, and finally by Max Schmeling, who died in 2005. Forest Lawn, Hollywood Hills Cemetery is in Los Angeles. He was posthumously inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame. Andy Duncan's novella "The Pottawatomie Giant" is about a dispute he had with Harry Houdini. A photograph from his 5 April 1915 championship winning match and a pocket watch which was estimated to be worth between $15,000 and $50,000 were shown in a television program in 2020. Newspaper decisions are not counted as a win, loss or draw in professional boxing.The Massachusetts colonist <mask> was a 6th great-grandson of <mask>. Further reading Allen, Arly is one of the works cited. The champion of the world was <mask>. The company is located in Jefferson, NC. <mask>'s Boxing gear is at the Kansas Museum of History. | [
"Willard",
"Willard",
"Willard",
"Jess Myron",
"Willard",
"Willard",
"Willard",
"Willard",
"Willard",
"Willard",
"Willard",
"Willard",
"Willard",
"Willard",
"Willard",
"Willard",
"Willard",
"Willard",
"Simon Willard",
"Jess Willard",
"Jess Willard",
"Jess Willard"
] |
24078886 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20W.%20O%27Neill | Richard W. O'Neill | Richard William O'Neill (August 28, 1897 – April 9, 1982) was a soldier in the United States Army who served during World War I.
He received the Medal of Honor for his actions, and went on to receive numerous other decorations to recognize his wartime heroism.
Born and educated in New York City, O'Neill joined the New York National Guard's 69th Infantry Regiment in 1916, and served with the unit in Texas during the Pancho Villa Expedition. He continued to serve with his regiment during World War I, when it was re-designated as the 165th Infantry. He received the Medal of Honor to recognize his heroism during combat along the Ourcq River in July 1918; O'Neill was wounded more than 10 times, and all the soldiers he was leading were killed. Despite his wounds, O'Neill made his way back to friendly lines to pass on information about enemy positions, which enabled U.S. troops to successfully press the attack. When he was awarded the medal in 1921, he was still recuperating at Fordham Hospital, so the presentation was made by Ferdinand Foch at Fordham University. According to the New York Tribune, July 6, 1921, at the time of the award (July 5th), O'Neill was "a student in the college of the City of New York, where he is studying electrical engineering. On June 12 he married Miss Estelle Johnson. They now are living with his brother-in-law in Westwood" (New Jersey). He later received additional valor awards from several foreign countries.
After recuperating, O'Neill worked in construction and as a salesman before purchasing a liquor store, which he operated until his retirement. During World War II he worked for the Office of Strategic Services; the agency's head, William J. Donovan, had been O'Neill's World War I commander, and Donovan employed O'Neill in an effort to identify and apprehend potential German spies or collaborators in the northeastern United States. O'Neill was also active in several veterans organizations, including the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the American Legion.
O'Neill died in Valhalla, New York and was buried at Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Hawthorne, New York.
Early life
O'Neill was born in New York City on August 28, 1897, the son of John O'Neill, an Irish immigrant from Liverpool, England, and Ella O'Neill. He was educated in New York City, and began to box professionally; he won 12 fights during his brief career. At age 18 he joined the New York National Guard's 69th Infantry Regiment. He served in Texas during the Pancho Villa Expedition, and shortly after returning home, the regiment was mobilized for World War I and re-designated as the 165th Infantry Regiment.
World War I
By now a sergeant, O'Neill served with his regiment in France. During a combat action along the Ourcq River on July 30, 1918, O'Neill led a detachment of soldiers in a reconnaissance to determine the location of German artillery positions. O'Neill was wounded repeatedly, and the other soldiers of his detachment were killed, but O'Neill succeeded in returning to friendly lines and providing details on the location of the German artillery. As a result, U.S. troops were able to destroy the positions and successfully press the attack. O'Neill was hospitalized, but later violated doctor's orders and returned to his unit, serving until he was wounded again. At the end of the war in November 1918, O'Neill was still hospitalized in the United States.
Post-World War I
Following the end of the war, O'Neill continued to convalesce. Doctors recommended amputation of his legs, which O'Neill refused, and he was eventually able to walk unaided. According to family members, for the rest of his life O'Neill would occasionally remove from his legs pieces of shrapnel that worked their way to the surface of his skin.
In 1921, O'Neill was awarded the Medal of Honor to recognize his heroism in the Ourcq River action. Because he was still recuperating at Fordham Hospital, the Army permitted Ferdinand Foch to make the presentation in a ceremony at Fordham University. In addition to the Medal of Honor, O'Neill later received medals from several foreign countries in recognition of his heroic actions. Also in 1921, O'Neill was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the New York National Guard; he held this rank until resigning from the military in 1923.
Career
After his recovery, O'Neill attended extension courses in construction at the City College of New York, and worked as a concrete pourer during the construction of the George Washington Bridge. He later worked in sales, and then purchased a liquor store near the Waldorf Astoria Hotel, which he operated until retiring in the early 1960s.
O'Neill also became active in New York's Republican Party, including speeches on behalf of candidates, and speeches at fundraising dinners and other events.
World War II
During World War II, O'Neill was employed by the Office of Strategic Services. The head of the OSS, William J. Donovan, had been O'Neill's World War I commander, and he hired O'Neill as part of an initiative to investigate potential German collaborators in New England and New York.
Veterans advocate
O'Neill was active in several veterans' organizations, including the Catholic War Veterans, Disabled American Veterans, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and American Legion. In 1932, he resigned as state chairman of the Disabled American Veterans because of disagreement with other veterans over the activities of the Bonus Army. O'Neill opposed early payment of the bonus due to World War I veterans who advocated early payment in order to help them cope with the effects of the Great Depression; the DAV favored it by a vote of 3 to 1. O'Neill argued that the payments would be too small to make a meaningful difference to the veterans who received it, and that the government should do more to aid them with job creation and medical care. O'Neill served as executive director of the Congressional Medal of Honor Society. In addition, he made frequent public appearances, including serving as grand marshal of Memorial Day parades and marching at 1960s demonstrations in support of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War.
Death and burial
O'Neill died at a nursing home in Valhalla, New York on April 9, 1982. He was buried at Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Hawthorne, New York.
Family
In 1921, O'Neill married Estelle Johnson (1897-1985); they were the parents of a son, William Donovan O'Neill (1927-2009).
O'Neill's sister Rose was married to Edward J. Geaney, who was also a World War I veteran of the 69th Infantry. Geaney was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for heroism for the same action for which O'Neill received the Medal of Honor. While serving as a company first sergeant, and though wounded himself, Geaney succeeded in rescuing a wounded officer who was unable to move and so vulnerable to continued enemy fire. Geaney received his medal during the same ceremony at which O'Neill was honored.
Legacy
In 1975, Governor Hugh Carey designated an office building at the National Guard's Camp Smith training facility as O'Neill Hall, in honor of Richard O'Neill.
Medal of Honor Citation
Rank and organization: Sergeant, U.S. Army, Company D, 165th Infantry, 42d Division. Place and date: On the Ourcq River, France; July 30, 1918. Entered service at: New York, New York. Birth: August 28, 1898; New York, New, York. General Orders: War Department, General Orders No. 30 (July 15, 1921).
Citation:
In advance of an assaulting line, he attacked a detachment of about 25 of the enemy. In the ensuing hand-to-hand encounter he sustained pistol wounds, but heroically continued in the advance, during which he received additional wounds: but, with great physical effort, he remained in active command of his detachment. Being again wounded, he was forced by weakness and loss of blood to be evacuated, but insisted upon being taken first to the battalion commander in order to transmit to him valuable information relative to enemy positions and the disposition of our men.
Military Awards
O'Neill's military decorations and awards include:
See also
List of Medal of Honor recipients
List of Medal of Honor recipients for World War I
References
Sources
Books
Internet
Newspapers
External links
1897 births
1982 deaths
United States Army Medal of Honor recipients
United States Army soldiers
United States Army personnel of World War I
Military personnel from New York City
World War I recipients of the Medal of Honor
New York (state) Republicans
Recipients of the Croix de Guerre 1914–1918 (France)
Recipients of the War Cross for Military Valor
Knights of the Order of Aviz
Knights of the Order of the Star of Romania
Burials at Gate of Heaven Cemetery (Hawthorne, New York) | [
"Richard William O'Neill (August 28, 1897 – April 9, 1982) was a soldier in the United States Army who served during World War I.",
"He received the Medal of Honor for his actions, and went on to receive numerous other decorations to recognize his wartime heroism.",
"Born and educated in New York City, O'Neill joined the New York National Guard's 69th Infantry Regiment in 1916, and served with the unit in Texas during the Pancho Villa Expedition.",
"He continued to serve with his regiment during World War I, when it was re-designated as the 165th Infantry.",
"He received the Medal of Honor to recognize his heroism during combat along the Ourcq River in July 1918; O'Neill was wounded more than 10 times, and all the soldiers he was leading were killed.",
"Despite his wounds, O'Neill made his way back to friendly lines to pass on information about enemy positions, which enabled U.S. troops to successfully press the attack.",
"When he was awarded the medal in 1921, he was still recuperating at Fordham Hospital, so the presentation was made by Ferdinand Foch at Fordham University.",
"According to the New York Tribune, July 6, 1921, at the time of the award (July 5th), O'Neill was \"a student in the college of the City of New York, where he is studying electrical engineering.",
"On June 12 he married Miss Estelle Johnson.",
"They now are living with his brother-in-law in Westwood\" (New Jersey).",
"He later received additional valor awards from several foreign countries.",
"After recuperating, O'Neill worked in construction and as a salesman before purchasing a liquor store, which he operated until his retirement.",
"During World War II he worked for the Office of Strategic Services; the agency's head, William J. Donovan, had been O'Neill's World War I commander, and Donovan employed O'Neill in an effort to identify and apprehend potential German spies or collaborators in the northeastern United States.",
"O'Neill was also active in several veterans organizations, including the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the American Legion.",
"O'Neill died in Valhalla, New York and was buried at Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Hawthorne, New York.",
"Early life\nO'Neill was born in New York City on August 28, 1897, the son of John O'Neill, an Irish immigrant from Liverpool, England, and Ella O'Neill.",
"He was educated in New York City, and began to box professionally; he won 12 fights during his brief career.",
"At age 18 he joined the New York National Guard's 69th Infantry Regiment.",
"He served in Texas during the Pancho Villa Expedition, and shortly after returning home, the regiment was mobilized for World War I and re-designated as the 165th Infantry Regiment.",
"World War I\nBy now a sergeant, O'Neill served with his regiment in France.",
"During a combat action along the Ourcq River on July 30, 1918, O'Neill led a detachment of soldiers in a reconnaissance to determine the location of German artillery positions.",
"O'Neill was wounded repeatedly, and the other soldiers of his detachment were killed, but O'Neill succeeded in returning to friendly lines and providing details on the location of the German artillery.",
"As a result, U.S. troops were able to destroy the positions and successfully press the attack.",
"O'Neill was hospitalized, but later violated doctor's orders and returned to his unit, serving until he was wounded again.",
"At the end of the war in November 1918, O'Neill was still hospitalized in the United States.",
"Post-World War I\nFollowing the end of the war, O'Neill continued to convalesce.",
"Doctors recommended amputation of his legs, which O'Neill refused, and he was eventually able to walk unaided.",
"According to family members, for the rest of his life O'Neill would occasionally remove from his legs pieces of shrapnel that worked their way to the surface of his skin.",
"In 1921, O'Neill was awarded the Medal of Honor to recognize his heroism in the Ourcq River action.",
"Because he was still recuperating at Fordham Hospital, the Army permitted Ferdinand Foch to make the presentation in a ceremony at Fordham University.",
"In addition to the Medal of Honor, O'Neill later received medals from several foreign countries in recognition of his heroic actions.",
"Also in 1921, O'Neill was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the New York National Guard; he held this rank until resigning from the military in 1923.",
"Career\nAfter his recovery, O'Neill attended extension courses in construction at the City College of New York, and worked as a concrete pourer during the construction of the George Washington Bridge.",
"He later worked in sales, and then purchased a liquor store near the Waldorf Astoria Hotel, which he operated until retiring in the early 1960s.",
"O'Neill also became active in New York's Republican Party, including speeches on behalf of candidates, and speeches at fundraising dinners and other events.",
"World War II\nDuring World War II, O'Neill was employed by the Office of Strategic Services.",
"The head of the OSS, William J. Donovan, had been O'Neill's World War I commander, and he hired O'Neill as part of an initiative to investigate potential German collaborators in New England and New York.",
"Veterans advocate\nO'Neill was active in several veterans' organizations, including the Catholic War Veterans, Disabled American Veterans, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and American Legion.",
"In 1932, he resigned as state chairman of the Disabled American Veterans because of disagreement with other veterans over the activities of the Bonus Army.",
"O'Neill opposed early payment of the bonus due to World War I veterans who advocated early payment in order to help them cope with the effects of the Great Depression; the DAV favored it by a vote of 3 to 1.",
"O'Neill argued that the payments would be too small to make a meaningful difference to the veterans who received it, and that the government should do more to aid them with job creation and medical care.",
"O'Neill served as executive director of the Congressional Medal of Honor Society.",
"In addition, he made frequent public appearances, including serving as grand marshal of Memorial Day parades and marching at 1960s demonstrations in support of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War.",
"Death and burial\nO'Neill died at a nursing home in Valhalla, New York on April 9, 1982.",
"He was buried at Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Hawthorne, New York.",
"Family\nIn 1921, O'Neill married Estelle Johnson (1897-1985); they were the parents of a son, William Donovan O'Neill (1927-2009).",
"O'Neill's sister Rose was married to Edward J. Geaney, who was also a World War I veteran of the 69th Infantry.",
"Geaney was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for heroism for the same action for which O'Neill received the Medal of Honor.",
"While serving as a company first sergeant, and though wounded himself, Geaney succeeded in rescuing a wounded officer who was unable to move and so vulnerable to continued enemy fire.",
"Geaney received his medal during the same ceremony at which O'Neill was honored.",
"Legacy\nIn 1975, Governor Hugh Carey designated an office building at the National Guard's Camp Smith training facility as O'Neill Hall, in honor of Richard O'Neill.",
"Medal of Honor Citation\nRank and organization: Sergeant, U.S. Army, Company D, 165th Infantry, 42d Division.",
"Place and date: On the Ourcq River, France; July 30, 1918.",
"Entered service at: New York, New York.",
"Birth: August 28, 1898; New York, New, York.",
"General Orders: War Department, General Orders No.",
"30 (July 15, 1921).",
"Citation:\n\nIn advance of an assaulting line, he attacked a detachment of about 25 of the enemy.",
"In the ensuing hand-to-hand encounter he sustained pistol wounds, but heroically continued in the advance, during which he received additional wounds: but, with great physical effort, he remained in active command of his detachment.",
"Being again wounded, he was forced by weakness and loss of blood to be evacuated, but insisted upon being taken first to the battalion commander in order to transmit to him valuable information relative to enemy positions and the disposition of our men.",
"Military Awards \nO'Neill's military decorations and awards include:\n\nSee also\n\nList of Medal of Honor recipients\nList of Medal of Honor recipients for World War I\n\nReferences\n\nSources\n\nBooks\n\nInternet\n\nNewspapers\n\nExternal links\n\n1897 births\n1982 deaths\nUnited States Army Medal of Honor recipients\nUnited States Army soldiers\nUnited States Army personnel of World War I\nMilitary personnel from New York City\nWorld War I recipients of the Medal of Honor\nNew York (state) Republicans\nRecipients of the Croix de Guerre 1914–1918 (France)\nRecipients of the War Cross for Military Valor\nKnights of the Order of Aviz\nKnights of the Order of the Star of Romania\nBurials at Gate of Heaven Cemetery (Hawthorne, New York)"
] | [
"Richard William O'Neill was a soldier in the United States Army who served during World War I.",
"He was awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions during the war.",
"O'Neill joined the New York National Guard's 69th Infantry Regiment in 1916 and served with the unit in Texas during the Pancho Villa expedition.",
"The 165th Infantry was re-designated during World War I.",
"He was awarded the Medal of Honor for his heroism during combat along the Ourcq River in July 1918, but O'Neill was wounded more than 10 times, and all the soldiers he was leading were killed.",
"The U.S. troops were able to successfully press the attack because O'Neill was able to pass on information about enemy positions.",
"Ferdinand Foch made the presentation for the medal when he was still in the hospital.",
"According to the New York Tribune, at the time of the award, he was a student in the college of the City of New York.",
"He married Miss Johnson on June 12.",
"They are living with his brother-in-law.",
"He received additional awards from other countries.",
"He worked in construction and as a salesman before buying a liquor store and running it until his retirement.",
"During World War II he worked for the Office of Strategic Services, which was headed by William J. Donovan, who had been O'Neill's World War I commander.",
"The Veterans of Foreign Wars and the American Legion were some of the organizations that O'Neill was active in.",
"O'Neill was buried at Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Hawthorne, New York.",
"O'Neill was born in New York City on August 28, 1897, the son of an Irish immigrant and a British woman.",
"He won 12 fights during his brief career as a professional boxer.",
"He joined the New York National Guard at the age of 18.",
"He was a member of the 165th Infantry, which was re-designated as the 165th Infantry after World War I.",
"O'Neill was in France during World War I.",
"On July 30, 1918, O'Neill led a group of soldiers to determine the location of German positions.",
"O'Neill was wounded multiple times, but he was able to return to friendly lines and give details on the location of the German shelling.",
"The U.S. troops were able to destroy the positions.",
"After he was wounded again, O'Neill disobeyed the doctor's orders and returned to his unit.",
"At the end of the war, O'Neill was hospitalized in the United States.",
"O'Neill continued to convalesce after the end of the war.",
"He was able to walk on his own after doctors recommended amputation of his legs.",
"For the rest of his life, according to family members, O'Neill would occasionally remove pieces of his legs that had been hit by enemy fire.",
"The Medal of Honor was awarded to O'Neill for his actions in the Ourcq River.",
"Ferdinand Foch was allowed to make the presentation by the Army because he was still in the hospital.",
"In recognition of his heroic actions, O'Neill received medals from several foreign countries.",
"He was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the New York National Guard in 1921, but resigned from the military in 1923.",
"After his recovery, O'Neill attended extension courses in construction at the City College of New York and worked as a concrete pourer on the George Washington Bridge.",
"He owned and operated a liquor store near the hotel until he retired in the early 1960s.",
"Speeches on behalf of candidates, as well as speeches at fundraising dinners and other events, were some of the things that O'Neill did in New York's Republican Party.",
"O'Neill was employed by the Office of Strategic Services during World War II.",
"O'Neill was hired by the head of the OSS to investigate potential German spies in New England and New York.",
"The Catholic War Veterans, Disabled American Veterans, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and American Legion were some of the organizations that O'Neill was active in.",
"He resigned as state chairman of the Disabled American Veterans because of disagreements with other veterans over the activities of the Bonus Army.",
"The DAV voted 3 to 1 in favor of early payment of the bonus due to World War I veterans who advocated it in order to help them cope with the effects of the Great Depression.",
"The payments would be too small to make a difference to the veterans who received them, and the government should do more to aid them with job creation and medical care.",
"The Congressional Medal of Honor Society had an executive director.",
"He was grand marshal of Memorial Day parades and participated in demonstrations in support of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War.",
"O'Neill died at a nursing home in New York on April 9, 1982.",
"He was buried in New York.",
"In 1921, O'Neill married Johnson and they were the parents of a son.",
"Rose was married to Edward J. Geaney, who was a veteran of the 69th Infantry.",
"The same action that led to O'Neill receiving the Medal of Honor was performed by Geaney.",
"While serving as a company first sergeant, Geaney saved a wounded officer who was so vulnerable to continued enemy fire that he was unable to move.",
"During the same ceremony that O'Neill was honored, Geaney received his medal.",
"In 1975, Governor Hugh Carey named an office building at the National Guard's Camp Smith training facility after Richard O'Neill.",
"Sergeant, U.S. Army, Company D, 165th Infantry, 42d Division, received the medal of honor.",
"On the Ourcq River, France, on July 30, 1918.",
"The service was entered in New York.",
"The birth place was New York, New York.",
"The War Department has general orders.",
"On July 15, 1921.",
"He attacked a group of the enemy in advance of the assault line.",
"He was wounded in the hand-to-hand encounter but continued in the advance, despite receiving additional wounds.",
"After being wounded again, he was forced by weakness and loss of blood to be evacuated, but insisted upon being taken first to the battalion commander in order to transmit valuable information to him.",
"Military decorations and awards include: List of Medal of Honor recipients List of Medal of Honor recipients for World War I References Sources Books Internet Newspapers External links 1897 births 1982 deaths United States Army Medal of Honor recipients United States Army soldiers"
] | <mask>'Neill (August 28, 1897 – April 9, 1982) was a soldier in the United States Army who served during World War I. He received the Medal of Honor for his actions, and went on to receive numerous other decorations to recognize his wartime heroism. Born and educated in New York City, O'Neill joined the New York National Guard's 69th Infantry Regiment in 1916, and served with the unit in Texas during the Pancho Villa Expedition. He continued to serve with his regiment during World War I, when it was re-designated as the 165th Infantry. He received the Medal of Honor to recognize his heroism during combat along the Ourcq River in July 1918; O'Neill was wounded more than 10 times, and all the soldiers he was leading were killed. Despite his wounds, O'Neill made his way back to friendly lines to pass on information about enemy positions, which enabled U.S. troops to successfully press the attack. When he was awarded the medal in 1921, he was still recuperating at Fordham Hospital, so the presentation was made by Ferdinand Foch at Fordham University.According to the New York Tribune, July 6, 1921, at the time of the award (July 5th), O'Neill was "a student in the college of the City of New York, where he is studying electrical engineering. On June 12 he married Miss Estelle Johnson. They now are living with his brother-in-law in Westwood" (New Jersey). He later received additional valor awards from several foreign countries. After recuperating, O'Neill worked in construction and as a salesman before purchasing a liquor store, which he operated until his retirement. During World War II he worked for the Office of Strategic Services; the agency's head, <mask>. Donovan, had been O'Neill's World War I commander, and Donovan employed O'Neill in an effort to identify and apprehend potential German spies or collaborators in the northeastern United States. O'Neill was also active in several veterans organizations, including the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the American Legion.O'Neill died in Valhalla, New York and was buried at Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Hawthorne, New York. Early life
O'Neill was born in New York City on August 28, 1897, the son of John O'Neill, an Irish immigrant from Liverpool, England, and Ella O'Neill. He was educated in New York City, and began to box professionally; he won 12 fights during his brief career. At age 18 he joined the New York National Guard's 69th Infantry Regiment. He served in Texas during the Pancho Villa Expedition, and shortly after returning home, the regiment was mobilized for World War I and re-designated as the 165th Infantry Regiment. World War I
By now a sergeant, O'Neill served with his regiment in France. During a combat action along the Ourcq River on July 30, 1918, O'Neill led a detachment of soldiers in a reconnaissance to determine the location of German artillery positions.O'Neill was wounded repeatedly, and the other soldiers of his detachment were killed, but O'Neill succeeded in returning to friendly lines and providing details on the location of the German artillery. As a result, U.S. troops were able to destroy the positions and successfully press the attack. O'Neill was hospitalized, but later violated doctor's orders and returned to his unit, serving until he was wounded again. At the end of the war in November 1918, O'Neill was still hospitalized in the United States. Post-World War I
Following the end of the war, O'Neill continued to convalesce. Doctors recommended amputation of his legs, which O'Neill refused, and he was eventually able to walk unaided. According to family members, for the rest of his life O'Neill would occasionally remove from his legs pieces of shrapnel that worked their way to the surface of his skin.In 1921, O'Neill was awarded the Medal of Honor to recognize his heroism in the Ourcq River action. Because he was still recuperating at Fordham Hospital, the Army permitted Ferdinand Foch to make the presentation in a ceremony at Fordham University. In addition to the Medal of Honor, O'Neill later received medals from several foreign countries in recognition of his heroic actions. Also in 1921, O'Neill was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the New York National Guard; he held this rank until resigning from the military in 1923. Career
After his recovery, O'Neill attended extension courses in construction at the City College of New York, and worked as a concrete pourer during the construction of the George Washington Bridge. He later worked in sales, and then purchased a liquor store near the Waldorf Astoria Hotel, which he operated until retiring in the early 1960s. O'Neill also became active in New York's Republican Party, including speeches on behalf of candidates, and speeches at fundraising dinners and other events.World War II
During World War II, O'Neill was employed by the Office of Strategic Services. The head of the OSS, <mask>. Donovan, had been O'Neill's World War I commander, and he hired O'Neill as part of an initiative to investigate potential German collaborators in New England and New York. Veterans advocate
O'Neill was active in several veterans' organizations, including the Catholic War Veterans, Disabled American Veterans, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and American Legion. In 1932, he resigned as state chairman of the Disabled American Veterans because of disagreement with other veterans over the activities of the Bonus Army. O'Neill opposed early payment of the bonus due to World War I veterans who advocated early payment in order to help them cope with the effects of the Great Depression; the DAV favored it by a vote of 3 to 1. O'Neill argued that the payments would be too small to make a meaningful difference to the veterans who received it, and that the government should do more to aid them with job creation and medical care. O'Neill served as executive director of the Congressional Medal of Honor Society.In addition, he made frequent public appearances, including serving as grand marshal of Memorial Day parades and marching at 1960s demonstrations in support of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. Death and burial
O'Neill died at a nursing home in Valhalla, New York on April 9, 1982. He was buried at Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Hawthorne, New York. Family
In 1921, O'Neill married Estelle Johnson (1897-1985); they were the parents of a son, <mask> O'Neill (1927-2009). O'Neill's sister Rose was married to Edward J. Geaney, who was also a World War I veteran of the 69th Infantry. Geaney was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for heroism for the same action for which O'Neill received the Medal of Honor. While serving as a company first sergeant, and though wounded himself, Geaney succeeded in rescuing a wounded officer who was unable to move and so vulnerable to continued enemy fire.Geaney received his medal during the same ceremony at which O'Neill was honored. Legacy
In 1975, Governor Hugh Carey designated an office building at the National Guard's Camp Smith training facility as O'Neill Hall, in honor of <mask>'Neill. Medal of Honor Citation
Rank and organization: Sergeant, U.S. Army, Company D, 165th Infantry, 42d Division. Place and date: On the Ourcq River, France; July 30, 1918. Entered service at: New York, New York. Birth: August 28, 1898; New York, New, York. General Orders: War Department, General Orders No.30 (July 15, 1921). Citation:
In advance of an assaulting line, he attacked a detachment of about 25 of the enemy. In the ensuing hand-to-hand encounter he sustained pistol wounds, but heroically continued in the advance, during which he received additional wounds: but, with great physical effort, he remained in active command of his detachment. Being again wounded, he was forced by weakness and loss of blood to be evacuated, but insisted upon being taken first to the battalion commander in order to transmit to him valuable information relative to enemy positions and the disposition of our men. Military Awards
O'Neill's military decorations and awards include:
See also
List of Medal of Honor recipients
List of Medal of Honor recipients for World War I
References
Sources
Books
Internet
Newspapers
External links
1897 births
1982 deaths
United States Army Medal of Honor recipients
United States Army soldiers
United States Army personnel of World War I
Military personnel from New York City
World War I recipients of the Medal of Honor
New York (state) Republicans
Recipients of the Croix de Guerre 1914–1918 (France)
Recipients of the War Cross for Military Valor
Knights of the Order of Aviz
Knights of the Order of the Star of Romania
Burials at Gate of Heaven Cemetery (Hawthorne, New York) | [
"Richard William O",
"William J",
"William J",
"William Donovan",
"Richard O"
] | <mask>'Neill was a soldier in the United States Army who served during World War I. He was awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions during the war. O'Neill joined the New York National Guard's 69th Infantry Regiment in 1916 and served with the unit in Texas during the Pancho Villa expedition. The 165th Infantry was re-designated during World War I. He was awarded the Medal of Honor for his heroism during combat along the Ourcq River in July 1918, but O'Neill was wounded more than 10 times, and all the soldiers he was leading were killed. The U.S. troops were able to successfully press the attack because O'Neill was able to pass on information about enemy positions. Ferdinand Foch made the presentation for the medal when he was still in the hospital.According to the New York Tribune, at the time of the award, he was a student in the college of the City of New York. He married Miss Johnson on June 12. They are living with his brother-in-law. He received additional awards from other countries. He worked in construction and as a salesman before buying a liquor store and running it until his retirement. During World War II he worked for the Office of Strategic Services, which was headed by <mask>. Donovan, who had been O'Neill's World War I commander. The Veterans of Foreign Wars and the American Legion were some of the organizations that O'Neill was active in.O'Neill was buried at Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Hawthorne, New York. O'Neill was born in New York City on August 28, 1897, the son of an Irish immigrant and a British woman. He won 12 fights during his brief career as a professional boxer. He joined the New York National Guard at the age of 18. He was a member of the 165th Infantry, which was re-designated as the 165th Infantry after World War I. O'Neill was in France during World War I. On July 30, 1918, O'Neill led a group of soldiers to determine the location of German positions.O'Neill was wounded multiple times, but he was able to return to friendly lines and give details on the location of the German shelling. The U.S. troops were able to destroy the positions. After he was wounded again, O'Neill disobeyed the doctor's orders and returned to his unit. At the end of the war, O'Neill was hospitalized in the United States. O'Neill continued to convalesce after the end of the war. He was able to walk on his own after doctors recommended amputation of his legs. For the rest of his life, according to family members, O'Neill would occasionally remove pieces of his legs that had been hit by enemy fire.The Medal of Honor was awarded to O'Neill for his actions in the Ourcq River. Ferdinand Foch was allowed to make the presentation by the Army because he was still in the hospital. In recognition of his heroic actions, O'Neill received medals from several foreign countries. He was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the New York National Guard in 1921, but resigned from the military in 1923. After his recovery, O'Neill attended extension courses in construction at the City College of New York and worked as a concrete pourer on the George Washington Bridge. He owned and operated a liquor store near the hotel until he retired in the early 1960s. Speeches on behalf of candidates, as well as speeches at fundraising dinners and other events, were some of the things that O'Neill did in New York's Republican Party.O'Neill was employed by the Office of Strategic Services during World War II. O'Neill was hired by the head of the OSS to investigate potential German spies in New England and New York. The Catholic War Veterans, Disabled American Veterans, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and American Legion were some of the organizations that O'Neill was active in. He resigned as state chairman of the Disabled American Veterans because of disagreements with other veterans over the activities of the Bonus Army. The DAV voted 3 to 1 in favor of early payment of the bonus due to World War I veterans who advocated it in order to help them cope with the effects of the Great Depression. The payments would be too small to make a difference to the veterans who received them, and the government should do more to aid them with job creation and medical care. The Congressional Medal of Honor Society had an executive director.He was grand marshal of Memorial Day parades and participated in demonstrations in support of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. O'Neill died at a nursing home in New York on April 9, 1982. He was buried in New York. In 1921, O'Neill married Johnson and they were the parents of a son. Rose was married to Edward J. Geaney, who was a veteran of the 69th Infantry. The same action that led to O'Neill receiving the Medal of Honor was performed by Geaney. While serving as a company first sergeant, Geaney saved a wounded officer who was so vulnerable to continued enemy fire that he was unable to move.During the same ceremony that O'Neill was honored, Geaney received his medal. In 1975, Governor Hugh Carey named an office building at the National Guard's Camp Smith training facility after <mask>'Neill. Sergeant, U.S. Army, Company D, 165th Infantry, 42d Division, received the medal of honor. On the Ourcq River, France, on July 30, 1918. The service was entered in New York. The birth place was New York, New York. The War Department has general orders.On July 15, 1921. He attacked a group of the enemy in advance of the assault line. He was wounded in the hand-to-hand encounter but continued in the advance, despite receiving additional wounds. After being wounded again, he was forced by weakness and loss of blood to be evacuated, but insisted upon being taken first to the battalion commander in order to transmit valuable information to him. Military decorations and awards include: List of Medal of Honor recipients List of Medal of Honor recipients for World War I References Sources Books Internet Newspapers External links 1897 births 1982 deaths United States Army Medal of Honor recipients United States Army soldiers | [
"Richard William O",
"William J",
"Richard O"
] |
1010850 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lomana%20LuaLua | Lomana LuaLua | Trésor Lomana LuaLua (; born 28 December 1980) is a Congolese professional footballer who last played as a striker. He is currently the attacking coach for Spalding United.
LuaLua was born in Kinshasa, but moved to England at a young age. After impressing in a college football match, he signed for Colchester United. There he scored a total of 21 goals in 68 appearances which prompted Newcastle United to sign him. However, the competition for places meant he was less of a regular in the first team, and after four seasons and 88 appearances, he transferred to Portsmouth, the club that had previously loaned him for three months while at Newcastle. He remained there for three seasons, but his spell was marred by disciplinary problems and malaria. After leaving Portsmouth, he moved teams frequently, representing sides in Greece, Qatar, Cyprus and Turkey, in addition to a brief return to English football at Blackpool. LuaLua received his first of 31 international caps in 2002, and scored seven goals in an eleven-year international career. He represented his national team at four Africa Cup of Nations tournaments.
LuaLua is also known for setting up the LuaLua Foundation, which provides care for orphans in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and for being a patron for the Haslar Visitors Group. His brother Kazenga, and cousins Trésor Kandol and Yannick Bolasie, all became footballers as well.
Early life
LuaLua was born Trésor Lua Lua Lomana – Lua Lua, his grandfather's given name, was passed to him and his brother Kazenga – in Kinshasa, Zaire (now Democratic Republic of the Congo), in 1980, but moved to England as a young boy in 1989. His family settled in Forest Gate in London; there, he attended Forest Gate Community School and started to play football at the age of 16, while also being involved in gymnastics. His activity in gymnastics was the base of his trademark goal celebration, seven back flips and a backward somersault. LuaLua represented his school at football after he was spotted kicking a tennis ball around in the playground. He was playing for Leyton Sixth Form College, where he studied performing arts, when he was spotted at the age of 17 by second division side, Colchester United. Geoff Harrop, a scout for Colchester College's football team, was impressed by LuaLua's performance, "He was taking on the whole team by the end of the game and it wasn't hard to pick him out among 22 young 17-year-olds." Harrop invited the striker for a trial at Colchester United and he was signed by the club.
His brother, Kazenga LuaLua, is also a professional footballer, and two of his cousins also play professionally; Yannick Bolasie, and Trésor Kandol.
Club career
Colchester United
LuaLua joined Colchester United in September 1998. Initially, he struggled to adapt and he preferred going to nightclubs over playing for Colchester, Harrop says, "It took a lot of hard work by the staff at Colchester. Micky Cook, the director of youth, had to spend endless hours with him and [manager] Steve Wignall and then [the next manager] Steve Whitton had to spend a lot of time with him talking him through the tactical side of the game and what his role was within the team". LuaLua scored within four minutes of his debut where he appeared as a substitute in a 3–1 defeat to Chesterfield. In two seasons, he made 68 league and cup appearances for Colchester, 44 starts and 24 substitute appearances, scoring a total of 21 goals. His performances attracted the attention of several Premiership clubs and despite manager Steve Whitton's denial that LuaLua was for sale, LuaLua joined Newcastle United in September 2000 for a fee of £2.25 million. An earlier offer by Newcastle of £300,000 for LuaLua made by former manager, Ruud Gullit, had been rejected, but the much increased bid offered financial security and assistance towards a new ground and was one that Colchester felt they could not turn down.
Newcastle United
LuaLua had been brought to the attention of Newcastle manager, Bobby Robson, by Mick Wadsworth, assistant-manager at Newcastle United, who was a former manager of Colchester. Robson watched LuaLua before deciding to negotiate the transfer, and said, "I see [LuaLua] as a special talent. He has to learn how to play with the other players but he's a special new talent. He has to be nursed and cherished and taught. But we are buying long-term a very promising talent, a very promising player." LuaLua signed a five-year contract with the club. He made his first-team debut in a 1–0 home defeat to Charlton Athletic in September 2000 and made 23 league and cup appearances for Newcastle in the 2000–01 season without scoring. He scored twice in Newcastle's Intertoto Cup campaign at the beginning of the 2001–02 season but his first Premiership goal did not come until April 2002, when he scored a last-minute winner in a 3–2 away win against Derby County. He scored a further two goals in the remaining four games of the season. LuaLua's goalscoring form continued to the beginning of the 2002–03 season when he scored three goals in his first four games. Tougher competition for a first-team place meant that LuaLua made only 22 appearances in this season. In January 2003, LuaLua urged Robson to rotate the squad, saying, "I think I deserve a chance now, as do many of the lads on the fringes of the team. Although some people might have the idea that those of us not in the team like sitting on the bench and getting paid good money, nothing could be further from the truth. I'm not in this for the money, I want to play for the first team and show what I can do on a regular basis." LuaLua also spent much of the beginning of the 2003–04 season on the bench and in November 2003, complained about his lack of first-team football and indicated that he would consider leaving Newcastle. In the Newcastle Chronicle, Robson responded, saying he would not take advice from a player about how to manage the side: "How dare he say this? I run this football club... LuaLua has been a pretty poor professional about all this. What he should do is keep his mouth shut and get out there and do what he is paid for." In the end, he made 88 league and cup appearances for Newcastle, scoring nine goals, having started 21 games and made 67 appearances as a substitute.
Portsmouth
In February 2004, after returning from the 2004 African Cup of Nations, he joined Portsmouth on a three-month loan deal with a view to a permanent deal at the end of the season. LuaLua scored on his debut for Portsmouth in a 4–3 away defeat to Tottenham Hotspur in February 2004. During this loan spell he scored in the 89th minute in a 1–1 draw for Portsmouth against parent club Newcastle. The result lifted Portsmouth out of the bottom three of the Premiership. This also lead to a change in legislation for the FA introducing standard rules meaning a player on loan could not play against their parent club. He scored four goals in 15 appearances for Portsmouth as they finished in mid-table in their debut season in the Premiership. Manager Harry Redknapp was sufficiently impressed with LuaLua's performances that when his loan spell ended at the end of the 2003–04 season, he signed LuaLua permanently at a cost of £1.75 million.
LuaLua made 26 league and cup appearances, scoring six goals, including two against local rivals Southampton, in the 2004–05 season. The season was marred by a groin injury at the beginning and a hamstring injury in May 2005. Disciplinary problems led to charges by the Football Association of abusive behaviour in December 2004 and improper conduct after he was sent off against Blackburn Rovers in January 2005, for which he received an extra one-match ban and a fine of £5,000 in addition to a three-match ban for the dismissal. He made 26 appearances in the 2005–06 season, scoring seven goals, but missed several games in the autumn after contracting malaria on a visit to Africa to play for DR Congo. He also missed several games due to international duty at the 2004 African Cup of Nations and missed games in April 2006 after damaging his foot while doing his acrobatic goal celebration during a game against Arsenal. His disciplinary problems continued when he was warned by the Football Association over his future conduct; this came after he admitted a charge of improper conduct in relation to comments made about referee Uriah Rennie after a 3–1 defeat at Tottenham Hotspur in December.
LuaLua signed a new three-year contract in July 2006; it was set to keep him at Portsmouth until 2009. An ankle injury suffered in a pre-season friendly led to LuaLua missing the beginning of the 2006–07 season. He struggled to break back into the first-team, making only eight starts out of 24 appearances, and scored only two goals in that season. Manager Harry Redknapp warned him that he needed to "...start performing" and that he had to "...start producing next season". However, he joined Greek club Olympiacos in August 2007 and Redknapp admitted that, "Lua wants to move on... I've no doubt he'll go away and be a great player for Olympiacos. He wants a change, he wants to play in a role behind the strikers and he wants to move abroad. He will get to play in the Champions League by moving to Greece. He has been a top Premier League player and he'll be a top player for them."
Olympiacos
On 12 August 2007, LuaLua signed a three-year contract with Olympiacos for an estimated fee of £2.8 million (€4.1 million). He made his league debut on 2 September, in a 0–0 draw against Panathinaikos. His Champions League debut came on 18 September in a 1–1 draw against Lazio. LuaLua scored his first two goals on 23 September in a 6–2 win over OFI.
On 16 January 2008, LuaLua opened the scoring with a 30-yard volley in the Greek Cup fifth round, which saw Olympiacos progress to the quarter-finals in a 4–0 win against Panathinaikos. LuaLua missed both the knockout stages against Chelsea, having suffered from ankle injuries and a dislocated shoulder, the latter of which he received in a 1–1 draw against Asteras Tripolis. As a result, he missed most of the season, but returned on 20 April 2008 to help Olympiacos win their fourth Super League Greece title, beating Iraklis 3–1. Before the 2008 Greek Cup Final on 17 May, LuaLua fell out of favour and was deemed surplus to requirements. In total, he made 30 appearances for Olympiacos, scoring six goals.
Al-Arabi
Following his injury spell at Olympiacos, LuaLua joined Qatari based club Al-Arabi on a one-year contract in July 2008. On 30 October, Al-Arabi won the Sheikh Jassim Cup, beating Al-Rayyan Club 3–0 in the final with LuaLua scoring one goal in the seventh minute. In the 21st week of the 2008–09 season, on 20 February 2009, LuaLua scored his first league goal for the club in a 4–2 defeat to Al-Khor. His only other goal for that season came in a 1–0 win over Al-Kharitiyath on 16 April.
Return to Olympiacos
During December 2009, LuaLua left Al-Arabi by mutual consent and rejoined Olympiakos on a six-month contract with an option for the club to extend the contract for two years. LuaLua scored his first goals upon return to Olympiakos, with two against Asteras Tripolis.
Omonia
LuaLua signed a two-year contract for an undisclosed fee with Omonia in July 2010, reuniting with Takis Lemonis for the second time since Olympiakos in 2008. He scored his first goal on his league debut on 18 September 2010 in a 4–0 win against Alki Larnaca, coming on as a substitute for Georgios Efrem. On 18 May 2011, LuaLua won the Cypriot Cup with Omonia after winning 4–3 on penalties against Apollon Limassol.
Return to England
In September 2011, after his release by Omonia, LuaLua trained with League One club Hartlepool United, where he linked with former Newcastle United assistant-manager Mick Wadsworth. However, he was offered a contract by Blackpool who play a level above in the Championship. After two substitute appearances, Lualua's first start saw him score twice in Blackpool's 5–0 win over Leeds United at Elland Road, Leeds' joint-heaviest home defeat.. On 2 January 2012, he scored his first goal of the new year against Middlesbrough. For the second time in his Blackpool career he was on the score sheet as Blackpool beat Fylde coast neighbours Fleetwood Town 5–1 in the third round of the FA Cup. During a fourth-round FA Cup match against Sheffield Wednesday held on 7 February 2012, LuaLua scored an impressive right-footed goal from just inside the top-left corner of the 18-yard box into the top-right corner of the goal.
Karabükspor
On 24 May 2012, it was confirmed that LuaLua had turned down a new contract at Blackpool and had signed a two-year deal with Turkish side Kardemir Karabükspor. He is considered one of the best players in first half of Turkish league.
Akhisar Belediyespor
On 2 February 2015, LuaLua signed a contract with Akhisar Belediyespor. He left the club in the winter 2016.
Şanlıurfaspor
On 20 January 2016, LuaLua signed a contract with Şanlıurfaspor. He left the club in May 2016.
Northern Cyprus
On 12 May 2017, LuaLua signed a contract with Turkish Cypriot club Merit Alsancak Yeşilova. He played his first friendly game against Bostancı Bağcıl on 11 August. LuaLua ended the 2017–18 KTFF Süper Lig season with nine goals in 23 appearances. After leaving the club in 2018, LuaLua played for English non-league side Tilbury in July; featuring for the second half of a 1–0 friendly win versus Hashtag United. For the 2018–19 campaign, LuaLua returned to Northern Cyprus to play with Süper Lig teams Doğan Türk Birliği and Gìrne Halk Evì.
Peterborough Sports
On 13 November 2019, Southern League Premier Division Central side Peterborough Sports announced the signing of LuaLua. He made his debut for the club in January 2020, coming off the bench in a league match against Hitchin Town.
International career
2002 and 2004 Africa Cup of Nations
LuaLua was first named by the DR Congo national team in the preliminary squad for the African Nations Cup finals in Mali in January 2002. He played in the 0–0 draw with Togo, 1–0 loss to Cameroon, 3–1 win over Ivory Coast and the quarter-final match against Senegal, which DR Congo lost 2–0 amid some controversy. LuaLua blamed the referee Domenico Messina for the defeat, "We had a lot of fouls which the referee didn't give and there was a penalty right in front of him but he just let the match go on, sometimes they [the Senegalese] fell over without being touched, screamed and the referee just gave the foul to them."
DR Congo's qualifying campaign for the 2004 African Nations Cup in Tunisia began six months after the 2002 tournament ended, with a match against Libya on 8 September, Libya won the match 3–2. LuaLua initially indicated that he might not play in the match, but did so reluctantly after threats were made to his family, which caused him to reconsider his international career. Robson commented, "He didn't want to go and play in that match. But he said he had to go because his grandmother had been threatened." He played in the 2–0 win over Botswana in October 2002, when he scored inside five minutes but was later sent off for dissent. He was suspended for two matches and his next appearance was in the 0–0 draw with Botswana in July 2003, which secured qualification for the finals of the competition. LuaLua initially expressed doubts that he would take part in the finals due to club commitments. He was, however, included in the squad and named as captain in the absence of regular captain, Shabani Nonda, who missed the tournament due to a knee injury. LuaLua said on being named as captain, "When Shabani plays, it takes the pressure off me but now everyone's now looking to me for leadership and I feel honoured." He appeared in the first match of the tournament, a 2–1 defeat to Guinea, but in the next match against the hosts Tunisia, he was sent off, reacting angrily and taking several minutes to leave the pitch. DR Congo went on to lose the match and were eliminated from the tournament. Following his sending off, LuaLua considered giving up international football and criticised the behaviour of the Tunisia players during the match and the organisation of the tournament. He later criticised the national football federation of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the Congolese Association Football Federation, blaming them for the poor state of the national side, but said that he would continue to be available for international selection because "I can never turn my back on my country. I play for Congo because I am proud to do it", and apologised to his country for his sending off against Tunisia.
2006 Africa Cup of Nations
LuaLua received a four-match suspension for the sending-off and missed several 2006 World Cup qualifying round matches during the summer of June 2004. He was selected for the World Cup qualifier against South Africa in September, but missed the match due to injury, and was dropped for the next qualifier against Ghana in October. He missed the 1–1 draw with Ghana in March 2005 after a dispute with the DR Congo football association but committed himself to the match against Uganda in June. He scored in a friendly against Guinea played in Paris in August, a match used as preparation for the World Cup qualifying matches the following month. LuaLua played for DR Congo in the 2–1 win over Cape Verde in September but contracted malaria and missed the final World Cup qualifier against South Africa in October.
LuaLua was recalled to the DR Congo squad for a friendly against Tunisia played near Paris in November 2005, as part of the countries' preparation for the 2006 African Nations Cup held in Egypt in January and February 2006. He was unable to play, however, after he was one of several players refused a visa by French immigration authorities. He was named as the captain of DR Congo for the tournament in place of Shabani Nonda who was injured for a second successive Nations Cup. He then delayed his departure to be available to his club Portsmouth for a crucial league match, missing a friendly with Senegal. Despite a pay dispute leading to the DR Congo players threatening to boycott the match, which was only resolved shortly before the kickoff, he returned to the side for DR Congo's opening match of the tournament against Togo, assisting in one goal and scoring the other in a 2–0 win. He appeared against Angola and Cameroon as DR Congo qualified for the quarter-finals stage of the tournament, only to be beaten by the hosts Egypt. LuaLua's 18-month-old son died while he was playing in the tournament.
Later international career
In the 2008 African Nations Cup qualifier against Ethiopia in April 2007, LuaLua scored the second goal in a 2–0 victory; the result extended their lead at the top of their group. He did not travel to Ethiopia for the away fixture in June, which DR Congo lost, as the authorities failed to send LuaLua his travel documents in time. Following the failure of DR Congo to qualify for the tournament in October, the DR Congo sports minister, Pardonne Kaliba, suspended the manager, Henri Depireux, and removed the captaincy from LuaLua.
LuaLua returned to the DR Congo squad in the 2010 World Cup qualifier against Egypt in June 2008. After returning to Greece, he complained of severe stomach pain and was rushed to hospital to have his appendix removed, ruling him out of subsequent matches for several weeks, as DR Congo moved to the top of Group 12 in the second round. Despite topping the group at that point, DR Congo were later eliminated at this stage and therefore failed to progress to the third round of qualifying.
In February 2012, national manager Claude Le Roy confirmed that he was with LuaLua in the aim of him returning to the national team for their Cup of Nations qualifier against Seychelles. He did not play that game, but in December, LuaLua was named for his fourth Africa Cup of Nations in South Africa in 2013. He started all three matches—all draws—as the team exited from Group C.
Personal life
In September 2003, LuaLua was fined £175 by Newcastle Magistrates Court for watching British television without a licence.
In 2005, LuaLua became patron of the Haslar Visitors Group, a charity that works with detainees in an immigration removal centre. In the following year, he set up the LuaLua Foundation, building a hostel, sport and education complex in Kinshasa to provide care and education for orphaned children in DR Congo. He is also actively involved in the Show Racism The Red Card campaign and was involved in the launch of a new video entitled "A Safe Place", which features Premiership footballers talking about their experiences with racism. LuaLua is a born-again Christian and his former teammate at Portsmouth, Linvoy Primus, was quoted saying "We are not scared to say we pray together before games. About 45 minutes before a game we link our arms and just pray that we can glorify God."
LuaLua wrote the foreword in "You Can Have Chips", the autobiography of his former manager Steve Wignall.
Career statistics
.
International goals
Scores and results list Congo DR's goal tally first.
References
External links
Lomana LuaLua at BBC Sport
1980 births
Living people
Footballers from Kinshasa
Democratic Republic of the Congo footballers
Democratic Republic of the Congo international footballers
Democratic Republic of the Congo expatriate footballers
Democratic Republic of the Congo Christians
Expatriate footballers in England
Association football forwards
Colchester United F.C. players
Newcastle United F.C. players
Portsmouth F.C. players
Olympiacos F.C. players
Blackpool F.C. players
AC Omonia players
Alsancak Yeşilova footballers
Premier League players
English Football League players
Super League Greece players
Süper Lig players
Southern Football League players
Expatriate footballers in Greece
Al-Arabi SC (Qatar) players
Qatar Stars League players
Expatriate footballers in Qatar
Cypriot First Division players
Expatriate footballers in Cyprus
Kardemir Karabükspor footballers
Çaykur Rizespor footballers
Akhisarspor footballers
Doğan Türk Birliği footballers
Peterborough Sports F.C. players
Expatriate footballers in Northern Cyprus
Expatriate footballers in Turkey
2004 African Cup of Nations players
2006 Africa Cup of Nations players
2002 African Cup of Nations players
2013 Africa Cup of Nations players
21st-century Democratic Republic of the Congo people
Association football coaches | [
"Trésor Lomana LuaLua (; born 28 December 1980) is a Congolese professional footballer who last played as a striker.",
"He is currently the attacking coach for Spalding United.",
"LuaLua was born in Kinshasa, but moved to England at a young age.",
"After impressing in a college football match, he signed for Colchester United.",
"There he scored a total of 21 goals in 68 appearances which prompted Newcastle United to sign him.",
"However, the competition for places meant he was less of a regular in the first team, and after four seasons and 88 appearances, he transferred to Portsmouth, the club that had previously loaned him for three months while at Newcastle.",
"He remained there for three seasons, but his spell was marred by disciplinary problems and malaria.",
"After leaving Portsmouth, he moved teams frequently, representing sides in Greece, Qatar, Cyprus and Turkey, in addition to a brief return to English football at Blackpool.",
"LuaLua received his first of 31 international caps in 2002, and scored seven goals in an eleven-year international career.",
"He represented his national team at four Africa Cup of Nations tournaments.",
"LuaLua is also known for setting up the LuaLua Foundation, which provides care for orphans in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and for being a patron for the Haslar Visitors Group.",
"His brother Kazenga, and cousins Trésor Kandol and Yannick Bolasie, all became footballers as well.",
"Early life\nLuaLua was born Trésor Lua Lua Lomana – Lua Lua, his grandfather's given name, was passed to him and his brother Kazenga – in Kinshasa, Zaire (now Democratic Republic of the Congo), in 1980, but moved to England as a young boy in 1989.",
"His family settled in Forest Gate in London; there, he attended Forest Gate Community School and started to play football at the age of 16, while also being involved in gymnastics.",
"His activity in gymnastics was the base of his trademark goal celebration, seven back flips and a backward somersault.",
"LuaLua represented his school at football after he was spotted kicking a tennis ball around in the playground.",
"He was playing for Leyton Sixth Form College, where he studied performing arts, when he was spotted at the age of 17 by second division side, Colchester United.",
"Geoff Harrop, a scout for Colchester College's football team, was impressed by LuaLua's performance, \"He was taking on the whole team by the end of the game and it wasn't hard to pick him out among 22 young 17-year-olds.\"",
"Harrop invited the striker for a trial at Colchester United and he was signed by the club.",
"His brother, Kazenga LuaLua, is also a professional footballer, and two of his cousins also play professionally; Yannick Bolasie, and Trésor Kandol.",
"Club career\n\nColchester United\nLuaLua joined Colchester United in September 1998.",
"Initially, he struggled to adapt and he preferred going to nightclubs over playing for Colchester, Harrop says, \"It took a lot of hard work by the staff at Colchester.",
"Micky Cook, the director of youth, had to spend endless hours with him and [manager] Steve Wignall and then [the next manager] Steve Whitton had to spend a lot of time with him talking him through the tactical side of the game and what his role was within the team\".",
"LuaLua scored within four minutes of his debut where he appeared as a substitute in a 3–1 defeat to Chesterfield.",
"In two seasons, he made 68 league and cup appearances for Colchester, 44 starts and 24 substitute appearances, scoring a total of 21 goals.",
"His performances attracted the attention of several Premiership clubs and despite manager Steve Whitton's denial that LuaLua was for sale, LuaLua joined Newcastle United in September 2000 for a fee of £2.25 million.",
"An earlier offer by Newcastle of £300,000 for LuaLua made by former manager, Ruud Gullit, had been rejected, but the much increased bid offered financial security and assistance towards a new ground and was one that Colchester felt they could not turn down.",
"Newcastle United\n\nLuaLua had been brought to the attention of Newcastle manager, Bobby Robson, by Mick Wadsworth, assistant-manager at Newcastle United, who was a former manager of Colchester.",
"Robson watched LuaLua before deciding to negotiate the transfer, and said, \"I see [LuaLua] as a special talent.",
"He has to learn how to play with the other players but he's a special new talent.",
"He has to be nursed and cherished and taught.",
"But we are buying long-term a very promising talent, a very promising player.\"",
"LuaLua signed a five-year contract with the club.",
"He made his first-team debut in a 1–0 home defeat to Charlton Athletic in September 2000 and made 23 league and cup appearances for Newcastle in the 2000–01 season without scoring.",
"He scored twice in Newcastle's Intertoto Cup campaign at the beginning of the 2001–02 season but his first Premiership goal did not come until April 2002, when he scored a last-minute winner in a 3–2 away win against Derby County.",
"He scored a further two goals in the remaining four games of the season.",
"LuaLua's goalscoring form continued to the beginning of the 2002–03 season when he scored three goals in his first four games.",
"Tougher competition for a first-team place meant that LuaLua made only 22 appearances in this season.",
"In January 2003, LuaLua urged Robson to rotate the squad, saying, \"I think I deserve a chance now, as do many of the lads on the fringes of the team.",
"Although some people might have the idea that those of us not in the team like sitting on the bench and getting paid good money, nothing could be further from the truth.",
"I'm not in this for the money, I want to play for the first team and show what I can do on a regular basis.\"",
"LuaLua also spent much of the beginning of the 2003–04 season on the bench and in November 2003, complained about his lack of first-team football and indicated that he would consider leaving Newcastle.",
"In the Newcastle Chronicle, Robson responded, saying he would not take advice from a player about how to manage the side: \"How dare he say this?",
"I run this football club... LuaLua has been a pretty poor professional about all this.",
"What he should do is keep his mouth shut and get out there and do what he is paid for.\"",
"In the end, he made 88 league and cup appearances for Newcastle, scoring nine goals, having started 21 games and made 67 appearances as a substitute.",
"Portsmouth\nIn February 2004, after returning from the 2004 African Cup of Nations, he joined Portsmouth on a three-month loan deal with a view to a permanent deal at the end of the season.",
"LuaLua scored on his debut for Portsmouth in a 4–3 away defeat to Tottenham Hotspur in February 2004.",
"During this loan spell he scored in the 89th minute in a 1–1 draw for Portsmouth against parent club Newcastle.",
"The result lifted Portsmouth out of the bottom three of the Premiership.",
"This also lead to a change in legislation for the FA introducing standard rules meaning a player on loan could not play against their parent club.",
"He scored four goals in 15 appearances for Portsmouth as they finished in mid-table in their debut season in the Premiership.",
"Manager Harry Redknapp was sufficiently impressed with LuaLua's performances that when his loan spell ended at the end of the 2003–04 season, he signed LuaLua permanently at a cost of £1.75 million.",
"LuaLua made 26 league and cup appearances, scoring six goals, including two against local rivals Southampton, in the 2004–05 season.",
"The season was marred by a groin injury at the beginning and a hamstring injury in May 2005.",
"Disciplinary problems led to charges by the Football Association of abusive behaviour in December 2004 and improper conduct after he was sent off against Blackburn Rovers in January 2005, for which he received an extra one-match ban and a fine of £5,000 in addition to a three-match ban for the dismissal.",
"He made 26 appearances in the 2005–06 season, scoring seven goals, but missed several games in the autumn after contracting malaria on a visit to Africa to play for DR Congo.",
"He also missed several games due to international duty at the 2004 African Cup of Nations and missed games in April 2006 after damaging his foot while doing his acrobatic goal celebration during a game against Arsenal.",
"His disciplinary problems continued when he was warned by the Football Association over his future conduct; this came after he admitted a charge of improper conduct in relation to comments made about referee Uriah Rennie after a 3–1 defeat at Tottenham Hotspur in December.",
"LuaLua signed a new three-year contract in July 2006; it was set to keep him at Portsmouth until 2009.",
"An ankle injury suffered in a pre-season friendly led to LuaLua missing the beginning of the 2006–07 season.",
"He struggled to break back into the first-team, making only eight starts out of 24 appearances, and scored only two goals in that season.",
"Manager Harry Redknapp warned him that he needed to \"...start performing\" and that he had to \"...start producing next season\".",
"However, he joined Greek club Olympiacos in August 2007 and Redknapp admitted that, \"Lua wants to move on...",
"I've no doubt he'll go away and be a great player for Olympiacos.",
"He wants a change, he wants to play in a role behind the strikers and he wants to move abroad.",
"He will get to play in the Champions League by moving to Greece.",
"He has been a top Premier League player and he'll be a top player for them.\"",
"Olympiacos\nOn 12 August 2007, LuaLua signed a three-year contract with Olympiacos for an estimated fee of £2.8 million (€4.1 million).",
"He made his league debut on 2 September, in a 0–0 draw against Panathinaikos.",
"His Champions League debut came on 18 September in a 1–1 draw against Lazio.",
"LuaLua scored his first two goals on 23 September in a 6–2 win over OFI.",
"On 16 January 2008, LuaLua opened the scoring with a 30-yard volley in the Greek Cup fifth round, which saw Olympiacos progress to the quarter-finals in a 4–0 win against Panathinaikos.",
"LuaLua missed both the knockout stages against Chelsea, having suffered from ankle injuries and a dislocated shoulder, the latter of which he received in a 1–1 draw against Asteras Tripolis.",
"As a result, he missed most of the season, but returned on 20 April 2008 to help Olympiacos win their fourth Super League Greece title, beating Iraklis 3–1.",
"Before the 2008 Greek Cup Final on 17 May, LuaLua fell out of favour and was deemed surplus to requirements.",
"In total, he made 30 appearances for Olympiacos, scoring six goals.",
"Al-Arabi\n\nFollowing his injury spell at Olympiacos, LuaLua joined Qatari based club Al-Arabi on a one-year contract in July 2008.",
"On 30 October, Al-Arabi won the Sheikh Jassim Cup, beating Al-Rayyan Club 3–0 in the final with LuaLua scoring one goal in the seventh minute.",
"In the 21st week of the 2008–09 season, on 20 February 2009, LuaLua scored his first league goal for the club in a 4–2 defeat to Al-Khor.",
"His only other goal for that season came in a 1–0 win over Al-Kharitiyath on 16 April.",
"Return to Olympiacos\nDuring December 2009, LuaLua left Al-Arabi by mutual consent and rejoined Olympiakos on a six-month contract with an option for the club to extend the contract for two years.",
"LuaLua scored his first goals upon return to Olympiakos, with two against Asteras Tripolis.",
"Omonia\nLuaLua signed a two-year contract for an undisclosed fee with Omonia in July 2010, reuniting with Takis Lemonis for the second time since Olympiakos in 2008.",
"He scored his first goal on his league debut on 18 September 2010 in a 4–0 win against Alki Larnaca, coming on as a substitute for Georgios Efrem.",
"On 18 May 2011, LuaLua won the Cypriot Cup with Omonia after winning 4–3 on penalties against Apollon Limassol.",
"Return to England\nIn September 2011, after his release by Omonia, LuaLua trained with League One club Hartlepool United, where he linked with former Newcastle United assistant-manager Mick Wadsworth.",
"However, he was offered a contract by Blackpool who play a level above in the Championship.",
"After two substitute appearances, Lualua's first start saw him score twice in Blackpool's 5–0 win over Leeds United at Elland Road, Leeds' joint-heaviest home defeat.. On 2 January 2012, he scored his first goal of the new year against Middlesbrough.",
"For the second time in his Blackpool career he was on the score sheet as Blackpool beat Fylde coast neighbours Fleetwood Town 5–1 in the third round of the FA Cup.",
"During a fourth-round FA Cup match against Sheffield Wednesday held on 7 February 2012, LuaLua scored an impressive right-footed goal from just inside the top-left corner of the 18-yard box into the top-right corner of the goal.",
"Karabükspor\nOn 24 May 2012, it was confirmed that LuaLua had turned down a new contract at Blackpool and had signed a two-year deal with Turkish side Kardemir Karabükspor.",
"He is considered one of the best players in first half of Turkish league.",
"Akhisar Belediyespor\nOn 2 February 2015, LuaLua signed a contract with Akhisar Belediyespor.",
"He left the club in the winter 2016.",
"Şanlıurfaspor\nOn 20 January 2016, LuaLua signed a contract with Şanlıurfaspor.",
"He left the club in May 2016.",
"Northern Cyprus\nOn 12 May 2017, LuaLua signed a contract with Turkish Cypriot club Merit Alsancak Yeşilova.",
"He played his first friendly game against Bostancı Bağcıl on 11 August.",
"LuaLua ended the 2017–18 KTFF Süper Lig season with nine goals in 23 appearances.",
"After leaving the club in 2018, LuaLua played for English non-league side Tilbury in July; featuring for the second half of a 1–0 friendly win versus Hashtag United.",
"For the 2018–19 campaign, LuaLua returned to Northern Cyprus to play with Süper Lig teams Doğan Türk Birliği and Gìrne Halk Evì.",
"Peterborough Sports\nOn 13 November 2019, Southern League Premier Division Central side Peterborough Sports announced the signing of LuaLua.",
"He made his debut for the club in January 2020, coming off the bench in a league match against Hitchin Town.",
"International career\n\n2002 and 2004 Africa Cup of Nations\nLuaLua was first named by the DR Congo national team in the preliminary squad for the African Nations Cup finals in Mali in January 2002.",
"He played in the 0–0 draw with Togo, 1–0 loss to Cameroon, 3–1 win over Ivory Coast and the quarter-final match against Senegal, which DR Congo lost 2–0 amid some controversy.",
"LuaLua blamed the referee Domenico Messina for the defeat, \"We had a lot of fouls which the referee didn't give and there was a penalty right in front of him but he just let the match go on, sometimes they [the Senegalese] fell over without being touched, screamed and the referee just gave the foul to them.\"",
"DR Congo's qualifying campaign for the 2004 African Nations Cup in Tunisia began six months after the 2002 tournament ended, with a match against Libya on 8 September, Libya won the match 3–2.",
"LuaLua initially indicated that he might not play in the match, but did so reluctantly after threats were made to his family, which caused him to reconsider his international career.",
"Robson commented, \"He didn't want to go and play in that match.",
"But he said he had to go because his grandmother had been threatened.\"",
"He played in the 2–0 win over Botswana in October 2002, when he scored inside five minutes but was later sent off for dissent.",
"He was suspended for two matches and his next appearance was in the 0–0 draw with Botswana in July 2003, which secured qualification for the finals of the competition.",
"LuaLua initially expressed doubts that he would take part in the finals due to club commitments.",
"He was, however, included in the squad and named as captain in the absence of regular captain, Shabani Nonda, who missed the tournament due to a knee injury.",
"LuaLua said on being named as captain, \"When Shabani plays, it takes the pressure off me but now everyone's now looking to me for leadership and I feel honoured.\"",
"He appeared in the first match of the tournament, a 2–1 defeat to Guinea, but in the next match against the hosts Tunisia, he was sent off, reacting angrily and taking several minutes to leave the pitch.",
"DR Congo went on to lose the match and were eliminated from the tournament.",
"Following his sending off, LuaLua considered giving up international football and criticised the behaviour of the Tunisia players during the match and the organisation of the tournament.",
"He later criticised the national football federation of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the Congolese Association Football Federation, blaming them for the poor state of the national side, but said that he would continue to be available for international selection because \"I can never turn my back on my country.",
"I play for Congo because I am proud to do it\", and apologised to his country for his sending off against Tunisia.",
"2006 Africa Cup of Nations\nLuaLua received a four-match suspension for the sending-off and missed several 2006 World Cup qualifying round matches during the summer of June 2004.",
"He was selected for the World Cup qualifier against South Africa in September, but missed the match due to injury, and was dropped for the next qualifier against Ghana in October.",
"He missed the 1–1 draw with Ghana in March 2005 after a dispute with the DR Congo football association but committed himself to the match against Uganda in June.",
"He scored in a friendly against Guinea played in Paris in August, a match used as preparation for the World Cup qualifying matches the following month.",
"LuaLua played for DR Congo in the 2–1 win over Cape Verde in September but contracted malaria and missed the final World Cup qualifier against South Africa in October.",
"LuaLua was recalled to the DR Congo squad for a friendly against Tunisia played near Paris in November 2005, as part of the countries' preparation for the 2006 African Nations Cup held in Egypt in January and February 2006.",
"He was unable to play, however, after he was one of several players refused a visa by French immigration authorities.",
"He was named as the captain of DR Congo for the tournament in place of Shabani Nonda who was injured for a second successive Nations Cup.",
"He then delayed his departure to be available to his club Portsmouth for a crucial league match, missing a friendly with Senegal.",
"Despite a pay dispute leading to the DR Congo players threatening to boycott the match, which was only resolved shortly before the kickoff, he returned to the side for DR Congo's opening match of the tournament against Togo, assisting in one goal and scoring the other in a 2–0 win.",
"He appeared against Angola and Cameroon as DR Congo qualified for the quarter-finals stage of the tournament, only to be beaten by the hosts Egypt.",
"LuaLua's 18-month-old son died while he was playing in the tournament.",
"Later international career\nIn the 2008 African Nations Cup qualifier against Ethiopia in April 2007, LuaLua scored the second goal in a 2–0 victory; the result extended their lead at the top of their group.",
"He did not travel to Ethiopia for the away fixture in June, which DR Congo lost, as the authorities failed to send LuaLua his travel documents in time.",
"Following the failure of DR Congo to qualify for the tournament in October, the DR Congo sports minister, Pardonne Kaliba, suspended the manager, Henri Depireux, and removed the captaincy from LuaLua.",
"LuaLua returned to the DR Congo squad in the 2010 World Cup qualifier against Egypt in June 2008.",
"After returning to Greece, he complained of severe stomach pain and was rushed to hospital to have his appendix removed, ruling him out of subsequent matches for several weeks, as DR Congo moved to the top of Group 12 in the second round.",
"Despite topping the group at that point, DR Congo were later eliminated at this stage and therefore failed to progress to the third round of qualifying.",
"In February 2012, national manager Claude Le Roy confirmed that he was with LuaLua in the aim of him returning to the national team for their Cup of Nations qualifier against Seychelles.",
"He did not play that game, but in December, LuaLua was named for his fourth Africa Cup of Nations in South Africa in 2013.",
"He started all three matches—all draws—as the team exited from Group C.\n\nPersonal life\nIn September 2003, LuaLua was fined £175 by Newcastle Magistrates Court for watching British television without a licence.",
"In 2005, LuaLua became patron of the Haslar Visitors Group, a charity that works with detainees in an immigration removal centre.",
"In the following year, he set up the LuaLua Foundation, building a hostel, sport and education complex in Kinshasa to provide care and education for orphaned children in DR Congo.",
"He is also actively involved in the Show Racism The Red Card campaign and was involved in the launch of a new video entitled \"A Safe Place\", which features Premiership footballers talking about their experiences with racism.",
"LuaLua is a born-again Christian and his former teammate at Portsmouth, Linvoy Primus, was quoted saying \"We are not scared to say we pray together before games.",
"About 45 minutes before a game we link our arms and just pray that we can glorify God.\"",
"LuaLua wrote the foreword in \"You Can Have Chips\", the autobiography of his former manager Steve Wignall.",
"Career statistics\n.",
"International goals\nScores and results list Congo DR's goal tally first.",
"References\n\nExternal links\n \n Lomana LuaLua at BBC Sport\n \n\n1980 births\nLiving people\nFootballers from Kinshasa\nDemocratic Republic of the Congo footballers\nDemocratic Republic of the Congo international footballers\nDemocratic Republic of the Congo expatriate footballers\nDemocratic Republic of the Congo Christians\nExpatriate footballers in England\nAssociation football forwards\nColchester United F.C.",
"players\nNewcastle United F.C.",
"players\nPortsmouth F.C.",
"players\nOlympiacos F.C.",
"players\nBlackpool F.C.",
"players\nAC Omonia players\nAlsancak Yeşilova footballers\nPremier League players\nEnglish Football League players\nSuper League Greece players\nSüper Lig players\nSouthern Football League players\nExpatriate footballers in Greece\nAl-Arabi SC (Qatar) players\nQatar Stars League players\nExpatriate footballers in Qatar\nCypriot First Division players\nExpatriate footballers in Cyprus\nKardemir Karabükspor footballers\nÇaykur Rizespor footballers\nAkhisarspor footballers\nDoğan Türk Birliği footballers\nPeterborough Sports F.C.",
"players\nExpatriate footballers in Northern Cyprus\nExpatriate footballers in Turkey\n2004 African Cup of Nations players\n2006 Africa Cup of Nations players\n2002 African Cup of Nations players\n2013 Africa Cup of Nations players\n21st-century Democratic Republic of the Congo people\nAssociation football coaches"
] | [
"There is a professional footballer who last played as a forward.",
"He is an attacking coach.",
"At a young age, LuaLua moved to England.",
"He signed for Colchester United after impressing in a college football match.",
"He scored a total of 21 goals in 68 appearances, which led to him being signed byNewcastle United.",
"However, the competition for places meant he was less of a regular in the first team, and after four seasons and 88 appearances, he transferred to Pompey.",
"He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"After leaving Pompey, he moved teams frequently, representing sides in Greece, Qatar, Cyprus and Turkey, as well as a brief return to English football at Blackpool.",
"He scored seven goals in an eleven-year international career, after receiving his first of 31 international caps in 2002.",
"He was a member of the national team at the Africa Cup of Nations.",
"The Haslar Visitors Group is a beneficiary of the LuaLua Foundation, which provides care for orphans in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.",
"His brothers and cousins became football players as well.",
"In 1980, his grandfather's given name was passed to him and his brother, who moved to England as a young boy.",
"He started playing football at the age of 16 and was also involved in gymnastics at Forest Gate Community School.",
"His trademark goal celebration was based on his gymnastics activity, which included seven back flips and a backward somersault.",
"After he was spotted kicking a tennis ball around in the playground, he represented his school at football.",
"He was spotted at the age of 17 by a second division side and went on to play for them.",
"\"Lua was taking on the whole team by the end of the game and it wasn't hard to pick him out among 22 young 17-year-olds.\"",
"He was signed by the club after Harrop invited him for a trial.",
"Two of his cousins and his brother are also professional football players.",
"LuaLua joined the club in 1998.",
"Harrop says that it took a lot of hard work by the staff at Colchester for him to adapt.",
"Micky Cook, the director of youth, had to spend a lot of time with the manager and the next manager talking about the tactical side of the game and what his role was within the team.",
"Within four minutes of his debut, LuaLua scored and appeared as a substitute.",
"He scored a total of 21 goals in two seasons with the club.",
"Despite manager Steve Whitton's denial that LuaLua was for sale, he joinedNewcastle United in September 2000 for a fee of £2.25 million.",
"An earlier offer of £300,000 for LuaLua made by former manager, Ruud Gullit, had been rejected, but the much increased bid offered financial security and assistance towards a new ground and was one that Colchester felt they could not turn down.",
"Mick Wadsworth, an assistant-manager at Newcastle United, brought LuaLua to the attention of Bobby Robson, the manager of the club.",
"After watching LuaLua, Robson decided to negotiate the transfer.",
"He needs to learn how to play with other players.",
"He needs to be nursed and taught.",
"We are buying a very promising player.",
"A five-year contract was signed by LuaLua.",
"He made his first-team debut in a 1–0 home defeat to Charlton Athletic in September 2000 and made 23 league and cup appearances for Newcastle in the 2000–01) season without scoring.",
"He scored twice in the Intertoto Cup at the beginning of 2001, but his first goal in the top flight came in April 2002 in a 3–2 away win against Derby County.",
"He scored two more goals in the last four games of the season.",
"In the first four games of the 2002–03 season, LuaLua scored three goals.",
"Tougher competition for a first-team place meant that LuaLua only made 22 appearances this season.",
"\"I think I deserve a chance now, as do many of the guys on the fringes of the team,\" said LuaLua.",
"Some people might think that those not in the team like sitting on the bench and getting paid good money, but nothing could be further from the truth.",
"I want to play for the first team and show what I can do on a regular basis, not for the money.",
"In November 2003 he indicated that he would consider leaving the club after complaining about his lack of first-team football.",
"How dare he say he wouldn't take advice from a player about how to manage the side?",
"I run this football club.",
"He should keep his mouth shut and do what he is paid to do.",
"He made 88 league and cup appearances for Newcastle, scoring nine goals, starting 21 games, and making 67 appearances as a substitute.",
"He joined Pompey on a three-month loan deal in February 2004, with a view to a permanent deal at the end of the season.",
"In February 2004, LuaLua scored on his debut for Pompey in a 4–3 away defeat to Spurs.",
"He scored in the 89th minute in a 1–1 draw for Pompey against their parent club.",
"The result lifted Pompey out of the bottom three.",
"The change in legislation for the FA standard rules meant that a player on loan could not play against their parent club.",
"He scored four goals in 15 appearances for Pompey, who finished in the middle of the table.",
"When his loan spell ended at the end of the 2003– 2004 season, Harry Redknapp signed LuaLua permanently at a cost of over two million dollars.",
"In the 2004–05 season, LuaLua made 26 league and cup appearances, scoring six goals, including two against local rivals.",
"There were injuries at the beginning and end of the season.",
"He received an extra one-match ban and a £5,000 fine for improper conduct after he was sent off in January 2005, after being charged with abusive behavior and improper conduct by the Football Association.",
"He made 26 appearances in the 2005–06 season, scoring seven goals, but missed several games in the autumn after contracting Malaria on a visit to Africa.",
"He missed several games due to international duty at the 2004 African Cup of Nations and in April 2006 he injured his foot while doing his acrobatic goal celebration.",
"The Football Association warned him about his future conduct after he admitted a charge of improper conduct in relation to comments made about the referee after a 3–1 defeat at Spurs.",
"The new three-year contract that LuaLua signed in July was supposed to keep him at Pompey until 2009.",
"LuaLua missed the beginning of the 2006–07 season due to an ankle injury.",
"He made only eight starts out of 24 appearances and only scored two goals that season, as he struggled to break back into the first-team.",
"He was warned by his manager that he had to start producing next season.",
"He joined Greek club Olympiacos in August of 2007.",
"He will be a great player for Olympiacos.",
"He wants a change, he wants to play a role behind the strikers, and he wants to move abroad.",
"He will be moving to Greece so that he can play in the European club competition.",
"He'll be a top player for them because he's been a top player in the premier league.",
"On August 12th, 2007, LuaLua signed a three-year contract with Olympiacos.",
"He made his league debut in a 0–0 draw.",
"He made his European debut in a 1–1 draw against Lazio.",
"In a 6–2 win over OFI, LuaLua scored his first two goals.",
"On 16 January 2008, LuaLua opened the scoring with a 30-yard volley in the fifth round of the Greek Cup, which saw Olympiacos progress to the quarter-finals.",
"He missed out on the knockout stages due to an ankle injury and a shoulder injury, which he received in a 1–1 draw against Asteras Tripolis.",
"He missed most of the season, but came back in April 2008 to help Olympiacos win their fourth Super League Greece title, beating Iraklis 3–1.",
"LuaLua was surplus to requirements before the Greek Cup Final on 17 May.",
"He scored six goals in 30 appearances for Olympiacos.",
"LuaLua joined Al-Arabi on a one-year contract in July 2008.",
"On 30 October, Al-Arabi won the Sheikh Jassim Cup, beating Al-Rayyan Club 3–0 in the final with LuaLua scoring one goal in the seventh minute.",
"In the 21st week of the 2008–09 season, LuaLua scored his first league goal for the club in a 4–2 defeat to Al-Khor.",
"His only other goal for that season was a 1–0 win over Al-Kharitiyath.",
"In December 2009, LuaLua left Al-Arabi and returned to Olympiacos on a six-month contract with an option for the club to extend it for two years.",
"After returning to Olympiakos, LuaLua scored his first two goals.",
"In July 2010 Omonia signed a two-year contract for an undisclosed fee with Takis Lemonis.",
"He scored his first goal on his league debut as a substitute in a 4–0 win against Alki Larnaca.",
"The Cypriot Cup was won by Omonia on penalties against Apollon Limassol.",
"In September of 2011, after his release by Omonia, LuaLua trained with a League One club.",
"He was offered a contract by a team in the Championship.",
"In his first start, he scored twice in a 5–0 win over Leeds United at Elland Road, theaviest home defeat in the club's history.",
"In the third round of the FA Cup, he scored for the second time in his career as he helped his side to a 5–1 win over Fleetwood Town.",
"During a fourth-round FA Cup match against Sheffield Wednesday held on 7 February 2012, LuaLua scored an impressive right-footed goal from just inside the top left corner of the 18-yard box into the top-right corner of the goal.",
"On May 24, 2012 it was confirmed that LuaLua had signed a two-year deal with Kardemir Karabkspor after turning down a new contract with Blackpool.",
"He is one of the best players in the first half of the Turkish league.",
"On February 2, 2015, LuaLua signed a contract with Akhisar Belediyespor.",
"He left the club in the winter of 2016",
"On January 20, 2016 LuaLua signed a contract with anlurfaspor.",
"He left the club in May of 2016",
"LuaLua signed a contract with Merit Alsancak Yeilova.",
"He played his first game against Bostanc Bacl.",
"The KTFF Sper Lig season ended with nine goals by LuaLua.",
"In July of this year, after leaving the club, LuaLua played for Tilbury in a 1–0 friendly win over Hashtag United.",
"Sper Lig teams Doan Trk Birlii and Grne Halk Ev played with LuaLua.",
"The signing of LuaLua was announced on 13 November.",
"He made his debut for the club in January 2020, coming off the bench in a league match.",
"There was a preliminary squad for the 2002 and 2004 Africa Cup of Nations named by the DR Congo national team in January 2002.",
"He played in the 0–0 draw with Togo, 1–0 loss to Cameroon, 3–1 win overIvory Coast, and the 2–0 loss to Senegal in the quarter-finals.",
"\"We had a lot of fouls which the referee didn't give and there was a penalty right in front of him but he just let the match go on, sometimes they fell over without being touched, screamed LuaLua.\"",
"The campaign for the African Nations Cup in Tunisia began six months after the 2002 tournament ended, with a match against Libya on 8 September.",
"After threats were made to his family, LuaLua reconsidered his international career and played in the match.",
"He didn't want to play in that match.",
"He said he had to leave because his grandmother was in danger.",
"He was sent off for dissent after scoring in the 2–0 win over Botswana in October 2002.",
"His next appearance was in the 0–0 draw with Botswana in July 2003 which secured qualification for the finals of the competition, after he was suspended for two matches.",
"He had doubts about taking part in the finals due to his club commitments.",
"He was named captain in the absence of Shabani Nonda, who missed the tournament due to a knee injury.",
"When Shabani plays, it takes the pressure off me but now everyone is looking to me for leadership and I feel honoured.",
"He was sent off in the second match of the tournament, against Tunisia, after taking several minutes to leave the pitch.",
"They lost the match and were eliminated from the tournament.",
"Following his sending off, LuaLua considered giving up international football and criticized the behavior of the Tunisia players during the match and the organisation of the tournament.",
"He said that he would continue to be available for international selection because he could never turn his back on his country.",
"He apologized to his country for his sending off against Tunisia.",
"During the summer of 2004, LuaLua missed several World Cup qualification matches due to his suspension for the 2006 Africa Cup of Nations.",
"He missed the South Africa match due to an injury and was dropped from the team for the next match.",
"He committed himself to the match against Uganda in June despite missing the 1–1 draw with Ghana in March 2005.",
"He scored in a match in Paris in August that was used to prepare for the World Cup matches the following month.",
"In the 2–1 win over Cape Verde in September, LuaLua contracted Malaria and missed the final World Cup qualification against South Africa.",
"As part of the preparation for the 2006 African Nations Cup held in Egypt in January and February 2006, LuaLua was recalled to the DR Congo squad for a friendly against Tunisia played near Paris in November 2005.",
"He was unable to play because he was refused a visa by French immigration authorities.",
"Shabani Nonda, who was injured for a second successive Nations Cup, was replaced by him as the captain.",
"His departure was delayed so that he could be available for the crucial league match.",
"Despite a pay dispute leading to the DR Congo players threatening to boycott the match, which was only resolved shortly before the kick off, he returned to the side for the opening match of the tournament, assisting in one goal and scoring the other in a 2–0 win.",
"He was part of the team that lost to Egypt in the quarter-finals of the tournament.",
"LuaLua's son died while playing in a tournament.",
"In the 2008 African Nations Cup qualifier against Ethiopia in April 2007, LuaLua scored the second goal in a 2–0 victory; the result extended their lead at the top of their group.",
"He did not travel to Ethiopia for the away fixture in June because the authorities failed to send his travel documents in time.",
"The manager, Henri Depireux, was suspended by the DR Congo sports minister after the team failed to qualify for the tournament.",
"In June of 2008, LuaLua returned to the DR Congo squad.",
"After returning to Greece, he complained of severe stomach pain and was rushed to hospital to have his appendix removed, ruling him out of the rest of the group for several weeks.",
"DR Congo failed to progress to the third round of qualification despite topping the group at that point.",
"Claude Le Roy confirmed in February 2012 that he was with LuaLua in the aim of him returning to the national team.",
"In December, he was named for his fourth Africa Cup of Nations in South Africa.",
"In September 2003 he was fined for watching British television without a licence.",
"The Haslar Visitors Group is a charity that works with people in an immigration removal centre.",
"The LuaLua Foundation was set up in the following year to provide care and education for orphans in DR Congo.",
"He was involved in the launch of a new video called \"A Safe Place\", which features players talking about their experiences with racism, as well as being involved in the Show Racism The Red Card campaign.",
"Linvoy Primus, a former teammate of LuaLua's at Pompey, was quoted as saying that they pray together before games.",
"We link our arms about 45 minutes before the game.",
"\"You Can Have Chips\" is the autobiography of his former manager.",
"There are career statistics.",
"The goal tally of the Democratic Republic of the Congo is listed first.",
"Footballers from the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic",
"The players of United F.C.",
"The players are from Pompey F.C.",
"The players are from Olympiacos F.C.",
"The players are from Blackpool.",
"Football players who play for AC Omonia are English Football League, Super League Greece, Sper Lig, and Southern Football League.",
"African Cup of Nations players in Turkey 2004, 2006 and 2002 and Africa Cup of Nations players in 2013)."
] | <mask> (; born 28 December 1980) is a Congolese professional footballer who last played as a striker. He is currently the attacking coach for Spalding United. <mask> was born in Kinshasa, but moved to England at a young age. After impressing in a college football match, he signed for Colchester United. There he scored a total of 21 goals in 68 appearances which prompted Newcastle United to sign him. However, the competition for places meant he was less of a regular in the first team, and after four seasons and 88 appearances, he transferred to Portsmouth, the club that had previously loaned him for three months while at Newcastle. He remained there for three seasons, but his spell was marred by disciplinary problems and malaria.After leaving Portsmouth, he moved teams frequently, representing sides in Greece, Qatar, Cyprus and Turkey, in addition to a brief return to English football at Blackpool. <mask> received his first of 31 international caps in 2002, and scored seven goals in an eleven-year international career. He represented his national team at four Africa Cup of Nations tournaments. <mask> is also known for setting up the LuaLua Foundation, which provides care for orphans in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and for being a patron for the Haslar Visitors Group. His brother Kazenga, and cousins Trésor Kandol and Yannick Bolasie, all became footballers as well. Early life
<mask> was born Trésor Lua Lua <mask> – Lua Lua, his grandfather's given name, was passed to him and his brother Kazenga – in Kinshasa, Zaire (now Democratic Republic of the Congo), in 1980, but moved to England as a young boy in 1989. His family settled in Forest Gate in London; there, he attended Forest Gate Community School and started to play football at the age of 16, while also being involved in gymnastics.His activity in gymnastics was the base of his trademark goal celebration, seven back flips and a backward somersault. <mask> represented his school at football after he was spotted kicking a tennis ball around in the playground. He was playing for Leyton Sixth Form College, where he studied performing arts, when he was spotted at the age of 17 by second division side, Colchester United. Geoff Harrop, a scout for Colchester College's football team, was impressed by <mask>'s performance, "He was taking on the whole team by the end of the game and it wasn't hard to pick him out among 22 young 17-year-olds." Harrop invited the striker for a trial at Colchester United and he was signed by the club. His brother, Kazenga <mask>, is also a professional footballer, and two of his cousins also play professionally; Yannick Bolasie, and Trésor Kandol. Club career
Colchester United
<mask> joined Colchester United in September 1998.Initially, he struggled to adapt and he preferred going to nightclubs over playing for Colchester, Harrop says, "It took a lot of hard work by the staff at Colchester. Micky Cook, the director of youth, had to spend endless hours with him and [manager] Steve Wignall and then [the next manager] Steve Whitton had to spend a lot of time with him talking him through the tactical side of the game and what his role was within the team". <mask> scored within four minutes of his debut where he appeared as a substitute in a 3–1 defeat to Chesterfield. In two seasons, he made 68 league and cup appearances for Colchester, 44 starts and 24 substitute appearances, scoring a total of 21 goals. His performances attracted the attention of several Premiership clubs and despite manager Steve Whitton's denial that LuaLua was for sale, LuaLua joined Newcastle United in September 2000 for a fee of £2.25 million. An earlier offer by Newcastle of £300,000 for LuaLua made by former manager, Ruud Gullit, had been rejected, but the much increased bid offered financial security and assistance towards a new ground and was one that Colchester felt they could not turn down. Newcastle United
LuaLua had been brought to the attention of Newcastle manager, Bobby Robson, by Mick Wadsworth, assistant-manager at Newcastle United, who was a former manager of Colchester.Robson watched <mask> before deciding to negotiate the transfer, and said, "I see [<mask>] as a special talent. He has to learn how to play with the other players but he's a special new talent. He has to be nursed and cherished and taught. But we are buying long-term a very promising talent, a very promising player." <mask> signed a five-year contract with the club. He made his first-team debut in a 1–0 home defeat to Charlton Athletic in September 2000 and made 23 league and cup appearances for Newcastle in the 2000–01 season without scoring. He scored twice in Newcastle's Intertoto Cup campaign at the beginning of the 2001–02 season but his first Premiership goal did not come until April 2002, when he scored a last-minute winner in a 3–2 away win against Derby County.He scored a further two goals in the remaining four games of the season. <mask>'s goalscoring form continued to the beginning of the 2002–03 season when he scored three goals in his first four games. Tougher competition for a first-team place meant that <mask> made only 22 appearances in this season. In January 2003, <mask> urged Robson to rotate the squad, saying, "I think I deserve a chance now, as do many of the lads on the fringes of the team. Although some people might have the idea that those of us not in the team like sitting on the bench and getting paid good money, nothing could be further from the truth. I'm not in this for the money, I want to play for the first team and show what I can do on a regular basis." <mask> also spent much of the beginning of the 2003–04 season on the bench and in November 2003, complained about his lack of first-team football and indicated that he would consider leaving Newcastle.In the Newcastle Chronicle, Robson responded, saying he would not take advice from a player about how to manage the side: "How dare he say this? I run this football club... <mask> has been a pretty poor professional about all this. What he should do is keep his mouth shut and get out there and do what he is paid for." In the end, he made 88 league and cup appearances for Newcastle, scoring nine goals, having started 21 games and made 67 appearances as a substitute. Portsmouth
In February 2004, after returning from the 2004 African Cup of Nations, he joined Portsmouth on a three-month loan deal with a view to a permanent deal at the end of the season. <mask> scored on his debut for Portsmouth in a 4–3 away defeat to Tottenham Hotspur in February 2004. During this loan spell he scored in the 89th minute in a 1–1 draw for Portsmouth against parent club Newcastle.The result lifted Portsmouth out of the bottom three of the Premiership. This also lead to a change in legislation for the FA introducing standard rules meaning a player on loan could not play against their parent club. He scored four goals in 15 appearances for Portsmouth as they finished in mid-table in their debut season in the Premiership. Manager Harry Redknapp was sufficiently impressed with <mask>'s performances that when his loan spell ended at the end of the 2003–04 season, he signed <mask> permanently at a cost of £1.75 million. <mask> made 26 league and cup appearances, scoring six goals, including two against local rivals Southampton, in the 2004–05 season. The season was marred by a groin injury at the beginning and a hamstring injury in May 2005. Disciplinary problems led to charges by the Football Association of abusive behaviour in December 2004 and improper conduct after he was sent off against Blackburn Rovers in January 2005, for which he received an extra one-match ban and a fine of £5,000 in addition to a three-match ban for the dismissal.He made 26 appearances in the 2005–06 season, scoring seven goals, but missed several games in the autumn after contracting malaria on a visit to Africa to play for DR Congo. He also missed several games due to international duty at the 2004 African Cup of Nations and missed games in April 2006 after damaging his foot while doing his acrobatic goal celebration during a game against Arsenal. His disciplinary problems continued when he was warned by the Football Association over his future conduct; this came after he admitted a charge of improper conduct in relation to comments made about referee Uriah Rennie after a 3–1 defeat at Tottenham Hotspur in December. <mask> signed a new three-year contract in July 2006; it was set to keep him at Portsmouth until 2009. An ankle injury suffered in a pre-season friendly led to <mask> missing the beginning of the 2006–07 season. He struggled to break back into the first-team, making only eight starts out of 24 appearances, and scored only two goals in that season. Manager Harry Redknapp warned him that he needed to "...start performing" and that he had to "...start producing next season".However, he joined Greek club Olympiacos in August 2007 and Redknapp admitted that, "Lua wants to move on... I've no doubt he'll go away and be a great player for Olympiacos. He wants a change, he wants to play in a role behind the strikers and he wants to move abroad. He will get to play in the Champions League by moving to Greece. He has been a top Premier League player and he'll be a top player for them." Olympiacos
On 12 August 2007, <mask> signed a three-year contract with Olympiacos for an estimated fee of £2.8 million (€4.1 million). He made his league debut on 2 September, in a 0–0 draw against Panathinaikos.His Champions League debut came on 18 September in a 1–1 draw against Lazio. <mask> scored his first two goals on 23 September in a 6–2 win over OFI. On 16 January 2008, <mask> opened the scoring with a 30-yard volley in the Greek Cup fifth round, which saw Olympiacos progress to the quarter-finals in a 4–0 win against Panathinaikos. <mask> missed both the knockout stages against Chelsea, having suffered from ankle injuries and a dislocated shoulder, the latter of which he received in a 1–1 draw against Asteras Tripolis. As a result, he missed most of the season, but returned on 20 April 2008 to help Olympiacos win their fourth Super League Greece title, beating Iraklis 3–1. Before the 2008 Greek Cup Final on 17 May, <mask> fell out of favour and was deemed surplus to requirements. In total, he made 30 appearances for Olympiacos, scoring six goals.Al-Arabi
Following his injury spell at Olympiacos, <mask> joined Qatari based club Al-Arabi on a one-year contract in July 2008. On 30 October, Al-Arabi won the Sheikh Jassim Cup, beating Al-Rayyan Club 3–0 in the final with <mask> scoring one goal in the seventh minute. In the 21st week of the 2008–09 season, on 20 February 2009, <mask> scored his first league goal for the club in a 4–2 defeat to Al-Khor. His only other goal for that season came in a 1–0 win over Al-Kharitiyath on 16 April. Return to Olympiacos
During December 2009, <mask> left Al-Arabi by mutual consent and rejoined Olympiakos on a six-month contract with an option for the club to extend the contract for two years. <mask> signed a two-year contract for an undisclosed fee with Omonia in July 2010, reuniting with Takis Lemonis for the second time since Olympiakos in 2008.He scored his first goal on his league debut on 18 September 2010 in a 4–0 win against Alki Larnaca, coming on as a substitute for Georgios Efrem. On 18 May 2011, <mask> won the Cypriot Cup with Omonia after winning 4–3 on penalties against Apollon Limassol. Return to England
In September 2011, after his release by Omonia, <mask> trained with League One club Hartlepool United, where he linked with former Newcastle United assistant-manager Mick Wadsworth. However, he was offered a contract by Blackpool who play a level above in the Championship. After two substitute appearances, Lualua's first start saw him score twice in Blackpool's 5–0 win over Leeds United at Elland Road, Leeds' joint-heaviest home defeat.. On 2 January 2012, he scored his first goal of the new year against Middlesbrough. For the second time in his Blackpool career he was on the score sheet as Blackpool beat Fylde coast neighbours Fleetwood Town 5–1 in the third round of the FA Cup. During a fourth-round FA Cup match against Sheffield Wednesday held on 7 February 2012, <mask> scored an impressive right-footed goal from just inside the top-left corner of the 18-yard box into the top-right corner of the goal.Karabükspor
On 24 May 2012, it was confirmed that <mask> had turned down a new contract at Blackpool and had signed a two-year deal with Turkish side Kardemir Karabükspor. He is considered one of the best players in first half of Turkish league. Akhisar Belediyespor
On 2 February 2015, <mask> signed a contract with Akhisar Belediyespor. He left the club in the winter 2016. Şanlıurfaspor
On 20 January 2016, <mask> signed a contract with Şanlıurfaspor. He left the club in May 2016. Northern Cyprus
On 12 May 2017, <mask> signed a contract with Turkish Cypriot club Merit Alsancak Yeşilova.He played his first friendly game against Bostancı Bağcıl on 11 August. <mask> ended the 2017–18 KTFF Süper Lig season with nine goals in 23 appearances. After leaving the club in 2018, <mask> played for English non-league side Tilbury in July; featuring for the second half of a 1–0 friendly win versus Hashtag United. For the 2018–19 campaign, <mask> returned to Northern Cyprus to play with Süper Lig teams Doğan Türk Birliği and Gìrne Halk Evì. Peterborough Sports
On 13 November 2019, Southern League Premier Division Central side Peterborough Sports announced the signing of <mask>. He made his debut for the club in January 2020, coming off the bench in a league match against Hitchin Town. International career
2002 and 2004 Africa Cup of Nations
<mask> was first named by the DR Congo national team in the preliminary squad for the African Nations Cup finals in Mali in January 2002.He played in the 0–0 draw with Togo, 1–0 loss to Cameroon, 3–1 win over Ivory Coast and the quarter-final match against Senegal, which DR Congo lost 2–0 amid some controversy. <mask> blamed the referee Domenico Messina for the defeat, "We had a lot of fouls which the referee didn't give and there was a penalty right in front of him but he just let the match go on, sometimes they [the Senegalese] fell over without being touched, screamed and the referee just gave the foul to them." DR Congo's qualifying campaign for the 2004 African Nations Cup in Tunisia began six months after the 2002 tournament ended, with a match against Libya on 8 September, Libya won the match 3–2. <mask> initially indicated that he might not play in the match, but did so reluctantly after threats were made to his family, which caused him to reconsider his international career. Robson commented, "He didn't want to go and play in that match. But he said he had to go because his grandmother had been threatened." He played in the 2–0 win over Botswana in October 2002, when he scored inside five minutes but was later sent off for dissent.He was suspended for two matches and his next appearance was in the 0–0 draw with Botswana in July 2003, which secured qualification for the finals of the competition. <mask> initially expressed doubts that he would take part in the finals due to club commitments. He was, however, included in the squad and named as captain in the absence of regular captain, Shabani Nonda, who missed the tournament due to a knee injury. <mask> said on being named as captain, "When Shabani plays, it takes the pressure off me but now everyone's now looking to me for leadership and I feel honoured." He appeared in the first match of the tournament, a 2–1 defeat to Guinea, but in the next match against the hosts Tunisia, he was sent off, reacting angrily and taking several minutes to leave the pitch. DR Congo went on to lose the match and were eliminated from the tournament. Following his sending off, <mask> considered giving up international football and criticised the behaviour of the Tunisia players during the match and the organisation of the tournament.He later criticised the national football federation of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the Congolese Association Football Federation, blaming them for the poor state of the national side, but said that he would continue to be available for international selection because "I can never turn my back on my country. I play for Congo because I am proud to do it", and apologised to his country for his sending off against Tunisia. 2006 Africa Cup of Nations
<mask> received a four-match suspension for the sending-off and missed several 2006 World Cup qualifying round matches during the summer of June 2004. He was selected for the World Cup qualifier against South Africa in September, but missed the match due to injury, and was dropped for the next qualifier against Ghana in October. He missed the 1–1 draw with Ghana in March 2005 after a dispute with the DR Congo football association but committed himself to the match against Uganda in June. He scored in a friendly against Guinea played in Paris in August, a match used as preparation for the World Cup qualifying matches the following month. <mask> played for DR Congo in the 2–1 win over Cape Verde in September but contracted malaria and missed the final World Cup qualifier against South Africa in October.<mask> was recalled to the DR Congo squad for a friendly against Tunisia played near Paris in November 2005, as part of the countries' preparation for the 2006 African Nations Cup held in Egypt in January and February 2006. He was unable to play, however, after he was one of several players refused a visa by French immigration authorities. He was named as the captain of DR Congo for the tournament in place of Shabani Nonda who was injured for a second successive Nations Cup. He then delayed his departure to be available to his club Portsmouth for a crucial league match, missing a friendly with Senegal. Despite a pay dispute leading to the DR Congo players threatening to boycott the match, which was only resolved shortly before the kickoff, he returned to the side for DR Congo's opening match of the tournament against Togo, assisting in one goal and scoring the other in a 2–0 win. He appeared against Angola and Cameroon as DR Congo qualified for the quarter-finals stage of the tournament, only to be beaten by the hosts Egypt. <mask>'s 18-month-old son died while he was playing in the tournament.Later international career
In the 2008 African Nations Cup qualifier against Ethiopia in April 2007, LuaLua scored the second goal in a 2–0 victory; the result extended their lead at the top of their group. He did not travel to Ethiopia for the away fixture in June, which DR Congo lost, as the authorities failed to send LuaLua his travel documents in time. Following the failure of DR Congo to qualify for the tournament in October, the DR Congo sports minister, Pardonne Kaliba, suspended the manager, Henri Depireux, and removed the captaincy from <mask>. <mask> returned to the DR Congo squad in the 2010 World Cup qualifier against Egypt in June 2008. After returning to Greece, he complained of severe stomach pain and was rushed to hospital to have his appendix removed, ruling him out of subsequent matches for several weeks, as DR Congo moved to the top of Group 12 in the second round. Despite topping the group at that point, DR Congo were later eliminated at this stage and therefore failed to progress to the third round of qualifying. In February 2012, national manager Claude Le Roy confirmed that he was with <mask> in the aim of him returning to the national team for their Cup of Nations qualifier against Seychelles.He did not play that game, but in December, <mask> was named for his fourth Africa Cup of Nations in South Africa in 2013. He started all three matches—all draws—as the team exited from Group C.
Personal life
In September 2003, <mask> was fined £175 by Newcastle Magistrates Court for watching British television without a licence. In 2005, <mask> became patron of the Haslar Visitors Group, a charity that works with detainees in an immigration removal centre. In the following year, he set up the LuaLua Foundation, building a hostel, sport and education complex in Kinshasa to provide care and education for orphaned children in DR Congo. He is also actively involved in the Show Racism The Red Card campaign and was involved in the launch of a new video entitled "A Safe Place", which features Premiership footballers talking about their experiences with racism. <mask> is a born-again Christian and his former teammate at Portsmouth, Linvoy Primus, was quoted saying "We are not scared to say we pray together before games. About 45 minutes before a game we link our arms and just pray that we can glorify God."<mask> wrote the foreword in "You Can Have Chips", the autobiography of his former manager Steve Wignall. Career statistics
. International goals
Scores and results list Congo DR's goal tally first. References
External links
<mask> <mask> at BBC Sport
1980 births
Living people
Footballers from Kinshasa
Democratic Republic of the Congo footballers
Democratic Republic of the Congo international footballers
Democratic Republic of the Congo expatriate footballers
Democratic Republic of the Congo Christians
Expatriate footballers in England
Association football forwards
Colchester United F.C. players
Newcastle United F.C. players
Portsmouth F.C. players
Olympiacos F.C.players
Blackpool F.C. players
AC Omonia players
Alsancak Yeşilova footballers
Premier League players
English Football League players
Super League Greece players
Süper Lig players
Southern Football League players
Expatriate footballers in Greece
Al-Arabi SC (Qatar) players
Qatar Stars League players
Expatriate footballers in Qatar
Cypriot First Division players
Expatriate footballers in Cyprus
Kardemir Karabükspor footballers
Çaykur Rizespor footballers
Akhisarspor footballers
Doğan Türk Birliği footballers
Peterborough Sports F.C. players
Expatriate footballers in Northern Cyprus
Expatriate footballers in Turkey
2004 African Cup of Nations players
2006 Africa Cup of Nations players
2002 African Cup of Nations players
2013 Africa Cup of Nations players
21st-century Democratic Republic of the Congo people
Association football coaches | [
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] | There is a professional footballer who last played as a forward. He is an attacking coach. At a young age, LuaLua moved to England. He signed for Colchester United after impressing in a college football match. He scored a total of 21 goals in 68 appearances, which led to him being signed byNewcastle United. However, the competition for places meant he was less of a regular in the first team, and after four seasons and 88 appearances, he transferred to Pompey. He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217After leaving Pompey, he moved teams frequently, representing sides in Greece, Qatar, Cyprus and Turkey, as well as a brief return to English football at Blackpool. He scored seven goals in an eleven-year international career, after receiving his first of 31 international caps in 2002. He was a member of the national team at the Africa Cup of Nations. The Haslar Visitors Group is a beneficiary of the LuaLua Foundation, which provides care for orphans in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. His brothers and cousins became football players as well. In 1980, his grandfather's given name was passed to him and his brother, who moved to England as a young boy. He started playing football at the age of 16 and was also involved in gymnastics at Forest Gate Community School.His trademark goal celebration was based on his gymnastics activity, which included seven back flips and a backward somersault. After he was spotted kicking a tennis ball around in the playground, he represented his school at football. He was spotted at the age of 17 by a second division side and went on to play for them. "Lua was taking on the whole team by the end of the game and it wasn't hard to pick him out among 22 young 17-year-olds." He was signed by the club after Harrop invited him for a trial. Two of his cousins and his brother are also professional football players. <mask> joined the club in 1998.Harrop says that it took a lot of hard work by the staff at Colchester for him to adapt. Micky Cook, the director of youth, had to spend a lot of time with the manager and the next manager talking about the tactical side of the game and what his role was within the team. Within four minutes of his debut, <mask> scored and appeared as a substitute. He scored a total of 21 goals in two seasons with the club. Despite manager Steve Whitton's denial that <mask> was for sale, he joinedNewcastle United in September 2000 for a fee of £2.25 million. An earlier offer of £300,000 for LuaLua made by former manager, Ruud Gullit, had been rejected, but the much increased bid offered financial security and assistance towards a new ground and was one that Colchester felt they could not turn down. Mick Wadsworth, an assistant-manager at Newcastle United, brought <mask> to the attention of Bobby Robson, the manager of the club.After watching LuaLua, Robson decided to negotiate the transfer. He needs to learn how to play with other players. He needs to be nursed and taught. We are buying a very promising player. A five-year contract was signed by LuaLua. He made his first-team debut in a 1–0 home defeat to Charlton Athletic in September 2000 and made 23 league and cup appearances for Newcastle in the 2000–01) season without scoring. He scored twice in the Intertoto Cup at the beginning of 2001, but his first goal in the top flight came in April 2002 in a 3–2 away win against Derby County.He scored two more goals in the last four games of the season. In the first four games of the 2002–03 season, <mask> scored three goals. Tougher competition for a first-team place meant that <mask> only made 22 appearances this season. "I think I deserve a chance now, as do many of the guys on the fringes of the team," said <mask>. Some people might think that those not in the team like sitting on the bench and getting paid good money, but nothing could be further from the truth. I want to play for the first team and show what I can do on a regular basis, not for the money. In November 2003 he indicated that he would consider leaving the club after complaining about his lack of first-team football.How dare he say he wouldn't take advice from a player about how to manage the side? I run this football club. He should keep his mouth shut and do what he is paid to do. He made 88 league and cup appearances for Newcastle, scoring nine goals, starting 21 games, and making 67 appearances as a substitute. He joined Pompey on a three-month loan deal in February 2004, with a view to a permanent deal at the end of the season. In February 2004, <mask> scored on his debut for Pompey in a 4–3 away defeat to Spurs. He scored in the 89th minute in a 1–1 draw for Pompey against their parent club.The result lifted Pompey out of the bottom three. The change in legislation for the FA standard rules meant that a player on loan could not play against their parent club. He scored four goals in 15 appearances for Pompey, who finished in the middle of the table. When his loan spell ended at the end of the 2003– 2004 season, Harry Redknapp signed LuaLua permanently at a cost of over two million dollars. In the 2004–05 season, <mask> made 26 league and cup appearances, scoring six goals, including two against local rivals. There were injuries at the beginning and end of the season. He received an extra one-match ban and a £5,000 fine for improper conduct after he was sent off in January 2005, after being charged with abusive behavior and improper conduct by the Football Association.He made 26 appearances in the 2005–06 season, scoring seven goals, but missed several games in the autumn after contracting Malaria on a visit to Africa. He missed several games due to international duty at the 2004 African Cup of Nations and in April 2006 he injured his foot while doing his acrobatic goal celebration. The Football Association warned him about his future conduct after he admitted a charge of improper conduct in relation to comments made about the referee after a 3–1 defeat at Spurs. The new three-year contract that <mask> signed in July was supposed to keep him at Pompey until 2009. <mask> missed the beginning of the 2006–07 season due to an ankle injury. He made only eight starts out of 24 appearances and only scored two goals that season, as he struggled to break back into the first-team. He was warned by his manager that he had to start producing next season.He joined Greek club Olympiacos in August of 2007. He will be a great player for Olympiacos. He wants a change, he wants to play a role behind the strikers, and he wants to move abroad. He will be moving to Greece so that he can play in the European club competition. He'll be a top player for them because he's been a top player in the premier league. On August 12th, 2007, <mask> signed a three-year contract with Olympiacos. He made his league debut in a 0–0 draw.He made his European debut in a 1–1 draw against Lazio. In a 6–2 win over OFI, <mask> scored his first two goals. On 16 January 2008, <mask> opened the scoring with a 30-yard volley in the fifth round of the Greek Cup, which saw Olympiacos progress to the quarter-finals. He missed out on the knockout stages due to an ankle injury and a shoulder injury, which he received in a 1–1 draw against Asteras Tripolis. He missed most of the season, but came back in April 2008 to help Olympiacos win their fourth Super League Greece title, beating Iraklis 3–1. <mask> was surplus to requirements before the Greek Cup Final on 17 May. He scored six goals in 30 appearances for Olympiacos.<mask> joined Al-Arabi on a one-year contract in July 2008. On 30 October, Al-Arabi won the Sheikh Jassim Cup, beating Al-Rayyan Club 3–0 in the final with <mask> scoring one goal in the seventh minute. In the 21st week of the 2008–09 season, <mask> scored his first league goal for the club in a 4–2 defeat to Al-Khor. His only other goal for that season was a 1–0 win over Al-Kharitiyath. In December 2009, <mask> left Al-Arabi and returned to Olympiacos on a six-month contract with an option for the club to extend it for two years. After returning to Olympiakos, <mask> scored his first two goals. In July 2010 Omonia signed a two-year contract for an undisclosed fee with Takis Lemonis.He scored his first goal on his league debut as a substitute in a 4–0 win against Alki Larnaca. The Cypriot Cup was won by Omonia on penalties against Apollon Limassol. In September of 2011, after his release by Omonia, <mask> trained with a League One club. He was offered a contract by a team in the Championship. In his first start, he scored twice in a 5–0 win over Leeds United at Elland Road, theaviest home defeat in the club's history. In the third round of the FA Cup, he scored for the second time in his career as he helped his side to a 5–1 win over Fleetwood Town. During a fourth-round FA Cup match against Sheffield Wednesday held on 7 February 2012, <mask> scored an impressive right-footed goal from just inside the top left corner of the 18-yard box into the top-right corner of the goal.On May 24, 2012 it was confirmed that <mask> had signed a two-year deal with Kardemir Karabkspor after turning down a new contract with Blackpool. He is one of the best players in the first half of the Turkish league. On February 2, 2015, <mask> signed a contract with Akhisar Belediyespor. He left the club in the winter of 2016 On January 20, 2016 <mask> signed a contract with anlurfaspor. He left the club in May of 2016 <mask> signed a contract with Merit Alsancak Yeilova.He played his first game against Bostanc Bacl. The KTFF Sper Lig season ended with nine goals by LuaLua. In July of this year, after leaving the club, LuaLua played for Tilbury in a 1–0 friendly win over Hashtag United. Sper Lig teams Doan Trk Birlii and Grne Halk Ev played with LuaLua. The signing of <mask> was announced on 13 November. He made his debut for the club in January 2020, coming off the bench in a league match. There was a preliminary squad for the 2002 and 2004 Africa Cup of Nations named by the DR Congo national team in January 2002.He played in the 0–0 draw with Togo, 1–0 loss to Cameroon, 3–1 win overIvory Coast, and the 2–0 loss to Senegal in the quarter-finals. "We had a lot of fouls which the referee didn't give and there was a penalty right in front of him but he just let the match go on, sometimes they fell over without being touched, screamed <mask>." The campaign for the African Nations Cup in Tunisia began six months after the 2002 tournament ended, with a match against Libya on 8 September. After threats were made to his family, <mask> reconsidered his international career and played in the match. He didn't want to play in that match. He said he had to leave because his grandmother was in danger. He was sent off for dissent after scoring in the 2–0 win over Botswana in October 2002.His next appearance was in the 0–0 draw with Botswana in July 2003 which secured qualification for the finals of the competition, after he was suspended for two matches. He had doubts about taking part in the finals due to his club commitments. He was named captain in the absence of Shabani Nonda, who missed the tournament due to a knee injury. When Shabani plays, it takes the pressure off me but now everyone is looking to me for leadership and I feel honoured. He was sent off in the second match of the tournament, against Tunisia, after taking several minutes to leave the pitch. They lost the match and were eliminated from the tournament. Following his sending off, <mask> considered giving up international football and criticized the behavior of the Tunisia players during the match and the organisation of the tournament.He said that he would continue to be available for international selection because he could never turn his back on his country. He apologized to his country for his sending off against Tunisia. During the summer of 2004, <mask> missed several World Cup qualification matches due to his suspension for the 2006 Africa Cup of Nations. He missed the South Africa match due to an injury and was dropped from the team for the next match. He committed himself to the match against Uganda in June despite missing the 1–1 draw with Ghana in March 2005. He scored in a match in Paris in August that was used to prepare for the World Cup matches the following month. In the 2–1 win over Cape Verde in September, <mask> contracted Malaria and missed the final World Cup qualification against South Africa.As part of the preparation for the 2006 African Nations Cup held in Egypt in January and February 2006, <mask> was recalled to the DR Congo squad for a friendly against Tunisia played near Paris in November 2005. He was unable to play because he was refused a visa by French immigration authorities. Shabani Nonda, who was injured for a second successive Nations Cup, was replaced by him as the captain. His departure was delayed so that he could be available for the crucial league match. Despite a pay dispute leading to the DR Congo players threatening to boycott the match, which was only resolved shortly before the kick off, he returned to the side for the opening match of the tournament, assisting in one goal and scoring the other in a 2–0 win. He was part of the team that lost to Egypt in the quarter-finals of the tournament. <mask>'s son died while playing in a tournament.In the 2008 African Nations Cup qualifier against Ethiopia in April 2007, <mask> scored the second goal in a 2–0 victory; the result extended their lead at the top of their group. He did not travel to Ethiopia for the away fixture in June because the authorities failed to send his travel documents in time. The manager, Henri Depireux, was suspended by the DR Congo sports minister after the team failed to qualify for the tournament. In June of 2008, <mask> returned to the DR Congo squad. After returning to Greece, he complained of severe stomach pain and was rushed to hospital to have his appendix removed, ruling him out of the rest of the group for several weeks. DR Congo failed to progress to the third round of qualification despite topping the group at that point. Claude Le Roy confirmed in February 2012 that he was with <mask> in the aim of him returning to the national team.In December, he was named for his fourth Africa Cup of Nations in South Africa. In September 2003 he was fined for watching British television without a licence. The Haslar Visitors Group is a charity that works with people in an immigration removal centre. The LuaLua Foundation was set up in the following year to provide care and education for orphans in DR Congo. He was involved in the launch of a new video called "A Safe Place", which features players talking about their experiences with racism, as well as being involved in the Show Racism The Red Card campaign. Linvoy Primus, a former teammate of LuaLua's at Pompey, was quoted as saying that they pray together before games. We link our arms about 45 minutes before the game."You Can Have Chips" is the autobiography of his former manager. There are career statistics. The goal tally of the Democratic Republic of the Congo is listed first. Footballers from the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic of the Democratic Republic The players of United F.C. The players are from Pompey F.C. The players are from Olympiacos F.C.The players are from Blackpool. Football players who play for AC Omonia are English Football League, Super League Greece, Sper Lig, and Southern Football League. African Cup of Nations players in Turkey 2004, 2006 and 2002 and Africa Cup of Nations players in 2013). | [
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27006902 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter%20McGraw | Peter McGraw | Peter McGraw is an American professor of marketing and psychology at the University of Colorado Boulder. As a behavioral scientist his research spans the fields of judgment and decision making, emotion, affect, mood, and behavioral economics.
McGraw's early work examined the interplay of judgment, emotion, and choice, with an emphasis on moral judgment, mixed emotions, and behavioral economics. For example, McGraw and Jonathan Levav have published work based on their theory of Emotional Accounting, which is a complement to prior research on Mental accounting. Emotional Accounting posits that people use their feelings about money to guide how they spend it. One of the findings of the work suggests that people have negative feelings about a windfall of money, they tend to make utilitarian or virtuous expenditures in lieu of hedonic expenditures.
More recently, McGraw has examined the antecedents and consequences of humor—work that has helped move the study of humor from the niche to the mainstream. One advantage that he has over his predecessors is his ability to conduct state-of-the-art experiments with the help of the team he directs at the Humor Research Lab (aka HuRL). With Caleb Warren, he has developed a theory of humor: the Benign Violation Theory. The theory suggests that humor occurs when a person simultaneously appraises a situation as wrong or threatening some way (i.e., a violation) and yet appraises the situation to be okay or acceptable in some way (i.e., benign). His popular TEDx talk, "What makes things funny?" documents early insights from the benign violation theory.
In 2014, McGraw co-authored The Humor Code, a book about the science of humor and his travels around the world with journalist Joel Warner.
In 2015, McGraw created a live comedy game show—"Funny or True?"—which pits scientists against comedians to see who has the best blend of brains and funny bone.
In 2018, McGraw launched a podcast "I'm not joking" that looks at the lives of comedians, improvisers, comedy writers, and other funny people from business, science, and the arts.
McGraw gives public talks and keynotes on a range of topics, including humor, marketing management, and behavioral economics. His work appears in major media outlets, such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Time, Wired, CNN, NPR, and BBC. He has written for Slate, Fortune, and Huffington Post.
Academic career
McGraw received his Ph.D. from The Ohio State University in 2002, at which time he pursued a post-doc at Princeton University with Nobel Laureate Daniel Kahneman. In 2004, he joined the faculty at the Leeds School of Business, University of Colorado Boulder. In 2008, he received an appointment (courtesy) in the Department of Psychology and Neuroscience.
At the University of Colorado’s Leeds School of Business, he teaches courses in marketing management and behavioral economics. He also teaches for executive MBA programs at London Business School and the Rady School of Management at UC San Diego.
He directs the Humor Research Lab (HuRL) and co-directs a virtual research lab, the Moral Research Lab (MoRL) with Daniel Bartels. His research has been published in the Journal of Consumer Research, Journal of Marketing Research, Management Science, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, and Psychological Science.
In 2007, McGraw was named a Marketing Science Institute Young Scholar.
Outside academic pursuits, McGraw, from 2004 to 2010, served as academic coordinator, assistant coach, and associate head coach of the men's lacrosse team at the University of Colorado. He was the head coach of the men's lacrosse club at Princeton University from 2002 to 2004.
Shtick to Business
In 2020, McGraw published his second book, Shtick to Business: What the Masters of Comedy can Teach You about Breaking Rules, Being Fearless, and Building a Serious Career. Drawing on behavioral science research, case studies, and his own comedy successes, McGraw presents “serious” business lessons from the masters of comedy.
The Humor Code
In 2010, McGraw met journalist Joel Warner, who was fascinated by McGraw's humor research and unified theory of humor. Starting in 2011, the two created "The Humor Code Project," a two-year, 91,000-mile global search for what makes things funny. Their travels took them to Tanzania, Scandinavia, Japan, Israel, Peru, and several other destinations in North America. McGraw and Warner authored The Humor Code, a book about their travels and the experiments they conducted along the way. The two maintained multiple blogs about their adventures on Wired, Huffington Post, and Psychology Today. McGraw's research and the book have been widely covered by the media, including the Wall Street Journal, NPR, MSNBC, The Boston Globe, Scientific American, The Atlantic, Denver Post, and others.
The funniest cities in the United States
McGraw and his Humor Code co-author Joel Warner worked with Adrian Ward and Caleb Warren, and other members of the Humor Research Lab to create the Humor Algorithm, which ranked the 50 funniest cities in America. The team collected data for the project:
Frequency of visits to Cheezburger comedy websites, such as Lolcats and FAIL Blog
Number of comedy clubs per square mile in each city
Traveling comedians’ ratings of each city's comedy-club audiences
Number of famous comedians born in each city, divided by city population
Number of famous funny tweeters living in each city, divided by city population
Number of comedy radio stations available in each city
Frequency of humor-related web searches originating in each city
The team also conducted an extensive survey with more than 900 residents from the top ten cities determined by the objective measures above. To glean a deeper understanding of humorous daily life in these cities, researchers asked residents about the entertainment they enjoyed, asked whether they looked for humor in their friends and lovers, and subjected them to a “Need for Levity” personality test.
Chicago was deemed the funniest city in the United States.
Solo-The Single Persons’ Guide to a Remarkable Life
In December 2019, McGraw launched his second podcast called "Solo-The Single Person’s Guide to a Remarkable Life". The podcast takes a positive view of single living. He interviews singles living remarkable lives and experts who provide advice to listeners. Notable guests include Kristin Newman, Neal Brennan, and Alonzo Bodden.
Selected publications
Bartels, D. M., Bauman, C.W., Cushman, F.A., Pizarro, D.A., & McGraw, A.P., (Forthcoming), Moral judgment and decision making. In G. Keren & G. Wu (Eds.) The Wiley Blackwell Handbook of Judgment and Decision Making. Chichester, UK: Wiley.
McGraw, A.P. & Warren, C. (2014). Benign violation theory. In S. Attardo (Ed.). Encyclopedia of Humor Studies, Vol. 1 (pp. 75–77) Sage Publications.
McGraw, A.P., Williams, L.T., & Warren, C. (2014). The rise and fall of humor: Psychological distance modulates humorous responses to tragedy. Social Psychology and Personality Science5, 566-572.
McGraw, A.P., Warren, C., Williams, L., & Leonard, B., (2012). Too close for comfort, or too far to care? Finding humor in distant tragedies and close mishaps. Psychological Science, 25, 1215 - 1223.
McGraw, A.P., Schwartz, J. & Tetlock, P. (2012). From the commercial to the communal: Reframing taboo trade-offs in religious and pharmaceutical marketing. Journal of Consumer Research, 39, 157-173.
Larsen, J.T. & McGraw, A.P. (2011). Further evidence for mixed emotions. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 100, 1095-1110.
McGraw, A.P., Todorov, A., & Kunreuther, H. (2011). A policy maker's dilemma: Preventing blame or preventing terrorism. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 115, 25-34.
McGraw, A.P., Larsen, J.T., Kahneman, D., & Schkade, D. (2010). Comparing gains and losses. Psychological Science, 21, 1438-1445.
McGraw, A.P., Shafir, E., & Todorov, A. (2010). Valuing money and things: Why a $20 item can be worth more and less than $20. Management Science, 56, 816-830.
McGraw, A.P. & Warren, C. (2010). Benign violations: Making immoral behavior funny. Psychological Science, 21, 1141-1149.
Levav, J., & McGraw, A.P. (2009). Emotional accounting: How feelings about money influence consumer choice. Journal of Marketing Research, 46, 66-80.
McGraw, A.P., Mellers, B.A, & Tetlock, P.E. (2005). Expectations and emotions of Olympic athletes. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 41, 438-446.
McGraw, A.P., & Tetlock, P.E. (2005). Taboo trade-offs, relational framing and the acceptability of exchanges. Journal of Consumer Psychology, 15, 2-15
Larsen, J.T., McGraw, A.P., Mellers, B.A. & Cacioppo, J. (2004). The agony of victory and thrill of defeat: Mixed emotional reactions to disappointing wins and relieving losses. Psychological Science, 15, 325-330.
McGraw, A.P., Tetlock, P.E., & Kristel, O.V. (2003). The limits of fungibility: Relational schemata and the value of things. Journal of Consumer Research, 30, 219-229.
Larsen, J.T., McGraw, A.P., & Cacioppo, J. (2001). Can people feel happy and sad at the same time? Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 81, 684-696.
See also
Theories of Humor
Loss Aversion
Mental Accounting
References
External links
Peter McGraw’s CV
Peter McGraw on Emotional Accounting
Peter McGraw on The Money Laundering Effect
Peter McGraw on What Makes Things Funny
The Humor Code
1970 births
Living people
University of Colorado Boulder faculty
Humor researchers | [
"Peter McGraw is an American professor of marketing and psychology at the University of Colorado Boulder.",
"As a behavioral scientist his research spans the fields of judgment and decision making, emotion, affect, mood, and behavioral economics.",
"McGraw's early work examined the interplay of judgment, emotion, and choice, with an emphasis on moral judgment, mixed emotions, and behavioral economics.",
"For example, McGraw and Jonathan Levav have published work based on their theory of Emotional Accounting, which is a complement to prior research on Mental accounting.",
"Emotional Accounting posits that people use their feelings about money to guide how they spend it.",
"One of the findings of the work suggests that people have negative feelings about a windfall of money, they tend to make utilitarian or virtuous expenditures in lieu of hedonic expenditures.",
"More recently, McGraw has examined the antecedents and consequences of humor—work that has helped move the study of humor from the niche to the mainstream.",
"One advantage that he has over his predecessors is his ability to conduct state-of-the-art experiments with the help of the team he directs at the Humor Research Lab (aka HuRL).",
"With Caleb Warren, he has developed a theory of humor: the Benign Violation Theory.",
"The theory suggests that humor occurs when a person simultaneously appraises a situation as wrong or threatening some way (i.e., a violation) and yet appraises the situation to be okay or acceptable in some way (i.e., benign).",
"His popular TEDx talk, \"What makes things funny?\"",
"documents early insights from the benign violation theory.",
"In 2014, McGraw co-authored The Humor Code, a book about the science of humor and his travels around the world with journalist Joel Warner.",
"In 2015, McGraw created a live comedy game show—\"Funny or True?",
"\"—which pits scientists against comedians to see who has the best blend of brains and funny bone.",
"In 2018, McGraw launched a podcast \"I'm not joking\" that looks at the lives of comedians, improvisers, comedy writers, and other funny people from business, science, and the arts.",
"McGraw gives public talks and keynotes on a range of topics, including humor, marketing management, and behavioral economics.",
"His work appears in major media outlets, such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Time, Wired, CNN, NPR, and BBC.",
"He has written for Slate, Fortune, and Huffington Post.",
"Academic career\nMcGraw received his Ph.D. from The Ohio State University in 2002, at which time he pursued a post-doc at Princeton University with Nobel Laureate Daniel Kahneman.",
"In 2004, he joined the faculty at the Leeds School of Business, University of Colorado Boulder.",
"In 2008, he received an appointment (courtesy) in the Department of Psychology and Neuroscience.",
"At the University of Colorado’s Leeds School of Business, he teaches courses in marketing management and behavioral economics.",
"He also teaches for executive MBA programs at London Business School and the Rady School of Management at UC San Diego.",
"He directs the Humor Research Lab (HuRL) and co-directs a virtual research lab, the Moral Research Lab (MoRL) with Daniel Bartels.",
"His research has been published in the Journal of Consumer Research, Journal of Marketing Research, Management Science, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, and Psychological Science.",
"In 2007, McGraw was named a Marketing Science Institute Young Scholar.",
"Outside academic pursuits, McGraw, from 2004 to 2010, served as academic coordinator, assistant coach, and associate head coach of the men's lacrosse team at the University of Colorado.",
"He was the head coach of the men's lacrosse club at Princeton University from 2002 to 2004.",
"Shtick to Business \nIn 2020, McGraw published his second book, Shtick to Business: What the Masters of Comedy can Teach You about Breaking Rules, Being Fearless, and Building a Serious Career.",
"Drawing on behavioral science research, case studies, and his own comedy successes, McGraw presents “serious” business lessons from the masters of comedy.",
"The Humor Code\nIn 2010, McGraw met journalist Joel Warner, who was fascinated by McGraw's humor research and unified theory of humor.",
"Starting in 2011, the two created \"The Humor Code Project,\" a two-year, 91,000-mile global search for what makes things funny.",
"Their travels took them to Tanzania, Scandinavia, Japan, Israel, Peru, and several other destinations in North America.",
"McGraw and Warner authored The Humor Code, a book about their travels and the experiments they conducted along the way.",
"The two maintained multiple blogs about their adventures on Wired, Huffington Post, and Psychology Today.",
"McGraw's research and the book have been widely covered by the media, including the Wall Street Journal, NPR, MSNBC, The Boston Globe, Scientific American, The Atlantic, Denver Post, and others.",
"The funniest cities in the United States\n\nMcGraw and his Humor Code co-author Joel Warner worked with Adrian Ward and Caleb Warren, and other members of the Humor Research Lab to create the Humor Algorithm, which ranked the 50 funniest cities in America.",
"The team collected data for the project:\nFrequency of visits to Cheezburger comedy websites, such as Lolcats and FAIL Blog\nNumber of comedy clubs per square mile in each city\nTraveling comedians’ ratings of each city's comedy-club audiences\nNumber of famous comedians born in each city, divided by city population\nNumber of famous funny tweeters living in each city, divided by city population\nNumber of comedy radio stations available in each city\nFrequency of humor-related web searches originating in each city\n\nThe team also conducted an extensive survey with more than 900 residents from the top ten cities determined by the objective measures above.",
"To glean a deeper understanding of humorous daily life in these cities, researchers asked residents about the entertainment they enjoyed, asked whether they looked for humor in their friends and lovers, and subjected them to a “Need for Levity” personality test.",
"Chicago was deemed the funniest city in the United States.",
"Solo-The Single Persons’ Guide to a Remarkable Life \nIn December 2019, McGraw launched his second podcast called \"Solo-The Single Person’s Guide to a Remarkable Life\".",
"The podcast takes a positive view of single living.",
"He interviews singles living remarkable lives and experts who provide advice to listeners.",
"Notable guests include Kristin Newman, Neal Brennan, and Alonzo Bodden.",
"Selected publications\nBartels, D. M., Bauman, C.W., Cushman, F.A., Pizarro, D.A., & McGraw, A.P., (Forthcoming), Moral judgment and decision making.",
"In G. Keren & G. Wu (Eds.)",
"The Wiley Blackwell Handbook of Judgment and Decision Making.",
"Chichester, UK: Wiley.",
"McGraw, A.P.",
"& Warren, C. (2014).",
"Benign violation theory.",
"In S. Attardo (Ed.).",
"Encyclopedia of Humor Studies, Vol.",
"1 (pp.",
"75–77) Sage Publications.",
"McGraw, A.P., Williams, L.T., & Warren, C. (2014).",
"The rise and fall of humor: Psychological distance modulates humorous responses to tragedy.",
"Social Psychology and Personality Science5, 566-572.",
"McGraw, A.P., Warren, C., Williams, L., & Leonard, B., (2012).",
"Too close for comfort, or too far to care?",
"Finding humor in distant tragedies and close mishaps.",
"Psychological Science, 25, 1215 - 1223.",
"McGraw, A.P., Schwartz, J.",
"& Tetlock, P. (2012).",
"From the commercial to the communal: Reframing taboo trade-offs in religious and pharmaceutical marketing.",
"Journal of Consumer Research, 39, 157-173.",
"Larsen, J.T.",
"& McGraw, A.P.",
"(2011).",
"Further evidence for mixed emotions.",
"Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 100, 1095-1110.",
"McGraw, A.P., Todorov, A., & Kunreuther, H. (2011).",
"A policy maker's dilemma: Preventing blame or preventing terrorism.",
"Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 115, 25-34.",
"McGraw, A.P., Larsen, J.T., Kahneman, D., & Schkade, D. (2010).",
"Comparing gains and losses.",
"Psychological Science, 21, 1438-1445.",
"McGraw, A.P., Shafir, E., & Todorov, A.",
"(2010).",
"Valuing money and things: Why a $20 item can be worth more and less than $20.",
"Management Science, 56, 816-830.",
"McGraw, A.P.",
"& Warren, C. (2010).",
"Benign violations: Making immoral behavior funny.",
"Psychological Science, 21, 1141-1149.",
"Levav, J., & McGraw, A.P.",
"(2009).",
"Emotional accounting: How feelings about money influence consumer choice.",
"Journal of Marketing Research, 46, 66-80.",
"McGraw, A.P., Mellers, B.A, & Tetlock, P.E.",
"(2005).",
"Expectations and emotions of Olympic athletes.",
"Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 41, 438-446.",
"McGraw, A.P., & Tetlock, P.E.",
"(2005).",
"Taboo trade-offs, relational framing and the acceptability of exchanges.",
"Journal of Consumer Psychology, 15, 2-15\nLarsen, J.T., McGraw, A.P., Mellers, B.A.",
"& Cacioppo, J.",
"(2004).",
"The agony of victory and thrill of defeat: Mixed emotional reactions to disappointing wins and relieving losses.",
"Psychological Science, 15, 325-330.",
"McGraw, A.P., Tetlock, P.E., & Kristel, O.V.",
"(2003).",
"The limits of fungibility: Relational schemata and the value of things.",
"Journal of Consumer Research, 30, 219-229.",
"Larsen, J.T., McGraw, A.P., & Cacioppo, J.",
"(2001).",
"Can people feel happy and sad at the same time?",
"Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 81, 684-696.",
"See also\n Theories of Humor\n Loss Aversion\n Mental Accounting\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links\n \n \n Peter McGraw’s CV\n Peter McGraw on Emotional Accounting\n Peter McGraw on The Money Laundering Effect\n Peter McGraw on What Makes Things Funny\n The Humor Code\n\n1970 births\nLiving people\nUniversity of Colorado Boulder faculty\nHumor researchers"
] | [
"The professor of marketing and psychology at the University of Colorado Boulder is American.",
"His research focuses on judgment and decision making, emotion, affect, mood, and behavioral economics.",
"The interplay of judgment, emotion, and choice was examined by McGraw in his early work.",
"The theory of Emotional Accounting is a complement to the research on Mental accounting.",
"People use their feelings about money to guide their spending.",
"According to one of the findings of the work, people who have negative feelings about money tend to use it for good.",
"It has helped move the study of humor from the niche to the mainstream by examining the antecedents and consequences of humor.",
"One advantage that he has over his predecessors is his ability to conduct state-of-the-art experiments with the help of the team he directs at the Humor Research Lab.",
"The theory of humor is called the Benign Violation Theory.",
"The theory suggests that humor occurs when a person simultaneously appraises a situation as wrong or threatening and yet appraises the situation to be okay or benign.",
"His talk was \"What makes things funny?\"",
"There are early insights from the benign violation theory.",
"The Humor Code, a book about the science of humor, was co-authored by McGraw and Warner.",
"In 2015, he created a live comedy game show.",
"It pits scientists against comedians to see who has the best blend of brains and humor.",
"\"I'm not joking\" is a show that looks at the lives of comedians, improvisers, comedy writers, and other funny people from business, science, and the arts.",
"A range of topics include humor, marketing management, and behavioral economics.",
"His work can be found in major media outlets, such as The New York Times.",
"He has written for a number of publications.",
"When he received his PhD from The Ohio State University in 2002, he pursued a post-doc with Daniel Kahneman.",
"He joined the faculty at the University of Colorado Boulder in 2004.",
"He got an appointment in the Department of Psychology and Neuroscience.",
"He teaches marketing management and behavioral economics at the University of Colorado.",
"He is a professor at the London Business School and the UC San Diego.",
"He co-directs a virtual research lab with Daniel Bartels and directs the Humor Research Lab.",
"His research has been published in a number of journals.",
"In 2007, he was named a Marketing Science Institute Young Scholar.",
"From 2004 to 2010 he was an associate head coach of the men's lacrosse team at the University of Colorado.",
"From 2002 to 2004, he was the head coach of the men's lacrosse club.",
"Shtick to Business: What the Masters of Comedy can teach you about breaking rules, being fearless, and building a serious career was published in 2020.",
"Drawing on behavioral science research, case studies, and his own comedy successes, McGraw presents \"serious\" business lessons from the masters of comedy.",
"The journalist who was fascinated by the unified theory of humor met the author of The Humor Code.",
"The two created \"The Humor Code Project,\" a two-year, 91,000-mile global search for what makes things funny.",
"They traveled to a number of destinations in North America.",
"The Humor Code was a book about their travels and the experiments they conducted along the way.",
"The two wrote about their adventures on multiple websites.",
"The Wall Street Journal, NPR, MSNBC, The Boston Globe, Scientific American, The Atlantic, and Denver Post all covered the research and the book by McGraw.",
"The funniest cities in the United States were ranked by the Humor Code co-author and other members of the Humor Research Lab.",
"The team collected data for the project, such as the number of visits to Cheezburger comedy websites, the number of comedy clubs per square mile in each city, and the number of famous comedians born in each city.",
"To get a deeper understanding of humorous daily life in these cities, researchers asked residents about the entertainment they enjoyed, asked whether they looked for humor in their friends and lovers, and subjected them to a \"Need for Levity\" personality test.",
"The funniest city in the US was Chicago.",
"\"Solo-The Single Person's Guide to a Remarkable Life\" was launched in December of 2019.",
"There is a positive view of single living.",
"He interviews people who are living remarkable lives.",
"Notable guests include Neal Brennan.",
"M., Bauman, C.W., Cushman, F.A., Pizarro, D.A., and McGraw, A.P. have publications.",
"In G. Keren and G. Wu.",
"There is a Handbook of Judgment and Decision Making.",
"You can find it in the UK in Chichester, UK.",
"A.P. McGraw.",
"Warren, C.",
"There is a violation theory.",
"In S. Attardo.",
"There is an encyclopedia of humor studies.",
"There is a 1 (pp.).",
"There is a publication by the name of Sage Publications.",
"A.P., Williams, L.T., and Warren are related.",
"The rise and fall of humor is related to psychological distance.",
"Social psychology and personality science are related.",
"A.P., Warren, C., Williams, L., and Leonard, B.",
"Is it too close for comfort or too far for care?",
"There is humor in tragedies and close accidents.",
"The psychological science is 25, 1215 - 1223.",
"A.P., Schwartz, J.",
"There are1-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-6556",
"Reframing taboo trade-offs in religious and pharmaceutical marketing is from the commercial to the communal.",
"The Journal of Consumer Research was published in 1973.",
"J.T. Larsen.",
"McGraw, A.P.",
"There were1-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-6556",
"There is more evidence for mixed emotions.",
"The Journal of Personality and Social Psychology is a journal.",
"The authors are A.P., Todorov, and Kunreuther.",
"It is a policy maker's dilemma if they should prevent blame or prevent terrorism.",
"Organizational behavior and human decision processes are covered.",
"The authors are A.P., Larsen, J.T., Kahneman, D., and Schkade.",
"Gains and losses are compared.",
"There is a psychological science.",
"The authors are McGraw, A.P., Shafir, E., and Todorov.",
"(2010).",
"A $20 item can be worth less than a $20 item.",
"Management Science is in Kansas.",
"A.P. McGraw.",
"& Warren, C.",
"Making immoral behavior funny.",
"The Psychological Science, 21, 1141-1149.",
"Levav, J., and McGraw, A.P.",
"The year 2009.",
"Consumer choice is influenced by feelings about money.",
"The Journal of Marketing Research is a journal.",
"A.P., Mellers, B.A., and Tetlock, P.E.",
"The year 2005.",
"Olympic athletes have expectations and emotions.",
"The Journal of Experimental Social Psychology.",
"A.P. and Tetlock, P.E.",
"The year 2005.",
"There areaboo trade-offs, relational framing and acceptability of exchanges.",
"The Journal of Consumer Psychology is a journal.",
"Cacioppo, J.",
"They did it in 2004.",
"The thrill of defeat and the agony of victory are mixed emotions.",
"There is a psychological science.",
"McGraw, A.P., Tetlock, P.E., and Kristel, O.V.",
"There are1-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-6556",
"The value of things is one of the limits of fungibility.",
"The Journal of Consumer Research was published in 1980.",
"Larsen, J.T., McGraw, A.P., and Cacioppo are related.",
"The year 2001.",
"Is it possible for people to be happy and sad at the same time?",
"The Journal of Personality and Social Psychology is a journal.",
"See also Theories of Humor Loss Aversion Mental Accounting References."
] | <mask> is an American professor of marketing and psychology at the University of Colorado Boulder. As a behavioral scientist his research spans the fields of judgment and decision making, emotion, affect, mood, and behavioral economics. <mask>'s early work examined the interplay of judgment, emotion, and choice, with an emphasis on moral judgment, mixed emotions, and behavioral economics. For example, <mask> and Jonathan Levav have published work based on their theory of Emotional Accounting, which is a complement to prior research on Mental accounting. Emotional Accounting posits that people use their feelings about money to guide how they spend it. One of the findings of the work suggests that people have negative feelings about a windfall of money, they tend to make utilitarian or virtuous expenditures in lieu of hedonic expenditures. More recently, <mask> has examined the antecedents and consequences of humor—work that has helped move the study of humor from the niche to the mainstream.One advantage that he has over his predecessors is his ability to conduct state-of-the-art experiments with the help of the team he directs at the Humor Research Lab (aka HuRL). With Caleb Warren, he has developed a theory of humor: the Benign Violation Theory. The theory suggests that humor occurs when a person simultaneously appraises a situation as wrong or threatening some way (i.e., a violation) and yet appraises the situation to be okay or acceptable in some way (i.e., benign). His popular TEDx talk, "What makes things funny?" documents early insights from the benign violation theory. In 2014, <mask> co-authored The Humor Code, a book about the science of humor and his travels around the world with journalist Joel Warner. In 2015, <mask> created a live comedy game show—"Funny or True?"—which pits scientists against comedians to see who has the best blend of brains and funny bone. In 2018, <mask> launched a podcast "I'm not joking" that looks at the lives of comedians, improvisers, comedy writers, and other funny people from business, science, and the arts. <mask> gives public talks and keynotes on a range of topics, including humor, marketing management, and behavioral economics. His work appears in major media outlets, such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Time, Wired, CNN, NPR, and BBC. He has written for Slate, Fortune, and Huffington Post. Academic career
<mask> received his Ph.D. from The Ohio State University in 2002, at which time he pursued a post-doc at Princeton University with Nobel Laureate Daniel Kahneman. In 2004, he joined the faculty at the Leeds School of Business, University of Colorado Boulder.In 2008, he received an appointment (courtesy) in the Department of Psychology and Neuroscience. At the University of Colorado’s Leeds School of Business, he teaches courses in marketing management and behavioral economics. He also teaches for executive MBA programs at London Business School and the Rady School of Management at UC San Diego. He directs the Humor Research Lab (HuRL) and co-directs a virtual research lab, the Moral Research Lab (MoRL) with Daniel Bartels. His research has been published in the Journal of Consumer Research, Journal of Marketing Research, Management Science, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, and Psychological Science. In 2007, <mask> was named a Marketing Science Institute Young Scholar. Outside academic pursuits, <mask>, from 2004 to 2010, served as academic coordinator, assistant coach, and associate head coach of the men's lacrosse team at the University of Colorado.He was the head coach of the men's lacrosse club at Princeton University from 2002 to 2004. Shtick to Business
In 2020, <mask> published his second book, Shtick to Business: What the Masters of Comedy can Teach You about Breaking Rules, Being Fearless, and Building a Serious Career. Drawing on behavioral science research, case studies, and his own comedy successes, <mask> presents “serious” business lessons from the masters of comedy. The Humor Code
In 2010, <mask> met journalist Joel Warner, who was fascinated by <mask>'s humor research and unified theory of humor. Starting in 2011, the two created "The Humor Code Project," a two-year, 91,000-mile global search for what makes things funny. Their travels took them to Tanzania, Scandinavia, Japan, Israel, Peru, and several other destinations in North America. <mask> and Warner authored The Humor Code, a book about their travels and the experiments they conducted along the way.The two maintained multiple blogs about their adventures on Wired, Huffington Post, and Psychology Today. <mask>'s research and the book have been widely covered by the media, including the Wall Street Journal, NPR, MSNBC, The Boston Globe, Scientific American, The Atlantic, Denver Post, and others. The funniest cities in the United States
<mask> and his Humor Code co-author Joel Warner worked with Adrian Ward and Caleb Warren, and other members of the Humor Research Lab to create the Humor Algorithm, which ranked the 50 funniest cities in America. The team collected data for the project:
Frequency of visits to Cheezburger comedy websites, such as Lolcats and FAIL Blog
Number of comedy clubs per square mile in each city
Traveling comedians’ ratings of each city's comedy-club audiences
Number of famous comedians born in each city, divided by city population
Number of famous funny tweeters living in each city, divided by city population
Number of comedy radio stations available in each city
Frequency of humor-related web searches originating in each city
The team also conducted an extensive survey with more than 900 residents from the top ten cities determined by the objective measures above. To glean a deeper understanding of humorous daily life in these cities, researchers asked residents about the entertainment they enjoyed, asked whether they looked for humor in their friends and lovers, and subjected them to a “Need for Levity” personality test. Chicago was deemed the funniest city in the United States. Solo-The Single Persons’ Guide to a Remarkable Life
In December 2019, <mask> launched his second podcast called "Solo-The Single Person’s Guide to a Remarkable Life".The podcast takes a positive view of single living. He interviews singles living remarkable lives and experts who provide advice to listeners. Notable guests include Kristin Newman, Neal Brennan, and Alonzo Bodden. Selected publications
Bartels, D. M., Bauman, C.W., Cushman, F.A., Pizarro, D.A., & McGraw, A.P., (Forthcoming), Moral judgment and decision making. In G. Keren & G. Wu (Eds.) The Wiley Blackwell Handbook of Judgment and Decision Making. Chichester, UK: Wiley.McGraw, A.P. & Warren, C. (2014). Benign violation theory. In S. Attardo (Ed.). Encyclopedia of Humor Studies, Vol. 1 (pp. 75–77) Sage Publications.<mask>, A.P., Williams, L.T., & Warren, C. (2014). The rise and fall of humor: Psychological distance modulates humorous responses to tragedy. Social Psychology and Personality Science5, 566-572. <mask>, A.P., Warren, C., Williams, L., & Leonard, B., (2012). Too close for comfort, or too far to care? Finding humor in distant tragedies and close mishaps. Psychological Science, 25, 1215 - 1223.<mask>, A.P., Schwartz, J. & Tetlock, P. (2012). From the commercial to the communal: Reframing taboo trade-offs in religious and pharmaceutical marketing. Journal of Consumer Research, 39, 157-173. Larsen, J.T. & <mask>, A.P. (2011).Further evidence for mixed emotions. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 100, 1095-1110. <mask>, A.P., Todorov, A., & Kunreuther, H. (2011). A policy maker's dilemma: Preventing blame or preventing terrorism. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 115, 25-34. <mask>, A.P., Larsen, J.T., Kahneman, D., & Schkade, D. (2010). Comparing gains and losses.Psychological Science, 21, 1438-1445. <mask>, A.P., Shafir, E., & Todorov, A. (2010). Valuing money and things: Why a $20 item can be worth more and less than $20. Management Science, 56, 816-830. <mask>, A.P. & Warren, C. (2010).Benign violations: Making immoral behavior funny. Psychological Science, 21, 1141-1149. Levav, J., & <mask>, A.P. (2009). Emotional accounting: How feelings about money influence consumer choice. Journal of Marketing Research, 46, 66-80. <mask>, A.P., Mellers, B.A, & Tetlock, P.E.(2005). Expectations and emotions of Olympic athletes. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 41, 438-446. <mask>, A.P., & Tetlock, P.E. (2005). Taboo trade-offs, relational framing and the acceptability of exchanges. Journal of Consumer Psychology, 15, 2-15
Larsen, J.T., <mask>, A.P., Mellers, B.A.& Cacioppo, J. (2004). The agony of victory and thrill of defeat: Mixed emotional reactions to disappointing wins and relieving losses. Psychological Science, 15, 325-330. <mask>, A.P., Tetlock, P.E., & Kristel, O.V. (2003). The limits of fungibility: Relational schemata and the value of things.Journal of Consumer Research, 30, 219-229. Larsen, J.T., <mask>, A.P., & Cacioppo, J. (2001). Can people feel happy and sad at the same time? Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 81, 684-696. See also
Theories of Humor
Loss Aversion
Mental Accounting
References
External links
<mask>’s CV
<mask> on Emotional Accounting
<mask> on The Money Laundering Effect
<mask> on What Makes Things Funny
The Humor Code
1970 births
Living people
University of Colorado Boulder faculty
Humor researchers | [
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] | The professor of marketing and psychology at the University of Colorado Boulder is American. His research focuses on judgment and decision making, emotion, affect, mood, and behavioral economics. The interplay of judgment, emotion, and choice was examined by <mask> in his early work. The theory of Emotional Accounting is a complement to the research on Mental accounting. People use their feelings about money to guide their spending. According to one of the findings of the work, people who have negative feelings about money tend to use it for good. It has helped move the study of humor from the niche to the mainstream by examining the antecedents and consequences of humor.One advantage that he has over his predecessors is his ability to conduct state-of-the-art experiments with the help of the team he directs at the Humor Research Lab. The theory of humor is called the Benign Violation Theory. The theory suggests that humor occurs when a person simultaneously appraises a situation as wrong or threatening and yet appraises the situation to be okay or benign. His talk was "What makes things funny?" There are early insights from the benign violation theory. The Humor Code, a book about the science of humor, was co-authored by <mask> and Warner. In 2015, he created a live comedy game show.It pits scientists against comedians to see who has the best blend of brains and humor. "I'm not joking" is a show that looks at the lives of comedians, improvisers, comedy writers, and other funny people from business, science, and the arts. A range of topics include humor, marketing management, and behavioral economics. His work can be found in major media outlets, such as The New York Times. He has written for a number of publications. When he received his PhD from The Ohio State University in 2002, he pursued a post-doc with Daniel Kahneman. He joined the faculty at the University of Colorado Boulder in 2004.He got an appointment in the Department of Psychology and Neuroscience. He teaches marketing management and behavioral economics at the University of Colorado. He is a professor at the London Business School and the UC San Diego. He co-directs a virtual research lab with Daniel Bartels and directs the Humor Research Lab. His research has been published in a number of journals. In 2007, he was named a Marketing Science Institute Young Scholar. From 2004 to 2010 he was an associate head coach of the men's lacrosse team at the University of Colorado.From 2002 to 2004, he was the head coach of the men's lacrosse club. Shtick to Business: What the Masters of Comedy can teach you about breaking rules, being fearless, and building a serious career was published in 2020. Drawing on behavioral science research, case studies, and his own comedy successes, <mask> presents "serious" business lessons from the masters of comedy. The journalist who was fascinated by the unified theory of humor met the author of The Humor Code. The two created "The Humor Code Project," a two-year, 91,000-mile global search for what makes things funny. They traveled to a number of destinations in North America. The Humor Code was a book about their travels and the experiments they conducted along the way.The two wrote about their adventures on multiple websites. The Wall Street Journal, NPR, MSNBC, The Boston Globe, Scientific American, The Atlantic, and Denver Post all covered the research and the book by <mask>. The funniest cities in the United States were ranked by the Humor Code co-author and other members of the Humor Research Lab. The team collected data for the project, such as the number of visits to Cheezburger comedy websites, the number of comedy clubs per square mile in each city, and the number of famous comedians born in each city. To get a deeper understanding of humorous daily life in these cities, researchers asked residents about the entertainment they enjoyed, asked whether they looked for humor in their friends and lovers, and subjected them to a "Need for Levity" personality test. The funniest city in the US was Chicago. "Solo-The Single Person's Guide to a Remarkable Life" was launched in December of 2019.There is a positive view of single living. He interviews people who are living remarkable lives. Notable guests include Neal Brennan. M., Bauman, C.W., Cushman, F.A., Pizarro, D.A., and McGraw, A.P. have publications. In G. Keren and G. Wu. There is a Handbook of Judgment and Decision Making. You can find it in the UK in Chichester, UK.A.P<mask>. Warren, C. There is a violation theory. In S. Attardo. There is an encyclopedia of humor studies. There is a 1 (pp.). There is a publication by the name of Sage Publications.A.P., Williams, L.T., and Warren are related. The rise and fall of humor is related to psychological distance. Social psychology and personality science are related. A.P., Warren, C., Williams, L., and Leonard, B. Is it too close for comfort or too far for care? There is humor in tragedies and close accidents. The psychological science is 25, 1215 - 1223.A.P., Schwartz, J. There are1-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-6556 Reframing taboo trade-offs in religious and pharmaceutical marketing is from the commercial to the communal. The Journal of Consumer Research was published in 1973. J.T. Larsen. <mask>, A.P. There were1-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-6556There is more evidence for mixed emotions. The Journal of Personality and Social Psychology is a journal. The authors are A.P., Todorov, and Kunreuther. It is a policy maker's dilemma if they should prevent blame or prevent terrorism. Organizational behavior and human decision processes are covered. The authors are A.P., Larsen, J.T., Kahneman, D., and Schkade. Gains and losses are compared.There is a psychological science. The authors are <mask>, A.P., Shafir, E., and Todorov. (2010). A $20 item can be worth less than a $20 item. Management Science is in Kansas. A.P. McGraw. & Warren, C.Making immoral behavior funny. The Psychological Science, 21, 1141-1149. Levav, J., and <mask>, A.P. The year 2009. Consumer choice is influenced by feelings about money. The Journal of Marketing Research is a journal. A.P., Mellers, B.A., and Tetlock, P.E.The year 2005. Olympic athletes have expectations and emotions. The Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. A.P. and Tetlock, P.E. The year 2005. There areaboo trade-offs, relational framing and acceptability of exchanges. The Journal of Consumer Psychology is a journal.Cacioppo, J. They did it in 2004. The thrill of defeat and the agony of victory are mixed emotions. There is a psychological science. <mask>, A.P., Tetlock, P.E., and Kristel, O.V. There are1-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-65561-6556 The value of things is one of the limits of fungibility.The Journal of Consumer Research was published in 1980. Larsen, J.T., <mask>, A.P., and Cacioppo are related. The year 2001. Is it possible for people to be happy and sad at the same time? The Journal of Personality and Social Psychology is a journal. See also Theories of Humor Loss Aversion Mental Accounting References. | [
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1322256 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%20Groves | Charles Groves | Sir Charles Barnard Groves CBE (10 March 191520 June 1992) was an English conductor. He was known for the breadth of his repertoire and for encouraging contemporary composers and young conductors.
After accompanying positions and conducting various orchestras and studio work for the BBC, Groves spent a decade as conductor of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra. His best-known musical directorship was of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, beginning in 1963, with which he made most of his recordings. From 1967 until his death, Groves was associate conductor of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, and in the 1970s he was one of the regular conductors of the Last Night of the Proms. He also served as president of the National Youth Orchestra from 1977, and, during the last decade of his life, as guest conductor for orchestras around the world.
Life and career
Early years
Groves was born in London, the only child of Frederick Groves and Annie (née Whitehead). He was a pupil at St Paul's Cathedral School (where a house is now named after him), singing in the Cathedral choir and, from the age of 13, studying the piano and organ.
Music was already important to him as a solace, as he was orphaned at the age of ten – his father having died in 1921 from injuries received in World War I and his mother having died four years later.
From 1930 until 1932 he was a pupil at Sutton Valence School, in Kent, where Groves Hall is named in honour of him.
After leaving Sutton Valence School he attended the Royal College of Music.
There, his main studies were in lieder and accompanying, but he became involved in student opera productions as a répétiteur. He was naturally gifted with great fluency and the ability to sight read almost any music, but confessed, years later, to having been lazy about his piano studies, and he abandoned his ambitions to become a concert pianist. He played in the percussion section for Vaughan Williams's Hugh the Drover and Delius's A Village Romeo and Juliet when Sir Thomas Beecham performed as guest conductor at the College. Groves also went into the conducting class, but did not progress beyond the third orchestra. In 1937, while still a student, he accompanied choral rehearsals of Brahms's German Requiem, Verdi's Requiem and Beethoven's Missa Solemnis under Arturo Toscanini.
Groves began his professional career as a freelance accompanist, including work for the BBC. In 1938, he was appointed chorus master of the BBC Music Productions Unit under the direction of Stanford Robinson, where he worked on broadcast opera productions. At the outbreak of the Second World War, Groves was sent to Evesham, and later Bedford, England, to be resident chorus master for the BBC while it was evacuated from London. In 1943, he was invited to take charge of the BBC Revue Orchestra, playing mostly light music. During this time Groves conducted Weill's Lady in the Dark with Gertrude Lawrence in the lead role.
Conducting posts
Groves was conductor for the BBC Northern Orchestra in Manchester from 1944 to 1951, conducting several studio concerts every week, and thereby acquiring an exceptionally large repertoire. While in Manchester he met a BBC colleague, Hilary Barchard, whom he married in 1948. Feeling the need to move from studio-based work, Groves accepted the conductorship of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra from 1951 to 1961, which he conducted about 150 times each year. When financial difficulties led to a proposal to merge the Bournemouth and Birmingham orchestras, Groves supported the alternative proposition by which the Bournemouth orchestra took on the additional role of resident orchestra for the new Welsh National Opera, of which he became musical director from 1961 to 1963. Groves did much to establish that company's choral and orchestral traditions and conducted many performances of works then seldom staged, such as Verdi's I Lombardi and The Sicilian Vespers, which won critical acclaim and were brought to London.
Groves is probably best known for his long tenure from 1963 to 1977 as Music Director and Principal Conductor of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, conducting, as he said, "everything from the St John Passion to Messiaen and Stockhausen". He spent nine months of every year with the RLPO, where he greatly improved standards of playing. In the other three months he guest conducted concerts and operas in London and overseas. He took the RLPO on highly acclaimed tours of Germany and Switzerland in 1966 and 1968, and Poland in 1970. During his time in Liverpool, Groves instituted a series of seminars for young conductors, and those who made early appearances there included Andrew Davis, Mark Elder, John Eliot Gardiner, James Judd and Barry Wordsworth. At one seminar Groves noted the presence in the orchestra, as an extra percussion player, of a teenager named Simon Rattle.
From 1967 until his death, Groves was associate conductor of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, which he led on a tour of the US In the 1970s he was one of the regular conductors of the Last Night of the Proms (others being Norman Del Mar and James Loughran).
Groves was Music Director of the English National Opera in 1978–1979, but in spite of a well-received and rare revival of Weber's Euryanthe the appointment did not prove a success, and he relinquished the post the following year. He found combining administration with conducting too stressful for him. Groves also served as president of the National Youth Orchestra (1977–1992) and, especially during the last decade of his career, as guest conductor for numerous orchestras around the world. In 1984, he joined the English Sinfonia as president and artistic adviser, later also becoming principal conductor of the Guildford Philharmonic (1987) and music director of the Leeds Philharmonic Society (1988).
Repertoire
Groves was particularly noted for his assured conducting of large-scale works and was the first conductor to direct a complete cycle of Gustav Mahler's symphonies in Britain. He was also famous for encouraging modern composers, and he frequently included their works in his programmes. Groves conducted a wide repertory, refusing to concentrate on any particular subgenre. He remarked, "I feel myself a GP [general practitioner] rather than a consultant." Nevertheless, he became particularly known as a champion of British composers and invariably offered British works in his programmes when touring abroad. His large British repertoire included the works of Malcolm Arnold, Arthur Bliss, Havergal Brian, Frank Bridge, Benjamin Britten, George Butterworth, Eric Coates, Frederick Delius, Edward Elgar, Alexander Goehr, Alun Hoddinott, Gustav Holst, George Lloyd, William Mathias, Michael Tippett, Thea Musgrave, Peter Maxwell Davies, Arthur Sullivan, Ralph Vaughan Williams and William Walton.
Groves was noted for adding adventurous new works to the repertory of his orchestras. The composer Oliver Knussen said, "He managed to get the respect of the players and the affection of performers. He had an exemplary attitude and track record with regard to contemporary music. His policy of presenting second performances as well as first was selfless and idealistic." Groves's premières included works by Lennox Berkeley, David Blake, Justin Connolly. Arnold Cooke, Gordon Crosse, Jonathan Harvey, Robin Holloway, Daniel Jones, John McCabe, Priaulx Rainier, Edwin Roxburgh, Edmund Rubbra, Giles Swayne and Hugh Wood.
Honours and personal life
Groves received many honours for his musical work, including being appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1958, a Commander of the Order (CBE) in 1968, and receiving a knighthood in 1973. He received doctorates from four universities, was made a freeman of the City of London in 1976 and elected an honorary member of the Royal Philharmonic Society in 1990. He was appointed Companion of the Royal Northern College of Music (whose council he chaired from 1973 to 1990, and where a building is named in his honour) and a Fellow of the Royal College of Music, the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, Trinity College of Music, and the London College of Music, and was an honorary member of the Royal Academy of Music. The "Making Music Sir Charles Groves Prize" is a national award, named in his honour, given to an individual or organisation making an outstanding contribution to British music. Peter Maxwell Davies wrote Sir Charles: his Pavane as a tribute to Groves's memory.
Away from the concert hall, Groves was a connoisseur of English literature and also a keen sports fan. When young he played rugby "in the Wasps F team", as he self-deprecatingly put it, and as a cricketer was "a wily slow bowler". Charles and Hilary Groves had three children, Sally, Mary and Jonathan, the first and last of whom entered the musical profession. Charles Groves suffered a heart attack early in 1992 and died in London, four months later, at the age of 77. A memorial stone to his memory was placed in St Paul's Cathedral.
Recordings
Although the record companies tended to regard Groves as a specialist in British music, he made recordings of German, French and Russian music including Beethoven (Symphony No 4 and Symphony No 6); Fauré (Masques et bergamasques and Pavane); Haydn (Symphony No 92, Oxford, Symphony No 104, London); Ravel (Pavane pour une infante défunte); Satie (Gymnopédies) and Tchaikovsky (Variations on a Rococo Theme (with Paul Tortelier, cello)). He also recorded Dvorak's Sixth Symphony and Sibelius's incidental music to The Tempest.
British music recorded by Groves includes Arnold (Symphony No 2); Bliss (A Colour Symphony, Morning Heroes); Brian (Symphonies 8 & 9); Bridge (Enter Spring, The Sea, Summer); Britten (Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge); Butterworth (The Banks of Green Willow ); Delius (Koanga, A Mass of Life, On hearing the first cuckoo in Spring); Elgar (Caractacus, Cello Concerto (Paul Tortelier, cello), Chanson de matin, Chanson de nuit, Crown of India Suite, Enigma Variations, The Light of Life, Nursery Suite, Serenade for Strings, Severn Suite, Violin Concerto (Hugh Bean, violin)); Holst (Choral Symphony, The Planets, St. Paul's Suite); Sullivan (Overture Di Ballo, Overtures to Savoy Operas, Symphony in E (Irish)); Tippett (Fantasia concertante on a Theme of Corelli); Vaughan Williams (Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis, Hugh the Drover); Walton (Capriccio burlesco, Crown Imperial, Hamlet Funeral March, Johannesburg Festival Overture, Orb and Sceptre, Richard III Prelude and Suite, Scapino, Spitfire Prelude & Fugue); and Warlock (Capriol Suite).
Notes
External links
Profile at Divineart.com
1915 births
1992 deaths
English conductors (music)
British male conductors (music)
Music directors (opera)
Alumni of the Royal College of Music
Knights Bachelor
Conductors (music) awarded knighthoods
Commanders of the Order of the British Empire
Honorary Members of the Royal Philharmonic Society
People educated at Sutton Valence School
People educated at St. Paul's Cathedral School
Musicians from Kent
20th-century English musicians
20th-century British conductors (music)
20th-century British male musicians | [
"Sir Charles Barnard Groves CBE (10 March 191520 June 1992) was an English conductor.",
"He was known for the breadth of his repertoire and for encouraging contemporary composers and young conductors.",
"After accompanying positions and conducting various orchestras and studio work for the BBC, Groves spent a decade as conductor of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra.",
"His best-known musical directorship was of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, beginning in 1963, with which he made most of his recordings.",
"From 1967 until his death, Groves was associate conductor of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, and in the 1970s he was one of the regular conductors of the Last Night of the Proms.",
"He also served as president of the National Youth Orchestra from 1977, and, during the last decade of his life, as guest conductor for orchestras around the world.",
"Life and career\n\nEarly years\nGroves was born in London, the only child of Frederick Groves and Annie (née Whitehead).",
"He was a pupil at St Paul's Cathedral School (where a house is now named after him), singing in the Cathedral choir and, from the age of 13, studying the piano and organ.",
"Music was already important to him as a solace, as he was orphaned at the age of ten – his father having died in 1921 from injuries received in World War I and his mother having died four years later.",
"From 1930 until 1932 he was a pupil at Sutton Valence School, in Kent, where Groves Hall is named in honour of him.",
"After leaving Sutton Valence School he attended the Royal College of Music.",
"There, his main studies were in lieder and accompanying, but he became involved in student opera productions as a répétiteur.",
"He was naturally gifted with great fluency and the ability to sight read almost any music, but confessed, years later, to having been lazy about his piano studies, and he abandoned his ambitions to become a concert pianist.",
"He played in the percussion section for Vaughan Williams's Hugh the Drover and Delius's A Village Romeo and Juliet when Sir Thomas Beecham performed as guest conductor at the College.",
"Groves also went into the conducting class, but did not progress beyond the third orchestra.",
"In 1937, while still a student, he accompanied choral rehearsals of Brahms's German Requiem, Verdi's Requiem and Beethoven's Missa Solemnis under Arturo Toscanini.",
"Groves began his professional career as a freelance accompanist, including work for the BBC.",
"In 1938, he was appointed chorus master of the BBC Music Productions Unit under the direction of Stanford Robinson, where he worked on broadcast opera productions.",
"At the outbreak of the Second World War, Groves was sent to Evesham, and later Bedford, England, to be resident chorus master for the BBC while it was evacuated from London.",
"In 1943, he was invited to take charge of the BBC Revue Orchestra, playing mostly light music.",
"During this time Groves conducted Weill's Lady in the Dark with Gertrude Lawrence in the lead role.",
"Conducting posts\nGroves was conductor for the BBC Northern Orchestra in Manchester from 1944 to 1951, conducting several studio concerts every week, and thereby acquiring an exceptionally large repertoire.",
"While in Manchester he met a BBC colleague, Hilary Barchard, whom he married in 1948.",
"Feeling the need to move from studio-based work, Groves accepted the conductorship of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra from 1951 to 1961, which he conducted about 150 times each year.",
"When financial difficulties led to a proposal to merge the Bournemouth and Birmingham orchestras, Groves supported the alternative proposition by which the Bournemouth orchestra took on the additional role of resident orchestra for the new Welsh National Opera, of which he became musical director from 1961 to 1963.",
"Groves did much to establish that company's choral and orchestral traditions and conducted many performances of works then seldom staged, such as Verdi's I Lombardi and The Sicilian Vespers, which won critical acclaim and were brought to London.",
"Groves is probably best known for his long tenure from 1963 to 1977 as Music Director and Principal Conductor of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, conducting, as he said, \"everything from the St John Passion to Messiaen and Stockhausen\".",
"He spent nine months of every year with the RLPO, where he greatly improved standards of playing.",
"In the other three months he guest conducted concerts and operas in London and overseas.",
"He took the RLPO on highly acclaimed tours of Germany and Switzerland in 1966 and 1968, and Poland in 1970.",
"During his time in Liverpool, Groves instituted a series of seminars for young conductors, and those who made early appearances there included Andrew Davis, Mark Elder, John Eliot Gardiner, James Judd and Barry Wordsworth.",
"At one seminar Groves noted the presence in the orchestra, as an extra percussion player, of a teenager named Simon Rattle.",
"From 1967 until his death, Groves was associate conductor of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, which he led on a tour of the US In the 1970s he was one of the regular conductors of the Last Night of the Proms (others being Norman Del Mar and James Loughran).",
"Groves was Music Director of the English National Opera in 1978–1979, but in spite of a well-received and rare revival of Weber's Euryanthe the appointment did not prove a success, and he relinquished the post the following year.",
"He found combining administration with conducting too stressful for him.",
"Groves also served as president of the National Youth Orchestra (1977–1992) and, especially during the last decade of his career, as guest conductor for numerous orchestras around the world.",
"In 1984, he joined the English Sinfonia as president and artistic adviser, later also becoming principal conductor of the Guildford Philharmonic (1987) and music director of the Leeds Philharmonic Society (1988).",
"Repertoire\nGroves was particularly noted for his assured conducting of large-scale works and was the first conductor to direct a complete cycle of Gustav Mahler's symphonies in Britain.",
"He was also famous for encouraging modern composers, and he frequently included their works in his programmes.",
"Groves conducted a wide repertory, refusing to concentrate on any particular subgenre.",
"He remarked, \"I feel myself a GP [general practitioner] rather than a consultant.\"",
"Nevertheless, he became particularly known as a champion of British composers and invariably offered British works in his programmes when touring abroad.",
"His large British repertoire included the works of Malcolm Arnold, Arthur Bliss, Havergal Brian, Frank Bridge, Benjamin Britten, George Butterworth, Eric Coates, Frederick Delius, Edward Elgar, Alexander Goehr, Alun Hoddinott, Gustav Holst, George Lloyd, William Mathias, Michael Tippett, Thea Musgrave, Peter Maxwell Davies, Arthur Sullivan, Ralph Vaughan Williams and William Walton.",
"Groves was noted for adding adventurous new works to the repertory of his orchestras.",
"The composer Oliver Knussen said, \"He managed to get the respect of the players and the affection of performers.",
"He had an exemplary attitude and track record with regard to contemporary music.",
"His policy of presenting second performances as well as first was selfless and idealistic.\"",
"Groves's premières included works by Lennox Berkeley, David Blake, Justin Connolly.",
"Arnold Cooke, Gordon Crosse, Jonathan Harvey, Robin Holloway, Daniel Jones, John McCabe, Priaulx Rainier, Edwin Roxburgh, Edmund Rubbra, Giles Swayne and Hugh Wood.",
"Honours and personal life\nGroves received many honours for his musical work, including being appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1958, a Commander of the Order (CBE) in 1968, and receiving a knighthood in 1973.",
"He received doctorates from four universities, was made a freeman of the City of London in 1976 and elected an honorary member of the Royal Philharmonic Society in 1990.",
"He was appointed Companion of the Royal Northern College of Music (whose council he chaired from 1973 to 1990, and where a building is named in his honour) and a Fellow of the Royal College of Music, the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, Trinity College of Music, and the London College of Music, and was an honorary member of the Royal Academy of Music.",
"The \"Making Music Sir Charles Groves Prize\" is a national award, named in his honour, given to an individual or organisation making an outstanding contribution to British music.",
"Peter Maxwell Davies wrote Sir Charles: his Pavane as a tribute to Groves's memory.",
"Away from the concert hall, Groves was a connoisseur of English literature and also a keen sports fan.",
"When young he played rugby \"in the Wasps F team\", as he self-deprecatingly put it, and as a cricketer was \"a wily slow bowler\".",
"Charles and Hilary Groves had three children, Sally, Mary and Jonathan, the first and last of whom entered the musical profession.",
"Charles Groves suffered a heart attack early in 1992 and died in London, four months later, at the age of 77.",
"A memorial stone to his memory was placed in St Paul's Cathedral.",
"Recordings\nAlthough the record companies tended to regard Groves as a specialist in British music, he made recordings of German, French and Russian music including Beethoven (Symphony No 4 and Symphony No 6); Fauré (Masques et bergamasques and Pavane); Haydn (Symphony No 92, Oxford, Symphony No 104, London); Ravel (Pavane pour une infante défunte); Satie (Gymnopédies) and Tchaikovsky (Variations on a Rococo Theme (with Paul Tortelier, cello)).",
"He also recorded Dvorak's Sixth Symphony and Sibelius's incidental music to The Tempest.",
"Notes\n\nExternal links\nProfile at Divineart.com\n\n1915 births\n1992 deaths\nEnglish conductors (music)\nBritish male conductors (music)\nMusic directors (opera)\nAlumni of the Royal College of Music\nKnights Bachelor\nConductors (music) awarded knighthoods\nCommanders of the Order of the British Empire\nHonorary Members of the Royal Philharmonic Society\nPeople educated at Sutton Valence School\nPeople educated at St. Paul's Cathedral School\nMusicians from Kent\n20th-century English musicians\n20th-century British conductors (music)\n20th-century British male musicians"
] | [
"Sir Charles was an English conductor.",
"He encouraged contemporary composers and young conductors.",
"After a decade as conductor of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, Groves went on to conduct various orchestras and studio work for the BBC.",
"He made most of his recordings while he was the musical director of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.",
"In the 1970s, he was one of the regular conductors of the Last Night of the Proms, as associate conductor of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.",
"He was a guest conductor for orchestras around the world during the last decade of his life, as well as serving as president of the National Youth Orchestra.",
"The only child of Frederick and Annie, Groves was born in London.",
"He was a student at St Paul's Cathedral School and studied the piano and organ.",
"His father died from injuries received in World War I and his mother died four years later, but music was still important to him, as he was orphans at the age of ten.",
"The school where he was a student from 1930 to 1932 is named after him.",
"He attended the Royal College of Music.",
"His main studies were in lieder and accompanying, but he became involved in student opera productions.",
"He confessed years later that he was lazy about his piano studies and abandoned his ambitions to become a concert pianist.",
"He played in the percussion section for both Hugh the Drover and A Village Romeo and Juliet.",
"Groves did not progress beyond the third orchestra after going into the conducting class.",
"He was a student in 1937 when he accompanied the rehearsals of Beethoven's Missa Solemnis.",
"He began his professional career as a accompanist.",
"He worked on broadcast opera productions while he was a chorus master at the BBC.",
"At the outbreak of the Second World War, Groves was sent to Evesham, England, to be the resident chorus master for the BBC while it was evacuated from London.",
"He was invited to take charge of the Revue Orchestra in 1943, playing mostly light music.",
"The lead role in Lady in the Dark was played by Gertrude Lawrence.",
"During his time as conductor for the Northern Orchestra in Manchester from 1944 to 1951, he conducted several studio concerts every week.",
"Hilary Barchard was married to him in 1948.",
"When he felt the need to move away from studio-based work, he accepted the conductorship of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra from 1951 to 1961.",
"The Bournemouth orchestra took on the additional role of resident orchestra for the new Welsh National Opera because of the financial difficulties that led to a proposal to merge the Bournemouth and Birmingham orchestras.",
"The company's choral and orchestral traditions were established by Groves, who conducted many performances of works such as Verdi's I Lombardi and The Sicilian Vespers, which won critical praise and were brought to London.",
"As he said, \"everything from the St John Passion to Messiaen and Stockhausen\", as he was best known for his long tenure from 1963 to 1977 as Music Director and Principal Conductor of the RoyalLiverpool Philharmonic Orchestra.",
"He spent nine months a year with the RLPO, improving the standards of playing.",
"He guest conducted operas and concerts in London and overseas.",
"In 1966 and 1968, he took the RLPO on tours of Germany and Switzerland.",
"Andrew Davis, Mark Elder, John Eliot Gardiner, James Judd, and Barry Wordsworth were some of the young conductors who made appearances there.",
"The teenager named Simon Rattle was an extra percussion player in the orchestra.",
"In the 1970s, he was one of the regular conductors of the Last Night of the Proms, as well as being an associate conductor of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.",
"In spite of a well-received and rare revival of Weber's Euryanthe, the appointment of Groves as Music Director of the English National Opera did not prove to be a success, and he relinquished the post the following year.",
"Combining administration with conducting was too much for him.",
"He was a guest conductor for numerous orchestras around the world during the last decade of his career, as well as the president of the National Youth Orchestra.",
"In 1984 he became president and artistic adviser of the English Sinfonia and later became principal conductor of the Guildford Philharmonic and music director of the Leeds Philharmonic Society.",
"Repertoire Groves was the first conductor to direct a complete cycle of Gustav Mahler's symphonies in Britain and was noted for his assured conducting of large-scale works.",
"He encouraged modern composers and included their works in his programmes.",
"The repertory was conducted by a wide range of people.",
"He said he felt like a GP rather than a consultant.",
"He was a champion of British composers and always offered British works in his programmes.",
"His large British collection included works by Malcolm Arnold, Havergal Brian, Frank Bridge, Benjamin Britten, George Butterworth, Eric Coates, Frederick Delius, Edward Elgar, Alexander Goehr, Alun Hoddinott, Gustav Holst, George Lloyd, William Mathias, and Michael Tippett.",
"New works were added to the repertory of his orchestras.",
"Oliver Knussen said that he got the respect of the players and the affection of the performers.",
"He had a good track record with contemporary music.",
"His policy of presenting second performances as well as first was idealistic.",
"The premires included works by a number of authors.",
"Arnold Cooke, Gordon Crosse, Jonathan Harvey, Robin Holloway, Daniel Jones, John McCabe, Priaulx Rainier, Edmund Rubbra, Giles Swayne and Hugh Wood.",
"In addition to being an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE), a Commander of the Order (CBE) in 1968, and a knighthood in 1973, Groves received many other honours for his musical work.",
"In 1976, he was made a freeman of the City of London, and in 1990 he was elected to the Royal Philharmonic Society.",
"He was a fellow of the Royal College of Music, a fellow of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, a fellow of the Trinity College of Music, and a Companion of the Royal Northern College of Music.",
"The \"Making Music Sir Charles Groves Prize\" is a national award, named in his honour, given to an individual or organisation making an outstanding contribution to British music.",
"Sir Charles: his Pavane was written by Peter Maxwell Davies.",
"Outside of the concert hall, Groves was a fan of sports and English literature.",
"He was a wily slow bowler when he was a cricketer and when he was a rugby player.",
"Sally, Mary and Jonathan were the first and last children to enter the musical profession.",
"At the age of 77, Charles Groves died in London four months after he suffered a heart attack.",
"There is a memorial stone in St Paul's Cathedral.",
"Although the record companies thought of him as a specialist in British music, he made recordings of German, French and Russian music.",
"The sixth symphony and Sibelius's music were recorded by him.",
"Commanders of the Order of the British Empire have been awarded to alumni of the Royal College of Music."
] | <mask> CBE (10 March 191520 June 1992) was an English conductor. He was known for the breadth of his repertoire and for encouraging contemporary composers and young conductors. After accompanying positions and conducting various orchestras and studio work for the BBC, Groves spent a decade as conductor of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra. His best-known musical directorship was of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, beginning in 1963, with which he made most of his recordings. From 1967 until his death, Groves was associate conductor of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, and in the 1970s he was one of the regular conductors of the Last Night of the Proms. He also served as president of the National Youth Orchestra from 1977, and, during the last decade of his life, as guest conductor for orchestras around the world. Life and career
Early years
Groves was born in London, the only child of <mask> and Annie (née Whitehead).He was a pupil at St Paul's Cathedral School (where a house is now named after him), singing in the Cathedral choir and, from the age of 13, studying the piano and organ. Music was already important to him as a solace, as he was orphaned at the age of ten – his father having died in 1921 from injuries received in World War I and his mother having died four years later. From 1930 until 1932 he was a pupil at Sutton Valence School, in Kent, where Groves Hall is named in honour of him. After leaving Sutton Valence School he attended the Royal College of Music. There, his main studies were in lieder and accompanying, but he became involved in student opera productions as a répétiteur. He was naturally gifted with great fluency and the ability to sight read almost any music, but confessed, years later, to having been lazy about his piano studies, and he abandoned his ambitions to become a concert pianist. He played in the percussion section for Vaughan Williams's Hugh the Drover and Delius's A Village Romeo and Juliet when Sir Thomas Beecham performed as guest conductor at the College.Groves also went into the conducting class, but did not progress beyond the third orchestra. In 1937, while still a student, he accompanied choral rehearsals of Brahms's German Requiem, Verdi's Requiem and Beethoven's Missa Solemnis under Arturo Toscanini. Groves began his professional career as a freelance accompanist, including work for the BBC. In 1938, he was appointed chorus master of the BBC Music Productions Unit under the direction of Stanford Robinson, where he worked on broadcast opera productions. At the outbreak of the Second World War, Groves was sent to Evesham, and later Bedford, England, to be resident chorus master for the BBC while it was evacuated from London. In 1943, he was invited to take charge of the BBC Revue Orchestra, playing mostly light music. During this time Groves conducted Weill's Lady in the Dark with Gertrude Lawrence in the lead role.Conducting posts
Groves was conductor for the BBC Northern Orchestra in Manchester from 1944 to 1951, conducting several studio concerts every week, and thereby acquiring an exceptionally large repertoire. While in Manchester he met a BBC colleague, Hilary Barchard, whom he married in 1948. Feeling the need to move from studio-based work, Groves accepted the conductorship of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra from 1951 to 1961, which he conducted about 150 times each year. When financial difficulties led to a proposal to merge the Bournemouth and Birmingham orchestras, Groves supported the alternative proposition by which the Bournemouth orchestra took on the additional role of resident orchestra for the new Welsh National Opera, of which he became musical director from 1961 to 1963. Groves did much to establish that company's choral and orchestral traditions and conducted many performances of works then seldom staged, such as Verdi's I Lombardi and The Sicilian Vespers, which won critical acclaim and were brought to London. Groves is probably best known for his long tenure from 1963 to 1977 as Music Director and Principal Conductor of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, conducting, as he said, "everything from the St John Passion to Messiaen and Stockhausen". He spent nine months of every year with the RLPO, where he greatly improved standards of playing.In the other three months he guest conducted concerts and operas in London and overseas. He took the RLPO on highly acclaimed tours of Germany and Switzerland in 1966 and 1968, and Poland in 1970. During his time in Liverpool, Groves instituted a series of seminars for young conductors, and those who made early appearances there included Andrew Davis, Mark Elder, John Eliot Gardiner, James Judd and Barry Wordsworth. At one seminar Groves noted the presence in the orchestra, as an extra percussion player, of a teenager named Simon Rattle. From 1967 until his death, Groves was associate conductor of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, which he led on a tour of the US In the 1970s he was one of the regular conductors of the Last Night of the Proms (others being Norman Del Mar and James Loughran). Groves was Music Director of the English National Opera in 1978–1979, but in spite of a well-received and rare revival of Weber's Euryanthe the appointment did not prove a success, and he relinquished the post the following year. He found combining administration with conducting too stressful for him.Groves also served as president of the National Youth Orchestra (1977–1992) and, especially during the last decade of his career, as guest conductor for numerous orchestras around the world. In 1984, he joined the English Sinfonia as president and artistic adviser, later also becoming principal conductor of the Guildford Philharmonic (1987) and music director of the Leeds Philharmonic Society (1988). Repertoire
Groves was particularly noted for his assured conducting of large-scale works and was the first conductor to direct a complete cycle of Gustav Mahler's symphonies in Britain. He was also famous for encouraging modern composers, and he frequently included their works in his programmes. Groves conducted a wide repertory, refusing to concentrate on any particular subgenre. He remarked, "I feel myself a GP [general practitioner] rather than a consultant." Nevertheless, he became particularly known as a champion of British composers and invariably offered British works in his programmes when touring abroad.His large British repertoire included the works of Malcolm Arnold, Arthur Bliss, Havergal Brian, Frank Bridge, Benjamin Britten, George Butterworth, Eric Coates, Frederick Delius, Edward Elgar, Alexander Goehr, Alun Hoddinott, Gustav Holst, George Lloyd, William Mathias, Michael Tippett, Thea Musgrave, Peter Maxwell Davies, Arthur Sullivan, Ralph Vaughan Williams and William Walton. Groves was noted for adding adventurous new works to the repertory of his orchestras. The composer Oliver Knussen said, "He managed to get the respect of the players and the affection of performers. He had an exemplary attitude and track record with regard to contemporary music. His policy of presenting second performances as well as first was selfless and idealistic." Groves's premières included works by Lennox Berkeley, David Blake, Justin Connolly. Arnold Cooke, Gordon Crosse, Jonathan Harvey, Robin Holloway, Daniel Jones, John McCabe, Priaulx Rainier, Edwin Roxburgh, Edmund Rubbra, Giles Swayne and Hugh Wood.Honours and personal life
Groves received many honours for his musical work, including being appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1958, a Commander of the Order (CBE) in 1968, and receiving a knighthood in 1973. He received doctorates from four universities, was made a freeman of the City of London in 1976 and elected an honorary member of the Royal Philharmonic Society in 1990. He was appointed Companion of the Royal Northern College of Music (whose council he chaired from 1973 to 1990, and where a building is named in his honour) and a Fellow of the Royal College of Music, the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, Trinity College of Music, and the London College of Music, and was an honorary member of the Royal Academy of Music. The "Making Music Sir Charles Groves Prize" is a national award, named in his honour, given to an individual or organisation making an outstanding contribution to British music. Peter Maxwell Davies wrote Sir <mask>: his Pavane as a tribute to Groves's memory. Away from the concert hall, Groves was a connoisseur of English literature and also a keen sports fan. When young he played rugby "in the Wasps F team", as he self-deprecatingly put it, and as a cricketer was "a wily slow bowler".<mask> and Hilary Groves had three children, Sally, Mary and Jonathan, the first and last of whom entered the musical profession. <mask>s suffered a heart attack early in 1992 and died in London, four months later, at the age of 77. A memorial stone to his memory was placed in St Paul's Cathedral. Recordings
Although the record companies tended to regard Groves as a specialist in British music, he made recordings of German, French and Russian music including Beethoven (Symphony No 4 and Symphony No 6); Fauré (Masques et bergamasques and Pavane); Haydn (Symphony No 92, Oxford, Symphony No 104, London); Ravel (Pavane pour une infante défunte); Satie (Gymnopédies) and Tchaikovsky (Variations on a Rococo Theme (with Paul Tortelier, cello)). He also recorded Dvorak's Sixth Symphony and Sibelius's incidental music to The Tempest. Notes
External links
Profile at Divineart.com
1915 births
1992 deaths
English conductors (music)
British male conductors (music)
Music directors (opera)
Alumni of the Royal College of Music
Knights Bachelor
Conductors (music) awarded knighthoods
Commanders of the Order of the British Empire
Honorary Members of the Royal Philharmonic Society
People educated at Sutton Valence School
People educated at St. Paul's Cathedral School
Musicians from Kent
20th-century English musicians
20th-century British conductors (music)
20th-century British male musicians | [
"Sir Charles Barnard Groves",
"Frederick Groves",
"Charles",
"Charles",
"Charles Grove"
] | Sir <mask> was an English conductor. He encouraged contemporary composers and young conductors. After a decade as conductor of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, Groves went on to conduct various orchestras and studio work for the BBC. He made most of his recordings while he was the musical director of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. In the 1970s, he was one of the regular conductors of the Last Night of the Proms, as associate conductor of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. He was a guest conductor for orchestras around the world during the last decade of his life, as well as serving as president of the National Youth Orchestra. The only child of Frederick and Annie, Groves was born in London.He was a student at St Paul's Cathedral School and studied the piano and organ. His father died from injuries received in World War I and his mother died four years later, but music was still important to him, as he was orphans at the age of ten. The school where he was a student from 1930 to 1932 is named after him. He attended the Royal College of Music. His main studies were in lieder and accompanying, but he became involved in student opera productions. He confessed years later that he was lazy about his piano studies and abandoned his ambitions to become a concert pianist. He played in the percussion section for both Hugh the Drover and A Village Romeo and Juliet.Groves did not progress beyond the third orchestra after going into the conducting class. He was a student in 1937 when he accompanied the rehearsals of Beethoven's Missa Solemnis. He began his professional career as a accompanist. He worked on broadcast opera productions while he was a chorus master at the BBC. At the outbreak of the Second World War, <mask> was sent to Evesham, England, to be the resident chorus master for the BBC while it was evacuated from London. He was invited to take charge of the Revue Orchestra in 1943, playing mostly light music. The lead role in Lady in the Dark was played by Gertrude Lawrence.During his time as conductor for the Northern Orchestra in Manchester from 1944 to 1951, he conducted several studio concerts every week. Hilary Barchard was married to him in 1948. When he felt the need to move away from studio-based work, he accepted the conductorship of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra from 1951 to 1961. The Bournemouth orchestra took on the additional role of resident orchestra for the new Welsh National Opera because of the financial difficulties that led to a proposal to merge the Bournemouth and Birmingham orchestras. The company's choral and orchestral traditions were established by Groves, who conducted many performances of works such as Verdi's I Lombardi and The Sicilian Vespers, which won critical praise and were brought to London. As he said, "everything from the St John Passion to Messiaen and Stockhausen", as he was best known for his long tenure from 1963 to 1977 as Music Director and Principal Conductor of the RoyalLiverpool Philharmonic Orchestra. He spent nine months a year with the RLPO, improving the standards of playing.He guest conducted operas and concerts in London and overseas. In 1966 and 1968, he took the RLPO on tours of Germany and Switzerland. Andrew Davis, Mark Elder, John Eliot Gardiner, James Judd, and Barry Wordsworth were some of the young conductors who made appearances there. The teenager named Simon Rattle was an extra percussion player in the orchestra. In the 1970s, he was one of the regular conductors of the Last Night of the Proms, as well as being an associate conductor of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. In spite of a well-received and rare revival of Weber's Euryanthe, the appointment of <mask> as Music Director of the English National Opera did not prove to be a success, and he relinquished the post the following year. Combining administration with conducting was too much for him.He was a guest conductor for numerous orchestras around the world during the last decade of his career, as well as the president of the National Youth Orchestra. In 1984 he became president and artistic adviser of the English Sinfonia and later became principal conductor of the Guildford Philharmonic and music director of the Leeds Philharmonic Society. Repertoire Groves was the first conductor to direct a complete cycle of Gustav Mahler's symphonies in Britain and was noted for his assured conducting of large-scale works. He encouraged modern composers and included their works in his programmes. The repertory was conducted by a wide range of people. He said he felt like a GP rather than a consultant. He was a champion of British composers and always offered British works in his programmes.His large British collection included works by Malcolm Arnold, Havergal Brian, Frank Bridge, Benjamin Britten, George Butterworth, Eric Coates, Frederick Delius, Edward Elgar, Alexander Goehr, Alun Hoddinott, Gustav Holst, George Lloyd, William Mathias, and Michael Tippett. New works were added to the repertory of his orchestras. Oliver Knussen said that he got the respect of the players and the affection of the performers. He had a good track record with contemporary music. His policy of presenting second performances as well as first was idealistic. The premires included works by a number of authors. Arnold Cooke, Gordon Crosse, Jonathan Harvey, Robin Holloway, Daniel Jones, John McCabe, Priaulx Rainier, Edmund Rubbra, Giles Swayne and Hugh Wood.In addition to being an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE), a Commander of the Order (CBE) in 1968, and a knighthood in 1973, Groves received many other honours for his musical work. In 1976, he was made a freeman of the City of London, and in 1990 he was elected to the Royal Philharmonic Society. He was a fellow of the Royal College of Music, a fellow of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, a fellow of the Trinity College of Music, and a Companion of the Royal Northern College of Music. The "Making Music Sir Charles Groves Prize" is a national award, named in his honour, given to an individual or organisation making an outstanding contribution to British music. Sir <mask>: his Pavane was written by Peter Maxwell Davies. Outside of the concert hall, Groves was a fan of sports and English literature. He was a wily slow bowler when he was a cricketer and when he was a rugby player.Sally, Mary and Jonathan were the first and last children to enter the musical profession. At the age of 77, <mask> died in London four months after he suffered a heart attack. There is a memorial stone in St Paul's Cathedral. Although the record companies thought of him as a specialist in British music, he made recordings of German, French and Russian music. The sixth symphony and Sibelius's music were recorded by him. Commanders of the Order of the British Empire have been awarded to alumni of the Royal College of Music. | [
"Charles",
"Groves",
"Groves",
"Charles",
"Charles Groves"
] |
30476025 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike%20Budenholzer | Mike Budenholzer | Michael Vincent Budenholzer (born August 6, 1969) is an American professional basketball coach who is the head coach of the Milwaukee Bucks of the National Basketball Association (NBA). Before joining the Bucks, he spent five seasons as head coach of the Atlanta Hawks and 17 seasons with the San Antonio Spurs, serving as an alternate video coordinator for the first two seasons and then as an assistant coach behind head coach Gregg Popovich. In 2021, Budenholzer coached the Bucks to their first NBA championship since 1971.
As a protégé of Gregg Popovich, Budenholzer is, similar to his mentor, commonly referred to by other coaches, players and media as "Bud" or "Coach Bud".
Playing career
A native of Holbrook, Arizona, Budenholzer attended Pomona College, where he was a four-year letterman in basketball and golf and was named the Outstanding Senior Athlete in 1993. He graduated with a bachelor's degree in philosophy, politics, and economics. On September 19, 2015, Budenholzer was inducted into the Pomona-Pitzer Hall of Fame.
Coaching career
After college, he spent the 1993–94 season in Denmark, playing professionally for Vejle Basketball Klub, where he averaged a team-high 27.5 points per game while also serving as head coach for two teams of the club's youth system. Previously, he had a spell playing for Pentland in the Scottish League.
San Antonio Spurs
At the start of the 1994–95 season, Budenholzer was hired by the San Antonio Spurs of the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a video coordinator. He held that position for two years before being named an assistant coach under head coach Gregg Popovich at the beginning of the 1996–97 season. Budenholzer was part of a staff that won four NBA championships while with the Spurs.
Atlanta Hawks
Budenholzer left San Antonio at the end of the 2013 NBA Playoffs to begin his new career as the head coach of the Atlanta Hawks. In his first season as head coach, the Hawks would qualify for the Eastern Conference playoffs as the 8th seed in the 2014 NBA Playoffs but would lose to the first-seeded Indiana Pacers in the first round.
Budenholzer was named the December 2014 Eastern Conference Coach of the Month after leading the Hawks to a 14–2 record in the month. He was named the head coach of the Eastern Conference team at the 2015 NBA All-Star Game by virtue of Atlanta being in first place in the conference by the break. Budenholzer won the January 2015 Eastern Conference Coach of the Month award after leading the Hawks to the first 17–0 record in a month in NBA history. He went on to lead the Hawks to a franchise record 60 wins, as well as their deepest playoff run in 48 years. On April 21, he was named the recipient of the Red Auerbach Trophy as the 2014–15 NBA Coach of the Year.
On June 30, 2015, Budenholzer was promoted to president of basketball operations in addition to his duties as head coach. While Wes Wilcox was promoted to general manager, Budenholzer had the final say in all basketball matters.
On August 1, 2015, Budenholzer served as Team Africa's assistant coach at the 2015 NBA Africa exhibition game.
On April 25, 2018, Budenholzer and the Hawks agreed to part ways, having been removed as president of basketball operations for the Hawks on May 5, 2017.
Milwaukee Bucks
On May 17, 2018, the Milwaukee Bucks announced Budenholzer as their head coach. The Bucks found success in his first season, posting a 60–22 record. In January, Budenholzer was selected as the coach of the East team in the 2019 NBA All-Star Game. At the end of the season, he won the NBA Coach of the Year for the second time in his career and also won the National Basketball Coaches Association's Coach of the Year Award.
On July 21, 2021, Budenholzer led the Milwaukee Bucks to an NBA championship, defeating the Phoenix Suns in six games.
Head coaching record
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|Atlanta
| style="text-align:left;"|
| 82||38||44|||| style="text-align:center;"|4th in Southeast||7||3||4||
| style="text-align:center;"|Lost in First Round
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|Atlanta
| style="text-align:left;"|
| 82||60||22|||| style="text-align:center;"|1st in Southeast||16||8||8||
| style="text-align:center;"|Lost in Conference Finals
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|Atlanta
| style="text-align:left;"|
| 82||48||34|||| style="text-align:center;"|2nd in Southeast||10||4||6||
| style="text-align:center;"|Lost in Conference Semifinals
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|Atlanta
| style="text-align:left;"|
| 82||43||39|||| style="text-align:center;"|2nd in Southeast||6||2||4||
| style="text-align:center;"|Lost in First Round
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|Atlanta
| style="text-align:left;"|
| 82||24||58|||| style="text-align:center;"|5th in Southeast||—||—||—||—
| style="text-align:center;"|Missed playoffs
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|Milwaukee
| style="text-align:left;"|
| 82||60||22|||| style="text-align:center;"|1st in Central||15||10||5||
| style="text-align:center;"|Lost in Conference Finals
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|Milwaukee
| style="text-align:left;"|
| 73||56||17|||| style="text-align:center;"|1st in Central||10||5||5||
| style="text-align:center;"|Lost in Conference Semifinals
|-
|- style="background:#FDE910;"
| style="text-align:left;"|Milwaukee
| style="text-align:left;"|
| 72||46||26|||| style="text-align:center;"|1st in Central||23||16||7||
| data-sort-value="1" style="text-align:center;"|Won NBA Championship
|- class="sortbottom"
| style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"|Career
| 637||375||262|||| ||87||48||39||||
Personal life
Budenholzer is the youngest of seven children born to Vince and Libby Budenholzer. He is of German descent. His father was also a basketball coach and spent 25 years coaching high school and college teams in Arizona before retiring in 1997. Budenholzer has four children: William Vincent, Savoia Elizabeth, Hanna Louise, and John Bent.
References
External links
Mike Budenholzer Info Page at NBA.com
1969 births
Living people
American expatriate basketball people in Denmark
American men's basketball players
American people of German descent
Atlanta Hawks head coaches
Basketball coaches from Arizona
Basketball players from Arizona
Milwaukee Bucks head coaches
National Basketball Association championship-winning head coaches
People from Holbrook, Arizona
Pomona College alumni
Pomona-Pitzer Sagehens men's basketball players
San Antonio Spurs assistant coaches | [
"Michael Vincent Budenholzer (born August 6, 1969) is an American professional basketball coach who is the head coach of the Milwaukee Bucks of the National Basketball Association (NBA).",
"Before joining the Bucks, he spent five seasons as head coach of the Atlanta Hawks and 17 seasons with the San Antonio Spurs, serving as an alternate video coordinator for the first two seasons and then as an assistant coach behind head coach Gregg Popovich.",
"In 2021, Budenholzer coached the Bucks to their first NBA championship since 1971.",
"As a protégé of Gregg Popovich, Budenholzer is, similar to his mentor, commonly referred to by other coaches, players and media as \"Bud\" or \"Coach Bud\".",
"Playing career\nA native of Holbrook, Arizona, Budenholzer attended Pomona College, where he was a four-year letterman in basketball and golf and was named the Outstanding Senior Athlete in 1993.",
"He graduated with a bachelor's degree in philosophy, politics, and economics.",
"On September 19, 2015, Budenholzer was inducted into the Pomona-Pitzer Hall of Fame.",
"Coaching career\nAfter college, he spent the 1993–94 season in Denmark, playing professionally for Vejle Basketball Klub, where he averaged a team-high 27.5 points per game while also serving as head coach for two teams of the club's youth system.",
"Previously, he had a spell playing for Pentland in the Scottish League.",
"San Antonio Spurs \n\nAt the start of the 1994–95 season, Budenholzer was hired by the San Antonio Spurs of the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a video coordinator.",
"He held that position for two years before being named an assistant coach under head coach Gregg Popovich at the beginning of the 1996–97 season.",
"Budenholzer was part of a staff that won four NBA championships while with the Spurs.",
"Atlanta Hawks \nBudenholzer left San Antonio at the end of the 2013 NBA Playoffs to begin his new career as the head coach of the Atlanta Hawks.",
"In his first season as head coach, the Hawks would qualify for the Eastern Conference playoffs as the 8th seed in the 2014 NBA Playoffs but would lose to the first-seeded Indiana Pacers in the first round.",
"Budenholzer was named the December 2014 Eastern Conference Coach of the Month after leading the Hawks to a 14–2 record in the month.",
"He was named the head coach of the Eastern Conference team at the 2015 NBA All-Star Game by virtue of Atlanta being in first place in the conference by the break.",
"Budenholzer won the January 2015 Eastern Conference Coach of the Month award after leading the Hawks to the first 17–0 record in a month in NBA history.",
"He went on to lead the Hawks to a franchise record 60 wins, as well as their deepest playoff run in 48 years.",
"On April 21, he was named the recipient of the Red Auerbach Trophy as the 2014–15 NBA Coach of the Year.",
"On June 30, 2015, Budenholzer was promoted to president of basketball operations in addition to his duties as head coach.",
"While Wes Wilcox was promoted to general manager, Budenholzer had the final say in all basketball matters.",
"On August 1, 2015, Budenholzer served as Team Africa's assistant coach at the 2015 NBA Africa exhibition game.",
"On April 25, 2018, Budenholzer and the Hawks agreed to part ways, having been removed as president of basketball operations for the Hawks on May 5, 2017.",
"Milwaukee Bucks \nOn May 17, 2018, the Milwaukee Bucks announced Budenholzer as their head coach.",
"The Bucks found success in his first season, posting a 60–22 record.",
"In January, Budenholzer was selected as the coach of the East team in the 2019 NBA All-Star Game.",
"At the end of the season, he won the NBA Coach of the Year for the second time in his career and also won the National Basketball Coaches Association's Coach of the Year Award.",
"On July 21, 2021, Budenholzer led the Milwaukee Bucks to an NBA championship, defeating the Phoenix Suns in six games.",
"He is of German descent.",
"His father was also a basketball coach and spent 25 years coaching high school and college teams in Arizona before retiring in 1997.",
"Budenholzer has four children: William Vincent, Savoia Elizabeth, Hanna Louise, and John Bent.",
"References\n\nExternal links\n\n Mike Budenholzer Info Page at NBA.com\n\n1969 births\nLiving people\nAmerican expatriate basketball people in Denmark\nAmerican men's basketball players\nAmerican people of German descent\nAtlanta Hawks head coaches\nBasketball coaches from Arizona\nBasketball players from Arizona\nMilwaukee Bucks head coaches\nNational Basketball Association championship-winning head coaches\nPeople from Holbrook, Arizona\nPomona College alumni\nPomona-Pitzer Sagehens men's basketball players\nSan Antonio Spurs assistant coaches"
] | [
"Budenholzer is an American professional basketball coach who is the head coach of the Milwaukee Bucks of the National Basketball Association.",
"He spent five seasons as head coach of the Atlanta Hawks and 17 seasons as an assistant coach with the San Antonio Spurs.",
"The Bucks won their first NBA championship since 1971 under Budenholzer.",
"Similar to his mentor, Budenholzer is often referred to as \"Bud\" or \"Coach Bud\" by other coaches, players and media.",
"Budenholzer was a four-year letterman in basketball and golf at Pomona College, where he was named the Outstanding Senior Athlete in 1993.",
"He received a bachelor's degree in philosophy, politics, and economics.",
"The Pomona-Pitzer Hall of Fame inducted Budenholzer on September 19, 2015.",
"He served as head coach for two teams of the club's youth system and averaged a team-high 27.5 points per game in the 1993–94 season while playing professionally for Vejle Basketball Klub.",
"He played for Pentland in the Scottish League.",
"Budenholzer was hired by the San Antonio Spurs as a video assistant at the start of the 1994–95 season.",
"At the beginning of the 1996–97 season, he was named an assistant coach under Popovich.",
"While with the Spurs, Budenholzer was part of a staff that won four NBA titles.",
"The head coach of the Atlanta Hawks, Mike Budenholzer, left San Antonio at the end of the NBA playoffs to start his new career.",
"In his first season as head coach, the Hawks lost to the Pacers in the first round of the NBA playoffs, despite being the 8th seed in the Eastern Conference.",
"Budenholzer led the Hawks to a 14–2 record in December and was named the Eastern Conference Coach of the month.",
"He was named the head coach of the Eastern Conference team at the All-Star Game because Atlanta was in first place at the break.",
"Budenholzer led the Hawks to a 17–0 record in January and was named the Eastern Conference Coach of the month.",
"He led the Hawks to a franchise record 60 wins and their deepest playoff run in 48 years.",
"He was named the NBA Coach of the Year on April 21.",
"Budenholzer was promoted to president of basketball operations on June 30, 2015.",
"Budenholzer had the final say in all basketball matters after Wes Wilcox was promoted to general manager.",
"Budenholzer was Team Africa's assistant coach at the NBA Africa exhibition game.",
"Budenholzer was removed as president of basketball operations for the Hawks on May 5, 2017.",
"Budenholzer was named the head coach of the Milwaukee Bucks.",
"The Bucks had a 60–22 record in his first season.",
"In January, Budenholzer was selected as the coach of the East team in the All-Star Game.",
"He won the NBA Coach of the Year for the second time in his career and the National Basketball Coaches Association's Coach of the Year Award.",
"Milwaukee won the NBA title on July 21, 2021, defeating the Phoenix Suns in six games.",
"He is of German descent.",
"His father was a basketball coach for 25 years and retired in 1997.",
"Budenholzer has four children.",
"NBA.com 1969 births Living people American expatriate basketball people in Denmark American men's basketball players American people of German descent Atlanta Hawks head coaches"
] | <mask> (born August 6, 1969) is an American professional basketball coach who is the head coach of the Milwaukee Bucks of the National Basketball Association (NBA). Before joining the Bucks, he spent five seasons as head coach of the Atlanta Hawks and 17 seasons with the San Antonio Spurs, serving as an alternate video coordinator for the first two seasons and then as an assistant coach behind head coach Gregg Popovich. In 2021, Budenholzer coached the Bucks to their first NBA championship since 1971. As a protégé of Gregg Popovich, Budenholzer is, similar to his mentor, commonly referred to by other coaches, players and media as "Bud" or "Coach Bud". Playing career
A native of Holbrook, Arizona, Budenholzer attended Pomona College, where he was a four-year letterman in basketball and golf and was named the Outstanding Senior Athlete in 1993. He graduated with a bachelor's degree in philosophy, politics, and economics. On September 19, 2015, <mask> was inducted into the Pomona-Pitzer Hall of Fame.Coaching career
After college, he spent the 1993–94 season in Denmark, playing professionally for Vejle Basketball Klub, where he averaged a team-high 27.5 points per game while also serving as head coach for two teams of the club's youth system. Previously, he had a spell playing for Pentland in the Scottish League. San Antonio Spurs
At the start of the 1994–95 season, <mask> was hired by the San Antonio Spurs of the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a video coordinator. He held that position for two years before being named an assistant coach under head coach Gregg Popovich at the beginning of the 1996–97 season. Budenholzer was part of a staff that won four NBA championships while with the Spurs. Atlanta Hawks
<mask> left San Antonio at the end of the 2013 NBA Playoffs to begin his new career as the head coach of the Atlanta Hawks. In his first season as head coach, the Hawks would qualify for the Eastern Conference playoffs as the 8th seed in the 2014 NBA Playoffs but would lose to the first-seeded Indiana Pacers in the first round.<mask> was named the December 2014 Eastern Conference Coach of the Month after leading the Hawks to a 14–2 record in the month. He was named the head coach of the Eastern Conference team at the 2015 NBA All-Star Game by virtue of Atlanta being in first place in the conference by the break. <mask> won the January 2015 Eastern Conference Coach of the Month award after leading the Hawks to the first 17–0 record in a month in NBA history. He went on to lead the Hawks to a franchise record 60 wins, as well as their deepest playoff run in 48 years. On April 21, he was named the recipient of the Red Auerbach Trophy as the 2014–15 NBA Coach of the Year. On June 30, 2015, <mask> was promoted to president of basketball operations in addition to his duties as head coach. While Wes Wilcox was promoted to general manager, Budenholzer had the final say in all basketball matters.On August 1, 2015, Budenholzer served as Team Africa's assistant coach at the 2015 NBA Africa exhibition game. On April 25, 2018, <mask> and the Hawks agreed to part ways, having been removed as president of basketball operations for the Hawks on May 5, 2017. Milwaukee Bucks
On May 17, 2018, the Milwaukee Bucks announced <mask> as their head coach. The Bucks found success in his first season, posting a 60–22 record. In January, <mask> was selected as the coach of the East team in the 2019 NBA All-Star Game. At the end of the season, he won the NBA Coach of the Year for the second time in his career and also won the National Basketball Coaches Association's Coach of the Year Award. On July 21, 2021, <mask> led the Milwaukee Bucks to an NBA championship, defeating the Phoenix Suns in six games.He is of German descent. His father was also a basketball coach and spent 25 years coaching high school and college teams in Arizona before retiring in 1997. Budenholzer has four children: William Vincent, Savoia Elizabeth, Hanna Louise, and John Bent. References
External links
<mask>zer Info Page at NBA.com
1969 births
Living people
American expatriate basketball people in Denmark
American men's basketball players
American people of German descent
Atlanta Hawks head coaches
Basketball coaches from Arizona
Basketball players from Arizona
Milwaukee Bucks head coaches
National Basketball Association championship-winning head coaches
People from Holbrook, Arizona
Pomona College alumni
Pomona-Pitzer Sagehens men's basketball players
San Antonio Spurs assistant coaches | [
"Michael Vincent Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Mike Budenhol"
] | <mask> is an American professional basketball coach who is the head coach of the Milwaukee Bucks of the National Basketball Association. He spent five seasons as head coach of the Atlanta Hawks and 17 seasons as an assistant coach with the San Antonio Spurs. The Bucks won their first NBA championship since 1971 under Budenholzer. Similar to his mentor, <mask> is often referred to as "Bud" or "Coach Bud" by other coaches, players and media. <mask> was a four-year letterman in basketball and golf at Pomona College, where he was named the Outstanding Senior Athlete in 1993. He received a bachelor's degree in philosophy, politics, and economics. The Pomona-Pitzer Hall of Fame inducted Budenholzer on September 19, 2015.He served as head coach for two teams of the club's youth system and averaged a team-high 27.5 points per game in the 1993–94 season while playing professionally for Vejle Basketball Klub. He played for Pentland in the Scottish League. <mask> was hired by the San Antonio Spurs as a video assistant at the start of the 1994–95 season. At the beginning of the 1996–97 season, he was named an assistant coach under Popovich. While with the Spurs, <mask> was part of a staff that won four NBA titles. The head coach of the Atlanta Hawks, <mask>, left San Antonio at the end of the NBA playoffs to start his new career. In his first season as head coach, the Hawks lost to the Pacers in the first round of the NBA playoffs, despite being the 8th seed in the Eastern Conference.<mask> led the Hawks to a 14–2 record in December and was named the Eastern Conference Coach of the month. He was named the head coach of the Eastern Conference team at the All-Star Game because Atlanta was in first place at the break. <mask> led the Hawks to a 17–0 record in January and was named the Eastern Conference Coach of the month. He led the Hawks to a franchise record 60 wins and their deepest playoff run in 48 years. He was named the NBA Coach of the Year on April 21. <mask> was promoted to president of basketball operations on June 30, 2015. Budenholzer had the final say in all basketball matters after Wes Wilcox was promoted to general manager.<mask> was Team Africa's assistant coach at the NBA Africa exhibition game. <mask> was removed as president of basketball operations for the Hawks on May 5, 2017. <mask> was named the head coach of the Milwaukee Bucks. The Bucks had a 60–22 record in his first season. In January, <mask> was selected as the coach of the East team in the All-Star Game. He won the NBA Coach of the Year for the second time in his career and the National Basketball Coaches Association's Coach of the Year Award. Milwaukee won the NBA title on July 21, 2021, defeating the Phoenix Suns in six games.He is of German descent. His father was a basketball coach for 25 years and retired in 1997. Budenholzer has four children. NBA.com 1969 births Living people American expatriate basketball people in Denmark American men's basketball players American people of German descent Atlanta Hawks head coaches | [
"Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Mike Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer",
"Budenholzer"
] |
1682089 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josh%20Morgan | Josh Morgan | Joshua Lewis Morgan (born June 20, 1985) is a former American football wide receiver. He was drafted by the San Francisco 49ers in the sixth round of the 2008 NFL Draft. He played college football at Virginia Tech. He also played for the Washington Redskins and Chicago Bears.
High school career
Morgan played quarterback, wide receiver and cornerback at Eastern Senior High School in Washington, D.C. before transferring to H.D. Woodson High School for his senior year. During his senior season, he accumulated eight catches for 275 yards and three touchdowns in a game against Glen Mills (Pa.) High School. He passed for 987 yards and rushed for 898 during his junior year, and finished with five passing and eight rushing touchdowns. He also played basketball and was named the most valuable player in two of the tournaments his team participated in.
College career
Morgan ranks fourth in Virginia Tech history with 122 receptions, eighth with 1,817 receiving yards (a 14.9 avg.) and fifth with 16 touchdowns. He finished his career with 2,435 all-purpose yards.
During his senior season in 2007, Morgan led the team with a career-high 46 catches for 552 yards (a 12.0 avg) and five touchdowns, while playing alongside Eddie Royal, now with the San Diego Chargers, and Justin Harper, now with the BC Lions. In 2006, he finished second on the team with 33 receptions for 448 yards (a 13.6 avg.) and four touchdowns.
As a sophomore in 2005, he finished with 28 catches for 571 yards (a 16.8 avg.) and four touchdowns. During his freshman season in 2004, he caught 15 passes for 346 yards (a 23.1 avg.) and three touchdowns. Morgan’s 126 yards receiving vs. Auburn in the 2005 Sugar Bowl set a school bowl game record.
Professional career
San Francisco 49ers
2008 season
In 2008, Morgan's preseason performances won him a place on the final 53-man roster. He became ill just before the season and lost 15 pounds. Morgan made his NFL debut in Week 1 against the Arizona Cardinals. In Week 7 against the New York Giants, he caught five passes for 86 yards and scored his first touchdown. The week after, he had his first career start. After suffering a one-inch tear in his groin in November, he missed the next four games. Playing in only 12 games, Morgan showed real promise as he finished his rookie season with 20 receptions for 319 yards and three touchdown receptions.
2009 season
Morgan was made a starter by Week 1 of the 2009 season. In October, after the 49ers had finally signed their 2009 first-round draft pick (wide receiver Michael Crabtree), it was assumed that Morgan might lose his starting job to the rookie. Instead, Morgan retained his starting position and played alongside Crabtree. By the end of his second season, he played in all 16 games, starting 15 of them, and recorded 52 receptions for 527 yards and three touchdowns.
2010 season
In his third season, Morgan recorded a career-high of 698 receiving yards on only 44 receptions. He also scored two touchdowns.
2011 season
On October 11, 2011, Morgan was placed on the injured reserve list after a promising start to the 2011 season due to a broken bone in his right leg. He finished the season with 15 receptions, 220 yards, and one touchdown in just five games.
Washington Redskins
2012 season
Morgan signed a five-year contract worth $12 million for the first two years, $7.5 million of which guaranteed, and the last three years voidable by the Washington Redskins on March 13, 2012. By the start of the 2012 season, he was named the second starting wide receiver opposite of Pierre Garçon after competing with Leonard Hankerson for the starting flanker position. In Week 2 against the St. Louis Rams, he was penalized for unsportsmanlike conduct during the Redskins' two-minute drive attempt in the fourth quarter to tie with or beat the Rams. After catching a pass on a third down and being tackled by Cortland Finnegan, Finnegan shoved Morgan while he was getting up and put his hand in Morgan's face. Morgan reacted by throwing the ball at Finnegan and the Redskins were then given a 15-yard penalty. Redskins kicker Billy Cundiff then attempted a 62-yard field goal on fourth down, missing and leaving the final score 31-28. Morgan was later fined $7,875 by the NFL for the penalty. On a play where Robert Griffin III rushed for 12 yards, the ball popped into the air as he was tackled, Morgan caught the ball and ran it 13 yards for a touchdown in the Week 13 win over the New York Giants. In the next game against the Baltimore Ravens, he scored his first receiving touchdown of the season.
2013 season
Morgan took over as the team's kick returner in place of struggling rookie Chris Thompson.
Originally named the starter at the start of the season, he lost his starting position to Hankerson. For the first time in his career, he was benched after being listed as inactive in Week 11. The following week, he returned to his starting position after Hankerson was moved to injured reserve.
Chicago Bears
On April 21, 2014, Morgan agreed to a one-year deal with the Chicago Bears after the Redskins chose not to pick up the last three years of his five-year contract.
New Orleans Saints
Morgan signed with the New Orleans Saints on May 17, 2015. He was released on September 5 for final roster cuts before the start of the season.
Career statistics
Personal life
Growing up in Washington D.C., Morgan was a fan of the Washington Redskins, along with his family, during his childhood and formative years.
References
External links
Chicago Bears bio
Washington Redskins bio
San Francisco 49ers bio
Virginia Tech Hokies bio
1985 births
Living people
African-American players of American football
Players of American football from Washington, D.C.
American football wide receivers
Virginia Tech Hokies football players
San Francisco 49ers players
Washington Redskins players
Chicago Bears players
New Orleans Saints players
H. D. Woodson High School alumni
21st-century African-American sportspeople
20th-century African-American people | [
"Joshua Lewis Morgan (born June 20, 1985) is a former American football wide receiver.",
"He was drafted by the San Francisco 49ers in the sixth round of the 2008 NFL Draft.",
"He played college football at Virginia Tech.",
"He also played for the Washington Redskins and Chicago Bears.",
"High school career\nMorgan played quarterback, wide receiver and cornerback at Eastern Senior High School in Washington, D.C. before transferring to H.D.",
"Woodson High School for his senior year.",
"During his senior season, he accumulated eight catches for 275 yards and three touchdowns in a game against Glen Mills (Pa.) High School.",
"He passed for 987 yards and rushed for 898 during his junior year, and finished with five passing and eight rushing touchdowns.",
"He also played basketball and was named the most valuable player in two of the tournaments his team participated in.",
"College career\nMorgan ranks fourth in Virginia Tech history with 122 receptions, eighth with 1,817 receiving yards (a 14.9 avg.)",
"and fifth with 16 touchdowns.",
"He finished his career with 2,435 all-purpose yards.",
"During his senior season in 2007, Morgan led the team with a career-high 46 catches for 552 yards (a 12.0 avg) and five touchdowns, while playing alongside Eddie Royal, now with the San Diego Chargers, and Justin Harper, now with the BC Lions.",
"In 2006, he finished second on the team with 33 receptions for 448 yards (a 13.6 avg.)",
"and four touchdowns.",
"As a sophomore in 2005, he finished with 28 catches for 571 yards (a 16.8 avg.)",
"and four touchdowns.",
"During his freshman season in 2004, he caught 15 passes for 346 yards (a 23.1 avg.)",
"and three touchdowns.",
"Morgan’s 126 yards receiving vs. Auburn in the 2005 Sugar Bowl set a school bowl game record.",
"Professional career\n\nSan Francisco 49ers\n\n2008 season\nIn 2008, Morgan's preseason performances won him a place on the final 53-man roster.",
"He became ill just before the season and lost 15 pounds.",
"Morgan made his NFL debut in Week 1 against the Arizona Cardinals.",
"In Week 7 against the New York Giants, he caught five passes for 86 yards and scored his first touchdown.",
"The week after, he had his first career start.",
"After suffering a one-inch tear in his groin in November, he missed the next four games.",
"Playing in only 12 games, Morgan showed real promise as he finished his rookie season with 20 receptions for 319 yards and three touchdown receptions.",
"2009 season\nMorgan was made a starter by Week 1 of the 2009 season.",
"In October, after the 49ers had finally signed their 2009 first-round draft pick (wide receiver Michael Crabtree), it was assumed that Morgan might lose his starting job to the rookie.",
"Instead, Morgan retained his starting position and played alongside Crabtree.",
"By the end of his second season, he played in all 16 games, starting 15 of them, and recorded 52 receptions for 527 yards and three touchdowns.",
"2010 season\nIn his third season, Morgan recorded a career-high of 698 receiving yards on only 44 receptions.",
"He also scored two touchdowns.",
"2011 season\nOn October 11, 2011, Morgan was placed on the injured reserve list after a promising start to the 2011 season due to a broken bone in his right leg.",
"He finished the season with 15 receptions, 220 yards, and one touchdown in just five games.",
"Washington Redskins\n\n2012 season\nMorgan signed a five-year contract worth $12 million for the first two years, $7.5 million of which guaranteed, and the last three years voidable by the Washington Redskins on March 13, 2012.",
"By the start of the 2012 season, he was named the second starting wide receiver opposite of Pierre Garçon after competing with Leonard Hankerson for the starting flanker position.",
"In Week 2 against the St. Louis Rams, he was penalized for unsportsmanlike conduct during the Redskins' two-minute drive attempt in the fourth quarter to tie with or beat the Rams.",
"After catching a pass on a third down and being tackled by Cortland Finnegan, Finnegan shoved Morgan while he was getting up and put his hand in Morgan's face.",
"Morgan reacted by throwing the ball at Finnegan and the Redskins were then given a 15-yard penalty.",
"Redskins kicker Billy Cundiff then attempted a 62-yard field goal on fourth down, missing and leaving the final score 31-28.",
"Morgan was later fined $7,875 by the NFL for the penalty.",
"On a play where Robert Griffin III rushed for 12 yards, the ball popped into the air as he was tackled, Morgan caught the ball and ran it 13 yards for a touchdown in the Week 13 win over the New York Giants.",
"In the next game against the Baltimore Ravens, he scored his first receiving touchdown of the season.",
"2013 season\nMorgan took over as the team's kick returner in place of struggling rookie Chris Thompson.",
"Originally named the starter at the start of the season, he lost his starting position to Hankerson.",
"For the first time in his career, he was benched after being listed as inactive in Week 11.",
"The following week, he returned to his starting position after Hankerson was moved to injured reserve.",
"Chicago Bears\nOn April 21, 2014, Morgan agreed to a one-year deal with the Chicago Bears after the Redskins chose not to pick up the last three years of his five-year contract.",
"New Orleans Saints\nMorgan signed with the New Orleans Saints on May 17, 2015.",
"He was released on September 5 for final roster cuts before the start of the season.",
"Career statistics\n\nPersonal life\nGrowing up in Washington D.C., Morgan was a fan of the Washington Redskins, along with his family, during his childhood and formative years.",
"References\n\nExternal links\n\nChicago Bears bio\nWashington Redskins bio\nSan Francisco 49ers bio\nVirginia Tech Hokies bio\n\n1985 births\nLiving people\nAfrican-American players of American football\nPlayers of American football from Washington, D.C.\nAmerican football wide receivers\nVirginia Tech Hokies football players\nSan Francisco 49ers players\nWashington Redskins players\nChicago Bears players\nNew Orleans Saints players\nH. D. Woodson High School alumni\n21st-century African-American sportspeople\n20th-century African-American people"
] | [
"Joshua Lewis Morgan is a former American football wide receiver.",
"He was drafted by the 49ers in the sixth round.",
"He was a football player at Virginia Tech.",
"He played for two other teams.",
"Morgan attended Eastern Senior High School in Washington, D.C. before transferring to H.D.",
"He is a senior at Woodson High School.",
"He had eight catches for 275 yards and three touchdown in a game against Glen Mills.",
"During his junior year, he passed for 987 yards and ran for ",
"He was named the most valuable player in two of the tournaments he played in.",
"Morgan is fourth in Virginia Tech history with 122 reception and eighth with 1,817 receiving yards.",
"It was fifth with 16 touchdown.",
"He finished his career with 2,435 all-purpose yards.",
"During his senior season in 2007, Morgan led the team with a career-high 46 catches for 552 yards and five touchdown, while playing alongside Eddie Royal, now with the San Diego Chargers, and JustinHarper, now with the BC Lions.",
"He finished second on the team in 2006 with 33 catches for 448 yards.",
"There were four touchdown.",
"He had 28 catches for 571 yards as a sophomore in 2005.",
"There were four touchdown.",
"In his freshman season, he caught 15 passes for 346 yards.",
"There were three touchdown.",
"The school bowl game record was set by Morgan in the 2005 Sugar Bowl.",
"Morgan's preseason performances won him a place on the final 53-man roster.",
"He lost 15 pounds when he became ill.",
"Morgan made his debut in the National Football League.",
"He scored his first touchdown in Week 7 against the New York Giants, catching five passes for 86 yards.",
"His first career start was the week after.",
"He missed four games after tearing his groin in November.",
"Playing in only 12 games, Morgan showed promise as he finished his first season with 20 catches for 319 yards and three touchdown catches.",
"Morgan was a starter by Week 1 of the 2009 season.",
"After the 49ers signed their first-round draft pick, it was assumed that Morgan would lose his starting job.",
"Morgan kept his starting position and played with Crabtree.",
"By the end of his second season, he played in all 16 games, starting 15 of them, and recorded 52 catches for 552 yards and three scores.",
"Morgan was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"He scored two more times.",
"Morgan was placed on the injured reserve list on October 11, 2011, due to a broken bone in his right leg.",
"He had 15 catches, 220 yards, and one touchdown in just five games.",
"Morgan signed a five-year contract worth $12 million for the first two years, $7.5 million of which was guaranteed, and the last three years voided by the Washington Redskins on March 13, 2012",
"After competing with Leonard Hankerson for the starting flanker position, he was named the second starting wide receiver opposite of Pierre Garon by the start of the 2012 season.",
"He was fined for unsportsmanlike conduct in the fourth quarter of the game against the Rams.",
"Finnegan put his hand in Morgan's face after catching a third down pass and being tackled by him.",
"Morgan threw the ball at Finnegan, who was given a 15-yard penalty.",
"Billy Cundiff missed a 62-yard field goal on fourth down that would have tied the game.",
"Morgan was fined by the NFL.",
"Morgan caught the ball and ran it 13 yards for a touchdown in the Week 13 win over the New York Giants.",
"He scored his first touchdown of the season against the Ravens.",
"Morgan replaced Chris Thompson as the team's kick returner.",
"He lost his starting position to Hankerson after being named the starter.",
"He was benched for the first time in his career after being listed as inactive in Week 11.",
"After Hankerson was moved to injured reserve, he returned to his starting position.",
"Morgan agreed to a one-year deal with the Chicago Bears on April 21, 2014, after the Washington Redskins decided not to pick up the last three years of his contract.",
"The New Orleans Saints signed Morgan on May 17, 2015.",
"He was released before the start of the season.",
"Growing up in Washington D.C., Morgan was a fan of the Washington Redskins and his family.",
"Football players from Washington, D.C., Virginia Tech Hokies and San Francisco 49ers are mentioned."
] | <mask> (born June 20, 1985) is a former American football wide receiver. He was drafted by the San Francisco 49ers in the sixth round of the 2008 NFL Draft. He played college football at Virginia Tech. He also played for the Washington Redskins and Chicago Bears. High school career
<mask> played quarterback, wide receiver and cornerback at Eastern Senior High School in Washington, D.C. before transferring to H.D. Woodson High School for his senior year. During his senior season, he accumulated eight catches for 275 yards and three touchdowns in a game against Glen Mills (Pa.) High School.He passed for 987 yards and rushed for 898 during his junior year, and finished with five passing and eight rushing touchdowns. He also played basketball and was named the most valuable player in two of the tournaments his team participated in. College career
<mask> ranks fourth in Virginia Tech history with 122 receptions, eighth with 1,817 receiving yards (a 14.9 avg.) and fifth with 16 touchdowns. He finished his career with 2,435 all-purpose yards. During his senior season in 2007, <mask> led the team with a career-high 46 catches for 552 yards (a 12.0 avg) and five touchdowns, while playing alongside Eddie Royal, now with the San Diego Chargers, and Justin Harper, now with the BC Lions. In 2006, he finished second on the team with 33 receptions for 448 yards (a 13.6 avg.)and four touchdowns. As a sophomore in 2005, he finished with 28 catches for 571 yards (a 16.8 avg.) and four touchdowns. During his freshman season in 2004, he caught 15 passes for 346 yards (a 23.1 avg.) and three touchdowns. <mask>’s 126 yards receiving vs. Auburn in the 2005 Sugar Bowl set a school bowl game record. Professional career
San Francisco 49ers
2008 season
In 2008, <mask>'s preseason performances won him a place on the final 53-man roster.He became ill just before the season and lost 15 pounds. <mask> made his NFL debut in Week 1 against the Arizona Cardinals. In Week 7 against the New York Giants, he caught five passes for 86 yards and scored his first touchdown. The week after, he had his first career start. After suffering a one-inch tear in his groin in November, he missed the next four games. Playing in only 12 games, <mask> showed real promise as he finished his rookie season with 20 receptions for 319 yards and three touchdown receptions. 2009 season
<mask> was made a starter by Week 1 of the 2009 season.In October, after the 49ers had finally signed their 2009 first-round draft pick (wide receiver Michael Crabtree), it was assumed that <mask> might lose his starting job to the rookie. Instead, <mask> retained his starting position and played alongside Crabtree. By the end of his second season, he played in all 16 games, starting 15 of them, and recorded 52 receptions for 527 yards and three touchdowns. 2010 season
In his third season, <mask> recorded a career-high of 698 receiving yards on only 44 receptions. He also scored two touchdowns. 2011 season
On October 11, 2011, <mask> was placed on the injured reserve list after a promising start to the 2011 season due to a broken bone in his right leg. He finished the season with 15 receptions, 220 yards, and one touchdown in just five games.Washington Redskins
2012 season
<mask> signed a five-year contract worth $12 million for the first two years, $7.5 million of which guaranteed, and the last three years voidable by the Washington Redskins on March 13, 2012. By the start of the 2012 season, he was named the second starting wide receiver opposite of Pierre Garçon after competing with Leonard Hankerson for the starting flanker position. In Week 2 against the St. Louis Rams, he was penalized for unsportsmanlike conduct during the Redskins' two-minute drive attempt in the fourth quarter to tie with or beat the Rams. After catching a pass on a third down and being tackled by Cortland Finnegan, Finnegan shoved <mask> while he was getting up and put his hand in <mask>'s face. <mask> reacted by throwing the ball at Finnegan and the Redskins were then given a 15-yard penalty. Redskins kicker Billy Cundiff then attempted a 62-yard field goal on fourth down, missing and leaving the final score 31-28. <mask> was later fined $7,875 by the NFL for the penalty.On a play where Robert Griffin III rushed for 12 yards, the ball popped into the air as he was tackled, <mask> caught the ball and ran it 13 yards for a touchdown in the Week 13 win over the New York Giants. In the next game against the Baltimore Ravens, he scored his first receiving touchdown of the season. 2013 season
<mask> took over as the team's kick returner in place of struggling rookie Chris Thompson. Originally named the starter at the start of the season, he lost his starting position to Hankerson. For the first time in his career, he was benched after being listed as inactive in Week 11. The following week, he returned to his starting position after Hankerson was moved to injured reserve. Chicago Bears
On April 21, 2014, <mask> agreed to a one-year deal with the Chicago Bears after the Redskins chose not to pick up the last three years of his five-year contract.New Orleans Saints
<mask> signed with the New Orleans Saints on May 17, 2015. He was released on September 5 for final roster cuts before the start of the season. Career statistics
Personal life
Growing up in Washington D.C., <mask> was a fan of the Washington Redskins, along with his family, during his childhood and formative years. References
External links
Chicago Bears bio
Washington Redskins bio
San Francisco 49ers bio
Virginia Tech Hokies bio
1985 births
Living people
African-American players of American football
Players of American football from Washington, D.C.
American football wide receivers
Virginia Tech Hokies football players
San Francisco 49ers players
Washington Redskins players
Chicago Bears players
New Orleans Saints players
H. D. Woodson High School alumni
21st-century African-American sportspeople
20th-century African-American people | [
"Joshua Lewis Morgan",
"Morgan",
"Morgan",
"Morgan",
"Morgan",
"Morgan",
"Morgan",
"Morgan",
"Morgan",
"Morgan",
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] | <mask> is a former American football wide receiver. He was drafted by the 49ers in the sixth round. He was a football player at Virginia Tech. He played for two other teams. <mask> attended Eastern Senior High School in Washington, D.C. before transferring to H.D. He is a senior at Woodson High School. He had eight catches for 275 yards and three touchdown in a game against Glen Mills.During his junior year, he passed for 987 yards and ran for He was named the most valuable player in two of the tournaments he played in. <mask> is fourth in Virginia Tech history with 122 reception and eighth with 1,817 receiving yards. It was fifth with 16 touchdown. He finished his career with 2,435 all-purpose yards. During his senior season in 2007, <mask> led the team with a career-high 46 catches for 552 yards and five touchdown, while playing alongside Eddie Royal, now with the San Diego Chargers, and JustinHarper, now with the BC Lions. He finished second on the team in 2006 with 33 catches for 448 yards.There were four touchdown. He had 28 catches for 571 yards as a sophomore in 2005. There were four touchdown. In his freshman season, he caught 15 passes for 346 yards. There were three touchdown. The school bowl game record was set by <mask> in the 2005 Sugar Bowl. <mask>'s preseason performances won him a place on the final 53-man roster.He lost 15 pounds when he became ill. <mask> made his debut in the National Football League. He scored his first touchdown in Week 7 against the New York Giants, catching five passes for 86 yards. His first career start was the week after. He missed four games after tearing his groin in November. Playing in only 12 games, <mask> showed promise as he finished his first season with 20 catches for 319 yards and three touchdown catches. <mask> was a starter by Week 1 of the 2009 season.After the 49ers signed their first-round draft pick, it was assumed that <mask> would lose his starting job. <mask> kept his starting position and played with Crabtree. By the end of his second season, he played in all 16 games, starting 15 of them, and recorded 52 catches for 552 yards and three scores. <mask> was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 He scored two more times. <mask> was placed on the injured reserve list on October 11, 2011, due to a broken bone in his right leg. He had 15 catches, 220 yards, and one touchdown in just five games.<mask> signed a five-year contract worth $12 million for the first two years, $7.5 million of which was guaranteed, and the last three years voided by the Washington Redskins on March 13, 2012 After competing with Leonard Hankerson for the starting flanker position, he was named the second starting wide receiver opposite of Pierre Garon by the start of the 2012 season. He was fined for unsportsmanlike conduct in the fourth quarter of the game against the Rams. Finnegan put his hand in <mask>'s face after catching a third down pass and being tackled by him. <mask> threw the ball at Finnegan, who was given a 15-yard penalty. Billy Cundiff missed a 62-yard field goal on fourth down that would have tied the game. <mask> was fined by the NFL.<mask> caught the ball and ran it 13 yards for a touchdown in the Week 13 win over the New York Giants. He scored his first touchdown of the season against the Ravens. <mask> replaced Chris Thompson as the team's kick returner. He lost his starting position to Hankerson after being named the starter. He was benched for the first time in his career after being listed as inactive in Week 11. After Hankerson was moved to injured reserve, he returned to his starting position. <mask> agreed to a one-year deal with the Chicago Bears on April 21, 2014, after the Washington Redskins decided not to pick up the last three years of his contract.The New Orleans Saints signed <mask> on May 17, 2015. He was released before the start of the season. Growing up in Washington D.C., <mask> was a fan of the Washington Redskins and his family. Football players from Washington, D.C., Virginia Tech Hokies and San Francisco 49ers are mentioned. | [
"Joshua Lewis Morgan",
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"Morgan",
"Morgan",
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"Morgan",
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33233797 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmund%20Francis%20Dunne | Edmund Francis Dunne | Count Edmund Francis Dunne (July 30, 1835 – October 4, 1904), born Edmund Francis O'Dunne, was an American politician and jurist who served as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Arizona Territory. During his early career he served in the California State Legislature and as a member of the Nevada constitutional convention. His later life was spent building the town of San Antonio, Florida.
Background
Dunne was born on July 30, 1835 in Little Falls, New York, the eldest of five children to John and Eleanor O'Dunne. Of Irish ancestry, he was a "rectilineal descendant of Tiege Reagh O'Dunne" on his father's side and descended from Cormac, second son of Tiego IV of Iregan on his mother's. A year after his birth, Dunne's family moved to Ohio. There his father, a prosperous businessman, helped Irish immigrants to settle. Details of Dunne's education are unknown but the judge's broad background in history and theology combined with fluency in multiple languages indicates extensive schooling.
In 1852, Dunne and his father went to prospect for gold in California. After several years the pair brought the rest of the family west to live with them on a farm. About this time Dunne obtained his legal education in San Francisco. In 1852 he worked to establish a Catholic colony in Mexico.
Political career and family
During his youth, Dunne was a Douglas Democrat but joined the Unionist Party following the outbreak of the American Civil War. He was elected in 1862 to represent Sonoma County, California in the California State Legislature. Upon completing his term in 1863, Dunne moved to Humboldt County, Nevada Territory.
A year after his arrival, Dunne was a member of the Nevada constitutional convention. Following statehood he was elected a district court judge for Nevada's Sixth Judicial District in 1865 and 1866. Following his service on the state bench, Dunne established a legal practice in Washington D.C. that specialized in helping American citizens with legal claims against the Republic of Mexico.
During this time period, Dunne made a number of trips to Europe. He married Josephine Cecelia Warner of Vicksburg, Mississippi on October 30, 1872 at the Église Saint-Philippe-du-Roule in Paris. A later trip, in 1874, resulted in Dunne meeting with historians who determined he was "the legitimate legal heir of Iregan and chief of his tribe". The marriage produced five children, including respected Maryland judge, Eugene O'Dunne, and longtime Santa Fe society gossip columnist and author, Brian Boru Dunne (1878-1962). Josephine died of pneumonia in Dunne's Catholic Florida colony on January 1, 1883 at the age of 38. And so the couple's five children were brought by the colorful "Stagecoach Mary" Fields (with whom the Warners had a previous connection) to Judge Dunne's sister, Mother Mary Amadeus Dunne (1846-1919). His youngest child, Mary Eithne Dunne, died in 1886 at age 5. Mother Amadeus was herself the mother superior of an Ursuline convent in Toledo, Ohio and would later become a prominent missionary to the Native-American peoples of both Montana and Alaska. Dunne's two surviving daughters, Maria del Carmen (d. 1950) and Hilda (1876-1972), followed their aunt into the Ursuline Order in 1892 and 1893, later becoming Mother Annunciata and Mother Amata, respectively. The two also worked in the missions and schools of Montana, Idaho and Washington. Another relative of note, Dom Frederic Dunne (the first American Trappist abbot), was the eldest son of Judge Dunne's cousin and San Antonio, Florida co-founder Capt. Hugh Dunne.
Arizona Territory
U.S. Senator William Morris Stewart, upon the advice of Arizona Territorial Governor Anson P. K. Safford, recommended Dunne to replace John Titus as Chief Justice of the Arizona Territorial Supreme Court. Safford likely knew Dunne from the time both had lived in Humboldt County. President Ulysses S. Grant made the nomination on March 6, 1874 with Senate confirmation coming on March 20. The new Chief Justice arrived with his family in late June and settled in Tucson. During his spare time he traveled throughout the territory with Governor Safford and was credited with planting Arizona's first orange orchard in late 1874.
In his role as a justice, Dunne was well regarded with his opinions considered clear, well-reasoned, and rigorous. Examples of his rulings include Grounds v. Ralph, 1 Arizona 227 (1875) which rejected an appeal by a justice of the peace on the grounds the appeal did not specify the nature of the supposed legal error and was for an amount less than required by statute, Ford v. Haynes, 1 Arizona 229 (1875) which determined a debtor could show preferential treatment to a creditor prior to filing for bankruptcy, and Thorne v. Bowers, 1 Arizona 240 (1875) which determined an intermediary who obtained a larger sum for a mining claim from a purchaser than agreed upon by the seller could keep the difference between the two prices.
The removal of Dunne came about for reasons other than his legal expertise. An ardent Catholic, the Chief Justice believed the church should handle all education in the Territory. He publicly expressed this belief in February 1875 in a speech before the 8th Arizona Territorial Legislature. He continued his efforts in newspaper columns over the next few months, some of which received attention on the Eastern Seaboard. The appeals went as far as calling for Catholics to stop paying taxes which supported public schools. With the resulting commotion, President Grant decided to remove Dunne in December 1875. The Chief Justice remained on the bench until the end of his January 3–26, 1876 court session.
San Antonio, Florida
After his removal from the bench, Dunne initially remained in Tucson where he opened a private legal practice. The next year he was living in Santa Fe, New Mexico and in 1878 moved to Utah where he served as legal counsel for a mining company. Dunne was granted a Papal knighthood in 1876 and promoted to the rank of Commander three years later. He was finally created a Count by Pope Leo XIII in 1884.
Dunne gave the commencement address at Notre Dame in 1880 and was living in Chicago when he became involved with Hamilton Disston's 1881 efforts to purchase roughly sixteen percent of peninsular Florida. As his commission, in 1882 Dunne received of land west of Dade City, Florida near the shore of Lake Jovita – which he'd named to honor St. Jovita. The former judge used this land to found the Catholic colony of San Antonio, Florida. He worked to build the town until his departure in 1889. Before leaving the area, Dunne conveyed his residence and the surround property along the southern shore of Lake Jovita to the Benedictine monks in order that Saint Leo College and St. Leo Abbey be created out of it. San Antonio prospered until the Great Freeze of 1894–95 destroyed the local citrus groves. In 1976 the town's bicentennial commission placed a marker in the northwest corner of the plaza recognizing Dunne's contributions in establishing the community. In 2010 the Diocese of St. Petersburg added a Catholic Heritage Marker to the north facade of Saint Anthony of Padua Catholic Church in San Antonio, recognizing both Dunne's and the parish's part in the 19th Century church history of Florida's West Coast. Today, over 135 years since Dunne first established it, the city numbers about 1,300 residents.
After San Antonio and death
After leaving the area Dunne practiced law with his son Eugene in Jacksonville, FL at the firm of Dunne and O'Dunne. In his later years Dunne was a prominent Catholic lay writer and orator. His final two years were spent fighting an illness from which he died at St. Agnes Sanitarium in Baltimore, Maryland on October 4, 1904. Obituaries indicate that he also suffered from paralysis during his stay at St. Agnes. He was buried in Baltimore's New Cathedral Cemetery.
References
Sources
Arizona Territory judges
Members of the California State Assembly
Nevada state court judges
American city founders
1835 births
1904 deaths
Papal counts
Arizona pioneers
California Unionists
People from Humboldt County, Nevada
People from Little Falls, New York
People from San Antonio, Florida
Florida settlers
Catholics from New York (state)
Catholics from Florida
Catholics from Nevada
19th-century American judges | [
"Count Edmund Francis Dunne (July 30, 1835 – October 4, 1904), born Edmund Francis O'Dunne, was an American politician and jurist who served as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Arizona Territory.",
"During his early career he served in the California State Legislature and as a member of the Nevada constitutional convention.",
"His later life was spent building the town of San Antonio, Florida.",
"Background\nDunne was born on July 30, 1835 in Little Falls, New York, the eldest of five children to John and Eleanor O'Dunne.",
"Of Irish ancestry, he was a \"rectilineal descendant of Tiege Reagh O'Dunne\" on his father's side and descended from Cormac, second son of Tiego IV of Iregan on his mother's.",
"A year after his birth, Dunne's family moved to Ohio.",
"There his father, a prosperous businessman, helped Irish immigrants to settle.",
"Details of Dunne's education are unknown but the judge's broad background in history and theology combined with fluency in multiple languages indicates extensive schooling.",
"In 1852, Dunne and his father went to prospect for gold in California.",
"After several years the pair brought the rest of the family west to live with them on a farm.",
"About this time Dunne obtained his legal education in San Francisco.",
"In 1852 he worked to establish a Catholic colony in Mexico.",
"Political career and family\nDuring his youth, Dunne was a Douglas Democrat but joined the Unionist Party following the outbreak of the American Civil War.",
"He was elected in 1862 to represent Sonoma County, California in the California State Legislature.",
"Upon completing his term in 1863, Dunne moved to Humboldt County, Nevada Territory.",
"A year after his arrival, Dunne was a member of the Nevada constitutional convention.",
"Following statehood he was elected a district court judge for Nevada's Sixth Judicial District in 1865 and 1866.",
"Following his service on the state bench, Dunne established a legal practice in Washington D.C. that specialized in helping American citizens with legal claims against the Republic of Mexico.",
"During this time period, Dunne made a number of trips to Europe.",
"He married Josephine Cecelia Warner of Vicksburg, Mississippi on October 30, 1872 at the Église Saint-Philippe-du-Roule in Paris.",
"A later trip, in 1874, resulted in Dunne meeting with historians who determined he was \"the legitimate legal heir of Iregan and chief of his tribe\".",
"The marriage produced five children, including respected Maryland judge, Eugene O'Dunne, and longtime Santa Fe society gossip columnist and author, Brian Boru Dunne (1878-1962).",
"Josephine died of pneumonia in Dunne's Catholic Florida colony on January 1, 1883 at the age of 38.",
"And so the couple's five children were brought by the colorful \"Stagecoach Mary\" Fields (with whom the Warners had a previous connection) to Judge Dunne's sister, Mother Mary Amadeus Dunne (1846-1919).",
"His youngest child, Mary Eithne Dunne, died in 1886 at age 5.",
"Mother Amadeus was herself the mother superior of an Ursuline convent in Toledo, Ohio and would later become a prominent missionary to the Native-American peoples of both Montana and Alaska.",
"Dunne's two surviving daughters, Maria del Carmen (d. 1950) and Hilda (1876-1972), followed their aunt into the Ursuline Order in 1892 and 1893, later becoming Mother Annunciata and Mother Amata, respectively.",
"The two also worked in the missions and schools of Montana, Idaho and Washington.",
"Another relative of note, Dom Frederic Dunne (the first American Trappist abbot), was the eldest son of Judge Dunne's cousin and San Antonio, Florida co-founder Capt.",
"Hugh Dunne.",
"Arizona Territory\nU.S.",
"Senator William Morris Stewart, upon the advice of Arizona Territorial Governor Anson P. K. Safford, recommended Dunne to replace John Titus as Chief Justice of the Arizona Territorial Supreme Court.",
"Safford likely knew Dunne from the time both had lived in Humboldt County.",
"President Ulysses S. Grant made the nomination on March 6, 1874 with Senate confirmation coming on March 20.",
"The new Chief Justice arrived with his family in late June and settled in Tucson.",
"During his spare time he traveled throughout the territory with Governor Safford and was credited with planting Arizona's first orange orchard in late 1874.",
"In his role as a justice, Dunne was well regarded with his opinions considered clear, well-reasoned, and rigorous.",
"Examples of his rulings include Grounds v. Ralph, 1 Arizona 227 (1875) which rejected an appeal by a justice of the peace on the grounds the appeal did not specify the nature of the supposed legal error and was for an amount less than required by statute, Ford v. Haynes, 1 Arizona 229 (1875) which determined a debtor could show preferential treatment to a creditor prior to filing for bankruptcy, and Thorne v. Bowers, 1 Arizona 240 (1875) which determined an intermediary who obtained a larger sum for a mining claim from a purchaser than agreed upon by the seller could keep the difference between the two prices.",
"The removal of Dunne came about for reasons other than his legal expertise.",
"An ardent Catholic, the Chief Justice believed the church should handle all education in the Territory.",
"He publicly expressed this belief in February 1875 in a speech before the 8th Arizona Territorial Legislature.",
"He continued his efforts in newspaper columns over the next few months, some of which received attention on the Eastern Seaboard.",
"The appeals went as far as calling for Catholics to stop paying taxes which supported public schools.",
"With the resulting commotion, President Grant decided to remove Dunne in December 1875.",
"The Chief Justice remained on the bench until the end of his January 3–26, 1876 court session.",
"San Antonio, Florida\nAfter his removal from the bench, Dunne initially remained in Tucson where he opened a private legal practice.",
"The next year he was living in Santa Fe, New Mexico and in 1878 moved to Utah where he served as legal counsel for a mining company.",
"Dunne was granted a Papal knighthood in 1876 and promoted to the rank of Commander three years later.",
"He was finally created a Count by Pope Leo XIII in 1884.",
"Dunne gave the commencement address at Notre Dame in 1880 and was living in Chicago when he became involved with Hamilton Disston's 1881 efforts to purchase roughly sixteen percent of peninsular Florida.",
"As his commission, in 1882 Dunne received of land west of Dade City, Florida near the shore of Lake Jovita – which he'd named to honor St. Jovita.",
"The former judge used this land to found the Catholic colony of San Antonio, Florida.",
"He worked to build the town until his departure in 1889.",
"Before leaving the area, Dunne conveyed his residence and the surround property along the southern shore of Lake Jovita to the Benedictine monks in order that Saint Leo College and St. Leo Abbey be created out of it.",
"San Antonio prospered until the Great Freeze of 1894–95 destroyed the local citrus groves.",
"In 1976 the town's bicentennial commission placed a marker in the northwest corner of the plaza recognizing Dunne's contributions in establishing the community.",
"In 2010 the Diocese of St. Petersburg added a Catholic Heritage Marker to the north facade of Saint Anthony of Padua Catholic Church in San Antonio, recognizing both Dunne's and the parish's part in the 19th Century church history of Florida's West Coast.",
"Today, over 135 years since Dunne first established it, the city numbers about 1,300 residents.",
"After San Antonio and death\nAfter leaving the area Dunne practiced law with his son Eugene in Jacksonville, FL at the firm of Dunne and O'Dunne.",
"In his later years Dunne was a prominent Catholic lay writer and orator.",
"His final two years were spent fighting an illness from which he died at St. Agnes Sanitarium in Baltimore, Maryland on October 4, 1904.",
"Obituaries indicate that he also suffered from paralysis during his stay at St. Agnes.",
"He was buried in Baltimore's New Cathedral Cemetery.",
"References\n\nSources\n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\nArizona Territory judges\nMembers of the California State Assembly\nNevada state court judges\nAmerican city founders\n1835 births\n1904 deaths\nPapal counts\nArizona pioneers\nCalifornia Unionists\nPeople from Humboldt County, Nevada\nPeople from Little Falls, New York\nPeople from San Antonio, Florida\nFlorida settlers\nCatholics from New York (state)\nCatholics from Florida\nCatholics from Nevada\n19th-century American judges"
] | [
"Edmund Francis Dunne was an American politician and judge who served as the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Arizona Territory.",
"He was a member of the Nevada constitutional convention and served in the California State Legislature.",
"The town of San Antonio, Florida was built during his later life.",
"Dunne was the eldest of five children and was born in Little Falls, New York.",
"He was descended from Cormac, the second son of Tiego IV of Iregan, on his mother's side.",
"Dunne's family moved to Ohio after he was born.",
"Irish immigrants were helped to settle by his father.",
"Dunne's education is unknown but the judge's background in history and theology combined with his ability to speak multiple languages indicates extensive education.",
"Dunne and his father went prospecting for gold.",
"They brought the rest of the family west to live on a farm.",
"Dunne got his legal education in San Francisco.",
"He worked to establish a Catholic colony in Mexico.",
"Dunne was a Douglas Democrat but joined the Unionist Party after the American Civil War.",
"He was elected to the California State Legislature in the 19th century.",
"Dunne moved to Nevada Territory after completing his term.",
"Dunne was a member of the Nevada constitutional convention a year after arriving.",
"He served as a district court judge for Nevada's Sixth Judicial District after statehood.",
"Dunne established a legal practice in Washington D.C. to help American citizens with legal claims against the Republic of Mexico.",
"Dunne made a number of trips to Europe.",
"He married Josephine Cecelia Warner of Vicksburg, Mississippi at the glise Saint-Philippe-du-Roule in Paris on October 30, 1872.",
"Dunne was determined to be the legitimate legal heir of Iregan and his tribe by historians after a later trip in 1874.",
"The marriage produced five children, including a respected Maryland judge and a Santa Fe gossip columnist.",
"Josephine died of pneumonia at the age of 38 in Dunne's Catholic Florida colony.",
"The Warners had a previous connection to Judge Dunne's sister, Mother Mary Amadeus Dunne, who brought the Warners' five children to her.",
"Mary Eithne Dunne was his youngest child.",
"Mother Amadeus was the mother superior of an Ursuline convent in Toledo, Ohio and would later become a prominent missionary to the Native-American peoples of both Montana and Alaska.",
"Dunne's two surviving daughters, Maria del Carmen and Hilda, followed in their aunt's footsteps and became members of the Ursuline Order.",
"The missions and schools of Montana, Idaho and Washington were also worked on by the two.",
"Dom Frederic Dunne was the eldest son of Judge Dunne's cousin and co- founder of San Antonio, Florida.",
"Hugh Dunne.",
"The U.S. Territory of Arizona.",
"Dunne was recommended to replace John Titus as Chief Justice of the Arizona Territorial Supreme Court by Senator William Morris Stewart.",
"Dunne and Safford lived in the same county.",
"The nomination was made by President Grant on March 6, 1874.",
"The Chief Justice arrived with his family in June and settled in Tucson.",
"He traveled throughout the territory with Governor Safford and was credited with planting Arizona's first orange orchard in 1874.",
"Dunne's opinions were considered clear, well-reasoned, and rigorous in his role as a justice.",
"His rulings include Grounds v.Ralph which rejected an appeal by a justice of the peace on the grounds the appeal did not specify the nature of the legal error and was for an amount less than required by statute.",
"Dunne was removed for reasons other than his legal expertise.",
"The Chief Justice believed the church should be in charge of education in the Territory.",
"He said this in a speech before the 8th Arizona Territorial Legislature.",
"Some of his newspaper columns received attention on the Eastern Seaboard.",
"The appeals called for Catholics to stop paying taxes that supported public schools.",
"Dunne was removed by President Grant in December of 1875.",
"The Chief Justice was on the bench until the end of the court session.",
"Dunne opened a private legal practice after being removed from the bench.",
"He lived in Santa Fe, New Mexico for a year and then moved to Utah to work for a mining company.",
"Dunne received a Papal knighthood in 1876 and was promoted to the rank of Commander three years later.",
"Pope Leo XIII created a Count in 1884.",
"Dunne was living in Chicago when he became involved with Hamilton Disston's efforts to purchase sixteen percent of peninsular Florida.",
"Dunne received land west of Dade City, Florida near the shore of Lake Jovita, which he named to honor St. Jovita.",
"The Catholic colony of San Antonio, Florida was found by the former judge.",
"He worked to build the town until 1889.",
"Dunne conveyed his residence and surrounding property along the southern shore of Lake Jovita to the Benedictine monks in order to create a college and abbey out of it.",
"The Great Freeze of 1894–95 destroyed the local citrus groves.",
"Dunne's contributions in establishing the community were recognized by a marker in the northwest corner of the plaza.",
"The north facade of Saint Anthony of Padua Catholic Church in San Antonio, Texas was added with a Catholic Heritage Marker in 2010 to recognize Dunne's and the parish's part in the 19th Century church history of Florida's West Coast.",
"The city has 1,300 residents since Dunne first established it 135 years ago.",
"Dunne practiced law with his son Eugene at the firm of Dunne and O'Dunne after leaving San Antonio.",
"Dunne was a prominent Catholic lay writer.",
"He died of an illness in Baltimore, Maryland on October 4, 1904.",
"According to obituaries, he suffered from paralysis during his stay at St. Agnes.",
"He was buried in Baltimore.",
"Arizona Territory judges Members of the California State Assembly Nevada state court judges American city founders 1835 births 1904 deaths Papal counts Arizona pioneers California Unionists"
] | <mask> (July 30, 1835 – October 4, 1904), born <mask>'<mask>, was an American politician and jurist who served as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Arizona Territory. During his early career he served in the California State Legislature and as a member of the Nevada constitutional convention. His later life was spent building the town of San Antonio, Florida. <mask> was born on July 30, 1835 in Little Falls, New York, the eldest of five children to John and Eleanor O'<mask>. Of Irish ancestry, he was a "rectilineal descendant of Tiege Reagh O'<mask>" on his father's side and descended from Cormac, second son of Tiego IV of Iregan on his mother's. A year after his birth, Dunne's family moved to Ohio. There his father, a prosperous businessman, helped Irish immigrants to settle.Details of Dunne's education are unknown but the judge's broad background in history and theology combined with fluency in multiple languages indicates extensive schooling. In 1852, Dunne and his father went to prospect for gold in California. After several years the pair brought the rest of the family west to live with them on a farm. About this time Dunne obtained his legal education in San Francisco. In 1852 he worked to establish a Catholic colony in Mexico. Political career and family
During his youth, <mask> was a Douglas Democrat but joined the Unionist Party following the outbreak of the American Civil War. He was elected in 1862 to represent Sonoma County, California in the California State Legislature.Upon completing his term in 1863, Dunne moved to Humboldt County, Nevada Territory. A year after his arrival, Dunne was a member of the Nevada constitutional convention. Following statehood he was elected a district court judge for Nevada's Sixth Judicial District in 1865 and 1866. Following his service on the state bench, Dunne established a legal practice in Washington D.C. that specialized in helping American citizens with legal claims against the Republic of Mexico. During this time period, Dunne made a number of trips to Europe. He married Josephine Cecelia Warner of Vicksburg, Mississippi on October 30, 1872 at the Église Saint-Philippe-du-Roule in Paris. A later trip, in 1874, resulted in Dunne meeting with historians who determined he was "the legitimate legal heir of Iregan and chief of his tribe".The marriage produced five children, including respected Maryland judge, Eugene O'<mask>, and longtime Santa Fe society gossip columnist and author, Brian Boru <mask> (1878-1962). Josephine died of pneumonia in Dunne's Catholic Florida colony on January 1, 1883 at the age of 38. And so the couple's five children were brought by the colorful "Stagecoach Mary" Fields (with whom the Warners had a previous connection) to <mask>'s sister, Mother Mary Amadeus <mask> (1846-1919). His youngest child, Mary Eithne <mask>, died in 1886 at age 5. Mother Amadeus was herself the mother superior of an Ursuline convent in Toledo, Ohio and would later become a prominent missionary to the Native-American peoples of both Montana and Alaska. Dunne's two surviving daughters, Maria del Carmen (d. 1950) and Hilda (1876-1972), followed their aunt into the Ursuline Order in 1892 and 1893, later becoming Mother Annunciata and Mother Amata, respectively. The two also worked in the missions and schools of Montana, Idaho and Washington.Another relative of note, Dom Frederic <mask> (the first American Trappist abbot), was the eldest son of Judge <mask>'s cousin and San Antonio, Florida co-founder Capt. <mask>. Arizona Territory
U.S. Senator William Morris Stewart, upon the advice of Arizona Territorial Governor Anson P. K. Safford, recommended Dunne to replace John Titus as Chief Justice of the Arizona Territorial Supreme Court. Safford likely knew Dunne from the time both had lived in Humboldt County. President Ulysses S. Grant made the nomination on March 6, 1874 with Senate confirmation coming on March 20. The new Chief Justice arrived with his family in late June and settled in Tucson.During his spare time he traveled throughout the territory with Governor Safford and was credited with planting Arizona's first orange orchard in late 1874. In his role as a justice, Dunne was well regarded with his opinions considered clear, well-reasoned, and rigorous. Examples of his rulings include Grounds v. Ralph, 1 Arizona 227 (1875) which rejected an appeal by a justice of the peace on the grounds the appeal did not specify the nature of the supposed legal error and was for an amount less than required by statute, Ford v. Haynes, 1 Arizona 229 (1875) which determined a debtor could show preferential treatment to a creditor prior to filing for bankruptcy, and Thorne v. Bowers, 1 Arizona 240 (1875) which determined an intermediary who obtained a larger sum for a mining claim from a purchaser than agreed upon by the seller could keep the difference between the two prices. The removal of Dunne came about for reasons other than his legal expertise. An ardent Catholic, the Chief Justice believed the church should handle all education in the Territory. He publicly expressed this belief in February 1875 in a speech before the 8th Arizona Territorial Legislature. He continued his efforts in newspaper columns over the next few months, some of which received attention on the Eastern Seaboard.The appeals went as far as calling for Catholics to stop paying taxes which supported public schools. With the resulting commotion, President Grant decided to remove Dunne in December 1875. The Chief Justice remained on the bench until the end of his January 3–26, 1876 court session. San Antonio, Florida
After his removal from the bench, Dunne initially remained in Tucson where he opened a private legal practice. The next year he was living in Santa Fe, New Mexico and in 1878 moved to Utah where he served as legal counsel for a mining company. Dunne was granted a Papal knighthood in 1876 and promoted to the rank of Commander three years later. He was finally created a Count by Pope Leo XIII in 1884.Dunne gave the commencement address at Notre Dame in 1880 and was living in Chicago when he became involved with Hamilton Disston's 1881 efforts to purchase roughly sixteen percent of peninsular Florida. As his commission, in 1882 Dunne received of land west of Dade City, Florida near the shore of Lake Jovita – which he'd named to honor St. Jovita. The former judge used this land to found the Catholic colony of San Antonio, Florida. He worked to build the town until his departure in 1889. Before leaving the area, Dunne conveyed his residence and the surround property along the southern shore of Lake Jovita to the Benedictine monks in order that Saint Leo College and St. Leo Abbey be created out of it. San Antonio prospered until the Great Freeze of 1894–95 destroyed the local citrus groves. In 1976 the town's bicentennial commission placed a marker in the northwest corner of the plaza recognizing Dunne's contributions in establishing the community.In 2010 the Diocese of St. Petersburg added a Catholic Heritage Marker to the north facade of Saint Anthony of Padua Catholic Church in San Antonio, recognizing both Dunne's and the parish's part in the 19th Century church history of Florida's West Coast. Today, over 135 years since Dunne first established it, the city numbers about 1,300 residents. After San Antonio and death
After leaving the area Dunne practiced law with his son Eugene in Jacksonville, FL at the firm of <mask> and O'<mask>. In his later years Dunne was a prominent Catholic lay writer and orator. His final two years were spent fighting an illness from which he died at St. Agnes Sanitarium in Baltimore, Maryland on October 4, 1904. Obituaries indicate that he also suffered from paralysis during his stay at St. Agnes. He was buried in Baltimore's New Cathedral Cemetery.References
Sources
Arizona Territory judges
Members of the California State Assembly
Nevada state court judges
American city founders
1835 births
1904 deaths
Papal counts
Arizona pioneers
California Unionists
People from Humboldt County, Nevada
People from Little Falls, New York
People from San Antonio, Florida
Florida settlers
Catholics from New York (state)
Catholics from Florida
Catholics from Nevada
19th-century American judges | [
"Count Edmund Francis Dunne",
"Edmund Francis O",
"Dunne",
"Background Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Judge Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Hugh Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Dunne"
] | <mask> was an American politician and judge who served as the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Arizona Territory. He was a member of the Nevada constitutional convention and served in the California State Legislature. The town of San Antonio, Florida was built during his later life. <mask> was the eldest of five children and was born in Little Falls, New York. He was descended from Cormac, the second son of Tiego IV of Iregan, on his mother's side. <mask>'s family moved to Ohio after he was born. Irish immigrants were helped to settle by his father.<mask>'s education is unknown but the judge's background in history and theology combined with his ability to speak multiple languages indicates extensive education. <mask> and his father went prospecting for gold. They brought the rest of the family west to live on a farm. Dunne got his legal education in San Francisco. He worked to establish a Catholic colony in Mexico. <mask> was a Douglas Democrat but joined the Unionist Party after the American Civil War. He was elected to the California State Legislature in the 19th century.Dunne moved to Nevada Territory after completing his term. Dunne was a member of the Nevada constitutional convention a year after arriving. He served as a district court judge for Nevada's Sixth Judicial District after statehood. Dunne established a legal practice in Washington D.C. to help American citizens with legal claims against the Republic of Mexico. Dunne made a number of trips to Europe. He married Josephine Cecelia Warner of Vicksburg, Mississippi at the glise Saint-Philippe-du-Roule in Paris on October 30, 1872. Dunne was determined to be the legitimate legal heir of Iregan and his tribe by historians after a later trip in 1874.The marriage produced five children, including a respected Maryland judge and a Santa Fe gossip columnist. Josephine died of pneumonia at the age of 38 in Dunne's Catholic Florida colony. The Warners had a previous connection to <mask>'s sister, Mother Mary Amadeus <mask>, who brought the Warners' five children to her. Mary Eithne Dunne was his youngest child. Mother Amadeus was the mother superior of an Ursuline convent in Toledo, Ohio and would later become a prominent missionary to the Native-American peoples of both Montana and Alaska. Dunne's two surviving daughters, Maria del Carmen and Hilda, followed in their aunt's footsteps and became members of the Ursuline Order. The missions and schools of Montana, Idaho and Washington were also worked on by the two.Dom Frederic <mask> was the eldest son of <mask>'s cousin and co- founder of San Antonio, Florida. <mask>. The U.S. Territory of Arizona. Dunne was recommended to replace John Titus as Chief Justice of the Arizona Territorial Supreme Court by Senator William Morris Stewart. <mask> and Safford lived in the same county. The nomination was made by President Grant on March 6, 1874. The Chief Justice arrived with his family in June and settled in Tucson.He traveled throughout the territory with Governor Safford and was credited with planting Arizona's first orange orchard in 1874. Dunne's opinions were considered clear, well-reasoned, and rigorous in his role as a justice. His rulings include Grounds v.Ralph which rejected an appeal by a justice of the peace on the grounds the appeal did not specify the nature of the legal error and was for an amount less than required by statute. Dunne was removed for reasons other than his legal expertise. The Chief Justice believed the church should be in charge of education in the Territory. He said this in a speech before the 8th Arizona Territorial Legislature. Some of his newspaper columns received attention on the Eastern Seaboard.The appeals called for Catholics to stop paying taxes that supported public schools. Dunne was removed by President Grant in December of 1875. The Chief Justice was on the bench until the end of the court session. Dunne opened a private legal practice after being removed from the bench. He lived in Santa Fe, New Mexico for a year and then moved to Utah to work for a mining company. Dunne received a Papal knighthood in 1876 and was promoted to the rank of Commander three years later. Pope Leo XIII created a Count in 1884.<mask> was living in Chicago when he became involved with Hamilton Disston's efforts to purchase sixteen percent of peninsular Florida. Dunne received land west of Dade City, Florida near the shore of Lake Jovita, which he named to honor St. Jovita. The Catholic colony of San Antonio, Florida was found by the former judge. He worked to build the town until 1889. Dunne conveyed his residence and surrounding property along the southern shore of Lake Jovita to the Benedictine monks in order to create a college and abbey out of it. The Great Freeze of 1894–95 destroyed the local citrus groves. Dunne's contributions in establishing the community were recognized by a marker in the northwest corner of the plaza.The north facade of Saint Anthony of Padua Catholic Church in San Antonio, Texas was added with a Catholic Heritage Marker in 2010 to recognize <mask>'s and the parish's part in the 19th Century church history of Florida's West Coast. The city has 1,300 residents since Dunne first established it 135 years ago. Dunne practiced law with his son Eugene at the firm of <mask> and <mask> after leaving San Antonio. <mask> was a prominent Catholic lay writer. He died of an illness in Baltimore, Maryland on October 4, 1904. According to obituaries, he suffered from paralysis during his stay at St. Agnes. He was buried in Baltimore.Arizona Territory judges Members of the California State Assembly Nevada state court judges American city founders 1835 births 1904 deaths Papal counts Arizona pioneers California Unionists | [
"Edmund Francis Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Judge Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Judge Dunne",
"Hugh Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Dunne",
"Dunne",
"O Dunne",
"Dunne"
] |
2345639 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John%20Clements%20Wickham | John Clements Wickham | John Clements Wickham (21 November 17986 January 1864) was a Scottish explorer, naval officer, magistrate and administrator. He was first lieutenant on during its second survey mission, 1831–1836, under captain Robert FitzRoy. The young naturalist and geologist Charles Darwin was a supernumerary on the ship, and his journal was published as The Voyage of the Beagle. After that expedition, Wickham was promoted to Commander and made captain of the Beagle on its third voyage, from 1837 and conducted various maritime expeditions and hydrographic surveys along the Australian coastline.
In 1843, after his retirement from the Royal Navy, Wickham was made Police Magistrate and, later, Government Resident of the Moreton Bay District, in the Colony of New South Wales (NSW). Wickham retired in 1859, when the Moreton Bay District was separated from NSW, forming basis of the Colony of Queensland. When the Queensland and NSW governments disagreed over which was responsible for his pension, Wickham moved to France, where he died.
The Wickham family
The origins of the Wickham family were in Rowley, an East Yorkshire village which later became depopulated. In 1638, two brothers, Richard and Thomas Wickham, were among the families to emigrate to America with Rev. Ezekiel Rogers after he was suspended as Rector of the parish church in 1638 for his non-conformist beliefs. Thomas married Sarah and their fifth son, Samuel Wickham, was born in 1664; he later settled in Rhode Island and became a Freeman of that Colony and a Deputy. Samuel Wickham married Barbara Holken in 1691 and their fifth son, Benjamin Wickham, was born 17 November 1701 at Rhode Island. Benjamin was chosen by the Rhode Island colonial Assembly in 1756 to be Lieutenant-Colonel of a Regiment raised for the second expedition against Crown Point. In 1757, a deputy for Newport he became Speaker of the House of Deputies. Benjamin married Mary, daughter of Colonel John Gardner in 1743 and Samuel Wickham, their sixth and youngest son, was born at Newport, Rhode Island in 1758. This Samuel rose to the rank of Lieutenant in the Royal Navy; while he was attached to the Portuguese Navy as an instructor he was given the rank of Captain-Lieutenant. He fought on the British side in the American War of Independence after which he left America and settled in Scotland. On 16 June 1795 he married Ellen Susan Naylor at Gibraltar. John Clements Wickham was born to them on 21 November 1798 at Leith in Scotland.
Naval career
On 21 February 1812 John Clements Wickham joined the Royal Navy. By 1815 he was an Admiralty Midshipman and was posted to HMS Nightingale and in 1818 was posted to HMS Hyperion before being paid off. He passed his Lieutenant's examination in 1819.
In 1825 he was appointed Second-Lieutenant on the British warship Adventure under the command of Phillip Parker King, son of Philip Gidley King, third Governor of New South Wales. The Adventure and the Beagle were ordered to survey the coasts of the southern part of South America, including Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego.
Wickham transferred to the Beagle in 1831 as First Lieutenant, under Captain Robert Fitzroy and first officer Philip Parker King (1791–1856), to complete the survey of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego, as part of a circumnavigation of the globe. Wickham and King were lifelong friends and brothers-in-law as they married sisters, the daughters of Hannibal Hawkins Macarthur. This would be the most famous voyage of the Beagle, with naturalist Charles Darwin, and artists Augustus Earle and (later) Conrad Martens also on board. After entering the Pacific Ocean, the Beagle surveyed the coasts of Chile and Peru, the Galápagos Islands, the Society Islands, the Navigator (Samoa) and Fiji island groups, New Zealand, Port Jackson (Sydney), Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania), King George's Sound, the Cocos (Keeling) Islands and Mauritius. It then returned, via Saint Helena, Ascension Island, Bahia and Pernambuco to England in 1836.
On 10 January 1837, Wickham was promoted from lieutenant to captain and given command of the Beagle, while Lt John Lort Stokes – a shipmate from the first two journeys of the Beagle – was made first officer.
From 1837 to 1841, the Beagle charting the coasts of north western Australia and Arnhem Land. In 1839, Stokes sighted a natural harbour which Wickham named Port Darwin after their former shipmate.
In 1841, Wickham fell ill and resigned his command which was taken over by Stokes, who continued the survey and completed the voyage in 1843. Darwin also took a Galápagos tortoise named Harriet which he gave to Wickham, who brought it to Brisbane. The tortoise gained fame for her longevity, living 175 years until 2006.
Later life
Wickham became the police magistrate at the Moreton Bay District of New South Wales (now Queensland).
From 1853 he was Government Resident of the Moreton Bay District and resided at Newstead House, Brisbane.
In 1859, Wickham moved to the south of France, where he lived until his death in 1864.
Commemorations
Places
Australia
Cape Wickham and Cape Wickham Lighthouse, Tasmania;
Point Wickham, now known as Caloundra Headland on the Sunshine Coast, Queensland;
two islands in Western Australia
a small island off Bernouilli Island (Timor Sea);
a former name of Stanley Island, in the Recherche Archipelago;
two different hills or peaks named Mount Wickham, in the Northern Territory and Queensland;
Wickham, New South Wales, a suburb of Newcastle, which includes Wickham Park;
the town of Wickham, Western Australia;
the headland of Wickham Point in the Northern Territory
Wickham Park, Brisbane;
Wickham River, Northern Territory;
a major street in Brisbane, Wickham Terrace, where is the notable Wickham Hotel, as well as "Wickham Streets" in Fortitude Valley, Queensland, East Perth, Western Australia, Ayr, and Townsville, and Wyndham Vale, Victoria.
Chile
Wickham Island
Falkland Islands
Wickham Heights, including Mount Wickham
Solomon Islands
Wickham Island, New Georgia Islands group
Other commemorations
Two defunct electorates in Australian state parliaments, namely
Electoral district of Wickham (New South Wales)
Electoral district of Wickham (Queensland)
An Australian plant:
Grevillea wickhamii (Wickham's Grevillea).
See also
References
Further reading
A. A. Morrison, "Wickham, John Clements (1798–1864)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University (also available in hard copy in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Vol. 2, (1967, Melbourne University Press) p 597).
G. J. McCarthy, Wickham, John Clements (1798–1864), Encyclopedia of Australian Science 2010.
1798 births
1864 deaths
Explorers of Australia
Explorers of Western Australia
Australian magistrates
Royal Navy officers
People from Leith
People from New South Wales
Pre-Separation Queensland | [
"John Clements Wickham (21 November 17986 January 1864) was a Scottish explorer, naval officer, magistrate and administrator.",
"He was first lieutenant on during its second survey mission, 1831–1836, under captain Robert FitzRoy.",
"The young naturalist and geologist Charles Darwin was a supernumerary on the ship, and his journal was published as The Voyage of the Beagle.",
"After that expedition, Wickham was promoted to Commander and made captain of the Beagle on its third voyage, from 1837 and conducted various maritime expeditions and hydrographic surveys along the Australian coastline.",
"In 1843, after his retirement from the Royal Navy, Wickham was made Police Magistrate and, later, Government Resident of the Moreton Bay District, in the Colony of New South Wales (NSW).",
"Wickham retired in 1859, when the Moreton Bay District was separated from NSW, forming basis of the Colony of Queensland.",
"When the Queensland and NSW governments disagreed over which was responsible for his pension, Wickham moved to France, where he died.",
"The Wickham family\nThe origins of the Wickham family were in Rowley, an East Yorkshire village which later became depopulated.",
"In 1638, two brothers, Richard and Thomas Wickham, were among the families to emigrate to America with Rev.",
"Ezekiel Rogers after he was suspended as Rector of the parish church in 1638 for his non-conformist beliefs.",
"Thomas married Sarah and their fifth son, Samuel Wickham, was born in 1664; he later settled in Rhode Island and became a Freeman of that Colony and a Deputy.",
"Samuel Wickham married Barbara Holken in 1691 and their fifth son, Benjamin Wickham, was born 17 November 1701 at Rhode Island.",
"Benjamin was chosen by the Rhode Island colonial Assembly in 1756 to be Lieutenant-Colonel of a Regiment raised for the second expedition against Crown Point.",
"In 1757, a deputy for Newport he became Speaker of the House of Deputies.",
"Benjamin married Mary, daughter of Colonel John Gardner in 1743 and Samuel Wickham, their sixth and youngest son, was born at Newport, Rhode Island in 1758.",
"This Samuel rose to the rank of Lieutenant in the Royal Navy; while he was attached to the Portuguese Navy as an instructor he was given the rank of Captain-Lieutenant.",
"He fought on the British side in the American War of Independence after which he left America and settled in Scotland.",
"On 16 June 1795 he married Ellen Susan Naylor at Gibraltar.",
"John Clements Wickham was born to them on 21 November 1798 at Leith in Scotland.",
"Naval career \nOn 21 February 1812 John Clements Wickham joined the Royal Navy.",
"By 1815 he was an Admiralty Midshipman and was posted to HMS Nightingale and in 1818 was posted to HMS Hyperion before being paid off.",
"He passed his Lieutenant's examination in 1819.",
"In 1825 he was appointed Second-Lieutenant on the British warship Adventure under the command of Phillip Parker King, son of Philip Gidley King, third Governor of New South Wales.",
"The Adventure and the Beagle were ordered to survey the coasts of the southern part of South America, including Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego.",
"Wickham transferred to the Beagle in 1831 as First Lieutenant, under Captain Robert Fitzroy and first officer Philip Parker King (1791–1856), to complete the survey of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego, as part of a circumnavigation of the globe.",
"Wickham and King were lifelong friends and brothers-in-law as they married sisters, the daughters of Hannibal Hawkins Macarthur.",
"This would be the most famous voyage of the Beagle, with naturalist Charles Darwin, and artists Augustus Earle and (later) Conrad Martens also on board.",
"After entering the Pacific Ocean, the Beagle surveyed the coasts of Chile and Peru, the Galápagos Islands, the Society Islands, the Navigator (Samoa) and Fiji island groups, New Zealand, Port Jackson (Sydney), Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania), King George's Sound, the Cocos (Keeling) Islands and Mauritius.",
"It then returned, via Saint Helena, Ascension Island, Bahia and Pernambuco to England in 1836.",
"On 10 January 1837, Wickham was promoted from lieutenant to captain and given command of the Beagle, while Lt John Lort Stokes – a shipmate from the first two journeys of the Beagle – was made first officer.",
"From 1837 to 1841, the Beagle charting the coasts of north western Australia and Arnhem Land.",
"In 1839, Stokes sighted a natural harbour which Wickham named Port Darwin after their former shipmate.",
"In 1841, Wickham fell ill and resigned his command which was taken over by Stokes, who continued the survey and completed the voyage in 1843.",
"Darwin also took a Galápagos tortoise named Harriet which he gave to Wickham, who brought it to Brisbane.",
"The tortoise gained fame for her longevity, living 175 years until 2006.",
"Later life \nWickham became the police magistrate at the Moreton Bay District of New South Wales (now Queensland).",
"From 1853 he was Government Resident of the Moreton Bay District and resided at Newstead House, Brisbane.",
"In 1859, Wickham moved to the south of France, where he lived until his death in 1864.",
"Commemorations\n\nPlaces\nAustralia\n Cape Wickham and Cape Wickham Lighthouse, Tasmania;\n Point Wickham, now known as Caloundra Headland on the Sunshine Coast, Queensland;\n two islands in Western Australia\n a small island off Bernouilli Island (Timor Sea);\n a former name of Stanley Island, in the Recherche Archipelago;\n two different hills or peaks named Mount Wickham, in the Northern Territory and Queensland;\n Wickham, New South Wales, a suburb of Newcastle, which includes Wickham Park;\n the town of Wickham, Western Australia;\n the headland of Wickham Point in the Northern Territory \n Wickham Park, Brisbane;\n Wickham River, Northern Territory;\n a major street in Brisbane, Wickham Terrace, where is the notable Wickham Hotel, as well as \"Wickham Streets\" in Fortitude Valley, Queensland, East Perth, Western Australia, Ayr, and Townsville, and Wyndham Vale, Victoria.",
"Chile\n Wickham Island\n\nFalkland Islands\n Wickham Heights, including Mount Wickham\n\nSolomon Islands\n Wickham Island, New Georgia Islands group\n\nOther commemorations\nTwo defunct electorates in Australian state parliaments, namely\n Electoral district of Wickham (New South Wales)\nElectoral district of Wickham (Queensland)\nAn Australian plant:\n Grevillea wickhamii (Wickham's Grevillea).",
"See also\n\nReferences\n\nFurther reading\n A.",
"A. Morrison, \"Wickham, John Clements (1798–1864)\", Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University (also available in hard copy in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Vol.",
"2, (1967, Melbourne University Press) p 597).",
"G. J. McCarthy, Wickham, John Clements (1798–1864), Encyclopedia of Australian Science 2010.",
"1798 births\n1864 deaths\nExplorers of Australia\nExplorers of Western Australia\nAustralian magistrates\nRoyal Navy officers\nPeople from Leith\nPeople from New South Wales\nPre-Separation Queensland"
] | [
"John Wickham was a Scottish explorer, naval officer and administrator.",
"He was the first lieutenant on the second survey mission.",
"The voyage of the beagle was the journal of Charles Darwin, who was a supernumerary on the ship.",
"After that expedition, Wickham was promoted to Commander and made captain of the Beagle on its third voyage, conducting various maritime expeditions and hydrographic surveys along the Australian coastline.",
"The Government Resident of the Moreton Bay District in New South Wales was made after he retired from the Royal Navy.",
"The basis of the Colony ofQueensland was formed when the Moreton Bay District was separated from the state.",
"When the governments of Australia and New Zealand disagreed over who was responsible for his pension, he moved to France.",
"The origins of the Wickham family were in a village in East Yorkshire.",
"In 1638, two brothers, Richard and Thomas, were among the families to emigrate to America.",
"In 1638, the parish church suspended Rogers for his non-conformist beliefs.",
"Thomas married Sarah and their fifth son, Samuel, was born in 1664, he later settled in Rhode Island and became a deputy.",
"Benjamin Wickham was born at Rhode Island in 1701, the fifth son of Samuel and Barbara Holken.",
"Benjamin was chosen by the Rhode Island Assembly to be a Lieutenant-Colonel in the second expedition against Crown Point.",
"The Speaker of the House of Deputies was a deputy for Newport.",
"Benjamin and Mary were married in 1743 and Samuel was born at Newport, Rhode Island in 1758.",
"He was given the rank of Captain-Lieutenant while he was an instructor in the Portuguese Navy.",
"After the American War of Independence, he left America and settled in Scotland.",
"He married Ellen Susan Naylor on June 16, 1795.",
"On November 21, 1798 at Leith in Scotland, John Clements Wickham was born to them.",
"John Clements Wickham joined the Royal Navy in 1812.",
"He was a midshipman in the Admiralty and was posted to two ships before being paid off.",
"In 1819, he passed his Lieutenant's exam.",
"Philip Gidley King, the third Governor of New South Wales, had a son who was appointed Second-Lieutenant on the British ship Adventure.",
"The coasts of the southern part of South America were surveyed by the Adventure and the Beagle.",
"As part of a circumnavigation of the globe, Wickham was transferred to the Beagle in 1831 as First Lieutenant, under Captain Robert Fitzroy and first officer Philip Parker King.",
"As they married sisters of the Macarthur family, Wickham and King were lifelong friends and brothers-in-law.",
"This would be the most famous voyage of the Beagle, with Charles Darwin, Augustus Earle, and Conrad Martens also on board.",
"The Galpagos Islands, the Society Islands, the Navigator, New Zealand, Port Jackson, and Van Diemen's Land were surveyed after entering the Pacific Ocean.",
"In 1836, it returned via SaintHelena, Ascension Island, and Pernambuco to England.",
"On January 10, 1836, the captain of the Beagle was promoted to captain and the first officer was made.",
"The coast of north western Australia was mapped by the Beagle from 1836 to 1841.",
"Port Darwin was named after their former shipmate.",
"In 1841, Wickham fell ill and resigned his command, which was taken over by Stokes, who continued the survey and completed the voyage in 1843.",
"The Galpagos tortoise named Harriet was given to Wickham by Darwin.",
"The tortoise lived for 175 years.",
"The Moreton Bay District of New South Wales was where Wickham became the police magistrate.",
"He was the Government Resident of the Moreton Bay District from 1854 to 1856.",
"He lived in the south of France until his death.",
"There are two islands in Western Australia, a small island off Bernouilli Island and a former name of Stanley Island.",
"There are two electorates in Australian state parliaments, one of which is the Electoral district of Wickham in New South Wales.",
"Referred further reading A.",
"The Australian Dictionary of Biography, the National Centre of Biography, and the Australian National University have a hard copy of \"Wickham, John Clements\".",
"In 1967, the Melbourne University Press published 2.",
"The Encyclopedia of Australian Science was written by G. J. McCarthy.",
"There were Explorers of Australia, Royal Navy officers, and people from New South Wales."
] | <mask> (21 November 17986 January 1864) was a Scottish explorer, naval officer, magistrate and administrator. He was first lieutenant on during its second survey mission, 1831–1836, under captain Robert FitzRoy. The young naturalist and geologist Charles Darwin was a supernumerary on the ship, and his journal was published as The Voyage of the Beagle. After that expedition, <mask> was promoted to Commander and made captain of the Beagle on its third voyage, from 1837 and conducted various maritime expeditions and hydrographic surveys along the Australian coastline. In 1843, after his retirement from the Royal Navy, <mask> was made Police Magistrate and, later, Government Resident of the Moreton Bay District, in the Colony of New South Wales (NSW). <mask> retired in 1859, when the Moreton Bay District was separated from NSW, forming basis of the Colony of Queensland. When the Queensland and NSW governments disagreed over which was responsible for his pension, <mask> moved to France, where he died.The <mask> family
The origins of the <mask> family were in Rowley, an East Yorkshire village which later became depopulated. In 1638, two brothers, Richard and <mask>, were among the families to emigrate to America with Rev. Ezekiel Rogers after he was suspended as Rector of the parish church in 1638 for his non-conformist beliefs. Thomas married Sarah and their fifth son, <mask>, was born in 1664; he later settled in Rhode Island and became a Freeman of that Colony and a Deputy. <mask> married Barbara Holken in 1691 and their fifth son, <mask>, was born 17 November 1701 at Rhode Island. Benjamin was chosen by the Rhode Island colonial Assembly in 1756 to be Lieutenant-Colonel of a Regiment raised for the second expedition against Crown Point. In 1757, a deputy for Newport he became Speaker of the House of Deputies.Benjamin married Mary, daughter of Colonel <mask> in 1743 and <mask>, their sixth and youngest son, was born at Newport, Rhode Island in 1758. This Samuel rose to the rank of Lieutenant in the Royal Navy; while he was attached to the Portuguese Navy as an instructor he was given the rank of Captain-Lieutenant. He fought on the British side in the American War of Independence after which he left America and settled in Scotland. On 16 June 1795 he married Ellen Susan Naylor at Gibraltar. <mask> <mask> was born to them on 21 November 1798 at Leith in Scotland. Naval career
On 21 February 1812 <mask> <mask> joined the Royal Navy. By 1815 he was an Admiralty Midshipman and was posted to HMS Nightingale and in 1818 was posted to HMS Hyperion before being paid off.He passed his Lieutenant's examination in 1819. In 1825 he was appointed Second-Lieutenant on the British warship Adventure under the command of Phillip Parker King, son of Philip Gidley King, third Governor of New South Wales. The Adventure and the Beagle were ordered to survey the coasts of the southern part of South America, including Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego. <mask> transferred to the Beagle in 1831 as First Lieutenant, under Captain Robert Fitzroy and first officer Philip Parker King (1791–1856), to complete the survey of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego, as part of a circumnavigation of the globe. <mask> and King were lifelong friends and brothers-in-law as they married sisters, the daughters of Hannibal Hawkins Macarthur. This would be the most famous voyage of the Beagle, with naturalist Charles Darwin, and artists Augustus Earle and (later) Conrad Martens also on board. After entering the Pacific Ocean, the Beagle surveyed the coasts of Chile and Peru, the Galápagos Islands, the Society Islands, the Navigator (Samoa) and Fiji island groups, New Zealand, Port Jackson (Sydney), Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania), King George's Sound, the Cocos (Keeling) Islands and Mauritius.It then returned, via Saint Helena, Ascension Island, Bahia and Pernambuco to England in 1836. On 10 January 1837, <mask> was promoted from lieutenant to captain and given command of the Beagle, while Lt <mask> Stokes – a shipmate from the first two journeys of the Beagle – was made first officer. From 1837 to 1841, the Beagle charting the coasts of north western Australia and Arnhem Land. In 1839, Stokes sighted a natural harbour which Wickham named Port Darwin after their former shipmate. In 1841, <mask> fell ill and resigned his command which was taken over by Stokes, who continued the survey and completed the voyage in 1843. Darwin also took a Galápagos tortoise named Harriet which he gave to Wickham, who brought it to Brisbane. The tortoise gained fame for her longevity, living 175 years until 2006.Later life
<mask> became the police magistrate at the Moreton Bay District of New South Wales (now Queensland). From 1853 he was Government Resident of the Moreton Bay District and resided at Newstead House, Brisbane. In 1859, <mask>ii (Wickham's Grevillea). See also
References
Further reading
A. A. Morrison, "Wickham, <mask>s (1798–1864)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University (also available in hard copy in Australian Dictionary of Biography, Vol.2, (1967, Melbourne University Press) p 597). G. J. McCarthy, <mask>, <mask> (1798–1864), Encyclopedia of Australian Science 2010. 1798 births
1864 deaths
Explorers of Australia
Explorers of Western Australia
Australian magistrates
Royal Navy officers
People from Leith
People from New South Wales
Pre-Separation Queensland | [
"John Clements Wickham",
"Wickham",
"Wickham",
"Wickham",
"Wickham",
"Wickham",
"Wickham",
"Thomas Wickham",
"Samuel Wickham",
"Samuel Wickham",
"Benjamin Wickham",
"John Gardner",
"Samuel Wickham",
"John Clements",
"Wickham",
"John Clements",
"Wickham",
"Wickham",
"Wickham",
"Wickham",
"John Lort",
"Wickham",
"Wickham",
"Wickhamham",
"John Clement",
"Wickham",
"John Clements"
] | <mask> was a Scottish explorer, naval officer and administrator. He was the first lieutenant on the second survey mission. The voyage of the beagle was the journal of Charles Darwin, who was a supernumerary on the ship. After that expedition, <mask> was promoted to Commander and made captain of the Beagle on its third voyage, conducting various maritime expeditions and hydrographic surveys along the Australian coastline. The Government Resident of the Moreton Bay District in New South Wales was made after he retired from the Royal Navy. The basis of the Colony ofQueensland was formed when the Moreton Bay District was separated from the state. When the governments of Australia and New Zealand disagreed over who was responsible for his pension, he moved to France.The origins of the <mask> family were in a village in East Yorkshire. In 1638, two brothers, Richard and Thomas, were among the families to emigrate to America. In 1638, the parish church suspended Rogers for his non-conformist beliefs. Thomas married Sarah and their fifth son, Samuel, was born in 1664, he later settled in Rhode Island and became a deputy. <mask> was born at Rhode Island in 1701, the fifth son of Samuel and Barbara Holken. Benjamin was chosen by the Rhode Island Assembly to be a Lieutenant-Colonel in the second expedition against Crown Point. The Speaker of the House of Deputies was a deputy for Newport.Benjamin and Mary were married in 1743 and Samuel was born at Newport, Rhode Island in 1758. He was given the rank of Captain-Lieutenant while he was an instructor in the Portuguese Navy. After the American War of Independence, he left America and settled in Scotland. He married Ellen Susan Naylor on June 16, 1795. On November 21, 1798 at Leith in Scotland, <mask> <mask> was born to them. <mask> <mask> joined the Royal Navy in 1812. He was a midshipman in the Admiralty and was posted to two ships before being paid off.In 1819, he passed his Lieutenant's exam. Philip Gidley King, the third Governor of New South Wales, had a son who was appointed Second-Lieutenant on the British ship Adventure. The coasts of the southern part of South America were surveyed by the Adventure and the Beagle. As part of a circumnavigation of the globe, <mask> was transferred to the Beagle in 1831 as First Lieutenant, under Captain Robert Fitzroy and first officer Philip Parker King. As they married sisters of the Macarthur family, <mask> and King were lifelong friends and brothers-in-law. This would be the most famous voyage of the Beagle, with Charles Darwin, Augustus Earle, and Conrad Martens also on board. The Galpagos Islands, the Society Islands, the Navigator, New Zealand, Port Jackson, and Van Diemen's Land were surveyed after entering the Pacific Ocean.In 1836, it returned via SaintHelena, Ascension Island, and Pernambuco to England. On January 10, 1836, the captain of the Beagle was promoted to captain and the first officer was made. The coast of north western Australia was mapped by the Beagle from 1836 to 1841. Port Darwin was named after their former shipmate. In 1841, <mask> fell ill and resigned his command, which was taken over by Stokes, who continued the survey and completed the voyage in 1843. The Galpagos tortoise named Harriet was given to Wickham by Darwin. The tortoise lived for 175 years.The Moreton Bay District of New South Wales was where <mask> became the police magistrate. He was the Government Resident of the Moreton Bay District from 1854 to 1856. He lived in the south of France until his death. There are two islands in Western Australia, a small island off Bernouilli Island and a former name of Stanley Island. There are two electorates in Australian state parliaments, one of which is the Electoral district of Wickham in New South Wales. Referred further reading A. The Australian Dictionary of Biography, the National Centre of Biography, and the Australian National University have a hard copy of "Wickham, <mask> Clements".In 1967, the Melbourne University Press published 2. The Encyclopedia of Australian Science was written by G. J. McCarthy. There were Explorers of Australia, Royal Navy officers, and people from New South Wales. | [
"John Wickham",
"Wickham",
"Wickham",
"Benjamin Wickham",
"John Clements",
"Wickham",
"John Clements",
"Wickham",
"Wickham",
"Wickham",
"Wickham",
"Wickham",
"John"
] |
38292409 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paige%20Hourigan | Paige Hourigan | Paige Mary Hourigan (born 3 February 1997) is a professional tennis player from New Zealand. She has won four singles and ten doubles titles on the ITF Circuit. She reached her best rankings in both singles and doubles after winning ITF titles in Singapore and Surprise, Arizona early in 2019, and those rankings continued to climb as her run of success extended through Mexico and Asia.
Hourigan, who was born in Turakina, is of part Māori descent and affiliates to the Ngāti Tūwharetoa iwi.
Junior career
Hourigan won five singles and five doubles titles as a junior, the best of which was the doubles at the Grade-2 Biesterbos Open in the Netherlands, partnering Lizette Cabrera. She twice competed in the Australian Open junior singles, her better result being a loss in the first round proper to Beatriz Haddad Maia in 2013. Her best junior ranking was 175, in October 2012.
Senior career
She made her WTA Tour debut at the 2013 ASB Classic. Her first main-draw win was in an ITF doubles match in Glen Iris, Australia, in April 2014, and her first ITF final resulted in a doubles win in Antalya, Turkey, in June 2016. She first represented New Zealand in the Fed Cup in Dushanbe, Tajikistan, in 2017, winning two of her three singles matches.
2018
Hourigan won her first singles title as a qualifier at Corroios (a suburb of Lisbon), Portugal, in July, just a few hours after being beaten in a qualifying match for her next tournament in neighbouring Setubal. Returning to North America, she then went all the way to the semi-finals as a qualifier in an ITF tournament in Fort Worth, Texas. In December, she was runner-up to Valentina Ivanov in the singles at the New Zealand Tennis Championships, and won the doubles title with Erin Routliffe.
2019
Given a wildcard into the singles qualifying draw at the Auckland Open, Hourigan was again beaten by Valentina Ivanov, this time in the first round. She did much better in the doubles where, with partner Taylor Townsend, she got all the way to her first WTA final, having defeated second seeds Kirsten Flipkens and Johanna Larsson in the semifinal. Against the scratch pair of Eugenie Bouchard and Sofia Kenin, Hourigan and Townsend raced through the first set to lead 6–1, but lost the second set by the same score. The match tie-break was a scrappy affair, with Bouchard and Kenin eventually winning 10–7 to take the title.
Hourigan made no mistakes in her run to her second ITF doubles title, in Singapore three weeks later, this time with Indonesia's Aldila Sutjiadi as her partner. Beating the top seeds in their semifinal, they comfortably defeated the Hong Kong pair of Eudice Chong and Zhang Ling in the final, winning nine games in a row from 1–2 down in the first set on the way to a final score of 6–2, 6–3. Hourigan's third ITF doubles title came just three weeks later, in Surprise, Arizona, with star American youngster Coco Gauff on her side of the net. They started by beating the third seeds, Jovana Jakšić and Giuliana Olmos, and defeated the second seeds, Jacqueline Cako and Ingrid Neel, in an amazing semi-final, coming back from two set points down at 2–5, 30–40 to win five games in a row and take the first set. The second set was more straightforward, as they went on to win 7–5, 6–3. Less than an hour later they were back on court for the final, where they won the first set against Usue Maitane Arconada and Emina Bektas, but lost the second. The match tie-break saw the all-American pair work their way to a 9–5 lead, holding four match points. Hourigan and Gauff managed to save all four points to change ends again at 9-9, but then faced another match point, which they saved as well. They dropped their own first point again for match point number six, but recovered to level up at 11–11. They then lost a match point of their own before finally prevailing 14–12 after an epic 18 minute struggle.
On the Mexican swing of the ITF Circuit in March, she won the doubles title in Irapuato, and followed that with a runner-up finish in doubles and a win in the singles at the second tournament in Cancun, before taking the doubles title at the same venue a week later, after retiring during her singles semifinal earlier that day. That was followed by another title in Asia, as she reunited with Aldila Sutjiadi to make it two titles from two tournaments together by winning in Hong Kong.
Staying together for the next few tournaments, Hourigan and Sutjiadi lost to Rutuja Bhosale and Abigail Tere-Apisah in the semifinals of the first tournament in Singapore, beaten 14–12 in a match tie-break after holding two match points at 9–7. They made amends by winning the corresponding tournament the following week, beating Emily Appleton and Catherine Harrison in the final after Sutjiadi had thrashed Hourigan in their singles semifinal. Their last tournament together was the following week in Hong Kong, where they were beaten in the semifinals by Tere-Apisah and Junri Namigata, in a match where several crucial line calls were disputed by one team or the other.
The next stop for Hourigan was the Fed Cup in Malaysia, where she had two double-bagel wins in singles before losing in three sets to Eudice Chong from Hong Kong. She played just one doubles match, teaming up with Erin Routliffe to beat the pair from Bangladesh. Moving on to Europe, Hourigan was injured in her first match in Spain before travelling to Portugal to try to defend her singles crown in Corroios. Well-beaten in the quarterfinals by Pemra Özgen, she and Alison Bai won the doubles title, beating Francisca Jorge and Olga Parres Azcoitia in a tight match tie-break in the final, winning 14–12 on their third match point, having saved two earlier in the tie-break. It was Hourigan's third doubles match of the season, and the second final, to feature the same score in the decider.
A family bereavement cut short Hourigan's European tour, and she didn't play again for nearly two months, resuming at Redding, California, in September. She and Catherine Harrison reached the doubles final, but they were well-beaten by Emina Bektas and Tara Moore. Four tournaments in Australia followed, the best resulting in another doubles final, where she and Bai lost to Destanee Aiava and Naiktha Bains in Brisbane. Two tournaments in Texas ended Hourigan's year, she and Katherine Sebov reaching the doubles semifinals in Dallas, but they had to default through injury.
2020
Hourigan began the new season in Auckland, where she received a wildcard into both singles and doubles, the latter with Sara Errani. She suffered a heavy defeat to Caroline Wozniacki in the first round of singles, and also lost in the first round of doubles. The next stop was an ITF tournament in Burnie, Tasmania, where she again lost in the first round of singles, this time after having to qualify, but made the semifinals of the doubles with Destanee Aiava.
Back in New Zealand, Hourigan won all three singles matches she played in the Fed Cup tournament in Wellington, ensuring New Zealand's place in the Asia/Oceania Zone Group I for 2021. Back in Australia, Hourigan lost in the first round of singles in both tournaments in Perth. She and Abigail Tere-Apisah lost in the quarterfinals of the first week's doubles event, but got through to the final in the second week, losing to Kanako Morisaki and Erika Sema.
From Perth, Hourigan flew to South Africa for two tournaments in Potchefstroom. In the first tournament she lost again in the first round of singles, but she and Berfu Cengiz were beaten in the doubles final by Samantha Murray Sharan and Fanny Stollár. Hourigan had reached the singles quarterfinal and doubles semifinal in the second week when the ITF Circuit events were suspended because of Covid-19. The only matches allowed to continue were those actually being played when the order to abandon was given.
Hourigan played just one tournament after the resumption of play in August, an ITF event in Sharm El Sheikh where she lost her doubles quarterfinal and had to withdraw from her singles quarterfinal when down 0–2 in the deciding set.
2021
Warming up for the new season with a series of exhibition matches in Auckland, Hourigan flew to Egypt in late March to resume her ITF career in Sharm El Sheikh. She had instant success, winning the singles title at the first tournament she entered, and keeping her unbeaten record in singles finals intact. Two weeks later, she won a doubles title at Monastir in Tunisia, and followed that with a singles title at the same venue.
WTA career finals
Doubles: 1 (runner-up)
ITF Circuit finals
Singles: 4 (4 titles)
Doubles: 16 (10 titles, 6 runner-ups)
This tournament is an outdoor event, but rain caused the doubles final to be postponed from 13 April and then transferred to an indoor court.
Fed Cup participation
Singles
Doubles
References
External links
1997 births
Living people
People from Turakina
New Zealand female tennis players
Ngāti Tūwharetoa
New Zealand Māori sportspeople
People educated at Nga Tawa Diocesan School | [
"Paige Mary Hourigan (born 3 February 1997) is a professional tennis player from New Zealand.",
"She has won four singles and ten doubles titles on the ITF Circuit.",
"She reached her best rankings in both singles and doubles after winning ITF titles in Singapore and Surprise, Arizona early in 2019, and those rankings continued to climb as her run of success extended through Mexico and Asia.",
"Hourigan, who was born in Turakina, is of part Māori descent and affiliates to the Ngāti Tūwharetoa iwi.",
"Junior career\nHourigan won five singles and five doubles titles as a junior, the best of which was the doubles at the Grade-2 Biesterbos Open in the Netherlands, partnering Lizette Cabrera.",
"She twice competed in the Australian Open junior singles, her better result being a loss in the first round proper to Beatriz Haddad Maia in 2013.",
"Her best junior ranking was 175, in October 2012.",
"Senior career\nShe made her WTA Tour debut at the 2013 ASB Classic.",
"Her first main-draw win was in an ITF doubles match in Glen Iris, Australia, in April 2014, and her first ITF final resulted in a doubles win in Antalya, Turkey, in June 2016.",
"She first represented New Zealand in the Fed Cup in Dushanbe, Tajikistan, in 2017, winning two of her three singles matches.",
"2018\nHourigan won her first singles title as a qualifier at Corroios (a suburb of Lisbon), Portugal, in July, just a few hours after being beaten in a qualifying match for her next tournament in neighbouring Setubal.",
"Returning to North America, she then went all the way to the semi-finals as a qualifier in an ITF tournament in Fort Worth, Texas.",
"In December, she was runner-up to Valentina Ivanov in the singles at the New Zealand Tennis Championships, and won the doubles title with Erin Routliffe.",
"2019\nGiven a wildcard into the singles qualifying draw at the Auckland Open, Hourigan was again beaten by Valentina Ivanov, this time in the first round.",
"She did much better in the doubles where, with partner Taylor Townsend, she got all the way to her first WTA final, having defeated second seeds Kirsten Flipkens and Johanna Larsson in the semifinal.",
"Against the scratch pair of Eugenie Bouchard and Sofia Kenin, Hourigan and Townsend raced through the first set to lead 6–1, but lost the second set by the same score.",
"The match tie-break was a scrappy affair, with Bouchard and Kenin eventually winning 10–7 to take the title.",
"Hourigan made no mistakes in her run to her second ITF doubles title, in Singapore three weeks later, this time with Indonesia's Aldila Sutjiadi as her partner.",
"Beating the top seeds in their semifinal, they comfortably defeated the Hong Kong pair of Eudice Chong and Zhang Ling in the final, winning nine games in a row from 1–2 down in the first set on the way to a final score of 6–2, 6–3.",
"Hourigan's third ITF doubles title came just three weeks later, in Surprise, Arizona, with star American youngster Coco Gauff on her side of the net.",
"They started by beating the third seeds, Jovana Jakšić and Giuliana Olmos, and defeated the second seeds, Jacqueline Cako and Ingrid Neel, in an amazing semi-final, coming back from two set points down at 2–5, 30–40 to win five games in a row and take the first set.",
"The second set was more straightforward, as they went on to win 7–5, 6–3.",
"Less than an hour later they were back on court for the final, where they won the first set against Usue Maitane Arconada and Emina Bektas, but lost the second.",
"The match tie-break saw the all-American pair work their way to a 9–5 lead, holding four match points.",
"Hourigan and Gauff managed to save all four points to change ends again at 9-9, but then faced another match point, which they saved as well.",
"They dropped their own first point again for match point number six, but recovered to level up at 11–11.",
"They then lost a match point of their own before finally prevailing 14–12 after an epic 18 minute struggle.",
"On the Mexican swing of the ITF Circuit in March, she won the doubles title in Irapuato, and followed that with a runner-up finish in doubles and a win in the singles at the second tournament in Cancun, before taking the doubles title at the same venue a week later, after retiring during her singles semifinal earlier that day.",
"That was followed by another title in Asia, as she reunited with Aldila Sutjiadi to make it two titles from two tournaments together by winning in Hong Kong.",
"Staying together for the next few tournaments, Hourigan and Sutjiadi lost to Rutuja Bhosale and Abigail Tere-Apisah in the semifinals of the first tournament in Singapore, beaten 14–12 in a match tie-break after holding two match points at 9–7.",
"They made amends by winning the corresponding tournament the following week, beating Emily Appleton and Catherine Harrison in the final after Sutjiadi had thrashed Hourigan in their singles semifinal.",
"Their last tournament together was the following week in Hong Kong, where they were beaten in the semifinals by Tere-Apisah and Junri Namigata, in a match where several crucial line calls were disputed by one team or the other.",
"The next stop for Hourigan was the Fed Cup in Malaysia, where she had two double-bagel wins in singles before losing in three sets to Eudice Chong from Hong Kong.",
"She played just one doubles match, teaming up with Erin Routliffe to beat the pair from Bangladesh.",
"Moving on to Europe, Hourigan was injured in her first match in Spain before travelling to Portugal to try to defend her singles crown in Corroios.",
"Well-beaten in the quarterfinals by Pemra Özgen, she and Alison Bai won the doubles title, beating Francisca Jorge and Olga Parres Azcoitia in a tight match tie-break in the final, winning 14–12 on their third match point, having saved two earlier in the tie-break.",
"It was Hourigan's third doubles match of the season, and the second final, to feature the same score in the decider.",
"A family bereavement cut short Hourigan's European tour, and she didn't play again for nearly two months, resuming at Redding, California, in September.",
"She and Catherine Harrison reached the doubles final, but they were well-beaten by Emina Bektas and Tara Moore.",
"Four tournaments in Australia followed, the best resulting in another doubles final, where she and Bai lost to Destanee Aiava and Naiktha Bains in Brisbane.",
"Two tournaments in Texas ended Hourigan's year, she and Katherine Sebov reaching the doubles semifinals in Dallas, but they had to default through injury.",
"2020\nHourigan began the new season in Auckland, where she received a wildcard into both singles and doubles, the latter with Sara Errani.",
"She suffered a heavy defeat to Caroline Wozniacki in the first round of singles, and also lost in the first round of doubles.",
"The next stop was an ITF tournament in Burnie, Tasmania, where she again lost in the first round of singles, this time after having to qualify, but made the semifinals of the doubles with Destanee Aiava.",
"Back in New Zealand, Hourigan won all three singles matches she played in the Fed Cup tournament in Wellington, ensuring New Zealand's place in the Asia/Oceania Zone Group I for 2021.",
"Back in Australia, Hourigan lost in the first round of singles in both tournaments in Perth.",
"She and Abigail Tere-Apisah lost in the quarterfinals of the first week's doubles event, but got through to the final in the second week, losing to Kanako Morisaki and Erika Sema.",
"From Perth, Hourigan flew to South Africa for two tournaments in Potchefstroom.",
"In the first tournament she lost again in the first round of singles, but she and Berfu Cengiz were beaten in the doubles final by Samantha Murray Sharan and Fanny Stollár.",
"Hourigan had reached the singles quarterfinal and doubles semifinal in the second week when the ITF Circuit events were suspended because of Covid-19.",
"The only matches allowed to continue were those actually being played when the order to abandon was given.",
"Hourigan played just one tournament after the resumption of play in August, an ITF event in Sharm El Sheikh where she lost her doubles quarterfinal and had to withdraw from her singles quarterfinal when down 0–2 in the deciding set.",
"2021\nWarming up for the new season with a series of exhibition matches in Auckland, Hourigan flew to Egypt in late March to resume her ITF career in Sharm El Sheikh.",
"She had instant success, winning the singles title at the first tournament she entered, and keeping her unbeaten record in singles finals intact.",
"Two weeks later, she won a doubles title at Monastir in Tunisia, and followed that with a singles title at the same venue.",
"WTA career finals\n\nDoubles: 1 (runner-up)\n\nITF Circuit finals\n\nSingles: 4 (4 titles)\n\nDoubles: 16 (10 titles, 6 runner-ups)\n\n This tournament is an outdoor event, but rain caused the doubles final to be postponed from 13 April and then transferred to an indoor court.",
"Fed Cup participation\n\nSingles\n\nDoubles\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links\n \n \n \n\n1997 births\nLiving people\nPeople from Turakina\nNew Zealand female tennis players\nNgāti Tūwharetoa\nNew Zealand Māori sportspeople\nPeople educated at Nga Tawa Diocesan School"
] | [
"A professional tennis player is born in New Zealand.",
"She has won a lot of titles on the circuit.",
"She reached her best rankings in both singles and doubles after winning titles in Singapore and Surprise, Arizona early in the year, and those rankings continued to climb as her run of success extended through Mexico and Asia.",
"Hourigan is of Mori descent and is a member of the Ngti Twharetoa iwi.",
"Junior career Hourigan won five singles and five doubles titles as a junior, the best of which was the doubles at the Grade-2 Biesterbos Open in the Netherlands.",
"She lost to Beatriz Haddad Maia in the first round of the Australian Open junior singles.",
"Her best junior ranking was 175.",
"She made her tour debut at the ASB Classic.",
"Her first main-draw win was in an ITF doubles match in Glen Iris, Australia, in April 2014, and her second main-draw win was in a doubles match in Antalya, Turkey, in June 2016",
"She won two of her three singles matches for New Zealand in the Fed Cup in Dushanbe.",
"In July, Hourigan won her first singles title at Corroios, just a few hours after being beaten in a qualification match for her next tournament.",
"She qualified for the semi-finals in Fort Worth, Texas, after returning to North America.",
"She was runner-up in the singles at the New Zealand Tennis Championships and won the doubles title with her partner.",
"Hourigan was beaten in the first round for the second year in a row at the Auckland Open.",
"She got all the way to her first WTA final in the doubles with partner Taylor Townsend, having defeated second seeds Kirsten Flipkens and Johanna Larsson in the semifinals.",
"They raced through the first set to lead 6–1, but lost the second set by the same score.",
"The title was decided in a match tie-break, with Bouchard and Kenin winning 10–7.",
"Hourigan and Indonesia's Aldila Sutjiadi won the doubles title in Singapore three weeks later.",
"They easily defeated the Hong Kong pair of Eudice Chong and Zhang Ling in the final, winning nine games in a row from 1–2 down in the first set on the way to a final score of 6–2, 6–3.",
"Three weeks later, in Surprise, Arizona, Hourigan and Coco Gauff won their third ITF doubles title.",
"They started by beating the third seeds, Jovana Jaki and Giuliana Olmos, and then came back from two set points down to win five games.",
"They went on to win 7–5 and 6–3 in the second set.",
"They won the first set against Usue Maitane Arconada and Emina Bektas, but lost the second in the final.",
"Four match points were held by the all-American pair in the match tie-break.",
"Hourigan and Gauff saved all four points to change ends at 9-9, but then faced another match point, which they saved as well.",
"They dropped their first point for match point number six, but recovered to level up at 11–11.",
"They lost a match point of their own before winning 14–12.",
"She won the doubles title in Irapuato, followed that with a runner-up finish in doubles and a win in the singles at the second tournament, and then took the doubles title at the same venue a week later.",
"She and Aldila Sutjiadi won two titles in two tournaments together, the first in Asia and the second in Hong Kong.",
"Staying together for the next few tournaments, Hourigan and Sutjiadi lost in the semifinals of the first tournament in Singapore, beaten 14–12 in a match tie-break after holding two match points at 9–7.",
"They beat Emily Appleton and Catherine Harrison in the final after Sutjiadi beat Hourigan in the semifinals.",
"Their last tournament together was in Hong Kong, where they were beaten in the semifinals by Tere-Apisah and Junri Namigata, in a match where several crucial line calls were disputed by one team or the other.",
"The next stop for Hourigan was the Fed Cup in Malaysia, where she had two double-bagel wins in singles.",
"She and Routliffe beat the pair from Bangladesh in a doubles match.",
"Hourigan was injured in her first match in Spain and had to travel to Portugal to defend her singles crown.",
"She and Alison Bai were beaten in the quarterfinals by Pemra zgen but rebounded to win the doubles title.",
"It was Hourigan's third doubles match of the season, and the second final, to feature the same score in the decider.",
"Hourigan didn't play again for nearly two months after a family tragedy cut short her European tour.",
"They lost to Emina Bektas and Tara Moore in the doubles final.",
"She and Bai lost to Destanee Aiava and Naiktha Bains in the doubles final of four tournaments in Australia.",
"Two tournaments in Texas ended Hourigan's year, but she and her partner had to default due to injury.",
"In the new season, Hourigan received a wild card into both singles and doubles with Sara Errani.",
"She lost to Wozniacki in 888-282-0465 888-282-0465 888-282-0465 888-282-0465 888-282-0465 888-282-0465 888-282-0465 888-282-0465 888-282-0465 in the first round of singles and doubles.",
"She lost in the first round of singles at the Burnie tournament after having to qualify, but made the semifinals of the doubles with Destanee Aiava.",
"In New Zealand, Hourigan won all three singles matches she played in the Fed Cup tournament in Wellington, ensuring New Zealand's place in the Asia/Oceania Zone Group I for 2021.",
"In Perth, Hourigan lost in the first round in both tournaments.",
"She and her partner lost in the quarterfinals of the first week's doubles event, but got through to the final in the second week.",
"Hourigan flew to South Africa for two tournaments.",
"She was beaten 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"When the ITF Circuit events were suspended because of Covid-19, Hourigan had reached the singles quarterfinals and doubles semifinals.",
"The matches were stopped when the order to abandon was given.",
"Hourigan played just one tournament after the restart of play in August, an ITF event in Sharm El Sheikh where she lost her doubles quarterfinals and had to withdraw from her singles quarterfinals when down 0–2 in the deciding set.",
"Hourigan flew to Egypt in late March to get ready for the new season with a series of exhibition matches in New Zealand.",
"She won the singles title at the first tournament she entered and kept her perfect record in singles finals.",
"She won a doubles title and a singles title at the same place two weeks later.",
"This tournament is an outdoor event, but rain caused the doubles final to be moved to an indoor court.",
"People from Turakina, New Zealand have links to External links."
] | <mask> (born 3 February 1997) is a professional tennis player from New Zealand. She has won four singles and ten doubles titles on the ITF Circuit. She reached her best rankings in both singles and doubles after winning ITF titles in Singapore and Surprise, Arizona early in 2019, and those rankings continued to climb as her run of success extended through Mexico and Asia. <mask>, who was born in Turakina, is of part Māori descent and affiliates to the Ngāti Tūwharetoa iwi. Junior career
<mask> won five singles and five doubles titles as a junior, the best of which was the doubles at the Grade-2 Biesterbos Open in the Netherlands, partnering Lizette Cabrera. She twice competed in the Australian Open junior singles, her better result being a loss in the first round proper to Beatriz Haddad Maia in 2013. Her best junior ranking was 175, in October 2012.Senior career
She made her WTA Tour debut at the 2013 ASB Classic. Her first main-draw win was in an ITF doubles match in Glen Iris, Australia, in April 2014, and her first ITF final resulted in a doubles win in Antalya, Turkey, in June 2016. She first represented New Zealand in the Fed Cup in Dushanbe, Tajikistan, in 2017, winning two of her three singles matches. 2018
<mask> won her first singles title as a qualifier at Corroios (a suburb of Lisbon), Portugal, in July, just a few hours after being beaten in a qualifying match for her next tournament in neighbouring Setubal. Returning to North America, she then went all the way to the semi-finals as a qualifier in an ITF tournament in Fort Worth, Texas. In December, she was runner-up to Valentina Ivanov in the singles at the New Zealand Tennis Championships, and won the doubles title with Erin Routliffe. 2019
Given a wildcard into the singles qualifying draw at the Auckland Open, <mask> was again beaten by Valentina Ivanov, this time in the first round.She did much better in the doubles where, with partner Taylor Townsend, she got all the way to her first WTA final, having defeated second seeds Kirsten Flipkens and Johanna Larsson in the semifinal. Against the scratch pair of Eugenie Bouchard and Sofia Kenin, <mask> and Townsend raced through the first set to lead 6–1, but lost the second set by the same score. The match tie-break was a scrappy affair, with Bouchard and Kenin eventually winning 10–7 to take the title. <mask> made no mistakes in her run to her second ITF doubles title, in Singapore three weeks later, this time with Indonesia's Aldila Sutjiadi as her partner. Beating the top seeds in their semifinal, they comfortably defeated the Hong Kong pair of Eudice Chong and Zhang Ling in the final, winning nine games in a row from 1–2 down in the first set on the way to a final score of 6–2, 6–3. <mask>'s third ITF doubles title came just three weeks later, in Surprise, Arizona, with star American youngster Coco Gauff on her side of the net. They started by beating the third seeds, Jovana Jakšić and Giuliana Olmos, and defeated the second seeds, Jacqueline Cako and Ingrid Neel, in an amazing semi-final, coming back from two set points down at 2–5, 30–40 to win five games in a row and take the first set.The second set was more straightforward, as they went on to win 7–5, 6–3. Less than an hour later they were back on court for the final, where they won the first set against Usue Maitane Arconada and Emina Bektas, but lost the second. The match tie-break saw the all-American pair work their way to a 9–5 lead, holding four match points. <mask> and Gauff managed to save all four points to change ends again at 9-9, but then faced another match point, which they saved as well. They dropped their own first point again for match point number six, but recovered to level up at 11–11. They then lost a match point of their own before finally prevailing 14–12 after an epic 18 minute struggle. On the Mexican swing of the ITF Circuit in March, she won the doubles title in Irapuato, and followed that with a runner-up finish in doubles and a win in the singles at the second tournament in Cancun, before taking the doubles title at the same venue a week later, after retiring during her singles semifinal earlier that day.That was followed by another title in Asia, as she reunited with Aldila Sutjiadi to make it two titles from two tournaments together by winning in Hong Kong. Staying together for the next few tournaments, <mask> and Sutjiadi lost to Rutuja Bhosale and Abigail Tere-Apisah in the semifinals of the first tournament in Singapore, beaten 14–12 in a match tie-break after holding two match points at 9–7. They made amends by winning the corresponding tournament the following week, beating Emily Appleton and Catherine Harrison in the final after Sutjiadi had thrashed Hourigan in their singles semifinal. Their last tournament together was the following week in Hong Kong, where they were beaten in the semifinals by Tere-Apisah and Junri Namigata, in a match where several crucial line calls were disputed by one team or the other. The next stop for <mask> was the Fed Cup in Malaysia, where she had two double-bagel wins in singles before losing in three sets to Eudice Chong from Hong Kong. She played just one doubles match, teaming up with Erin Routliffe to beat the pair from Bangladesh. Moving on to Europe, <mask> was injured in her first match in Spain before travelling to Portugal to try to defend her singles crown in Corroios.Well-beaten in the quarterfinals by Pemra Özgen, she and Alison Bai won the doubles title, beating Francisca Jorge and Olga Parres Azcoitia in a tight match tie-break in the final, winning 14–12 on their third match point, having saved two earlier in the tie-break. It was <mask>'s third doubles match of the season, and the second final, to feature the same score in the decider. A family bereavement cut short <mask>'s European tour, and she didn't play again for nearly two months, resuming at Redding, California, in September. She and Catherine Harrison reached the doubles final, but they were well-beaten by Emina Bektas and Tara Moore. Four tournaments in Australia followed, the best resulting in another doubles final, where she and Bai lost to Destanee Aiava and Naiktha Bains in Brisbane. Two tournaments in Texas ended <mask>'s year, she and Katherine Sebov reaching the doubles semifinals in Dallas, but they had to default through injury. 2020
<mask> began the new season in Auckland, where she received a wildcard into both singles and doubles, the latter with Sara Errani.She suffered a heavy defeat to Caroline Wozniacki in the first round of singles, and also lost in the first round of doubles. The next stop was an ITF tournament in Burnie, Tasmania, where she again lost in the first round of singles, this time after having to qualify, but made the semifinals of the doubles with Destanee Aiava. Back in New Zealand, <mask> won all three singles matches she played in the Fed Cup tournament in Wellington, ensuring New Zealand's place in the Asia/Oceania Zone Group I for 2021. Back in Australia, <mask> lost in the first round of singles in both tournaments in Perth. She and Abigail Tere-Apisah lost in the quarterfinals of the first week's doubles event, but got through to the final in the second week, losing to Kanako Morisaki and Erika Sema. From Perth, <mask> flew to South Africa for two tournaments in Potchefstroom. In the first tournament she lost again in the first round of singles, but she and Berfu Cengiz were beaten in the doubles final by Samantha Murray Sharan and Fanny Stollár.<mask> had reached the singles quarterfinal and doubles semifinal in the second week when the ITF Circuit events were suspended because of Covid-19. The only matches allowed to continue were those actually being played when the order to abandon was given. <mask> played just one tournament after the resumption of play in August, an ITF event in Sharm El Sheikh where she lost her doubles quarterfinal and had to withdraw from her singles quarterfinal when down 0–2 in the deciding set. 2021
Warming up for the new season with a series of exhibition matches in Auckland, <mask> flew to Egypt in late March to resume her ITF career in Sharm El Sheikh. She had instant success, winning the singles title at the first tournament she entered, and keeping her unbeaten record in singles finals intact. Two weeks later, she won a doubles title at Monastir in Tunisia, and followed that with a singles title at the same venue. WTA career finals
Doubles: 1 (runner-up)
ITF Circuit finals
Singles: 4 (4 titles)
Doubles: 16 (10 titles, 6 runner-ups)
This tournament is an outdoor event, but rain caused the doubles final to be postponed from 13 April and then transferred to an indoor court.Fed Cup participation
Singles
Doubles
References
External links
1997 births
Living people
People from Turakina
New Zealand female tennis players
Ngāti Tūwharetoa
New Zealand Māori sportspeople
People educated at Nga Tawa Diocesan School | [
"Paige Mary Hourigan",
"Hourigan",
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] | A professional tennis player is born in New Zealand. She has won a lot of titles on the circuit. She reached her best rankings in both singles and doubles after winning titles in Singapore and Surprise, Arizona early in the year, and those rankings continued to climb as her run of success extended through Mexico and Asia. <mask> is of Mori descent and is a member of the Ngti Twharetoa iwi. Junior career <mask> won five singles and five doubles titles as a junior, the best of which was the doubles at the Grade-2 Biesterbos Open in the Netherlands. She lost to Beatriz Haddad Maia in the first round of the Australian Open junior singles. Her best junior ranking was 175.She made her tour debut at the ASB Classic. Her first main-draw win was in an ITF doubles match in Glen Iris, Australia, in April 2014, and her second main-draw win was in a doubles match in Antalya, Turkey, in June 2016 She won two of her three singles matches for New Zealand in the Fed Cup in Dushanbe. In July, <mask> won her first singles title at Corroios, just a few hours after being beaten in a qualification match for her next tournament. She qualified for the semi-finals in Fort Worth, Texas, after returning to North America. She was runner-up in the singles at the New Zealand Tennis Championships and won the doubles title with her partner. <mask> was beaten in the first round for the second year in a row at the Auckland Open.She got all the way to her first WTA final in the doubles with partner Taylor Townsend, having defeated second seeds Kirsten Flipkens and Johanna Larsson in the semifinals. They raced through the first set to lead 6–1, but lost the second set by the same score. The title was decided in a match tie-break, with Bouchard and Kenin winning 10–7. Hourigan and Indonesia's Aldila Sutjiadi won the doubles title in Singapore three weeks later. They easily defeated the Hong Kong pair of Eudice Chong and Zhang Ling in the final, winning nine games in a row from 1–2 down in the first set on the way to a final score of 6–2, 6–3. Three weeks later, in Surprise, Arizona, <mask> and Coco Gauff won their third ITF doubles title. They started by beating the third seeds, Jovana Jaki and Giuliana Olmos, and then came back from two set points down to win five games.They went on to win 7–5 and 6–3 in the second set. They won the first set against Usue Maitane Arconada and Emina Bektas, but lost the second in the final. Four match points were held by the all-American pair in the match tie-break. <mask> and Gauff saved all four points to change ends at 9-9, but then faced another match point, which they saved as well. They dropped their first point for match point number six, but recovered to level up at 11–11. They lost a match point of their own before winning 14–12. She won the doubles title in Irapuato, followed that with a runner-up finish in doubles and a win in the singles at the second tournament, and then took the doubles title at the same venue a week later.She and Aldila Sutjiadi won two titles in two tournaments together, the first in Asia and the second in Hong Kong. Staying together for the next few tournaments, <mask> and Sutjiadi lost in the semifinals of the first tournament in Singapore, beaten 14–12 in a match tie-break after holding two match points at 9–7. They beat Emily Appleton and Catherine Harrison in the final after Sutjiadi beat <mask> in the semifinals. Their last tournament together was in Hong Kong, where they were beaten in the semifinals by Tere-Apisah and Junri Namigata, in a match where several crucial line calls were disputed by one team or the other. The next stop for <mask> was the Fed Cup in Malaysia, where she had two double-bagel wins in singles. She and Routliffe beat the pair from Bangladesh in a doubles match. <mask> was injured in her first match in Spain and had to travel to Portugal to defend her singles crown.She and Alison Bai were beaten in the quarterfinals by Pemra zgen but rebounded to win the doubles title. It was <mask>'s third doubles match of the season, and the second final, to feature the same score in the decider. <mask> didn't play again for nearly two months after a family tragedy cut short her European tour. They lost to Emina Bektas and Tara Moore in the doubles final. She and Bai lost to Destanee Aiava and Naiktha Bains in the doubles final of four tournaments in Australia. Two tournaments in Texas ended <mask>'s year, but she and her partner had to default due to injury. In the new season, <mask> received a wild card into both singles and doubles with Sara Errani.She lost to Wozniacki in 888-282-0465 888-282-0465 888-282-0465 888-282-0465 888-282-0465 888-282-0465 888-282-0465 888-282-0465 888-282-0465 in the first round of singles and doubles. She lost in the first round of singles at the Burnie tournament after having to qualify, but made the semifinals of the doubles with Destanee Aiava. In New Zealand, <mask> won all three singles matches she played in the Fed Cup tournament in Wellington, ensuring New Zealand's place in the Asia/Oceania Zone Group I for 2021. In Perth, <mask> lost in the first round in both tournaments. She and her partner lost in the quarterfinals of the first week's doubles event, but got through to the final in the second week. <mask> flew to South Africa for two tournaments. She was beaten 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217When the ITF Circuit events were suspended because of Covid-19, <mask> had reached the singles quarterfinals and doubles semifinals. The matches were stopped when the order to abandon was given. <mask> played just one tournament after the restart of play in August, an ITF event in Sharm El Sheikh where she lost her doubles quarterfinals and had to withdraw from her singles quarterfinals when down 0–2 in the deciding set. <mask> flew to Egypt in late March to get ready for the new season with a series of exhibition matches in New Zealand. She won the singles title at the first tournament she entered and kept her perfect record in singles finals. She won a doubles title and a singles title at the same place two weeks later. This tournament is an outdoor event, but rain caused the doubles final to be moved to an indoor court.People from Turakina, New Zealand have links to External links. | [
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] |
2913271 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valerie%20Adams | Valerie Adams | Dame Valerie Kasanita Adams (formerly Vili; born 6 October 1984) is a retired New Zealand shot putter. She is a four-time World champion, four-time World Indoor champion, two-time Olympic, three-time Commonwealth Games champion and twice IAAF Continental Cup winner. She has a personal best throw of 21.24 metres outdoors and 20.54 m indoors. These marks are Oceanian, Commonwealth and New Zealand national records. She also holds the Oceanian junior record (18.93 m) and the Oceanian youth record (17.54 m), as well as the World Championships record, World Indoor Championships record and Commonwealth Games record.
Adams was the third woman to win world championships at the youth, junior, and senior level of an athletics event, following the feats of Yelena Isinbayeva and Jana Pittman. She was the first woman to win four consecutive individual titles at the IAAF World Championships. Adams had a winning streak that extended to 56 wins at elite-level competitions, which started in August 2010 and ended in July 2015. She was the IAAF World Athlete of the Year in 2014 and the Track & Field News Athlete of the Year in 2012 and 2013. She had the longest shot put performance of the season every year from 2006 to 2014, bar 2008 when she was second to Natallia Mikhnevich (later banned for doping that year).
Adams won silver medals at the 2012 Summer Olympics (amended to a gold after prior winner Nadzeya Astapchuk was disqualified for doping), 2016 Summer Olympics, 2005 World Championships in Athletics, and the Commonwealth Games in 2002 and 2018. She was also a bronze medallist at the 2016 IAAF World Indoor Championships. While still a teenager, Adams was a finalist at the 2003 World Championships in Athletics and the 2004 Summer Olympics.
At national level, she has won fifteen shot put titles at the New Zealand Athletics Championships between 2001 and 2018, as well as having a hammer throw national title in 2003. Adams also won four times at the Australian Athletics Championships between 2004 and 2008. From 2006 to 2012 she was chosen as the New Zealand Sportswoman of the Year seven times consecutively and has been awarded the Lonsdale Cup on five occasions in recognition as the leading national athlete in an Olympic sport.
Adams retired from athletics competition in 2022.
Career
Early career
In 1998 Adams met former javelin thrower Kirsten Hellier, who would become her coach for the next 11 years. Adams first came to prominence when winning the World Youth Championships in 2001, with a throw of 16.87 m. She followed this up in 2002 by becoming World Junior champion, throwing 17.73 m, and gained her first international senior placing with the silver medal at the Commonwealth Games, throwing 17.45 m.
She finished fifth at the 2003 World Championships at eighteen years of age. At her first Olympics in 2004, Adams finished seventh (after two athletes' subsequent disqualification), while still recovering from an appendectomy she had just weeks before the competition.
The following year Adams finished third at the World Championships with a personal best throw of 19.87 m. When the original winner, Nadzeya Astapchuk, was disqualified following a 2013 retest of her drug sample from the competition that was found to be positive, Adams' original bronze medal was upgraded to silver. Adams originally finished second at the World Athletics Final in 2005, but was promoted to gold after Astapchuk's results were annulled. At the 2006 Commonwealth Games Adams won the gold medal, breaking the 20-year-old Commonwealth Games record of 19.00 m with a throw of 19.66 m.
First world and Olympic titles
In 2007, Adams went to the Osaka World Championships as a favourite to take a medal due to her being one of only three women to throw over 20 m before the championships. In qualifying, Adams led the field with a throw of 19.45 m. Adams held second place behind Nadzeya Astapchuk throughout the final, but responded well in the last round with a mammoth throw and Commonwealth record of 20.54 m to take the gold. This made Adams one of few female athletes ever to take IAAF World Titles at youth, junior and senior level.
In 2008 Adams broke the Oceania record in winning her first World Indoor Title in Valencia (20.19 m). At the Beijing Olympics, she qualified for the final with the longest distance thrown, 19.73 meters, on her first attempt. She won the gold with a throw of 20.56 m, a personal best, beating Belarusian thrower Natallia Mikhnevich. It was the first Olympic gold medal in track and field for New Zealand since John Walker won the 1500 meter race in 1976. She also won the New Zealand Sports Award of the year in 2008.
At the 2009 Grande Prêmio Rio in Brazil Adams won the competition with a new personal best and Oceanian area record of 20.69 m. The throw was also the world leading distance for the event. In August, Adams won at the 2009 World Championships in Athletics in Berlin with a throw of 20.44 meters, ahead of the German Nadine Kleinert and Gong Lijiao of China.
At the 2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships Adams was defeated by Nadzeya Astapchuk by a large margin, in spite of the New Zealander setting a continental record of 20.49 m. Adams announced on 28 March 2010 that she would no longer be coached by Kirsten Hellier after an 11-year partnership. In April 2010 she announced her new coach was Didier Poppe.
Adams was consistently beaten by Nadzeya Astapchuk in the big meetings that season. She set a meeting record and season's best of 20.37 m at the Athletics Bridge meet in Slovakia, later saying that a change in her technique that April had begun to pay dividends.
Later that season she won at the 2010 IAAF Continental Cup with a season's best mark of 20.85 m and also competed at the Commonwealth Games in New Delhi, where she set a Games record mark of 20.47 m to retain her title. In late 2010 Jean-Pierre Egger took over as her coach from Poppe.
World and Olympic repeat
Adams won the 2011 World Championships equalling the championship record 21.24 met by Natalya Lisovskaya in 1987. At the 2012 World Indoor Championships Adams won the competition with a throw of 20.54 m, a new indoors personal best.
Adams originally won the silver medal at the 2012 London Olympics but was promoted to the gold medal after the initial Olympic champion, Nadzeya Astapchuk, failed two drug tests, one a day before the event and the second on the day of the event.
The Belarusian Ostapchuk tested positive for metenolone which is classified as an anabolic agent on the list of banned substances. Adams later recounted how she initially believed Chef de Mission Dave Currie was "telling fibs" upon being told the news. She received the gold medal from the New Zealand Governor-General, Sir Jerry Mateparae, at a special ceremony in Auckland on 19 September 2012.
Fourth world title
Adams won her fourth world championship gold at the 2013 World Championships games in Moscow in August 2013. Her fourth gold medal surpassed Astrid Kumbernuss for most all time by a female shotputter and made her the first woman to win four straight titles in an event at the competition. On 27 September, Adams underwent surgery on her left ankle and right knee, and in March 2014 won her third world indoor championship at Sopot in Poland with a distance of 20.67 m. Her gold medal at the 2014 Commonwealth Games, where she was New Zealand's flag-bearer, was her 54th consecutive event win; the streak began in August 2010.
Later career
Injury caused Adams to withdraw from an attempted defence of her shot put title at the 2014 IAAF Continental Cup and she was ruled out for most of 2015 season for the same reason. During this period she underwent surgeries on her shoulder and elbow in late 2014 and returned for a further operational on her knee in August 2015.
Adams finished second in shot put at the 2016 Summer Olympics with a distance of 20.42 m. She was beaten by Michelle Carter who had a personal best of 20.63 m with her last put of the competition.
In the 2017 New Year Honours, Adams was named a Dame Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit. She skipped the entire track and field that season due to pregnancy.
Adams came in second in the shot put at the 2018 Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast, Australia, with a seasonal best put of 18.70 m.
Adams won her fourth Olympic medal in July 2021, at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, winning a bronze medal with a best put of .
Adams announced her retirement from athletics competition on 1 March 2022, but will continue to coach Lisa Adams.
Personal life
Adams was born in Rotorua, New Zealand, to a Tongan mother (Lilika Ngauamo) and an English father (Sydney Adams). Her father, who settled in New Zealand after service in the Royal Navy, had a total of 18 children with five women. Adams' youngest sibling is NBA player Steven Adams, and two other brothers played professional basketball in New Zealand. Their sister, Lisa Adams, is a paralympic champion shot-putter and discus thrower who has cerebral palsy.
Adams was married to Bertrand Vili, a discus thrower from New Caledonia. They married in 2004 and divorced in early 2010. Adams married Gabriel Price, a friend since childhood, at Temple View in Hamilton on 2 April 2016. The couple have two children: a daughter born in 2017 and a son.
She is a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Adams' training base is at the Centre national de sport de Macolin in Switzerland.
Personal bests
Seasonal bests
International competitions
Revised positions
2004 Olympic Games: Promoted to seventh following disqualification of winner Irina Korzhanenko and fourth-place Svetlana Krivelyova
2005 World Championships: Promoted to silver following disqualification of winner Nadzeya Astapchuk
2010 World Indoor Championships: Promoted to gold following disqualification of winner Nadzeya Astapchuk
2012 Olympic Games: Promoted to gold following disqualification of winner Nadzeya Astapchuk
National titles
New Zealand Athletics Championships
Shot put: 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2018
Hammer throw: 2003
Australian Athletics Championships
Shot put: 2004, 2005, 2008, 2009
Circuit wins
IAAF Diamond League: 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016
Shanghai Golden Grand Prix: 2010
Adidas Grand Prix: 2010, 2012, 2014
British Grand Prix: 2010, 2012, 2014
Meeting Areva: 2010, 2011, 2013
Herculis: 2010, 2014, 2016
Stockholm Bauhaus Athletics: 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013
London Grand Prix: 2010, 2011, 2013
Weltklasse Zürich: 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013
Bislett Games: 2011
Athletissima: 2012, 2014, 2016
Golden Gala: 2012, 2014, 2016
Prefontaine Classic: 2013
Qatar Athletic Super Grand Prix: 2014
Memorial Van Damme: 2014
Meeting International Mohammed VI d'Athlétisme de Rabat: 2016
IAAF World Athletics Final: 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009
Awards
Laureus World Sports Award for Sportswoman of the Year: 2015 nominee
IAAF World Athlete of the Year: 2014
Track & Field News Athlete of the Year: 2012, 2013
New Zealand Listener Power List in Sport: 2008, 2009
Member of the Order of Queen Sālote Tupou III (31 July 2008).
New Zealand Order of Merit: 2017
New Zealand's Sportswoman of the Year: 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
Halberg Awards – Supreme Award: 2007, 2008, 2009
Lonsdale Cup of the New Zealand Olympic Committee: 2006, 2007, 2011, 2013, 2014
See also
Shot put at the Olympics
List of Olympic medalists in athletics (women)
List of 2008 Summer Olympics medal winners
List of 2012 Summer Olympics medal winners
List of 2016 Summer Olympics medal winners
List of New Zealand Olympic medallists
List of Commonwealth Games medallists in athletics (women)
List of World Championships in Athletics medalists (women)
List of Australian athletics champions (women)
List of New Zealand sportspeople
List of professional sports families
List of sporting knights and dames
Women in New Zealand
References
External links
Vili wins the shot put title at the 2007 World Championships at YouTube
Page with Photo, one of several at Sporting Heroes
IAAF highlight video
1984 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Rotorua
New Zealand female shot putters
Olympic female shot putters
Olympic athletes of New Zealand
Olympic gold medalists for New Zealand
Olympic silver medalists for New Zealand
Olympic bronze medalists for New Zealand
Olympic gold medalists in athletics (track and field)
Olympic silver medalists in athletics (track and field)
Olympic bronze medalists in athletics (track and field)
Athletes (track and field) at the 2004 Summer Olympics
Athletes (track and field) at the 2008 Summer Olympics
Athletes (track and field) at the 2012 Summer Olympics
Athletes (track and field) at the 2016 Summer Olympics
Athletes (track and field) at the 2020 Summer Olympics
Medalists at the 2008 Summer Olympics
Medalists at the 2012 Summer Olympics
Medalists at the 2016 Summer Olympics
Medalists at the 2020 Summer Olympics
Commonwealth Games gold medallists for New Zealand
Commonwealth Games silver medallists for New Zealand
Commonwealth Games medallists in athletics
Athletes (track and field) at the 2002 Commonwealth Games
Athletes (track and field) at the 2006 Commonwealth Games
Athletes (track and field) at the 2010 Commonwealth Games
Athletes (track and field) at the 2014 Commonwealth Games
Athletes (track and field) at the 2018 Commonwealth Games
World Athletics Championships athletes for New Zealand
World Athletics Championships medalists
Dames Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit
Sporting dames
New Zealand Latter Day Saints
New Zealand people of English descent
New Zealand people of Tongan descent
Track & Field News Athlete of the Year winners
Diamond League winners
World Athletics Indoor Championships winners
IAAF Continental Cup winners
World Athletics Championships winners
IAAF World Athletics Final winners
Members of the Order of Queen Sālote Tupou III | [
"Dame Valerie Kasanita Adams (formerly Vili; born 6 October 1984) is a retired New Zealand shot putter.",
"She is a four-time World champion, four-time World Indoor champion, two-time Olympic, three-time Commonwealth Games champion and twice IAAF Continental Cup winner.",
"She has a personal best throw of 21.24 metres outdoors and 20.54 m indoors.",
"These marks are Oceanian, Commonwealth and New Zealand national records.",
"She also holds the Oceanian junior record (18.93 m) and the Oceanian youth record (17.54 m), as well as the World Championships record, World Indoor Championships record and Commonwealth Games record.",
"Adams was the third woman to win world championships at the youth, junior, and senior level of an athletics event, following the feats of Yelena Isinbayeva and Jana Pittman.",
"She was the first woman to win four consecutive individual titles at the IAAF World Championships.",
"Adams had a winning streak that extended to 56 wins at elite-level competitions, which started in August 2010 and ended in July 2015.",
"She was the IAAF World Athlete of the Year in 2014 and the Track & Field News Athlete of the Year in 2012 and 2013.",
"She had the longest shot put performance of the season every year from 2006 to 2014, bar 2008 when she was second to Natallia Mikhnevich (later banned for doping that year).",
"Adams won silver medals at the 2012 Summer Olympics (amended to a gold after prior winner Nadzeya Astapchuk was disqualified for doping), 2016 Summer Olympics, 2005 World Championships in Athletics, and the Commonwealth Games in 2002 and 2018.",
"She was also a bronze medallist at the 2016 IAAF World Indoor Championships.",
"While still a teenager, Adams was a finalist at the 2003 World Championships in Athletics and the 2004 Summer Olympics.",
"At national level, she has won fifteen shot put titles at the New Zealand Athletics Championships between 2001 and 2018, as well as having a hammer throw national title in 2003.",
"Adams also won four times at the Australian Athletics Championships between 2004 and 2008.",
"From 2006 to 2012 she was chosen as the New Zealand Sportswoman of the Year seven times consecutively and has been awarded the Lonsdale Cup on five occasions in recognition as the leading national athlete in an Olympic sport.",
"Adams retired from athletics competition in 2022.",
"Career\n\nEarly career\nIn 1998 Adams met former javelin thrower Kirsten Hellier, who would become her coach for the next 11 years.",
"Adams first came to prominence when winning the World Youth Championships in 2001, with a throw of 16.87 m. She followed this up in 2002 by becoming World Junior champion, throwing 17.73 m, and gained her first international senior placing with the silver medal at the Commonwealth Games, throwing 17.45 m.\n\nShe finished fifth at the 2003 World Championships at eighteen years of age.",
"At her first Olympics in 2004, Adams finished seventh (after two athletes' subsequent disqualification), while still recovering from an appendectomy she had just weeks before the competition.",
"The following year Adams finished third at the World Championships with a personal best throw of 19.87 m. When the original winner, Nadzeya Astapchuk, was disqualified following a 2013 retest of her drug sample from the competition that was found to be positive, Adams' original bronze medal was upgraded to silver.",
"Adams originally finished second at the World Athletics Final in 2005, but was promoted to gold after Astapchuk's results were annulled.",
"At the 2006 Commonwealth Games Adams won the gold medal, breaking the 20-year-old Commonwealth Games record of 19.00 m with a throw of 19.66 m.\n\nFirst world and Olympic titles\nIn 2007, Adams went to the Osaka World Championships as a favourite to take a medal due to her being one of only three women to throw over 20 m before the championships.",
"In qualifying, Adams led the field with a throw of 19.45 m. Adams held second place behind Nadzeya Astapchuk throughout the final, but responded well in the last round with a mammoth throw and Commonwealth record of 20.54 m to take the gold.",
"This made Adams one of few female athletes ever to take IAAF World Titles at youth, junior and senior level.",
"In 2008 Adams broke the Oceania record in winning her first World Indoor Title in Valencia (20.19 m).",
"At the Beijing Olympics, she qualified for the final with the longest distance thrown, 19.73 meters, on her first attempt.",
"She won the gold with a throw of 20.56 m, a personal best, beating Belarusian thrower Natallia Mikhnevich.",
"It was the first Olympic gold medal in track and field for New Zealand since John Walker won the 1500 meter race in 1976.",
"She also won the New Zealand Sports Award of the year in 2008.",
"At the 2009 Grande Prêmio Rio in Brazil Adams won the competition with a new personal best and Oceanian area record of 20.69 m. The throw was also the world leading distance for the event.",
"In August, Adams won at the 2009 World Championships in Athletics in Berlin with a throw of 20.44 meters, ahead of the German Nadine Kleinert and Gong Lijiao of China.",
"At the 2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships Adams was defeated by Nadzeya Astapchuk by a large margin, in spite of the New Zealander setting a continental record of 20.49 m. Adams announced on 28 March 2010 that she would no longer be coached by Kirsten Hellier after an 11-year partnership.",
"In April 2010 she announced her new coach was Didier Poppe.",
"Adams was consistently beaten by Nadzeya Astapchuk in the big meetings that season.",
"She set a meeting record and season's best of 20.37 m at the Athletics Bridge meet in Slovakia, later saying that a change in her technique that April had begun to pay dividends.",
"Later that season she won at the 2010 IAAF Continental Cup with a season's best mark of 20.85 m and also competed at the Commonwealth Games in New Delhi, where she set a Games record mark of 20.47 m to retain her title.",
"In late 2010 Jean-Pierre Egger took over as her coach from Poppe.",
"World and Olympic repeat\nAdams won the 2011 World Championships equalling the championship record 21.24 met by Natalya Lisovskaya in 1987.",
"At the 2012 World Indoor Championships Adams won the competition with a throw of 20.54 m, a new indoors personal best.",
"Adams originally won the silver medal at the 2012 London Olympics but was promoted to the gold medal after the initial Olympic champion, Nadzeya Astapchuk, failed two drug tests, one a day before the event and the second on the day of the event.",
"The Belarusian Ostapchuk tested positive for metenolone which is classified as an anabolic agent on the list of banned substances.",
"Adams later recounted how she initially believed Chef de Mission Dave Currie was \"telling fibs\" upon being told the news.",
"She received the gold medal from the New Zealand Governor-General, Sir Jerry Mateparae, at a special ceremony in Auckland on 19 September 2012.",
"Fourth world title\nAdams won her fourth world championship gold at the 2013 World Championships games in Moscow in August 2013.",
"Her fourth gold medal surpassed Astrid Kumbernuss for most all time by a female shotputter and made her the first woman to win four straight titles in an event at the competition.",
"On 27 September, Adams underwent surgery on her left ankle and right knee, and in March 2014 won her third world indoor championship at Sopot in Poland with a distance of 20.67 m. Her gold medal at the 2014 Commonwealth Games, where she was New Zealand's flag-bearer, was her 54th consecutive event win; the streak began in August 2010.",
"Later career\nInjury caused Adams to withdraw from an attempted defence of her shot put title at the 2014 IAAF Continental Cup and she was ruled out for most of 2015 season for the same reason.",
"During this period she underwent surgeries on her shoulder and elbow in late 2014 and returned for a further operational on her knee in August 2015.",
"Adams finished second in shot put at the 2016 Summer Olympics with a distance of 20.42 m. She was beaten by Michelle Carter who had a personal best of 20.63 m with her last put of the competition.",
"In the 2017 New Year Honours, Adams was named a Dame Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit.",
"She skipped the entire track and field that season due to pregnancy.",
"Adams came in second in the shot put at the 2018 Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast, Australia, with a seasonal best put of 18.70 m.\n\nAdams won her fourth Olympic medal in July 2021, at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, winning a bronze medal with a best put of .",
"Adams announced her retirement from athletics competition on 1 March 2022, but will continue to coach Lisa Adams.",
"Personal life\n\nAdams was born in Rotorua, New Zealand, to a Tongan mother (Lilika Ngauamo) and an English father (Sydney Adams).",
"Her father, who settled in New Zealand after service in the Royal Navy, had a total of 18 children with five women.",
"Adams' youngest sibling is NBA player Steven Adams, and two other brothers played professional basketball in New Zealand.",
"Their sister, Lisa Adams, is a paralympic champion shot-putter and discus thrower who has cerebral palsy.",
"Adams was married to Bertrand Vili, a discus thrower from New Caledonia.",
"They married in 2004 and divorced in early 2010.",
"Adams married Gabriel Price, a friend since childhood, at Temple View in Hamilton on 2 April 2016.",
"The couple have two children: a daughter born in 2017 and a son.",
"She is a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.",
"Adams' training base is at the Centre national de sport de Macolin in Switzerland."
] | [
"Dame Vili Adams is a retired New Zealand shot putter.",
"She is a four-time World champion, four-time World Indoor champion, two-time Olympic and three-time Commonwealth Games champion.",
"She has a best throw outdoors of 21.24 metres and indoors of 20.4 m.",
"There are marks for Oceanian, Commonwealth and New Zealand.",
"She holds the Oceanian junior record (18.93 m) and the Oceanian youth record (17.54 m), as well as the World Championships record, World Indoor Championships record and Commonwealth Games record.",
"Adams is the third woman to win a world championship at the youth, junior, and senior level of an athletics event.",
"She was the first woman to win four titles in a row.",
"Adams had a winning streak that began in August 2010 and ended in July 2015.",
"She was the Track & Field News athlete of the year in 2012 and 2013.",
"She was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"Adams won silver medals at the 2012 Summer Olympics, 2016 Summer Olympics, 2005 World Championships in athletics, and the Commonwealth Games.",
"She won a bronze medal at the 2016 World Indoor Championships.",
"Adams was a finalist at the 2003 World Championships in athletics and the 2004 Summer Olympics when he was still a teenager.",
"She has won fifteen shot put titles at the New Zealand Athletics Championships between 2001 and 2018, as well as having a hammer throw national title in 2003",
"Between 2004 and 2008 Adams won four times at the Australian Athletics Championships.",
"She was chosen as the New Zealand Sportswoman of the Year seven times in a row from 2006 to 2012 and has also been awarded the Lonsdale Cup five times.",
"Adams retired from athletics competition.",
"Adams met Hellier, a javelin thrower who would become her coach for the next 11 years.",
"After winning the World Youth Championships in 2001, Adams went on to win the World Junior Championship and the silver medal at the Commonwealth Games.",
"After two athletes were disqualified and Adams was still recovering from an appendix, she finished seventh at the Olympics in 2004.",
"Adams' bronze medal from the World Championships was upgraded when the original winner was disqualified due to a positive drug test.",
"Adams was promoted to gold after Astapchuk's results were thrown out.",
"Adams won the gold medal at the 2006 Commonwealth Games with a throw of 19.66 m, breaking the 20-year-old Commonwealth Games record.",
"Adams was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"Adams was one of the few female athletes to ever win a world title.",
"Adams won her first World Indoor Title in Valencia in 2008.",
"She qualified for the final with the longest distance thrown, 19.73 meters, on her first attempt.",
"She won the gold medal with a throw of 20.56 m.",
"It was New Zealand's first gold medal in track and field since 1976, when John Walker won the 1500 meter race.",
"The New Zealand Sports Award of the year was won by her.",
"Adams won the competition with a new personal best and Oceanian area record of 20.69 m.",
"Adams won the javelin at the World Championships in Berlin in August with a throw of 20.44 meters, ahead of the Germans Nadine Kleinert and Gong Lijiao.",
"In spite of a New Zealander setting a continental record of 20.49 m, Adams was defeated by Nadzeya Astapchuk by a large margin at the 2010 World Indoor Championships.",
"She announced in April 2010 that she had a new coach.",
"Adams was beaten by Nadzeya Astapchuk a lot.",
"She set a meeting record and season's best of 20.37 m at the Athletics Bridge meet in Slovakia, later saying that a change in her technique that April had begun to pay dividends.",
"She won the 2010 Continental Cup with a season's best mark of 20.85 m and also competed at the Commonwealth Games in New Delhi, where she set a Games record mark of 20.47 m to retain her title.",
"Jean-Pierre Egger was her coach from Poppe.",
"Adams equaled the championship record of 21.24 set by Natalya Lisovskaya in 1987.",
"Adams won the 2012 World Indoor Championships with a throw of 20.54 m, a new indoor personal best.",
"Adams won the silver medal at the 2012 London Olympics but was promoted to the gold medal after the initial Olympic champion, Nadzeya Astapchuk, failed two drug tests one day before the event and the second on the day of the event.",
"The metenolone that the Ostapchuk tested positive for was on the banned substances list.",
"Adams said she initially thought Chef de Mission Dave Currie was lying.",
"She received the gold medal from the New Zealand Governor-General at a special ceremony.",
"Adams won her fourth world championship gold at the World Championships in Moscow.",
"Her fourth gold medal was the most by a female shotputter and made her the first woman to win four straight titles in an event.",
"Adams won her third world indoor championship at Sopot in Poland with a distance of 20.67 m after undergoing surgery on her left ankle and right knee.",
"Adams was unable to defend her shot put title at the Continental Cup due to injury and was ruled out for most of the season.",
"She had surgeries on her shoulder, elbow, and knee during this period.",
"Adams had a distance of 20.42 m but was beaten by Carter who had a personal best of 20.63 m.",
"Adams was made a Dame Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit.",
"She missed the entire track and field season due to being pregnant.",
"Adams placed second in the shot put at the Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast, Australia, with a seasonal best put of 18.70 m.",
"Lisa Adams will continue to coach after her retirement from athletics competition.",
"Adams was born in New Zealand to a Tongan mother and an English father.",
"After serving in the Royal Navy, her father settled in New Zealand and had 18 children with five women.",
"Adams has three brothers who played professional basketball in New Zealand.",
"Lisa Adams is a paralympic champion shot-putter and discus thrower who has cerebral palsy.",
"Adams was married to a discus thrower.",
"They were married and divorced in 2004.",
"Adams and Gabriel Price were married on April 2, 2016 at Temple View in Hamilton.",
"A daughter and a son were born to the couple.",
"She is a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.",
"The Centre national de sport de Macolin is in Switzerland."
] | <mask> (formerly Vili; born 6 October 1984) is a retired New Zealand shot putter. She is a four-time World champion, four-time World Indoor champion, two-time Olympic, three-time Commonwealth Games champion and twice IAAF Continental Cup winner. She has a personal best throw of 21.24 metres outdoors and 20.54 m indoors. These marks are Oceanian, Commonwealth and New Zealand national records. She also holds the Oceanian junior record (18.93 m) and the Oceanian youth record (17.54 m), as well as the World Championships record, World Indoor Championships record and Commonwealth Games record. <mask> was the third woman to win world championships at the youth, junior, and senior level of an athletics event, following the feats of Yelena Isinbayeva and Jana Pittman. She was the first woman to win four consecutive individual titles at the IAAF World Championships.<mask> had a winning streak that extended to 56 wins at elite-level competitions, which started in August 2010 and ended in July 2015. She was the IAAF World Athlete of the Year in 2014 and the Track & Field News Athlete of the Year in 2012 and 2013. She had the longest shot put performance of the season every year from 2006 to 2014, bar 2008 when she was second to Natallia Mikhnevich (later banned for doping that year). <mask> won silver medals at the 2012 Summer Olympics (amended to a gold after prior winner Nadzeya Astapchuk was disqualified for doping), 2016 Summer Olympics, 2005 World Championships in Athletics, and the Commonwealth Games in 2002 and 2018. She was also a bronze medallist at the 2016 IAAF World Indoor Championships. While still a teenager, <mask> was a finalist at the 2003 World Championships in Athletics and the 2004 Summer Olympics. At national level, she has won fifteen shot put titles at the New Zealand Athletics Championships between 2001 and 2018, as well as having a hammer throw national title in 2003.<mask> also won four times at the Australian Athletics Championships between 2004 and 2008. From 2006 to 2012 she was chosen as the New Zealand Sportswoman of the Year seven times consecutively and has been awarded the Lonsdale Cup on five occasions in recognition as the leading national athlete in an Olympic sport. <mask> retired from athletics competition in 2022. Career
Early career
In 1998 <mask> met former javelin thrower Kirsten Hellier, who would become her coach for the next 11 years. <mask> first came to prominence when winning the World Youth Championships in 2001, with a throw of 16.87 m. She followed this up in 2002 by becoming World Junior champion, throwing 17.73 m, and gained her first international senior placing with the silver medal at the Commonwealth Games, throwing 17.45 m.
She finished fifth at the 2003 World Championships at eighteen years of age. At her first Olympics in 2004, <mask> finished seventh (after two athletes' subsequent disqualification), while still recovering from an appendectomy she had just weeks before the competition. The following year <mask> finished third at the World Championships with a personal best throw of 19.87 m. When the original winner, Nadzeya Astapchuk, was disqualified following a 2013 retest of her drug sample from the competition that was found to be positive, <mask>' original bronze medal was upgraded to silver.<mask> originally finished second at the World Athletics Final in 2005, but was promoted to gold after Astapchuk's results were annulled. At the 2006 Commonwealth Games <mask> won the gold medal, breaking the 20-year-old Commonwealth Games record of 19.00 m with a throw of 19.66 m.
First world and Olympic titles
In 2007, <mask> went to the Osaka World Championships as a favourite to take a medal due to her being one of only three women to throw over 20 m before the championships. In qualifying, <mask> led the field with a throw of 19.45 m. <mask> held second place behind Nadzeya Astapchuk throughout the final, but responded well in the last round with a mammoth throw and Commonwealth record of 20.54 m to take the gold. This made <mask> one of few female athletes ever to take IAAF World Titles at youth, junior and senior level. In 2008 <mask> broke the Oceania record in winning her first World Indoor Title in Valencia (20.19 m). At the Beijing Olympics, she qualified for the final with the longest distance thrown, 19.73 meters, on her first attempt. She won the gold with a throw of 20.56 m, a personal best, beating Belarusian thrower Natallia Mikhnevich.It was the first Olympic gold medal in track and field for New Zealand since John Walker won the 1500 meter race in 1976. She also won the New Zealand Sports Award of the year in 2008. At the 2009 Grande Prêmio Rio in Brazil <mask> won the competition with a new personal best and Oceanian area record of 20.69 m. The throw was also the world leading distance for the event. In August, <mask> won at the 2009 World Championships in Athletics in Berlin with a throw of 20.44 meters, ahead of the German Nadine Kleinert and Gong Lijiao of China. At the 2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships <mask> was defeated by Nadzeya Astapchuk by a large margin, in spite of the New Zealander setting a continental record of 20.49 m. <mask> announced on 28 March 2010 that she would no longer be coached by Kirsten Hellier after an 11-year partnership. In April 2010 she announced her new coach was Didier Poppe. <mask> was consistently beaten by Nadzeya Astapchuk in the big meetings that season.She set a meeting record and season's best of 20.37 m at the Athletics Bridge meet in Slovakia, later saying that a change in her technique that April had begun to pay dividends. Later that season she won at the 2010 IAAF Continental Cup with a season's best mark of 20.85 m and also competed at the Commonwealth Games in New Delhi, where she set a Games record mark of 20.47 m to retain her title. In late 2010 Jean-Pierre Egger took over as her coach from Poppe. World and Olympic repeat
<mask> won the 2011 World Championships equalling the championship record 21.24 met by Natalya Lisovskaya in 1987. At the 2012 World Indoor Championships <mask> won the competition with a throw of 20.54 m, a new indoors personal best. <mask> originally won the silver medal at the 2012 London Olympics but was promoted to the gold medal after the initial Olympic champion, Nadzeya Astapchuk, failed two drug tests, one a day before the event and the second on the day of the event. The Belarusian Ostapchuk tested positive for metenolone which is classified as an anabolic agent on the list of banned substances.<mask> later recounted how she initially believed Chef de Mission Dave Currie was "telling fibs" upon being told the news. She received the gold medal from the New Zealand Governor-General, Sir Jerry Mateparae, at a special ceremony in Auckland on 19 September 2012. Fourth world title
<mask> won her fourth world championship gold at the 2013 World Championships games in Moscow in August 2013. Her fourth gold medal surpassed Astrid Kumbernuss for most all time by a female shotputter and made her the first woman to win four straight titles in an event at the competition. On 27 September, <mask> underwent surgery on her left ankle and right knee, and in March 2014 won her third world indoor championship at Sopot in Poland with a distance of 20.67 m. Her gold medal at the 2014 Commonwealth Games, where she was New Zealand's flag-bearer, was her 54th consecutive event win; the streak began in August 2010. Later career
Injury caused <mask> to withdraw from an attempted defence of her shot put title at the 2014 IAAF Continental Cup and she was ruled out for most of 2015 season for the same reason. During this period she underwent surgeries on her shoulder and elbow in late 2014 and returned for a further operational on her knee in August 2015.<mask> finished second in shot put at the 2016 Summer Olympics with a distance of 20.42 m. She was beaten by Michelle Carter who had a personal best of 20.63 m with her last put of the competition. In the 2017 New Year Honours, <mask> was named a Dame Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit. She skipped the entire track and field that season due to pregnancy. <mask> came in second in the shot put at the 2018 Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast, Australia, with a seasonal best put of 18.70 m.
<mask> won her fourth Olympic medal in July 2021, at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, winning a bronze medal with a best put of . <mask> announced her retirement from athletics competition on 1 March 2022, but will continue to coach <mask>. Personal life
<mask> was born in Rotorua, New Zealand, to a Tongan mother (Lilika Ngauamo) and an English father (<mask>). Her father, who settled in New Zealand after service in the Royal Navy, had a total of 18 children with five women.<mask>' youngest sibling is NBA player <mask>, and two other brothers played professional basketball in New Zealand. Their sister, <mask>, is a paralympic champion shot-putter and discus thrower who has cerebral palsy. <mask> was married to Bertrand Vili, a discus thrower from New Caledonia. They married in 2004 and divorced in early 2010. <mask> married Gabriel Price, a friend since childhood, at Temple View in Hamilton on 2 April 2016. The couple have two children: a daughter born in 2017 and a son. She is a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.<mask>' training base is at the Centre national de sport de Macolin in Switzerland. | [
"Dame Valerie Kasanita Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Lisa Adams",
"Adams",
"Sydney Adams",
"Adams",
"Steven Adams",
"Lisa Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams",
"Adams"
] | <mask> is a retired New Zealand shot putter. She is a four-time World champion, four-time World Indoor champion, two-time Olympic and three-time Commonwealth Games champion. She has a best throw outdoors of 21.24 metres and indoors of 20.4 m. There are marks for Oceanian, Commonwealth and New Zealand. She holds the Oceanian junior record (18.93 m) and the Oceanian youth record (17.54 m), as well as the World Championships record, World Indoor Championships record and Commonwealth Games record. <mask> is the third woman to win a world championship at the youth, junior, and senior level of an athletics event. She was the first woman to win four titles in a row.<mask> had a winning streak that began in August 2010 and ended in July 2015. She was the Track & Field News athlete of the year in 2012 and 2013. She was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 <mask> won silver medals at the 2012 Summer Olympics, 2016 Summer Olympics, 2005 World Championships in athletics, and the Commonwealth Games. She won a bronze medal at the 2016 World Indoor Championships. <mask> was a finalist at the 2003 World Championships in athletics and the 2004 Summer Olympics when he was still a teenager. She has won fifteen shot put titles at the New Zealand Athletics Championships between 2001 and 2018, as well as having a hammer throw national title in 2003Between 2004 and 2008 <mask> won four times at the Australian Athletics Championships. She was chosen as the New Zealand Sportswoman of the Year seven times in a row from 2006 to 2012 and has also been awarded the Lonsdale Cup five times. <mask> retired from athletics competition. <mask> met Hellier, a javelin thrower who would become her coach for the next 11 years. After winning the World Youth Championships in 2001, <mask> went on to win the World Junior Championship and the silver medal at the Commonwealth Games. After two athletes were disqualified and <mask> was still recovering from an appendix, she finished seventh at the Olympics in 2004. <mask>' bronze medal from the World Championships was upgraded when the original winner was disqualified due to a positive drug test.<mask> was promoted to gold after Astapchuk's results were thrown out. <mask> won the gold medal at the 2006 Commonwealth Games with a throw of 19.66 m, breaking the 20-year-old Commonwealth Games record. <mask> was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 <mask> was one of the few female athletes to ever win a world title. <mask> won her first World Indoor Title in Valencia in 2008. She qualified for the final with the longest distance thrown, 19.73 meters, on her first attempt. She won the gold medal with a throw of 20.56 m.It was New Zealand's first gold medal in track and field since 1976, when John Walker won the 1500 meter race. The New Zealand Sports Award of the year was won by her. <mask> won the competition with a new personal best and Oceanian area record of 20.69 m. <mask> won the javelin at the World Championships in Berlin in August with a throw of 20.44 meters, ahead of the Germans Nadine Kleinert and Gong Lijiao. In spite of a New Zealander setting a continental record of 20.49 m, <mask> was defeated by Nadzeya Astapchuk by a large margin at the 2010 World Indoor Championships. She announced in April 2010 that she had a new coach. <mask> was beaten by Nadzeya Astapchuk a lot.She set a meeting record and season's best of 20.37 m at the Athletics Bridge meet in Slovakia, later saying that a change in her technique that April had begun to pay dividends. She won the 2010 Continental Cup with a season's best mark of 20.85 m and also competed at the Commonwealth Games in New Delhi, where she set a Games record mark of 20.47 m to retain her title. Jean-Pierre Egger was her coach from Poppe. <mask> equaled the championship record of 21.24 set by Natalya Lisovskaya in 1987. <mask> won the 2012 World Indoor Championships with a throw of 20.54 m, a new indoor personal best. <mask> won the silver medal at the 2012 London Olympics but was promoted to the gold medal after the initial Olympic champion, Nadzeya Astapchuk, failed two drug tests one day before the event and the second on the day of the event. The metenolone that the Ostapchuk tested positive for was on the banned substances list.<mask> said she initially thought Chef de Mission Dave Currie was lying. She received the gold medal from the New Zealand Governor-General at a special ceremony. <mask> won her fourth world championship gold at the World Championships in Moscow. Her fourth gold medal was the most by a female shotputter and made her the first woman to win four straight titles in an event. <mask> won her third world indoor championship at Sopot in Poland with a distance of 20.67 m after undergoing surgery on her left ankle and right knee. <mask> was unable to defend her shot put title at the Continental Cup due to injury and was ruled out for most of the season. She had surgeries on her shoulder, elbow, and knee during this period.<mask> had a distance of 20.42 m but was beaten by Carter who had a personal best of 20.63 m. <mask> was made a Dame Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit. She missed the entire track and field season due to being pregnant. <mask> placed second in the shot put at the Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast, Australia, with a seasonal best put of 18.70 m. <mask> will continue to coach after her retirement from athletics competition. <mask> was born in New Zealand to a Tongan mother and an English father. After serving in the Royal Navy, her father settled in New Zealand and had 18 children with five women.<mask> has three brothers who played professional basketball in New Zealand. <mask> is a paralympic champion shot-putter and discus thrower who has cerebral palsy. <mask> was married to a discus thrower. They were married and divorced in 2004. <mask> and Gabriel Price were married on April 2, 2016 at Temple View in Hamilton. A daughter and a son were born to the couple. She is a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.The Centre national de sport de Macolin is in Switzerland. | [
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42022148 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean%20Ren%C3%A9%20Moreaux | Jean René Moreaux | Jean René Moreaux (14 March 1758 – 10 February 1795) commanded the French Army of the Moselle during the French Revolutionary Wars. He joined the French Royal Army in 1776 and was badly wounded in the American Revolutionary War two years later. After leaving military service, he married and took over the family business. At the time of the French Revolution he was elected second in command of a volunteer battalion. He was rapidly promoted, emerging as a general officer in May 1793. After another promotion, he led a corps at Pirmasens and a division at Wissembourg. He was appointed commander of the Army of the Moselle in June 1794. In November he was sent with three divisions to invest the fortress of Luxembourg. He caught a fever and died during the Siege of Luxembourg. His surname is one of the names inscribed under the Arc de Triomphe.
Early career
Moreaux was born at Rocroi on 14 March 1758 to parents Geoffroy Moreaux (1709–1767) and Marie Mangin (1710–1786). He had four siblings, Pierre, Marie (1745–1791), Nicole and Marie Catharine. After a short stint in the Royal Marine, Moreaux enlisted in the Auxerrois Grenadier Regiment in 1776 and was sent overseas to fight in the American Revolutionary War. During the British Capture of St. Lucia in December 1778, his leg was broken by a musket ball. Returning home to civilian life he took over the family business. On 11 February 1782 he married Marie Françoise Collardeau (b. 1760) of a well-to-do family. The couple had five children, Marie Thérèse, Charles François, Charles Florent, Pierre Victor René and Armand. The business prospered and he was soon directing 30 workers.
Revolution
At the outbreak of the French Revolution Moreaux was elected commander of the Rocroi National Guard. With war threatening, the government called out the National Guard on 22 July 1791. Recognized for his organizational talents, Moreaux was made second-in-command of the 1st Battalion of the Ardennes Volunteers. His father-in-law replaced him in command of the Rocroi National Guard while his brother-in-law took over the family business. He participated in the defense of Thionville with the rank of lieutenant colonel. Between 3 and 5 September 1792, a garrison of 3,000 to 4,000 French soldiers successfully held Thionville against 20,000 Austrians and Émigrés under Friedrich Wilhelm, Fürst zu Hohenlohe-Kirchberg. The attacking force included a French Royalist unit called the Brigade of Auxerrois. Moreaux was promoted general of brigade on 15 May 1793, skipping over the rank of colonel.
Moreaux served in the campaign to capture the Fortress of Mainz which ended in failure at the Siege of Mainz. On 30 July 1793 he received promotion to the rank of general of division. He was appointed to command the Corps of the Vosges which occupied the Electorate of Trier. On 20 August, three battalions, six squadrons and 10 guns belonging to the Corps of the Vosges were defeated near the Lines of Weissenburg by a Coalition force numbering five battalions, six companies, 13 squadrons and 12 guns. The French commander Louis-Théobald Ihler was killed in the action. Out of 3,000 soldiers, the French lost 103 men and five guns captured plus an unknown number of killed and wounded. The Coalition sustained 147 casualties.
In the Battle of Pirmasens on 14 September, Moreaux was defeated by a Prussian army under Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel. The name of the French commander of the Corps of the Vosges is spelled "Moreau" in historian Digby Smith's account. Another authority, Ramsay Weston Phipps noted that Moreaux was often spelled "Moreau" and confused with the more famous Jean Victor Marie Moreau. In fact, Jean Victor Moreau was not promoted to general of division until 14 April 1794. Moreaux led 12,000 men to attack the Prussian camp at Pirmasens. The Prussians were on the alert and prepared to defend themselves in strong positions. The French generals expressed doubt about continuing, but the representatives on mission demanded an assault. Accordingly, the French attacked along three valleys and were repulsed by heavy flanking fire. The French lost 4,000 casualties and 22 guns. The Prussians reported only 167 casualties.
On 30 September 1793 Moreaux was offered command of the Army of the Moselle but refused. In the Second Battle of Wissembourg in December 1793, Moreaux led a division in Lazare Hoche's Army of the Moselle. His division included the 1st Battalions of the 30th, 44th and 81st Line Infantry Demi Brigades and the Lot and Ardennes Volunteers, the 2nd Battalions of the 54th Line, 99th Line and Loiret, the 4th and 6th Battalions of the Haute-Saone, the 5th Battalion of the Orne, three squadrons of the 10th Cavalry and four squadrons of the 9th Chasseurs à Cheval Regiments. When Hoche became ill at the end of January 1794, Moreaux temporarily took command. Two months later Jean-Baptiste Jourdan succeeded Hoche in command and the army pulled back to a position between Thionville and Sarrebruck.
Army command
On 25 June 1794, Moreaux was named commander of the Army of the Moselle, taking over from Claude Ignace François Michaud. In July his army captured Trier and on 23 October it captured Koblenz. Meanwhile, after a series of stunning victories, the army of Jean-Charles Pichegru conquered Flanders while Jourdan's Army of Sambre-et-Meuse advanced through Liège and Aachen to capture Bonn and Cologne. To the south, the Army of the Rhine captured Kaiserslautern and Worms. French armies stood victorious in the Netherlands and on the west bank of the Rhine. One of Moreaux's divisions led by Rémy Vincent captured Rheinfels Castle on 2 November leaving only Mainz and Luxembourg City in enemy hands on the Rhine's west bank.
While Michaud's Army of the Rhine received instructions to lay siege to Mainz, Moreaux was ordered to make preparations to capture Luxembourg. The fortress had served the Habsburg Austrians as a major supply base during their military operations against France. Seizing Luxembourg was expected to yield enormous stocks of accumulated military supplies. Since the nearest enemy army was far away on the opposite bank of the Rhine, there was little risk that the Allies might relieve the city. For this mission, Moreaux assembled 19,800 soldiers in the divisions of Jean-Jacques Ambert, Jean-Baptiste Debrun and Guillaume Péduchelle. These were formed into two columns, including one under Debrun which approached on the Liège road starting on 19 November 1794.
Several clashes ensued between the advancing French and the withdrawing Austrians, one in which future marshal of France Louis-Nicolas Davout was involved. A blockade was established by 21 November and Moreaux's force was renamed the Army before Luxembourg. Moreaux placed Alexandre Camille Taponier's division across the road to Trier, with its right at Dommeldange and its headquarters at Sandweiler. Debrun's division covered the Arlon road with its right on the Longwy road and its left on the Liège road. Ambert's division was posted at Roeser covering the Thionville road with its headquarters at Hesperange. Moreaux located the army headquarters at Weiler-la-Tour. Achille Grigny was his chief of staff and Jean Pierre Alexandre Dieudel commanded the artillery.
The winter of 1794–1795 was bitterly cold, reaching at one point. Because the roads were in poor condition, it took several weeks before provision convoys began reaching the French camps with regularity. Arrangements were made to bake bread at Grevenmacher and convoy it to the siege lines. Moreaux requested reinforcements in order to tighten the blockade and by 15 December the Army before Luxembourg numbered 25,500 men. In addition, the Army of Sambre-et-Meuse took over positions on the west bank of the Rhine that were formerly the responsibility of the Army of the Moselle. French pickets were pushed to within of the Luxembourg defenses.
The 12,000-man Luxembourg garrison was commanded by the octogenarian Feldmarschall Johann von Bender. The fortress commandant was Johann Wilhelm von Schröder and the brigade commanders were Karl Philipp Sebottendorf, Johann von Moitelle and Ernst Beust. The garrison consisted of 10,095 infantry, 670 cavalry, 570 gunners, 88 sappers, 16 engineers and 415 volunteers. Altogether, there were nine Austrian infantry battalions, two battalions of Würzburgers and four squadrons of Austrian cavalry. On 9 January 1795, the garrison mounted a sortie by 3,000 picked volunteers in order to procure firewood from the surrounding villages. The blow fell on the French lines between Merl and Fayencerie. At first the Austrians drove back the besiegers but they were thrown back into Luxembourg by French reinforcements and an artillery piece that Davout brought forward. In this skirmish, the French suffered 11 killed and 25 wounded while the Austrians lost 30 killed, a number of wounded and five cavalrymen taken prisoner.
At the beginning of February, Moreaux was stricken by a fever at his headquarters at Weiler-la-Tour. He was taken to Thionville where he died on the night of 9–10 February 1795. MOREAUX is one of the names inscribed under the Arc de Triomphe, on Column 13.
On 2 February, representative on mission Étienne Neveu appointed Ambert commander of the Army before Luxembourg. At the end of March, Jacques Maurice Hatry was ordered to undertake the siege with three fresh divisions from the Army of Sambre-et-Meuse. In mid-April, the exchange of troops was carried out and the original three divisions were relieved. Bender surrendered the city on 7 June 1795.
Notes
References
Source:
French soldiers
French generals
French military personnel of the French Revolutionary Wars
Military leaders of the French Revolutionary Wars
French Republican military leaders of the French Revolutionary Wars
People from Ardennes (department)
1755 births
1795 deaths
Names inscribed under the Arc de Triomphe | [
"Jean René Moreaux (14 March 1758 – 10 February 1795) commanded the French Army of the Moselle during the French Revolutionary Wars.",
"He joined the French Royal Army in 1776 and was badly wounded in the American Revolutionary War two years later.",
"After leaving military service, he married and took over the family business.",
"At the time of the French Revolution he was elected second in command of a volunteer battalion.",
"He was rapidly promoted, emerging as a general officer in May 1793.",
"After another promotion, he led a corps at Pirmasens and a division at Wissembourg.",
"He was appointed commander of the Army of the Moselle in June 1794.",
"In November he was sent with three divisions to invest the fortress of Luxembourg.",
"He caught a fever and died during the Siege of Luxembourg.",
"His surname is one of the names inscribed under the Arc de Triomphe.",
"Early career\nMoreaux was born at Rocroi on 14 March 1758 to parents Geoffroy Moreaux (1709–1767) and Marie Mangin (1710–1786).",
"He had four siblings, Pierre, Marie (1745–1791), Nicole and Marie Catharine.",
"After a short stint in the Royal Marine, Moreaux enlisted in the Auxerrois Grenadier Regiment in 1776 and was sent overseas to fight in the American Revolutionary War.",
"During the British Capture of St. Lucia in December 1778, his leg was broken by a musket ball.",
"Returning home to civilian life he took over the family business.",
"On 11 February 1782 he married Marie Françoise Collardeau (b.",
"1760) of a well-to-do family.",
"The couple had five children, Marie Thérèse, Charles François, Charles Florent, Pierre Victor René and Armand.",
"The business prospered and he was soon directing 30 workers.",
"Revolution\nAt the outbreak of the French Revolution Moreaux was elected commander of the Rocroi National Guard.",
"With war threatening, the government called out the National Guard on 22 July 1791.",
"Recognized for his organizational talents, Moreaux was made second-in-command of the 1st Battalion of the Ardennes Volunteers.",
"His father-in-law replaced him in command of the Rocroi National Guard while his brother-in-law took over the family business.",
"He participated in the defense of Thionville with the rank of lieutenant colonel.",
"Between 3 and 5 September 1792, a garrison of 3,000 to 4,000 French soldiers successfully held Thionville against 20,000 Austrians and Émigrés under Friedrich Wilhelm, Fürst zu Hohenlohe-Kirchberg.",
"The attacking force included a French Royalist unit called the Brigade of Auxerrois.",
"Moreaux was promoted general of brigade on 15 May 1793, skipping over the rank of colonel.",
"Moreaux served in the campaign to capture the Fortress of Mainz which ended in failure at the Siege of Mainz.",
"On 30 July 1793 he received promotion to the rank of general of division.",
"He was appointed to command the Corps of the Vosges which occupied the Electorate of Trier.",
"On 20 August, three battalions, six squadrons and 10 guns belonging to the Corps of the Vosges were defeated near the Lines of Weissenburg by a Coalition force numbering five battalions, six companies, 13 squadrons and 12 guns.",
"The French commander Louis-Théobald Ihler was killed in the action.",
"Out of 3,000 soldiers, the French lost 103 men and five guns captured plus an unknown number of killed and wounded.",
"The Coalition sustained 147 casualties.",
"In the Battle of Pirmasens on 14 September, Moreaux was defeated by a Prussian army under Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel.",
"The name of the French commander of the Corps of the Vosges is spelled \"Moreau\" in historian Digby Smith's account.",
"Another authority, Ramsay Weston Phipps noted that Moreaux was often spelled \"Moreau\" and confused with the more famous Jean Victor Marie Moreau.",
"In fact, Jean Victor Moreau was not promoted to general of division until 14 April 1794.",
"Moreaux led 12,000 men to attack the Prussian camp at Pirmasens.",
"The Prussians were on the alert and prepared to defend themselves in strong positions.",
"The French generals expressed doubt about continuing, but the representatives on mission demanded an assault.",
"Accordingly, the French attacked along three valleys and were repulsed by heavy flanking fire.",
"The French lost 4,000 casualties and 22 guns.",
"The Prussians reported only 167 casualties.",
"On 30 September 1793 Moreaux was offered command of the Army of the Moselle but refused.",
"In the Second Battle of Wissembourg in December 1793, Moreaux led a division in Lazare Hoche's Army of the Moselle.",
"His division included the 1st Battalions of the 30th, 44th and 81st Line Infantry Demi Brigades and the Lot and Ardennes Volunteers, the 2nd Battalions of the 54th Line, 99th Line and Loiret, the 4th and 6th Battalions of the Haute-Saone, the 5th Battalion of the Orne, three squadrons of the 10th Cavalry and four squadrons of the 9th Chasseurs à Cheval Regiments.",
"When Hoche became ill at the end of January 1794, Moreaux temporarily took command.",
"Two months later Jean-Baptiste Jourdan succeeded Hoche in command and the army pulled back to a position between Thionville and Sarrebruck.",
"Army command\nOn 25 June 1794, Moreaux was named commander of the Army of the Moselle, taking over from Claude Ignace François Michaud.",
"In July his army captured Trier and on 23 October it captured Koblenz.",
"Meanwhile, after a series of stunning victories, the army of Jean-Charles Pichegru conquered Flanders while Jourdan's Army of Sambre-et-Meuse advanced through Liège and Aachen to capture Bonn and Cologne.",
"To the south, the Army of the Rhine captured Kaiserslautern and Worms.",
"French armies stood victorious in the Netherlands and on the west bank of the Rhine.",
"One of Moreaux's divisions led by Rémy Vincent captured Rheinfels Castle on 2 November leaving only Mainz and Luxembourg City in enemy hands on the Rhine's west bank.",
"While Michaud's Army of the Rhine received instructions to lay siege to Mainz, Moreaux was ordered to make preparations to capture Luxembourg.",
"The fortress had served the Habsburg Austrians as a major supply base during their military operations against France.",
"Seizing Luxembourg was expected to yield enormous stocks of accumulated military supplies.",
"Since the nearest enemy army was far away on the opposite bank of the Rhine, there was little risk that the Allies might relieve the city.",
"For this mission, Moreaux assembled 19,800 soldiers in the divisions of Jean-Jacques Ambert, Jean-Baptiste Debrun and Guillaume Péduchelle.",
"These were formed into two columns, including one under Debrun which approached on the Liège road starting on 19 November 1794.",
"Several clashes ensued between the advancing French and the withdrawing Austrians, one in which future marshal of France Louis-Nicolas Davout was involved.",
"A blockade was established by 21 November and Moreaux's force was renamed the Army before Luxembourg.",
"Moreaux placed Alexandre Camille Taponier's division across the road to Trier, with its right at Dommeldange and its headquarters at Sandweiler.",
"Debrun's division covered the Arlon road with its right on the Longwy road and its left on the Liège road.",
"Ambert's division was posted at Roeser covering the Thionville road with its headquarters at Hesperange.",
"Moreaux located the army headquarters at Weiler-la-Tour.",
"Achille Grigny was his chief of staff and Jean Pierre Alexandre Dieudel commanded the artillery.",
"The winter of 1794–1795 was bitterly cold, reaching at one point.",
"Because the roads were in poor condition, it took several weeks before provision convoys began reaching the French camps with regularity.",
"Arrangements were made to bake bread at Grevenmacher and convoy it to the siege lines.",
"Moreaux requested reinforcements in order to tighten the blockade and by 15 December the Army before Luxembourg numbered 25,500 men.",
"In addition, the Army of Sambre-et-Meuse took over positions on the west bank of the Rhine that were formerly the responsibility of the Army of the Moselle.",
"French pickets were pushed to within of the Luxembourg defenses.",
"The 12,000-man Luxembourg garrison was commanded by the octogenarian Feldmarschall Johann von Bender.",
"The fortress commandant was Johann Wilhelm von Schröder and the brigade commanders were Karl Philipp Sebottendorf, Johann von Moitelle and Ernst Beust.",
"The garrison consisted of 10,095 infantry, 670 cavalry, 570 gunners, 88 sappers, 16 engineers and 415 volunteers.",
"Altogether, there were nine Austrian infantry battalions, two battalions of Würzburgers and four squadrons of Austrian cavalry.",
"On 9 January 1795, the garrison mounted a sortie by 3,000 picked volunteers in order to procure firewood from the surrounding villages.",
"The blow fell on the French lines between Merl and Fayencerie.",
"At first the Austrians drove back the besiegers but they were thrown back into Luxembourg by French reinforcements and an artillery piece that Davout brought forward.",
"In this skirmish, the French suffered 11 killed and 25 wounded while the Austrians lost 30 killed, a number of wounded and five cavalrymen taken prisoner.",
"At the beginning of February, Moreaux was stricken by a fever at his headquarters at Weiler-la-Tour.",
"He was taken to Thionville where he died on the night of 9–10 February 1795.",
"MOREAUX is one of the names inscribed under the Arc de Triomphe, on Column 13.",
"On 2 February, representative on mission Étienne Neveu appointed Ambert commander of the Army before Luxembourg.",
"At the end of March, Jacques Maurice Hatry was ordered to undertake the siege with three fresh divisions from the Army of Sambre-et-Meuse.",
"In mid-April, the exchange of troops was carried out and the original three divisions were relieved.",
"Bender surrendered the city on 7 June 1795.",
"Notes\n\nReferences\n\nSource: \n\nFrench soldiers\nFrench generals\nFrench military personnel of the French Revolutionary Wars\nMilitary leaders of the French Revolutionary Wars\nFrench Republican military leaders of the French Revolutionary Wars\nPeople from Ardennes (department)\n1755 births\n1795 deaths\nNames inscribed under the Arc de Triomphe"
] | [
"The French Army of the Moselle was commanded by Jean René Moreaux.",
"He was badly wounded in the American Revolutionary War after joining the French Royal Army.",
"He took over the family business after leaving military service.",
"He was second in command of a volunteer battalion at the time of the French Revolution.",
"He became a general officer in May 1793.",
"He led a division at Wissembourg after another promotion.",
"He was the commander of the Army of the Moselle.",
"He was sent in November to invest in Luxembourg.",
"He died during the Siege of Luxembourg.",
"His name is listed under the Arc de Triomphe.",
"Moreaux was born at Rocroi on 14 March 1758 to parents.",
"He had four siblings, Pierre, Marie, Nicole and Marie Catharine.",
"Moreaux was sent to fight in the American Revolutionary War after a short stint in the Royal Marine.",
"He broke his leg during the British Capture of St. Lucia.",
"He returned to civilian life and took over the family business.",
"He married Marie Franoise Collardeau on February 11th, 1782.",
"A well-to-do family.",
"The couple had five children.",
"He was directing 30 workers after the business prospered.",
"Moreaux was elected commander of the National Guard during the French Revolution.",
"The National Guard was called out by the government.",
"Moreaux was made second-in-command of the 1st Battalion of the Ardennes Volunteers because of his organizational talents.",
"His brother-in-law took over the family business while his father-in-law took over the National Guard.",
"He was a lieutenant colonel in the defense of Thionville.",
"Between 3 and 5 September 1792, a garrison of 3,000 to 4,000 French soldiers successfully held Thionville against 20,000 Austrians and migrés.",
"The brigade of auxerrois is a French Royalist unit.",
"On May 15, 1793, Moreaux was promoted to general of brigade.",
"The campaign to capture the Fortress of Mainz ended in failure.",
"He was promoted to the rank of general of division.",
"He was appointed to lead the Corps of the Vosges.",
"Three battalions, six squadrons and 10 guns belonging to the Corps of the Vosges were defeated by a Coalition force numbering five battalions, six companies, 13 squadrons and 12 guns.",
"The French commander was killed.",
"Out of 3,000 soldiers, the French lost 103 men and five guns.",
"There were over 150 casualties of the Coalition.",
"On September 14, Moreaux was defeated by the army of Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbttel.",
"Moreau is the name of the French commander of the Corps of the Vosges.",
"Moreaux was often spelled \" Moreau\" and was confused with Jean Victor Marie Moreau.",
"Jean Victor Moreau was promoted to general of division on April 14, 1794.",
"Moreaux commanded 12,000 men to attack the camp.",
"The Prussians were prepared to defend themselves.",
"The representatives on mission demanded an assault after the French generals expressed doubt about continuing.",
"The French were repulsed by heavy flanking fire as they attacked along three valleys.",
"4,000 casualties and 22 guns were lost by the French.",
"The casualties were reported by the Prussians.",
"Moreaux refused the command of the Army of the Moselle.",
"Moreaux was in charge of a division in the Second Battle of Wissembourg.",
"His division included the 1st Battalions of the 30th, 44th and 81st Line Infantry, the 2nd Battalions of the 54th Line, 99th Line and Loiret, and the 4th and 6th Battalions.",
"Moreaux temporarily took command after Hoche became ill.",
"After Jean-Baptiste Jourdan succeeded Hoche in command, the army returned to a position between Thionville and Sarrebruck.",
"Claude Ignace Franois Michaud had been the commander of the Army of the Moselle.",
"His army captured Trier in July and Koblenz in October.",
"After a series of stunning victories, the army of Jean-Charles Pichegru conquered Flanders while Jourdan's Army of Sambre-et-Meuse advanced through Lige and Aachen to capture Bonn and Cologne.",
"Kaiserslautern and Worms were captured by the Army of the Rhine.",
"The west bank of the Rhine was conquered by the French.",
"The Rhine's west bank was left in the hands of Mainz and Luxembourg City after the capture of Rheinfels Castle by one of Moreaux's divisions.",
"Michaud's Army of the Rhine was told to lay siege to Mainz, while Moreaux was told to capture Luxembourg.",
"During their military operations against France, the Habsburg Austrians used the fortress as a major supply base.",
"Huge stocks of military supplies were expected to be created by Seizing Luxembourg.",
"There was little risk that the Allies would relieve the city since the nearest enemy army was far away.",
"Moreaux assembled 19,800 soldiers in the divisions of Jean- Jacques Ambert, Jean-Baptiste Debrun and Guillaume Péduchelle.",
"One of the columns was under Debrun which was on the Lige road.",
"Louis-Nicolas Davout, the future marshal of France, was involved in one of the battles between the French and Austrians.",
"Moreaux's force was renamed the Army before Luxembourg after a blockade was established.",
"Moreaux placed Taponier's division across the road from Trier to Dommeldange and its headquarters at Sandweiler.",
"The left side of the Lige road was covered by Debrun's division.",
"The headquarters of the division was located at Hesperange.",
"The army headquarters was located at Weiler-la-Tour.",
"Grigny was his chief of staff and Dieudel commanded the cannon.",
"The winter of 1794–95 was very cold.",
"It took several weeks before provision convoys began reaching the French camps because the roads were in poor condition.",
"There were plans to bake bread at Grevenmacher and deliver it to the siege lines.",
"The blockade was tightened after Moreaux requested reinforcements and before Luxembourg had 25,500 men.",
"The positions on the west bank of the Rhine were taken over by the Army of Sambre-et-Meuse.",
"The Luxembourg defenses pushed the French pickets.",
"The Luxembourg garrison was commanded by an old man.",
"The fortress commandant and brigade commanders were both men.",
"The garrison was made up of 10,095 infantry, 670 cavalry, 570 gunners, 88 sappers, 16 engineers and 415 volunteers.",
"There were nine Austrian infantry battalions, two battalions of Wrzburgers and four squadrons of Austrian cavalry.",
"On January 9, 1795, the garrison mounted a sortie to procure firewood from the surrounding villages.",
"There was a blow on the French lines.",
"After the Austrians drove back the besiegers, they were thrown back into Luxembourg by French reinforcements and a piece of military equipment.",
"The French suffered 11 killed and 25 wounded, while the Austrians lost 30 killed, a number of wounded and five cavalrymen taken prisoner.",
"Moreaux was ill at his headquarters at Weiler-la-Tour at the beginning of February.",
"He died in Thionville on the night of February 10, 1795.",
"One of the names under the Arc de Triomphe is Moreaux.",
"The commander of the Army before Luxembourg was appointed by a representative on mission tienne Neveu.",
"The siege with three new divisions from the Army of Sambre-et-Meuse was ordered by Jacques Maurice Hatry at the end of March.",
"The original three divisions were relieved after the exchange of troops.",
"The city was surrendered on June 7, 1795.",
"The names of military leaders of the French Revolutionary Wars are engraved under the Arc de Triomphe."
] | <mask> (14 March 1758 – 10 February 1795) commanded the French Army of the Moselle during the French Revolutionary Wars. He joined the French Royal Army in 1776 and was badly wounded in the American Revolutionary War two years later. After leaving military service, he married and took over the family business. At the time of the French Revolution he was elected second in command of a volunteer battalion. He was rapidly promoted, emerging as a general officer in May 1793. After another promotion, he led a corps at Pirmasens and a division at Wissembourg. He was appointed commander of the Army of the Moselle in June 1794.In November he was sent with three divisions to invest the fortress of Luxembourg. He caught a fever and died during the Siege of Luxembourg. His surname is one of the names inscribed under the Arc de Triomphe. Early career
<mask> was born at Rocroi on 14 March 1758 to parents Geoffroy <mask> (1709–1767) and Marie Mangin (1710–1786). He had four siblings, Pierre, Marie (1745–1791), Nicole and Marie Catharine. After a short stint in the Royal Marine, <mask> enlisted in the Auxerrois Grenadier Regiment in 1776 and was sent overseas to fight in the American Revolutionary War. During the British Capture of St. Lucia in December 1778, his leg was broken by a musket ball.Returning home to civilian life he took over the family business. On 11 February 1782 he married Marie Françoise Collardeau (b. 1760) of a well-to-do family. The couple had five children, Marie Thérèse, Charles François, Charles Florent, Pierre Victor <mask> and Armand. The business prospered and he was soon directing 30 workers. Revolution
At the outbreak of the French Revolution <mask> was elected commander of the Rocroi National Guard. With war threatening, the government called out the National Guard on 22 July 1791.Recognized for his organizational talents, <mask> was made second-in-command of the 1st Battalion of the Ardennes Volunteers. His father-in-law replaced him in command of the Rocroi National Guard while his brother-in-law took over the family business. He participated in the defense of Thionville with the rank of lieutenant colonel. Between 3 and 5 September 1792, a garrison of 3,000 to 4,000 French soldiers successfully held Thionville against 20,000 Austrians and Émigrés under Friedrich Wilhelm, Fürst zu Hohenlohe-Kirchberg. The attacking force included a French Royalist unit called the Brigade of Auxerrois. <mask> was promoted general of brigade on 15 May 1793, skipping over the rank of colonel. <mask> served in the campaign to capture the Fortress of Mainz which ended in failure at the Siege of Mainz.On 30 July 1793 he received promotion to the rank of general of division. He was appointed to command the Corps of the Vosges which occupied the Electorate of Trier. On 20 August, three battalions, six squadrons and 10 guns belonging to the Corps of the Vosges were defeated near the Lines of Weissenburg by a Coalition force numbering five battalions, six companies, 13 squadrons and 12 guns. The French commander Louis-Théobald Ihler was killed in the action. Out of 3,000 soldiers, the French lost 103 men and five guns captured plus an unknown number of killed and wounded. The Coalition sustained 147 casualties. In the Battle of Pirmasens on 14 September, <mask> was defeated by a Prussian army under Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel.The name of the French commander of the Corps of the Vosges is spelled "Moreau" in historian Digby Smith's account. Another authority, Ramsay Weston Phipps noted that <mask> was often spelled "Moreau" and confused with the more famous <mask> Marie Moreau. In fact, <mask> Moreau was not promoted to general of division until 14 April 1794. <mask> led 12,000 men to attack the Prussian camp at Pirmasens. The Prussians were on the alert and prepared to defend themselves in strong positions. The French generals expressed doubt about continuing, but the representatives on mission demanded an assault. Accordingly, the French attacked along three valleys and were repulsed by heavy flanking fire.The French lost 4,000 casualties and 22 guns. The Prussians reported only 167 casualties. On 30 September 1793 <mask> was offered command of the Army of the Moselle but refused. In the Second Battle of Wissembourg in December 1793, <mask> led a division in Lazare Hoche's Army of the Moselle. His division included the 1st Battalions of the 30th, 44th and 81st Line Infantry Demi Brigades and the Lot and Ardennes Volunteers, the 2nd Battalions of the 54th Line, 99th Line and Loiret, the 4th and 6th Battalions of the Haute-Saone, the 5th Battalion of the Orne, three squadrons of the 10th Cavalry and four squadrons of the 9th Chasseurs à Cheval Regiments. When Hoche became ill at the end of January 1794, <mask> temporarily took command. Two months later <mask>-Baptiste Jourdan succeeded Hoche in command and the army pulled back to a position between Thionville and Sarrebruck.Army command
On 25 June 1794, <mask> was named commander of the Army of the Moselle, taking over from Claude Ignace François Michaud. In July his army captured Trier and on 23 October it captured Koblenz. Meanwhile, after a series of stunning victories, the army of <mask> Pichegru conquered Flanders while Jourdan's Army of Sambre-et-Meuse advanced through Liège and Aachen to capture Bonn and Cologne. To the south, the Army of the Rhine captured Kaiserslautern and Worms. French armies stood victorious in the Netherlands and on the west bank of the Rhine. One of <mask>'s divisions led by Rémy Vincent captured Rheinfels Castle on 2 November leaving only Mainz and Luxembourg City in enemy hands on the Rhine's west bank. While Michaud's Army of the Rhine received instructions to lay siege to Mainz, <mask> was ordered to make preparations to capture Luxembourg.The fortress had served the Habsburg Austrians as a major supply base during their military operations against France. Seizing Luxembourg was expected to yield enormous stocks of accumulated military supplies. Since the nearest enemy army was far away on the opposite bank of the Rhine, there was little risk that the Allies might relieve the city. For this mission, <mask> assembled 19,800 soldiers in the divisions of <mask> Ambert, <mask> Debrun and Guillaume Péduchelle. These were formed into two columns, including one under Debrun which approached on the Liège road starting on 19 November 1794. Several clashes ensued between the advancing French and the withdrawing Austrians, one in which future marshal of France Louis-Nicolas Davout was involved. A blockade was established by 21 November and <mask>'s force was renamed the Army before Luxembourg.Moreaux placed Alexandre Camille Taponier's division across the road to Trier, with its right at Dommeldange and its headquarters at Sandweiler. Debrun's division covered the Arlon road with its right on the Longwy road and its left on the Liège road. Ambert's division was posted at Roeser covering the Thionville road with its headquarters at Hesperange. Moreaux located the army headquarters at Weiler-la-Tour. Achille Grigny was his chief of staff and <mask> Alexandre Dieudel commanded the artillery. The winter of 1794–1795 was bitterly cold, reaching at one point. Because the roads were in poor condition, it took several weeks before provision convoys began reaching the French camps with regularity.Arrangements were made to bake bread at Grevenmacher and convoy it to the siege lines. Moreaux requested reinforcements in order to tighten the blockade and by 15 December the Army before Luxembourg numbered 25,500 men. In addition, the Army of Sambre-et-Meuse took over positions on the west bank of the Rhine that were formerly the responsibility of the Army of the Moselle. French pickets were pushed to within of the Luxembourg defenses. The 12,000-man Luxembourg garrison was commanded by the octogenarian Feldmarschall Johann von Bender. The fortress commandant was Johann Wilhelm von Schröder and the brigade commanders were Karl Philipp Sebottendorf, Johann von Moitelle and Ernst Beust. The garrison consisted of 10,095 infantry, 670 cavalry, 570 gunners, 88 sappers, 16 engineers and 415 volunteers.Altogether, there were nine Austrian infantry battalions, two battalions of Würzburgers and four squadrons of Austrian cavalry. On 9 January 1795, the garrison mounted a sortie by 3,000 picked volunteers in order to procure firewood from the surrounding villages. The blow fell on the French lines between Merl and Fayencerie. At first the Austrians drove back the besiegers but they were thrown back into Luxembourg by French reinforcements and an artillery piece that Davout brought forward. In this skirmish, the French suffered 11 killed and 25 wounded while the Austrians lost 30 killed, a number of wounded and five cavalrymen taken prisoner. At the beginning of February, <mask> was stricken by a fever at his headquarters at Weiler-la-Tour. He was taken to Thionville where he died on the night of 9–10 February 1795.MOREAUX is one of the names inscribed under the Arc de Triomphe, on Column 13. On 2 February, representative on mission Étienne Neveu appointed Ambert commander of the Army before Luxembourg. At the end of March, Jacques Maurice Hatry was ordered to undertake the siege with three fresh divisions from the Army of Sambre-et-Meuse. In mid-April, the exchange of troops was carried out and the original three divisions were relieved. Bender surrendered the city on 7 June 1795. Notes
References
Source:
French soldiers
French generals
French military personnel of the French Revolutionary Wars
Military leaders of the French Revolutionary Wars
French Republican military leaders of the French Revolutionary Wars
People from Ardennes (department)
1755 births
1795 deaths
Names inscribed under the Arc de Triomphe | [
"Jean René Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"René",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Jean Victor",
"Jean Victor",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Jean",
"Moreaux",
"Jean Charles",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Jean Jacques",
"Jean Baptiste",
"Moreaux",
"Jean Pierre",
"Moreaux"
] | The French Army of the Moselle was commanded by <mask>. He was badly wounded in the American Revolutionary War after joining the French Royal Army. He took over the family business after leaving military service. He was second in command of a volunteer battalion at the time of the French Revolution. He became a general officer in May 1793. He led a division at Wissembourg after another promotion. He was the commander of the Army of the Moselle.He was sent in November to invest in Luxembourg. He died during the Siege of Luxembourg. His name is listed under the Arc de Triomphe. <mask> was born at Rocroi on 14 March 1758 to parents. He had four siblings, Pierre, Marie, Nicole and Marie Catharine. <mask> was sent to fight in the American Revolutionary War after a short stint in the Royal Marine. He broke his leg during the British Capture of St. Lucia.He returned to civilian life and took over the family business. He married Marie Franoise Collardeau on February 11th, 1782. A well-to-do family. The couple had five children. He was directing 30 workers after the business prospered. <mask> was elected commander of the National Guard during the French Revolution. The National Guard was called out by the government.<mask> was made second-in-command of the 1st Battalion of the Ardennes Volunteers because of his organizational talents. His brother-in-law took over the family business while his father-in-law took over the National Guard. He was a lieutenant colonel in the defense of Thionville. Between 3 and 5 September 1792, a garrison of 3,000 to 4,000 French soldiers successfully held Thionville against 20,000 Austrians and migrés. The brigade of auxerrois is a French Royalist unit. On May 15, 1793, <mask> was promoted to general of brigade. The campaign to capture the Fortress of Mainz ended in failure.He was promoted to the rank of general of division. He was appointed to lead the Corps of the Vosges. Three battalions, six squadrons and 10 guns belonging to the Corps of the Vosges were defeated by a Coalition force numbering five battalions, six companies, 13 squadrons and 12 guns. The French commander was killed. Out of 3,000 soldiers, the French lost 103 men and five guns. There were over 150 casualties of the Coalition. On September 14, <mask> was defeated by the army of Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbttel.Moreau is the name of the French commander of the Corps of the Vosges. <mask> was often spelled " Moreau" and was confused with <mask> Marie Moreau. <mask> Moreau was promoted to general of division on April 14, 1794. <mask> commanded 12,000 men to attack the camp. The Prussians were prepared to defend themselves. The representatives on mission demanded an assault after the French generals expressed doubt about continuing. The French were repulsed by heavy flanking fire as they attacked along three valleys.4,000 casualties and 22 guns were lost by the French. The casualties were reported by the Prussians. <mask> refused the command of the Army of the Moselle. <mask> was in charge of a division in the Second Battle of Wissembourg. His division included the 1st Battalions of the 30th, 44th and 81st Line Infantry, the 2nd Battalions of the 54th Line, 99th Line and Loiret, and the 4th and 6th Battalions. <mask> temporarily took command after Hoche became ill. After <mask>-Baptiste Jourdan succeeded Hoche in command, the army returned to a position between Thionville and Sarrebruck.Claude Ignace Franois Michaud had been the commander of the Army of the Moselle. His army captured Trier in July and Koblenz in October. After a series of stunning victories, the army of <mask> Pichegru conquered Flanders while Jourdan's Army of Sambre-et-Meuse advanced through Lige and Aachen to capture Bonn and Cologne. Kaiserslautern and Worms were captured by the Army of the Rhine. The west bank of the Rhine was conquered by the French. The Rhine's west bank was left in the hands of Mainz and Luxembourg City after the capture of Rheinfels Castle by one of <mask>'s divisions. Michaud's Army of the Rhine was told to lay siege to Mainz, while <mask> was told to capture Luxembourg.During their military operations against France, the Habsburg Austrians used the fortress as a major supply base. Huge stocks of military supplies were expected to be created by Seizing Luxembourg. There was little risk that the Allies would relieve the city since the nearest enemy army was far away. Moreaux assembled 19,800 soldiers in the divisions of <mask>- Jacques Ambert, <mask>-Baptiste Debrun and Guillaume Péduchelle. One of the columns was under Debrun which was on the Lige road. Louis-Nicolas Davout, the future marshal of France, was involved in one of the battles between the French and Austrians. <mask>'s force was renamed the Army before Luxembourg after a blockade was established.<mask> placed Taponier's division across the road from Trier to Dommeldange and its headquarters at Sandweiler. The left side of the Lige road was covered by Debrun's division. The headquarters of the division was located at Hesperange. The army headquarters was located at Weiler-la-Tour. Grigny was his chief of staff and Dieudel commanded the cannon. The winter of 1794–95 was very cold. It took several weeks before provision convoys began reaching the French camps because the roads were in poor condition.There were plans to bake bread at Grevenmacher and deliver it to the siege lines. The blockade was tightened after <mask> requested reinforcements and before Luxembourg had 25,500 men. The positions on the west bank of the Rhine were taken over by the Army of Sambre-et-Meuse. The Luxembourg defenses pushed the French pickets. The Luxembourg garrison was commanded by an old man. The fortress commandant and brigade commanders were both men. The garrison was made up of 10,095 infantry, 670 cavalry, 570 gunners, 88 sappers, 16 engineers and 415 volunteers.There were nine Austrian infantry battalions, two battalions of Wrzburgers and four squadrons of Austrian cavalry. On January 9, 1795, the garrison mounted a sortie to procure firewood from the surrounding villages. There was a blow on the French lines. After the Austrians drove back the besiegers, they were thrown back into Luxembourg by French reinforcements and a piece of military equipment. The French suffered 11 killed and 25 wounded, while the Austrians lost 30 killed, a number of wounded and five cavalrymen taken prisoner. <mask> was ill at his headquarters at Weiler-la-Tour at the beginning of February. He died in Thionville on the night of February 10, 1795.One of the names under the Arc de Triomphe is <mask>. The commander of the Army before Luxembourg was appointed by a representative on mission tienne Neveu. The siege with three new divisions from the Army of Sambre-et-Meuse was ordered by Jacques Maurice Hatry at the end of March. The original three divisions were relieved after the exchange of troops. The city was surrendered on June 7, 1795. The names of military leaders of the French Revolutionary Wars are engraved under the Arc de Triomphe. | [
"Jean René Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Jean Victor",
"Jean Victor",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Jean",
"Jean Charles",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Jean",
"Jean",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux",
"Moreaux"
] |
3651963 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daiane%20dos%20Santos | Daiane dos Santos | Daiane Garcia dos Santos (born February 10, 1983, in Porto Alegre) is a retired artistic gymnast. She is the 2003 world champion on the floor apparatus. On doing so, she became the first black gymnast to ever win an event at the World Championships as well as the first Brazilian and South American to win the competition. She represented Brazil at the 2004, 2008, and 2012 Summer Olympics. Widely regarded as the most powerful tumbler of her generation by critics and fellow competitors alike, the gymnast had two eponymous skills added on the FIG code of points after being the first woman to compete them at international championships. Dos Santos I, an F rated element, and Dos Santos II, an H rated element on the 2017–2020 COP.
Gymnastics career
Dos Santos began gymnastics when she was 12, later than most elite gymnasts, after a coach spotted her on a playground. She advanced quickly, becoming the South American champion within four years.
2003–04
Daiane's breakthrough came at the 2003 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Anaheim, California. There, she won the gold medal on floor exercise, defeating Romania's Cătălina Ponor, who would become the Olympic champion on the event the following year. She opened her routine with a piked double Arabian: a half twist into a double front flip in a piked position. Because she was the first to perform the skill in World Championships or Olympic competition, it was named after her in the Code of Points.
At the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Dos Santos qualified for the floor exercise event final and became the first female gymnast to perform a laid-out double Arabian. The skill, now known as the Dos Santos II, was the second to be named after her. However, in the final, she went out of bounds on a tumbling pass and placed fifth.
In December 2004, she became the World Cup floor champion, again beating Ponor.
2005–06
At the 2005 World Championships in Melbourne, Dos Santos tried to defend her floor title, but underrotated her first tumbling pass and fell, scoring an 8.837 and placing 7th.
In 2006, she debuted a new floor routine to the music "Isto aqui o que é?" by Ary Barroso. With this program, she won her first gold medal under the new Code of Points at the Moscow World Cup.
At the 2006 World Championships, she placed 4th in the floor final. She also qualified for the World Cup Final, where she defended her floor exercise title and placed 7th on uneven bars.
2007
Dos Santos's first competition of 2007 was the Ghent World Cup in May. She competed in the floor and uneven bars event finals, placing 8th on bars and winning the bronze on floor. In June, she won a gold medal on floor at a tri-meet competition in Natal, in which Brazil competed against Great Britain and Canada.
In July 2007, Dos Santos injured her ankle. She competed at the Pan American Games despite the injury, but performed poorly on floor exercise in the team finals and left the apparatus crying. She qualified for the floor event final, but chose not to compete in order to avoid a worse injury that could keep her out of the 2007 World Championships in Stuttgart.
At the World Championships, Dos Santos was still not fully recovered, but she helped the Brazilian team place fifth and qualify for the 2008 Olympics in Beijing.
2008
Dos Santos underwent six months of intensive treatment after the 2007 World Championship and returned to competition at the 2008 World Cups in Cottbus and Tianjin, placing 4th on floor at both. In preparation for the Olympics, she decided along with coach Oleg Ostapenko to bring back her 2004–05 floor music, the crowd-pleasing "Brasileirinho". In June, she competed with the Brazilian team at friendly meets in Europe, where she performed the Dos Santos II for the first time since the 2004 Olympics.
In August, Dos Santos competed at her second Olympic Games, this time sharing the spotlight with newcomer Jade Barbosa, an all-around bronze medalist at the 2007 World Championships. She helped Brazil reach its first-ever Olympic team final, and made the individual floor exercise final with a score of 15.275. Brazil finished 7th in the team final, and Dos Santos placed 6th on floor after going out of bounds twice.
2009–12
Dos Santos tested positive for the banned drug furosemide in July 2009 and received a five-month ban.
Her next major success was at the 2011 Ghent World Cup, where she won the bronze medal on floor. Shortly after that, she competed at the 2011 World Championships in Tokyo. The Brazilian team placed 14th, and Dos Santos finished 26th on floor with a score of 13.758. Some days later, she competed in the Pan American Games. She placed 5th with the Brazilian team, but did not make the floor final because she fell during qualifications.
In January 2012, Dos Santos helped Brazil place 4th at the Olympic Test Event in London and won the bronze medal in the floor final, with a score of 14.066. At the 2012 Olympics, she did not qualify for any finals.
Eponymous skills
Dos Santos has two eponymous skills listed in the Code of Points.
Personal life
Dos Santos lives in Curitiba, Brazil, where she studies physical education at Dom Bosco University.
Results
1998
Canberra Cup (Canberra) — 1st, floor exercise
1999
Pan American Games (Winnipeg) — 2nd, vault; 3rd, floor; 3rd, team
2001
Pan American Games (Cancún) — 1st, floor
World Cup (Ghent) — 5th, floor
2003
World Cup (Cottbus) — 3rd, floor; 5th, uneven bars
Pan American Games (Santo Domingo) — 3rd, team
World Cup (Paris) — 4th, floor
World Cup (Stuttgart) — 1st, floor; 5th, vault; 6th, uneven bars
World Artistic Gymnastics Championships (Anaheim) — 1st, floor
2004
World Cup (Rio de Janeiro) — 1st, floor; 4th, vault
World Cup (Birmingham) — 1st, floor
World Cup (Lyon) — 1st, floor; 2nd, vault
World Cup (Cottbus) — 1st, floor; 4th, vault
World Cup (Stuttgart) — 3rd, floor
2004 Summer Olympics (Athens) — 5th, floor
2005
World Cup (São Paulo) — 1st, floor
World Cup (Paris) — 1st, floor
World Artistic Gymnastics Championships (Melbourne) — 7th, floor
2006
World Artistic Gymnastics Championships (Aarhus) — 4th (tie), floor
World Cup Final (São Paulo) — 1st, floor; 7th, uneven bars
2007
World Cup (Ghent) — 3rd, floor; 8th, uneven bars
BRA–GBR–CAN tri-meet (Natal) — 1st, floor; 1st, team
Pan American Games (Rio de Janeiro) — 2nd, team
2008
World Cup (Cottbus) — 4th, floor
World Cup (Tianjin) — 4th, floor
2008 Olympic Games (Beijing) — 6th, floor; 7th, team
2011
World Cup (Ghent) — 3rd, floor
World Artistic Gymnastics Championships (Tokyo) — 14th, team
Pan American Games (Guadalajara) — 5th, team
2012
Olympic Test Event (London) — 3rd, floor; 4th, team
Floor routines
2003 World Championships
Music: "Rumba para los Rumberos"; Start Value: 10.0
Round-off + back handspring + piked double Arabian (Dos Santos I); round-off + back handspring + double layout; double turn; tour jeté 1/1; front pike + round-off + back handspring + tucked double Arabian; cat leap 2/1 + Popa 3/2; round-off + back handspring + double pike.
2004 Olympic Games
Music: "Brasileirinho"; S.V.: 10.00
Round-off + back handspring + laid-out double Arabian (Dos Santos II); round-off + back handspring + piked double Arabian (Dos Santos I); double turn; tour jeté 1/1; round-off + back handspring + double layout; cat leap 3/2 + cat leap 1/1; front pike + round-off + back handspring + double pike.
2006 World Cup Final
Music: "Isto aqui o que é?"; Difficulty: 6.4
Round-off + back handspring + full-twisting double layout; front pike + round-off + back handspring + piked double Arabian (Dos Santos I); double turn with leg at horizontal; jump 1/1 with leg at horizontal + tour jeté 1/1; switch leap + switch side leap + tour jeté; front pike + round-off + back handspring + double pike.
2008 Olympic Games
Music: "Brasileirinho"; Difficulty: 6.4
Round-off + back handspring + full-twisting double layout; round-off + back handspring + laid-out double Arabian (Dos Santos II); double turn; switch leap + tour jeté 1/2 + tour jeté 1/1; round-off, back handspring, double layout; double leap + leap jump; front pike + round-off + back handspring + double pike.
2011 World Championships
Music: "Mix of Latin Rhythms"; Difficulty: 5.9
Round-off + back handspring + full-twisting double layout; round-off + back handspring + piked double Arabian (Dos Santos I); full turn with leg at horizontal; tour jeté 1/2; front pike + round-off + back handspring + double pike; leap jump + tour jeté 1/1; switch leap; round-off + back handspring + double layout.
References
External links
Página Oficial
Photos at Gymbox.net
Dos Santos2(FloorExerciseSkill)
1983 births
Sportspeople from Porto Alegre
Living people
Brazilian female artistic gymnasts
Gymnasts at the 1999 Pan American Games
Gymnasts at the 2003 Pan American Games
Gymnasts at the 2004 Summer Olympics
Gymnasts at the 2007 Pan American Games
Gymnasts at the 2008 Summer Olympics
Gymnasts at the 2011 Pan American Games
Gymnasts at the 2012 Summer Olympics
Olympic gymnasts of Brazil
Medalists at the World Artistic Gymnastics Championships
World champion gymnasts
Pan American Games silver medalists for Brazil
Pan American Games bronze medalists for Brazil
Originators of elements in artistic gymnastics
Doping cases in gymnastics
Pan American Games medalists in gymnastics
Universiade medalists in gymnastics
South American Games gold medalists for Brazil
South American Games bronze medalists for Brazil
South American Games medalists in gymnastics
Competitors at the 1998 South American Games
Universiade gold medalists for Brazil
Universiade silver medalists for Brazil
Medalists at the 2005 Summer Universiade
Brazilian people of African descent
Medalists at the 1999 Pan American Games
Medalists at the 2003 Pan American Games
Medalists at the 2007 Pan American Games | [
"Daiane Garcia dos Santos (born February 10, 1983, in Porto Alegre) is a retired artistic gymnast.",
"She is the 2003 world champion on the floor apparatus.",
"On doing so, she became the first black gymnast to ever win an event at the World Championships as well as the first Brazilian and South American to win the competition.",
"She represented Brazil at the 2004, 2008, and 2012 Summer Olympics.",
"Widely regarded as the most powerful tumbler of her generation by critics and fellow competitors alike, the gymnast had two eponymous skills added on the FIG code of points after being the first woman to compete them at international championships.",
"Dos Santos I, an F rated element, and Dos Santos II, an H rated element on the 2017–2020 COP.",
"Gymnastics career\nDos Santos began gymnastics when she was 12, later than most elite gymnasts, after a coach spotted her on a playground.",
"She advanced quickly, becoming the South American champion within four years.",
"2003–04\nDaiane's breakthrough came at the 2003 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Anaheim, California.",
"There, she won the gold medal on floor exercise, defeating Romania's Cătălina Ponor, who would become the Olympic champion on the event the following year.",
"She opened her routine with a piked double Arabian: a half twist into a double front flip in a piked position.",
"Because she was the first to perform the skill in World Championships or Olympic competition, it was named after her in the Code of Points.",
"At the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Dos Santos qualified for the floor exercise event final and became the first female gymnast to perform a laid-out double Arabian.",
"The skill, now known as the Dos Santos II, was the second to be named after her.",
"However, in the final, she went out of bounds on a tumbling pass and placed fifth.",
"In December 2004, she became the World Cup floor champion, again beating Ponor.",
"2005–06\nAt the 2005 World Championships in Melbourne, Dos Santos tried to defend her floor title, but underrotated her first tumbling pass and fell, scoring an 8.837 and placing 7th.",
"In 2006, she debuted a new floor routine to the music \"Isto aqui o que é?\"",
"by Ary Barroso.",
"With this program, she won her first gold medal under the new Code of Points at the Moscow World Cup.",
"At the 2006 World Championships, she placed 4th in the floor final.",
"She also qualified for the World Cup Final, where she defended her floor exercise title and placed 7th on uneven bars.",
"2007\nDos Santos's first competition of 2007 was the Ghent World Cup in May.",
"She competed in the floor and uneven bars event finals, placing 8th on bars and winning the bronze on floor.",
"In June, she won a gold medal on floor at a tri-meet competition in Natal, in which Brazil competed against Great Britain and Canada.",
"In July 2007, Dos Santos injured her ankle.",
"She competed at the Pan American Games despite the injury, but performed poorly on floor exercise in the team finals and left the apparatus crying.",
"She qualified for the floor event final, but chose not to compete in order to avoid a worse injury that could keep her out of the 2007 World Championships in Stuttgart.",
"At the World Championships, Dos Santos was still not fully recovered, but she helped the Brazilian team place fifth and qualify for the 2008 Olympics in Beijing.",
"2008\nDos Santos underwent six months of intensive treatment after the 2007 World Championship and returned to competition at the 2008 World Cups in Cottbus and Tianjin, placing 4th on floor at both.",
"In preparation for the Olympics, she decided along with coach Oleg Ostapenko to bring back her 2004–05 floor music, the crowd-pleasing \"Brasileirinho\".",
"In June, she competed with the Brazilian team at friendly meets in Europe, where she performed the Dos Santos II for the first time since the 2004 Olympics.",
"In August, Dos Santos competed at her second Olympic Games, this time sharing the spotlight with newcomer Jade Barbosa, an all-around bronze medalist at the 2007 World Championships.",
"She helped Brazil reach its first-ever Olympic team final, and made the individual floor exercise final with a score of 15.275.",
"Brazil finished 7th in the team final, and Dos Santos placed 6th on floor after going out of bounds twice.",
"2009–12\nDos Santos tested positive for the banned drug furosemide in July 2009 and received a five-month ban.",
"Her next major success was at the 2011 Ghent World Cup, where she won the bronze medal on floor.",
"Shortly after that, she competed at the 2011 World Championships in Tokyo.",
"The Brazilian team placed 14th, and Dos Santos finished 26th on floor with a score of 13.758.",
"Some days later, she competed in the Pan American Games.",
"She placed 5th with the Brazilian team, but did not make the floor final because she fell during qualifications.",
"In January 2012, Dos Santos helped Brazil place 4th at the Olympic Test Event in London and won the bronze medal in the floor final, with a score of 14.066.",
"At the 2012 Olympics, she did not qualify for any finals.",
"Eponymous skills\nDos Santos has two eponymous skills listed in the Code of Points.",
"Personal life \nDos Santos lives in Curitiba, Brazil, where she studies physical education at Dom Bosco University.",
"2004 Olympic Games\n\nMusic: \"Brasileirinho\"; S.V.",
": 10.00\n\nRound-off + back handspring + laid-out double Arabian (Dos Santos II); round-off + back handspring + piked double Arabian (Dos Santos I); double turn; tour jeté 1/1; round-off + back handspring + double layout; cat leap 3/2 + cat leap 1/1; front pike + round-off + back handspring + double pike.",
"2006 World Cup Final\n\nMusic: \"Isto aqui o que é?",
"\"; Difficulty: 6.4\n\nRound-off + back handspring + full-twisting double layout; front pike + round-off + back handspring + piked double Arabian (Dos Santos I); double turn with leg at horizontal; jump 1/1 with leg at horizontal + tour jeté 1/1; switch leap + switch side leap + tour jeté; front pike + round-off + back handspring + double pike.",
"2008 Olympic Games\n\nMusic: \"Brasileirinho\"; Difficulty: 6.4\n\nRound-off + back handspring + full-twisting double layout; round-off + back handspring + laid-out double Arabian (Dos Santos II); double turn; switch leap + tour jeté 1/2 + tour jeté 1/1; round-off, back handspring, double layout; double leap + leap jump; front pike + round-off + back handspring + double pike.",
"2011 World Championships\n\nMusic: \"Mix of Latin Rhythms\"; Difficulty: 5.9\n\nRound-off + back handspring + full-twisting double layout; round-off + back handspring + piked double Arabian (Dos Santos I); full turn with leg at horizontal; tour jeté 1/2; front pike + round-off + back handspring + double pike; leap jump + tour jeté 1/1; switch leap; round-off + back handspring + double layout.",
"References\n\nExternal links\n\nPágina Oficial\n\nPhotos at Gymbox.net\nDos Santos2(FloorExerciseSkill)\n\n1983 births\nSportspeople from Porto Alegre\nLiving people\nBrazilian female artistic gymnasts\nGymnasts at the 1999 Pan American Games\nGymnasts at the 2003 Pan American Games\nGymnasts at the 2004 Summer Olympics\nGymnasts at the 2007 Pan American Games\nGymnasts at the 2008 Summer Olympics\nGymnasts at the 2011 Pan American Games\nGymnasts at the 2012 Summer Olympics\nOlympic gymnasts of Brazil\nMedalists at the World Artistic Gymnastics Championships\nWorld champion gymnasts\nPan American Games silver medalists for Brazil\nPan American Games bronze medalists for Brazil\nOriginators of elements in artistic gymnastics\nDoping cases in gymnastics\nPan American Games medalists in gymnastics\nUniversiade medalists in gymnastics\nSouth American Games gold medalists for Brazil\nSouth American Games bronze medalists for Brazil\nSouth American Games medalists in gymnastics\nCompetitors at the 1998 South American Games\nUniversiade gold medalists for Brazil\nUniversiade silver medalists for Brazil\nMedalists at the 2005 Summer Universiade\nBrazilian people of African descent\nMedalists at the 1999 Pan American Games\nMedalists at the 2003 Pan American Games\nMedalists at the 2007 Pan American Games"
] | [
"Daiane is a retired artistic gymnast.",
"She won the world title on the floor apparatus.",
"She became the first black gymnast to ever win an event at the World Championships as well as the first Brazilian and South American to win the competition.",
"She represented Brazil at three Summer Olympics.",
"The gymnast had two eponymous skills added to the code of points after being the first woman to compete them at international championships.",
"Dos Santos I is an F rated element and Dos Santos II is an H rated element.",
"DosSantos began gymnastics at the age of 12 after a coach spotted her on a playground.",
"She became the South American champion in four years.",
"Daiane's breakthrough came at the 2003 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships.",
"She won the gold medal on the floor exercise, defeating Ctlina Ponor, who would become the Olympic champion the following year.",
"She opened her routine with a piked double Arabian: a half twist into a double front flip.",
"The Code of Points named it after her because she was the first to perform the skill.",
"At the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, DosSantos became the first female gymnast to perform a laid-out double Arabian.",
"The second skill was named after her.",
"She placed fifth in the final after going out of bounds on a tumbling pass.",
"She became the World Cup floor champion again.",
"At the 2005 World Championships in Melbourne, DosSantos tried to defend her floor title, but underrotated her first tumbling pass and fell, scoring an 8.837 and placing 7th.",
"She performed a new floor routine to the music.",
"Ary Barroso is a writer.",
"She won her first gold medal under the new Code of Points at the Moscow World Cup.",
"She placed fourth in the floor final at the World Championships.",
"She qualified for the World Cup Final, where she placed 7th on the bars.",
"The first competition of the year was the World Cup in May.",
"She won the bronze on floor after placing 8th on bars in the event finals.",
"In June, she won a gold medal on floor at a tri-meet competition in Natal, in which Brazil competed against Great Britain and Canada.",
"DosSantos injured her ankle in July of 2007.",
"She competed at the Pan American Games despite the injury, but performed poorly on floor exercise in the team finals and left the apparatus crying.",
"She qualified for the floor event final, but chose not to compete in order to avoid a worse injury that could keep her out of the World Championships.",
"She helped the Brazilian team place fifth at the World Championships and qualify for the Olympics in Beijing, even though she was still not fully recovered.",
"After the World Championship in 2007, DosSantos underwent six months of intensive treatment and returned to competition at the 2008 World Cups in Cottbus and Tianjin, where he placed 4th on floor.",
"She and Ostapenko decided to bring back her 2004–05 floor music in preparation for the Olympics.",
"She performed the Dos Santos II for the first time since the 2004 Olympics in June, when she competed with the Brazilian team at friendly meets in Europe.",
"In August, Dos Santos competed at her second Olympic Games, this time sharing the spotlight with Jade Barbosa, an all-around bronze medal winner at the 2007 World Championships.",
"She made the individual floor exercise final with a score of 15.275 and helped Brazil reach its first-ever Olympic team final.",
"DosSantos placed 6th on floor after going out of bounds twice, as Brazil finished 7th in the team final.",
"In July of 2009, DosSantos tested positive for the drug and was banned for five months.",
"She won a bronze medal on the floor at the World Cup.",
"She competed at the World Championships in 2011.",
"The Brazilian team placed 14th and DosSantos finished 26th on the floor.",
"She competed in the Pan American Games a few days later.",
"She did not make the floor final because she fell during qualifications.",
"DosSantos helped Brazil place 4th at the Olympic Test Event in London and won the bronze medal in the floor final with a score of 14.066.",
"She didn't make the finals at the 2012 Olympics.",
"There are two eponymous skills listed in the Code of Points.",
"DosSantos lives in Curitiba, Brazil, where she studies physical education.",
"The music for the 2004 Olympic Games is \"Brasileirinho\" by S.V.",
"Round-off + back handspring + laid-out double Arabian (DosSantos II); round-off + back handspring + piked double Arabian (DosSantos I); double turn.",
"The 2006 World Cup Final Music is \"Isto aqui o",
"Difficulty: 6.4 Round-off + back handspring + full-twisting double layout; front pike + round-off + back handspring + piked double Arabian (Dos Santos I); double turn with leg at horizontal.",
"Difficulty: 6.4 round-off + back handspring + full-twisting double layout; round-off + back handspring + laid-out double Arabian; double turn.",
"The Difficulty: 5.9 Round-off + back handspring + full-twisting double layout; round-off + back handspring + piked double Arabian; full turn with leg horizontal.",
"The Pgina Oficial Photos are at Gymbox.net."
] | <mask> (born February 10, 1983, in Porto Alegre) is a retired artistic gymnast. She is the 2003 world champion on the floor apparatus. On doing so, she became the first black gymnast to ever win an event at the World Championships as well as the first Brazilian and South American to win the competition. She represented Brazil at the 2004, 2008, and 2012 Summer Olympics. Widely regarded as the most powerful tumbler of her generation by critics and fellow competitors alike, the gymnast had two eponymous skills added on the FIG code of points after being the first woman to compete them at international championships. Dos <mask> I, an F rated element, and Dos <mask> II, an H rated element on the 2017–2020 COP. Gymnastics career
<mask> began gymnastics when she was 12, later than most elite gymnasts, after a coach spotted her on a playground.She advanced quickly, becoming the South American champion within four years. 2003–04
<mask>'s breakthrough came at the 2003 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Anaheim, California. There, she won the gold medal on floor exercise, defeating Romania's Cătălina Ponor, who would become the Olympic champion on the event the following year. She opened her routine with a piked double Arabian: a half twist into a double front flip in a piked position. Because she was the first to perform the skill in World Championships or Olympic competition, it was named after her in the Code of Points. At the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Dos <mask> qualified for the floor exercise event final and became the first female gymnast to perform a laid-out double Arabian. The skill, now known as the Dos Santos II, was the second to be named after her.However, in the final, she went out of bounds on a tumbling pass and placed fifth. In December 2004, she became the World Cup floor champion, again beating Ponor. 2005–06
At the 2005 World Championships in Melbourne, Dos <mask> tried to defend her floor title, but underrotated her first tumbling pass and fell, scoring an 8.837 and placing 7th. In 2006, she debuted a new floor routine to the music "Isto aqui o que é?" by Ary Barroso. With this program, she won her first gold medal under the new Code of Points at the Moscow World Cup. At the 2006 World Championships, she placed 4th in the floor final.She also qualified for the World Cup Final, where she defended her floor exercise title and placed 7th on uneven bars. 2007
Dos <mask>'s first competition of 2007 was the Ghent World Cup in May. She competed in the floor and uneven bars event finals, placing 8th on bars and winning the bronze on floor. In June, she won a gold medal on floor at a tri-meet competition in Natal, in which Brazil competed against Great Britain and Canada. In July 2007, Dos <mask> injured her ankle. She competed at the Pan American Games despite the injury, but performed poorly on floor exercise in the team finals and left the apparatus crying. She qualified for the floor event final, but chose not to compete in order to avoid a worse injury that could keep her out of the 2007 World Championships in Stuttgart.At the World Championships, Dos <mask> was still not fully recovered, but she helped the Brazilian team place fifth and qualify for the 2008 Olympics in Beijing. 2008
Dos <mask> underwent six months of intensive treatment after the 2007 World Championship and returned to competition at the 2008 World Cups in Cottbus and Tianjin, placing 4th on floor at both. In preparation for the Olympics, she decided along with coach Oleg Ostapenko to bring back her 2004–05 floor music, the crowd-pleasing "Brasileirinho". In June, she competed with the Brazilian team at friendly meets in Europe, where she performed the Dos Santos II for the first time since the 2004 Olympics. In August, Dos <mask> competed at her second Olympic Games, this time sharing the spotlight with newcomer Jade Barbosa, an all-around bronze medalist at the 2007 World Championships. She helped Brazil reach its first-ever Olympic team final, and made the individual floor exercise final with a score of 15.275. Brazil finished 7th in the team final, and Dos <mask> placed 6th on floor after going out of bounds twice.2009–12
Dos <mask> tested positive for the banned drug furosemide in July 2009 and received a five-month ban. Her next major success was at the 2011 Ghent World Cup, where she won the bronze medal on floor. Shortly after that, she competed at the 2011 World Championships in Tokyo. The Brazilian team placed 14th, and Dos <mask> finished 26th on floor with a score of 13.758. Some days later, she competed in the Pan American Games. She placed 5th with the Brazilian team, but did not make the floor final because she fell during qualifications. In January 2012, Dos <mask> helped Brazil place 4th at the Olympic Test Event in London and won the bronze medal in the floor final, with a score of 14.066.At the 2012 Olympics, she did not qualify for any finals. Eponymous skills
Dos <mask> has two eponymous skills listed in the Code of Points. Personal life
Dos <mask> lives in Curitiba, Brazil, where she studies physical education at Dom Bosco University. 2004 Olympic Games
Music: "Brasileirinho"; S.V. : 10.00
Round-off + back handspring + laid-out double Arabian (Dos <mask> II); round-off + back handspring + piked double Arabian (Dos Santos I); double turn; tour jeté 1/1; round-off + back handspring + double layout; cat leap 3/2 + cat leap 1/1; front pike + round-off + back handspring + double pike. 2006 World Cup Final
Music: "Isto aqui o que é? "; Difficulty: 6.4
Round-off + back handspring + full-twisting double layout; front pike + round-off + back handspring + piked double Arabian (Dos Santos I); double turn with leg at horizontal; jump 1/1 with leg at horizontal + tour jeté 1/1; switch leap + switch side leap + tour jeté; front pike + round-off + back handspring + double pike.2008 Olympic Games
Music: "Brasileirinho"; Difficulty: 6.4
Round-off + back handspring + full-twisting double layout; round-off + back handspring + laid-out double Arabian (Dos Santos II); double turn; switch leap + tour jeté 1/2 + tour jeté 1/1; round-off, back handspring, double layout; double leap + leap jump; front pike + round-off + back handspring + double pike. 2011 World Championships
Music: "Mix of Latin Rhythms"; Difficulty: 5.9
Round-off + back handspring + full-twisting double layout; round-off + back handspring + piked double Arabian (Dos Santos I); full turn with leg at horizontal; tour jeté 1/2; front pike + round-off + back handspring + double pike; leap jump + tour jeté 1/1; switch leap; round-off + back handspring + double layout. References
External links
Página Oficial
Photos at Gymbox.net
Dos Santos2(FloorExerciseSkill)
1983 births
Sportspeople from Porto Alegre
Living people
Brazilian female artistic gymnasts
Gymnasts at the 1999 Pan American Games
Gymnasts at the 2003 Pan American Games
Gymnasts at the 2004 Summer Olympics
Gymnasts at the 2007 Pan American Games
Gymnasts at the 2008 Summer Olympics
Gymnasts at the 2011 Pan American Games
Gymnasts at the 2012 Summer Olympics
Olympic gymnasts of Brazil
Medalists at the World Artistic Gymnastics Championships
World champion gymnasts
Pan American Games silver medalists for Brazil
Pan American Games bronze medalists for Brazil
Originators of elements in artistic gymnastics
Doping cases in gymnastics
Pan American Games medalists in gymnastics
Universiade medalists in gymnastics
South American Games gold medalists for Brazil
South American Games bronze medalists for Brazil
South American Games medalists in gymnastics
Competitors at the 1998 South American Games
Universiade gold medalists for Brazil
Universiade silver medalists for Brazil
Medalists at the 2005 Summer Universiade
Brazilian people of African descent
Medalists at the 1999 Pan American Games
Medalists at the 2003 Pan American Games
Medalists at the 2007 Pan American Games | [
"Daiane Garcia dos Santos",
"Santos",
"Santos",
"Dos Santos",
"Daiane",
"Santos",
"Santos",
"Santos",
"Santos",
"Santos",
"Santos",
"Santos",
"Santos",
"Santos",
"Santos",
"Santos",
"Santos",
"Santos",
"Santos"
] | <mask> is a retired artistic gymnast. She won the world title on the floor apparatus. She became the first black gymnast to ever win an event at the World Championships as well as the first Brazilian and South American to win the competition. She represented Brazil at three Summer Olympics. The gymnast had two eponymous skills added to the code of points after being the first woman to compete them at international championships. Dos Santos I is an F rated element and Dos Santos II is an H rated element. <mask> began gymnastics at the age of 12 after a coach spotted her on a playground.She became the South American champion in four years. <mask>'s breakthrough came at the 2003 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships. She won the gold medal on the floor exercise, defeating Ctlina Ponor, who would become the Olympic champion the following year. She opened her routine with a piked double Arabian: a half twist into a double front flip. The Code of Points named it after her because she was the first to perform the skill. At the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, <mask> became the first female gymnast to perform a laid-out double Arabian. The second skill was named after her.She placed fifth in the final after going out of bounds on a tumbling pass. She became the World Cup floor champion again. At the 2005 World Championships in Melbourne, <mask> tried to defend her floor title, but underrotated her first tumbling pass and fell, scoring an 8.837 and placing 7th. She performed a new floor routine to the music. Ary Barroso is a writer. She won her first gold medal under the new Code of Points at the Moscow World Cup. She placed fourth in the floor final at the World Championships.She qualified for the World Cup Final, where she placed 7th on the bars. The first competition of the year was the World Cup in May. She won the bronze on floor after placing 8th on bars in the event finals. In June, she won a gold medal on floor at a tri-meet competition in Natal, in which Brazil competed against Great Britain and Canada. <mask> injured her ankle in July of 2007. She competed at the Pan American Games despite the injury, but performed poorly on floor exercise in the team finals and left the apparatus crying. She qualified for the floor event final, but chose not to compete in order to avoid a worse injury that could keep her out of the World Championships.She helped the Brazilian team place fifth at the World Championships and qualify for the Olympics in Beijing, even though she was still not fully recovered. After the World Championship in 2007, <mask> underwent six months of intensive treatment and returned to competition at the 2008 World Cups in Cottbus and Tianjin, where he placed 4th on floor. She and Ostapenko decided to bring back her 2004–05 floor music in preparation for the Olympics. She performed the Dos Santos II for the first time since the 2004 Olympics in June, when she competed with the Brazilian team at friendly meets in Europe. In August, Dos <mask> competed at her second Olympic Games, this time sharing the spotlight with Jade Barbosa, an all-around bronze medal winner at the 2007 World Championships. She made the individual floor exercise final with a score of 15.275 and helped Brazil reach its first-ever Olympic team final. <mask> placed 6th on floor after going out of bounds twice, as Brazil finished 7th in the team final.In July of 2009, <mask> tested positive for the drug and was banned for five months. She won a bronze medal on the floor at the World Cup. She competed at the World Championships in 2011. The Brazilian team placed 14th and <mask> finished 26th on the floor. She competed in the Pan American Games a few days later. She did not make the floor final because she fell during qualifications. <mask> helped Brazil place 4th at the Olympic Test Event in London and won the bronze medal in the floor final with a score of 14.066.She didn't make the finals at the 2012 Olympics. There are two eponymous skills listed in the Code of Points. <mask> lives in Curitiba, Brazil, where she studies physical education. The music for the 2004 Olympic Games is "Brasileirinho" by S.V. Round-off + back handspring + laid-out double Arabian (DosSantos II); round-off + back handspring + piked double Arabian (DosSantos I); double turn. The 2006 World Cup Final Music is "Isto aqui o Difficulty: 6.4 Round-off + back handspring + full-twisting double layout; front pike + round-off + back handspring + piked double Arabian (Dos Santos I); double turn with leg at horizontal.Difficulty: 6.4 round-off + back handspring + full-twisting double layout; round-off + back handspring + laid-out double Arabian; double turn. The Difficulty: 5.9 Round-off + back handspring + full-twisting double layout; round-off + back handspring + piked double Arabian; full turn with leg horizontal. The Pgina Oficial Photos are at Gymbox.net. | [
"Daiane",
"DoSantos",
"Daiane",
"DosSantos",
"DosSantos",
"DosSantos",
"DosSantos",
"Santos",
"DosSantos",
"DosSantos",
"DosSantos",
"DosSantos",
"DosSantos"
] |
46553572 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryan%20J.%20Bell | Ryan J. Bell | Ryan J. Bell (born September 26, 1971) is an American former Seventh-day Adventist pastor who became an atheist after spending a "year without God" as an experiment. He has publicly spoken about his experiences before, during, and after this year, and he wrote about it in his blog "Year Without God" (later hosted by Patheos). He is a regular contributor at The Huffington Post and in August 2015, launched a new blog and podcast "Life After God." He currently serves as the National Organizing Manager for the Secular Student Alliance and as the Humanist Chaplain at the University of Southern California.
Early life
Bell was born in Parma, Ohio, and spent his childhood in Loma Linda, a California suburb largely populated by Seventh-day Adventists. Growing up, Bell was strictly religious. He was baptized when he was nine years old and not long after that his parents got divorced and he moved with his mother to live in southern Oregon. Bell lived with his grandparents, who were very faithful, traditional Adventists, during his high school years. That had a great effect on Bell, who became very conservative in his faith. Because his grandparents were volunteers at Weimar Institute at the time, Bell decided to transfer there during his junior year. He later served at the Covelo Church in the Northern California Conference, where Doug Batchelor was a pastor, and he did some ministry alongside Batchelor. After finishing at Weimar, Bell went to work for the Pennsylvania Conference where he realized that "my harsh ideology was bumping up against real life. I realized that God is not as much about ideas as he is about people. I knew that if I didn't love people, then I couldn't do my ministry."
Career as a pastor
When Bell started his career as a pastor, he learned that his congregation did not follow the Adventist religious laws to the letter. They wore makeup and jewelry and some smoked, which all went against what Bell believed a true Adventist should be like. He realized "my ideology clashed with real people", and he decided not to exclude them. Bell became liberal in his views and opened his church to those who were not sure about organized religion. He became an advocate of social justice, speaking for gay rights and marriage equality.
In 2010, the Hollywood Adventist Church, where Bell was pastor at the time, won the "2010 Innovative Church of the Year" award. During his time as pastor, his church took part in many different social initiatives and charities, such as One Mile Mission, in which church members took responsibility for the well-being of every person within a one-mile radius; LA Voice, a faith-based organization which seeks to improve local communities through social change; and Imagine LA, which helps congregations mentor families coming out of homelessness. In March 2013, Bell was forced to resign from his position as a pastor, after he had argued in favor of ordination of women and the rights of homosexuals. According to Bell, the gap between him and his fellow clergymen had also widened due to his efforts for peace, justice, and interfaith dialogue, which were constantly met with resistance.
A Year Without God
After being a Seventh-day Adventist pastor for 19 years, Bell announced his 'A Year Without God' experiment on December 31, 2013, on his Huffington Post blog. The idea came from the question that Bell's friend once asked him: "What difference does God make?" He decided to find out by living the year without God. "For the next 12 months I will live as if there is no God. I will not pray, read the Bible for inspiration, refer to God as the cause of things or hope that God might intervene and change my own or someone else's circumstances." Right after stating his intention, Bell lost his position and income at two Christian universities, Azusa Pacific University and Fuller Theological Seminary. In response, an early critic of the experiment, "Friendly Atheist" blogger Hemant Mehta, started a fundraising campaign among atheists to support Bell. The effort garnered $17,000 in its first few days.
The campaign raised over $27,000 to help Bell to support his family during his unemployment.
The decision to live a year without God was met by criticism from faith-based communities. Christianity Today published an article, in which they criticized Bell's idea: "this notion that he can turn his faith off for one calendar year, then flip the switch back should he so desire strikes me as strange," wrote Laura Turner. In an interview on the CBC Radio Tapestry podcast, Bell responded to some of the criticism by saying that he understands the position of "you either believe in God or not", but he also believes that people should be able to try things out, go wherever your questions lead you, pursue your own truth. On this podcast Bell also talks about how his life was affected by his decision to live without God. He said that his "life hasn't changed that much", he is not praying or reading the Bible but other than that he was always "a feet on the ground" pastor.
In April 2014, Bell attended the American Atheists National Convention in Salt Lake City. When asked how his journey into atheism was faring, he stated, It is still very confusing. I do still think faith is very understandable. And I would be fine to return to it. But with another part of my mind, I'm constantly puncturing holes in it. There is also a cost-benefit analysis to it. Religion is beautiful, but it can also encourage violence, and taking away the rights of others. Especially the monotheistic religions; they claim the exclusive truth.
Life After God podcast
In August 2015, Bell launched the Life After God podcast, to discuss his and other people's apostasy, and how they live their lives now without religion. The podcast is part of the broader project Life After God, which serves to provide a "safe, hospitable space for people to explore their doubts, recalibrate their ‘moral compass’, and create new friendships."
References
External links
Year Without God – The Film
1971 births
Living people
People from Parma, Ohio
American atheists
American bloggers
American former Protestants
Former Seventh-day Adventists
People from Loma Linda, California | [
"Ryan J.",
"Bell (born September 26, 1971) is an American former Seventh-day Adventist pastor who became an atheist after spending a \"year without God\" as an experiment.",
"He has publicly spoken about his experiences before, during, and after this year, and he wrote about it in his blog \"Year Without God\" (later hosted by Patheos).",
"He is a regular contributor at The Huffington Post and in August 2015, launched a new blog and podcast \"Life After God.\"",
"He currently serves as the National Organizing Manager for the Secular Student Alliance and as the Humanist Chaplain at the University of Southern California.",
"Early life \n\nBell was born in Parma, Ohio, and spent his childhood in Loma Linda, a California suburb largely populated by Seventh-day Adventists.",
"Growing up, Bell was strictly religious.",
"He was baptized when he was nine years old and not long after that his parents got divorced and he moved with his mother to live in southern Oregon.",
"Bell lived with his grandparents, who were very faithful, traditional Adventists, during his high school years.",
"That had a great effect on Bell, who became very conservative in his faith.",
"Because his grandparents were volunteers at Weimar Institute at the time, Bell decided to transfer there during his junior year.",
"He later served at the Covelo Church in the Northern California Conference, where Doug Batchelor was a pastor, and he did some ministry alongside Batchelor.",
"After finishing at Weimar, Bell went to work for the Pennsylvania Conference where he realized that \"my harsh ideology was bumping up against real life.",
"I realized that God is not as much about ideas as he is about people.",
"I knew that if I didn't love people, then I couldn't do my ministry.\"",
"Career as a pastor \n\nWhen Bell started his career as a pastor, he learned that his congregation did not follow the Adventist religious laws to the letter.",
"They wore makeup and jewelry and some smoked, which all went against what Bell believed a true Adventist should be like.",
"He realized \"my ideology clashed with real people\", and he decided not to exclude them.",
"Bell became liberal in his views and opened his church to those who were not sure about organized religion.",
"He became an advocate of social justice, speaking for gay rights and marriage equality.",
"In 2010, the Hollywood Adventist Church, where Bell was pastor at the time, won the \"2010 Innovative Church of the Year\" award.",
"During his time as pastor, his church took part in many different social initiatives and charities, such as One Mile Mission, in which church members took responsibility for the well-being of every person within a one-mile radius; LA Voice, a faith-based organization which seeks to improve local communities through social change; and Imagine LA, which helps congregations mentor families coming out of homelessness.",
"In March 2013, Bell was forced to resign from his position as a pastor, after he had argued in favor of ordination of women and the rights of homosexuals.",
"According to Bell, the gap between him and his fellow clergymen had also widened due to his efforts for peace, justice, and interfaith dialogue, which were constantly met with resistance.",
"A Year Without God \n\nAfter being a Seventh-day Adventist pastor for 19 years, Bell announced his 'A Year Without God' experiment on December 31, 2013, on his Huffington Post blog.",
"The idea came from the question that Bell's friend once asked him: \"What difference does God make?\"",
"He decided to find out by living the year without God.",
"\"For the next 12 months I will live as if there is no God.",
"I will not pray, read the Bible for inspiration, refer to God as the cause of things or hope that God might intervene and change my own or someone else's circumstances.\"",
"Right after stating his intention, Bell lost his position and income at two Christian universities, Azusa Pacific University and Fuller Theological Seminary.",
"In response, an early critic of the experiment, \"Friendly Atheist\" blogger Hemant Mehta, started a fundraising campaign among atheists to support Bell.",
"The effort garnered $17,000 in its first few days.",
"The campaign raised over $27,000 to help Bell to support his family during his unemployment.",
"The decision to live a year without God was met by criticism from faith-based communities.",
"Christianity Today published an article, in which they criticized Bell's idea: \"this notion that he can turn his faith off for one calendar year, then flip the switch back should he so desire strikes me as strange,\" wrote Laura Turner.",
"In an interview on the CBC Radio Tapestry podcast, Bell responded to some of the criticism by saying that he understands the position of \"you either believe in God or not\", but he also believes that people should be able to try things out, go wherever your questions lead you, pursue your own truth.",
"On this podcast Bell also talks about how his life was affected by his decision to live without God.",
"He said that his \"life hasn't changed that much\", he is not praying or reading the Bible but other than that he was always \"a feet on the ground\" pastor.",
"In April 2014, Bell attended the American Atheists National Convention in Salt Lake City.",
"When asked how his journey into atheism was faring, he stated, It is still very confusing.",
"I do still think faith is very understandable.",
"And I would be fine to return to it.",
"But with another part of my mind, I'm constantly puncturing holes in it.",
"There is also a cost-benefit analysis to it.",
"Religion is beautiful, but it can also encourage violence, and taking away the rights of others.",
"Especially the monotheistic religions; they claim the exclusive truth.",
"Life After God podcast \n\nIn August 2015, Bell launched the Life After God podcast, to discuss his and other people's apostasy, and how they live their lives now without religion.",
"The podcast is part of the broader project Life After God, which serves to provide a \"safe, hospitable space for people to explore their doubts, recalibrate their ‘moral compass’, and create new friendships.\"",
"References\n\nExternal links \n\n \n Year Without God – The Film\n\n1971 births\nLiving people\nPeople from Parma, Ohio\nAmerican atheists\nAmerican bloggers\nAmerican former Protestants\nFormer Seventh-day Adventists\nPeople from Loma Linda, California"
] | [
"Ryan J.",
"Bell was a former Seventh-day Adventist pastor who became an unbeliever after spending a year without God.",
"He has spoken about his experiences before, during, and after this year, and he wrote about it in his \"Year Without God\" (hosted by Patheos).",
"He is a regular contributor at The Huffington Post.",
"He is the Humanist Chaplain at the University of Southern California and the National Organizing Manager for the Secular Student Alliance.",
"Bell was born in Parma, Ohio, and spent his formative years in the California suburb of Loma Linda.",
"Bell was religious as a child.",
"When he was nine years old, his parents got divorced and he moved with his mother to southern Oregon.",
"Bell lived with his grandparents during his high school years.",
"Bell became very conservative in his faith because of that.",
"Bell transferred to Weimar Institute during his junior year because his grandparents were volunteers there.",
"He was a pastor at the Covelo Church in the Northern California Conference with Doug Batchelor.",
"Bell realized that his harsh ideology was bumping up against real life when he went to work for the Pennsylvania Conference.",
"God is not as focused on ideas as he is on people.",
"I knew I couldn't do my ministry if I didn't love people.",
"When Bell started his career as a pastor, he found out that his congregation did not follow the religious laws of the Adventist church.",
"They smoked and wore makeup and jewelry that went against Bell's beliefs.",
"He decided not to exclude real people because his ideology clashed with them.",
"Bell opened his church to people who were not sure about organized religion.",
"He spoke for gay rights and marriage equality.",
"The \"2010 Innovative Church of the Year\" award was won by the Hollywood Adventist Church, where Bell was pastor at the time.",
"During his time as pastor, his church took part in many different social initiatives and charities, such as One Mile Mission, in which church members took responsibility for the well-being of every person within a one-mile radius; LA Voice, a faith-based organization which seeks to improve local",
"Bell was forced to resign from his position as a pastor after he argued in favor of ordination of women and the rights of homosexuals.",
"Bell said that the gap between him and his fellow clergymen had widened due to his efforts for peace, justice, and interfaith dialogue, which were always met with resistance.",
"Bell, a Seventh-day Adventist pastor for 19 years, announced his \"A Year Without God\" experiment on the Huffington Post.",
"Bell's friend once asked him \"What difference does God make?\"",
"He decided to live the year without God.",
"I will live as if there is no God for the next year.",
"I will not pray, read the Bible for inspiration, refer to God as the cause of things or hope that God might intervene and change my own or someone else's circumstances.",
"Bell lost his position and income at two Christian universities after he stated his intentions.",
"Hemant Mehta, an early critic of the experiment, started a campaign to raise money for Bell.",
"The effort made $17,000 in the first few days.",
"Bell's family will be helped by the $27,000 raised by the campaign.",
"The decision to live without God was criticized by faith-based communities.",
"\"This notion that he can turn his faith off for one calendar year, then flip the switch back should he so desire strikes me as strange,\" wrote Laura Turner in an article published by Christianity Today.",
"Bell responded to some of the criticism by saying that he understands the position of \"you either believe in God or not\", but he also believes that people should be able to try things out.",
"Bell talks about how his decision to live without God affected his life.",
"He said that his life hasn't changed much and that he was always a feet on the ground as a pastor.",
"Bell attended the American Atheists National Convention in Salt Lake City.",
"He stated when asked how his journey was faring that it was still very confusing.",
"I think faith is understandable.",
"I would be happy to come back to it.",
"I'mpuncturing holes in it with another part of my mind.",
"A cost-benefit analysis is also included.",
"Religion can encourage violence and take away the rights of others.",
"The exclusive truth is claimed by the monotheistic religions.",
"Bell launched the Life After God podcast to discuss his and other people's apostasy and how they live their lives without religion.",
"Life After God is a project that provides a safe, hospitable space for people to explore their doubts, recalibrate their moral compass, and create new friends.",
"Year Without God is a film about people from Parma, Ohio."
] | <mask><mask> (born September 26, 1971) is an American former Seventh-day Adventist pastor who became an atheist after spending a "year without God" as an experiment. He has publicly spoken about his experiences before, during, and after this year, and he wrote about it in his blog "Year Without God" (later hosted by Patheos). He is a regular contributor at The Huffington Post and in August 2015, launched a new blog and podcast "Life After God." He currently serves as the National Organizing Manager for the Secular Student Alliance and as the Humanist Chaplain at the University of Southern California. Early life
<mask> was born in Parma, Ohio, and spent his childhood in Loma Linda, a California suburb largely populated by Seventh-day Adventists. Growing up, <mask> was strictly religious.He was baptized when he was nine years old and not long after that his parents got divorced and he moved with his mother to live in southern Oregon. <mask> lived with his grandparents, who were very faithful, traditional Adventists, during his high school years. That had a great effect on <mask>, who became very conservative in his faith. Because his grandparents were volunteers at Weimar Institute at the time, <mask> decided to transfer there during his junior year. He later served at the Covelo Church in the Northern California Conference, where Doug Batchelor was a pastor, and he did some ministry alongside Batchelor. After finishing at Weimar, <mask> went to work for the Pennsylvania Conference where he realized that "my harsh ideology was bumping up against real life. I realized that God is not as much about ideas as he is about people.I knew that if I didn't love people, then I couldn't do my ministry." Career as a pastor
When <mask> started his career as a pastor, he learned that his congregation did not follow the Adventist religious laws to the letter. They wore makeup and jewelry and some smoked, which all went against what <mask> believed a true Adventist should be like. He realized "my ideology clashed with real people", and he decided not to exclude them. <mask> became liberal in his views and opened his church to those who were not sure about organized religion. He became an advocate of social justice, speaking for gay rights and marriage equality. In 2010, the Hollywood Adventist Church, where <mask> was pastor at the time, won the "2010 Innovative Church of the Year" award.During his time as pastor, his church took part in many different social initiatives and charities, such as One Mile Mission, in which church members took responsibility for the well-being of every person within a one-mile radius; LA Voice, a faith-based organization which seeks to improve local communities through social change; and Imagine LA, which helps congregations mentor families coming out of homelessness. In March 2013, <mask> was forced to resign from his position as a pastor, after he had argued in favor of ordination of women and the rights of homosexuals. According to <mask>, the gap between him and his fellow clergymen had also widened due to his efforts for peace, justice, and interfaith dialogue, which were constantly met with resistance. A Year Without God
After being a Seventh-day Adventist pastor for 19 years, <mask> announced his 'A Year Without God' experiment on December 31, 2013, on his Huffington Post blog. The idea came from the question that <mask>'s friend once asked him: "What difference does God make?" He decided to find out by living the year without God. "For the next 12 months I will live as if there is no God.I will not pray, read the Bible for inspiration, refer to God as the cause of things or hope that God might intervene and change my own or someone else's circumstances." Right after stating his intention, <mask> lost his position and income at two Christian universities, Azusa Pacific University and Fuller Theological Seminary. In response, an early critic of the experiment, "Friendly Atheist" blogger Hemant Mehta, started a fundraising campaign among atheists to support <mask>. The effort garnered $17,000 in its first few days. The campaign raised over $27,000 to help <mask> to support his family during his unemployment. The decision to live a year without God was met by criticism from faith-based communities. Christianity Today published an article, in which they criticized <mask>'s idea: "this notion that he can turn his faith off for one calendar year, then flip the switch back should he so desire strikes me as strange," wrote Laura Turner.In an interview on the CBC Radio Tapestry podcast, <mask> responded to some of the criticism by saying that he understands the position of "you either believe in God or not", but he also believes that people should be able to try things out, go wherever your questions lead you, pursue your own truth. On this podcast <mask> also talks about how his life was affected by his decision to live without God. He said that his "life hasn't changed that much", he is not praying or reading the Bible but other than that he was always "a feet on the ground" pastor. In April 2014, <mask> attended the American Atheists National Convention in Salt Lake City. When asked how his journey into atheism was faring, he stated, It is still very confusing. I do still think faith is very understandable. And I would be fine to return to it.But with another part of my mind, I'm constantly puncturing holes in it. There is also a cost-benefit analysis to it. Religion is beautiful, but it can also encourage violence, and taking away the rights of others. Especially the monotheistic religions; they claim the exclusive truth. Life After God podcast
In August 2015, <mask> launched the Life After God podcast, to discuss his and other people's apostasy, and how they live their lives now without religion. The podcast is part of the broader project Life After God, which serves to provide a "safe, hospitable space for people to explore their doubts, recalibrate their ‘moral compass’, and create new friendships." References
External links
Year Without God – The Film
1971 births
Living people
People from Parma, Ohio
American atheists
American bloggers
American former Protestants
Former Seventh-day Adventists
People from Loma Linda, California | [
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] | <mask><mask> was a former Seventh-day Adventist pastor who became an unbeliever after spending a year without God. He has spoken about his experiences before, during, and after this year, and he wrote about it in his "Year Without God" (hosted by Patheos). He is a regular contributor at The Huffington Post. He is the Humanist Chaplain at the University of Southern California and the National Organizing Manager for the Secular Student Alliance. <mask> was born in Parma, Ohio, and spent his formative years in the California suburb of Loma Linda. <mask> was religious as a child.When he was nine years old, his parents got divorced and he moved with his mother to southern Oregon. <mask> lived with his grandparents during his high school years. <mask> became very conservative in his faith because of that. <mask> transferred to Weimar Institute during his junior year because his grandparents were volunteers there. He was a pastor at the Covelo Church in the Northern California Conference with Doug Batchelor. <mask> realized that his harsh ideology was bumping up against real life when he went to work for the Pennsylvania Conference. God is not as focused on ideas as he is on people.I knew I couldn't do my ministry if I didn't love people. When <mask> started his career as a pastor, he found out that his congregation did not follow the religious laws of the Adventist church. They smoked and wore makeup and jewelry that went against <mask>'s beliefs. He decided not to exclude real people because his ideology clashed with them. <mask> opened his church to people who were not sure about organized religion. He spoke for gay rights and marriage equality. The "2010 Innovative Church of the Year" award was won by the Hollywood Adventist Church, where <mask> was pastor at the time.During his time as pastor, his church took part in many different social initiatives and charities, such as One Mile Mission, in which church members took responsibility for the well-being of every person within a one-mile radius; LA Voice, a faith-based organization which seeks to improve local <mask> was forced to resign from his position as a pastor after he argued in favor of ordination of women and the rights of homosexuals. <mask> said that the gap between him and his fellow clergymen had widened due to his efforts for peace, justice, and interfaith dialogue, which were always met with resistance. <mask>, a Seventh-day Adventist pastor for 19 years, announced his "A Year Without God" experiment on the Huffington Post. <mask>'s friend once asked him "What difference does God make?" He decided to live the year without God. I will live as if there is no God for the next year.I will not pray, read the Bible for inspiration, refer to God as the cause of things or hope that God might intervene and change my own or someone else's circumstances. <mask> lost his position and income at two Christian universities after he stated his intentions. Hemant Mehta, an early critic of the experiment, started a campaign to raise money for <mask>. The effort made $17,000 in the first few days. <mask>'s family will be helped by the $27,000 raised by the campaign. The decision to live without God was criticized by faith-based communities. "This notion that he can turn his faith off for one calendar year, then flip the switch back should he so desire strikes me as strange," wrote Laura Turner in an article published by Christianity Today.<mask> responded to some of the criticism by saying that he understands the position of "you either believe in God or not", but he also believes that people should be able to try things out. <mask> talks about how his decision to live without God affected his life. He said that his life hasn't changed much and that he was always a feet on the ground as a pastor. <mask> attended the American Atheists National Convention in Salt Lake City. He stated when asked how his journey was faring that it was still very confusing. I think faith is understandable. I would be happy to come back to it.I'mpuncturing holes in it with another part of my mind. A cost-benefit analysis is also included. Religion can encourage violence and take away the rights of others. The exclusive truth is claimed by the monotheistic religions. <mask> launched the Life After God podcast to discuss his and other people's apostasy and how they live their lives without religion. Life After God is a project that provides a safe, hospitable space for people to explore their doubts, recalibrate their moral compass, and create new friends. Year Without God is a film about people from Parma, Ohio. | [
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4660185 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul%20C | Paul C | Paul C. McKasty (September 20, 1964July 17, 1989), better known as Paul C, was an East Coast hip hop pioneer, producer, engineer, and mixer in the 1980s. Before his death on July 17, 1989, McKasty gained recognition for his work with notable artists such as Devo, Organized Konfusion, Kwamé, Queen Latifah, Biz Markie, Ultramagnetic MCs, Rahzel, and Eric B & Rakim. Complex called him "one of the most important figures in the development of sampling" and Questlove of the Roots called McKasty, "damn near the J Dilla of his day."
Work
Paul gave himself the middle name "Charles" after Ray Charles, which he shortened to the initial "C." He developed an interest in music from his older brother Michael, who was a guitarist, and Tim, who worked as a recording engineer at 1212 Studio in Queens. According to Paul's middle school friend TeQnotic, he was an already gifted artist and bass guitar player in junior high. McKasty began his musical career as a bassist of the pop rock band the Mandolindley Road Show. Band founder and lead singer Lindley Farley said, Paul was "a historian about pop music and soul music. And that's what informed everything he did." During the band's early years he studied his brother John's extensive record collection to learn about different genres.
One of the group's first shows was at the famed Max's Kansas City venue before it closed. Band member Lindley Farley credits Paul for being the group's best live performer during their early shows. The group later recorded a self-titled album at Hi-Five Studios in New York City, which they released in 1985 on Manna Records/Mando-Division Music. Paul co-wrote the song "I've Got A Hatchet" and his brother Tim played guitar on "First to Fight". Musician and producer Moogy Klingman, who was a founding member of Todd Rundgren’s Utopia, helped the group mix and master the album. Klingman acted as a mentor to McKasty and taught him a great deal about the post-production process.
After the group disbanded, Paul started making beats in a bedroom studio at his family's Rosedale, Queens house. During this time he did some mixing and mastering for the rap group the Clientele Brothers, which consisted of group members Will Seville and Eddie O'Jay. Paul eventually moved his production setup out to his garage and was later introduced to rapper Michael Deering, aka Mikey D, by Eddie and Will. Not longer after he joined Mikey D's group, Mikey D & The L.A. Posse. Mikey D described Paul as a musical prodigy and said, "He didn’t even really have to try that hard, it just came so naturally to him. Paul C. was a genius."
He also started working at 1212 Studio in Queens after dropping by the studio to purchase a keyboard voice synthesizer. During his visits he asked 1212 employee Mick Corey for a job. Corey described Paul as a somewhat inexperienced engineer who learned quickly. “Paul was green," he recalled. "I showed him a few things. He started doing sessions and generally took off from there.”
During his early days at 1212 Paul started sneaking Mikey D and DJ Johnny Quest in after hours to work on Mikey D & The Posse material after hours. It was during these sessions that Paul produced singles like "My Telephone" b/w "Bust A Rhyme Mike" and "I Get Rough" b/w "Go For It". On "Bust A Rhyme Mike", Paul showed an advanced understanding of the E-mu SP-12 sampler, as he recorded Mikey D making three different percussion sounds with his mouth and wove them together into a beat.
He also impressed Mikey D with his ability to take vocal sounds from beatboxer Rahzel, change their pitch, and turn them into a fluid bassline on "I Get Rough". “Rahzel didn’t know that his voice was going to become a bassline,” Mikey said. “It’s not like Paul told Rahzel to play ‘Brick House’. He caught something from what Rahzel did earlier like a bass and then he played it himself. It’s like he programmed him into the keys to become a key on a piano.”
He also worked as a producer and engineer for numerous other hip-hop acts. Paul C's best-known work is on Ultramagnetic MC's 1988 classic debut album Critical Beatdown and the non-album singles the group released between 1988 and 1989. He has only one credit as a producer on tCritical Beatdown for the track "Give the Drummer Some", but according to group members, Paul C was responsible for the overall sound of the album. DJ Moe Love said that Paul played a pivotal role in the song's creation, even coming up with the hook. Paul preferred to work without contracts, so he often did not receive credit for his production work.
Although his involvement with Kwamé is not as well known as some of his other collaborations, Paul engineered Kwamé's "The Rhythm" on Christmas Day of 1988. He also helped engineer additional songs for the Kwamé the Boy Genius: Featuring a New Beginning album, as Kwamé recorded six out of the eight songs from the album during the same session, which lasted from midnight until eight in the morning.
Paul also worked together with the Greek Psychedelic Folk/WorldBeat act Annabouboula, for which he did engineering and mixing in the late '80s in the 1212 Studio, Queens, mixing and editing a variety of tracks for Annabouboula which were released in Europe on Virgin and BMG and eventually in the U.S. on Shanachie. McKasty is credit with mixing their 1991 album Greek Fire, though it is unclear when he worked on this album with them as it was released after his death.
Paul C also worked for many other artists including Grandmaster Caz, Super Lover Cee and Casanova Rud, Stezo, and Rahzel. Paul's played an instrumental role in the making of Super Lover Cee and Casanova Rud's Girls I Got 'Em Locked album, which reached #77 on the billboard charts and sold 425,000 copies worldwide. The single "Do The James" has been heralded by several producers for its mixing of multiple James Brown records. Cut Chemist referred to it as "the blend of the century."
He overheard a recording session of a new local group named Simply Too Positive and offered to produce its entire demo. Simply Too Positive eventually became Organized Konfusion and its demo created a major buzz around the group. The group recorded a demo with Paul that caught the attention of several people in the industry, including Mr. Walt of The Beatminerz. In a testament to Paul C's mentoring of the group and his assistance in launching their careers, Organized Konfusion member Pharoahe Monch would later say, "No Paul C, No Organized, No Organized, No Pharoahe."
In 1989, Paul did some engineering work on Queen Latifah's All Hail The Queen album, including recording the vocals for Mark The 45 King on "A King and Queen Creation". He also recorded extensively with the Boston rap group The Almighty RSO the week before his murder. According to group member Twice Thou, then known as E-Devious, the group recorded close to a full album worth of material with Paul before his death.
Beside working with the cream of the crop in hip hop, Paul also did two remixes for the group Devo with the songs "Disco Dancer" and "Baby Doll".
Paul C's status began to grow and he was hired to work for higher-profile artists. He produced the tracks "Run For Cover" and "Untouchables" for Eric B. & Rakim's Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em. He was planning on producing more songs for the group and also for Queen Latifah, Biz Markie, and Large Professor's group Main Source.
Equipment
Paul was known for his innovative use of the E-mu SP-12 and E-mu SP-1200 samplers. The 1200 has a maxiumum sampling time of 10.07 seconds per beat, with producers often chopping the 10.07 second sample into smaller pieces to fit on each of the 1200s eight pads. Though many notable producers such as The Bomb Squad, Easy Mo Bee, Lord Finesse, Large Professor, Pete Rock, and Ski used the sampler, Paul is credited as one of the early innovators of chopping with it. Roots drummer Questlove described Paul as, "The engineer/producer/beatdigger who inspired your favorite producer's favorite producer. Like seriously--next to Marley Marl Paul was one of the first cats to...try ideas no one thought to ever do on such a limiting machine. Damn near the J Dilla of his day."
He also served as a mentor of Large Professor in the use of the SP-1200, lending Large Professor the machine for a two-week period. During that time Large Pro made 30 to 40 beats and learned how to use the machine on a more advanced level. Large Professor credited Paul C for helping him move from "pause-tape" production to making more elaborate compositions with the 1200, saying "He took me out of that tape deck era."
Large Professor described Paul as a "wizard" with the SP-1200 and recalled how he amazed people with his use of the machine. "To go in the studio, people would just go in with their jaws dropping, like 'Wow. This dude.' Because he was just so swift with it and knew what he wanted to do. And the beats would be so funky," he said.
Rapper Rakim still keeps an SP-1200 sampler in his house in memory of Paul. In the Pritt Kalsi documentary Memories of Paul C McKasty he said, “You can go to my house right now and there’s an SP-1200 in there ‘cause that’s what he taught me on. It’s like letting my man know I’m still focused.”
Engineer and producer Nick Hook obtained McKasty's SP-1200 from Merry Jane editor-in-chief and A & R/producer Noah Rubin. He uses the 1200 in some of his studio sessions with other artists and is currently experimenting with sampling from Spotify into the SP. Nick is currently using Paul's SP-1200 to archive old SP disks from The Bomb Squad and Public Enemy.
Record collection
Paul was known for his large collection full of hard to find records. He also had a reputation for taking meticulous care of his vinyl. Every record was placed in a plastic sleeve with a special paper and plastic inner sleeve to prevent dust buildup. According to Large Professor, Paul wore gloves while digging through records for samples, something he still does in his honor. “Paul took it to the next level. His records smelled good,” he said.
According to Large Professor, Paul preferred to sample original vinyl pressings and didn't like sampling reissues. He said, "He was big into originals, like, 'No, that’s a reprint man. You can’t...' It was almost like you couldn’t sample the reprint."
CJ Moore noted Paul's gift for sampling records that didn't contain obvious samples and his ability to understand how the music was played. "A lot of records we sampled aren’t jamming records," he said. "There were simple lines. But it was about how long you held the note, how you plucked it, how you approached it with velocity. Paul C understood how what we sampled was played."
Drum programming, sampling, and sound design
Complex credited Paul C for introducing chopping and panning samples to rap music production. Chopping involves breaking samples into smaller pieces and re-arranging them. Panning involves orienting a sample in the stereo-field, while hard panning is using only the left or right side of a stereo recording to isolate specific instruments in samples.
Several notable producers have also praised Paul C's advanced drum programming. Drummer, producer, and rapper J-Zone said “He was a damn genius. Him, Pete Rock, and Timberland all revolutionized drum programming.” Notable producer Pete Rock also praised his percussion work, calling his drums on Ultramagnetic MC's "Give The Drummer Some" “the illest drums I ever heard.” Rock was so impressed by Paul's work that he thought someone had given Paul the original recording of James Brown's "Give The Drummer Some" to use as a sample source.
Large Professor listed the sample on "Give The Drummer Some" as one of his favorites and had this to say about Paul's work on the song."This song is early sample innovation. Paul C was an extreme sound scientist, and this may be the most prime example of his futuristic approach. To take the James Brown “There Was a Time” off the Gettin’ Down To It album and pan (use only the left or right side of a stereo record) to get only the drums, was unheard of at that time. He not only heard that, but also heard the horn and guitar from the same record to create a real ill b-boy joint." Collaborator and friend CJ Moore explained his unique drum manipulation techniques that he used to engineer Stezo's Crazy Noize album in an interview. “Paul wound up putting the record together and the approach that he had was a little eclectic. He started with the snare, then the hi-hats and then put the kick drum in. Then went around and got the hi-hats and re-sampled them and did all kinds of little things to it.” According to Large Professor, Paul would also double time certain elements of his beat to make sure they were "tighter than average."
In addition to chopping, drum programming, and panning, Paul is also noted for bringing a sophisticated level of musicality to his production. As a former bass player, he could play live basslines for his beats and he tuned his samples so that they were in the right key. On several occasions Paul made entire songs out of vocal samples, including several early records for Mikey D & The LA Posse. "He was one of the first to put together a song that was all vocals," Rahzel said while describing Paul's early work. "The only person who came close to what Paul was doing was Bobby McFerrin. And this is ‘85."
Death
On Monday, July 17, 1989, Paul C was shot to death in Rosedale, Queens, at the age of 24. His murder was featured on America's Most Wanted, leading to the arrest of Derrick "Little Shine" Blair in Fayetteville, North Carolina. A witness who saw two men leave McKasty's house the night of the murder identified Blair in a lineup four months prior to his arrest on Tuesday, February 13, 1990. Blair was arrested along with his brother David Blair and David Currie of Fayetteville. The three men were arrested in the Sleepy Hollow Mobile Home Park, located at 1100 Sleepy Hollow Dr, at 10:30 pm. The arrest took place after someone saw a re-enactment of McKasty's murder, which appeared on WNYW-TV's New York's Most Wanted and the Crime Stoppers television show in Fayetteville, and contacted authorities to tell them Blair's whereabouts. The three men were arrested in a coordinated effort between the Fayetteville police, the Cumberland County sheriff's department, and the NYPD. Blair tried to fight his extradition from North Carolina to New York at the time of his arrest.
Blair was also wanted on a Texas warrant for narcotics charges at the time of his arrest. According to former Queens District Attorney Richard Piperno, a second suspect remained at large after authorities found Blair. The police were unable to determine a motive for McKasty's murder at the time of Blair's arrest and he faced a maximum jail sentence of 25 years to life. There is no public record of a second arrest ever happening and Blair was later released due to lack of evidence.
Several artists that Paul worked with, including Super Lover Cee and Casanova Rud, were questioned as suspects after Paul's murder. They were later cleared of any wrongdoing, but the implication that Super Lover Cee and Casanova Rud were involved with Paul's death was damaging to their career. "We were dropped from our label, our management gave up on us, people that were for us weren't anymore," Rud said. "To me, it felt like we were blacklisted."
Prince Po coincidentally stopped by Paul's house several hours after his murder. Despite no evidence linking him to the murder, he was taken to a police station and interrogated for six hours by police. He remembers the police being very aggressive, kicking his chair, and not letting him use the bathroom during questioning.
The Almighty RSO group gave Paul a ride home after their final session together the night of his murder. They were questioned the next day when they showed up to his house after he didn't come to his scheduled session. The police cleared them the same day after determining they had no involvement in his death.
Large Professor spoke about the difficult time after Paul's death where several collaborators and friends were suspects, saying "He got shot up and that’s all I knew. It was hard for me to understand. There were speculations about why he got shot. The people it might’ve been were actually sitting there at the funeral. It was confusing."
Unreleased work
Several artists have alluded to having unreleased music produced by Paul C, though most of it remains unavailable. Despite never meeting Paul, veteran engineer Anton Pukshansky believes he has some of his work because of his close relationship with many people from Paul's inner circle. He said, "I probably still have a couple of SP-1200 discs with his name on it. I don’t even know if those discs work."
CJ Moore indicated that he has discs of Paul's work but it was too difficult at the time of his passing to release any of the material officially, saying "It was hard, I didn’t want to touch anything that he touched. I still have discs that he had involvement. He had 20 or 30 of my discs – I didn’t want ‘em back.".
Super Lover Cee and Casanova Rud, who were working on a sophomore albums with Paul at the time of his murder, also recorded substantial material with him that was never released. Although there are disks of the records somewhere, they are not in the group's possession.
Legacy
Despite his short career, Paul C left a lasting legacy on hip-hop music. Many people believe he would have had a legendary career in music. Large Professor said that Paul would "be right up there with Rick Rubin" if he were still alive today. Spin magazine wrote in 2009 that if Paul lived he would have achieved a level of success similar to DJ Premier.
His protégé Large Professor took over production duties on much of the music Paul C was working on before his death. He went on to become a well-known producer and emcee. Large Pro's publishing company is named Paul Sea Productions in honor of his late mentor. "Sea' was also a way to say that, through me, my namesake Paul would keep going," he said.
Other hip hop producers such as Cut Chemist, Domingo, Madlib, Pete Rock, and DJ Shadow cite Paul C as an influence. Kool Keith, Pharoahe Monch, and Rahzel credit Paul C with helping them to grow as artists. Kool Keith credits Paul's honest criticism of his raps for making him pay more attention to his delivery and pronunciation.
A picture of Paul C appears in the liner notes of Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em and the album is dedicated to his memory (although his name is not listed in the production credits).The liner notes of Main Source's debut album Breaking Atoms includes the inscription Paul C Lives. On Organized Konfusion's debut single "Fudge Pudge," the duo gives a shout-out that says, "Paul C to the organisms!"
Critical Beatdown was re-released in 2004 with the non-album singles that Paul produced as bonus tracks. In 2006, an unreleased album by Mikey D & the L.A. Posse was released under the title Better Late Than Never: In Memory Of Paul C. In February and April 2008 DJ Kid Grebo released a two part Paul C mixtape hosted by Organized Konfusion member Prince Po.
In 2013, artist and record label owner Pritt Kalsi released the documentary film Memories of Paul C McKasty, a collection of interviews recorded between 2000 and April 2013. In a post describing the process of making the film, Kalsi stated "This is no way the definitive story or film. There is still a few key people missing. I hope that after watching this that they may want to contribute some footage that would make it the definitive film." Kalsi also states that there is videotape of Paul C making beats at his studio, but it is currently "amongst hundreds and hundreds of video tapes in a spot in NYC, to this day it’s not been found."
On July 17, 2016 DJ Toast of the Grown Man Rap Show released a two part DJ set featuring Paul C's work to commemorate the 27th anniversary of his passing. Part 1 featured phone call interviews with Paul C collaborators Kev-E-Kev & AK-B as well as M.C. Outloud of Blahzay Blahzay. Part 2 featured a phone call interview with Mikey D from Mikey D and the LA Posse.
A full-length feature film is in the making, about his life and music.
Tracks engineered, mixed and produced
Unknown date
Sport G & Mastermind Live [Single] Mixed by Harvey L. Frierson Jr. and Paul C
1985
Double Delight & DJ Slice Nice - Party Jump / Leave Me This Way [Single] Engineered & mixed by Paul C
1986
Mikey D & The LA Posse- I Get Rough / Go for It [Single] Produced & mixed by Paul C
Disco Twins & Starchild - Do That Right / There It Is! [Single] Mixed by CJ Moore & Paul C
1987
The Ultimate Choice - You Can't Front (We Will Rock You) [Single] Engineered & mixed by Paul McKasty
Mikey D & The LA Posse - My Telephone [Single] Produced by Paul McKasty
Grandmaster Caz - Casanova's Rap [Single] Produced & mixed by Cedric Miller and Paul McKastee
The Heartbeat Brothers - Can We Do This / Bring in the Bassline [Single] Produced by Paul C and Lord Kool Gee
The Heartbeat Brothers - Time to Get Paid [Single] Produced & mixed by Greg Whitley & Paul C
Marauder & the Fury - Get Loose Mother Goose / Terminator [Single] "Get Loose Mother Goose" produced by Paul C, mixed by Jazzy Jay "Terminator" produced and mixed by Paul C
The Rangers - I'm Hot / Jacks on Crack [Single] "Jacks on Crack" drums programming by Paul C
Super Lover Cee and Casanova Rud - Do the James [Single] Engineered and co-mixed by Paul C. McKasty
1988
Captain G. Whiz - It's Hyped / All the Way Live [Single] Engineered by Paul McKastee
Mikey D & The LA Posse - Out of Control / Comin' in the House [Single] Produced by Paul C
Super Lover Cee and Casanova Rud - I Gotta Good Thing (Remix) / Gets No Deeper (Remix) [Single] "I Gotta Good Thing" produced, programmed, arranged and mixed by Paul C. McKasty
Super Lover Cee and Casanova Rud- Super - Casanova [Single] Mixed and arranged by Paul C. McKasty
Super Lover Cee and Casanova Rud- Girls I Got 'Em Locked "I Gotta Good Thing" recorded and mixed by Paul C. McKasty for Paul C Productions
Ultramagnetic MCs Watch Me Now / Feelin' It [Single] "Watch Me Now" recorded & mixed by Paul C
Ultramagnetic MCs - Critical Beatdown (Album) Uncredited mixing and engineering by Paul C
Live N Effect Posse - I'm Getting Physical [EP] Arranged by Dr. Shock and Paul Cee
Kev-E-Kev & AK-B - Listen to the Man [Single] Engineered & co-mixed by Paul C. McKastey
Phase n' Rhythm - Hyperactive / Brainfood (1988) [Single] Produced by Paul C
Black by Demand- Can’t Get Enough / All Rappers Give Up (1988) [Single] "Can't Get Enough" mixed by Paul C
The Mic Profesah - Bust the Format / Cry Freedom [Single] Engineered by Paul McKasty
Spicey Ham - Sex, Sex & More Sex / You Never Heard of Me & I Never Heard of You [Single] Engineered & mixed by Paul C
M.C. Tatiana - Mission to Rock / Back Up Jack [Single] Engineered by Paul McKasty
360 Degrees - Years to Build / Pelon [Single] Recorded and mixed by Paul C.
CKO and Sta La Fro- Sweat My Moves/ Down on the Corner (Single) DNA International Records/ "Produced by Paul C"
1989
Too Poetic - Poetical Terror / God Made Me Funky [Single] Mixed by Paul C., Engineered by Paul C. and J. Tinsley
MC Outloud - Clean and Sober / I'll Put a Hurten [Single] Engineered by Paul C & CJ
Kev-E-Kev & AK-B - Keep On Doin' [Single] Co-produced, engineered & mixed by Paul C. McKasty
Freak L - Line for Line / When the Pen Hits the Paper (1989) [Single] Mixed by Vandy C. & Paul C.
Ultramagnetic MC's - Give the Drummer Some / Moe Luv's Theme [Single] Produced by Paul C
Ultramagnetic M.C.'s - Travelling at the Speed of Thought / A Chorus Line [Single] Co-produced and engineered by Paul C
Main Source - Think / Atom [Single] Mixed/Engineered by Paul McKasty
Black Rock & Ron - True Feelings [Single] Hip Hop Mix by Paul C
Black Rock & Ron - Stop the World Engineered & mixed by Paul C, Jazzy Jay & DJ Doc
Stezo - Crazy Noise Mixed and engineered by Paul C
The Diabolical Biz Markie - The Biz Never Sleeps (1989) uncredited: "Thing Named Kim" and "Just a Friend" co-mixed and engineered by Paul C.
Queen Latifah - All Hail the Queen (1989) "Ladies First" and "A King and Queen Creation" engineered & mixed by Paul C.
1990
Eric B. & Rakim - Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em uncredited: "The Ghetto" and "Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em" co-produced by Paul C, Rakim and Large Professor "Run for Cover" produced by Paul C
1991
Super Lover Cee and Casanova Rud - Romeo / Giggolo [Single] "Romeo" produced by Casanova Rud & Paul C, arranged by Paul C
See also
List of murdered hip hop musicians
List of unsolved murders
References
External links
Paul C. discography at rateyourmusic.com
1964 births
1989 deaths
1989 murders in the United States
20th-century American businesspeople
20th-century American guitarists
American bass guitarists
American hip hop record producers
American people of Polish descent
Record producers from New York (state)
Deaths by firearm in Queens, New York
Guitarists from New York City
American murder victims
People from Queens, New York
People murdered in New York City
Unsolved murders in the United States | [
"Paul C. McKasty (September 20, 1964July 17, 1989), better known as Paul C, was an East Coast hip hop pioneer, producer, engineer, and mixer in the 1980s.",
"Before his death on July 17, 1989, McKasty gained recognition for his work with notable artists such as Devo, Organized Konfusion, Kwamé, Queen Latifah, Biz Markie, Ultramagnetic MCs, Rahzel, and Eric B & Rakim.",
"Complex called him \"one of the most important figures in the development of sampling\" and Questlove of the Roots called McKasty, \"damn near the J Dilla of his day.\"",
"Work\nPaul gave himself the middle name \"Charles\" after Ray Charles, which he shortened to the initial \"C.\" He developed an interest in music from his older brother Michael, who was a guitarist, and Tim, who worked as a recording engineer at 1212 Studio in Queens.",
"According to Paul's middle school friend TeQnotic, he was an already gifted artist and bass guitar player in junior high.",
"McKasty began his musical career as a bassist of the pop rock band the Mandolindley Road Show.",
"Band founder and lead singer Lindley Farley said, Paul was \"a historian about pop music and soul music.",
"And that's what informed everything he did.\"",
"During the band's early years he studied his brother John's extensive record collection to learn about different genres.",
"One of the group's first shows was at the famed Max's Kansas City venue before it closed.",
"Band member Lindley Farley credits Paul for being the group's best live performer during their early shows.",
"The group later recorded a self-titled album at Hi-Five Studios in New York City, which they released in 1985 on Manna Records/Mando-Division Music.",
"Paul co-wrote the song \"I've Got A Hatchet\" and his brother Tim played guitar on \"First to Fight\".",
"Musician and producer Moogy Klingman, who was a founding member of Todd Rundgren’s Utopia, helped the group mix and master the album.",
"Klingman acted as a mentor to McKasty and taught him a great deal about the post-production process.",
"After the group disbanded, Paul started making beats in a bedroom studio at his family's Rosedale, Queens house.",
"During this time he did some mixing and mastering for the rap group the Clientele Brothers, which consisted of group members Will Seville and Eddie O'Jay.",
"Paul eventually moved his production setup out to his garage and was later introduced to rapper Michael Deering, aka Mikey D, by Eddie and Will.",
"Not longer after he joined Mikey D's group, Mikey D & The L.A. Posse.",
"Mikey D described Paul as a musical prodigy and said, \"He didn’t even really have to try that hard, it just came so naturally to him.",
"Paul C. was a genius.\"",
"He also started working at 1212 Studio in Queens after dropping by the studio to purchase a keyboard voice synthesizer.",
"During his visits he asked 1212 employee Mick Corey for a job.",
"Corey described Paul as a somewhat inexperienced engineer who learned quickly.",
"“Paul was green,\" he recalled.",
"\"I showed him a few things.",
"He started doing sessions and generally took off from there.”\n\nDuring his early days at 1212 Paul started sneaking Mikey D and DJ Johnny Quest in after hours to work on Mikey D & The Posse material after hours.",
"It was during these sessions that Paul produced singles like \"My Telephone\" b/w \"Bust A Rhyme Mike\" and \"I Get Rough\" b/w \"Go For It\".",
"On \"Bust A Rhyme Mike\", Paul showed an advanced understanding of the E-mu SP-12 sampler, as he recorded Mikey D making three different percussion sounds with his mouth and wove them together into a beat.",
"He also impressed Mikey D with his ability to take vocal sounds from beatboxer Rahzel, change their pitch, and turn them into a fluid bassline on \"I Get Rough\".",
"“Rahzel didn’t know that his voice was going to become a bassline,” Mikey said.",
"“It’s not like Paul told Rahzel to play ‘Brick House’.",
"He caught something from what Rahzel did earlier like a bass and then he played it himself.",
"It’s like he programmed him into the keys to become a key on a piano.”\n\nHe also worked as a producer and engineer for numerous other hip-hop acts.",
"Paul C's best-known work is on Ultramagnetic MC's 1988 classic debut album Critical Beatdown and the non-album singles the group released between 1988 and 1989.",
"He has only one credit as a producer on tCritical Beatdown for the track \"Give the Drummer Some\", but according to group members, Paul C was responsible for the overall sound of the album.",
"DJ Moe Love said that Paul played a pivotal role in the song's creation, even coming up with the hook.",
"Paul preferred to work without contracts, so he often did not receive credit for his production work.",
"Although his involvement with Kwamé is not as well known as some of his other collaborations, Paul engineered Kwamé's \"The Rhythm\" on Christmas Day of 1988.",
"He also helped engineer additional songs for the Kwamé the Boy Genius: Featuring a New Beginning album, as Kwamé recorded six out of the eight songs from the album during the same session, which lasted from midnight until eight in the morning.",
"Paul also worked together with the Greek Psychedelic Folk/WorldBeat act Annabouboula, for which he did engineering and mixing in the late '80s in the 1212 Studio, Queens, mixing and editing a variety of tracks for Annabouboula which were released in Europe on Virgin and BMG and eventually in the U.S. on Shanachie.",
"McKasty is credit with mixing their 1991 album Greek Fire, though it is unclear when he worked on this album with them as it was released after his death.",
"Paul C also worked for many other artists including Grandmaster Caz, Super Lover Cee and Casanova Rud, Stezo, and Rahzel.",
"Paul's played an instrumental role in the making of Super Lover Cee and Casanova Rud's Girls I Got 'Em Locked album, which reached #77 on the billboard charts and sold 425,000 copies worldwide.",
"The single \"Do The James\" has been heralded by several producers for its mixing of multiple James Brown records.",
"Cut Chemist referred to it as \"the blend of the century.\"",
"He overheard a recording session of a new local group named Simply Too Positive and offered to produce its entire demo.",
"Simply Too Positive eventually became Organized Konfusion and its demo created a major buzz around the group.",
"The group recorded a demo with Paul that caught the attention of several people in the industry, including Mr. Walt of The Beatminerz.",
"In a testament to Paul C's mentoring of the group and his assistance in launching their careers, Organized Konfusion member Pharoahe Monch would later say, \"No Paul C, No Organized, No Organized, No Pharoahe.\"",
"In 1989, Paul did some engineering work on Queen Latifah's All Hail The Queen album, including recording the vocals for Mark The 45 King on \"A King and Queen Creation\".",
"He also recorded extensively with the Boston rap group The Almighty RSO the week before his murder.",
"According to group member Twice Thou, then known as E-Devious, the group recorded close to a full album worth of material with Paul before his death.",
"Beside working with the cream of the crop in hip hop, Paul also did two remixes for the group Devo with the songs \"Disco Dancer\" and \"Baby Doll\".",
"Paul C's status began to grow and he was hired to work for higher-profile artists.",
"He produced the tracks \"Run For Cover\" and \"Untouchables\" for Eric B.",
"& Rakim's Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em.",
"He was planning on producing more songs for the group and also for Queen Latifah, Biz Markie, and Large Professor's group Main Source.",
"Equipment \nPaul was known for his innovative use of the E-mu SP-12 and E-mu SP-1200 samplers.",
"The 1200 has a maxiumum sampling time of 10.07 seconds per beat, with producers often chopping the 10.07 second sample into smaller pieces to fit on each of the 1200s eight pads.",
"Though many notable producers such as The Bomb Squad, Easy Mo Bee, Lord Finesse, Large Professor, Pete Rock, and Ski used the sampler, Paul is credited as one of the early innovators of chopping with it.",
"Roots drummer Questlove described Paul as, \"The engineer/producer/beatdigger who inspired your favorite producer's favorite producer.",
"Like seriously--next to Marley Marl Paul was one of the first cats to...try ideas no one thought to ever do on such a limiting machine.",
"Damn near the J Dilla of his day.\"",
"He also served as a mentor of Large Professor in the use of the SP-1200, lending Large Professor the machine for a two-week period.",
"During that time Large Pro made 30 to 40 beats and learned how to use the machine on a more advanced level.",
"Large Professor credited Paul C for helping him move from \"pause-tape\" production to making more elaborate compositions with the 1200, saying \"He took me out of that tape deck era.\"",
"Large Professor described Paul as a \"wizard\" with the SP-1200 and recalled how he amazed people with his use of the machine.",
"\"To go in the studio, people would just go in with their jaws dropping, like 'Wow.",
"This dude.'",
"Because he was just so swift with it and knew what he wanted to do.",
"And the beats would be so funky,\" he said.",
"Rapper Rakim still keeps an SP-1200 sampler in his house in memory of Paul.",
"In the Pritt Kalsi documentary Memories of Paul C McKasty he said, “You can go to my house right now and there’s an SP-1200 in there ‘cause that’s what he taught me on.",
"It’s like letting my man know I’m still focused.”\n\nEngineer and producer Nick Hook obtained McKasty's SP-1200 from Merry Jane editor-in-chief and A & R/producer Noah Rubin.",
"He uses the 1200 in some of his studio sessions with other artists and is currently experimenting with sampling from Spotify into the SP.",
"Nick is currently using Paul's SP-1200 to archive old SP disks from The Bomb Squad and Public Enemy.",
"Record collection \nPaul was known for his large collection full of hard to find records.",
"He also had a reputation for taking meticulous care of his vinyl.",
"Every record was placed in a plastic sleeve with a special paper and plastic inner sleeve to prevent dust buildup.",
"According to Large Professor, Paul wore gloves while digging through records for samples, something he still does in his honor.",
"“Paul took it to the next level.",
"His records smelled good,” he said.",
"According to Large Professor, Paul preferred to sample original vinyl pressings and didn't like sampling reissues.",
"He said, \"He was big into originals, like, 'No, that’s a reprint man.",
"You can’t...' It was almost like you couldn’t sample the reprint.\"",
"CJ Moore noted Paul's gift for sampling records that didn't contain obvious samples and his ability to understand how the music was played.",
"\"A lot of records we sampled aren’t jamming records,\" he said.",
"\"There were simple lines.",
"But it was about how long you held the note, how you plucked it, how you approached it with velocity.",
"Paul C understood how what we sampled was played.\"",
"Drum programming, sampling, and sound design \nComplex credited Paul C for introducing chopping and panning samples to rap music production.",
"Chopping involves breaking samples into smaller pieces and re-arranging them.",
"Panning involves orienting a sample in the stereo-field, while hard panning is using only the left or right side of a stereo recording to isolate specific instruments in samples.",
"Several notable producers have also praised Paul C's advanced drum programming.",
"Drummer, producer, and rapper J-Zone said “He was a damn genius.",
"Him, Pete Rock, and Timberland all revolutionized drum programming.” Notable producer Pete Rock also praised his percussion work, calling his drums on Ultramagnetic MC's \"Give The Drummer Some\" “the illest drums I ever heard.” Rock was so impressed by Paul's work that he thought someone had given Paul the original recording of James Brown's \"Give The Drummer Some\" to use as a sample source.",
"Large Professor listed the sample on \"Give The Drummer Some\" as one of his favorites and had this to say about Paul's work on the song.",
"\"This song is early sample innovation.",
"Paul C was an extreme sound scientist, and this may be the most prime example of his futuristic approach.",
"To take the James Brown “There Was a Time” off the Gettin’ Down To It album and pan (use only the left or right side of a stereo record) to get only the drums, was unheard of at that time.",
"He not only heard that, but also heard the horn and guitar from the same record to create a real ill b-boy joint.\"",
"Collaborator and friend CJ Moore explained his unique drum manipulation techniques that he used to engineer Stezo's Crazy Noize album in an interview.",
"“Paul wound up putting the record together and the approach that he had was a little eclectic.",
"He started with the snare, then the hi-hats and then put the kick drum in.",
"Then went around and got the hi-hats and re-sampled them and did all kinds of little things to it.” According to Large Professor, Paul would also double time certain elements of his beat to make sure they were \"tighter than average.\"",
"In addition to chopping, drum programming, and panning, Paul is also noted for bringing a sophisticated level of musicality to his production.",
"As a former bass player, he could play live basslines for his beats and he tuned his samples so that they were in the right key.",
"On several occasions Paul made entire songs out of vocal samples, including several early records for Mikey D & The LA Posse.",
"\"He was one of the first to put together a song that was all vocals,\" Rahzel said while describing Paul's early work.",
"\"The only person who came close to what Paul was doing was Bobby McFerrin.",
"And this is ‘85.\"",
"Death \nOn Monday, July 17, 1989, Paul C was shot to death in Rosedale, Queens, at the age of 24.",
"His murder was featured on America's Most Wanted, leading to the arrest of Derrick \"Little Shine\" Blair in Fayetteville, North Carolina.",
"A witness who saw two men leave McKasty's house the night of the murder identified Blair in a lineup four months prior to his arrest on Tuesday, February 13, 1990.",
"Blair was arrested along with his brother David Blair and David Currie of Fayetteville.",
"The three men were arrested in the Sleepy Hollow Mobile Home Park, located at 1100 Sleepy Hollow Dr, at 10:30 pm.",
"The arrest took place after someone saw a re-enactment of McKasty's murder, which appeared on WNYW-TV's New York's Most Wanted and the Crime Stoppers television show in Fayetteville, and contacted authorities to tell them Blair's whereabouts.",
"The three men were arrested in a coordinated effort between the Fayetteville police, the Cumberland County sheriff's department, and the NYPD.",
"Blair tried to fight his extradition from North Carolina to New York at the time of his arrest.",
"Blair was also wanted on a Texas warrant for narcotics charges at the time of his arrest.",
"According to former Queens District Attorney Richard Piperno, a second suspect remained at large after authorities found Blair.",
"The police were unable to determine a motive for McKasty's murder at the time of Blair's arrest and he faced a maximum jail sentence of 25 years to life.",
"There is no public record of a second arrest ever happening and Blair was later released due to lack of evidence.",
"Several artists that Paul worked with, including Super Lover Cee and Casanova Rud, were questioned as suspects after Paul's murder.",
"They were later cleared of any wrongdoing, but the implication that Super Lover Cee and Casanova Rud were involved with Paul's death was damaging to their career.",
"\"We were dropped from our label, our management gave up on us, people that were for us weren't anymore,\" Rud said.",
"\"To me, it felt like we were blacklisted.\"",
"Prince Po coincidentally stopped by Paul's house several hours after his murder.",
"Despite no evidence linking him to the murder, he was taken to a police station and interrogated for six hours by police.",
"He remembers the police being very aggressive, kicking his chair, and not letting him use the bathroom during questioning.",
"The Almighty RSO group gave Paul a ride home after their final session together the night of his murder.",
"They were questioned the next day when they showed up to his house after he didn't come to his scheduled session.",
"The police cleared them the same day after determining they had no involvement in his death.",
"Large Professor spoke about the difficult time after Paul's death where several collaborators and friends were suspects, saying \"He got shot up and that’s all I knew.",
"It was hard for me to understand.",
"There were speculations about why he got shot.",
"The people it might’ve been were actually sitting there at the funeral.",
"It was confusing.\"",
"Unreleased work \nSeveral artists have alluded to having unreleased music produced by Paul C, though most of it remains unavailable.",
"Despite never meeting Paul, veteran engineer Anton Pukshansky believes he has some of his work because of his close relationship with many people from Paul's inner circle.",
"He said, \"I probably still have a couple of SP-1200 discs with his name on it.",
"I don’t even know if those discs work.\"",
"CJ Moore indicated that he has discs of Paul's work but it was too difficult at the time of his passing to release any of the material officially, saying \"It was hard, I didn’t want to touch anything that he touched.",
"I still have discs that he had involvement.",
"He had 20 or 30 of my discs – I didn’t want ‘em back.\".",
"Super Lover Cee and Casanova Rud, who were working on a sophomore albums with Paul at the time of his murder, also recorded substantial material with him that was never released.",
"Although there are disks of the records somewhere, they are not in the group's possession.",
"Legacy \nDespite his short career, Paul C left a lasting legacy on hip-hop music.",
"Many people believe he would have had a legendary career in music.",
"Large Professor said that Paul would \"be right up there with Rick Rubin\" if he were still alive today.",
"Spin magazine wrote in 2009 that if Paul lived he would have achieved a level of success similar to DJ Premier.",
"His protégé Large Professor took over production duties on much of the music Paul C was working on before his death.",
"He went on to become a well-known producer and emcee.",
"Large Pro's publishing company is named Paul Sea Productions in honor of his late mentor.",
"\"Sea' was also a way to say that, through me, my namesake Paul would keep going,\" he said.",
"Other hip hop producers such as Cut Chemist, Domingo, Madlib, Pete Rock, and DJ Shadow cite Paul C as an influence.",
"Kool Keith, Pharoahe Monch, and Rahzel credit Paul C with helping them to grow as artists.",
"Kool Keith credits Paul's honest criticism of his raps for making him pay more attention to his delivery and pronunciation.",
"A picture of Paul C appears in the liner notes of Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em and the album is dedicated to his memory (although his name is not listed in the production credits).The liner notes of Main Source's debut album Breaking Atoms includes the inscription Paul C Lives.",
"On Organized Konfusion's debut single \"Fudge Pudge,\" the duo gives a shout-out that says, \"Paul C to the organisms!\"",
"Critical Beatdown was re-released in 2004 with the non-album singles that Paul produced as bonus tracks.",
"In 2006, an unreleased album by Mikey D & the L.A. Posse was released under the title Better Late Than Never: In Memory Of Paul C. In February and April 2008 DJ Kid Grebo released a two part Paul C mixtape hosted by Organized Konfusion member Prince Po.",
"In 2013, artist and record label owner Pritt Kalsi released the documentary film Memories of Paul C McKasty, a collection of interviews recorded between 2000 and April 2013.",
"In a post describing the process of making the film, Kalsi stated \"This is no way the definitive story or film.",
"There is still a few key people missing.",
"I hope that after watching this that they may want to contribute some footage that would make it the definitive film.\"",
"Kalsi also states that there is videotape of Paul C making beats at his studio, but it is currently \"amongst hundreds and hundreds of video tapes in a spot in NYC, to this day it’s not been found.\"",
"On July 17, 2016 DJ Toast of the Grown Man Rap Show released a two part DJ set featuring Paul C's work to commemorate the 27th anniversary of his passing.",
"Part 1 featured phone call interviews with Paul C collaborators Kev-E-Kev & AK-B as well as M.C.",
"Outloud of Blahzay Blahzay.",
"Part 2 featured a phone call interview with Mikey D from Mikey D and the LA Posse.",
"A full-length feature film is in the making, about his life and music.",
"Tracks engineered, mixed and produced\n\nUnknown date \nSport G & Mastermind Live [Single] Mixed by Harvey L. Frierson Jr. and Paul C\n\n1985 \nDouble Delight & DJ Slice Nice - Party Jump / Leave Me This Way [Single] Engineered & mixed by Paul C\n\n1986 \nMikey D & The LA Posse- I Get Rough / Go for It [Single] Produced & mixed by Paul C\n\nDisco Twins & Starchild - Do That Right / There It Is!",
"Shock and Paul Cee\n\nKev-E-Kev & AK-B - Listen to the Man [Single] Engineered & co-mixed by Paul C. McKastey\n\nPhase n' Rhythm - Hyperactive / Brainfood (1988) [Single] Produced by Paul C\n\nBlack by Demand- Can’t Get Enough / All Rappers Give Up (1988) [Single] \"Can't Get Enough\" mixed by Paul C\n\nThe Mic Profesah - Bust the Format / Cry Freedom [Single] Engineered by Paul McKasty\n\nSpicey Ham - Sex, Sex & More Sex / You Never Heard of Me & I Never Heard of You [Single] Engineered & mixed by Paul C\n\nM.C.",
"Tatiana - Mission to Rock / Back Up Jack [Single] Engineered by Paul McKasty\n\n360 Degrees - Years to Build / Pelon [Single] Recorded and mixed by Paul C.\n \nCKO and Sta La Fro- Sweat My Moves/ Down on the Corner (Single) DNA International Records/ \"Produced by Paul C\"\n\n1989 \nToo Poetic - Poetical Terror / God Made Me Funky [Single] Mixed by Paul C., Engineered by Paul C. and J. Tinsley\n\nMC Outloud - Clean and Sober / I'll Put a Hurten [Single] Engineered by Paul C & CJ\n\nKev-E-Kev & AK-B - Keep On Doin' [Single] Co-produced, engineered & mixed by Paul C. McKasty\n\nFreak L - Line for Line / When the Pen Hits the Paper (1989) [Single] Mixed by Vandy C. & Paul C.\n\nUltramagnetic MC's - Give the Drummer Some / Moe Luv's Theme [Single] Produced by Paul C\n\nUltramagnetic M.C.",
"'s - Travelling at the Speed of Thought / A Chorus Line [Single] Co-produced and engineered by Paul C\n\nMain Source - Think / Atom [Single] Mixed/Engineered by Paul McKasty\n\nBlack Rock & Ron - True Feelings [Single] Hip Hop Mix by Paul C\n\nBlack Rock & Ron - Stop the World Engineered & mixed by Paul C, Jazzy Jay & DJ Doc\n\nStezo - Crazy Noise Mixed and engineered by Paul C\n\nThe Diabolical Biz Markie - The Biz Never Sleeps (1989) uncredited: \"Thing Named Kim\" and \"Just a Friend\" co-mixed and engineered by Paul C.\n\nQueen Latifah - All Hail the Queen (1989) \"Ladies First\" and \"A King and Queen Creation\" engineered & mixed by Paul C.\n\n1990 \nEric B.",
"& Rakim - Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em uncredited: \"The Ghetto\" and \"Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em\" co-produced by Paul C, Rakim and Large Professor \"Run for Cover\" produced by Paul C\n\n1991 \nSuper Lover Cee and Casanova Rud - Romeo / Giggolo [Single] \"Romeo\" produced by Casanova Rud & Paul C, arranged by Paul C\n\nSee also\n List of murdered hip hop musicians\n List of unsolved murders\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links\n\nPaul C. discography at rateyourmusic.com\n\n1964 births\n1989 deaths\n1989 murders in the United States\n20th-century American businesspeople\n20th-century American guitarists\nAmerican bass guitarists\nAmerican hip hop record producers\nAmerican people of Polish descent\nRecord producers from New York (state)\nDeaths by firearm in Queens, New York\nGuitarists from New York City\nAmerican murder victims\nPeople from Queens, New York\nPeople murdered in New York City\nUnsolved murders in the United States"
] | [
"Paul C. was an East Coast hip hop pioneer, producer, engineer, and mixer in the 1980s.",
"His work with notable artists such as Queen Latifah, Biz Markie, and Eric B & Rakim earned him recognition before his death in 1989.",
"He was called \"one of the most important figures in the development of sampling\" by Complex and \"damn near the J Dilla of 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167",
"Work Paul gave himself the middle name \"Charles\" after Ray Charles, which he shortened to the initial \"C.\" He developed an interest in music from his older brother Michael, who was a guitarist, and Tim, who worked as a recording engineer.",
"Paul was a gifted musician in junior high, according to his friend TeQnotic.",
"He was a bassist in a pop rock band called the Mandolindley Road Show.",
"Lindley said that Paul was a historian about pop music and soul music.",
"Everything he did was informed by that.",
"He studied his brother's record collection to learn about different genres.",
"One of the group's first shows was at Max's Kansas City.",
"Lindley says that Paul was the group's best live performer.",
"In 1985 the group recorded a self-titled album at Hi-Five Studios in New York City.",
"The song \"I've Got a Hatchet\" was co-written by Paul and his brother Tim.",
"A founding member of Todd Rundgren's Utopia helped the group mix and master the album.",
"Klingman taught McKasty a lot about the post-production process.",
"Paul started making beats in his bedroom studio after the group broke up.",
"He did some mixing and mastering for the Clientele Brothers, a rap group consisting of Will Seville and Eddie O'Jay.",
"Eddie and Will introduced Paul to Michael Deering, also known as Mikey D, a rapper.",
"He joined the group, Mikey D & The L.A. Posse.",
"\"Paul came so naturally to him, he didn't even have to try that hard, it just came so naturally to him,\" said Mikey D.",
"Paul C. was a genius.",
"He started working at the studio after purchasing a keyboard voice synthesizer.",
"He asked Mick to work for him.",
"Paul was an inexperienced engineer who learned quickly.",
"He said that Paul was green.",
"I showed him a few things.",
"He started doing sessions and took off from there.",
"\"My Telephone\" b/w \"Bust A Rhyme Mike\" and \"I Get Rough\" were produced by Paul during these sessions.",
"On \"Bust A Rhyme Mike\", Paul showed an advanced understanding of the E-mu SP-12 sampler, as he recorded Mikey D making three different percussion sounds with his mouth and wove them together into a beat.",
"He was able to take vocal sounds from a beatboxer, change their pitch, and turn them into a fluid bass on his song \"I Get Rough\".",
"He didn't know that his voice was going to become a bassline.",
"It is not like Paul told him to play a song.",
"He played his own bass after catching something from what Rahzel did earlier.",
"He worked as a producer and engineer for numerous other hip-hop acts.",
"Ultramagnetic MC's 1988 classic debut album Critical Beatdown is one of Paul C's best-known works.",
"According to the group members, Paul C was responsible for the overall sound of the album, despite only having one credit as a producer.",
"DJ Love said that Paul came up with the hook for the song.",
"Paul didn't get credit for his production work because he preferred to work without contracts.",
"Paul engineered Kwamé's \"The Rhythm\" on Christmas Day of 1988.",
"He helped engineer additional songs for the Kwamé the Boy Genius: featuring a New Beginning album, as Kwamé recorded six out of the eight songs from the album during the same session, which lasted from midnight until eight in the morning.",
"In the late '80s, Paul did engineering and mixing in the 1212 studio in Queens for Annabouboula, which was released in Europe on Virgin and BMG.",
"It is not clear when he worked on the Greek Fire album, though it was released after his death.",
"Paul C worked for many other artists.",
"The Girls I Got 'Em Locked album sold 425,000 copies and reached the top of the billboard charts, thanks to the help of Paul's.",
"Several producers have praised the single \"Do The James\" for its mixing of multiple James Brown records.",
"Cut Chemist referred to it as the blend of the century.",
"He heard a recording session of Simply Too Positive and offered to make the entire demo.",
"The demo of Simply Too Positive created a buzz around the group.",
"The demo with Paul caught the attention of several people in the industry, including Mr. Walt of The Beatminerz.",
"Organized Konfusion member Pharoahe Monch said \"No Paul C, No Organized, No Pharoahe\" in honor of Paul C's mentoring of the group.",
"Paul recorded the vocals for Mark The 45 King on \"A King and Queen Creation\", which was on Queen Latifah's All Hail The Queen album.",
"He recorded with The Almighty RSO the week before his murder.",
"A full album of material with Paul was recorded by Twice Thou, then known as E-Devious.",
"Paul worked with the cream of the crop in hip hop and also did two remixes for the group Devo with the songs \"Disco Dancer\" and \"Baby Doll\".",
"Paul C was hired to work for higher-profile artists as his status grew.",
"\"Run For Cover\" and \"Untouchables\" were produced by him.",
"Rakim's Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em.",
"He was going to produce more songs for Queen Latifah, Biz Markie, and Large Professor's group Main Source.",
"Paul was known for his innovative use of equipment.",
"The 1200 has a maxiumum sampling time of 10.07 seconds per beat, with producers often chopping the 10.07 second sample into smaller pieces to fit on each of the 1200s eight pads.",
"The Bomb Squad, Easy Mo Bee, Lord Finesse, Large Professor, Pete Rock, and Ski used the sampler, but Paul is credited as one of the early pioneers of chopping with it.",
"Paul was described as the engineer/producer/beatdigger who inspired your favorite producer.",
"Next to Marley Marl Paul was one of the first cats to try out new ideas.",
"It's close to the J Dilla of his day.",
"He was a mentor to Large Professor and lent him the machine for two weeks.",
"Large Pro made 30 to 40 beats and learned how to use the machine on a more advanced level.",
"Large Professor credited Paul C for helping him move from \"pause-tape\" production to making more elaborate compositions with the 1200, saying \"He took me out of that tape deck era.\"",
"Large Professor recalled how Paul amazed people with his use of the machine and described him as a \"wizard\".",
"People would go into the studio with their jaws dropping.",
"This guy.",
"He knew what he wanted to do.",
"He said the beats would be funky.",
"Rakim has a sampler in his house that he keeps in memory of Paul.",
"In the Pritt Kalsi documentary, he said, \"You can go to my house right now and there's an SP- 1200 in there, that's what he taught me on.\"",
"It's like letting my man know that I'm still focused.",
"He uses the 1200 in some of his studio sessions with other artists and is experimenting with sampling from Spotify into the SP.",
"Paul's SP-1200 is being used by Nick to archive old disks from The Bomb Squad and Public Enemy.",
"Paul had a large collection of hard to find records.",
"He had a reputation for taking care of his vinyl.",
"Every record was put in a plastic sleeve with a special paper and plastic inner sleeve.",
"Paul wore gloves while digging through records for samples, something he still does in his honor, according to Large Professor.",
"It was taken to the next level by Paul.",
"He said his records smelled good.",
"Paul preferred to sample original vinyl pressings and didn't like sampling reissues according to Large Professor.",
"He said that he was a big fan of originals.",
"It was almost like you couldn't sample the reprint.",
"Paul's gift for sampling records was that they didn't contain obvious samples and he was able to understand how the music was played.",
"He said a lot of records are not jamming.",
"There were no complicated lines.",
"It was about how long you held the note, how you plucked it, and how you approached it.",
"Paul C was aware of how the sample was played.",
"Complex credited Paul C for introducing chopping and panning samples to rap music production.",
"Chopping involves breaking samples into smaller pieces.",
"Panning involves orienting a sample in the stereo-field, while hard pan is using only the left or right side of a recording to get specific instruments in samples.",
"Paul C's drum programming has been praised by several producers.",
"J-Zone said that he was a damn genius.",
"Pete Rock said his drums on Ultramagnetic MC's \"Give The Drummer Some\" were the worst drums he had ever heard.",
"The sample on \"Give The Drummer Some\" was listed by Large Professor as one of his favorites and he praised Paul's work on the song.",
"Early sample innovation is what this song is about.",
"This may be the most important example of Paul C's futuristic approach.",
"The James Brown song \"There Was a Time\" was removed from the Gettin' Down To It album and pan in order to get only the drums.",
"He heard the horn and guitar from the same record to create a real ill b-boy joint.",
"In an interview, Moore explained his unique drum manipulation techniques that he used to engineer the Crazy Noize album.",
"The approach that Paul had was a little eclectic.",
"He started with the snare, then the hi-hats and finally the kick drum.",
"According to Large Professor, Paul would double time certain elements of his beat to make sure they were \"tighter than average.\"",
"In addition to chopping, drum programming, and panning, Paul is also noted for bringing a sophisticated level of musicality to his production.",
"He was a former bass player who could play live basslines for his beats and tune his samples so that they were in the right key.",
"Several times, Paul made entire songs out of vocal samples, including early records for The LA Posse.",
"Paul was one of the first to put together a song that was all vocals.",
"Bobby McFerrin was the only one who came close to what Paul was doing.",
"This is 1985.",
"Paul C was shot to death in Queens at the age of 24.",
"His murder was featured on America's Most Wanted, leading to the arrest of Blair in North Carolina.",
"Blair was arrested on February 13, 1990 after a witness identified him in a lineup four months prior to the murder.",
"David Blair and David Currie were also arrested.",
"Three men were arrested in a mobile home park at 10:30 pm.",
"Blair was arrested after someone saw a re-enactment of McKasty's murder, which appeared on WNYW-TV's New York's Most Wanted, and contacted authorities to tell them where he was.",
"The three men were arrested in a coordinated effort.",
"Blair was arrested in New York after trying to fight his deportation from North Carolina.",
"Blair was wanted for narcotics charges in Texas at the time of his arrest.",
"The second suspect was still at large after Blair was found.",
"At the time of Blair's arrest, the police were unable to determine a motive for the murder and he faced a maximum jail sentence of 25 years to life.",
"Blair was released due to lack of evidence and there was no public record of a second arrest.",
"After Paul's murder, several artists that he worked with were questioned as suspects.",
"They were cleared of any wrongdoing, but their career was damaged by the implication that they were involved in Paul's death.",
"Rud said, \"We were dropped from our label, our management gave up on us, people that were for us weren't anymore.\"",
"It felt like we had been blacklisted.",
"After his murder, Prince Po stopped by Paul's house.",
"He was taken to a police station, where he was questioned for six hours.",
"He remembers the police kicking his chair and not letting him use the bathroom during questioning.",
"Paul was given a ride home by the Almighty RSO group.",
"They showed up to his house the next day and were questioned.",
"The police determined they had no involvement in his death.",
"\"He got shot up and that's all I knew,\" said Large Professor, who spoke about the difficult time after Paul's death.",
"It was hard for me to comprehend.",
"There were rumors about why he was shot.",
"The people were at the funeral.",
"It was confusing.",
"Most of the music produced by Paul C is not available.",
"Despite never meeting Paul, veteran engineer Anton Pukshansky believes he has some of his work because of his close relationship with many people from Paul's inner circle.",
"He said he had a few discs with his name on them.",
"I don't know if those discs work.",
"At the time of Paul's passing, it was difficult for him to release any of his work officially, as he didn't want to touch anything that he touched.",
"I have discs that he was involved in.",
"I didn't want my discs back, he had 20 or 30 of them.",
"At the time of Paul's murder, he was working on a sophomore album with Super Lover Cee and Casanova Rud, who recorded substantial material that was never released.",
"The group doesn't own the disks of the records.",
"Paul C left a legacy on hip-hop music.",
"He would have had a great career in music.",
"Large Professor said that if Paul were still alive, he would be right up there with Rick Rubin.",
"In 2009, Spin magazine wrote that if Paul lived, he would have achieved the same level of success as DJ premier.",
"Large Professor took over production duties on a lot of the music Paul C was working on.",
"He became a well-known producer and emcee.",
"Large Pro's company is named after his mentor.",
"He said that Sea was a way to say that Paul would keep going.",
"Cut Chemist, Domingo, Madlib, Pete Rock, and DJ Shadow all cite Paul C as an influence.",
"Paul C helped the artists grow as artists.",
"Paul's honest criticism of his raps made him pay more attention to his delivery and pronunciation.",
"There is a picture of Paul C in the liner notes of Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em and the album is dedicated to his memory.",
"On Organized Konfusion's debut single \"Fudge Pudge,\" the duo gives a shout-out that says \"Paul C to the organisms!\"",
"Critical Beatdown was re-released in 2004 with bonus tracks produced by Paul.",
"The album Better Late Than Never: In Memory of Paul C was released in 2006 by the L.A. Posse.",
"Pritt Kalsi, an artist and record label owner, released the documentary film Memories of Paul C McKasty, a collection of interviews recorded between 2000 and April 2013).",
"Kalsi stated in a post that this is not the definitive story or film.",
"Some people are still missing.",
"I hope that after watching this, they will want to make a definitive film.",
"Kalsi states that there is videotape of Paul C making beats at his studio, but it is currently among hundreds and hundreds of video tapes in a spot in NYC.",
"On July 17, 2016 DJ Toast of the Grown Man Rap Show released a two part DJ set featuring Paul C's work to commemorate the 27th anniversary of his passing.",
"Part 1 featured phone call interviews with Paul C.",
"Loud of Blahzay.",
"Part 2 featured a phone call interview with a member of the LA Posse.",
"A film about his life and music is being made.",
"Tracks were mixed and produced by Harvey L. Frierson Jr. and Paul C.",
"Phase n' Rhythm - Hyperactive / Brainfood was produced by Paul C Black.",
"The single was recorded and mixed by Paul C. CKO and Sta La Fro.",
"A Chorus Line is a song co-produced and engineered by Paul C Main Source.",
"\"The Ghetto\" and \"Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em\" were co-produced by Paul C, Rakim and Large Professor."
] | <mask>. McKasty (September 20, 1964July 17, 1989), better known as <mask>, was an East Coast hip hop pioneer, producer, engineer, and mixer in the 1980s. Before his death on July 17, 1989, McKasty gained recognition for his work with notable artists such as Devo, Organized Konfusion, Kwamé, Queen Latifah, Biz Markie, Ultramagnetic MCs, Rahzel, and Eric B & Rakim. Complex called him "one of the most important figures in the development of sampling" and Questlove of the Roots called McKasty, "damn near the J Dilla of his day." Work
<mask> gave himself the middle name "<mask>" after <mask>, which he shortened to the initial "<mask>." He developed an interest in music from his older brother Michael, who was a guitarist, and Tim, who worked as a recording engineer at 1212 Studio in Queens. According to <mask>'s middle school friend TeQnotic, he was an already gifted artist and bass guitar player in junior high. McKasty began his musical career as a bassist of the pop rock band the Mandolindley Road Show. Band founder and lead singer Lindley Farley said, <mask> was "a historian about pop music and soul music.And that's what informed everything he did." During the band's early years he studied his brother John's extensive record collection to learn about different genres. One of the group's first shows was at the famed Max's Kansas City venue before it closed. Band member Lindley Farley credits <mask> for being the group's best live performer during their early shows. The group later recorded a self-titled album at Hi-Five Studios in New York City, which they released in 1985 on Manna Records/Mando-Division Music. <mask> co-wrote the song "I've Got A Hatchet" and his brother Tim played guitar on "First to Fight". Musician and producer Moogy Klingman, who was a founding member of Todd Rundgren’s Utopia, helped the group mix and master the album.Klingman acted as a mentor to McKasty and taught him a great deal about the post-production process. After the group disbanded, <mask> started making beats in a bedroom studio at his family's Rosedale, Queens house. During this time he did some mixing and mastering for the rap group the Clientele Brothers, which consisted of group members Will Seville and Eddie O'Jay. <mask> eventually moved his production setup out to his garage and was later introduced to rapper Michael Deering, aka Mikey D, by Eddie and Will. Not longer after he joined Mikey D's group, Mikey D & The L.A. Posse. Mikey D described <mask> as a musical prodigy and said, "He didn’t even really have to try that hard, it just came so naturally to him. <mask>. was a genius."He also started working at 1212 Studio in Queens after dropping by the studio to purchase a keyboard voice synthesizer. During his visits he asked 1212 employee <mask> for a job. <mask> described <mask> as a somewhat inexperienced engineer who learned quickly. “<mask> was green," he recalled. "I showed him a few things. He started doing sessions and generally took off from there.”
During his early days at 1212 <mask> started sneaking Mikey D and DJ Johnny Quest in after hours to work on Mikey D & The Posse material after hours. It was during these sessions that <mask> produced singles like "My Telephone" b/w "Bust A Rhyme Mike" and "I Get Rough" b/w "Go For It".On "Bust A Rhyme Mike", <mask> showed an advanced understanding of the E-mu SP-12 sampler, as he recorded Mikey D making three different percussion sounds with his mouth and wove them together into a beat. He also impressed Mikey D with his ability to take vocal sounds from beatboxer Rahzel, change their pitch, and turn them into a fluid bassline on "I Get Rough". “Rahzel didn’t know that his voice was going to become a bassline,” Mikey said. “It’s not like <mask> told Rahzel to play ‘Brick House’. He caught something from what Rahzel did earlier like a bass and then he played it himself. It’s like he programmed him into the keys to become a key on a piano.”
He also worked as a producer and engineer for numerous other hip-hop acts. <mask>'s best-known work is on Ultramagnetic MC's 1988 classic debut album Critical Beatdown and the non-album singles the group released between 1988 and 1989.He has only one credit as a producer on tCritical Beatdown for the track "Give the Drummer Some", but according to group members, <mask> was responsible for the overall sound of the album. DJ Moe Love said that <mask> played a pivotal role in the song's creation, even coming up with the hook. <mask> preferred to work without contracts, so he often did not receive credit for his production work. Although his involvement with Kwamé is not as well known as some of his other collaborations, <mask> engineered Kwamé's "The Rhythm" on Christmas Day of 1988. He also helped engineer additional songs for the Kwamé the Boy Genius: Featuring a New Beginning album, as Kwamé recorded six out of the eight songs from the album during the same session, which lasted from midnight until eight in the morning. <mask> also worked together with the Greek Psychedelic Folk/WorldBeat act Annabouboula, for which he did engineering and mixing in the late '80s in the 1212 Studio, Queens, mixing and editing a variety of tracks for Annabouboula which were released in Europe on Virgin and BMG and eventually in the U.S. on Shanachie. McKasty is credit with mixing their 1991 album Greek Fire, though it is unclear when he worked on this album with them as it was released after his death.<mask> also worked for many other artists including Grandmaster <mask>, Super Lover <mask>e and Casanova Rud, Stezo, and Rahzel. <mask>'s played an instrumental role in the making of Super Lover <mask>e and Casanova Rud's Girls I Got 'Em Locked album, which reached #77 on the billboard charts and sold 425,000 copies worldwide. The single "Do The James" has been heralded by several producers for its mixing of multiple James Brown records. <mask> Chemist referred to it as "the blend of the century." He overheard a recording session of a new local group named Simply Too Positive and offered to produce its entire demo. Simply Too Positive eventually became Organized Konfusion and its demo created a major buzz around the group. The group recorded a demo with <mask> that caught the attention of several people in the industry, including Mr. Walt of The Beatminerz.In a testament to <mask>'s mentoring of the group and his assistance in launching their careers, Organized Konfusion member Pharoahe Monch would later say, "No <mask>, No Organized, No Organized, No Pharoahe." In 1989, <mask> did some engineering work on Queen Latifah's All Hail The Queen album, including recording the vocals for Mark The 45 King on "A King and Queen Creation". He also recorded extensively with the Boston rap group The Almighty RSO the week before his murder. According to group member Twice Thou, then known as E-Devious, the group recorded close to a full album worth of material with <mask> before his death. Beside working with the cream of the crop in hip hop, <mask> also did two remixes for the group Devo with the songs "Disco Dancer" and "Baby Doll". <mask>'s status began to grow and he was hired to work for higher-profile artists. He produced the tracks "Run For Cover" and "Untouchables" for Eric B.& Rakim's Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em. He was planning on producing more songs for the group and also for Queen Latifah, Biz Markie, and Large Professor's group Main Source. Equipment
<mask> was known for his innovative use of the E-mu SP-12 and E-mu SP-1200 samplers. The 1200 has a maxiumum sampling time of 10.07 seconds per beat, with producers often chopping the 10.07 second sample into smaller pieces to fit on each of the 1200s eight pads. Though many notable producers such as The Bomb Squad, Easy Mo Bee, Lord Finesse, Large Professor, Pete Rock, and Ski used the sampler, <mask> is credited as one of the early innovators of chopping with it. Roots drummer Questlove described <mask> as, "The engineer/producer/beatdigger who inspired your favorite producer's favorite producer. Like seriously--next to Marley Marl <mask> was one of the first cats to...try ideas no one thought to ever do on such a limiting machine.Damn near the J Dilla of his day." He also served as a mentor of Large Professor in the use of the SP-1200, lending Large Professor the machine for a two-week period. During that time Large Pro made 30 to 40 beats and learned how to use the machine on a more advanced level. Large Professor credited <mask> for helping him move from "pause-tape" production to making more elaborate compositions with the 1200, saying "He took me out of that tape deck era." Large Professor described <mask> as a "wizard" with the SP-1200 and recalled how he amazed people with his use of the machine. "To go in the studio, people would just go in with their jaws dropping, like 'Wow. This dude.'Because he was just so swift with it and knew what he wanted to do. And the beats would be so funky," he said. Rapper Rakim still keeps an SP-1200 sampler in his house in memory of <mask>. In the Pritt Kalsi documentary Memories of Paul C McKasty he said, “You can go to my house right now and there’s an SP-1200 in there ‘cause that’s what he taught me on. It’s like letting my man know I’m still focused.”
Engineer and producer Nick Hook obtained McKasty's SP-1200 from Merry Jane editor-in-chief and A & R/producer Noah Rubin. He uses the 1200 in some of his studio sessions with other artists and is currently experimenting with sampling from Spotify into the SP. Nick is currently using <mask>'s SP-1200 to archive old SP disks from The Bomb Squad and Public Enemy.Record collection
<mask> was known for his large collection full of hard to find records. He also had a reputation for taking meticulous care of his vinyl. Every record was placed in a plastic sleeve with a special paper and plastic inner sleeve to prevent dust buildup. According to Large Professor, <mask> wore gloves while digging through records for samples, something he still does in his honor. “<mask> took it to the next level. His records smelled good,” he said. According to Large Professor, <mask> preferred to sample original vinyl pressings and didn't like sampling reissues.He said, "He was big into originals, like, 'No, that’s a reprint man. You can’t...' It was almost like you couldn’t sample the reprint." <mask> Moore noted <mask>'s gift for sampling records that didn't contain obvious samples and his ability to understand how the music was played. "A lot of records we sampled aren’t jamming records," he said. "There were simple lines. But it was about how long you held the note, how you plucked it, how you approached it with velocity. <mask> understood how what we sampled was played."Drum programming, sampling, and sound design
Complex credited <mask> for introducing chopping and panning samples to rap music production. Chopping involves breaking samples into smaller pieces and re-arranging them. Panning involves orienting a sample in the stereo-field, while hard panning is using only the left or right side of a stereo recording to isolate specific instruments in samples. Several notable producers have also praised <mask>'s advanced drum programming. Drummer, producer, and rapper J-Zone said “He was a damn genius. Him, Pete Rock, and Timberland all revolutionized drum programming.” Notable producer Pete Rock also praised his percussion work, calling his drums on Ultramagnetic MC's "Give The Drummer Some" “the illest drums I ever heard.” Rock was so impressed by <mask>'s work that he thought someone had given <mask> the original recording of James Brown's "Give The Drummer Some" to use as a sample source. Large Professor listed the sample on "Give The Drummer Some" as one of his favorites and had this to say about <mask>'s work on the song."This song is early sample innovation. <mask> was an extreme sound scientist, and this may be the most prime example of his futuristic approach. To take the James Brown “There Was a Time” off the Gettin’ Down To It album and pan (use only the left or right side of a stereo record) to get only the drums, was unheard of at that time. He not only heard that, but also heard the horn and guitar from the same record to create a real ill b-boy joint." Collaborator and friend <mask> Moore explained his unique drum manipulation techniques that he used to engineer Stezo's Crazy Noize album in an interview. “<mask> wound up putting the record together and the approach that he had was a little eclectic. He started with the snare, then the hi-hats and then put the kick drum in.Then went around and got the hi-hats and re-sampled them and did all kinds of little things to it.” According to Large Professor, <mask> would also double time certain elements of his beat to make sure they were "tighter than average." In addition to chopping, drum programming, and panning, <mask> is also noted for bringing a sophisticated level of musicality to his production. As a former bass player, he could play live basslines for his beats and he tuned his samples so that they were in the right key. On several occasions <mask> made entire songs out of vocal samples, including several early records for Mikey D & The LA Posse. "He was one of the first to put together a song that was all vocals," Rahzel said while describing <mask>'s early work. "The only person who came close to what <mask> was doing was Bobby McFerrin. And this is ‘85."Death
On Monday, July 17, 1989, <mask> was shot to death in Rosedale, Queens, at the age of 24. His murder was featured on America's Most Wanted, leading to the arrest of Derrick "Little Shine" Blair in Fayetteville, North Carolina. A witness who saw two men leave McKasty's house the night of the murder identified Blair in a lineup four months prior to his arrest on Tuesday, February 13, 1990. Blair was arrested along with his brother David Blair and <mask> of Fayetteville. The three men were arrested in the Sleepy Hollow Mobile Home Park, located at 1100 Sleepy Hollow Dr, at 10:30 pm. The arrest took place after someone saw a re-enactment of McKasty's murder, which appeared on WNYW-TV's New York's Most Wanted and the Crime Stoppers television show in Fayetteville, and contacted authorities to tell them Blair's whereabouts. The three men were arrested in a coordinated effort between the Fayetteville police, the Cumberland County sheriff's department, and the NYPD.Blair tried to fight his extradition from North Carolina to New York at the time of his arrest. Blair was also wanted on a Texas warrant for narcotics charges at the time of his arrest. According to former Queens District Attorney Richard Piperno, a second suspect remained at large after authorities found Blair. The police were unable to determine a motive for McKasty's murder at the time of Blair's arrest and he faced a maximum jail sentence of 25 years to life. There is no public record of a second arrest ever happening and Blair was later released due to lack of evidence. Several artists that <mask> worked with, including Super Lover <mask> and <mask> Rud, were questioned as suspects after <mask>'s murder. They were later cleared of any wrongdoing, but the implication that Super Lover <mask> and <mask> Rud were involved with <mask>'s death was damaging to their career."We were dropped from our label, our management gave up on us, people that were for us weren't anymore," Rud said. "To me, it felt like we were blacklisted." Prince Po coincidentally stopped by <mask>'s house several hours after his murder. Despite no evidence linking him to the murder, he was taken to a police station and interrogated for six hours by police. He remembers the police being very aggressive, kicking his chair, and not letting him use the bathroom during questioning. The Almighty RSO group gave <mask> a ride home after their final session together the night of his murder. They were questioned the next day when they showed up to his house after he didn't come to his scheduled session.The police cleared them the same day after determining they had no involvement in his death. Large Professor spoke about the difficult time after <mask>'s death where several collaborators and friends were suspects, saying "He got shot up and that’s all I knew. It was hard for me to understand. There were speculations about why he got shot. The people it might’ve been were actually sitting there at the funeral. It was confusing." Unreleased work
Several artists have alluded to having unreleased music produced by <mask>, though most of it remains unavailable.Despite never meeting <mask>, veteran engineer Anton Pukshansky believes he has some of his work because of his close relationship with many people from <mask>'s inner circle. He said, "I probably still have a couple of SP-1200 discs with his name on it. I don’t even know if those discs work." <mask> Moore indicated that he has discs of <mask>'s work but it was too difficult at the time of his passing to release any of the material officially, saying "It was hard, I didn’t want to touch anything that he touched. I still have discs that he had involvement. He had 20 or 30 of my discs – I didn’t want ‘em back.". Super Lover <mask> and <mask>nova Rud, who were working on a sophomore albums with <mask> at the time of his murder, also recorded substantial material with him that was never released.Although there are disks of the records somewhere, they are not in the group's possession. Legacy
Despite his short career, <mask> left a lasting legacy on hip-hop music. Many people believe he would have had a legendary career in music. Large Professor said that <mask> would "be right up there with Rick Rubin" if he were still alive today. Spin magazine wrote in 2009 that if <mask> lived he would have achieved a level of success similar to DJ Premier. His protégé Large Professor took over production duties on much of the music <mask> was working on before his death. He went on to become a well-known producer and emcee.Large Pro's publishing company is named Paul Sea Productions in honor of his late mentor. "Sea' was also a way to say that, through me, my namesake <mask> would keep going," he said. Other hip hop producers such as Cut Chemist, Domingo, Madlib, Pete Rock, and DJ Shadow cite <mask> as an influence. Kool Keith, Pharoahe Monch, and Rahzel credit <mask> with helping them to grow as artists. Kool Keith credits <mask>'s honest criticism of his raps for making him pay more attention to his delivery and pronunciation. A picture of <mask> appears in the liner notes of Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em and the album is dedicated to his memory (although his name is not listed in the production credits).The liner notes of Main Source's debut album Breaking Atoms includes the inscription <mask> Lives. On Organized Konfusion's debut single "Fudge Pudge," the duo gives a shout-out that says, "<mask> to the organisms!"Critical Beatdown was re-released in 2004 with the non-album singles that <mask> produced as bonus tracks. In 2006, an unreleased album by Mikey D & the L.A. Posse was released under the title Better Late Than Never: In Memory Of <mask>. In February and April 2008 DJ Kid Grebo released a two part Paul C mixtape hosted by Organized Konfusion member Prince Po. In 2013, artist and record label owner Pritt Kalsi released the documentary film Memories of <mask> McKasty, a collection of interviews recorded between 2000 and April 2013. In a post describing the process of making the film, Kalsi stated "This is no way the definitive story or film. There is still a few key people missing. I hope that after watching this that they may want to contribute some footage that would make it the definitive film." Kalsi also states that there is videotape of <mask> making beats at his studio, but it is currently "amongst hundreds and hundreds of video tapes in a spot in NYC, to this day it’s not been found."On July 17, 2016 DJ Toast of the Grown Man Rap Show released a two part DJ set featuring <mask>'s work to commemorate the 27th anniversary of his passing. Part 1 featured phone call interviews with <mask> collaborators Kev-E-Kev & AK-B as well as M.C. Outloud of Blahzay Blahzay. Part 2 featured a phone call interview with Mikey D from Mikey D and the LA Posse. A full-length feature film is in the making, about his life and music. Tracks engineered, mixed and produced
Unknown date
Sport G & Mastermind Live [Single] Mixed by Harvey L. Frierson Jr. and <mask>
1985
Double Delight & DJ Slice Nice - Party Jump / Leave Me This Way [Single] Engineered & mixed by <mask>
1986
Mikey D & The LA Posse- I Get Rough / Go for It [Single] Produced & mixed by <mask>
Disco Twins & Starchild - Do That Right / There It Is! Shock and <mask>e
Kev-E-Kev & AK-B - Listen to the Man [Single] Engineered & co-mixed by <mask>. McKastey
Phase n' Rhythm - Hyperactive / Brainfood (1988) [Single] Produced by <mask>
Black by Demand- Can’t Get Enough / All Rappers Give Up (1988) [Single] "Can't Get Enough" mixed by <mask>
The Mic Profesah - Bust the Format / Cry Freedom [Single] Engineered by <mask>y
Spicey Ham - Sex, Sex & More Sex / You Never Heard of Me & I Never Heard of You [Single] Engineered & mixed by <mask>
M.C.Tatiana - Mission to Rock / Back Up Jack [Single] Engineered by <mask>y
360 Degrees - Years to Build / Pelon [Single] Recorded and mixed by <mask>.
<mask>KO and Sta La Fro- Sweat My Moves/ Down on the Corner (Single) DNA International Records/ "Produced by <mask>"
1989
Too Poetic - Poetical Terror / God Made Me Funky [Single] Mixed by <mask>., Engineered by <mask>. and J. Tinsley
<mask> Outloud - Clean and Sober / I'll Put a Hurten [Single] Engineered by <mask> & CJ
Kev-E-Kev & AK-B - Keep On Doin' [Single] Co-produced, engineered & mixed by <mask>. McKasty
Freak L - Line for Line / When the Pen Hits the Paper (1989) [Single] Mixed by Vandy C. & <mask>.
Ultramagnetic MC's - Give the Drummer Some / Moe Luv's Theme [Single] Produced by <mask>
Ultramagnetic M.C. 's - Travelling at the Speed of Thought / A Chorus Line [Single] Co-produced and engineered by <mask>
Main Source - Think / Atom [Single] Mixed/Engineered by <mask>asty
Black Rock & Ron - True Feelings [Single] Hip Hop Mix by <mask>
Black Rock & Ron - Stop the World Engineered & mixed by <mask>, Jazzy Jay & DJ Doc
Stezo - Crazy Noise Mixed and engineered by <mask>
The Diabolical Biz Markie - The Biz Never Sleeps (1989) uncredited: "Thing Named Kim" and "Just a Friend" co-mixed and engineered by <mask>.
Queen Latifah - All Hail the Queen (1989) "Ladies First" and "A King and Queen Creation" engineered & mixed by Paul C.
1990
Eric B. & Rakim - Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em uncredited: "The Ghetto" and "Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em" co-produced by Paul C, Rakim and Large Professor "Run for Cover" produced by Paul C
1991
Super Lover Cee and Casanova Rud - Romeo / Giggolo [Single] "Romeo" produced by Casanova Rud & Paul C, arranged by Paul C
See also
List of murdered hip hop musicians
List of unsolved murders
References
External links
Paul C. discography at rateyourmusic.com
1964 births
1989 deaths
1989 murders in the United States
20th-century American businesspeople
20th-century American guitarists
American bass guitarists
American hip hop record producers
American people of Polish descent
Record producers from New York (state)
Deaths by firearm in Queens, New York
Guitarists from New York City
American murder victims
People from Queens, New York
People murdered in New York City
Unsolved murders in the United States | [
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] | <mask>. was an East Coast hip hop pioneer, producer, engineer, and mixer in the 1980s. His work with notable artists such as Queen Latifah, Biz Markie, and Eric B & Rakim earned him recognition before his death in 1989. He was called "one of the most important figures in the development of sampling" by Complex and "damn near the J Dilla of 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 800-244-0167 Work <mask> gave himself the middle name "<mask>" after <mask>, which he shortened to the initial "<mask>." He developed an interest in music from his older brother Michael, who was a guitarist, and Tim, who worked as a recording engineer. <mask> was a gifted musician in junior high, according to his friend TeQnotic. He was a bassist in a pop rock band called the Mandolindley Road Show. Lindley said that <mask> was a historian about pop music and soul music.Everything he did was informed by that. He studied his brother's record collection to learn about different genres. One of the group's first shows was at Max's Kansas City. Lindley says that <mask> was the group's best live performer. In 1985 the group recorded a self-titled album at Hi-Five Studios in New York City. The song "I've Got a Hatchet" was co-written by <mask> and his brother Tim. A founding member of Todd Rundgren's Utopia helped the group mix and master the album.Klingman taught McKasty a lot about the post-production process. <mask> started making beats in his bedroom studio after the group broke up. He did some mixing and mastering for the Clientele Brothers, a rap group consisting of Will Seville and Eddie O'Jay. Eddie and Will introduced <mask> to Michael Deering, also known as Mikey D, a rapper. He joined the group, Mikey D & The L.A. Posse. "<mask> came so naturally to him, he didn't even have to try that hard, it just came so naturally to him," said Mikey D. <mask>. was a genius.He started working at the studio after purchasing a keyboard voice synthesizer. He asked Mick to work for him. <mask> was an inexperienced engineer who learned quickly. He said that <mask> was green. I showed him a few things. He started doing sessions and took off from there. "My Telephone" b/w "Bust A Rhyme Mike" and "I Get Rough" were produced by <mask> during these sessions.On "Bust A Rhyme Mike", <mask> showed an advanced understanding of the E-mu SP-12 sampler, as he recorded Mikey D making three different percussion sounds with his mouth and wove them together into a beat. He was able to take vocal sounds from a beatboxer, change their pitch, and turn them into a fluid bass on his song "I Get Rough". He didn't know that his voice was going to become a bassline. It is not like <mask> told him to play a song. He played his own bass after catching something from what Rahzel did earlier. He worked as a producer and engineer for numerous other hip-hop acts. Ultramagnetic MC's 1988 classic debut album Critical Beatdown is one of <mask>'s best-known works.According to the group members, <mask> was responsible for the overall sound of the album, despite only having one credit as a producer. DJ Love said that <mask> came up with the hook for the song. <mask> didn't get credit for his production work because he preferred to work without contracts. <mask> engineered Kwamé's "The Rhythm" on Christmas Day of 1988. He helped engineer additional songs for the Kwamé the Boy Genius: featuring a New Beginning album, as Kwamé recorded six out of the eight songs from the album during the same session, which lasted from midnight until eight in the morning. In the late '80s, <mask> did engineering and mixing in the 1212 studio in Queens for Annabouboula, which was released in Europe on Virgin and BMG. It is not clear when he worked on the Greek Fire album, though it was released after his death.<mask> worked for many other artists. The Girls I Got 'Em Locked album sold 425,000 copies and reached the top of the billboard charts, thanks to the help of <mask>'s. Several producers have praised the single "Do The James" for its mixing of multiple James Brown records. Cut Chemist referred to it as the blend of the century. He heard a recording session of Simply Too Positive and offered to make the entire demo. The demo of Simply Too Positive created a buzz around the group. The demo with <mask> caught the attention of several people in the industry, including Mr. Walt of The Beatminerz.Organized Konfusion member Pharoahe Monch said "No <mask>, No Organized, No Pharoahe" in honor of <mask>'s mentoring of the group. <mask> recorded the vocals for Mark The 45 King on "A King and Queen Creation", which was on Queen Latifah's All Hail The Queen album. He recorded with The Almighty RSO the week before his murder. A full album of material with <mask> was recorded by Twice Thou, then known as E-Devious. <mask> worked with the cream of the crop in hip hop and also did two remixes for the group Devo with the songs "Disco Dancer" and "Baby Doll". <mask> was hired to work for higher-profile artists as his status grew. "Run For Cover" and "Untouchables" were produced by him.Rakim's Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em. He was going to produce more songs for Queen Latifah, Biz Markie, and Large Professor's group Main Source. <mask> was known for his innovative use of equipment. The 1200 has a maxiumum sampling time of 10.07 seconds per beat, with producers often chopping the 10.07 second sample into smaller pieces to fit on each of the 1200s eight pads. The Bomb Squad, Easy Mo Bee, Lord Finesse, Large Professor, Pete Rock, and Ski used the sampler, but <mask> is credited as one of the early pioneers of chopping with it. <mask> was described as the engineer/producer/beatdigger who inspired your favorite producer. Next to Marley Marl <mask> was one of the first cats to try out new ideas.It's close to the J Dilla of his day. He was a mentor to Large Professor and lent him the machine for two weeks. Large Pro made 30 to 40 beats and learned how to use the machine on a more advanced level. Large Professor credited <mask> for helping him move from "pause-tape" production to making more elaborate compositions with the 1200, saying "He took me out of that tape deck era." Large Professor recalled how <mask> amazed people with his use of the machine and described him as a "wizard". People would go into the studio with their jaws dropping. This guy.He knew what he wanted to do. He said the beats would be funky. Rakim has a sampler in his house that he keeps in memory of <mask>. In the Pritt Kalsi documentary, he said, "You can go to my house right now and there's an SP- 1200 in there, that's what he taught me on." It's like letting my man know that I'm still focused. He uses the 1200 in some of his studio sessions with other artists and is experimenting with sampling from Spotify into the SP. <mask>'s SP-1200 is being used by Nick to archive old disks from The Bomb Squad and Public Enemy.<mask> had a large collection of hard to find records. He had a reputation for taking care of his vinyl. Every record was put in a plastic sleeve with a special paper and plastic inner sleeve. <mask> wore gloves while digging through records for samples, something he still does in his honor, according to Large Professor. It was taken to the next level by <mask>. He said his records smelled good. <mask> preferred to sample original vinyl pressings and didn't like sampling reissues according to Large Professor.He said that he was a big fan of originals. It was almost like you couldn't sample the reprint. <mask>'s gift for sampling records was that they didn't contain obvious samples and he was able to understand how the music was played. He said a lot of records are not jamming. There were no complicated lines. It was about how long you held the note, how you plucked it, and how you approached it. <mask> was aware of how the sample was played.Complex credited <mask> for introducing chopping and panning samples to rap music production. Chopping involves breaking samples into smaller pieces. Panning involves orienting a sample in the stereo-field, while hard pan is using only the left or right side of a recording to get specific instruments in samples. <mask>'s drum programming has been praised by several producers. J-Zone said that he was a damn genius. Pete Rock said his drums on Ultramagnetic MC's "Give The Drummer Some" were the worst drums he had ever heard. The sample on "Give The Drummer Some" was listed by Large Professor as one of his favorites and he praised <mask>'s work on the song.Early sample innovation is what this song is about. This may be the most important example of <mask>'s futuristic approach. The James Brown song "There Was a Time" was removed from the Gettin' Down To It album and pan in order to get only the drums. He heard the horn and guitar from the same record to create a real ill b-boy joint. In an interview, Moore explained his unique drum manipulation techniques that he used to engineer the Crazy Noize album. The approach that <mask> had was a little eclectic. He started with the snare, then the hi-hats and finally the kick drum.According to Large Professor, <mask> would double time certain elements of his beat to make sure they were "tighter than average." In addition to chopping, drum programming, and panning, <mask> is also noted for bringing a sophisticated level of musicality to his production. He was a former bass player who could play live basslines for his beats and tune his samples so that they were in the right key. Several times, <mask> made entire songs out of vocal samples, including early records for The LA Posse. <mask> was one of the first to put together a song that was all vocals. Bobby McFerrin was the only one who came close to what <mask> was doing. This is 1985.<mask> was shot to death in Queens at the age of 24. His murder was featured on America's Most Wanted, leading to the arrest of Blair in North Carolina. Blair was arrested on February 13, 1990 after a witness identified him in a lineup four months prior to the murder. David Blair and <mask> were also arrested. Three men were arrested in a mobile home park at 10:30 pm. Blair was arrested after someone saw a re-enactment of McKasty's murder, which appeared on WNYW-TV's New York's Most Wanted, and contacted authorities to tell them where he was. The three men were arrested in a coordinated effort.Blair was arrested in New York after trying to fight his deportation from North Carolina. Blair was wanted for narcotics charges in Texas at the time of his arrest. The second suspect was still at large after Blair was found. At the time of Blair's arrest, the police were unable to determine a motive for the murder and he faced a maximum jail sentence of 25 years to life. Blair was released due to lack of evidence and there was no public record of a second arrest. After <mask>'s murder, several artists that he worked with were questioned as suspects. They were cleared of any wrongdoing, but their career was damaged by the implication that they were involved in <mask>'s death.Rud said, "We were dropped from our label, our management gave up on us, people that were for us weren't anymore." It felt like we had been blacklisted. After his murder, Prince Po stopped by <mask>'s house. He was taken to a police station, where he was questioned for six hours. He remembers the police kicking his chair and not letting him use the bathroom during questioning. <mask> was given a ride home by the Almighty RSO group. They showed up to his house the next day and were questioned.The police determined they had no involvement in his death. "He got shot up and that's all I knew," said Large Professor, who spoke about the difficult time after <mask>'s death. It was hard for me to comprehend. There were rumors about why he was shot. The people were at the funeral. It was confusing. Most of the music produced by <mask> is not available.Despite never meeting <mask>, veteran engineer Anton Pukshansky believes he has some of his work because of his close relationship with many people from <mask>'s inner circle. He said he had a few discs with his name on them. I don't know if those discs work. At the time of <mask>'s passing, it was difficult for him to release any of his work officially, as he didn't want to touch anything that he touched. I have discs that he was involved in. I didn't want my discs back, he had 20 or 30 of them. At the time of <mask>'s murder, he was working on a sophomore album with Super Lover Cee and <mask> Rud, who recorded substantial material that was never released.The group doesn't own the disks of the records. <mask> left a legacy on hip-hop music. He would have had a great career in music. Large Professor said that if <mask> were still alive, he would be right up there with Rick Rubin. In 2009, Spin magazine wrote that if <mask> lived, he would have achieved the same level of success as DJ premier. Large Professor took over production duties on a lot of the music <mask> was working on. He became a well-known producer and emcee.Large Pro's company is named after his mentor. He said that Sea was a way to say that <mask> would keep going. <mask> Chemist, Domingo, Madlib, Pete Rock, and DJ Shadow all cite <mask> as an influence. <mask> helped the artists grow as artists. <mask>'s honest criticism of his raps made him pay more attention to his delivery and pronunciation. There is a picture of <mask> in the liner notes of Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em and the album is dedicated to his memory. On Organized Konfusion's debut single "Fudge Pudge," the duo gives a shout-out that says "<mask> to the organisms!"Critical Beatdown was re-released in 2004 with bonus tracks produced by <mask>. The album Better Late Than Never: In Memory of <mask> was released in 2006 by the L.A. Posse. Pritt Kalsi, an artist and record label owner, released the documentary film Memories of <mask> McKasty, a collection of interviews recorded between 2000 and April 2013). Kalsi stated in a post that this is not the definitive story or film. Some people are still missing. I hope that after watching this, they will want to make a definitive film. Kalsi states that there is videotape of <mask> making beats at his studio, but it is currently among hundreds and hundreds of video tapes in a spot in NYC.On July 17, 2016 DJ Toast of the Grown Man Rap Show released a two part DJ set featuring <mask>'s work to commemorate the 27th anniversary of his passing. Part 1 featured phone call interviews with <mask>. Loud of Blahzay. Part 2 featured a phone call interview with a member of the LA Posse. A film about his life and music is being made. Tracks were mixed and produced by Harvey L. Frierson Jr. and <mask>. Phase n' Rhythm - Hyperactive / Brainfood was produced by <mask> Black.The single was recorded and mixed by <mask>. <mask>KO and Sta La Fro. A Chorus Line is a song co-produced and engineered by <mask> Main Source. "The Ghetto" and "Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em" were co-produced by <mask>, Rakim and Large Professor. | [
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51308276 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oscar%20Brandon | Oscar Brandon | Oscar Roël Brandon (born 8 August 1971) is a Surinamese badminton player, coach and Olympic team manager. He competed for Suriname at the 1996 Summer Olympics as a badminton player in the Men's singles event. And he was "chef de mission" (team manager) for Suriname at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London and the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.
Early years
At the age of six Oscar Brandon accompanied his dad to the badminton "Ismay van Wilgen sportshall" and when he turned 12 years old became a member of the SCVU (Sociaal Culturele Vereniging Uitvlugt) badminton club at the outskirts of the city of Paramaribo. There he nurtured his talent under guidance and supervision of trainer and coach "Ma Lefi". He quickly became a junior champ and was then soon included in the National Juniors Squad of Suriname for centralized training.
Career
His first big international success came in 1988 as a junior player winning the Carebaco juniors event in boys singles. In 1990 he reached the semi-finals in Men's Singles at the 1990 CACSO Games in Mexico City. Unfortunately he lost the semi-final against experienced home player Ernesto de La Torre and then he lost the bronze medal match against Jamaican Robert Richards. After a short period of training and playing tournaments in the Netherlands, he decided to play a full year of badminton competition abroad in the Netherlands. There he was part of the famous BV van Zijderveld club in Amstelveen. He won a record of ten National Men's Singles titles, the first in 1991 and then was undisputed from 1993 till 2001. In 1996 he received a wildcard to participate at the 1996 Summer Olympics a first in badminton for Suriname. At the Atlanta Olympics he would also become the first Olympic torch bearer for his country, participating in the Olympic Torch Relay in Miami. In the Men's Singles event at the 1996 Summer Olympics he lost his first match against Jamie Dawson of Canada 5-15, 4-15. In 1998 he became "Sportsman of the Year" in Suriname after reaching the 62nd place on the badminton world ranking, by winning the first edition of the Suriname International and reaching the final of the Argentina International. That year 1998 he also won both the Argentina International and Brazil International São Paulo Cup 1998 in the mixed doubles event with Adrienn Kocsis a former Hungarian player playing for Peru. In 1999 Oscar Brandon participated in both the Pan Am Games and the World Championships, a first for his country Suriname. Once again in 1999 he was chosen to be "Sportsman of the Year" in Suriname. In 2001 he was crowned "Badminton player of the century" in his native Suriname.
Achievements
1985
Winner at the Carebaco Juniors Boys Doubles with Marlon Djojodiwongso of Suriname
1988
Winner at the Carebaco Juniors Boys Singles
Winner at the Carebaco Juniors Boys Doubles with Eric Bleau of Suriname
Runner-Up at the Carebaco Juniors Mixed Doubles
Most Valuable Player Juniors Carebaco 1988
1989
Winner (Golden medal) at the Junior Carifta Games 1989 Boys Single
Runner-Up (Silver medal) at the Junior Carifta Games 1989 Boys Doubles with Eric Bleau of Suriname
Semi-Final (Bronze medal) at the Junior Carifta Games 1989 Mixed Doubles with Letitia Wongsodimedjo of Suriname
1990
4th Place at the 1990 CACSO Games Men's Singles
1992
Winner at the Caribbean Easter Tournament Curacao Men's Singles
Semi-Final at the Carebaco International Men's Singles
Quarter-Final at the Carebaco International Men's Doubles with Veron Griffiths of Jamaica
Quarter-Final at the Carebaco International Mixed Doubles with E. Hoeymaakers of Curacao
1995
First round at the Pan Am Games Men's Singles
1996
First round at the 1996 Summer Olympics Men's Singles
1997
Quarter-Final at the Peru International Men's Singles and Men's Doubles with Alejandro Elias of Peru
Semi-Final at the Carebaco International Men's Doubles with Eric Bleau of Suriname
Quarter-Final at the Carebaco International Men's Singles
Quarter-Final at the Guatemala International Men's Singles and Men's Doubles with Anil Seepaul of Trinidad & Tobago
Semi-Final at the Guatemala International Mixed Doubles with Shackera Cupidon of Jamaica
1998
Quarter-Final at the Peru International Men's Doubles with Pieter van Soerland of the Netherlands
Quarter-Final at the Peru International Mixed Doubles with Nigella Saunders of Jamaica
Runner-Up at the Carebaco International Mixed Doubles with Nathalie Haynes of Suriname
Semi-Final at the Carebaco International Men's Singles and Men's Doubles with Derrick Stjeward of Suriname
Winner at the Brazil International São Paulo Cup 1998 Mixed Doubles with Adrienn Kocsis of Peru
Semi-Final at the Brazil International São Paulo Cup 1998 Men's Doubles with Leandro Santos of Brazil
Runner-Up at the South American Badminton Championships Men's Doubles with Derrick Stjeward of Suriname
Runner-Up at the Argentina International Men's Singles
Winner at the Argentina International Mixed Doubles with Adrienn Kocsis of Peru
Semi-Final at the Argentina International Men's Doubles with Jorge Meyer of Argentina
Winner at the Suriname International Men's Singles
Semi-Final at the Suriname International Men's Doubles with Derrick Stjeward of Suriname
Quarter-Final at the Suriname International Mixed Doubles with Nathalie Haynes of Suriname
1999
Qualification round at the 1999 IBF World Championships Men's Singles and Men's Doubles with Derrick Stjeward of Suriname
First round at the Pan Am Games Men's Singles and Men's Doubles with Derrick Stjeward of Suriname
Second round at the Pan Am Games Mixed Doubles with Nathalie Haynes of Suriname
Quarter-Final at the Carebaco International Men's Singles and Men's Doubles with Derrick Stjeward of Suriname
Semi-Final at the Jamaica International Mixed Doubles with Kristal Karjohn of Jamaica
2001
Semi-Final at the Carebaco International Men's Singles
2003
Semi-Final at the Suriname International Mixed Doubles with Stephanie Jadi of Suriname
2008
Semi-Final at the Suriname International Men's Doubles with Jair Liew of Suriname
2009
Runner-Up at the Suriname International Men's Doubles with Raul Rampersad of Trinidad & Tobago
Semi-Final at the Suriname International Mixed Doubles with Danielle Melchiot of Suriname
2013
Semi-Final at the Suriname International Mixed Doubles with Stephanie Jadi of Suriname
Achievements with results
BWF International Challenge/Series
Men's singles
Men's doubles
Mixed doubles
BWF International Challenge tournament
BWF International Series tournament
BWF Future Series tournament
Post-playing career
After his active career Oscar Brandon became a badminton coach, team manager and politician for his country. In November 1998 he was chosen as a member of the National Assembly, the Parliament, representing the legislative branch of government in Suriname. He is also a member of the Suriname Olympic Committee and took up the "chef de mission" (team manager) role for Suriname at the 2010 Central American and Caribbean Games, the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics, the 2010 South American Games, the 2012 Summer Olympics, the 2014 Central American and Caribbean Games, the 2014 South American Games, the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics, the 2015 Pan American Games and the 2016 Summer Olympics.
Personal life
Oscar Brandon is married and the couple have a son Shawn, who occasionally also participated in the National Badminton Circuit of Suriname and was also selected as a junior international to participate in the Carebaco Games.
References
External links
Surinamese male badminton players
Badminton players at the 1996 Summer Olympics
Olympic badminton players of Suriname
Badminton players at the 1999 Pan American Games
Badminton players at the 1995 Pan American Games
Pan American Games competitors for Suriname
Competitors at the 1990 Central American and Caribbean Games
Sportspeople from Paramaribo
1971 births
Living people | [
"Oscar Roël Brandon (born 8 August 1971) is a Surinamese badminton player, coach and Olympic team manager.",
"He competed for Suriname at the 1996 Summer Olympics as a badminton player in the Men's singles event.",
"And he was \"chef de mission\" (team manager) for Suriname at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London and the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.",
"Early years\nAt the age of six Oscar Brandon accompanied his dad to the badminton \"Ismay van Wilgen sportshall\" and when he turned 12 years old became a member of the SCVU (Sociaal Culturele Vereniging Uitvlugt) badminton club at the outskirts of the city of Paramaribo.",
"There he nurtured his talent under guidance and supervision of trainer and coach \"Ma Lefi\".",
"He quickly became a junior champ and was then soon included in the National Juniors Squad of Suriname for centralized training.",
"Career\nHis first big international success came in 1988 as a junior player winning the Carebaco juniors event in boys singles.",
"In 1990 he reached the semi-finals in Men's Singles at the 1990 CACSO Games in Mexico City.",
"Unfortunately he lost the semi-final against experienced home player Ernesto de La Torre and then he lost the bronze medal match against Jamaican Robert Richards.",
"After a short period of training and playing tournaments in the Netherlands, he decided to play a full year of badminton competition abroad in the Netherlands.",
"There he was part of the famous BV van Zijderveld club in Amstelveen.",
"He won a record of ten National Men's Singles titles, the first in 1991 and then was undisputed from 1993 till 2001.",
"In 1996 he received a wildcard to participate at the 1996 Summer Olympics a first in badminton for Suriname.",
"At the Atlanta Olympics he would also become the first Olympic torch bearer for his country, participating in the Olympic Torch Relay in Miami.",
"In the Men's Singles event at the 1996 Summer Olympics he lost his first match against Jamie Dawson of Canada 5-15, 4-15.",
"In 1998 he became \"Sportsman of the Year\" in Suriname after reaching the 62nd place on the badminton world ranking, by winning the first edition of the Suriname International and reaching the final of the Argentina International.",
"That year 1998 he also won both the Argentina International and Brazil International São Paulo Cup 1998 in the mixed doubles event with Adrienn Kocsis a former Hungarian player playing for Peru.",
"In 1999 Oscar Brandon participated in both the Pan Am Games and the World Championships, a first for his country Suriname.",
"Once again in 1999 he was chosen to be \"Sportsman of the Year\" in Suriname.",
"In 2001 he was crowned \"Badminton player of the century\" in his native Suriname.",
"In November 1998 he was chosen as a member of the National Assembly, the Parliament, representing the legislative branch of government in Suriname.",
"He is also a member of the Suriname Olympic Committee and took up the \"chef de mission\" (team manager) role for Suriname at the 2010 Central American and Caribbean Games, the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics, the 2010 South American Games, the 2012 Summer Olympics, the 2014 Central American and Caribbean Games, the 2014 South American Games, the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics, the 2015 Pan American Games and the 2016 Summer Olympics.",
"Personal life \nOscar Brandon is married and the couple have a son Shawn, who occasionally also participated in the National Badminton Circuit of Suriname and was also selected as a junior international to participate in the Carebaco Games.",
"References\n\nExternal links\n \n\nSurinamese male badminton players\nBadminton players at the 1996 Summer Olympics\nOlympic badminton players of Suriname\nBadminton players at the 1999 Pan American Games\nBadminton players at the 1995 Pan American Games\nPan American Games competitors for Suriname\nCompetitors at the 1990 Central American and Caribbean Games\nSportspeople from Paramaribo\n1971 births\nLiving people"
] | [
"Oscar Rol Brandon is a badminton player, coach and Olympic team manager.",
"At the 1996 Summer Olympics, he competed in the Men's singles event.",
"He was the team manager for Suriname at the 2012 and 2016 Summer Olympics.",
"At the age of six, Oscar Brandon accompanied his dad to the badminton \"Ismay van Wilgen sportshall\" and at the age of 12 he joined the club.",
"His talent was nurtured by his trainer and coach.",
"He was included in the National Junior squad of Suriname for centralized training after becoming a junior champ.",
"His first big international success came in 1988 when he won the Carebaco juniors event in boys singles.",
"At the 1990 CACSO Games in Mexico City, he reached the semi-finals in Men's Singles.",
"He lost the semi-final against de La Torre and then the bronze medal match against Richards.",
"After a short period of training and playing tournaments in the Netherlands, he decided to play a full year of badminton in the Netherlands.",
"He was a member of the famous club in Amstelveen.",
"He won ten National Men's Singles titles, the first in 1991 and the last in 2001.",
"He participated in the Summer Olympics for the first time in badminton for Suriname.",
"He was the first torch bearer for his country at the Atlanta Olympics.",
"In the Men's Singles event at the 1996 Summer Olympics, he lost his first match against Jamie Dawson of Canada.",
"He became \"Sportsman of the Year\" in Suriname in 1998 after winning the first edition of the Suriname International and reaching the final of the Argentina International.",
"He won the Argentina International and Brazil International So Paulo Cup in 1998 with a former Hungarian player.",
"Oscar Brandon was the first person from his country to participate in the Pan Am Games and the World Championships.",
"He was chosen to be the \"Sportsman of the Year\" again in 1999.",
"He was crowned \"Badminton player of the century\" in 2001.",
"In 1998 he became a member of the National Assembly, the Parliament, representing the legislative branch of government.",
"He took up the \"chef de mission\" role for Suriname at the 2010 Central American and Caribbean Games, the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics, the 2010 South American Games, the 2012 Summer Olympics, and the 2014 Central American and Caribbean Games.",
"Shawn Brandon, Oscar Brandon's son, was selected as a junior international to participate in the Carebaco Games and occasionally participated in the National Badminton Circuit of Suriname.",
"The 1996 Summer Olympics, the 1999 Pan American Games, the 1995 Pan American Games, and the 1990 Central American and Caribbean Games are all related."
] | <mask> (born 8 August 1971) is a Surinamese badminton player, coach and Olympic team manager. He competed for Suriname at the 1996 Summer Olympics as a badminton player in the Men's singles event. And he was "chef de mission" (team manager) for Suriname at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London and the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. Early years
At the age of six <mask> accompanied his dad to the badminton "Ismay van Wilgen sportshall" and when he turned 12 years old became a member of the SCVU (Sociaal Culturele Vereniging Uitvlugt) badminton club at the outskirts of the city of Paramaribo. There he nurtured his talent under guidance and supervision of trainer and coach "Ma Lefi". He quickly became a junior champ and was then soon included in the National Juniors Squad of Suriname for centralized training. Career
His first big international success came in 1988 as a junior player winning the Carebaco juniors event in boys singles.In 1990 he reached the semi-finals in Men's Singles at the 1990 CACSO Games in Mexico City. Unfortunately he lost the semi-final against experienced home player Ernesto de La Torre and then he lost the bronze medal match against Jamaican Robert Richards. After a short period of training and playing tournaments in the Netherlands, he decided to play a full year of badminton competition abroad in the Netherlands. There he was part of the famous BV van Zijderveld club in Amstelveen. He won a record of ten National Men's Singles titles, the first in 1991 and then was undisputed from 1993 till 2001. In 1996 he received a wildcard to participate at the 1996 Summer Olympics a first in badminton for Suriname. At the Atlanta Olympics he would also become the first Olympic torch bearer for his country, participating in the Olympic Torch Relay in Miami.In the Men's Singles event at the 1996 Summer Olympics he lost his first match against Jamie Dawson of Canada 5-15, 4-15. In 1998 he became "Sportsman of the Year" in Suriname after reaching the 62nd place on the badminton world ranking, by winning the first edition of the Suriname International and reaching the final of the Argentina International. That year 1998 he also won both the Argentina International and Brazil International São Paulo Cup 1998 in the mixed doubles event with Adrienn Kocsis a former Hungarian player playing for Peru. In 1999 <mask> participated in both the Pan Am Games and the World Championships, a first for his country Suriname. Once again in 1999 he was chosen to be "Sportsman of the Year" in Suriname. In 2001 he was crowned "Badminton player of the century" in his native Suriname. In November 1998 he was chosen as a member of the National Assembly, the Parliament, representing the legislative branch of government in Suriname.He is also a member of the Suriname Olympic Committee and took up the "chef de mission" (team manager) role for Suriname at the 2010 Central American and Caribbean Games, the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics, the 2010 South American Games, the 2012 Summer Olympics, the 2014 Central American and Caribbean Games, the 2014 South American Games, the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics, the 2015 Pan American Games and the 2016 Summer Olympics. Personal life
<mask> is married and the couple have a son Shawn, who occasionally also participated in the National Badminton Circuit of Suriname and was also selected as a junior international to participate in the Carebaco Games. References
External links
Surinamese male badminton players
Badminton players at the 1996 Summer Olympics
Olympic badminton players of Suriname
Badminton players at the 1999 Pan American Games
Badminton players at the 1995 Pan American Games
Pan American Games competitors for Suriname
Competitors at the 1990 Central American and Caribbean Games
Sportspeople from Paramaribo
1971 births
Living people | [
"Oscar Roël Brandon",
"Oscar Brandon",
"Oscar Brandon",
"Oscar Brandon"
] | <mask> is a badminton player, coach and Olympic team manager. At the 1996 Summer Olympics, he competed in the Men's singles event. He was the team manager for Suriname at the 2012 and 2016 Summer Olympics. At the age of six, <mask> accompanied his dad to the badminton "Ismay van Wilgen sportshall" and at the age of 12 he joined the club. His talent was nurtured by his trainer and coach. He was included in the National Junior squad of Suriname for centralized training after becoming a junior champ. His first big international success came in 1988 when he won the Carebaco juniors event in boys singles.At the 1990 CACSO Games in Mexico City, he reached the semi-finals in Men's Singles. He lost the semi-final against de La Torre and then the bronze medal match against Richards. After a short period of training and playing tournaments in the Netherlands, he decided to play a full year of badminton in the Netherlands. He was a member of the famous club in Amstelveen. He won ten National Men's Singles titles, the first in 1991 and the last in 2001. He participated in the Summer Olympics for the first time in badminton for Suriname. He was the first torch bearer for his country at the Atlanta Olympics.In the Men's Singles event at the 1996 Summer Olympics, he lost his first match against Jamie Dawson of Canada. He became "Sportsman of the Year" in Suriname in 1998 after winning the first edition of the Suriname International and reaching the final of the Argentina International. He won the Argentina International and Brazil International So Paulo Cup in 1998 with a former Hungarian player. <mask> was the first person from his country to participate in the Pan Am Games and the World Championships. He was chosen to be the "Sportsman of the Year" again in 1999. He was crowned "Badminton player of the century" in 2001. In 1998 he became a member of the National Assembly, the Parliament, representing the legislative branch of government.He took up the "chef de mission" role for Suriname at the 2010 Central American and Caribbean Games, the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics, the 2010 South American Games, the 2012 Summer Olympics, and the 2014 Central American and Caribbean Games. <mask>, <mask>'s son, was selected as a junior international to participate in the Carebaco Games and occasionally participated in the National Badminton Circuit of Suriname. The 1996 Summer Olympics, the 1999 Pan American Games, the 1995 Pan American Games, and the 1990 Central American and Caribbean Games are all related. | [
"Oscar Rol Brandon",
"Oscar Brandon",
"Oscar Brandon",
"Shawn Brandon",
"Oscar Brandon"
] |
5886752 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dee%20Andros | Dee Andros | Demosthenes Konstandies Andrecopoulos (October 17, 1924 – October 22, 2003) was an American football player, coach, and college athletics He was the head coach at the University of Idaho from 1962 to 1964 and Oregon State University from 1965 to 1975, compiling a career record of A native of Oklahoma and a World War II veteran, Andros played college football as a guard at the University of Oklahoma. After retiring from coaching, he was the athletic director at Oregon State from 1976 to 1985.
Early life, military service, and playing career
Born Demosthenes Konstandies Andrikopoulos in Oklahoma City, Andros was the second of three sons of a Greek immigrant father. He graduated from Oklahoma City's Central High School in 1942, and then enlisted in the military at age seventeen during World War II. Andros served four years in the U.S. Marine Corps; a cook, he picked up a rifle and was awarded the Bronze Star and spent more than a month under heavy fire on the island of Iwo Jima in 1945. He was present at the famed moment when six Marines raised the American flag on Mount Suribachi.
Andros played college football at Oklahoma from 1946 to 1949, under hall of fame head coach Bud Wilkinson. He was selected in the 14th round (177th overall) by the Chicago Cardinals in the 1950 NFL draft. Dee's older brother Plato was an All-American in 1946 at Oklahoma and played four years in the NFL for the Cardinals. His younger brother Gus (Dick) was a ballet dancer and choreographer.
Coaching career
Andros' coaching career included stops as an assistant at Oklahoma, Kansas, Texas Tech, Nebraska, California, and Illinois. His bowl games as an assistant were the Sun Bowl in January 1956 with Texas Tech and the Rose Bowl in January 1959 with California.
Idaho
Andros became a head coach at age 37 at Idaho in February 1962. He took over in Moscow for Skip Stahley, who stepped down after eight seasons and remained as athletic director. Andros' starting annual salary was just under
The 1962 team was 2–6–1, but the following year he led Idaho to its first winning season (5–4) in a quarter century. The tenth and final game in 1963 at Arizona State on November 23 was canceled, following the assassination of President Kennedy.
The Vandals won their opener in 1964, but then lost four straight, the latter two were close ones to Oregon and Oregon State. The loss to the Rose Bowl-bound Beavers in Corvallis came by a late third quarter OSU punt return. The Vandals rebounded and the next week won the Battle of the Palouse for the first time in a decade, defeating neighbor Washington State The Cougars were led by first-year head coach Bert Clark, a former Sooner teammate; the Vandals split the final four games to finish at 4–6.
While Idaho had been a driving force in the founding of the Big Sky Conference in 1963, it was primarily to alleviate basketball scheduling and the Vandals remained an independent for football through 1964 under Andros. Only one conference foe was played during the first two Big Sky seasons, a 1963 game with Idaho State that was previously scheduled. Idaho was in the University Division, while the other Big Sky members were in the College Division (which became Division II in 1973) for football. After Andros left, Idaho began conference play in 1965 under head coach Steve Musseau, Andros' defensive coordinator.
Andros spent three years on the Palouse at Idaho, with an overall record of .
One of his first-year hires at Idaho in 1962 was alumnus Bud Riley then the head coach and athletic director at Lewiston High School, south of Moscow. A former Vandal halfback for Dixie Howell, he coached the Idaho freshman team for Andros and went with him to OSU in 1965. Riley was a defensive assistant in Corvallis for eight years before moving on to the Canadian Football League in 1973 and became a head coach the following year. His eldest son Mike (b.1953) was the head coach at Oregon State for fourteen seasons and later at Nebraska.
Oregon State
Andros was hired as the head coach at Oregon State in February He replaced the legendary Tommy Prothro, who left after ten seasons in Corvallis for UCLA, just ten days after leading the Beavers in the Rose Bowl. Andros compiled a record in eleven seasons at OSU. In the Civil War games against the Oregon Ducks, he won his first seven and split the last four, for an overall record of Andros was nicknamed "The Great Pumpkin" for his bright orange jacket and large physical size, first dubbed by a Spokane sports columnist during the homecoming rout of WSU in Pullman on Halloween weekend in 1966. It was his first game on the Palouse since he left Idaho; his last Palouse game as Vandal head two years earlier was also a win over the Cougars, 28–13.
As OSU head coach, Andros was 8–3 against Washington State and split the first ten games with Washington while headed by former Oklahoma teammate Jim Owens; Oregon State was beaten by the Huskies in Seattle in 1975, Don James' first season at UW and Andros' last in coaching. He was also against his former team, beating the Idaho Vandals by two in Boise in 1965 and by seven in Corvallis in 1966.
1967
Andros is best known for his incredible 1967 season in which his team, dubbed the "Giant Killers", went Led by junior quarterback Steve Preece, the Beavers beat #2 Purdue, tied the new #2 UCLA, and then beat #1 USC. But because Oregon State lost to Washington and tied UCLA, USC won the conference title by a half game and earned the berth to the Rose Bowl, where they defeated the Big Ten's Indiana Hoosiers and won the national title. Oregon State finished with a #7 ranking in the final AP Poll. In 1968, the Beavers were ranked sixth in the pre-season and finished fifteenth after a campaign. There was no bowl game for the Beavers in either year, as both the Pac-8 and Big Ten forbade their teams from postseason participation outside of the Rose Bowl until the 1975 season.
Andros expressed an interest in the open position at Oklahoma State University in Stillwater in December and several weeks later, rejected an offer from the University of Pittsburgh, but improved his situation in Corvallis.
Although it wasn't apparent at the time, Andros' tenure at Oregon State crested with the 1968 season. Following two six-win seasons in 1969 and 1970, his teams would only win a total of 13 games in the next five years, the start of 28 straight losing seasons.
Later life and family
Following an eighth straight loss to open the 1975 season, Andros announced his resignation, effective at the end of the season. Days after the final game, he was named athletic director to succeed the retiring Jim Barratt. Andros retired as AD in the spring of 1985, and continued to serve as a special assistant within the Beaver Athletic Scholarship Fund until health problems forced him to remain at his Corvallis home. He spent nearly four decades with Oregon State athletics.
Though he spent only three years at Idaho, he was still held in high regard in Moscow. In 1989, Andros was invited by new head coach John L. Smith to lead one of the sides in the annual Silver & Gold spring game, opposite former 1970s head coach Ed Troxel.
In 1992, his "Giant Killers" team of 1967 was inducted into the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame. In the spring of 2003, Andros was awarded the Martin Chaves Lifetime Achievement Award at the Fifth Annual Bennys celebration at Oregon State. Andros married Luella Andros, and they had one daughter named Jeanna. He died in Corvallis on October 22, 2003, at the age of 79.
Head coaching record
References
External links
1924 births
2003 deaths
American football guards
California Golden Bears football coaches
Chicago Cardinals players
Idaho Vandals football coaches
Illinois Fighting Illini football coaches
Kansas Jayhawks football coaches
Nebraska Cornhuskers football coaches
Oklahoma Sooners football coaches
Oklahoma Sooners football players
Oregon State Beavers athletic directors
Oregon State Beavers football coaches
Texas Tech Red Raiders football coaches
United States Marine Corps personnel of World War II
United States Marine Corps non-commissioned officers
Sportspeople from Oklahoma City
Sportspeople from Corvallis, Oregon
Players of American football from Oklahoma
American people of Greek descent | [
"Demosthenes Konstandies Andrecopoulos (October 17, 1924 – October 22, 2003) was an American football player, coach, and college athletics He was the head coach at the University of Idaho from 1962 to 1964 and Oregon State University from 1965 to 1975, compiling a career record of A native of Oklahoma and a World War II veteran, Andros played college football as a guard at the University of Oklahoma.",
"After retiring from coaching, he was the athletic director at Oregon State from 1976 to 1985.",
"Early life, military service, and playing career\nBorn Demosthenes Konstandies Andrikopoulos in Oklahoma City, Andros was the second of three sons of a Greek immigrant father.",
"He graduated from Oklahoma City's Central High School in 1942, and then enlisted in the military at age seventeen during World War II.",
"Andros served four years in the U.S. Marine Corps; a cook, he picked up a rifle and was awarded the Bronze Star and spent more than a month under heavy fire on the island of Iwo Jima in 1945.",
"He was present at the famed moment when six Marines raised the American flag on Mount Suribachi.",
"Andros played college football at Oklahoma from 1946 to 1949, under hall of fame head coach Bud Wilkinson.",
"He was selected in the 14th round (177th overall) by the Chicago Cardinals in the 1950 NFL draft.",
"Dee's older brother Plato was an All-American in 1946 at Oklahoma and played four years in the NFL for the Cardinals.",
"His younger brother Gus (Dick) was a ballet dancer and choreographer.",
"Coaching career\nAndros' coaching career included stops as an assistant at Oklahoma, Kansas, Texas Tech, Nebraska, California, and Illinois.",
"His bowl games as an assistant were the Sun Bowl in January 1956 with Texas Tech and the Rose Bowl in January 1959 with California.",
"Idaho\nAndros became a head coach at age 37 at Idaho in February 1962.",
"He took over in Moscow for Skip Stahley, who stepped down after eight seasons and remained as athletic director.",
"Andros' starting annual salary was just under \n \nThe 1962 team was 2–6–1, but the following year he led Idaho to its first winning season (5–4) in a quarter century.",
"The tenth and final game in 1963 at Arizona State on November 23 was canceled, following the assassination of President Kennedy.",
"The Vandals won their opener in 1964, but then lost four straight, the latter two were close ones to Oregon and Oregon State.",
"The loss to the Rose Bowl-bound Beavers in Corvallis came by a late third quarter OSU punt return.",
"The Vandals rebounded and the next week won the Battle of the Palouse for the first time in a decade, defeating neighbor Washington State The Cougars were led by first-year head coach Bert Clark, a former Sooner teammate; the Vandals split the final four games to finish at 4–6.",
"While Idaho had been a driving force in the founding of the Big Sky Conference in 1963, it was primarily to alleviate basketball scheduling and the Vandals remained an independent for football through 1964 under Andros.",
"Only one conference foe was played during the first two Big Sky seasons, a 1963 game with Idaho State that was previously scheduled.",
"Idaho was in the University Division, while the other Big Sky members were in the College Division (which became Division II in 1973) for football.",
"After Andros left, Idaho began conference play in 1965 under head coach Steve Musseau, Andros' defensive coordinator.",
"Andros spent three years on the Palouse at Idaho, with an overall record of .",
"One of his first-year hires at Idaho in 1962 was alumnus Bud Riley then the head coach and athletic director at Lewiston High School, south of Moscow.",
"A former Vandal halfback for Dixie Howell, he coached the Idaho freshman team for Andros and went with him to OSU in 1965.",
"Riley was a defensive assistant in Corvallis for eight years before moving on to the Canadian Football League in 1973 and became a head coach the following year.",
"His eldest son Mike (b.1953) was the head coach at Oregon State for fourteen seasons and later at Nebraska.",
"Oregon State\nAndros was hired as the head coach at Oregon State in February He replaced the legendary Tommy Prothro, who left after ten seasons in Corvallis for UCLA, just ten days after leading the Beavers in the Rose Bowl.",
"Andros compiled a record in eleven seasons at OSU.",
"In the Civil War games against the Oregon Ducks, he won his first seven and split the last four, for an overall record of Andros was nicknamed \"The Great Pumpkin\" for his bright orange jacket and large physical size, first dubbed by a Spokane sports columnist during the homecoming rout of WSU in Pullman on Halloween weekend in 1966.",
"It was his first game on the Palouse since he left Idaho; his last Palouse game as Vandal head two years earlier was also a win over the Cougars, 28–13.",
"As OSU head coach, Andros was 8–3 against Washington State and split the first ten games with Washington while headed by former Oklahoma teammate Jim Owens; Oregon State was beaten by the Huskies in Seattle in 1975, Don James' first season at UW and Andros' last in coaching.",
"He was also against his former team, beating the Idaho Vandals by two in Boise in 1965 and by seven in Corvallis in 1966.",
"1967\nAndros is best known for his incredible 1967 season in which his team, dubbed the \"Giant Killers\", went Led by junior quarterback Steve Preece, the Beavers beat #2 Purdue, tied the new #2 UCLA, and then beat #1 USC.",
"But because Oregon State lost to Washington and tied UCLA, USC won the conference title by a half game and earned the berth to the Rose Bowl, where they defeated the Big Ten's Indiana Hoosiers and won the national title.",
"Oregon State finished with a #7 ranking in the final AP Poll.",
"In 1968, the Beavers were ranked sixth in the pre-season and finished fifteenth after a campaign.",
"There was no bowl game for the Beavers in either year, as both the Pac-8 and Big Ten forbade their teams from postseason participation outside of the Rose Bowl until the 1975 season.",
"Andros expressed an interest in the open position at Oklahoma State University in Stillwater in December and several weeks later, rejected an offer from the University of Pittsburgh, but improved his situation in Corvallis.",
"Although it wasn't apparent at the time, Andros' tenure at Oregon State crested with the 1968 season.",
"Following two six-win seasons in 1969 and 1970, his teams would only win a total of 13 games in the next five years, the start of 28 straight losing seasons.",
"Later life and family\nFollowing an eighth straight loss to open the 1975 season, Andros announced his resignation, effective at the end of the season.",
"Days after the final game, he was named athletic director to succeed the retiring Jim Barratt.",
"Andros retired as AD in the spring of 1985, and continued to serve as a special assistant within the Beaver Athletic Scholarship Fund until health problems forced him to remain at his Corvallis home.",
"He spent nearly four decades with Oregon State athletics.",
"Though he spent only three years at Idaho, he was still held in high regard in Moscow.",
"In 1989, Andros was invited by new head coach John L. Smith to lead one of the sides in the annual Silver & Gold spring game, opposite former 1970s head coach Ed Troxel.",
"In 1992, his \"Giant Killers\" team of 1967 was inducted into the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame.",
"In the spring of 2003, Andros was awarded the Martin Chaves Lifetime Achievement Award at the Fifth Annual Bennys celebration at Oregon State.",
"Andros married Luella Andros, and they had one daughter named Jeanna.",
"He died in Corvallis on October 22, 2003, at the age of 79.",
"Head coaching record\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links\n \n\n1924 births\n2003 deaths\nAmerican football guards\nCalifornia Golden Bears football coaches\nChicago Cardinals players\nIdaho Vandals football coaches\nIllinois Fighting Illini football coaches\nKansas Jayhawks football coaches\nNebraska Cornhuskers football coaches\nOklahoma Sooners football coaches\nOklahoma Sooners football players\nOregon State Beavers athletic directors\nOregon State Beavers football coaches\nTexas Tech Red Raiders football coaches\nUnited States Marine Corps personnel of World War II\nUnited States Marine Corps non-commissioned officers\nSportspeople from Oklahoma City\nSportspeople from Corvallis, Oregon\nPlayers of American football from Oklahoma\nAmerican people of Greek descent"
] | [
"He was the head coach at the University of Idaho from 1962 to 1964 and the Oregon State University from 1966 to 1975.",
"He was the athletic director at Oregon State after retiring from coaching.",
"Born Demosthenes Konstandies Andrikopoulos in Oklahoma City, he was the second of three sons of a Greek immigrant father.",
"He enlisted in the military at the age of 17 after graduating from Oklahoma City's Central High School in 1942.",
"After four years in the U.S. Marine Corps, he picked up a rifle and spent a month on the island of Iwo Jima.",
"He was present when the Marines raised the flag.",
"Bud Wilkinson was the head coach of the Oklahoma football team from 1946 to 1949.",
"He was selected in the 14th round by the Chicago Cardinals in the 1950 NFL draft.",
"Dee's older brother Plato was an All-American at Oklahoma in 1946 and played four years in the NFL.",
"His brother was a ballet dancer.",
"There were stops as an assistant at Oklahoma, Kansas, Texas Tech, Nebraska, California, and Illinois.",
"His bowl games as an assistant were the Sun Bowl in January 1956 with Texas Tech and the Rose Bowl in January 1959 with California.",
"Idaho's head coach was 37 years old when he became a head coach.",
"The athletic director in Moscow stepped down after eight seasons.",
"After leading Idaho to its first winning season in 25 years, Andros' starting annual salary was less than half of what it was in 1962.",
"Following the assassination of President Kennedy, the tenth and final game at Arizona State was canceled.",
"The Vandals won their opener in 1964, but then lost four straight and were close to Oregon and Oregon State.",
"The loss to the Rose Bowl-bound Beavers was due to a punt return in the third quarter.",
"The Vandals won the Battle of the Palouse for the first time in a decade, defeating neighbor Washington State, and then split the final four games to finish at 4–6.",
"The Vandals remained an independent for football through 1964 despite being a driving force in the founding of the Big Sky Conference.",
"Idaho State was the only conference foe played in the first two Big Sky seasons.",
"The other Big Sky members were in the College Division for football, while Idaho was in the University Division.",
"Idaho began conference play in 1965, under head coach Steve Musseau.",
"Andros spent three years on the Palouse at Idaho.",
"Bud Riley was the head coach and athletic director at Lewiston High School when he was hired by Idaho in 1962.",
"He was a halfback for the Vandals and a coach for the Idaho freshman team.",
"After eight years as a defensive assistant in Corvallis, Riley became a head coach in the Canadian Football League in 1973.",
"Mike was the head coach at Oregon State for fourteen seasons and later at Nebraska.",
"The legendary Tommy Prothro left Oregon State just ten days after the Rose Bowl to take the same position at UCLA.",
"In eleven seasons at OSU, Andros compiled a record.",
"In the Civil War games against the Oregon Ducks, he won his first seven and split the last four, for an overall record of Andros was nicknamed \"The Great Pumpkin\" for his bright orange jacket and large physical size.",
"It was his first game on the Palouse since he left Idaho and his last Palouse game as Vandal head.",
"The first ten games of Jim Owens' first season as Oregon State's head coach were split between Washington State and Oregon State.",
"He beat the Idaho Vandals by two and seven in 1965, but was against his former team in 1966.",
"The \"Giant Killers\" of 1967, led by junior quarterback Steve Preece, went on to win four games in a row, including two against USC.",
"USC won the conference title by a half game and earned their way to the Rose Bowl, where they defeated the Big Ten's Indiana Hoosiers and won the national title.",
"Oregon State was ranked seventh in the final AP Poll.",
"The Beavers finished fifteenth in the 1968 season after being ranked sixth in the pre-season.",
"Both the Big Ten and the Pac-8 did not allow their teams to play in a bowl game outside of the Rose Bowl until 1975.",
"In December he expressed an interest in the open position at Oklahoma State University and several weeks later he rejected an offer from the University of Pittsburgh.",
"Although it wasn't obvious at the time, Andros' tenure at Oregon State ended with the 1968 season.",
"After two six-win seasons in 1969 and 1970, his teams would only win a total of 13 games in the next five years.",
"After an eighth straight loss to open the 1975 season, Andros announced his resignation, effective at the end of the season.",
"He was named athletic director days after the final game.",
"After retiring as AD in the spring of 1985 he continued to serve as a special assistant to the athletic scholarship fund until health problems forced him to remain at his home.",
"He worked for nearly four decades with Oregon State athletics.",
"He was held in high regard in Moscow despite only three years at Idaho.",
"John L. Smith invited Andros to lead one of the sides in the annual Silver & Gold spring game.",
"In 1992, his \"Giant Killers\" team was inducted into the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame.",
"The Martin Chaves Lifetime Achievement Award was presented to Andros in the spring of 2003 at Oregon State.",
"They had a daughter named Jeanna.",
"On October 22, 2003 he passed away.",
"References External links 1924 births 2003 deaths American football guards California Golden Bears football coaches Chicago Cardinals players Idaho Vandals football coaches Illinois Fighting Illini football coaches Kansas Jayhawks football coaches Nebraska Cornhuskers football coaches Oklahoma Sooners football coaches"
] | Demosthenes Konstandies Andrecopoulos (October 17, 1924 – October 22, 2003) was an American football player, coach, and college athletics He was the head coach at the University of Idaho from 1962 to 1964 and Oregon State University from 1965 to 1975, compiling a career record of A native of Oklahoma and a World War II veteran, <mask> played college football as a guard at the University of Oklahoma. After retiring from coaching, he was the athletic director at Oregon State from 1976 to 1985. Early life, military service, and playing career
Born Demosthenes Konstandies Andrikopoulos in Oklahoma City, <mask> was the second of three sons of a Greek immigrant father. He graduated from Oklahoma City's Central High School in 1942, and then enlisted in the military at age seventeen during World War II. <mask> served four years in the U.S. Marine Corps; a cook, he picked up a rifle and was awarded the Bronze Star and spent more than a month under heavy fire on the island of Iwo Jima in 1945. He was present at the famed moment when six Marines raised the American flag on Mount Suribachi. <mask> played college football at Oklahoma from 1946 to 1949, under hall of fame head coach Bud Wilkinson.He was selected in the 14th round (177th overall) by the Chicago Cardinals in the 1950 NFL draft. <mask>'s older brother Plato was an All-American in 1946 at Oklahoma and played four years in the NFL for the Cardinals. His younger brother Gus (Dick) was a ballet dancer and choreographer. Coaching career
<mask>' coaching career included stops as an assistant at Oklahoma, Kansas, Texas Tech, Nebraska, California, and Illinois. His bowl games as an assistant were the Sun Bowl in January 1956 with Texas Tech and the Rose Bowl in January 1959 with California. Idaho
<mask> became a head coach at age 37 at Idaho in February 1962. He took over in Moscow for Skip Stahley, who stepped down after eight seasons and remained as athletic director.<mask>' starting annual salary was just under
The 1962 team was 2–6–1, but the following year he led Idaho to its first winning season (5–4) in a quarter century. The tenth and final game in 1963 at Arizona State on November 23 was canceled, following the assassination of President Kennedy. The Vandals won their opener in 1964, but then lost four straight, the latter two were close ones to Oregon and Oregon State. The loss to the Rose Bowl-bound Beavers in Corvallis came by a late third quarter OSU punt return. The Vandals rebounded and the next week won the Battle of the Palouse for the first time in a decade, defeating neighbor Washington State The Cougars were led by first-year head coach Bert Clark, a former Sooner teammate; the Vandals split the final four games to finish at 4–6. While Idaho had been a driving force in the founding of the Big Sky Conference in 1963, it was primarily to alleviate basketball scheduling and the Vandals remained an independent for football through 1964 under <mask>. Only one conference foe was played during the first two Big Sky seasons, a 1963 game with Idaho State that was previously scheduled.Idaho was in the University Division, while the other Big Sky members were in the College Division (which became Division II in 1973) for football. After <mask> left, Idaho began conference play in 1965 under head coach Steve Musseau, <mask>' defensive coordinator. <mask> spent three years on the Palouse at Idaho, with an overall record of . One of his first-year hires at Idaho in 1962 was alumnus Bud Riley then the head coach and athletic director at Lewiston High School, south of Moscow. A former Vandal halfback for Dixie Howell, he coached the Idaho freshman team for <mask> and went with him to OSU in 1965. Riley was a defensive assistant in Corvallis for eight years before moving on to the Canadian Football League in 1973 and became a head coach the following year. His eldest son Mike (b.1953) was the head coach at Oregon State for fourteen seasons and later at Nebraska.Oregon State
<mask> was hired as the head coach at Oregon State in February He replaced the legendary Tommy Prothro, who left after ten seasons in Corvallis for UCLA, just ten days after leading the Beavers in the Rose Bowl. <mask> compiled a record in eleven seasons at OSU. In the Civil War games against the Oregon Ducks, he won his first seven and split the last four, for an overall record of <mask> was nicknamed "The Great Pumpkin" for his bright orange jacket and large physical size, first dubbed by a Spokane sports columnist during the homecoming rout of WSU in Pullman on Halloween weekend in 1966. It was his first game on the Palouse since he left Idaho; his last Palouse game as Vandal head two years earlier was also a win over the Cougars, 28–13. As OSU head coach, <mask> was 8–3 against Washington State and split the first ten games with Washington while headed by former Oklahoma teammate Jim Owens; Oregon State was beaten by the Huskies in Seattle in 1975, Don James' first season at UW and <mask>' last in coaching. He was also against his former team, beating the Idaho Vandals by two in Boise in 1965 and by seven in Corvallis in 1966. 1967
<mask> is best known for his incredible 1967 season in which his team, dubbed the "Giant Killers", went Led by junior quarterback Steve Preece, the Beavers beat #2 Purdue, tied the new #2 UCLA, and then beat #1 USC.But because Oregon State lost to Washington and tied UCLA, USC won the conference title by a half game and earned the berth to the Rose Bowl, where they defeated the Big Ten's Indiana Hoosiers and won the national title. Oregon State finished with a #7 ranking in the final AP Poll. In 1968, the Beavers were ranked sixth in the pre-season and finished fifteenth after a campaign. There was no bowl game for the Beavers in either year, as both the Pac-8 and Big Ten forbade their teams from postseason participation outside of the Rose Bowl until the 1975 season. <mask> expressed an interest in the open position at Oklahoma State University in Stillwater in December and several weeks later, rejected an offer from the University of Pittsburgh, but improved his situation in Corvallis. Although it wasn't apparent at the time, <mask>' tenure at Oregon State crested with the 1968 season. Following two six-win seasons in 1969 and 1970, his teams would only win a total of 13 games in the next five years, the start of 28 straight losing seasons.Later life and family
Following an eighth straight loss to open the 1975 season, <mask> announced his resignation, effective at the end of the season. Days after the final game, he was named athletic director to succeed the retiring Jim Barratt. <mask> retired as AD in the spring of 1985, and continued to serve as a special assistant within the Beaver Athletic Scholarship Fund until health problems forced him to remain at his Corvallis home. He spent nearly four decades with Oregon State athletics. Though he spent only three years at Idaho, he was still held in high regard in Moscow. In 1989, <mask> was invited by new head coach John L. Smith to lead one of the sides in the annual Silver & Gold spring game, opposite former 1970s head coach Ed Troxel. In 1992, his "Giant Killers" team of 1967 was inducted into the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame.In the spring of 2003, <mask> was awarded the Martin Chaves Lifetime Achievement Award at the Fifth Annual Bennys celebration at Oregon State. <mask> married Luella <mask>, and they had one daughter named Jeanna. He died in Corvallis on October 22, 2003, at the age of 79. Head coaching record
References
External links
1924 births
2003 deaths
American football guards
California Golden Bears football coaches
Chicago Cardinals players
Idaho Vandals football coaches
Illinois Fighting Illini football coaches
Kansas Jayhawks football coaches
Nebraska Cornhuskers football coaches
Oklahoma Sooners football coaches
Oklahoma Sooners football players
Oregon State Beavers athletic directors
Oregon State Beavers football coaches
Texas Tech Red Raiders football coaches
United States Marine Corps personnel of World War II
United States Marine Corps non-commissioned officers
Sportspeople from Oklahoma City
Sportspeople from Corvallis, Oregon
Players of American football from Oklahoma
American people of Greek descent | [
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Dee",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros"
] | He was the head coach at the University of Idaho from 1962 to 1964 and the Oregon State University from 1966 to 1975. He was the athletic director at Oregon State after retiring from coaching. Born Demosthenes Konstandies Andrikopoulos in Oklahoma City, he was the second of three sons of a Greek immigrant father. He enlisted in the military at the age of 17 after graduating from Oklahoma City's Central High School in 1942. After four years in the U.S. Marine Corps, he picked up a rifle and spent a month on the island of Iwo Jima. He was present when the Marines raised the flag. Bud Wilkinson was the head coach of the Oklahoma football team from 1946 to 1949.He was selected in the 14th round by the Chicago Cardinals in the 1950 NFL draft. <mask>'s older brother Plato was an All-American at Oklahoma in 1946 and played four years in the NFL. His brother was a ballet dancer. There were stops as an assistant at Oklahoma, Kansas, Texas Tech, Nebraska, California, and Illinois. His bowl games as an assistant were the Sun Bowl in January 1956 with Texas Tech and the Rose Bowl in January 1959 with California. Idaho's head coach was 37 years old when he became a head coach. The athletic director in Moscow stepped down after eight seasons.After leading Idaho to its first winning season in 25 years, <mask>' starting annual salary was less than half of what it was in 1962. Following the assassination of President Kennedy, the tenth and final game at Arizona State was canceled. The Vandals won their opener in 1964, but then lost four straight and were close to Oregon and Oregon State. The loss to the Rose Bowl-bound Beavers was due to a punt return in the third quarter. The Vandals won the Battle of the Palouse for the first time in a decade, defeating neighbor Washington State, and then split the final four games to finish at 4–6. The Vandals remained an independent for football through 1964 despite being a driving force in the founding of the Big Sky Conference. Idaho State was the only conference foe played in the first two Big Sky seasons.The other Big Sky members were in the College Division for football, while Idaho was in the University Division. Idaho began conference play in 1965, under head coach Steve Musseau. <mask> spent three years on the Palouse at Idaho. Bud Riley was the head coach and athletic director at Lewiston High School when he was hired by Idaho in 1962. He was a halfback for the Vandals and a coach for the Idaho freshman team. After eight years as a defensive assistant in Corvallis, Riley became a head coach in the Canadian Football League in 1973. Mike was the head coach at Oregon State for fourteen seasons and later at Nebraska.The legendary Tommy Prothro left Oregon State just ten days after the Rose Bowl to take the same position at UCLA. In eleven seasons at OSU, <mask> compiled a record. In the Civil War games against the Oregon Ducks, he won his first seven and split the last four, for an overall record of <mask> was nicknamed "The Great Pumpkin" for his bright orange jacket and large physical size. It was his first game on the Palouse since he left Idaho and his last Palouse game as Vandal head. The first ten games of Jim Owens' first season as Oregon State's head coach were split between Washington State and Oregon State. He beat the Idaho Vandals by two and seven in 1965, but was against his former team in 1966. The "Giant Killers" of 1967, led by junior quarterback Steve Preece, went on to win four games in a row, including two against USC.USC won the conference title by a half game and earned their way to the Rose Bowl, where they defeated the Big Ten's Indiana Hoosiers and won the national title. Oregon State was ranked seventh in the final AP Poll. The Beavers finished fifteenth in the 1968 season after being ranked sixth in the pre-season. Both the Big Ten and the Pac-8 did not allow their teams to play in a bowl game outside of the Rose Bowl until 1975. In December he expressed an interest in the open position at Oklahoma State University and several weeks later he rejected an offer from the University of Pittsburgh. Although it wasn't obvious at the time, <mask>' tenure at Oregon State ended with the 1968 season. After two six-win seasons in 1969 and 1970, his teams would only win a total of 13 games in the next five years.After an eighth straight loss to open the 1975 season, <mask> announced his resignation, effective at the end of the season. He was named athletic director days after the final game. After retiring as AD in the spring of 1985 he continued to serve as a special assistant to the athletic scholarship fund until health problems forced him to remain at his home. He worked for nearly four decades with Oregon State athletics. He was held in high regard in Moscow despite only three years at Idaho. John L. Smith invited <mask> to lead one of the sides in the annual Silver & Gold spring game. In 1992, his "Giant Killers" team was inducted into the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame.The Martin Chaves Lifetime Achievement Award was presented to <mask> in the spring of 2003 at Oregon State. They had a daughter named Jeanna. On October 22, 2003 he passed away. References External links 1924 births 2003 deaths American football guards California Golden Bears football coaches Chicago Cardinals players Idaho Vandals football coaches Illinois Fighting Illini football coaches Kansas Jayhawks football coaches Nebraska Cornhuskers football coaches Oklahoma Sooners football coaches | [
"Dee",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros",
"Andros"
] |
56508675 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul%20Glewwe | Paul Glewwe | Paul William Glewwe (born April 4, 1958) is an economist and Professor of Applied Economics at the University of Minnesota. His research interests include economic development and growth, the economics of the public sector, and poverty and welfare. He formerly was the Director of the Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy and served as co-chair of the education programme of the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL).
Biography
Paul Glewwe earned a B.A. in economics from the University of Chicago in 1979 as well as a Ph.D. from Stanford University in 1985, the latter with a doctoral thesis analysing labour markets and the distribution of income in Sri Lanka. Already prior to graduation, Glewwe began working as a consultant for the World Bank (1984–85, 86-88), followed by appointments as economist in the World Bank's population and human resources department (1988–93) and as senior economist in its policy research department (1994–99). In parallel, Glewwe worked in various academic positions at Pennsylvania State University, George Washington University and Oxford University. Since 1999, he has worked in the Department of Applied Economics of the University of Minnesota, first as assistant professor (1999-2001), then as associate professor (2001–06), and finally as full professor (since 2006). Moreover, since 2013, Paul Glewwe has held the title of Distinguished McKnight University Professor. In terms of professional service, Glewwe has served on the editorial boards of the World Bank Economic Review (2009-2016), Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy (2008-2019), Journal of African Economies (since 2011), Economics of Education Review (since 2013), and the American Journal of Agricultural Economics (2014-2017). He currently serves as an associate editor of Economic Development and Cultural Change (since 2020). Additionally, he has served as co-chair of the education programme of J-PAL from 2010 to 2014 and as Director of the Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy from 2007 to 2011.
Research
Glewwe's research generally focuses on the economics of education, poverty and inequality in developing countries, and applied econometrics. Overall, Glewwe belongs to the top 2% of most cited economists as ranked by IDEAS/RePEc.
Relationship between health and education
One of Glewwe's main research areas concerns the relationship between health and education. For example, he (with Hanan Jacoby) finds early childhood malnutrition - and not borrowing constraints or the rationing of school places - to be the likely cause of delayed enrollment in primary school in Ghana, and documents (with Jacoby and Elizabeth M. King) how malnutrition among young children in the Philippines impairs their academic achievements by delaying the age at which they enroll into school and causing them to learn more slowly, though not by decreasing their effort exerted at school (in terms of attendance, homework, etc.). Looking into the link between child health and maternal education, Glewwe argues based on evidence from Morocco that mothers' health knowledge, which is generally correlated with (though not necessarily caused by) their schooling, is probably the main pathway how maternal education achieves its strongly positive impact on child health and nutrition in developing countries, which consequently suggests large public health payoffs to female health education in school.
Impact of the quality of the supply of education on learning
Since the early 2000s, Glewwe has used randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in order to investigate the impact of the quality of the supply of education, e.g. in terms of school supplies or the quality of teaching, on learning outcomes. For example, Glewwe finds (with Michael Kremer, Sylvie Moulin, and Eric Zitzewitz) that in Kenya neither the provision of textbooks nor of flipcharts was effective in raising average student scores and that generally only the best students were able to take advantages of the improvement in school supplies. This in turn raises the question of whether the emphasis of many developing countries' (strongly centralized) education systems on top-down improvements to the supply of education may be guided rather by elite bias than by a concern for broad increases in students' learning outcomes. In another RCT, Glewwe (with Michael Kremer and Nauman Ilias) finds that rewarding primary school teachers in Kenya based on students' test scores and penalizing them based on their students not attending the exam leads teachers to increase the number of test preparation sessions (but not teacher attendance or homework assignments), which then increases students' test scores and exam participation, but is ineffective in reducing dropout rates. Earlier on, having found school characteristics in Ghana to be highly correlated with student achievement, e.g. via average grade attainment, Glewwe (with Jacoby) had argued that improvements to school quality, such as repairs of classrooms, may be a cost-effective investment into education in Ghana relative to the provision of more teaching materials and better trained teachers. More recently, Glewwe (with Albert Park and Meng Zhao) found that providing eyeglasses to children in primary school in rural China increases their learning, as measured by test scores, in Math, Chinese and Science.
Returns to schooling, determinants of household vulnerability, and willingness to pay for education
Glewwe's other findings include the following:
That many pre-1990s estimates of rates of returns to schooling are significantly biased because they fail to account for differences in ability and school quality and, even if accurate, may provide poor guidance to education policy compared to rates of return to investments in school quality;
That the vulnerability of households in Peru to welfare decreases during macroeconomic shocks decreases in education and access to foreign transfer networks, increases if households are headed by women or have more children, and is hardly mitigated by Peru's social security programme (with Gillette Hall);
That the willingness to pay for schooling in households in rural Peru is high enough at all income levels to cover the operating costs of new schools in their villages, thus suggesting that increasing school fees to raise revenue for educational improvements in developing countries may be feasible (with Paul Gertler).
Views on priorities for education policy in developing countries
Finally, taking stock of the literature on the supply of education in developing countries, Glewwe (with Michael Kremer) criticizes that, although school enrollment rates have risen rapidly in the developing world between 1960 and 2000, dropout rates remain high and learning outcomes disappointing, and thus argues that the primary policy question should be which policies most effectively improve learning, with RCTs as the preferred tool to conduct that investigation. More recently, Glewwe has emphasized (with Karthik Muralidharan) that educational spending in developing countries could be much more cost effective, as improvements to pedagogy (e.g. remedial classes for children lagging behind) as well as improvements to school governance and teacher accountability tend to be much more cost effective than mere (yet widespread) increases in "standard" school inputs (e.g. more books); by contrast, interventions aimed at increasing the demand for education by raising students' returns to (or decreasing households' costs of) school enrollment and effort are also generally effective in improving learning outcomes, but vary widely in terms of cost effectiveness.
Selected publications
Glewwe, P., Park, A., Zhao, M. (2016) A better vision for development: Eyeglasses and academic performance in rural primary schools in China. Journal of Development Economics, 122(1), pp. 170-182.
Wydick, B., Glewwe, P., Rutledge, L. (2013) Does International Child Sponsorship Work? A Six-Country Study of Impacts on Adult Life Outcomes. Journal of Political Economy, 121(2), pp. 393-436.
Glewwe, P. (2013). Education Policy in Developing Countries. Chicago: University of Chicago Press;
Glewwe, P. (2008). Education in developing countries. In: Durlauf, S.N., Blume, L.E. (eds.). The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics (2nd ed.). London: Palgrave Macmillan.
Agarwal, N., Glewwe, P., Dollar, D. (2004). Economic Growth, Poverty, and Household Welfare in Vietnam. Washington, D.C.: The World Bank.
Glewwe, P. (2002). Schools and Skills in Developing Countries: Education Policies and Socioeconomic Outcomes. Journal of Economic Literature, 40(2), pp. 436-482.
Glewwe, P., Grosh, M. (2000). Designing Household Survey Questionnaires for Developing Countries: Lessons from 15 Years of the Living Standards Development Study. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Glewwe, P. (1999). The Economics of School Quality Investments in Developing Countries: An Empirical Study of Ghana. London: MacMillan Press.
Dollar, D., Glewwe, P., Litvack, J. (1998). Household Welfare and Vietnam's Transition to a Market Economy''. Washington, D.C.: The World Bank.
References
External links
Webpage of Paul Glewwe at the University of Minnesota
1958 births
University of Chicago alumni
Stanford University alumni
University of Minnesota faculty
Labor economists
Education economists
Living people | [
"Paul William Glewwe (born April 4, 1958) is an economist and Professor of Applied Economics at the University of Minnesota.",
"His research interests include economic development and growth, the economics of the public sector, and poverty and welfare.",
"He formerly was the Director of the Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy and served as co-chair of the education programme of the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL).",
"Biography \n\nPaul Glewwe earned a B.A.",
"in economics from the University of Chicago in 1979 as well as a Ph.D. from Stanford University in 1985, the latter with a doctoral thesis analysing labour markets and the distribution of income in Sri Lanka.",
"Already prior to graduation, Glewwe began working as a consultant for the World Bank (1984–85, 86-88), followed by appointments as economist in the World Bank's population and human resources department (1988–93) and as senior economist in its policy research department (1994–99).",
"In parallel, Glewwe worked in various academic positions at Pennsylvania State University, George Washington University and Oxford University.",
"Since 1999, he has worked in the Department of Applied Economics of the University of Minnesota, first as assistant professor (1999-2001), then as associate professor (2001–06), and finally as full professor (since 2006).",
"Moreover, since 2013, Paul Glewwe has held the title of Distinguished McKnight University Professor.",
"In terms of professional service, Glewwe has served on the editorial boards of the World Bank Economic Review (2009-2016), Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy (2008-2019), Journal of African Economies (since 2011), Economics of Education Review (since 2013), and the American Journal of Agricultural Economics (2014-2017).",
"He currently serves as an associate editor of Economic Development and Cultural Change (since 2020).",
"Additionally, he has served as co-chair of the education programme of J-PAL from 2010 to 2014 and as Director of the Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy from 2007 to 2011.",
"Research \n\nGlewwe's research generally focuses on the economics of education, poverty and inequality in developing countries, and applied econometrics.",
"Overall, Glewwe belongs to the top 2% of most cited economists as ranked by IDEAS/RePEc.",
"Relationship between health and education \n\nOne of Glewwe's main research areas concerns the relationship between health and education.",
"For example, he (with Hanan Jacoby) finds early childhood malnutrition - and not borrowing constraints or the rationing of school places - to be the likely cause of delayed enrollment in primary school in Ghana, and documents (with Jacoby and Elizabeth M. King) how malnutrition among young children in the Philippines impairs their academic achievements by delaying the age at which they enroll into school and causing them to learn more slowly, though not by decreasing their effort exerted at school (in terms of attendance, homework, etc.).",
"Looking into the link between child health and maternal education, Glewwe argues based on evidence from Morocco that mothers' health knowledge, which is generally correlated with (though not necessarily caused by) their schooling, is probably the main pathway how maternal education achieves its strongly positive impact on child health and nutrition in developing countries, which consequently suggests large public health payoffs to female health education in school.",
"Impact of the quality of the supply of education on learning \n\nSince the early 2000s, Glewwe has used randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in order to investigate the impact of the quality of the supply of education, e.g.",
"in terms of school supplies or the quality of teaching, on learning outcomes.",
"For example, Glewwe finds (with Michael Kremer, Sylvie Moulin, and Eric Zitzewitz) that in Kenya neither the provision of textbooks nor of flipcharts was effective in raising average student scores and that generally only the best students were able to take advantages of the improvement in school supplies.",
"This in turn raises the question of whether the emphasis of many developing countries' (strongly centralized) education systems on top-down improvements to the supply of education may be guided rather by elite bias than by a concern for broad increases in students' learning outcomes.",
"In another RCT, Glewwe (with Michael Kremer and Nauman Ilias) finds that rewarding primary school teachers in Kenya based on students' test scores and penalizing them based on their students not attending the exam leads teachers to increase the number of test preparation sessions (but not teacher attendance or homework assignments), which then increases students' test scores and exam participation, but is ineffective in reducing dropout rates.",
"Earlier on, having found school characteristics in Ghana to be highly correlated with student achievement, e.g.",
"via average grade attainment, Glewwe (with Jacoby) had argued that improvements to school quality, such as repairs of classrooms, may be a cost-effective investment into education in Ghana relative to the provision of more teaching materials and better trained teachers.",
"More recently, Glewwe (with Albert Park and Meng Zhao) found that providing eyeglasses to children in primary school in rural China increases their learning, as measured by test scores, in Math, Chinese and Science.",
"Returns to schooling, determinants of household vulnerability, and willingness to pay for education \n\nGlewwe's other findings include the following:\n That many pre-1990s estimates of rates of returns to schooling are significantly biased because they fail to account for differences in ability and school quality and, even if accurate, may provide poor guidance to education policy compared to rates of return to investments in school quality;\n That the vulnerability of households in Peru to welfare decreases during macroeconomic shocks decreases in education and access to foreign transfer networks, increases if households are headed by women or have more children, and is hardly mitigated by Peru's social security programme (with Gillette Hall);\n That the willingness to pay for schooling in households in rural Peru is high enough at all income levels to cover the operating costs of new schools in their villages, thus suggesting that increasing school fees to raise revenue for educational improvements in developing countries may be feasible (with Paul Gertler).",
"Views on priorities for education policy in developing countries \n\nFinally, taking stock of the literature on the supply of education in developing countries, Glewwe (with Michael Kremer) criticizes that, although school enrollment rates have risen rapidly in the developing world between 1960 and 2000, dropout rates remain high and learning outcomes disappointing, and thus argues that the primary policy question should be which policies most effectively improve learning, with RCTs as the preferred tool to conduct that investigation.",
"More recently, Glewwe has emphasized (with Karthik Muralidharan) that educational spending in developing countries could be much more cost effective, as improvements to pedagogy (e.g.",
"remedial classes for children lagging behind) as well as improvements to school governance and teacher accountability tend to be much more cost effective than mere (yet widespread) increases in \"standard\" school inputs (e.g.",
"more books); by contrast, interventions aimed at increasing the demand for education by raising students' returns to (or decreasing households' costs of) school enrollment and effort are also generally effective in improving learning outcomes, but vary widely in terms of cost effectiveness.",
"Selected publications \n\n Glewwe, P., Park, A., Zhao, M. (2016) A better vision for development: Eyeglasses and academic performance in rural primary schools in China.",
"Journal of Development Economics, 122(1), pp.",
"170-182.",
"Wydick, B., Glewwe, P., Rutledge, L. (2013) Does International Child Sponsorship Work?",
"A Six-Country Study of Impacts on Adult Life Outcomes.",
"Journal of Political Economy, 121(2), pp.",
"393-436.",
"Glewwe, P. (2013).",
"Education Policy in Developing Countries.",
"Chicago: University of Chicago Press;\n Glewwe, P. (2008).",
"Education in developing countries.",
"In: Durlauf, S.N., Blume, L.E.",
"(eds.).",
"The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics (2nd ed.).",
"London: Palgrave Macmillan.",
"Agarwal, N., Glewwe, P., Dollar, D. (2004).",
"Economic Growth, Poverty, and Household Welfare in Vietnam.",
"Washington, D.C.: The World Bank.",
"Glewwe, P. (2002).",
"Schools and Skills in Developing Countries: Education Policies and Socioeconomic Outcomes.",
"Journal of Economic Literature, 40(2), pp.",
"436-482.",
"Glewwe, P., Grosh, M. (2000).",
"Designing Household Survey Questionnaires for Developing Countries: Lessons from 15 Years of the Living Standards Development Study.",
"Oxford: Oxford University Press.",
"Glewwe, P. (1999).",
"The Economics of School Quality Investments in Developing Countries: An Empirical Study of Ghana.",
"London: MacMillan Press.",
"Dollar, D., Glewwe, P., Litvack, J.",
"(1998).",
"Household Welfare and Vietnam's Transition to a Market Economy''.",
"Washington, D.C.: The World Bank.",
"References\n\nExternal links \n\n Webpage of Paul Glewwe at the University of Minnesota\n\n1958 births\nUniversity of Chicago alumni\nStanford University alumni\nUniversity of Minnesota faculty\nLabor economists\nEducation economists\nLiving people"
] | [
"Paul William Glewwe is an economist and professor at the University of Minnesota.",
"His research interests include economic development and growth, economics of the public sector, and poverty and welfare.",
"He was the co-chair of the education programme of the J-PAL when he was the Director of the Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy.",
"A biography of Paul Glewwe.",
"In 1979 he received an economics degree from the University of Chicago and in 1985 he received a PhD in labour markets and the distribution of income.",
"Glewwe began working for the World Bank as a consultant in 1984 and went on to work as an economist in the World Bank's policy research department in 1994.",
"Pennsylvania State University, George Washington University and Oxford University were where Glewwe worked.",
"Since 1999, he has worked in the Department of Applied Economics of the University of Minnesota, first as assistant professor, then as associate professor, and finally as full professor.",
"Paul Glewwe has held the title of professor at the university.",
"Glewwe has served on the editorial boards of the World Bank Economic Review, Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy, Journal of African Economies, and the American Journal of Agricultural Economics.",
"He is an associate editor of Economic Development and Cultural Change.",
"He was the Director of the Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy from 2007 to 2011.",
"Glewwe's research focuses on the economics of education, poverty and inequality in developing countries.",
"Glewwe is one of the top 2% of most cited economists.",
"One of Glewwe's main research areas is the relationship between health and education.",
"Early childhood malnutrition, and not borrowing constraints or the rationing of school places, is likely to be the cause of delayed school attendance in the Philippines.",
"Maternal education has been shown to have a positive impact on child health and nutrition, and Glewwe believes that mothers' health knowledge, which is correlated with their education, is the main pathway to achieving this.",
"Since the early 2000s, Glewwe has used randomized controlled trials to investigate the impact of the quality of education on learning.",
"The quality of teaching and school supplies are related to learning outcomes.",
"The provision of textbooks and flipcharts was not effective in raising average student scores and only the best students were able to take advantage of the improvement in school according to Glewwe.",
"This raises the question of whether the emphasis of many developing countries' education systems on top-down improvements to the supply of education may be guided by elite bias than by a concern for broad increases in students' learning outcomes.",
"In another RCT, Glewwe found that rewarding primary school teachers based on students' test scores and punishing them based on their students not attending the exam leads teachers to increase the number of test preparation sessions.",
"In the past, I have found school characteristics to be highly correlated with student achievement.",
"Glewwe had argued that improvements to school quality, such as repairs of classrooms, may be a cost-effective investment into education in Ghana relative to the provision of more teaching materials and better trained teachers.",
"Providing eyeglasses to children in primary school in rural China increases their learning, as measured by test scores, according to Glewwe.",
"Many pre-1990s estimates of rates of returns to schooling are significantly biased because they fail to account for differences in ability and school quality, even if accurate.",
"Although school attendance rates have risen rapidly in the developing world between 1960 and 2000, dropout rates remain high.",
"Glewwe has emphasized that educational spending in developing countries could be more cost effective.",
"Improvement to school governance and teacher accountability tend to be more cost effective than increases in \"standard\" school inputs.",
"Interventions aimed at increasing the demand for education by raising students' returns to (or decreasing households' costs of) school are generally effective in improving learning outcomes, but vary widely in terms of cost effectiveness.",
"A better vision for development: Eyeglasses and academic performance in rural primary schools in China.",
"The Journal of Development Economics is a journal.",
"170-182.",
"Is international child work sponsorship possible?",
"There are impacts on adult life outcomes.",
"pp. in the Journal of Political Economy.",
"393-436.",
"P. Glewwe.",
"There is an education policy in developing countries.",
"The University of Chicago Press is in Chicago.",
"There is education in developing countries.",
"In: Durlauf, S.N.",
"The book is called (eds.).",
"The second edition of the New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics.",
"There is a book in London called Palgrave Macmillan.",
"Dollar, D., Agarwal, N., Glewwe, P.",
"Vietnam has economic growth, poverty, and household welfare.",
"The World Bank is in Washington, D.C.",
"P. Glewwe was born in 2002.",
"There are education policies and socio economic outcomes in developing countries.",
"The Journal of Economic Literature has 40 pages.",
"436-482.",
"Grosh, M., and Glewwe, P., were involved in a project.",
"Lessons from 15 Years of the Living Standards Development Study can be found in Designing Household Survey Questionnaires for Developing Countries.",
"Oxford University Press.",
"P. Glewwe.",
"The Economics of School Quality Investments in Developing Countries is an empirical study.",
"MacMillan Press is in London.",
"Dollar, Glewwe, P., and Litvack are related.",
"The year 1998.",
"Vietnam's Transition to a Market Economy and Household Welfare.",
"The World Bank is in Washington, D.C.",
"There are external links to the website of Paul Glewwe at the University of Minnesota."
] | <mask> (born April 4, 1958) is an economist and Professor of Applied Economics at the University of Minnesota. His research interests include economic development and growth, the economics of the public sector, and poverty and welfare. He formerly was the Director of the Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy and served as co-chair of the education programme of the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL). Biography
<mask> earned a B.A. in economics from the University of Chicago in 1979 as well as a Ph.D. from Stanford University in 1985, the latter with a doctoral thesis analysing labour markets and the distribution of income in Sri Lanka. Already prior to graduation, Glewwe began working as a consultant for the World Bank (1984–85, 86-88), followed by appointments as economist in the World Bank's population and human resources department (1988–93) and as senior economist in its policy research department (1994–99). In parallel, Glewwe worked in various academic positions at Pennsylvania State University, George Washington University and Oxford University.Since 1999, he has worked in the Department of Applied Economics of the University of Minnesota, first as assistant professor (1999-2001), then as associate professor (2001–06), and finally as full professor (since 2006). Moreover, since 2013, <mask>we has held the title of Distinguished McKnight University Professor. In terms of professional service, Glewwe has served on the editorial boards of the World Bank Economic Review (2009-2016), Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy (2008-2019), Journal of African Economies (since 2011), Economics of Education Review (since 2013), and the American Journal of Agricultural Economics (2014-2017). He currently serves as an associate editor of Economic Development and Cultural Change (since 2020). Additionally, he has served as co-chair of the education programme of J-PAL from 2010 to 2014 and as Director of the Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy from 2007 to 2011. Research
Glewwe's research generally focuses on the economics of education, poverty and inequality in developing countries, and applied econometrics. Overall, Glewwe belongs to the top 2% of most cited economists as ranked by IDEAS/RePEc.Relationship between health and education
One of Glewwe's main research areas concerns the relationship between health and education. For example, he (with Hanan Jacoby) finds early childhood malnutrition - and not borrowing constraints or the rationing of school places - to be the likely cause of delayed enrollment in primary school in Ghana, and documents (with Jacoby and Elizabeth M. King) how malnutrition among young children in the Philippines impairs their academic achievements by delaying the age at which they enroll into school and causing them to learn more slowly, though not by decreasing their effort exerted at school (in terms of attendance, homework, etc.). Looking into the link between child health and maternal education, Glewwe argues based on evidence from Morocco that mothers' health knowledge, which is generally correlated with (though not necessarily caused by) their schooling, is probably the main pathway how maternal education achieves its strongly positive impact on child health and nutrition in developing countries, which consequently suggests large public health payoffs to female health education in school. Impact of the quality of the supply of education on learning
Since the early 2000s, Glewwe has used randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in order to investigate the impact of the quality of the supply of education, e.g. in terms of school supplies or the quality of teaching, on learning outcomes. For example, Glewwe finds (with Michael Kremer, Sylvie Moulin, and Eric Zitzewitz) that in Kenya neither the provision of textbooks nor of flipcharts was effective in raising average student scores and that generally only the best students were able to take advantages of the improvement in school supplies. This in turn raises the question of whether the emphasis of many developing countries' (strongly centralized) education systems on top-down improvements to the supply of education may be guided rather by elite bias than by a concern for broad increases in students' learning outcomes.In another RCT, Glewwe (with Michael Kremer and Nauman Ilias) finds that rewarding primary school teachers in Kenya based on students' test scores and penalizing them based on their students not attending the exam leads teachers to increase the number of test preparation sessions (but not teacher attendance or homework assignments), which then increases students' test scores and exam participation, but is ineffective in reducing dropout rates. Earlier on, having found school characteristics in Ghana to be highly correlated with student achievement, e.g. via average grade attainment, Glewwe (with Jacoby) had argued that improvements to school quality, such as repairs of classrooms, may be a cost-effective investment into education in Ghana relative to the provision of more teaching materials and better trained teachers. More recently, Glewwe (with Albert Park and Meng Zhao) found that providing eyeglasses to children in primary school in rural China increases their learning, as measured by test scores, in Math, Chinese and Science. Returns to schooling, determinants of household vulnerability, and willingness to pay for education
Glewwe's other findings include the following:
That many pre-1990s estimates of rates of returns to schooling are significantly biased because they fail to account for differences in ability and school quality and, even if accurate, may provide poor guidance to education policy compared to rates of return to investments in school quality;
That the vulnerability of households in Peru to welfare decreases during macroeconomic shocks decreases in education and access to foreign transfer networks, increases if households are headed by women or have more children, and is hardly mitigated by Peru's social security programme (with Gillette Hall);
That the willingness to pay for schooling in households in rural Peru is high enough at all income levels to cover the operating costs of new schools in their villages, thus suggesting that increasing school fees to raise revenue for educational improvements in developing countries may be feasible (with <mask>ertler). Views on priorities for education policy in developing countries
Finally, taking stock of the literature on the supply of education in developing countries, Glewwe (with Michael Kremer) criticizes that, although school enrollment rates have risen rapidly in the developing world between 1960 and 2000, dropout rates remain high and learning outcomes disappointing, and thus argues that the primary policy question should be which policies most effectively improve learning, with RCTs as the preferred tool to conduct that investigation. More recently, Glewwe has emphasized (with Karthik Muralidharan) that educational spending in developing countries could be much more cost effective, as improvements to pedagogy (e.g.remedial classes for children lagging behind) as well as improvements to school governance and teacher accountability tend to be much more cost effective than mere (yet widespread) increases in "standard" school inputs (e.g. more books); by contrast, interventions aimed at increasing the demand for education by raising students' returns to (or decreasing households' costs of) school enrollment and effort are also generally effective in improving learning outcomes, but vary widely in terms of cost effectiveness. Selected publications
<mask>, P., Park, A., Zhao, M. (2016) A better vision for development: Eyeglasses and academic performance in rural primary schools in China. Journal of Development Economics, 122(1), pp. 170-182. Wydick, B., <mask>, P., Rutledge, L. (2013) Does International Child Sponsorship Work? A Six-Country Study of Impacts on Adult Life Outcomes.Journal of Political Economy, 121(2), pp. 393-436. <mask>, P. (2013). Education Policy in Developing Countries. Chicago: University of Chicago Press;
<mask>, P. (2008). Education in developing countries. In: Durlauf, S.N., Blume, L.E.(eds.). The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics (2nd ed.). London: Palgrave Macmillan. Agarwal, N., Glewwe, P., Dollar, D. (2004). Economic Growth, Poverty, and Household Welfare in Vietnam. Washington, D.C.: The World Bank. <mask>, P. (2002).Schools and Skills in Developing Countries: Education Policies and Socioeconomic Outcomes. Journal of Economic Literature, 40(2), pp. 436-482. <mask>, P., Grosh, M. (2000). Designing Household Survey Questionnaires for Developing Countries: Lessons from 15 Years of the Living Standards Development Study. Oxford: Oxford University Press. <mask>, P. (1999).The Economics of School Quality Investments in Developing Countries: An Empirical Study of Ghana. London: MacMillan Press. Dollar, D., <mask>, P., Litvack, J. (1998). Household Welfare and Vietnam's Transition to a Market Economy''. Washington, D.C.: The World Bank. References
External links
Webpage of <mask> at the University of Minnesota
1958 births
University of Chicago alumni
Stanford University alumni
University of Minnesota faculty
Labor economists
Education economists
Living people | [
"Paul William Glewwe",
"Paul Glewwe",
"Paul Glew",
"Paul G",
"Glewwe",
"Glewwe",
"Glewwe",
"Glewwe",
"Glewwe",
"Glewwe",
"Glewwe",
"Glewwe",
"Paul Glewwe"
] | <mask> is an economist and professor at the University of Minnesota. His research interests include economic development and growth, economics of the public sector, and poverty and welfare. He was the co-chair of the education programme of the J-PAL when he was the Director of the Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy. A biography of <mask>we. In 1979 he received an economics degree from the University of Chicago and in 1985 he received a PhD in labour markets and the distribution of income. Glewwe began working for the World Bank as a consultant in 1984 and went on to work as an economist in the World Bank's policy research department in 1994. Pennsylvania State University, George Washington University and Oxford University were where Glewwe worked.Since 1999, he has worked in the Department of Applied Economics of the University of Minnesota, first as assistant professor, then as associate professor, and finally as full professor. <mask> has held the title of professor at the university. Glewwe has served on the editorial boards of the World Bank Economic Review, Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy, Journal of African Economies, and the American Journal of Agricultural Economics. He is an associate editor of Economic Development and Cultural Change. He was the Director of the Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy from 2007 to 2011. Glewwe's research focuses on the economics of education, poverty and inequality in developing countries. Glewwe is one of the top 2% of most cited economists.One of Glewwe's main research areas is the relationship between health and education. Early childhood malnutrition, and not borrowing constraints or the rationing of school places, is likely to be the cause of delayed school attendance in the Philippines. Maternal education has been shown to have a positive impact on child health and nutrition, and Glewwe believes that mothers' health knowledge, which is correlated with their education, is the main pathway to achieving this. Since the early 2000s, Glewwe has used randomized controlled trials to investigate the impact of the quality of education on learning. The quality of teaching and school supplies are related to learning outcomes. The provision of textbooks and flipcharts was not effective in raising average student scores and only the best students were able to take advantage of the improvement in school according to Glewwe. This raises the question of whether the emphasis of many developing countries' education systems on top-down improvements to the supply of education may be guided by elite bias than by a concern for broad increases in students' learning outcomes.In another RCT, Glewwe found that rewarding primary school teachers based on students' test scores and punishing them based on their students not attending the exam leads teachers to increase the number of test preparation sessions. In the past, I have found school characteristics to be highly correlated with student achievement. Glewwe had argued that improvements to school quality, such as repairs of classrooms, may be a cost-effective investment into education in Ghana relative to the provision of more teaching materials and better trained teachers. Providing eyeglasses to children in primary school in rural China increases their learning, as measured by test scores, according to Glewwe. Many pre-1990s estimates of rates of returns to schooling are significantly biased because they fail to account for differences in ability and school quality, even if accurate. Although school attendance rates have risen rapidly in the developing world between 1960 and 2000, dropout rates remain high. Glewwe has emphasized that educational spending in developing countries could be more cost effective.Improvement to school governance and teacher accountability tend to be more cost effective than increases in "standard" school inputs. Interventions aimed at increasing the demand for education by raising students' returns to (or decreasing households' costs of) school are generally effective in improving learning outcomes, but vary widely in terms of cost effectiveness. A better vision for development: Eyeglasses and academic performance in rural primary schools in China. The Journal of Development Economics is a journal. 170-182. Is international child work sponsorship possible? There are impacts on adult life outcomes.pp. in the Journal of Political Economy. 393-436. P. Glewwe. There is an education policy in developing countries. The University of Chicago Press is in Chicago. There is education in developing countries. In: Durlauf, S.N.The book is called (eds.). The second edition of the New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics. There is a book in London called Palgrave Macmillan. Dollar, D., Agarwal, N., Glewwe, P. Vietnam has economic growth, poverty, and household welfare. The World Bank is in Washington, D.C. P. Glewwe was born in 2002.There are education policies and socio economic outcomes in developing countries. The Journal of Economic Literature has 40 pages. 436-482. Grosh, M., and <mask>, P., were involved in a project. Lessons from 15 Years of the Living Standards Development Study can be found in Designing Household Survey Questionnaires for Developing Countries. Oxford University Press. P. Glewwe.The Economics of School Quality Investments in Developing Countries is an empirical study. MacMillan Press is in London. Dollar, Glewwe, P., and Litvack are related. The year 1998. Vietnam's Transition to a Market Economy and Household Welfare. The World Bank is in Washington, D.C. There are external links to the website of <mask> at the University of Minnesota. | [
"Paul William Glewwe",
"Paul Glew",
"Paul Glewwe",
"Glewwe",
"Paul Glewwe"
] |
7421545 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dean%20Lombardi | Dean Lombardi | Dean Lombardi (born March 5, 1958) is an American ice hockey executive with the Philadelphia Flyers. He most recently served as the former president, general manager and alternate governor of the Los Angeles Kings of the National Hockey League (NHL). He previously served as general manager of the San Jose Sharks, a position he held for seven seasons (1996–2003). In 2012, his sixth year as GM for the Kings, the team won its first Stanley Cup. In 2014, he won his second Stanley Cup with the Kings.
Early life
Lombardi grew up in Ludlow, Massachusetts. During the 1974–75 season, as a junior at Ludlow High School, he was an All-Western Massachusetts forward. The next season (1975–76), as a senior, Lombardi was a member of the Wallace Cup champion Springfield Olympics of the New England Junior Hockey League, where he played for top talent developer Gary Dineen. Lombardi then played two more seasons for Dineen and was selected to the All-America Junior hockey team. During his college freshman year, he played hockey at Division 2 power Elmira College before transferring to the University of New Haven, where he was selected the scholar/athlete his senior year, and served as captain his junior and senior years. Lombardi graduated third in his class.
Lombardi later attended law school at Tulane University, graduating with honors and specializing in labor law. He initially became a player's agent under the tutelage of famed agent Art Kaminsky, building a stable of players, including some members of the 1988 United States men's Olympic hockey team. Eventually, Lombardi crossed over into management as assistant general manager to Jack Ferreira with the Minnesota North Stars from 1988 to 1990, then moved with Ferreira to the expansion San Jose Sharks. Lombardi was appointed general manager of the Sharks in 1996. He is the son-in-law of Hockey Hall of Fame winger Bob Pulford, also a longtime NHL general manager and Coach of the Year in 1974–75 (for one of teams Lombardi was general manager of, the Los Angeles Kings).
As general manager
Upon taking over the San Jose Sharks, Lombardi was widely criticized for signing veterans. However, this move proved to be beneficial while stockpiling the team's farm system with homegrown talent. During his tenure as Sharks GM, he drafted Patrick Marleau, Brad Stuart, Scott Hannan, Marco Sturm and Marcel Goc in the first round along with Jonathan Cheechoo, Mark Smith, Ryane Clowe and Christian Ehrhoff in the later rounds.
Lombardi also traded for established veterans, including Owen Nolan, Teemu Selänne, Adam Graves, Vincent Damphousse, Mike Ricci, Kyle McLaren, Mike Vernon, Todd Harvey, Bryan Marchment and Scott Thornton, while developing their prospects slowly. All would become vital in the Sharks success during his tenure. The team would increase their point total for six straight seasons during his guidance, becoming only the second general manager in NHL history to accomplish the feat. Only Hall of Fame general manager Bill Torrey accomplished more consecutive seasons of increased point totals, seven (1972–1979), in his overseeing the dynasty of the New York Islanders into the early 1980s.
Lombardi's employment was terminated late in the 2002–03 NHL season, a season in which many felt the Sharks would go deep in the playoffs, but struggled with a slow start and never recovered. This could be mainly attributed to the lengthy contract hold-out of star goaltender Evgeni Nabokov.
Shortly after his firing, he was hired by the Philadelphia Flyers as a Western Conference scout, a position he held until April 2006, when he was appointed president and general manager of the Los Angeles Kings. He brought along Ferreira as a special advisor. As with the Sharks, Lombardi was a shrewd drafter and developer of talent, drafting the likes of Jonathan Bernier, Trevor Lewis, Alec Martinez, Slava Voynov and his most notable draft pick, Drew Doughty, the number two overall pick in the 2008 NHL Entry Draft. Lombardi also complemented the draft picks with solid veteran signings and trades for Dustin Penner, Mike Richards and Jeff Carter, among others. As he did with the Sharks, Lombardi's Kings saw gradual improvement yearly, culminating with a 101-point season in 2009–10. However, the Kings were eliminated in the first round of the 2010 Stanley Cup playoffs by the Vancouver Canucks. The following season, the Kings won the same number of games (46) and had 98 points, but were again defeated in the first-round, this time by his former team, the San Jose Sharks.
Stanley Cup Champions: 2011–12 and 2013–14
The Kings started the 2011–12 NHL season slowly, going 13–12–4, a record that resulted in Lombardi's firing of head coach Terry Murray. It was a tough move by Lombardi because of his respect for Murray, but a move that he felt had to be made to salvage the season. Lombardi opened himself up to criticism by tapping his former head coach in San Jose, Darryl Sutter. Many believed this was simply a case of recycling a friend and former coach, but Sutter was exactly what the Kings needed to jump-start their season. Murray was retained as a scout. Still, it was battle for the rest of the year for the Kings to qualify for the playoffs, which they did by five points (95–90) over the Calgary Flames for the eighth and final playoff spot in the Western Conference.
That qualification would be the beginning of arguably the greatest and most improbable run in playoff history. The Kings would set several records in their run to the Stanley Cup championship, including being the first eight-seed to win the Stanley Cup, the second team (Calgary Flames) to eliminate the top three seeds in their conference and first eight-seed to do so (Vancouver Canucks, St. Louis Blues, Phoenix Coyotes), the first team to build 3–0 series leads in all four rounds (Canucks, Blues, Coyotes and New Jersey Devils), and winning the most games on the road for a Cup champion, ten, and the most consecutive wins on the road, ten. The Kings never faced an elimination game and only lost one game on the road, which did not happen until Game 5 of the Stanley Cup final in New Jersey, their 11th and final road game.
On June 11, 2012, at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, the Kings won the franchise's first Stanley Cup with a 6–1 victory over the Devils. The Conn Smythe Trophy winner as playoff MVP was goaltender Jonathan Quick, a product of the University of Massachusetts-Amherst of the Hockey East conference. Lombardi was quick to praise Murray for getting the team going in the right direction on the bench, and it was announced the team elected to have a championship ring presented to Murray. He also highly complimented his predecessor Dave Taylor of laying the foundation with keen draft picks, including Anže Kopitar. On June 14, 2012, an estimated 250,000 people came out for the Kings victory parade through downtown Los Angeles. On August 8–9, 2012, Lombardi continued the tradition of every member of the current Stanley Cup champions spending a day with the Stanley Cup by bringing it to his native Ludlow, Massachusetts.
On June 13, 2014, Lombardi's Kings won the Stanley Cup championship for the second time in three seasons. However, in the 2014–15 season, despite finishing with a record of 40–27–15 and 95 points, the Kings failed to qualify for the playoffs.
On April 10, 2017, Lombardi was terminated as Kings GM after failing to qualify for the playoffs in the 2016–17 season. At the time of his dismissal, he was the longest-serving Kings' general manager.
References
1958 births
Living people
American men's ice hockey forwards
Ice hockey people from Massachusetts
Los Angeles Kings executives
Minnesota North Stars executives
National Hockey League executives
National Hockey League general managers
People from Ludlow, Massachusetts
Philadelphia Flyers personnel
Philadelphia Flyers scouts
San Jose Sharks executives
Sportspeople from Holyoke, Massachusetts
Tulane University alumni
University of New Haven alumni
Ice hockey players from Massachusetts | [
"Dean Lombardi (born March 5, 1958) is an American ice hockey executive with the Philadelphia Flyers.",
"He most recently served as the former president, general manager and alternate governor of the Los Angeles Kings of the National Hockey League (NHL).",
"He previously served as general manager of the San Jose Sharks, a position he held for seven seasons (1996–2003).",
"In 2012, his sixth year as GM for the Kings, the team won its first Stanley Cup.",
"In 2014, he won his second Stanley Cup with the Kings.",
"Early life\nLombardi grew up in Ludlow, Massachusetts.",
"During the 1974–75 season, as a junior at Ludlow High School, he was an All-Western Massachusetts forward.",
"The next season (1975–76), as a senior, Lombardi was a member of the Wallace Cup champion Springfield Olympics of the New England Junior Hockey League, where he played for top talent developer Gary Dineen.",
"Lombardi then played two more seasons for Dineen and was selected to the All-America Junior hockey team.",
"During his college freshman year, he played hockey at Division 2 power Elmira College before transferring to the University of New Haven, where he was selected the scholar/athlete his senior year, and served as captain his junior and senior years.",
"Lombardi graduated third in his class.",
"Lombardi later attended law school at Tulane University, graduating with honors and specializing in labor law.",
"He initially became a player's agent under the tutelage of famed agent Art Kaminsky, building a stable of players, including some members of the 1988 United States men's Olympic hockey team.",
"Eventually, Lombardi crossed over into management as assistant general manager to Jack Ferreira with the Minnesota North Stars from 1988 to 1990, then moved with Ferreira to the expansion San Jose Sharks.",
"Lombardi was appointed general manager of the Sharks in 1996.",
"He is the son-in-law of Hockey Hall of Fame winger Bob Pulford, also a longtime NHL general manager and Coach of the Year in 1974–75 (for one of teams Lombardi was general manager of, the Los Angeles Kings).",
"As general manager\nUpon taking over the San Jose Sharks, Lombardi was widely criticized for signing veterans.",
"However, this move proved to be beneficial while stockpiling the team's farm system with homegrown talent.",
"During his tenure as Sharks GM, he drafted Patrick Marleau, Brad Stuart, Scott Hannan, Marco Sturm and Marcel Goc in the first round along with Jonathan Cheechoo, Mark Smith, Ryane Clowe and Christian Ehrhoff in the later rounds.",
"Lombardi also traded for established veterans, including Owen Nolan, Teemu Selänne, Adam Graves, Vincent Damphousse, Mike Ricci, Kyle McLaren, Mike Vernon, Todd Harvey, Bryan Marchment and Scott Thornton, while developing their prospects slowly.",
"All would become vital in the Sharks success during his tenure.",
"The team would increase their point total for six straight seasons during his guidance, becoming only the second general manager in NHL history to accomplish the feat.",
"Only Hall of Fame general manager Bill Torrey accomplished more consecutive seasons of increased point totals, seven (1972–1979), in his overseeing the dynasty of the New York Islanders into the early 1980s.",
"Lombardi's employment was terminated late in the 2002–03 NHL season, a season in which many felt the Sharks would go deep in the playoffs, but struggled with a slow start and never recovered.",
"This could be mainly attributed to the lengthy contract hold-out of star goaltender Evgeni Nabokov.",
"Shortly after his firing, he was hired by the Philadelphia Flyers as a Western Conference scout, a position he held until April 2006, when he was appointed president and general manager of the Los Angeles Kings.",
"He brought along Ferreira as a special advisor.",
"As with the Sharks, Lombardi was a shrewd drafter and developer of talent, drafting the likes of Jonathan Bernier, Trevor Lewis, Alec Martinez, Slava Voynov and his most notable draft pick, Drew Doughty, the number two overall pick in the 2008 NHL Entry Draft.",
"Lombardi also complemented the draft picks with solid veteran signings and trades for Dustin Penner, Mike Richards and Jeff Carter, among others.",
"As he did with the Sharks, Lombardi's Kings saw gradual improvement yearly, culminating with a 101-point season in 2009–10.",
"However, the Kings were eliminated in the first round of the 2010 Stanley Cup playoffs by the Vancouver Canucks.",
"The following season, the Kings won the same number of games (46) and had 98 points, but were again defeated in the first-round, this time by his former team, the San Jose Sharks.",
"Stanley Cup Champions: 2011–12 and 2013–14\nThe Kings started the 2011–12 NHL season slowly, going 13–12–4, a record that resulted in Lombardi's firing of head coach Terry Murray.",
"It was a tough move by Lombardi because of his respect for Murray, but a move that he felt had to be made to salvage the season.",
"Lombardi opened himself up to criticism by tapping his former head coach in San Jose, Darryl Sutter.",
"Many believed this was simply a case of recycling a friend and former coach, but Sutter was exactly what the Kings needed to jump-start their season.",
"Murray was retained as a scout.",
"Still, it was battle for the rest of the year for the Kings to qualify for the playoffs, which they did by five points (95–90) over the Calgary Flames for the eighth and final playoff spot in the Western Conference.",
"That qualification would be the beginning of arguably the greatest and most improbable run in playoff history.",
"The Kings would set several records in their run to the Stanley Cup championship, including being the first eight-seed to win the Stanley Cup, the second team (Calgary Flames) to eliminate the top three seeds in their conference and first eight-seed to do so (Vancouver Canucks, St. Louis Blues, Phoenix Coyotes), the first team to build 3–0 series leads in all four rounds (Canucks, Blues, Coyotes and New Jersey Devils), and winning the most games on the road for a Cup champion, ten, and the most consecutive wins on the road, ten.",
"The Kings never faced an elimination game and only lost one game on the road, which did not happen until Game 5 of the Stanley Cup final in New Jersey, their 11th and final road game.",
"On June 11, 2012, at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, the Kings won the franchise's first Stanley Cup with a 6–1 victory over the Devils.",
"The Conn Smythe Trophy winner as playoff MVP was goaltender Jonathan Quick, a product of the University of Massachusetts-Amherst of the Hockey East conference.",
"Lombardi was quick to praise Murray for getting the team going in the right direction on the bench, and it was announced the team elected to have a championship ring presented to Murray.",
"He also highly complimented his predecessor Dave Taylor of laying the foundation with keen draft picks, including Anže Kopitar.",
"On June 14, 2012, an estimated 250,000 people came out for the Kings victory parade through downtown Los Angeles.",
"On August 8–9, 2012, Lombardi continued the tradition of every member of the current Stanley Cup champions spending a day with the Stanley Cup by bringing it to his native Ludlow, Massachusetts.",
"On June 13, 2014, Lombardi's Kings won the Stanley Cup championship for the second time in three seasons.",
"However, in the 2014–15 season, despite finishing with a record of 40–27–15 and 95 points, the Kings failed to qualify for the playoffs.",
"On April 10, 2017, Lombardi was terminated as Kings GM after failing to qualify for the playoffs in the 2016–17 season.",
"At the time of his dismissal, he was the longest-serving Kings' general manager.",
"References\n\n1958 births\nLiving people\nAmerican men's ice hockey forwards\nIce hockey people from Massachusetts\nLos Angeles Kings executives\nMinnesota North Stars executives\nNational Hockey League executives\nNational Hockey League general managers\nPeople from Ludlow, Massachusetts\nPhiladelphia Flyers personnel\nPhiladelphia Flyers scouts\nSan Jose Sharks executives\nSportspeople from Holyoke, Massachusetts\nTulane University alumni\nUniversity of New Haven alumni\nIce hockey players from Massachusetts"
] | [
"Dean was born on March 5, 1958, and is an American ice hockey executive.",
"He was the former president, general manager and alternate governor of the Los Angeles Kings of the NHL.",
"He was the general manager of the San Jose Sharks for seven seasons.",
"The Kings won the Stanley Cup in 2012 under his leadership.",
"He won his second Stanley Cup with the Kings.",
"Lombardi grew up in Massachusetts.",
"He was an All-Western Massachusetts forward during the 1974–75 season.",
"The next season, as a senior, he was a member of the Wallace Cup champion Springfield Olympics of the New England Junior Hockey League, where he played for top talent developer Gary Dineen.",
"He was selected to the All-America Junior hockey team.",
"He played hockey at Division 2 power Elmira College before moving to the University of New Haven, where he was a captain his junior and senior years.",
"He graduated third in his class.",
"He graduated from law school with honors and specialized in labor law.",
"He initially became a player's agent under the guidance of Art Kaminsky, who helped build a stable of players, including some members of the 1988 United States men's Olympic hockey team.",
"From 1988 to 1990 he was an assistant general manager for the Minnesota North Stars and then moved to the expansion San Jose Sharks.",
"In 1996 he was appointed general manager of the Sharks.",
"He is the son-in-law of Hockey Hall of Fame winger Bob Pulford, who was also an NHL general manager and coach of the year in 1974–75.",
"When he was the general manager of the San Jose Sharks, he was criticized for signing veterans.",
"This move was beneficial because of the team's farm system with local talent.",
"Patrick Marleau, Brad Stuart, Scott Hannan, Marco Sturm, Jonathan Cheechoo, Mark Smith, Ryane Clowe and Christian Ehrhoff were all drafted by him in the first round.",
"Owen Nolan, Teemu Selnne, Adam Graves,Vincent Damphousse, Mike Ricci, Kyle McLaren, Mike Vernon, Todd Harvey, Bryan Marchment and Scott Thornton were traded for established veterans.",
"The success of the Sharks would be dependent on all of them.",
"He was the second general manager in NHL history to increase the team's point total for six straight seasons.",
"The New York Islanders had seven consecutive seasons of increased point totals, the most of any team in the history of the game.",
"The 2002–03 NHL season was a season in which many felt the Sharks would go deep in the playoffs, but they struggled with a slow start and never recovered.",
"This could be due to the lengthy contract hold-out of the star goaltender.",
"He was appointed president and general manager of the Los Angeles Kings in April 2006 after he was fired from his job as a Western Conference scout.",
"He brought along a special advisor.",
"Drew Doughty, the number two overall pick in the 2008 NHL Entry Draft, was drafted by Lombardi, who was a shrewd drafter and developer of talent.",
"The draft picks were complemented by veteran signings and trades.",
"The Kings improved yearly and finished with a 101-point season in 2009.",
"The Kings were eliminated in the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs.",
"The Kings won 46 games and had 98 points, but were defeated in the first-round by his former team, the San Jose Sharks.",
"Terry Murray was fired as head coach of the Kings after the team started the NHL season slowly.",
"It was a difficult move because of his respect for Murray, but he felt he had to make it to save the season.",
"He tapped his former head coach in San Jose to open himself up to criticism.",
"The Kings needed to jump-start their season, but many thought this was just a case of recycling a friend and former coach.",
"Murray was retained as a scout.",
"It was a battle for the rest of the year for the Kings to qualify for the playoffs, which they did by five points over the Flames for the eighth and final playoff spot in the Western Conference.",
"It would be the beginning of the greatest and most unlikely run in playoff history.",
"The Kings were the first eight-seed to win the Stanley Cup and the second team to eliminate the top three seeds in their conference.",
"The only time the Kings lost a game on the road was in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup final in New Jersey.",
"On June 11, 2012 in Los Angeles, the Kings won the Stanley Cup with a 6–1 victory over the New JerseyDevils.",
"Jonathan Quick, a product of the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, was the most valuable player in the playoffs.",
"After praising Murray for getting the team going in the right direction, the team decided to give Murray a championship ring.",
"Dave Taylor was praised by his successor for laying the foundation with draft picks.",
"The Kings victory parade drew an estimated 250,000 people to downtown Los Angeles.",
"Every member of the current Stanley Cup champion spent a day with the Stanley Cup on August 8 and 9, 2012 in his native Massachusetts.",
"The Kings won the Stanley Cup for the second time in three seasons.",
"Despite finishing with a record of 40– 27–15 and 95 points, the Kings failed to qualify for the playoffs.",
"The Kings failed to qualify for the playoffs in the 2016–17 season, leading to the firing of the GM.",
"He was the longest-serving general manager of the Kings.",
"People from Massachusetts include Los Angeles Kings executives and National Hockey League general managers."
] | <mask> (born March 5, 1958) is an American ice hockey executive with the Philadelphia Flyers. He most recently served as the former president, general manager and alternate governor of the Los Angeles Kings of the National Hockey League (NHL). He previously served as general manager of the San Jose Sharks, a position he held for seven seasons (1996–2003). In 2012, his sixth year as GM for the Kings, the team won its first Stanley Cup. In 2014, he won his second Stanley Cup with the Kings. Early life
<mask> grew up in Ludlow, Massachusetts. During the 1974–75 season, as a junior at Ludlow High School, he was an All-Western Massachusetts forward.The next season (1975–76), as a senior, Lombardi was a member of the Wallace Cup champion Springfield Olympics of the New England Junior Hockey League, where he played for top talent developer Gary Dineen. Lombardi then played two more seasons for Dineen and was selected to the All-America Junior hockey team. During his college freshman year, he played hockey at Division 2 power Elmira College before transferring to the University of New Haven, where he was selected the scholar/athlete his senior year, and served as captain his junior and senior years. Lombardi graduated third in his class. <mask> later attended law school at Tulane University, graduating with honors and specializing in labor law. He initially became a player's agent under the tutelage of famed agent Art Kaminsky, building a stable of players, including some members of the 1988 United States men's Olympic hockey team. Eventually, Lombardi crossed over into management as assistant general manager to Jack Ferreira with the Minnesota North Stars from 1988 to 1990, then moved with Ferreira to the expansion San Jose Sharks.Lombardi was appointed general manager of the Sharks in 1996. He is the son-in-law of Hockey Hall of Fame winger Bob Pulford, also a longtime NHL general manager and Coach of the Year in 1974–75 (for one of teams Lombardi was general manager of, the Los Angeles Kings). As general manager
Upon taking over the San Jose Sharks, Lombardi was widely criticized for signing veterans. However, this move proved to be beneficial while stockpiling the team's farm system with homegrown talent. During his tenure as Sharks GM, he drafted Patrick Marleau, Brad Stuart, Scott Hannan, Marco Sturm and Marcel Goc in the first round along with Jonathan Cheechoo, Mark Smith, Ryane Clowe and Christian Ehrhoff in the later rounds. Lombardi also traded for established veterans, including Owen Nolan, Teemu Selänne, Adam Graves, Vincent Damphousse, Mike Ricci, Kyle McLaren, Mike Vernon, Todd Harvey, Bryan Marchment and Scott Thornton, while developing their prospects slowly. All would become vital in the Sharks success during his tenure.The team would increase their point total for six straight seasons during his guidance, becoming only the second general manager in NHL history to accomplish the feat. Only Hall of Fame general manager Bill Torrey accomplished more consecutive seasons of increased point totals, seven (1972–1979), in his overseeing the dynasty of the New York Islanders into the early 1980s. <mask>'s employment was terminated late in the 2002–03 NHL season, a season in which many felt the Sharks would go deep in the playoffs, but struggled with a slow start and never recovered. This could be mainly attributed to the lengthy contract hold-out of star goaltender Evgeni Nabokov. Shortly after his firing, he was hired by the Philadelphia Flyers as a Western Conference scout, a position he held until April 2006, when he was appointed president and general manager of the Los Angeles Kings. He brought along Ferreira as a special advisor. As with the Sharks, Lombardi was a shrewd drafter and developer of talent, drafting the likes of Jonathan Bernier, Trevor Lewis, Alec Martinez, Slava Voynov and his most notable draft pick, Drew Doughty, the number two overall pick in the 2008 NHL Entry Draft.Lombardi also complemented the draft picks with solid veteran signings and trades for Dustin Penner, Mike Richards and Jeff Carter, among others. As he did with the Sharks, <mask>'s Kings saw gradual improvement yearly, culminating with a 101-point season in 2009–10. However, the Kings were eliminated in the first round of the 2010 Stanley Cup playoffs by the Vancouver Canucks. The following season, the Kings won the same number of games (46) and had 98 points, but were again defeated in the first-round, this time by his former team, the San Jose Sharks. Stanley Cup Champions: 2011–12 and 2013–14
The Kings started the 2011–12 NHL season slowly, going 13–12–4, a record that resulted in Lombardi's firing of head coach Terry Murray. It was a tough move by Lombardi because of his respect for Murray, but a move that he felt had to be made to salvage the season. Lombardi opened himself up to criticism by tapping his former head coach in San Jose, Darryl Sutter.Many believed this was simply a case of recycling a friend and former coach, but Sutter was exactly what the Kings needed to jump-start their season. Murray was retained as a scout. Still, it was battle for the rest of the year for the Kings to qualify for the playoffs, which they did by five points (95–90) over the Calgary Flames for the eighth and final playoff spot in the Western Conference. That qualification would be the beginning of arguably the greatest and most improbable run in playoff history. The Kings would set several records in their run to the Stanley Cup championship, including being the first eight-seed to win the Stanley Cup, the second team (Calgary Flames) to eliminate the top three seeds in their conference and first eight-seed to do so (Vancouver Canucks, St. Louis Blues, Phoenix Coyotes), the first team to build 3–0 series leads in all four rounds (Canucks, Blues, Coyotes and New Jersey Devils), and winning the most games on the road for a Cup champion, ten, and the most consecutive wins on the road, ten. The Kings never faced an elimination game and only lost one game on the road, which did not happen until Game 5 of the Stanley Cup final in New Jersey, their 11th and final road game. On June 11, 2012, at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, the Kings won the franchise's first Stanley Cup with a 6–1 victory over the Devils.The Conn Smythe Trophy winner as playoff MVP was goaltender Jonathan Quick, a product of the University of Massachusetts-Amherst of the Hockey East conference. Lombardi was quick to praise Murray for getting the team going in the right direction on the bench, and it was announced the team elected to have a championship ring presented to Murray. He also highly complimented his predecessor Dave Taylor of laying the foundation with keen draft picks, including Anže Kopitar. On June 14, 2012, an estimated 250,000 people came out for the Kings victory parade through downtown Los Angeles. On August 8–9, 2012, Lombardi continued the tradition of every member of the current Stanley Cup champions spending a day with the Stanley Cup by bringing it to his native Ludlow, Massachusetts. On June 13, 2014, <mask>'s Kings won the Stanley Cup championship for the second time in three seasons. However, in the 2014–15 season, despite finishing with a record of 40–27–15 and 95 points, the Kings failed to qualify for the playoffs.On April 10, 2017, <mask> was terminated as Kings GM after failing to qualify for the playoffs in the 2016–17 season. At the time of his dismissal, he was the longest-serving Kings' general manager. References
1958 births
Living people
American men's ice hockey forwards
Ice hockey people from Massachusetts
Los Angeles Kings executives
Minnesota North Stars executives
National Hockey League executives
National Hockey League general managers
People from Ludlow, Massachusetts
Philadelphia Flyers personnel
Philadelphia Flyers scouts
San Jose Sharks executives
Sportspeople from Holyoke, Massachusetts
Tulane University alumni
University of New Haven alumni
Ice hockey players from Massachusetts | [
"Dean Lombardi",
"Lombardi",
"Lombardi",
"Lombardi",
"Lombardi",
"Lombardi",
"Lombardi"
] | <mask> was born on March 5, 1958, and is an American ice hockey executive. He was the former president, general manager and alternate governor of the Los Angeles Kings of the NHL. He was the general manager of the San Jose Sharks for seven seasons. The Kings won the Stanley Cup in 2012 under his leadership. He won his second Stanley Cup with the Kings. <mask> grew up in Massachusetts. He was an All-Western Massachusetts forward during the 1974–75 season.The next season, as a senior, he was a member of the Wallace Cup champion Springfield Olympics of the New England Junior Hockey League, where he played for top talent developer Gary Dineen. He was selected to the All-America Junior hockey team. He played hockey at Division 2 power Elmira College before moving to the University of New Haven, where he was a captain his junior and senior years. He graduated third in his class. He graduated from law school with honors and specialized in labor law. He initially became a player's agent under the guidance of Art Kaminsky, who helped build a stable of players, including some members of the 1988 United States men's Olympic hockey team. From 1988 to 1990 he was an assistant general manager for the Minnesota North Stars and then moved to the expansion San Jose Sharks.In 1996 he was appointed general manager of the Sharks. He is the son-in-law of Hockey Hall of Fame winger Bob Pulford, who was also an NHL general manager and coach of the year in 1974–75. When he was the general manager of the San Jose Sharks, he was criticized for signing veterans. This move was beneficial because of the team's farm system with local talent. Patrick Marleau, Brad Stuart, Scott Hannan, Marco Sturm, Jonathan Cheechoo, Mark Smith, Ryane Clowe and Christian Ehrhoff were all drafted by him in the first round. Owen Nolan, Teemu Selnne, Adam Graves,Vincent Damphousse, Mike Ricci, Kyle McLaren, Mike Vernon, Todd Harvey, Bryan Marchment and Scott Thornton were traded for established veterans. The success of the Sharks would be dependent on all of them.He was the second general manager in NHL history to increase the team's point total for six straight seasons. The New York Islanders had seven consecutive seasons of increased point totals, the most of any team in the history of the game. The 2002–03 NHL season was a season in which many felt the Sharks would go deep in the playoffs, but they struggled with a slow start and never recovered. This could be due to the lengthy contract hold-out of the star goaltender. He was appointed president and general manager of the Los Angeles Kings in April 2006 after he was fired from his job as a Western Conference scout. He brought along a special advisor. Drew Doughty, the number two overall pick in the 2008 NHL Entry Draft, was drafted by <mask>, who was a shrewd drafter and developer of talent.The draft picks were complemented by veteran signings and trades. The Kings improved yearly and finished with a 101-point season in 2009. The Kings were eliminated in the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs. The Kings won 46 games and had 98 points, but were defeated in the first-round by his former team, the San Jose Sharks. Terry Murray was fired as head coach of the Kings after the team started the NHL season slowly. It was a difficult move because of his respect for Murray, but he felt he had to make it to save the season. He tapped his former head coach in San Jose to open himself up to criticism.The Kings needed to jump-start their season, but many thought this was just a case of recycling a friend and former coach. Murray was retained as a scout. It was a battle for the rest of the year for the Kings to qualify for the playoffs, which they did by five points over the Flames for the eighth and final playoff spot in the Western Conference. It would be the beginning of the greatest and most unlikely run in playoff history. The Kings were the first eight-seed to win the Stanley Cup and the second team to eliminate the top three seeds in their conference. The only time the Kings lost a game on the road was in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup final in New Jersey. On June 11, 2012 in Los Angeles, the Kings won the Stanley Cup with a 6–1 victory over the New JerseyDevils.Jonathan Quick, a product of the University of Massachusetts-Amherst, was the most valuable player in the playoffs. After praising Murray for getting the team going in the right direction, the team decided to give Murray a championship ring. Dave Taylor was praised by his successor for laying the foundation with draft picks. The Kings victory parade drew an estimated 250,000 people to downtown Los Angeles. Every member of the current Stanley Cup champion spent a day with the Stanley Cup on August 8 and 9, 2012 in his native Massachusetts. The Kings won the Stanley Cup for the second time in three seasons. Despite finishing with a record of 40– 27–15 and 95 points, the Kings failed to qualify for the playoffs.The Kings failed to qualify for the playoffs in the 2016–17 season, leading to the firing of the GM. He was the longest-serving general manager of the Kings. People from Massachusetts include Los Angeles Kings executives and National Hockey League general managers. | [
"Dean",
"Lombardi",
"Lombardi"
] |
62768821 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William%20J.%20Keep | William J. Keep | William J. Keep (also William John Keep) (June 3, 1842September 30, 1918) was an American mechanical engineer who worked with molten metals in foundries. He mixed aluminum and other elements with iron to come up with new alloys with different characteristics that were used for stoves and heaters. He was known as a consulting engineer to the Michigan Stove Company that was founded by Jeremiah Dwyer.
Early life
Keep was born in Oberlin, Ohio on June 3, 1842. He was son of Theodore John Keep and his wife Mary Ann Thompson. Keep was a genealogist and he traced his paternal line from his earliest American ancestor who came from England, John Keep. John settled at Longmeadow, Massachusetts in 1660. His wife was Sarah Leonard. John and Sarah had a son, Ensign Samuel. His wife was Sarah Colton and they had one child, Samuel. Samuel's wife was Sabrina Cooley and they had one child, John. He and his wife Lydia Hale, were the grandparents of William John Keep.
Keep went to the Oberlin public schools when he grew up. After graduating from high school he first attended Oberlin College for the freshman and sophomore years. He later attended Union College in Schenectady, New York. There he graduated with a degree in civil engineering in 1865. Keep's natural ability was as a mechanic and before entering Union College to learn mechanical engineering he became a machinist at Globe Iron Works in Cleveland.
American Civil War
Keep was a first corporal in the Oberlin company of the Squirrel Hunters under martial law of Union General Lew Wallace. He was in charge of forces to repel an invasion into southern Ohio led by Confederate General Edmund Kirby Smith in September 1862.
Mid life
Keep in 1865 became a foreman at Hubbell & Brothers Stove Works in Buffalo, New York and was there from 1865 to 1868. In 1868 he became superintendent of the stove manufacturing plant of Fuller Warren & Co in Troy, New York. Keep was there for nearly eight years. Keep gave lectures on the steam engine to the senior class at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute during the time he lived at Troy from 1872 to 1877. In 1875 he started manufacturing stoves himself and did that until 1884.
Keep in 1884 moved to Detroit, Michigan. There he became the general superintendent of Michigan Stove Company. He was in this capacity until 1910 when he was promoted to consulting engineer for the company. He continued in this capacity until his death. During the time he worked for the company he caused a major improvement in the way they constructed stoves. Keep in 1872 patented the base burning stove. It had two rows of mica windows, one above the top of the fire-pot and one below. He patented in 1887 the baseburner with a reflector above the fire. That became standard for the stove industry.
Keep innovated a new process of making malleable iron castings using a secret mix of iron ore, aluminum and other elements. Michigan Stove Company used his patented mixes to make their stoves. Keep received many patents during his thirty-five years with the company. He was deeply interested in metallurgical research and wrote articles for the American Institute of Mining Engineers for nearly a decade starting in 1888. He also wrote articles for the ASME starting in 1894 and did that for the rest of his life.
Keep in 1885 figured out the relationship between shrinkage and chemical composition of cast iron in a testing process. He did this through an assessment that was referred to as "Keep's Test." This later was named "Mechanical Analysis" and became the worldwide industrial measure instead of chemical analysis. Keep devised this analysis as a result of thousands of tests, which he described in detail in his 1893 pamphlet he wrote titled Keep's test for cast iron. The pamphlet chronicled his tests and outlined the influence of aluminum, silicon, phosphorus, sulfur, and manganese on cast iron. This was also reported in his paper "Keep's Cooling Curves" that showed shrinkage and strength impact to cast iron mixes of various formulas of these elements. Keep devised and invented many testing machines and methods that were used in the foundry industry.
World's Largest Stove
As the Michigan Stove Company factory superintendent, Keep designed the World's Largest Stove for the 1893 Chicago's World Fair. The vice president of the company George Harrison Barbour came up with the idea of making a giant stove and had woodcarvers construct and carve the mammoth 15 ton replica according to Keep's designs.
Memberships and affiliations
Keep was a Republican. He belonged to the following.
American Association for the Advancement of Science
International Association for Testing and Materials
American Institute of Mining Engineers
Iron and Steel Institute of Great Britain
New England Society of New York
Rensselaer Society of Engineers
ASME for Mechanical Engineers
Sons of the American Revolution
Franklin Institute of Philadelphia
Engineering Society of Detroit
American Foundry Society
Personal
Keep was married to Sarah Frances Henderson in Oberlin on May 22, 1866. They had two children that lived to adulthood. Helen Elizabeth (b. 12/10/1868) who was a Michigan state chairwoman and member National League for Women's Service. Henry (b.7/19/1873) who worked in the engineering field. During World War I he was a lieutenant colonel in charge of construction in France serving as assistant to the chief engineer of the American Expeditionary Forces.
Keep died in a street accident in Detroit on September 30, 1918, aged 76. He was knocked to the pavement in an accident by either a street car or automobile. He died a few hours later.
Works
Cast Iron – A Record of Original Research (1902)
History of Our English Ancestors (1915)
A History of Stove Inventions (1915)
History of Heating Apparatus (1916)
Early American Cooking Stoves (1931)
Footnotes
Sources
Businesspeople from Detroit
1842 births
1918 deaths
People from Oberlin, Ohio
People of Ohio in the American Civil War
Oberlin College alumni
Union College (New York) alumni
Road incident deaths in Michigan
American mechanical engineers
19th-century American businesspeople | [
"William J.",
"Keep (also William John Keep) (June 3, 1842September 30, 1918) was an American mechanical engineer who worked with molten metals in foundries.",
"He mixed aluminum and other elements with iron to come up with new alloys with different characteristics that were used for stoves and heaters.",
"He was known as a consulting engineer to the Michigan Stove Company that was founded by Jeremiah Dwyer.",
"Early life \nKeep was born in Oberlin, Ohio on June 3, 1842.",
"He was son of Theodore John Keep and his wife Mary Ann Thompson.",
"Keep was a genealogist and he traced his paternal line from his earliest American ancestor who came from England, John Keep.",
"John settled at Longmeadow, Massachusetts in 1660.",
"His wife was Sarah Leonard.",
"John and Sarah had a son, Ensign Samuel.",
"His wife was Sarah Colton and they had one child, Samuel.",
"Samuel's wife was Sabrina Cooley and they had one child, John.",
"He and his wife Lydia Hale, were the grandparents of William John Keep.",
"Keep went to the Oberlin public schools when he grew up.",
"After graduating from high school he first attended Oberlin College for the freshman and sophomore years.",
"He later attended Union College in Schenectady, New York.",
"There he graduated with a degree in civil engineering in 1865.",
"Keep's natural ability was as a mechanic and before entering Union College to learn mechanical engineering he became a machinist at Globe Iron Works in Cleveland.",
"American Civil War \nKeep was a first corporal in the Oberlin company of the Squirrel Hunters under martial law of Union General Lew Wallace.",
"He was in charge of forces to repel an invasion into southern Ohio led by Confederate General Edmund Kirby Smith in September 1862.",
"Mid life \nKeep in 1865 became a foreman at Hubbell & Brothers Stove Works in Buffalo, New York and was there from 1865 to 1868.",
"In 1868 he became superintendent of the stove manufacturing plant of Fuller Warren & Co in Troy, New York.",
"Keep was there for nearly eight years.",
"Keep gave lectures on the steam engine to the senior class at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute during the time he lived at Troy from 1872 to 1877.",
"In 1875 he started manufacturing stoves himself and did that until 1884.",
"Keep in 1884 moved to Detroit, Michigan.",
"There he became the general superintendent of Michigan Stove Company.",
"He was in this capacity until 1910 when he was promoted to consulting engineer for the company.",
"He continued in this capacity until his death.",
"During the time he worked for the company he caused a major improvement in the way they constructed stoves.",
"Keep in 1872 patented the base burning stove.",
"It had two rows of mica windows, one above the top of the fire-pot and one below.",
"He patented in 1887 the baseburner with a reflector above the fire.",
"That became standard for the stove industry.",
"Keep innovated a new process of making malleable iron castings using a secret mix of iron ore, aluminum and other elements.",
"Michigan Stove Company used his patented mixes to make their stoves.",
"Keep received many patents during his thirty-five years with the company.",
"He was deeply interested in metallurgical research and wrote articles for the American Institute of Mining Engineers for nearly a decade starting in 1888.",
"He also wrote articles for the ASME starting in 1894 and did that for the rest of his life.",
"Keep in 1885 figured out the relationship between shrinkage and chemical composition of cast iron in a testing process.",
"He did this through an assessment that was referred to as \"Keep's Test.\"",
"This later was named \"Mechanical Analysis\" and became the worldwide industrial measure instead of chemical analysis.",
"Keep devised this analysis as a result of thousands of tests, which he described in detail in his 1893 pamphlet he wrote titled Keep's test for cast iron.",
"The pamphlet chronicled his tests and outlined the influence of aluminum, silicon, phosphorus, sulfur, and manganese on cast iron.",
"This was also reported in his paper \"Keep's Cooling Curves\" that showed shrinkage and strength impact to cast iron mixes of various formulas of these elements.",
"Keep devised and invented many testing machines and methods that were used in the foundry industry.",
"World's Largest Stove\n\nAs the Michigan Stove Company factory superintendent, Keep designed the World's Largest Stove for the 1893 Chicago's World Fair.",
"The vice president of the company George Harrison Barbour came up with the idea of making a giant stove and had woodcarvers construct and carve the mammoth 15 ton replica according to Keep's designs.",
"Memberships and affiliations \nKeep was a Republican.",
"He belonged to the following.",
"American Association for the Advancement of Science \n International Association for Testing and Materials\n American Institute of Mining Engineers \n Iron and Steel Institute of Great Britain\n New England Society of New York\n Rensselaer Society of Engineers\n ASME for Mechanical Engineers\n Sons of the American Revolution\n Franklin Institute of Philadelphia\n Engineering Society of Detroit\n American Foundry Society\n\nPersonal \nKeep was married to Sarah Frances Henderson in Oberlin on May 22, 1866.",
"They had two children that lived to adulthood.",
"Helen Elizabeth (b.",
"12/10/1868) who was a Michigan state chairwoman and member National League for Women's Service.",
"Henry (b.7/19/1873) who worked in the engineering field.",
"During World War I he was a lieutenant colonel in charge of construction in France serving as assistant to the chief engineer of the American Expeditionary Forces.",
"Keep died in a street accident in Detroit on September 30, 1918, aged 76.",
"He was knocked to the pavement in an accident by either a street car or automobile.",
"He died a few hours later.",
"Works \n Cast Iron – A Record of Original Research (1902)\n History of Our English Ancestors (1915)\n A History of Stove Inventions (1915)\n History of Heating Apparatus (1916)\n Early American Cooking Stoves (1931)\n\nFootnotes\n\nSources \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\nBusinesspeople from Detroit\n1842 births\n1918 deaths\nPeople from Oberlin, Ohio\nPeople of Ohio in the American Civil War\nOberlin College alumni\nUnion College (New York) alumni\nRoad incident deaths in Michigan\nAmerican mechanical engineers\n19th-century American businesspeople"
] | [
"William J.",
"William John Keep was an American mechanical engineer who worked with molten metals.",
"He mixed elements with iron to come up with new alloys with different characteristics.",
"He worked for the Michigan Stove Company and was known as a consulting engineer.",
"Keep was born in Ohio on June 3, 1842.",
"Theodore John Keep was the son of Mary Ann Thompson.",
"He traced his paternal line from his earliest American ancestor who came from England, John Keep.",
"John lived in Massachusetts in the 16th century.",
"Sarah Leonard was his wife.",
"John and Sarah had a child.",
"He had a child with his wife, Samuel.",
"Samuel and his wife had a child, John.",
"They were the grandparents of William John Keep.",
"He attended the public schools in Oberlin.",
"He attended Oberlin College for the freshman and sophomore years after graduating high school.",
"He attended Union College in New York.",
"He graduated with a degree in civil engineering.",
"Before entering Union College to study mechanical engineering, Keep was a mechanic at Globe Iron Works in Cleveland.",
"The Squirrel Hunters and American Civil War Keep were both under martial law of the Union General Lew Wallace.",
"The Confederate General Edmund Kirby Smith led an invasion into southern Ohio in September of 1862.",
"Keep worked at the Hubbell & Brothers Stove Works in Buffalo, New York from 1865 to 1868.",
"He was in charge of the stove manufacturing plant in Troy, New York in 1868.",
"Keep was there for a long time.",
"Keep lectured on the steam engine to the senior class at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute when he lived in Troy from 1872 to 1877.",
"He manufactured his own stove until 1884.",
"Detroit, Michigan was the location of Keep in 1884.",
"He was the general superintendent of Michigan Stove Company.",
"He was promoted to consulting engineer in 1910.",
"He continued doing this until his death.",
"He made a huge improvement in the way the company constructed their stoves.",
"The base burning stove was patented in 1872.",
"There were two rows of windows, one above the fire-pot and one below.",
"The base burner was patented in the 19th century.",
"That was standard for the stove industry.",
"A new process of making iron castings using a secret mix of iron Ore, aluminum and other elements was innovated.",
"The Michigan Stove Company used his patented mixes.",
"Keep has been with the company for thirty-five years.",
"He wrote articles for the American Institute of Mining Engineers for nearly a decade because of his interest in metallurgy.",
"He wrote articles for the ASME for the rest of his life.",
"The relationship between shrinkage and chemical composition of cast iron was figured out by Keep in 1885.",
"He used an assessment called \"Keep's Test\" to do this.",
"\"Mechanical Analysis\" became the worldwide industrial measure instead of chemical analysis.",
"In 1893, Keep wrote a pamphlet titled Keep's test for cast iron, in which he described thousands of tests that resulted in this analysis.",
"His tests showed the influence of several metals on cast iron.",
"This was reported in his paper \" Keep's Cooling Curves\" that showed the impact of the elements on cast iron mixes.",
"Many testing machines and methods were invented by Keep.",
"Keep designed the world's largest stove for the 1893 Chicago's World Fair.",
"George Harrison Barbour, the vice president of the company, came up with the idea of making a giant stove and had woodcarvers build and carve a 15 ton replica according to Keep's designs.",
"Keep was a Republican.",
"He was a member of the following.",
"The American Institute of Mining Engineers, Iron and Steel Institute of Great Britain, New England Society of New York, and the Franklin Institute of Philadelphia Engineering Society are all related to the American Revolution.",
"There were two children that lived to adulthood.",
"Helen Elizabeth was born.",
"The Michigan state chairwoman was a member of the National League for Women's Service.",
"Henry worked in the engineering field.",
"He was a lieutenant colonel in charge of construction in France during World War I.",
"Keep died in a street accident in Detroit in 1918 at the age of 76.",
"He was knocked to the pavement by a car.",
"He died a few hours later.",
"The History of Our English Ancestors (1915) and A History of Stove Inventions (1915) are related to Works Cast Iron."
] | <mask><mask> (also <mask>) (June 3, 1842September 30, 1918) was an American mechanical engineer who worked with molten metals in foundries. He mixed aluminum and other elements with iron to come up with new alloys with different characteristics that were used for stoves and heaters. He was known as a consulting engineer to the Michigan Stove Company that was founded by <mask>. Early life
<mask> was born in Oberlin, Ohio on June 3, 1842. He was son of <mask> and his wife Mary Ann Thompson. <mask> was a genealogist and he traced his paternal line from his earliest American ancestor who came from England, <mask>.<mask> settled at Longmeadow, Massachusetts in 1660. His wife was Sarah Leonard. <mask> and Sarah had a son, Ensign Samuel. His wife was Sarah Colton and they had one child, Samuel. Samuel's wife was Sabrina Cooley and they had one child, <mask>. He and his wife Lydia Hale, were the grandparents of <mask> <mask>. <mask> went to the Oberlin public schools when he grew up.After graduating from high school he first attended Oberlin College for the freshman and sophomore years. He later attended Union College in Schenectady, New York. There he graduated with a degree in civil engineering in 1865. <mask>'s natural ability was as a mechanic and before entering Union College to learn mechanical engineering he became a machinist at Globe Iron Works in Cleveland. American Civil War
<mask> was a first corporal in the Oberlin company of the Squirrel Hunters under martial law of Union General Lew Wallace. He was in charge of forces to repel an invasion into southern Ohio led by Confederate General Edmund Kirby Smith in September 1862. Mid life
<mask> in 1865 became a foreman at Hubbell & Brothers Stove Works in Buffalo, New York and was there from 1865 to 1868.In 1868 he became superintendent of the stove manufacturing plant of Fuller Warren & Co in Troy, New York. <mask> was there for nearly eight years. <mask> gave lectures on the steam engine to the senior class at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute during the time he lived at Troy from 1872 to 1877. In 1875 he started manufacturing stoves himself and did that until 1884. <mask> in 1884 moved to Detroit, Michigan. There he became the general superintendent of Michigan Stove Company. He was in this capacity until 1910 when he was promoted to consulting engineer for the company.He continued in this capacity until his death. During the time he worked for the company he caused a major improvement in the way they constructed stoves. <mask> in 1872 patented the base burning stove. It had two rows of mica windows, one above the top of the fire-pot and one below. He patented in 1887 the baseburner with a reflector above the fire. That became standard for the stove industry. <mask> innovated a new process of making malleable iron castings using a secret mix of iron ore, aluminum and other elements.Michigan Stove Company used his patented mixes to make their stoves. <mask> received many patents during his thirty-five years with the company. He was deeply interested in metallurgical research and wrote articles for the American Institute of Mining Engineers for nearly a decade starting in 1888. He also wrote articles for the ASME starting in 1894 and did that for the rest of his life. <mask> in 1885 figured out the relationship between shrinkage and chemical composition of cast iron in a testing process. He did this through an assessment that was referred to as "Keep's Test." This later was named "Mechanical Analysis" and became the worldwide industrial measure instead of chemical analysis.<mask> devised this analysis as a result of thousands of tests, which he described in detail in his 1893 pamphlet he wrote titled <mask>'s test for cast iron. The pamphlet chronicled his tests and outlined the influence of aluminum, silicon, phosphorus, sulfur, and manganese on cast iron. This was also reported in his paper "Keep's Cooling Curves" that showed shrinkage and strength impact to cast iron mixes of various formulas of these elements. <mask> devised and invented many testing machines and methods that were used in the foundry industry. World's Largest Stove
As the Michigan Stove Company factory superintendent, <mask> designed the World's Largest Stove for the 1893 Chicago's World Fair. The vice president of the company George Harrison Barbour came up with the idea of making a giant stove and had woodcarvers construct and carve the mammoth 15 ton replica according to <mask>'s designs. Memberships and affiliations
<mask> was a Republican.He belonged to the following. American Association for the Advancement of Science
International Association for Testing and Materials
American Institute of Mining Engineers
Iron and Steel Institute of Great Britain
New England Society of New York
Rensselaer Society of Engineers
ASME for Mechanical Engineers
Sons of the American Revolution
Franklin Institute of Philadelphia
Engineering Society of Detroit
American Foundry Society
Personal
Keep was married to Sarah Frances Henderson in Oberlin on May 22, 1866. They had two children that lived to adulthood. Helen Elizabeth (b. 12/10/1868) who was a Michigan state chairwoman and member National League for Women's Service. Henry (b.7/19/1873) who worked in the engineering field. During World War I he was a lieutenant colonel in charge of construction in France serving as assistant to the chief engineer of the American Expeditionary Forces.<mask> died in a street accident in Detroit on September 30, 1918, aged 76. He was knocked to the pavement in an accident by either a street car or automobile. He died a few hours later. Works
Cast Iron – A Record of Original Research (1902)
History of Our English Ancestors (1915)
A History of Stove Inventions (1915)
History of Heating Apparatus (1916)
Early American Cooking Stoves (1931)
Footnotes
Sources
Businesspeople from Detroit
1842 births
1918 deaths
People from Oberlin, Ohio
People of Ohio in the American Civil War
Oberlin College alumni
Union College (New York) alumni
Road incident deaths in Michigan
American mechanical engineers
19th-century American businesspeople | [
"William J",
". Keep",
"William John Keep",
"Jeremiah Dwyer",
"Keep",
"Theodore John Keep",
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"John",
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"William John",
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"Keep",
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"Keep",
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"Keep",
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"Keep"
] | <mask><mask> was an American mechanical engineer who worked with molten metals. He mixed elements with iron to come up with new alloys with different characteristics. He worked for the Michigan Stove Company and was known as a consulting engineer<mask> was born in Ohio on June 3, 1842. <mask> was the son of Mary Ann Thompson. He traced his paternal line from his earliest American ancestor who came from England, <mask>.<mask> lived in Massachusetts in the 16th century. Sarah Leonard was his wife. <mask> and Sarah had a child. He had a child with his wife, Samuel. Samuel and his wife had a child, <mask>. They were the grandparents of <mask> <mask>. He attended the public schools in Oberlin.He attended Oberlin College for the freshman and sophomore years after graduating high school. He attended Union College in New York. He graduated with a degree in civil engineering. Before entering Union College to study mechanical engineering, <mask> was a mechanic at Globe Iron Works in Cleveland. The Squirrel Hunters and American Civil War Keep were both under martial law of the Union General Lew Wallace. The Confederate General Edmund Kirby Smith led an invasion into southern Ohio in September of 1862. <mask> worked at the Hubbell & Brothers Stove Works in Buffalo, New York from 1865 to 1868.He was in charge of the stove manufacturing plant in Troy, New York in 1868. <mask> was there for a long time. <mask> lectured on the steam engine to the senior class at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute when he lived in Troy from 1872 to 1877. He manufactured his own stove until 1884. Detroit, Michigan was the location of <mask> in 1884. He was the general superintendent of Michigan Stove Company. He was promoted to consulting engineer in 1910.He continued doing this until his death. He made a huge improvement in the way the company constructed their stoves. The base burning stove was patented in 1872. There were two rows of windows, one above the fire-pot and one below. The base burner was patented in the 19th century. That was standard for the stove industry. A new process of making iron castings using a secret mix of iron Ore, aluminum and other elements was innovated.The Michigan Stove Company used his patented mixes. <mask> has been with the company for thirty-five years. He wrote articles for the American Institute of Mining Engineers for nearly a decade because of his interest in metallurgy. He wrote articles for the ASME for the rest of his life. The relationship between shrinkage and chemical composition of cast iron was figured out by <mask> in 1885. He used an assessment called "Keep's Test" to do this. "Mechanical Analysis" became the worldwide industrial measure instead of chemical analysis.In 1893, <mask> wrote a pamphlet titled <mask>'s test for cast iron, in which he described thousands of tests that resulted in this analysis. His tests showed the influence of several metals on cast iron. This was reported in his paper " Keep's Cooling Curves" that showed the impact of the elements on cast iron mixes. Many testing machines and methods were invented by <mask>. <mask> designed the world's largest stove for the 1893 Chicago's World Fair. George Harrison Barbour, the vice president of the company, came up with the idea of making a giant stove and had woodcarvers build and carve a 15 ton replica according to <mask>'s designs. <mask> was a Republican.He was a member of the following. The American Institute of Mining Engineers, Iron and Steel Institute of Great Britain, New England Society of New York, and the Franklin Institute of Philadelphia Engineering Society are all related to the American Revolution. There were two children that lived to adulthood. Helen Elizabeth was born. The Michigan state chairwoman was a member of the National League for Women's Service. Henry worked in the engineering field. He was a lieutenant colonel in charge of construction in France during World War I.<mask> died in a street accident in Detroit in 1918 at the age of 76. He was knocked to the pavement by a car. He died a few hours later. The History of Our English Ancestors (1915) and A History of Stove Inventions (1915) are related to Works Cast Iron. | [
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9192660 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jukka%20Tiensuu | Jukka Tiensuu | Jukka Santeri Tiensuu (born 30 August 1948) is a Finnish contemporary classical composer, harpsichordist, pianist and conductor.
Career
Tiensuu was born in Helsinki. After extensive musical studies (piano, harpsichord, conducting, composing, historically informed performance, electroacoustic and computer music a.o.t.) at the Sibelius Academy, Helsinki (1967–1972), the Juilliard School, New York (1972–1973), Hochschule für Musik Freiburg (1974–1976), IRCAM, Paris (1978–1982) and other institutes Jukka Tiensuu toured three continents giving numerous concerts with a wide repertoire ranging from the Renaissance to the latest avant-garde and performing both classical and free improvisations. He has received numerous prizes for his compositional work as well as for his recordings and performances. In 2020, he won the Wihuri Sibelius Prize. According to the jury report his "compositions emanate a deep spirituality, and his unwavering adherence to artistic goals is impressive".
Along with over a hundred works in the traditional instrumental, vocal and orchestral fields – in various styles, often microtonal and with electronic or computer music parts – Tiensuu's compositional output also includes many curiosities such as works for Chinese orchestra, accordion ensemble, clarinet choir, instrumental theatre, Baroque orchestra, jazz orchestra, kantele, sheng and works for any ensemble. Most of his works have remained in the repertoire and are available on disc.
His compositions have been premiered by major orchestras and ensembles in three continents by conductors such as Susanna Mälkki, Ernest Bour, Sakari Oramo, Jukka-Pekka Saraste, Lorraine Vaillancourt, Diego Masson, Ilan Volkov, Leif Segerstam, Jacek Kaspszyk, John Storgårds, Hannu Lintu, Dima Slobodeniuk, Yan Huichang, Juha Kangas, Jacques Mercier, Stefan Asbury, among others.
In the late 70's, as the president of the ISCM Finnish Section, Tiensuu started the first ever regular contemporary music concert series in Helsinki. He then became a founder and the first artistic director of Helsinki Biennale (now Musica nova Helsinki) as well as the founder and a long-time artistic director of Time of Music contemporary music festival and summer academy in Viitasaari. His other activities include teaching, writing for books and magazines and making evocative radio programs on both baroque music and on music of our time. According to Finnish Music Quarterly (3/2007) Jukka Tiensuu's influence on the contemporary Finnish music scene is virtually beyond compare.
Awards (selection)
1973 Koussevitzky Award
1978 Léonie Sonning Talent Prize
1979 Gaudeamus International Interpreters Award, 2nd prize (as pianist)
1987 Record of the Year "The Fantastic Harpsichord" (Finlandia FACD 357)
1988 International Rostrum of Composers Winner/Selected work (Tokko)
1996 Erik Bergman Prize
1999 Janne Award (Best solo album) for "The Frivolous Harpsichord"
2003 First prize for oddjob (given by the audience) at Hultgren Solo Cello Works Biennial
2004 First prize for Lots in the Aliénor Awards composition competition
2004 Teosto Prize for the most original and innovative work in 2004 (Umori)
2006 Emma Award (Best Classical Album) for "Minds and Moods" (Alba Records ABCD 224)
2008 Emma Award (Best Classical Album) for "Gamba nova" (Musica ambigua on Alba Records ABCD 259)
2008 Record of the year for "nemo, Puro, Spiriti" (Alba Records ABCD 258)
2008 Pizzicato magazine "Supersonic Award" and Süddeutsche Zeitung "Best Record" (Erz on Hänssler Classic)
2010 Emma Award (Best Classical Album) "Tiensuu Plus" (Alba Records ABCD 287)
2012 Finnish State Prize
2015 Record of the year (Rack on Alba Records ABCD 383)
2015 Pro Musica award
2019 Coup de cœur des Jeunes Mélomanes (Fondation Prince Pierre de Monaco) for Teoton
2020 Wihuri Sibelius Prize
Discography
Compositions and performances.
Works (selection)
Tiensuu's works are available from his home page www.tiensuu.fi (downloadable) and Musicfinland.fi (printed sheet music)
1972 Cadenza (on one note) for flute
1972 Ouverture for flute and harpsichord
1974 Four Etudes for flute
1974 preLUDI, LUDI and postLUDI for guitar
1975 Aspro for clarinet, trombone, cello and piano
1975 Rubato for any ensemble of melody instruments
1976 Prélude non-mesuré for piano
1977 Sinistro for accordion and guitar
1977 Mxpzkl for orchestra
1978–79 Yang for two ensembles
1979 Narcissus for oboe and tape
1980 Tombeau de Beethoven for oboe or clarinet, cello, piano, and sampler or tape
1980 Passage for soprano voice, ensemble and live-electronics
1980 M concerto for microtonally tuned harpsichord, percussion and string orchestra
1981 /L for piano 4-hands and optional live-electronics
1982 P=Pinocchio? for soprano voice, ensemble and computer
1984 Fantango for any keyboard instrument
1985 Tango lunaire for oboe or flute, clarinet, violin, cello and any keyboard instrument
1985 mutta for three accordions
1987 Tokko for male choir and tape
1988 Manaus for kantele
1989 Puro concerto for clarinet and orchestra
1990 Grround for piano
1990 Tombeau de Mozart for clarinet, violin and piano
1990 Arsenic and Old Lace for microtonally tuned harpsichord and string quartet
1993 Sound of Life radiophonic piece
1993 Halo a symphony for orchestra in three parts
1994 Plus V concerto for accordion and string orchestra
1994 Ai for 6-track tape
1995 Vento for clarinet choir
1995 oddjob for violin or viola or cello and live electronics
1995–98 Alma: I Himo, II Lumo, III Soma for orchestra and sampler
1996 Aion for two accordions
1996 Fra Tango for three accordions
1997 Padrigal for male choir
1997 nemo for ensemble and electronics
1997 Beat for clarinet, cello and piano
1998 Drang for guitar
1998 Musica ambigua for baroque ensemble (recorder, violin, viol, harpsichord)
1999 Asteletsa for walking bassoonist or bass clarinetist
1999 Mood stereophonic music for orchestra
2000 Ember concertino for microtonal flute and ensemble
2000 Koi for orchestra
2000 Etudes: 1. train 2. drain 3, grain for harpsichord
2000 Mind concerto for piano and orchestra
2001 Tri for three pianos
2002 Zolo for accordion
2003 Lots for baroque ensemble (recorder or traverso flute, violin, viol or cello, harpsichord)
2004 Umori for jazz orchestra (Big band)
2005 Spiriti concerto for accordion and orchestra
2005 Aim concerto for guitar and orchestra
2005 Balzo for cello
2006 Ote for cello and contrabass
2006 Tanzikone for recorder, trombone and cello
2007 Erz 14 companion pieces for J. S. Bach's Goldberg Variations (for accordion)
2007 Missa concerto for clarinet and orchestra
2007 Vie concerto for orchestra
2007 Hei for four melody instruments (tribute to Paavo Heininen)
2008 False Memories I-III Morphoses for orchestra
2008 Sun Games for orchestra (tribute to Magnus Lindberg)
2008 Doch – Apotheose von Papa Haydn for string quartet
2008 Ikisyyt for ensemble
2008 Rack for string quartet
2009 Blow/Blau fanfares for three wind instrument trios
2010 Nous for clarinet, violin, viola, cello and piano
2010 bLeuelein for cello (tribute to Anssi Karttunen)
2011 Bleu-El for contrabass
2011 Sulci for string orchestra
2011 Egregore microtonal music for kantele, guitar, accordion and piano
2011 Brandi a 2nd movement for J. S. Bach's 3rd Brandenburg concerto
2011 Kvagmaa for two string quartets tuned a quarter-tone apart
2012 Voice Verser for soprano voice and orchestra
2012 Hou concerto for violin and ensemble
2012 Mora for tenor voice and baroque or small orchestra
2012 Armotta for viola, guitar and cello
2012 Kalaasi a theatrical piece for flute, clarinet, trombone and contrabass (tribute to Kaija Saariaho)
2013 Egeiro for piano left hand
2014 Hehkuu stereophonic music for sheng and ensemble
2014 Oire concerto for cello and orchestra
2015 Anomal Dances concerto for quarter-tone accordion and orchestra
2015 Ihmix for Chinese orchestra
2015 Kuuhiomo for any ensemble of melody instruments
2015 Teoton concerto for sheng and orchestra
2016 Tarinaoopperabaletti concerto for electric cello and ensemble
2016 Daydreams for guitar and electronics
2017 Sinfoniaviis for orchestra
2017 Suuna concerto for trombone and orchestra
2017 Appo concerto for recorder and orchestra
2017 Innuo for baroque orchestra
2018 Collateral three solos as string trio
2018 Tuleks a fanfare for ensemble
External links
Homepage of the composer
Nieminen, Risto. Notes from a borderland: The composer Jukka Tiensuu
Music Finland's page Includes Tiensuu's list of works, biographical information, articles, audio clips and PDF scores
Finnish Broadcasting Company. Includes a recording of Jukka Tiensuus Aim for guitar and orchestra
Sävellyspaja Composition Masterclass & Workshop
1948 births
20th-century classical composers
21st-century classical composers
21st-century conductors (music)
21st-century male musicians
21st-century pianists
Finnish classical composers
Finnish conductors (music)
Finnish harpsichordists
Finnish male composers
Finnish pianists
International Rostrum of Composers prize-winners
Living people
Musicians from Helsinki
20th-century male musicians | [
"Jukka Santeri Tiensuu (born 30 August 1948) is a Finnish contemporary classical composer, harpsichordist, pianist and conductor.",
"Career\nTiensuu was born in Helsinki.",
"After extensive musical studies (piano, harpsichord, conducting, composing, historically informed performance, electroacoustic and computer music a.o.t.)",
"at the Sibelius Academy, Helsinki (1967–1972), the Juilliard School, New York (1972–1973), Hochschule für Musik Freiburg (1974–1976), IRCAM, Paris (1978–1982) and other institutes Jukka Tiensuu toured three continents giving numerous concerts with a wide repertoire ranging from the Renaissance to the latest avant-garde and performing both classical and free improvisations.",
"He has received numerous prizes for his compositional work as well as for his recordings and performances.",
"In 2020, he won the Wihuri Sibelius Prize.",
"According to the jury report his \"compositions emanate a deep spirituality, and his unwavering adherence to artistic goals is impressive\".",
"Along with over a hundred works in the traditional instrumental, vocal and orchestral fields – in various styles, often microtonal and with electronic or computer music parts – Tiensuu's compositional output also includes many curiosities such as works for Chinese orchestra, accordion ensemble, clarinet choir, instrumental theatre, Baroque orchestra, jazz orchestra, kantele, sheng and works for any ensemble.",
"Most of his works have remained in the repertoire and are available on disc.",
"His compositions have been premiered by major orchestras and ensembles in three continents by conductors such as Susanna Mälkki, Ernest Bour, Sakari Oramo, Jukka-Pekka Saraste, Lorraine Vaillancourt, Diego Masson, Ilan Volkov, Leif Segerstam, Jacek Kaspszyk, John Storgårds, Hannu Lintu, Dima Slobodeniuk, Yan Huichang, Juha Kangas, Jacques Mercier, Stefan Asbury, among others.",
"In the late 70's, as the president of the ISCM Finnish Section, Tiensuu started the first ever regular contemporary music concert series in Helsinki.",
"He then became a founder and the first artistic director of Helsinki Biennale (now Musica nova Helsinki) as well as the founder and a long-time artistic director of Time of Music contemporary music festival and summer academy in Viitasaari.",
"His other activities include teaching, writing for books and magazines and making evocative radio programs on both baroque music and on music of our time.",
"According to Finnish Music Quarterly (3/2007) Jukka Tiensuu's influence on the contemporary Finnish music scene is virtually beyond compare.",
"Works (selection)\nTiensuu's works are available from his home page www.tiensuu.fi (downloadable) and Musicfinland.fi (printed sheet music)\n\n 1972\tCadenza (on one note) for flute\n 1972\tOuverture for flute and harpsichord\n 1974\tFour Etudes for flute\n 1974\tpreLUDI, LUDI and postLUDI for guitar\n 1975\tAspro for clarinet, trombone, cello and piano\n 1975\tRubato for any ensemble of melody instruments\n 1976\tPrélude non-mesuré for piano\n 1977\tSinistro for accordion and guitar\n 1977\tMxpzkl for orchestra\n 1978–79\tYang for two ensembles\n 1979\tNarcissus for oboe and tape\n 1980\tTombeau de Beethoven for oboe or clarinet, cello, piano, and sampler or tape\n 1980\tPassage for soprano voice, ensemble and live-electronics\n 1980\tM concerto for microtonally tuned harpsichord, percussion and string orchestra\n 1981\t/L for piano 4-hands and optional live-electronics\n 1982\tP=Pinocchio?",
"Notes from a borderland: The composer Jukka Tiensuu\nMusic Finland's page Includes Tiensuu's list of works, biographical information, articles, audio clips and PDF scores\nFinnish Broadcasting Company.",
"Includes a recording of Jukka Tiensuus Aim for guitar and orchestra\nSävellyspaja Composition Masterclass & Workshop\n\n1948 births\n20th-century classical composers\n21st-century classical composers\n21st-century conductors (music)\n21st-century male musicians\n21st-century pianists\nFinnish classical composers\nFinnish conductors (music)\nFinnish harpsichordists\nFinnish male composers\nFinnish pianists\nInternational Rostrum of Composers prize-winners\nLiving people\nMusicians from Helsinki\n20th-century male musicians"
] | [
"Jukka Santeri Tiensuu was born in 1948 and is a contemporary classical composer.",
"Tiensuu was born in Helsinki.",
"After extensive musical studies, including piano, conducting, compose, historically informed performance, and computer music a.o.t.",
"Jukka Tiensuu toured three continents giving numerous concerts with a wide range of instruments.",
"He has received many prizes for his work.",
"He won the Sibelius Prize in 2020.",
"His compositions have a deep spirituality and his adherence to artistic goals is impressive according to the jury report.",
"Along with over a hundred works in the traditional instrumental, vocal and orchestral fields, Tiensuu's output also includes many curiosities such as works for Chinese orchestra, accordion ensemble, clarinet choir, instrumental theatre and Baroque.",
"Most of his works are available on disc.",
"His compositions have been performed by major orchestras and ensembles in three continents.",
"Tiensuu started the first ever regular contemporary music concert series in Helsinki in the late 70's.",
"He was the founder and the first artistic director of the Helsinki Biennale, as well as the founder and a long-time artistic director of the Time of Music contemporary music festival.",
"He makes evocative radio programs on both baroque music and music of our time, as well as teaching and writing for books and magazines.",
"Jukka Tiensuu's influence on the contemporary Finns music scene is beyond compare.",
"Tiensuu's works can be downloaded and printed from his home page www.tiensuu.fi.",
"The page includes Tiensuu's list of works, biographical information, articles, audio clips and PDF scores.",
"A recording of Jukka Tiensuus Aim for guitar and orchestra is included."
] | <mask> (born 30 August 1948) is a Finnish contemporary classical composer, harpsichordist, pianist and conductor. Career
Tiensuu was born in Helsinki. After extensive musical studies (piano, harpsichord, conducting, composing, historically informed performance, electroacoustic and computer music a.o.t.) at the Sibelius Academy, Helsinki (1967–1972), the Juilliard School, New York (1972–1973), Hochschule für Musik Freiburg (1974–1976), IRCAM, Paris (1978–1982) and other institutes <mask>u toured three continents giving numerous concerts with a wide repertoire ranging from the Renaissance to the latest avant-garde and performing both classical and free improvisations. He has received numerous prizes for his compositional work as well as for his recordings and performances. In 2020, he won the Wihuri Sibelius Prize. According to the jury report his "compositions emanate a deep spirituality, and his unwavering adherence to artistic goals is impressive".Along with over a hundred works in the traditional instrumental, vocal and orchestral fields – in various styles, often microtonal and with electronic or computer music parts – Tiensuu's compositional output also includes many curiosities such as works for Chinese orchestra, accordion ensemble, clarinet choir, instrumental theatre, Baroque orchestra, jazz orchestra, kantele, sheng and works for any ensemble. Most of his works have remained in the repertoire and are available on disc. His compositions have been premiered by major orchestras and ensembles in three continents by conductors such as Susanna Mälkki, Ernest Bour, Sakari Oramo, <mask>-Pekka Saraste, Lorraine Vaillancourt, Diego Masson, Ilan Volkov, Leif Segerstam, Jacek Kaspszyk, John Storgårds, Hannu Lintu, Dima Slobodeniuk, Yan Huichang, Juha Kangas, Jacques Mercier, Stefan Asbury, among others. In the late 70's, as the president of the ISCM Finnish Section, Tiensuu started the first ever regular contemporary music concert series in Helsinki. He then became a founder and the first artistic director of Helsinki Biennale (now Musica nova Helsinki) as well as the founder and a long-time artistic director of Time of Music contemporary music festival and summer academy in Viitasaari. His other activities include teaching, writing for books and magazines and making evocative radio programs on both baroque music and on music of our time. According to Finnish Music Quarterly (3/2007) <mask> Tiensuu's influence on the contemporary Finnish music scene is virtually beyond compare.Works (selection)
Tiensuu's works are available from his home page www.tiensuu.fi (downloadable) and Musicfinland.fi (printed sheet music)
1972 Cadenza (on one note) for flute
1972 Ouverture for flute and harpsichord
1974 Four Etudes for flute
1974 preLUDI, LUDI and postLUDI for guitar
1975 Aspro for clarinet, trombone, cello and piano
1975 Rubato for any ensemble of melody instruments
1976 Prélude non-mesuré for piano
1977 Sinistro for accordion and guitar
1977 Mxpzkl for orchestra
1978–79 Yang for two ensembles
1979 Narcissus for oboe and tape
1980 Tombeau de Beethoven for oboe or clarinet, cello, piano, and sampler or tape
1980 Passage for soprano voice, ensemble and live-electronics
1980 M concerto for microtonally tuned harpsichord, percussion and string orchestra
1981 /L for piano 4-hands and optional live-electronics
1982 P=Pinocchio? Notes from a borderland: The composer Jukka Tiensuu
Music Finland's page Includes Tiensuu's list of works, biographical information, articles, audio clips and PDF scores
Finnish Broadcasting Company. Includes a recording of Jukka Tiensuus Aim for guitar and orchestra
Sävellyspaja Composition Masterclass & Workshop
1948 births
20th-century classical composers
21st-century classical composers
21st-century conductors (music)
21st-century male musicians
21st-century pianists
Finnish classical composers
Finnish conductors (music)
Finnish harpsichordists
Finnish male composers
Finnish pianists
International Rostrum of Composers prize-winners
Living people
Musicians from Helsinki
20th-century male musicians | [
"Jukka Santeri Tiensuu",
"Jukka Tiensu",
"Jukka",
"Jukka"
] | <mask>u was born in 1948 and is a contemporary classical composer. Tiensuu was born in Helsinki. After extensive musical studies, including piano, conducting, compose, historically informed performance, and computer music a.o.t. <mask>u toured three continents giving numerous concerts with a wide range of instruments. He has received many prizes for his work. He won the Sibelius Prize in 2020. His compositions have a deep spirituality and his adherence to artistic goals is impressive according to the jury report.Along with over a hundred works in the traditional instrumental, vocal and orchestral fields, Tiensuu's output also includes many curiosities such as works for Chinese orchestra, accordion ensemble, clarinet choir, instrumental theatre and Baroque. Most of his works are available on disc. His compositions have been performed by major orchestras and ensembles in three continents. Tiensuu started the first ever regular contemporary music concert series in Helsinki in the late 70's. He was the founder and the first artistic director of the Helsinki Biennale, as well as the founder and a long-time artistic director of the Time of Music contemporary music festival. He makes evocative radio programs on both baroque music and music of our time, as well as teaching and writing for books and magazines. <mask> <mask>'s influence on the contemporary Finns music scene is beyond compare.Tiensuu's works can be downloaded and printed from his home page www.tiensuu.fi. The page includes Tiensuu's list of works, biographical information, articles, audio clips and PDF scores. A recording of Jukka Tiensuus Aim for guitar and orchestra is included. | [
"Jukka Santeri Tiensu",
"Jukka Tiensu",
"Jukka",
"Tiensuu"
] |
6451 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%20Proteus%20Steinmetz | Charles Proteus Steinmetz | Charles Proteus Steinmetz (born Karl August Rudolph Steinmetz, April 9, 1865 – October 26, 1923) was a German-born American mathematician and electrical engineer and professor at Union College. He fostered the development of alternating current that made possible the expansion of the electric power industry in the United States, formulating mathematical theories for engineers. He made ground-breaking discoveries in the understanding of hysteresis that enabled engineers to design better electromagnetic apparatus equipment, especially electric motors for use in industry.
At the time of his death, Steinmetz held over 200 patents. A genius in both mathematics and electronics, he did work that earned him the nicknames "Forger of Thunderbolts" and "The Wizard of Schenectady". Steinmetz's equation, Steinmetz solids, Steinmetz curves, and Steinmetz equivalent circuit are all named after him, as are numerous honors and scholarships, including the IEEE Charles Proteus Steinmetz Award, one of the highest technical recognitions given by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers professional society.
Early life and education
Steinmetz was born Karl August Rudolph Steinmetz on April 9, 1865 in Breslau, Province of Silesia, Prussia (now Wrocław, Poland) the son of Caroline (Neubert) and Karl Heinrich Steinmetz. Though he had Jewish ancestry, he was later baptized as a Lutheran into the Evangelical Church of Prussia. Steinmetz, who stood only four feet tall as an adult, suffered from dwarfism, hunchback, and hip dysplasia, as did his father and grandfather. Steinmetz attended Johannes Gymnasium and astonished his teachers with his proficiency in mathematics and physics.
Following the Gymnasium, Steinmetz went on to the University of Breslau to begin work on his undergraduate degree in 1883. He was on the verge of finishing his doctorate in 1888 when he came under investigation by the German police for activities on behalf of a socialist university group and articles he had written for a local socialist newspaper.
Socialism and technocracy
As socialist meetings and press had been banned in Germany, Steinmetz fled to Zürich in 1888 to escape possible arrest. Cornell University Professor Ronald R. Kline, author of Steinmetz: Engineer and Socialist, contended that other factors were more directly involved in Steinmetz's decision to leave his homeland such as being in arrears with his tuition at the University and life at home with his father, stepmother and their daughters being tension-filled.
Faced with an expiring visa, he emigrated to the United States in 1889. He changed his first name to "Charles" in order to sound more American, and chose the middle name "Proteus", a wise hunchbacked character from the Odyssey who knew many secrets, after a childhood epithet given by classmates Steinmetz felt suited him.
Despite his earlier efforts and interest in socialism, by 1922 Steinmetz concluded that socialism would never work in the United States, because the country lacked a "powerful, centralized government of competent men, remaining continuously in office", and because "only a small percentage of Americans accept this viewpoint today".
A member of the original Technical Alliance, which also included Thorstein Veblen and Leland Olds, Steinmetz had great faith in the ability of machines to eliminate human toil and create abundance for all. He put it this way: "Some day we make the good things of life for everybody".
Engineering wizard
Steinmetz is known for his contribution in three major fields of alternating current (AC) systems theory: hysteresis, steady-state analysis, and transients.
AC hysteresis theory
Shortly after arriving in the United States, Steinmetz went to work for Rudolf Eickemeyer in Yonkers, New York, and published in the field of magnetic hysteresis, earning worldwide professional recognition. Eickemeyer's firm developed transformers for use in the transmission of electrical power among many other mechanical and electrical devices. In 1893 Eickemeyer's company, along with all of its patents and designs, was bought by the newly formed General Electric Company, where Steinmetz quickly became known as the engineering wizard in GE's engineering community.
AC steady state circuit theory
Steinmetz's work revolutionized AC circuit theory and analysis, which had been carried out using complicated, time-consuming calculus-based methods. In the groundbreaking paper, "Complex Quantities and Their Use in Electrical Engineering", presented at a July 1893 meeting published in the American Institute of Electrical Engineers (AIEE), Steinmetz simplified these complicated methods to "a simple problem of algebra". He systematized the use of complex number phasor representation in electrical engineering education texts, whereby the lower-case letter "j" is used to designate the 90-degree rotation operator in AC system analysis. His seminal books and many other AIEE papers "taught a whole generation of engineers how to deal with AC phenomena".
AC transient theory
Steinmetz also greatly advanced the understanding of lightning. His systematic experiments resulted in the first laboratory created "man-made lightning", earning him the nickname the "Forger of Thunderbolts". These were conducted in a football field-sized laboratory at General Electric, using 120,000 volt generators. He also erected a lightning tower to attract natural lightning to study its patterns and effects, which resulted in several theories.
Professional life
Steinmetz acted in the following professional capacities:
At Union College, as chair of electrical engineering from 1902 to 1913 and as faculty member thereafter until his death in 1923
Board member on the Schenectady Board of Education for six years, including four years as the board's president
President of the Common Council of Schenectady
President of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers from 1901 to 1902
First vice-president of the International Association of Municipal Electricians (IAME) {which later became the International Municipal Signal Association (IMSA)} from 1913 until his death in 1923.
He was granted an honorary degree from Harvard University in 1901 and a doctorate from Union College in 1903.
Steinmetz wrote 13 books and 60 articles, not exclusively about engineering. He was a member and adviser to the fraternity Phi Gamma Delta at Union College, whose chapter house was one of the first electrified residences.
While serving as president of the Schenectady Board of Education, Steinmetz introduced numerous progressive reforms, including extended school hours, school meals, school nurses, special classes for the children of immigrants, and the distribution of free textbooks.
Personal life
In spite of his love for children and family life, Steinmetz remained unmarried, to prevent the spinal deformity afflicting himself, his father, and grandfather from being passed to any offspring.
When Joseph LeRoy Hayden, a loyal and hardworking lab assistant, announced that he would marry and look for his own living quarters, Steinmetz made the unusual proposal of opening his large home, complete with research lab, greenhouse, and office to the Haydens and their prospective family. Hayden favored the idea, but his future wife was wary of the unorthodox arrangement. She agreed after Steinmetz's assurance that she could run the house as she saw fit.
After an uneasy start, the arrangement worked well for all parties, especially after three Hayden children were born. Steinmetz legally adopted Joseph Hayden as his son, becoming grandfather to the youngsters, entertaining them with fantastic stories and spectacular scientific demonstrations. The unusual, harmonious living arrangement lasted for the rest of Steinmetz's life.
Steinmetz founded America's first glider club, but none of its prototypes "could be dignified with the term 'flight.<ref name="Froelich1990">Froehlich, Fritz; Kent, Allen (editors, 1990). 'The Froehlich/Kent Encyclopedia of Telecommunications]: Volume 15, p. 467</ref>
Steinmetz was a lifelong agnostic. He died on October 26, 1923, and was buried in Vale Cemetery in Schenectady.
Legacy
The "Forger of Thunderbolts" and "Wizard of Schenectady" earned wide recognition among the scientific community and numerous awards and honors both during his life and posthumously.
"Steinmetz's equation", derived from his experiments, defines the approximate heat energy due to magnetic hysteresis released, per cycle per unit volume of magnetic material. A Steinmetz solid is the solid body generated by the intersection of two or three cylinders of equal radius at right angles. Steinmetz' equivalent circuit is still widely used for the design and testing of induction machines.
One of the highest technical recognitions given by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, the IEEE Charles Proteus Steinmetz Award, is given for major contributions to standardization within the field of electrical and electronics engineering. Other awards include the Certificate of Merit of Franklin Institute, 1908; the Elliott Cresson Medal, 1913; and the Cedergren Medal, 1914.
A US Postage Stamp was released in his honor in 1983 in a series commemorating American Inventors. p
The Charles P. Steinmetz Memorial Lecture series was begun in his honor in 1925, sponsored by the Schenectady branch of the IEEE. Through 2017 seventy-three gatherings have taken place, held almost exclusively at Union College, featuring notable figures such as Nobel laureate experimental physicist Robert A. Millikan, helicopter inventor Igor Sikorsky, nuclear submarine pioneer Admiral Hyman G. Rickover (1963), Nobel-winning semiconductor inventor William Shockley, and Internet 'founding father' Leonard Kleinrock. The Charles P. Steinmetz Scholarship is awarded annually by the college, underwritten since its inception in 1923 by the General Electric Company.
The Charles P. Steinmetz Memorial Scholarship was established at Union by Marjorie Hayden, daughter of Joseph and Corrine Hayden, and is awarded to students majoring in engineering or physics.
Steinmetz's connection to Union is further celebrated with the annual Steinmetz Symposium, a day-long event in which Union undergraduates give presentations on research they have done. Steinmetz Hall, which houses the Union College computer center, is named after him.
Steinmetz was portrayed in 1959 by the actor Rod Steiger in the CBS television anthology series, The Joseph Cotten Show. The episode focused on his socialist activities in Germany.
A Chicago public high school, Steinmetz College Prep, is named for him.
A public park in north Schenectady, New York was named for him in 1931.
In popular culture
Steinmetz is featured in John Dos Passos' U.S.A. trilogy in one of the biographies. He also serves as a major character in Starling Lawrence's The Lightning Keeper.
Steinmetz is a major character in the novel Electric City by Elizabeth Rosner.
Moe refers to Curly as a "Steinmetz" in the 1944 Three Stooges short Busy Buddies.
A famous anecdote about Steinmetz concerns a troubleshooting consultation at Henry Ford's River Rouge Plant. A humorous aspect of the story is the "itemized bill" he submitted for the work performed.
Bibliography
Patents
At the time of his death, Steinmetz held over 200 patents:
, "System of distribution by alternating current" (January 29, 1895)
, "Inductor dynamo"
, "Three phase induction meter"
, "Inductor dynamo"
, "Induction motor"
, "System of electrical distribution"
, "Induction motor"
, "Means for producing light" (May 7, 1912)
, "Induction furnace"
, "Protective device"
, "Inductor dynamo"
Works
This book's first edition was expanded and updated in many subsequent editions.
See also
Charles P. Steinmetz Academic Centre
IEEE Charles Proteus Steinmetz Award
:de:Steinmetzschaltung (Steinmetz circuit)
Explanatory notes
Citations
General sources
External links
"Charles Steinmetz: Union's Electrical Wizard", Union College Magazine, November 1, 1998.
Finding Aid to Charles Steinmetz Papers, Schenectady County Historical Society.
Charles Proteus Steinmetz, the Wizard of Schenectady, Smithsonian Institution
[http://www.edisontechcenter.org/CharlesProteusSteinmetz.html Charles Proteus Steinmetz: Accomplishments and Life, Edison Tech Center, Hall of Fame
United States Supreme Court, Steinmetz v. Allen, 192 U.S. 543 (1904). Steinmetz v. Allen, Commissioner of Patents. No. 383. Argued January 12, 13, 1904. Decided February 23, 1904.
Divine Discontent, a documentary on Steinmetz
1865 births
1923 deaths
American agnostics
American democratic socialists
American electrical engineers
American inventors
American people with disabilities
Engineers from New York (state)
Engineers from Wrocław
European democratic socialists
General Electric people
German emigrants to the United States
Members of the Socialist Party of America
People from the Province of Silesia
People with dwarfism
Schenectady City Council members
Scientists from Schenectady, New York
University of Breslau alumni | [
"Charles Proteus Steinmetz (born Karl August Rudolph Steinmetz, April 9, 1865 – October 26, 1923) was a German-born American mathematician and electrical engineer and professor at Union College.",
"He fostered the development of alternating current that made possible the expansion of the electric power industry in the United States, formulating mathematical theories for engineers.",
"He made ground-breaking discoveries in the understanding of hysteresis that enabled engineers to design better electromagnetic apparatus equipment, especially electric motors for use in industry.",
"At the time of his death, Steinmetz held over 200 patents.",
"A genius in both mathematics and electronics, he did work that earned him the nicknames \"Forger of Thunderbolts\" and \"The Wizard of Schenectady\".",
"Steinmetz's equation, Steinmetz solids, Steinmetz curves, and Steinmetz equivalent circuit are all named after him, as are numerous honors and scholarships, including the IEEE Charles Proteus Steinmetz Award, one of the highest technical recognitions given by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers professional society.",
"Early life and education\n\nSteinmetz was born Karl August Rudolph Steinmetz on April 9, 1865 in Breslau, Province of Silesia, Prussia (now Wrocław, Poland) the son of Caroline (Neubert) and Karl Heinrich Steinmetz.",
"Though he had Jewish ancestry, he was later baptized as a Lutheran into the Evangelical Church of Prussia.",
"Steinmetz, who stood only four feet tall as an adult, suffered from dwarfism, hunchback, and hip dysplasia, as did his father and grandfather.",
"Steinmetz attended Johannes Gymnasium and astonished his teachers with his proficiency in mathematics and physics.",
"Following the Gymnasium, Steinmetz went on to the University of Breslau to begin work on his undergraduate degree in 1883.",
"He was on the verge of finishing his doctorate in 1888 when he came under investigation by the German police for activities on behalf of a socialist university group and articles he had written for a local socialist newspaper.",
"Socialism and technocracy\nAs socialist meetings and press had been banned in Germany, Steinmetz fled to Zürich in 1888 to escape possible arrest.",
"Cornell University Professor Ronald R. Kline, author of Steinmetz: Engineer and Socialist, contended that other factors were more directly involved in Steinmetz's decision to leave his homeland such as being in arrears with his tuition at the University and life at home with his father, stepmother and their daughters being tension-filled.",
"Faced with an expiring visa, he emigrated to the United States in 1889.",
"He changed his first name to \"Charles\" in order to sound more American, and chose the middle name \"Proteus\", a wise hunchbacked character from the Odyssey who knew many secrets, after a childhood epithet given by classmates Steinmetz felt suited him.",
"Despite his earlier efforts and interest in socialism, by 1922 Steinmetz concluded that socialism would never work in the United States, because the country lacked a \"powerful, centralized government of competent men, remaining continuously in office\", and because \"only a small percentage of Americans accept this viewpoint today\".",
"A member of the original Technical Alliance, which also included Thorstein Veblen and Leland Olds, Steinmetz had great faith in the ability of machines to eliminate human toil and create abundance for all.",
"He put it this way: \"Some day we make the good things of life for everybody\".",
"Engineering wizard\n\nSteinmetz is known for his contribution in three major fields of alternating current (AC) systems theory: hysteresis, steady-state analysis, and transients.",
"AC hysteresis theory\nShortly after arriving in the United States, Steinmetz went to work for Rudolf Eickemeyer in Yonkers, New York, and published in the field of magnetic hysteresis, earning worldwide professional recognition.",
"Eickemeyer's firm developed transformers for use in the transmission of electrical power among many other mechanical and electrical devices.",
"In 1893 Eickemeyer's company, along with all of its patents and designs, was bought by the newly formed General Electric Company, where Steinmetz quickly became known as the engineering wizard in GE's engineering community.",
"AC steady state circuit theory\nSteinmetz's work revolutionized AC circuit theory and analysis, which had been carried out using complicated, time-consuming calculus-based methods.",
"In the groundbreaking paper, \"Complex Quantities and Their Use in Electrical Engineering\", presented at a July 1893 meeting published in the American Institute of Electrical Engineers (AIEE), Steinmetz simplified these complicated methods to \"a simple problem of algebra\".",
"He systematized the use of complex number phasor representation in electrical engineering education texts, whereby the lower-case letter \"j\" is used to designate the 90-degree rotation operator in AC system analysis.",
"His seminal books and many other AIEE papers \"taught a whole generation of engineers how to deal with AC phenomena\".",
"AC transient theory\nSteinmetz also greatly advanced the understanding of lightning.",
"His systematic experiments resulted in the first laboratory created \"man-made lightning\", earning him the nickname the \"Forger of Thunderbolts\".",
"These were conducted in a football field-sized laboratory at General Electric, using 120,000 volt generators.",
"He also erected a lightning tower to attract natural lightning to study its patterns and effects, which resulted in several theories.",
"Professional life\nSteinmetz acted in the following professional capacities:\n At Union College, as chair of electrical engineering from 1902 to 1913 and as faculty member thereafter until his death in 1923\n Board member on the Schenectady Board of Education for six years, including four years as the board's president\n President of the Common Council of Schenectady \n President of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers from 1901 to 1902 \n First vice-president of the International Association of Municipal Electricians (IAME) {which later became the International Municipal Signal Association (IMSA)} from 1913 until his death in 1923.",
"He was granted an honorary degree from Harvard University in 1901 and a doctorate from Union College in 1903.",
"Steinmetz wrote 13 books and 60 articles, not exclusively about engineering.",
"He was a member and adviser to the fraternity Phi Gamma Delta at Union College, whose chapter house was one of the first electrified residences.",
"While serving as president of the Schenectady Board of Education, Steinmetz introduced numerous progressive reforms, including extended school hours, school meals, school nurses, special classes for the children of immigrants, and the distribution of free textbooks.",
"Personal life\nIn spite of his love for children and family life, Steinmetz remained unmarried, to prevent the spinal deformity afflicting himself, his father, and grandfather from being passed to any offspring.",
"When Joseph LeRoy Hayden, a loyal and hardworking lab assistant, announced that he would marry and look for his own living quarters, Steinmetz made the unusual proposal of opening his large home, complete with research lab, greenhouse, and office to the Haydens and their prospective family.",
"Hayden favored the idea, but his future wife was wary of the unorthodox arrangement.",
"She agreed after Steinmetz's assurance that she could run the house as she saw fit.",
"After an uneasy start, the arrangement worked well for all parties, especially after three Hayden children were born.",
"Steinmetz legally adopted Joseph Hayden as his son, becoming grandfather to the youngsters, entertaining them with fantastic stories and spectacular scientific demonstrations.",
"The unusual, harmonious living arrangement lasted for the rest of Steinmetz's life.",
"Steinmetz founded America's first glider club, but none of its prototypes \"could be dignified with the term 'flight.<ref name=\"Froelich1990\">Froehlich, Fritz; Kent, Allen (editors, 1990).",
"'The Froehlich/Kent Encyclopedia of Telecommunications]: Volume 15, p. 467</ref>\n\nSteinmetz was a lifelong agnostic.",
"He died on October 26, 1923, and was buried in Vale Cemetery in Schenectady.",
"Legacy\n\nThe \"Forger of Thunderbolts\" and \"Wizard of Schenectady\" earned wide recognition among the scientific community and numerous awards and honors both during his life and posthumously.",
"\"Steinmetz's equation\", derived from his experiments, defines the approximate heat energy due to magnetic hysteresis released, per cycle per unit volume of magnetic material.",
"A Steinmetz solid is the solid body generated by the intersection of two or three cylinders of equal radius at right angles.",
"Steinmetz' equivalent circuit is still widely used for the design and testing of induction machines.",
"One of the highest technical recognitions given by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, the IEEE Charles Proteus Steinmetz Award, is given for major contributions to standardization within the field of electrical and electronics engineering.",
"Other awards include the Certificate of Merit of Franklin Institute, 1908; the Elliott Cresson Medal, 1913; and the Cedergren Medal, 1914.",
"A US Postage Stamp was released in his honor in 1983 in a series commemorating American Inventors.",
"p\nThe Charles P. Steinmetz Memorial Lecture series was begun in his honor in 1925, sponsored by the Schenectady branch of the IEEE.",
"Through 2017 seventy-three gatherings have taken place, held almost exclusively at Union College, featuring notable figures such as Nobel laureate experimental physicist Robert A. Millikan, helicopter inventor Igor Sikorsky, nuclear submarine pioneer Admiral Hyman G. Rickover (1963), Nobel-winning semiconductor inventor William Shockley, and Internet 'founding father' Leonard Kleinrock.",
"The Charles P. Steinmetz Scholarship is awarded annually by the college, underwritten since its inception in 1923 by the General Electric Company.",
"The Charles P. Steinmetz Memorial Scholarship was established at Union by Marjorie Hayden, daughter of Joseph and Corrine Hayden, and is awarded to students majoring in engineering or physics.",
"Steinmetz's connection to Union is further celebrated with the annual Steinmetz Symposium, a day-long event in which Union undergraduates give presentations on research they have done.",
"Steinmetz Hall, which houses the Union College computer center, is named after him.",
"Steinmetz was portrayed in 1959 by the actor Rod Steiger in the CBS television anthology series, The Joseph Cotten Show.",
"The episode focused on his socialist activities in Germany.",
"A Chicago public high school, Steinmetz College Prep, is named for him.",
"A public park in north Schenectady, New York was named for him in 1931.",
"In popular culture\nSteinmetz is featured in John Dos Passos' U.S.A. trilogy in one of the biographies.",
"He also serves as a major character in Starling Lawrence's The Lightning Keeper.",
"Steinmetz is a major character in the novel Electric City by Elizabeth Rosner.",
"Moe refers to Curly as a \"Steinmetz\" in the 1944 Three Stooges short Busy Buddies.",
"A famous anecdote about Steinmetz concerns a troubleshooting consultation at Henry Ford's River Rouge Plant.",
"A humorous aspect of the story is the \"itemized bill\" he submitted for the work performed.",
"Bibliography\n\nPatents\nAt the time of his death, Steinmetz held over 200 patents:\n\n , \"System of distribution by alternating current\" (January 29, 1895)\n , \"Inductor dynamo\"\n , \"Three phase induction meter\"\n , \"Inductor dynamo\"\n , \"Induction motor\"\n , \"System of electrical distribution\"\n , \"Induction motor\"\n , \"Means for producing light\" (May 7, 1912)\n , \"Induction furnace\"\n , \"Protective device\"\n , \"Inductor dynamo\"\n\nWorks\n\n \n \n \n This book's first edition was expanded and updated in many subsequent editions.",
"See also\n\n Charles P. Steinmetz Academic Centre\n IEEE Charles Proteus Steinmetz Award\n :de:Steinmetzschaltung (Steinmetz circuit)\n\n Explanatory notes\n\n Citations \n\n General sources \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\nExternal links\n\n \"Charles Steinmetz: Union's Electrical Wizard\", Union College Magazine, November 1, 1998.",
"Finding Aid to Charles Steinmetz Papers, Schenectady County Historical Society.",
"Charles Proteus Steinmetz, the Wizard of Schenectady, Smithsonian Institution\n [http://www.edisontechcenter.org/CharlesProteusSteinmetz.html Charles Proteus Steinmetz: Accomplishments and Life, Edison Tech Center, Hall of Fame\n United States Supreme Court, Steinmetz v. Allen, 192 U.S. 543 (1904).",
"Steinmetz v. Allen, Commissioner of Patents.",
"No.",
"383.",
"Argued January 12, 13, 1904.",
"Decided February 23, 1904.",
"Divine Discontent, a documentary on Steinmetz\n \n\n1865 births\n1923 deaths\nAmerican agnostics\nAmerican democratic socialists\nAmerican electrical engineers\nAmerican inventors\nAmerican people with disabilities\nEngineers from New York (state)\nEngineers from Wrocław\nEuropean democratic socialists\nGeneral Electric people\nGerman emigrants to the United States\nMembers of the Socialist Party of America\nPeople from the Province of Silesia\nPeople with dwarfism\nSchenectady City Council members\nScientists from Schenectady, New York\nUniversity of Breslau alumni"
] | [
"Charles Proteus Steinmetz was a German-born American mathematician and electrical engineer who was a professor at Union College.",
"The expansion of the electric power industry in the United States was made possible by the development of alternating current.",
"Engineers were able to design better equipment for use in industry because of his discoveries.",
"Steinmetz had over 200 patents at the time of his death.",
"He was a genius in both mathematics and electronics and earned the nickname \"Forger of Thunderbolts\".",
"Steinmetz's equation, Steinmetz curves, and Steinmetz equivalent circuit are all named after him, as are numerous honors and scholarships.",
"Early life and education Steinmetz was born on April 9, 1865 in Breslau, Province of Silesia, Prussia (now Wrocaw, Poland).",
"He was a Lutheran and became a member of the Evangelical Church of Prussia.",
"Steinmetz had dwarfism, hunchback, and hip dysplasia, as did his father and grandfather.",
"Steinmetz excelled in mathematics and physics at Johannes Gymnasium.",
"Steinmetz began work on his undergraduate degree at the University of Breslau after the Gymnasium.",
"He was on the verge of finishing his doctorate when he was investigated by the German police for activities on behalf of a socialist university group and articles he had written for a local socialist newspaper.",
"Steinmetz fled to Zrich in order to escape possible arrest as socialism and press were banned in Germany.",
"Ronald R. Kline, author of Steinmetz: Engineer and Socialist, said that Steinmetz's decision to leave his homeland was influenced by other factors such as being in arrears with his tuition at the University and life at home with his father and stepmother.",
"He left the United States in 1889 because of an expired visa.",
"He changed his name to Charles in order to sound more American, and chose the middle name \"Proteus\", a wise hunchbacked character from the Odyssey who knew many secrets, after a childhood epithet given by classmates Steinmetz felt suited him.",
"Steinmetz concluded in 1922 that socialism would never work in the United States because the country lacked a \"powerful, centralized government of competent men, remaining continuously in office, and only a small percentage of Americans accept this viewpoint today\".",
"Steinmetz had great faith in the ability of machines to eliminate human toil and create abundance for all.",
"\"Some day we make the good things of life for everybody\", he said.",
"Steinmetz is known for his contributions to alternating current (AC) systems theory.",
"Steinmetz went to work for Eickemeyer in New York and published in the field of magnetic hysteresis, earning worldwide professional recognition.",
"Among other mechanical and electrical devices, Eickemeyer's firm developed transformers for use in the transmission of electrical power.",
"Steinmetz became known as the engineering wizard in GE's engineering community after the General Electric Company bought Eickemeyer's company in 1893.",
"The work of Steinmetz changed the way AC circuit theory and analysis is done.",
"Steinmetz simplified the methods used in electrical engineering in his paper, \"Complex Quantities and Their Use in Electrical Engineering\".",
"The lower-case letter \"j\" is used to designate the 90-degree rotation operator in AC system analysis, thanks to the systematized use of complex number phasor representation in electrical engineering education texts.",
"His seminal books taught a whole generation of engineers how to deal with AC phenomena.",
"Steinmetz advanced the understanding of lightning.",
"The first laboratory to create \"man-made lightning\" was named after him.",
"These were done in a football field-sized laboratory at General Electric.",
"He built a tower to attract natural lightning to study its effects.",
"Steinmetz was the chair of electrical engineering at Union College from 1901 to 1913, as well as a faculty member and board member, before his death in 1923.",
"He received degrees from Harvard University in 1901 and Union College in 1903.",
"Steinmetz wrote more than 60 articles and 13 books.",
"The chapter house at Union College was one of the first to have electricity.",
"Steinmetz introduced many progressive reforms while he was president of the Schenectady Board of Education, including extended school hours, school meals, school nurses, special classes for the children of immigrants, and the distribution of free textbooks.",
"Despite his love for children and family life, Steinmetz remained unmarried to prevent his father and grandfather from being passed on to his children.",
"Steinmetz made the unusual proposal of opening his large home, complete with research lab, greenhouse, and office, to the Haydens and their prospective family when Joseph LeRoy Hayden announced that he would marry and look for his own living quarters.",
"He was in favor of the idea, but his wife wasn't sold on it.",
"Steinmetz assured her that she could run the house as she saw fit.",
"After an uneasy start, the arrangement worked well for everyone.",
"Steinmetz became grandfather to the children when he legally adopted Joseph Hayden as his son.",
"Steinmetz lived in an unusual living arrangement for the rest of his life.",
"Steinmetz founded America's first glider club, but none of its prototypes could be dignified with the term \"flight\".",
"Steinmetz was a huge fan of the Encyclopedia of Telecommunications.",
"He was buried in Vale Cemetery in Schenectady on October 26, 1923.",
"Many awards and honors were given to the \"Forger of Thunderbolts\" and the \"Wizard of Schenectady\" during his life and posthumously.",
"\"Steinmetz's equation\", derived from his experiments, defines the approximate heat energy due to magnetic hysteresis released, per cycle per unit volume of magnetic material.",
"The intersection of two or three cylinders of equal radius creates a Steinmetz solid.",
"Steinmetz' equivalent circuit is still used to design and test machines.",
"The Charles Proteus Steinmetz Award is given by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers for major contributions to standardization within the field of electrical and electronics engineering.",
"The certificate of merit of Franklin Institute was one of the awards.",
"In 1983 a US Postage Stamp was released in his honor.",
"The Charles P. Steinmetz Memorial Lecture series was started in 1925.",
"There have been 73 gatherings held at Union College this year, featuring notable figures such as Robert A. Millikan and William Shockley.",
"The General Electric Company began funding the Charles P. Steinmetz Scholarship in 1923.",
"The Charles P. Steinmetz Memorial Scholarship was established at Union by the daughter of Joseph and Corrine Hayden.",
"The annual Steinmetz Symposium is an event in which Union undergraduates give presentations on research they have done.",
"The Union College computer center is named after him.",
"The Joseph Cotten Show was a CBS anthology series that featured Steinmetz as a character.",
"His socialist activities in Germany were the focus of the episode.",
"Steinmetz College Prep is a public high school in Chicago.",
"The park was named for him in 1931.",
"John Dos Passos' U.S.A. trilogy features Steinmetz in one of the biographies.",
"He is a major character in The Lightning Keeper.",
"In Electric City, Steinmetz is a major character.",
"Curly is referred to as a \"Steinmetz\" by Moe.",
"Henry Ford's River Rouge Plant has a famous anecdote about Steinmetz.",
"He submitted a \"itemized bill\" for the work he did.",
"Steinmetz held over 200 patents at the time of his death.",
"The Charles Proteus Steinmetz Award is from the Charles P. Steinmetz Academic Centre.",
"The Charles Steinmetz Papers were found by the Schenectady County Historical Society.",
"The Wizard of Schenectady is Charles Proteus Steinmetz.",
"The Commissioner of Patents is Steinmetz.",
"No.",
"386.",
"Argued January 13, 1904.",
"February 23, 1904 was when the decision was made.",
"There is a documentary on Steinmetz 1865 births, it is called Divine Discontent."
] | <mask> (born <mask>, April 9, 1865 – October 26, 1923) was a German-born American mathematician and electrical engineer and professor at Union College. He fostered the development of alternating current that made possible the expansion of the electric power industry in the United States, formulating mathematical theories for engineers. He made ground-breaking discoveries in the understanding of hysteresis that enabled engineers to design better electromagnetic apparatus equipment, especially electric motors for use in industry. At the time of his death, Steinmetz held over 200 patents. A genius in both mathematics and electronics, he did work that earned him the nicknames "Forger of Thunderbolts" and "The Wizard of Schenectady". Steinmetz's equation, Steinmetz solids, Steinmetz curves, and Steinmetz equivalent circuit are all named after him, as are numerous honors and scholarships, including the IEEE Charles Proteus Steinmetz Award, one of the highest technical recognitions given by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers professional society. Early life and education
Steinmetz was born <mask> on April 9, 1865 in Breslau, Province of Silesia, Prussia (now Wrocław, Poland) the son of Caroline (Neubert) and Karl Heinrich Steinmetz.Though he had Jewish ancestry, he was later baptized as a Lutheran into the Evangelical Church of Prussia. Steinmetz, who stood only four feet tall as an adult, suffered from dwarfism, hunchback, and hip dysplasia, as did his father and grandfather. Steinmetz attended Johannes Gymnasium and astonished his teachers with his proficiency in mathematics and physics. Following the Gymnasium, Steinmetz went on to the University of Breslau to begin work on his undergraduate degree in 1883. He was on the verge of finishing his doctorate in 1888 when he came under investigation by the German police for activities on behalf of a socialist university group and articles he had written for a local socialist newspaper. Socialism and technocracy
As socialist meetings and press had been banned in Germany, Steinmetz fled to Zürich in 1888 to escape possible arrest. Cornell University Professor Ronald R. Kline, author of Steinmetz: Engineer and Socialist, contended that other factors were more directly involved in Steinmetz's decision to leave his homeland such as being in arrears with his tuition at the University and life at home with his father, stepmother and their daughters being tension-filled.Faced with an expiring visa, he emigrated to the United States in 1889. He changed his first name to "<mask>" in order to sound more American, and chose the middle name "Proteus", a wise hunchbacked character from the Odyssey who knew many secrets, after a childhood epithet given by classmates Steinmetz felt suited him. Despite his earlier efforts and interest in socialism, by 1922 Steinmetz concluded that socialism would never work in the United States, because the country lacked a "powerful, centralized government of competent men, remaining continuously in office", and because "only a small percentage of Americans accept this viewpoint today". A member of the original Technical Alliance, which also included Thorstein Veblen and Leland Olds, Steinmetz had great faith in the ability of machines to eliminate human toil and create abundance for all. He put it this way: "Some day we make the good things of life for everybody". Engineering wizard
Steinmetz is known for his contribution in three major fields of alternating current (AC) systems theory: hysteresis, steady-state analysis, and transients. AC hysteresis theory
Shortly after arriving in the United States, Steinmetz went to work for Rudolf Eickemeyer in Yonkers, New York, and published in the field of magnetic hysteresis, earning worldwide professional recognition.Eickemeyer's firm developed transformers for use in the transmission of electrical power among many other mechanical and electrical devices. In 1893 Eickemeyer's company, along with all of its patents and designs, was bought by the newly formed General Electric Company, where Steinmetz quickly became known as the engineering wizard in GE's engineering community. AC steady state circuit theory
Steinmetz's work revolutionized AC circuit theory and analysis, which had been carried out using complicated, time-consuming calculus-based methods. In the groundbreaking paper, "Complex Quantities and Their Use in Electrical Engineering", presented at a July 1893 meeting published in the American Institute of Electrical Engineers (AIEE), Steinmetz simplified these complicated methods to "a simple problem of algebra". He systematized the use of complex number phasor representation in electrical engineering education texts, whereby the lower-case letter "j" is used to designate the 90-degree rotation operator in AC system analysis. His seminal books and many other AIEE papers "taught a whole generation of engineers how to deal with AC phenomena". AC transient theory
Steinmetz also greatly advanced the understanding of lightning.His systematic experiments resulted in the first laboratory created "man-made lightning", earning him the nickname the "Forger of Thunderbolts". These were conducted in a football field-sized laboratory at General Electric, using 120,000 volt generators. He also erected a lightning tower to attract natural lightning to study its patterns and effects, which resulted in several theories. Professional life
Steinmetz acted in the following professional capacities:
At Union College, as chair of electrical engineering from 1902 to 1913 and as faculty member thereafter until his death in 1923
Board member on the Schenectady Board of Education for six years, including four years as the board's president
President of the Common Council of Schenectady
President of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers from 1901 to 1902
First vice-president of the International Association of Municipal Electricians (IAME) {which later became the International Municipal Signal Association (IMSA)} from 1913 until his death in 1923. He was granted an honorary degree from Harvard University in 1901 and a doctorate from Union College in 1903. Steinmetz wrote 13 books and 60 articles, not exclusively about engineering. He was a member and adviser to the fraternity Phi Gamma Delta at Union College, whose chapter house was one of the first electrified residences.While serving as president of the Schenectady Board of Education, Steinmetz introduced numerous progressive reforms, including extended school hours, school meals, school nurses, special classes for the children of immigrants, and the distribution of free textbooks. Personal life
In spite of his love for children and family life, Steinmetz remained unmarried, to prevent the spinal deformity afflicting himself, his father, and grandfather from being passed to any offspring. When Joseph LeRoy Hayden, a loyal and hardworking lab assistant, announced that he would marry and look for his own living quarters, Steinmetz made the unusual proposal of opening his large home, complete with research lab, greenhouse, and office to the Haydens and their prospective family. Hayden favored the idea, but his future wife was wary of the unorthodox arrangement. She agreed after Steinmetz's assurance that she could run the house as she saw fit. After an uneasy start, the arrangement worked well for all parties, especially after three Hayden children were born. Steinmetz legally adopted Joseph Hayden as his son, becoming grandfather to the youngsters, entertaining them with fantastic stories and spectacular scientific demonstrations.The unusual, harmonious living arrangement lasted for the rest of Steinmetz's life. Steinmetz founded America's first glider club, but none of its prototypes "could be dignified with the term 'flight.<ref name="Froelich1990">Froehlich, Fritz; Kent, Allen (editors, 1990). 'The Froehlich/Kent Encyclopedia of Telecommunications]: Volume 15, p. 467</ref>
Steinmetz was a lifelong agnostic. He died on October 26, 1923, and was buried in Vale Cemetery in Schenectady. Legacy
The "Forger of Thunderbolts" and "Wizard of Schenectady" earned wide recognition among the scientific community and numerous awards and honors both during his life and posthumously. "Steinmetz's equation", derived from his experiments, defines the approximate heat energy due to magnetic hysteresis released, per cycle per unit volume of magnetic material. A Steinmetz solid is the solid body generated by the intersection of two or three cylinders of equal radius at right angles.Steinmetz' equivalent circuit is still widely used for the design and testing of induction machines. One of the highest technical recognitions given by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, the IEEE Charles Proteus Steinmetz Award, is given for major contributions to standardization within the field of electrical and electronics engineering. Other awards include the Certificate of Merit of Franklin Institute, 1908; the Elliott Cresson Medal, 1913; and the Cedergren Medal, 1914. A US Postage Stamp was released in his honor in 1983 in a series commemorating American Inventors. p
The <mask><mask> Memorial Lecture series was begun in his honor in 1925, sponsored by the Schenectady branch of the IEEE. Through 2017 seventy-three gatherings have taken place, held almost exclusively at Union College, featuring notable figures such as Nobel laureate experimental physicist Robert A. Millikan, helicopter inventor Igor Sikorsky, nuclear submarine pioneer Admiral Hyman G. Rickover (1963), Nobel-winning semiconductor inventor William Shockley, and Internet 'founding father' Leonard Kleinrock. The <mask><mask> Scholarship is awarded annually by the college, underwritten since its inception in 1923 by the General Electric Company.The <mask><mask> Memorial Scholarship was established at Union by Marjorie Hayden, daughter of Joseph and Corrine Hayden, and is awarded to students majoring in engineering or physics. Steinmetz's connection to Union is further celebrated with the annual Steinmetz Symposium, a day-long event in which Union undergraduates give presentations on research they have done. Steinmetz Hall, which houses the Union College computer center, is named after him. Steinmetz was portrayed in 1959 by the actor Rod Steiger in the CBS television anthology series, The Joseph Cotten Show. The episode focused on his socialist activities in Germany. A Chicago public high school, Steinmetz College Prep, is named for him. A public park in north Schenectady, New York was named for him in 1931.In popular culture
Steinmetz is featured in John Dos Passos' U.S.A. trilogy in one of the biographies. He also serves as a major character in Starling Lawrence's The Lightning Keeper. Steinmetz is a major character in the novel Electric City by Elizabeth Rosner. Moe refers to Curly as a "Steinmetz" in the 1944 Three Stooges short Busy Buddies. A famous anecdote about Steinmetz concerns a troubleshooting consultation at Henry Ford's River Rouge Plant. A humorous aspect of the story is the "itemized bill" he submitted for the work performed. Bibliography
Patents
At the time of his death, Steinmetz held over 200 patents:
, "System of distribution by alternating current" (January 29, 1895)
, "Inductor dynamo"
, "Three phase induction meter"
, "Inductor dynamo"
, "Induction motor"
, "System of electrical distribution"
, "Induction motor"
, "Means for producing light" (May 7, 1912)
, "Induction furnace"
, "Protective device"
, "Inductor dynamo"
Works
This book's first edition was expanded and updated in many subsequent editions.See also
Charles P. Steinmetz Academic Centre
IEEE Charles Proteus Steinmetz Award
:de:Steinmetzschaltung (Steinmetz circuit)
Explanatory notes
Citations
General sources
External links
"<mask>z: Union's Electrical Wizard", Union College Magazine, November 1, 1998. Finding Aid to <mask>z Papers, Schenectady County Historical Society. <mask> <mask>, the Wizard of Schenectady, Smithsonian Institution
[http://www.edisontechcenter.org/CharlesProteusSteinmetz.html <mask>us <mask>z v. Allen, 192 U.S. 543 (1904). Steinmetz v. Allen, Commissioner of Patents. No. 383. Argued January 12, 13, 1904.Decided February 23, 1904. Divine Discontent, a documentary on Steinmetz
1865 births
1923 deaths
American agnostics
American democratic socialists
American electrical engineers
American inventors
American people with disabilities
Engineers from New York (state)
Engineers from Wrocław
European democratic socialists
General Electric people
German emigrants to the United States
Members of the Socialist Party of America
People from the Province of Silesia
People with dwarfism
Schenectady City Council members
Scientists from Schenectady, New York
University of Breslau alumni | [
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] | <mask> was a German-born American mathematician and electrical engineer who was a professor at Union College. The expansion of the electric power industry in the United States was made possible by the development of alternating current. Engineers were able to design better equipment for use in industry because of his discoveries. Steinmetz had over 200 patents at the time of his death. He was a genius in both mathematics and electronics and earned the nickname "Forger of Thunderbolts". Steinmetz's equation, Steinmetz curves, and Steinmetz equivalent circuit are all named after him, as are numerous honors and scholarships. Early life and education <mask> was born on April 9, 1865 in Breslau, Province of Silesia, Prussia (now Wrocaw, Poland).He was a Lutheran and became a member of the Evangelical Church of Prussia. Steinmetz had dwarfism, hunchback, and hip dysplasia, as did his father and grandfather. Steinmetz excelled in mathematics and physics at Johannes Gymnasium. Steinmetz began work on his undergraduate degree at the University of Breslau after the Gymnasium. He was on the verge of finishing his doctorate when he was investigated by the German police for activities on behalf of a socialist university group and articles he had written for a local socialist newspaper. Steinmetz fled to Zrich in order to escape possible arrest as socialism and press were banned in Germany. Ronald R. Kline, author of Steinmetz: Engineer and Socialist, said that Steinmetz's decision to leave his homeland was influenced by other factors such as being in arrears with his tuition at the University and life at home with his father and stepmother.He left the United States in 1889 because of an expired visa. He changed his name to <mask> in order to sound more American, and chose the middle name "Proteus", a wise hunchbacked character from the Odyssey who knew many secrets, after a childhood epithet given by classmates Steinmetz felt suited him. Steinmetz concluded in 1922 that socialism would never work in the United States because the country lacked a "powerful, centralized government of competent men, remaining continuously in office, and only a small percentage of Americans accept this viewpoint today". Steinmetz had great faith in the ability of machines to eliminate human toil and create abundance for all. "Some day we make the good things of life for everybody", he said. Steinmetz is known for his contributions to alternating current (AC) systems theory. Steinmetz went to work for Eickemeyer in New York and published in the field of magnetic hysteresis, earning worldwide professional recognition.Among other mechanical and electrical devices, Eickemeyer's firm developed transformers for use in the transmission of electrical power. Steinmetz became known as the engineering wizard in GE's engineering community after the General Electric Company bought Eickemeyer's company in 1893. The work of Steinmetz changed the way AC circuit theory and analysis is done. Steinmetz simplified the methods used in electrical engineering in his paper, "Complex Quantities and Their Use in Electrical Engineering". The lower-case letter "j" is used to designate the 90-degree rotation operator in AC system analysis, thanks to the systematized use of complex number phasor representation in electrical engineering education texts. His seminal books taught a whole generation of engineers how to deal with AC phenomena. Steinmetz advanced the understanding of lightning.The first laboratory to create "man-made lightning" was named after him. These were done in a football field-sized laboratory at General Electric. He built a tower to attract natural lightning to study its effects. <mask> was the chair of electrical engineering at Union College from 1901 to 1913, as well as a faculty member and board member, before his death in 1923. He received degrees from Harvard University in 1901 and Union College in 1903. Steinmetz wrote more than 60 articles and 13 books. The chapter house at Union College was one of the first to have electricity.Steinmetz introduced many progressive reforms while he was president of the Schenectady Board of Education, including extended school hours, school meals, school nurses, special classes for the children of immigrants, and the distribution of free textbooks. Despite his love for children and family life, Steinmetz remained unmarried to prevent his father and grandfather from being passed on to his children. Steinmetz made the unusual proposal of opening his large home, complete with research lab, greenhouse, and office, to the Haydens and their prospective family when Joseph LeRoy Hayden announced that he would marry and look for his own living quarters. He was in favor of the idea, but his wife wasn't sold on it. Steinmetz assured her that she could run the house as she saw fit. After an uneasy start, the arrangement worked well for everyone. Steinmetz became grandfather to the children when he legally adopted Joseph Hayden as his son.Steinmetz lived in an unusual living arrangement for the rest of his life. Steinmetz founded America's first glider club, but none of its prototypes could be dignified with the term "flight". Steinmetz was a huge fan of the Encyclopedia of Telecommunications. He was buried in Vale Cemetery in Schenectady on October 26, 1923. Many awards and honors were given to the "Forger of Thunderbolts" and the "Wizard of Schenectady" during his life and posthumously. "Steinmetz's equation", derived from his experiments, defines the approximate heat energy due to magnetic hysteresis released, per cycle per unit volume of magnetic material. The intersection of two or three cylinders of equal radius creates a Steinmetz solid.Steinmetz' equivalent circuit is still used to design and test machines. The Charles Proteus Steinmetz Award is given by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers for major contributions to standardization within the field of electrical and electronics engineering. The certificate of merit of Franklin Institute was one of the awards. In 1983 a US Postage Stamp was released in his honor. The <mask><mask> Memorial Lecture series was started in 1925. There have been 73 gatherings held at Union College this year, featuring notable figures such as Robert A. Millikan and William Shockley. The General Electric Company began funding the <mask>. Steinmetz Scholarship in 1923.The <mask>. Steinmetz Memorial Scholarship was established at Union by the daughter of Joseph and Corrine Hayden. The annual Steinmetz Symposium is an event in which Union undergraduates give presentations on research they have done. The Union College computer center is named after him. The Joseph Cotten Show was a CBS anthology series that featured Steinmetz as a character. His socialist activities in Germany were the focus of the episode. Steinmetz College Prep is a public high school in Chicago. The park was named for him in 1931.John Dos Passos' U.S.A. trilogy features Steinmetz in one of the biographies. He is a major character in The Lightning Keeper. In Electric City, Steinmetz is a major character. Curly is referred to as a "Steinmetz" by Moe. Henry Ford's River Rouge Plant has a famous anecdote about Steinmetz. He submitted a "itemized bill" for the work he did. Steinmetz held over 200 patents at the time of his death.The Charles Proteus Steinmetz Award is from the Charles P. Steinmetz Academic Centre. The Charles Steinmetz Papers were found by the Schenectady County Historical Society. The Wizard of Schenectady is <mask> Steinmetz. The Commissioner of Patents is Steinmetz. No. 386. Argued January 13, 1904.February 23, 1904 was when the decision was made. There is a documentary on Steinmetz 1865 births, it is called Divine Discontent. | [
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"Charles Proteus"
] |
12785650 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riki%20Fukuda | Riki Fukuda | , is a Japanese mixed martial artist currently competing in the Middleweight division. A professional competitor since 2004, he has formerly competed for the UFC, EliteXC, DEEP, DREAM, K-1 (MMA), Shooto, and Pancrase.
Mixed martial arts career
Background
Fukuda was a member of the Yamanashi Gakuin University's wrestling team. At the All Japan University Championships, he placed third in 2002 and second in 2003 in his weight class. Fukuda then joined Fighting World of Japan Pro Wrestling and made his professional wrestling debut in March 2003.
Early career
In his professional mixed martial arts debut at SuperBrawl, Fukuda surprised many by taking Joe Doerksen to decision. Over the years, he has worked for the Japanese promotions Shooto, Pancrase and K-1. In February 2007, he made his debut in the EliteXC promotion at EliteXC Destiny. He then lost a close decision to Joey Villasenor on the September 15, 2007 EliteXC: Uprising card.
Fukuda fought at DREAM.8 as a late replacement for Yoon Dong-Sik, where he defeated Murilo Rua by unanimous decision. At DEEP 42, Riki defeated Yuichi Nakanishi via unanimous decision to become the DEEP Middleweight Champion. Fukuda successfully defended the title against Hiromitsu Kanehara at DEEP 46. At DEEP 49, Riki successfully defended the title against Ryuta Sakurai winning the fight via TKO due to knees. During his bout with Sakurai, Fukuda was able to push the pace, causing Sakurai to fall out of the cage twice. In the first round, Fukuda successfully completed a takedown, but in the process Sakurai fell out of the ring and hit his face on the bell. In the second round, Fukuda landed a knee to the midsection which cause Sakurai to fall, but as he fell he landed on the ground outside the ring; head first. Fukuda was given the victory by TKO, when Sakurai was not able to continue from the head injury.
Ultimate Fighting Championship
In October 2010, it was revealed Fukuda had signed with the UFC. Fukuda made his promotional debut against TUF 11 alumni, Nick Ring on February 27, 2011 at UFC 127. Fukuda lost his UFC debut by a controversial unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28). All three judges gave Ring the first two rounds with Fukuda winning the final round, despite controlling all three rounds with takedowns. Despite the loss on the scorecards, UFC president Dana White felt Fukuda won the bout and stated on his Twitter account that both fighters would be paid a win bonus.
Fukuda was expected to face Rafael Natal on August 6, 2011 at UFC 133. However, Fukuda was forced out of the bout due to a knee injury sustained in a car accident and replaced by Costas Philippou.
Fukuda faced Steve Cantwell on February 26, 2012 at UFC 144. Fukuda defeated Cantwell via unanimous decision.
Fukuda lost to Costas Philippou on July 7, 2012 at UFC 148 via unanimous decision.
Fukuda next defeated Tom DeBlass via unanimous decision on November 10, 2012 at UFC on Fuel TV 6.
Fukuda faced Brad Tavares on March 3, 2013 at UFC on Fuel TV 8 and lost via unanimous decision. Fukuda was subsequently released from the organization after testing positive for banned substances during his post fight drug screening. It was later revealed to be linked to over the counter cold medicine Fukuda had taken when he fell ill during his process of making weight for the bout.
Road Fighting Championship
In August 2013, Fukuda signed with South Korea based promotion ROAD FC. Fukuda faced Hee Seung Kim in his debut bout at Road FC: Korea 1 on January 18, 2014. He won the fight via second-round TKO.
Fukuda then faced Dong Sik-Yoon at Road FC 16 on July 26, 2014. He won the fight via TKO, extending his post-UFC record to 2–0.
In his next fight, Fukuda faced Dool Hee Lee at Road FC 19 on November 9, 2014. Fukuda controlled the first round, however, the fight was declared a no-contest in the second round, due to accidental groin shots.
Championships and accomplishments
Deep
Deep Middleweight Champion (One time)
Road FC
Road FC Middleweight Champion (One time)
Mixed martial arts record
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 24–9 (1)
| Hoon Kim
| TKO (punches)
| Road FC: Road Fighting Championship 40
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| 2:38
| Seoul, South Korea
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 24–8 (1)
| Nae Chul Kim
| Decision (unanimous)
| Road FC: Road Fighting Championship 36
|
| align=center| 3
| align=center| 5:00
| Seoul, South Korea
|
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 23–8 (1)
| Jung Hwan Cha
| KO (punches)
| Road FC: Road Fighting Championship 28
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| 2:36
| Seoul, South Korea
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 23–7 (1)
| Uh Jin Jeon
| TKO (punches)
| Road FC: Road Fighting Championship 24
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 2:52
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 22–7 (1)
| Dool Hee Lee
| TKO (punches)
| Road FC: Road Fighting Championship 22
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| 3:57
| Seoul, South Korea
|
|-
| NC
| align=center| 21–7 (1)
| Dool Hee Lee
| No Contest (accidental knee to groin)
| Road FC: Road Fighting Championship 19
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| N/A
| Seoul, South Korea
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 21–7
| Dong-sik Yoon
| TKO (punches)
| Road FC: Road Fighting Championship 16
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 3:36
| Gumi, South Korea
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 20–7
| Hee Seung Kim
| TKO (punches)
| Road FC: Korea 1
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| 2:09
| Seoul, South Korea
|
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 19–7
| Brad Tavares
| Decision (unanimous)
| UFC on Fuel TV: Silva vs. Stann
|
| align=center| 3
| align=center| 5:00
| Saitama, Japan
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 19–6
| Tom DeBlass
| Decision (unanimous)
| UFC on Fuel TV: Franklin vs. Le
|
| align=center| 3
| align=center| 5:00
| Macau, SAR, China
|
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 18–6
| Costas Philippou
| Decision (unanimous)
| UFC 148
|
| align=center| 3
| align=center| 5:00
| Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 18–5
| Steve Cantwell
| Decision (unanimous)
| UFC 144
|
| align=center| 3
| align=center| 5:00
| Saitama, Japan
|
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 17–5
| Nick Ring
| Decision (unanimous)
| UFC 127
|
| align=center| 3
| align=center| 5:00
| Sydney, Australia
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 17–4
| Ryuta Sakurai
| TKO (knees)
| DEEP: 49 Impact
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| 0:32
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 16–4
| Hiromitsu Kanehara
| Decision (unanimous)
| DEEP: 46 Impact
|
| align=center| 3
| align=center| 5:00
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 15–4
| Yuichi Nakanishi
| Decision (unanimous)
| DEEP: 42 Impact
|
| align=center| 3
| align=center| 5:00
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 14–4
| Murilo Rua
| Decision (unanimous)
| DREAM 8
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| 5:00
| Nagoya, Japan
|Catchweight bout of 196 lbs.
|-
| Win
| align=center| 13–4
| Ryuta Sakurai
| TKO (punches)
| DEEP: 40 Impact
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 0:45
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 12–4
| Jason Jones
| Decision (unanimous)
| Deep: 38 Impact
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| 5:00
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 11–4
| Hiroki Ozaki
| Decision (unanimous)
| DEEP: 37 Impact
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| 5:00
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 10–4
| Yuichi Nakanishi
| Decision (unanimous)
| DEEP: 35 Impact
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| 5:00
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 10–3
| Yuya Shirai
| Decision (split)
| DEEP: 35 Impact
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| 5:00
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 9–3
| Ryuta Sakurai
| Decision (unanimous)
| DEEP: 34 Impact
|
| align=center| 3
| align=center| 5:00
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 8–3
| Joey Villaseñor
| Decision (split)
| EliteXC: Uprising
|
| align=center| 3
| align=center| 5:00
| Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 8–2
| Hikaru Sato
| TKO (punches)
| Pancrase: 2007 Neo-Blood Tournament Finals
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 1:09
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 7–2
| Chris Gates
| TKO (submission to punches)
| EliteXC Destiny
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 1:18
| Southaven, Mississippi, United States
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 6–2
| Yuji Sakuragi
| Decision (unanimous)
| Pancrase: 2006 Neo-Blood Tournament Finals
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| 5:00
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 5–2
| Keitaro Maeda
| TKO (punches)
| GCM: D.O.G. 5
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 4:40
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 4–2
| Kozo Urita
| KO (punch)
| Pancrase: Blow 1
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 0:40
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 4–1
| Yuta Nakamura
| TKO (punches)
| Pancrase: Spiral 9
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 0:57
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 3–1
| Brandon Wolff
| TKO (punches)
| K-1: World Grand Prix Hawaii
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| 2:49
| Hawaii, United States
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 2–1
| Oleg Bazayev
| KO (punches)
| GCM: D.O.G. 2
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 0:28
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 1–1
| Masaya Inoue
| Decision (unanimous)
| Shooto: 1/29 in Korakuen Hall
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| 5:00
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 0–1
| Joe Doerksen
| Decision (unanimous)
| SuperBrawl 35
|
| align=center| 3
| align=center| 5:00
| Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
|
See also
List of male mixed martial artists
References
External links
Official UFC Profile
1981 births
Doping cases in mixed martial arts
Living people
Japanese male mixed martial artists
Japanese sportspeople in doping cases
Middleweight mixed martial artists
Mixed martial artists utilizing freestyle wrestling
Japanese male sport wrestlers
Sportspeople from Tokyo
Deep (mixed martial arts) champions
Road Fighting Championship champions
Ultimate Fighting Championship male fighters | [
", is a Japanese mixed martial artist currently competing in the Middleweight division.",
"A professional competitor since 2004, he has formerly competed for the UFC, EliteXC, DEEP, DREAM, K-1 (MMA), Shooto, and Pancrase.",
"Mixed martial arts career\n\nBackground\nFukuda was a member of the Yamanashi Gakuin University's wrestling team.",
"At the All Japan University Championships, he placed third in 2002 and second in 2003 in his weight class.",
"Fukuda then joined Fighting World of Japan Pro Wrestling and made his professional wrestling debut in March 2003.",
"Early career\nIn his professional mixed martial arts debut at SuperBrawl, Fukuda surprised many by taking Joe Doerksen to decision.",
"Over the years, he has worked for the Japanese promotions Shooto, Pancrase and K-1.",
"In February 2007, he made his debut in the EliteXC promotion at EliteXC Destiny.",
"He then lost a close decision to Joey Villasenor on the September 15, 2007 EliteXC: Uprising card.",
"Fukuda fought at DREAM.8 as a late replacement for Yoon Dong-Sik, where he defeated Murilo Rua by unanimous decision.",
"At DEEP 42, Riki defeated Yuichi Nakanishi via unanimous decision to become the DEEP Middleweight Champion.",
"Fukuda successfully defended the title against Hiromitsu Kanehara at DEEP 46.",
"At DEEP 49, Riki successfully defended the title against Ryuta Sakurai winning the fight via TKO due to knees.",
"During his bout with Sakurai, Fukuda was able to push the pace, causing Sakurai to fall out of the cage twice.",
"In the first round, Fukuda successfully completed a takedown, but in the process Sakurai fell out of the ring and hit his face on the bell.",
"In the second round, Fukuda landed a knee to the midsection which cause Sakurai to fall, but as he fell he landed on the ground outside the ring; head first.",
"Fukuda was given the victory by TKO, when Sakurai was not able to continue from the head injury.",
"Ultimate Fighting Championship\nIn October 2010, it was revealed Fukuda had signed with the UFC.",
"Fukuda made his promotional debut against TUF 11 alumni, Nick Ring on February 27, 2011 at UFC 127.",
"Fukuda lost his UFC debut by a controversial unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28).",
"All three judges gave Ring the first two rounds with Fukuda winning the final round, despite controlling all three rounds with takedowns.",
"Despite the loss on the scorecards, UFC president Dana White felt Fukuda won the bout and stated on his Twitter account that both fighters would be paid a win bonus.",
"Fukuda was expected to face Rafael Natal on August 6, 2011 at UFC 133.",
"However, Fukuda was forced out of the bout due to a knee injury sustained in a car accident and replaced by Costas Philippou.",
"Fukuda faced Steve Cantwell on February 26, 2012 at UFC 144.",
"Fukuda defeated Cantwell via unanimous decision.",
"Fukuda lost to Costas Philippou on July 7, 2012 at UFC 148 via unanimous decision.",
"Fukuda next defeated Tom DeBlass via unanimous decision on November 10, 2012 at UFC on Fuel TV 6.",
"Fukuda faced Brad Tavares on March 3, 2013 at UFC on Fuel TV 8 and lost via unanimous decision.",
"Fukuda was subsequently released from the organization after testing positive for banned substances during his post fight drug screening.",
"It was later revealed to be linked to over the counter cold medicine Fukuda had taken when he fell ill during his process of making weight for the bout.",
"Road Fighting Championship\nIn August 2013, Fukuda signed with South Korea based promotion ROAD FC.",
"Fukuda faced Hee Seung Kim in his debut bout at Road FC: Korea 1 on January 18, 2014.",
"He won the fight via second-round TKO.",
"Fukuda then faced Dong Sik-Yoon at Road FC 16 on July 26, 2014.",
"He won the fight via TKO, extending his post-UFC record to 2–0.",
"In his next fight, Fukuda faced Dool Hee Lee at Road FC 19 on November 9, 2014.",
"Fukuda controlled the first round, however, the fight was declared a no-contest in the second round, due to accidental groin shots.",
"5\n| \n| align=center| 1\n| align=center| 4:40\n| Tokyo, Japan\n| \n|-\n| Loss\n| align=center| 4–2\n| Kozo Urita\n| KO (punch)\n| Pancrase: Blow 1\n| \n| align=center| 1\n| align=center| 0:40\n| Tokyo, Japan\n| \n|-\n| Win\n| align=center| 4–1\n| Yuta Nakamura\n| TKO (punches)\n| Pancrase: Spiral 9\n| \n| align=center| 1\n| align=center| 0:57\n| Tokyo, Japan\n| \n|-\n| Win\n| align=center| 3–1\n| Brandon Wolff\n| TKO (punches)\n| K-1: World Grand Prix Hawaii\n| \n| align=center| 2\n| align=center| 2:49\n| Hawaii, United States\n| \n|-\n| Win\n| align=center| 2–1\n| Oleg Bazayev\n| KO (punches)\n| GCM: D.O.G.",
"2\n| \n| align=center| 1\n| align=center| 0:28\n| Tokyo, Japan\n| \n|-\n| Win\n| align=center| 1–1\n| Masaya Inoue\n| Decision (unanimous)\n| Shooto: 1/29 in Korakuen Hall\n| \n| align=center| 2\n| align=center| 5:00\n| Tokyo, Japan\n| \n|-\n| Loss\n| align=center| 0–1\n| Joe Doerksen\n| Decision (unanimous)\n| SuperBrawl 35\n| \n| align=center| 3\n| align=center| 5:00\n| Honolulu, Hawaii, United States\n|\n\nSee also\n List of male mixed martial artists\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links\nOfficial UFC Profile\n \n\n1981 births\nDoping cases in mixed martial arts\nLiving people\nJapanese male mixed martial artists\nJapanese sportspeople in doping cases\nMiddleweight mixed martial artists\nMixed martial artists utilizing freestyle wrestling\nJapanese male sport wrestlers\nSportspeople from Tokyo\nDeep (mixed martial arts) champions\nRoad Fighting Championship champions\nUltimate Fighting Championship male fighters"
] | [
"A Japanese mixed martial artist is competing in the Middleweight division.",
"He competed for the UFC, EliteXC, DEEP, DREAM, K-1 (MMA), Shooto, and Pancrase.",
"Fukuda was a member of the wrestling team at Yamanashi Gakuin University.",
"He placed third and second in his weight class at the All Japan University Championships.",
"Fukuda made his professional wrestling debut in March 2003 after joining Fighting World of Japan Pro Wrestling.",
"Fukuda surprised many when he took Joe Doerksen to decision in his professional mixed martial arts debut.",
"He has worked for Japanese promotions over the years.",
"He made his debut in the EliteXC promotion.",
"He lost a close decision to Joey Villasenor on the September 15, 2007, EliteXC: Uprising card.",
"At DREAM.8 Fukuda defeated Murilo Rua by a unanimous decision.",
"At DEEP 42, Riki defeated Yuichi Nakanishi to become the DEEP Middleweight Champion.",
"Fukuda successfully defended his title.",
"Ryuta Sakurai was defeated in the fight by TKO due to knees.",
"Fukuda was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"Sakurai fell out of the ring and hit his face on the bell after Fukuda successfully completed a takedown in the first round.",
"In the second round, Fukuda landed a knee to the midsection which caused Sakurai to fall, but as he fell he landed on the ground outside the ring.",
"When Sakurai was unable to continue from the head injury, Fukuda was given the victory.",
"Fukuda signed with the UFC in October of 2010.",
"On February 27, 2011, Fukuda made his promotional debut against Nick Ring.",
"Fukuda Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet",
"All three judges gave Ring the first two rounds with Fukuda winning the final round despite controlling all three rounds with takedowns.",
"The UFC president stated on his account that Fukuda would be paid a win bonus despite the loss on the scorecards.",
"Fukuda was supposed to face Natal at UFC 133.",
"Fukuda was forced out of the bout due to a knee injury he sustained in a car accident.",
"On February 26, 2012 Fukuda faced Steve Cantwell.",
"Fukuda defeated Cantwell in a unanimous decision.",
"Costas Philippou defeated Fukuda in a unanimous decision at UFC 148.",
"Tom DeBlass was defeated by Fukuda in a unanimous decision on November 10, 2012 at UFC on Fuel TV 6.",
"Fukuda was defeated by Brad Tavares in a UFC on Fuel TV 8 match.",
"Fukuda was released from the organization after testing positive for banned substances.",
"It was found to be linked to Fukuda's use of over the counter cold medicine when he fell ill.",
"Fukuda was a member of the Road Fighting Championship.",
"Hee Seung Kim was Fukuda's opponent in his Road FC: Korea 1 debut.",
"He won the fight.",
"Road FC 16 had a match with Fukuda on July 26, 2014).",
"He extended his post-UFC record to 2–0 with the win.",
"The next fight for Fukuda was against Dool Hee Lee.",
"Fukuda was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18",
"Shooto: 1/29 in Korakuen Hall."
] | , is a Japanese mixed martial artist currently competing in the Middleweight division. A professional competitor since 2004, he has formerly competed for the UFC, EliteXC, DEEP, DREAM, K-1 (MMA), Shooto, and Pancrase. Mixed martial arts career
<mask> was a member of the Yamanashi Gakuin University's wrestling team. At the All Japan University Championships, he placed third in 2002 and second in 2003 in his weight class. <mask> then joined Fighting World of Japan Pro Wrestling and made his professional wrestling debut in March 2003. Early career
In his professional mixed martial arts debut at SuperBrawl, <mask> surprised many by taking Joe Doerksen to decision. Over the years, he has worked for the Japanese promotions Shooto, Pancrase and K-1.In February 2007, he made his debut in the EliteXC promotion at EliteXC Destiny. He then lost a close decision to Joey Villasenor on the September 15, 2007 EliteXC: Uprising card. <mask> fought at DREAM.8 as a late replacement for Yoon Dong-Sik, where he defeated Murilo Rua by unanimous decision. At DEEP 42, <mask> defeated Yuichi Nakanishi via unanimous decision to become the DEEP Middleweight Champion. <mask> successfully defended the title against Hiromitsu Kanehara at DEEP 46. At DEEP 49, <mask> successfully defended the title against Ryuta Sakurai winning the fight via TKO due to knees. During his bout with Sakurai, Fukuda was able to push the pace, causing Sakurai to fall out of the cage twice.In the first round, <mask> successfully completed a takedown, but in the process Sakurai fell out of the ring and hit his face on the bell. In the second round, <mask> landed a knee to the midsection which cause Sakurai to fall, but as he fell he landed on the ground outside the ring; head first. <mask> was given the victory by TKO, when Sakurai was not able to continue from the head injury. Ultimate Fighting Championship
In October 2010, it was revealed <mask> had signed with the UFC. <mask> made his promotional debut against TUF 11 alumni, Nick Ring on February 27, 2011 at UFC 127. <mask> lost his UFC debut by a controversial unanimous decision (29-28, 29-28, 29-28). All three judges gave Ring the first two rounds with <mask> winning the final round, despite controlling all three rounds with takedowns.Despite the loss on the scorecards, UFC president Dana White felt <mask> won the bout and stated on his Twitter account that both fighters would be paid a win bonus. <mask> was expected to face Rafael Natal on August 6, 2011 at UFC 133. However, <mask> was forced out of the bout due to a knee injury sustained in a car accident and replaced by Costas Philippou. <mask> faced Steve Cantwell on February 26, 2012 at UFC 144. <mask> defeated Cantwell via unanimous decision. <mask> lost to Costas Philippou on July 7, 2012 at UFC 148 via unanimous decision. <mask> next defeated Tom DeBlass via unanimous decision on November 10, 2012 at UFC on Fuel TV 6.<mask> faced Brad Tavares on March 3, 2013 at UFC on Fuel TV 8 and lost via unanimous decision. <mask> was subsequently released from the organization after testing positive for banned substances during his post fight drug screening. It was later revealed to be linked to over the counter cold medicine <mask> had taken when he fell ill during his process of making weight for the bout. Road Fighting Championship
In August 2013, <mask> signed with South Korea based promotion ROAD FC. <mask> faced Hee Seung Kim in his debut bout at Road FC: Korea 1 on January 18, 2014. He won the fight via second-round TKO. <mask> then faced Dong Sik-Yoon at Road FC 16 on July 26, 2014.He won the fight via TKO, extending his post-UFC record to 2–0. In his next fight, <mask> faced Dool Hee Lee at Road FC 19 on November 9, 2014. <mask> controlled the first round, however, the fight was declared a no-contest in the second round, due to accidental groin shots. 5
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 4:40
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 4–2
| Kozo Urita
| KO (punch)
| Pancrase: Blow 1
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 0:40
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 4–1
| Yuta Nakamura
| TKO (punches)
| Pancrase: Spiral 9
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 0:57
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 3–1
| Brandon Wolff
| TKO (punches)
| K-1: World Grand Prix Hawaii
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| 2:49
| Hawaii, United States
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 2–1
| Oleg Bazayev
| KO (punches)
| GCM: D.O.G. 2
|
| align=center| 1
| align=center| 0:28
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Win
| align=center| 1–1
| Masaya Inoue
| Decision (unanimous)
| Shooto: 1/29 in Korakuen Hall
|
| align=center| 2
| align=center| 5:00
| Tokyo, Japan
|
|-
| Loss
| align=center| 0–1
| Joe Doerksen
| Decision (unanimous)
| SuperBrawl 35
|
| align=center| 3
| align=center| 5:00
| Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
|
See also
List of male mixed martial artists
References
External links
Official UFC Profile
1981 births
Doping cases in mixed martial arts
Living people
Japanese male mixed martial artists
Japanese sportspeople in doping cases
Middleweight mixed martial artists
Mixed martial artists utilizing freestyle wrestling
Japanese male sport wrestlers
Sportspeople from Tokyo
Deep (mixed martial arts) champions
Road Fighting Championship champions
Ultimate Fighting Championship male fighters | [
"Background Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Riki",
"Fukuda",
"Riki",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda"
] | A Japanese mixed martial artist is competing in the Middleweight division. He competed for the UFC, EliteXC, DEEP, DREAM, K-1 (MMA), Shooto, and Pancrase. <mask> was a member of the wrestling team at Yamanashi Gakuin University. He placed third and second in his weight class at the All Japan University Championships. <mask> made his professional wrestling debut in March 2003 after joining Fighting World of Japan Pro Wrestling. <mask> surprised many when he took Joe Doerksen to decision in his professional mixed martial arts debut. He has worked for Japanese promotions over the years.He made his debut in the EliteXC promotion. He lost a close decision to Joey Villasenor on the September 15, 2007, EliteXC: Uprising card. At DREAM.8 <mask> defeated Murilo Rua by a unanimous decision. At DEEP 42, <mask> defeated Yuichi Nakanishi to become the DEEP Middleweight Champion. <mask> successfully defended his title. Ryuta Sakurai was defeated in the fight by TKO due to knees. Fukuda was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217Sakurai fell out of the ring and hit his face on the bell after <mask> successfully completed a takedown in the first round. In the second round, <mask> landed a knee to the midsection which caused Sakurai to fall, but as he fell he landed on the ground outside the ring. When Sakurai was unable to continue from the head injury, Fukuda was given the victory. Fukuda signed with the UFC in October of 2010. On February 27, 2011, <mask> made his promotional debut against Nick Ring. Fukuda Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet Hughesnet All three judges gave Ring the first two rounds with Fukuda winning the final round despite controlling all three rounds with takedowns.The UFC president stated on his account that <mask> would be paid a win bonus despite the loss on the scorecards. <mask> was supposed to face Natal at UFC 133. <mask> was forced out of the bout due to a knee injury he sustained in a car accident. On February 26, 2012 Fukuda faced Steve Cantwell. <mask> defeated Cantwell in a unanimous decision. Costas Philippou defeated <mask> in a unanimous decision at UFC 148. Tom DeBlass was defeated by <mask> in a unanimous decision on November 10, 2012 at UFC on Fuel TV 6.<mask> was defeated by Brad Tavares in a UFC on Fuel TV 8 match. <mask> was released from the organization after testing positive for banned substances. It was found to be linked to <mask>'s use of over the counter cold medicine when he fell ill. <mask> was a member of the Road Fighting Championship. Hee Seung Kim was <mask>'s opponent in his Road FC: Korea 1 debut. He won the fight. Road FC 16 had a match with Fukuda on July 26, 2014).He extended his post-UFC record to 2–0 with the win. The next fight for <mask> was against Dool Hee Lee. Fukuda was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18 Shooto: 1/29 in Korakuen Hall. | [
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
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"Fukuda",
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"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
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"Fukuda",
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"Fukuda",
"Fukuda",
"Fukuda"
] |
208828 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seabury%20Quinn | Seabury Quinn | Seabury Grandin Quinn (also known as Jerome Burke; December 1889 – December 24, 1969) was an American government lawyer, journalist, and pulp magazine author, most famous for his stories of the occult detective Jules de Grandin, published in Weird Tales.
Biography
Seabury Quinn was born and lived in Washington, D.C. in 1889. In 1910 Quinn graduated from the law school of the National University and was admitted to the District of Columbia Bar.
Quinn served in the Army in World War I. After his service he became editor of a group of trade papers in New York, where he taught medical jurisprudence and wrote technical articles and pulp magazine fiction.
His first published work was "The Law of the Movies", in The Motion Picture Magazine, December 1917. (His story "Painted Gold" may have been written earlier.) "Demons of the Night" was published in Detective Story Magazine on March 19, 1918, followed by "Was She Mad?" on March 25, 1918. He published "The Stone Image" in 1919. He introduced Jules de Grandin as a character in 1925 (taking the character's surname from his own middle name), and continued writing stories about him until 1951. The longest of the de Grandin stories is the 1932 novel-length story The Devil's Bride, strongly influenced by Robert W. Chambers' 1920 novel The Slayer of Souls.
In 1937 he returned to Washington to represent a chain of trade journals, and there subsequently became a government lawyer for the duration of World War II. He alternated between law and journalism all his life. He published over five hundred short stories.
His first book, Roads (a surprising new origin for Santa Claus, drawn from the original Christian legends), was published by Arkham House in 1948.
Ten of the Jules de Grandin stories were collected in The Phantom Fighter (Mycroft & Moran, an imprint of Arkham House), 1966. A broader selection of the stories, including the novel The Devil's Bride, was issued in a six-volume Popular Library paperback edition in 1967–77. A three-volume omnibus reportedly including all the de Grandin stories was issued by Battered Silicon Dispatch Box in 2001.
Although the De Grandin stories were enormously popular on their initial publication, modern critics tend to regard them as the weakest part of Quinn's work, with Brian Stableford describing the De Grandin stories "as indeed rather undistinguished", claiming they are full of stereotyped characters and poorly resolved plots. Quinn wrote several non-De Grandin tales in the 1940s and 1950s; Stableford states Quinn's "best stories here are ironically perverted love stories", such as "The Globe of Memories" (1937) and
"Glamour" (1939).
His writing was secondary to his career as a lawyer specializing in mortuary jurisprudence. He taught this subject at mortuary schools for many years, and for some 15 years was the editor of Casket & Sunnyside, a leading trade journal. His Jerome Burke stories are still published in the Dodge embalming magazine.
Of his professional work, only two books were published. The first was A Syllabus of Mortuary Jurisprudence, published in book form in 1933 by Clement Williams of Kansas City, Kansas, with a foreword by C. A. Renouard (of the Renouard School of Embalming) and Clement Williams (of the Clement Williams School of Embalming). This was distilled from a lecture he gave in 1914. The text was extant as early as least 1924 / 1925, being serialized in Casket and Sunnyside. Quinn became editor of Casket and Sunnyside in December 1925.
The second was An Encyclopedic Law Glossary For Funeral Directors and Embalmers, published by the Williams Institute of Mortuary Science, Kansas City 1940, with an introduction by Quinn, dated January 1940. This had a series of definitions of terms that had puzzled his students.
Besides contributing to the then De-Ce-Co Magazine, later the Dodge Magazine, for the Dodge Chemical Co, of Cambridge, Massachusetts, Quinn wrote articles for The American Funeral Director and other trade journals.
His Jerome Burke material, not necessarily in sequence, is available in This I Remember: Memoirs of a Funeral Director, published by the Battered Silicon Dispatch Box, with a foreword by Arnold Dodge.
Quinn was a contemporary of Robert E. Howard, H. P. Lovecraft, and Clark Ashton Smith. Mary Elizabeth Counselman was a friend of Quinn's and wrote a tribute to him after he died.
Quinn's posthumously published novel Alien Flesh (1977) is a sexually explicit erotic fantasy about a male Egyptologist who has a magical sex change into a beautiful young woman. It has been described as a "bold and striking celebration of sexual confusion" in the style of Pierre Louÿs. It was illustrated by Stephen Fabian.
Recent publications
Night Creatures, a collection of stories by Quinn, edited by Peter Ruber and Joseph Wrzos for Ash-Tree Press appeared in (2003).
Demons of the Night, another collection of his stories, was published by Black Dog Books, of Normal, Illinois. Edited by Gene Christie, it contains his early stories. It has two of the "Major Sturdevant and his Washington Nights' Entertainment series", subtitled "Stories of the Secret Service", and two more featuring Professor Forrester, another amateur detector of crimes. It also contains one of the most complete bibliographies of Quinn yet published.
Someday I'll Kill You!, was published by Black Dog Books, of Normal, Illinois. Edited by Gene Christie, it contains all of Quinn's non-series stories published outside of Weird Tales between 1925 and 1963.
All of the Jules deGrandin stories were reprinted in 5 hardcover volumes in 2018 & 2019 by Night Shade Books.
A facsimile of the 1948 Arkham House edition of "Roads" was published 2017 by Shadowridge Press.
References
External links
Biographical information
1889 births
1969 deaths
20th-century American novelists
American erotica writers
American fantasy writers
American horror writers
American male novelists
American science fiction writers
Pulp fiction writers
Writers from Washington, D.C.
20th-century American male writers
20th-century American lawyers
National University School of Law alumni | [
"Seabury Grandin Quinn (also known as Jerome Burke; December 1889 – December 24, 1969) was an American government lawyer, journalist, and pulp magazine author, most famous for his stories of the occult detective Jules de Grandin, published in Weird Tales.",
"Biography\nSeabury Quinn was born and lived in Washington, D.C. in 1889.",
"In 1910 Quinn graduated from the law school of the National University and was admitted to the District of Columbia Bar.",
"Quinn served in the Army in World War I.",
"After his service he became editor of a group of trade papers in New York, where he taught medical jurisprudence and wrote technical articles and pulp magazine fiction.",
"His first published work was \"The Law of the Movies\", in The Motion Picture Magazine, December 1917.",
"(His story \"Painted Gold\" may have been written earlier.)",
"\"Demons of the Night\" was published in Detective Story Magazine on March 19, 1918, followed by \"Was She Mad?\"",
"on March 25, 1918.",
"He published \"The Stone Image\" in 1919.",
"He introduced Jules de Grandin as a character in 1925 (taking the character's surname from his own middle name), and continued writing stories about him until 1951.",
"The longest of the de Grandin stories is the 1932 novel-length story The Devil's Bride, strongly influenced by Robert W. Chambers' 1920 novel The Slayer of Souls.",
"In 1937 he returned to Washington to represent a chain of trade journals, and there subsequently became a government lawyer for the duration of World War II.",
"He alternated between law and journalism all his life.",
"He published over five hundred short stories.",
"His first book, Roads (a surprising new origin for Santa Claus, drawn from the original Christian legends), was published by Arkham House in 1948.",
"Ten of the Jules de Grandin stories were collected in The Phantom Fighter (Mycroft & Moran, an imprint of Arkham House), 1966.",
"A broader selection of the stories, including the novel The Devil's Bride, was issued in a six-volume Popular Library paperback edition in 1967–77.",
"A three-volume omnibus reportedly including all the de Grandin stories was issued by Battered Silicon Dispatch Box in 2001.",
"Although the De Grandin stories were enormously popular on their initial publication, modern critics tend to regard them as the weakest part of Quinn's work, with Brian Stableford describing the De Grandin stories \"as indeed rather undistinguished\", claiming they are full of stereotyped characters and poorly resolved plots.",
"Quinn wrote several non-De Grandin tales in the 1940s and 1950s; Stableford states Quinn's \"best stories here are ironically perverted love stories\", such as \"The Globe of Memories\" (1937) and \n\"Glamour\" (1939).",
"His writing was secondary to his career as a lawyer specializing in mortuary jurisprudence.",
"He taught this subject at mortuary schools for many years, and for some 15 years was the editor of Casket & Sunnyside, a leading trade journal.",
"His Jerome Burke stories are still published in the Dodge embalming magazine.",
"Of his professional work, only two books were published.",
"The first was A Syllabus of Mortuary Jurisprudence, published in book form in 1933 by Clement Williams of Kansas City, Kansas, with a foreword by C. A. Renouard (of the Renouard School of Embalming) and Clement Williams (of the Clement Williams School of Embalming).",
"This was distilled from a lecture he gave in 1914.",
"The text was extant as early as least 1924 / 1925, being serialized in Casket and Sunnyside.",
"Quinn became editor of Casket and Sunnyside in December 1925.",
"The second was An Encyclopedic Law Glossary For Funeral Directors and Embalmers, published by the Williams Institute of Mortuary Science, Kansas City 1940, with an introduction by Quinn, dated January 1940.",
"This had a series of definitions of terms that had puzzled his students.",
"Besides contributing to the then De-Ce-Co Magazine, later the Dodge Magazine, for the Dodge Chemical Co, of Cambridge, Massachusetts, Quinn wrote articles for The American Funeral Director and other trade journals.",
"His Jerome Burke material, not necessarily in sequence, is available in This I Remember: Memoirs of a Funeral Director, published by the Battered Silicon Dispatch Box, with a foreword by Arnold Dodge.",
"Quinn was a contemporary of Robert E. Howard, H. P. Lovecraft, and Clark Ashton Smith.",
"Mary Elizabeth Counselman was a friend of Quinn's and wrote a tribute to him after he died.",
"Quinn's posthumously published novel Alien Flesh (1977) is a sexually explicit erotic fantasy about a male Egyptologist who has a magical sex change into a beautiful young woman.",
"It has been described as a \"bold and striking celebration of sexual confusion\" in the style of Pierre Louÿs.",
"It was illustrated by Stephen Fabian.",
"Recent publications\nNight Creatures, a collection of stories by Quinn, edited by Peter Ruber and Joseph Wrzos for Ash-Tree Press appeared in (2003).",
"Demons of the Night, another collection of his stories, was published by Black Dog Books, of Normal, Illinois.",
"Edited by Gene Christie, it contains his early stories.",
"It has two of the \"Major Sturdevant and his Washington Nights' Entertainment series\", subtitled \"Stories of the Secret Service\", and two more featuring Professor Forrester, another amateur detector of crimes.",
"It also contains one of the most complete bibliographies of Quinn yet published.",
"Someday I'll Kill You!, was published by Black Dog Books, of Normal, Illinois.",
"Edited by Gene Christie, it contains all of Quinn's non-series stories published outside of Weird Tales between 1925 and 1963.",
"All of the Jules deGrandin stories were reprinted in 5 hardcover volumes in 2018 & 2019 by Night Shade Books.",
"A facsimile of the 1948 Arkham House edition of \"Roads\" was published 2017 by Shadowridge Press.",
"References\n\nExternal links\n\n Biographical information\n \n \n \n \n\n1889 births\n1969 deaths\n20th-century American novelists\nAmerican erotica writers\nAmerican fantasy writers\nAmerican horror writers\nAmerican male novelists\nAmerican science fiction writers\nPulp fiction writers\nWriters from Washington, D.C.\n20th-century American male writers\n20th-century American lawyers\nNational University School of Law alumni"
] | [
"Seabury Grandin Quinn was an American government lawyer, journalist, and pulp magazine author, most famous for his stories of the occult detective Jules de Grandin, published in Weird Tales.",
"Seabury was born in Washington, D.C. in 1889.",
"The National University graduate was admitted to the District of Columbia Bar in 1910.",
"In World War I, he served in the Army.",
"He was editor of a group of trade papers in New York, where he taught medical jurisprudence and wrote technical articles.",
"The Motion Picture Magazine published \"The Law of the Movies\" in December 1917.",
"His story \"Painted Gold\" may have been written before.",
"\"Was She Mad?\" and \"Demons of the Night\" were published in Detective Story Magazine.",
"On March 25, 1918.",
"\"The Stone Image\" was published in 1919.",
"He introduced Jules de Grandin as a character in 1925 and continued writing stories about him until 1951.",
"The Devil's Bride is the longest of the de Grandin stories and was written in 1932.",
"He became a government lawyer during World War II after returning to Washington to represent a chain of trade journals.",
"He was between journalism and law all his life.",
"He published over 500 short stories.",
"His first book, Roads, was published in 1948.",
"The Phantom Fighter was a collection of Jules de Grandin stories.",
"The Devil's Bride was included in a six-volume Popular Library paperback edition in 1967.",
"Battered Silicon Dispatch Box issued a three-volume omnibus in 2001.",
"Although the De Grandin stories were popular when they were first published, modern critics think they are the weakest part of the work, with Brian Stableford saying they are full of stereotyped characters and poorly written.",
"Stableford states that the best stories here are ironically perverted love stories, such as \"The Globe of Memories\" and \"Glamour\".",
"His writing was secondary to his career as a lawyer.",
"He was the editor of a leading trade journal for 15 years and taught this subject for many years at mortuary schools.",
"MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE",
"Only two books were published.",
"A syllabus of mortuary jurisprudence was published in 1933 by Clement Williams of Kansas City, Kansas.",
"He gave a lecture in 1914.",
"The text was written in the early 20th century.",
"In December 1925, he became editor of the two newspapers.",
"An Encyclopedic Law Glossary For Funeral Directors and Embalmers was published by the Williams Institute of Mortuary Science in Kansas City in 1940.",
"His students were confused by the definitions of the terms.",
"He wrote articles for The American Funeral Director and other journals, as well as contributing to the Dodge Magazine for the Dodge Chemical Co in Cambridge, Massachusetts.",
"This I Remember: Memoirs of a Funeral Director was published by the Battered Silicon Dispatch Box and has a foreword by Arnold Dodge.",
"He was a descendant of Robert E. Howard, H. P. Lovecraft, and Clark Ashton Smith.",
"After he died, Mary Elizabeth Counselman wrote a tribute to him.",
"Alien Flesh is a sexually explicit erotic fantasy about a male Egyptologist who has a magical sex change into a beautiful young woman.",
"It was described as a celebration of sexual confusion in the style of Pierre Lous.",
"Stephen Fabian illustrated it.",
"Night Creatures was edited by Peter Ruber and Joseph Wrzos for Ash-Tree Press.",
"His stories were published by Black Dog Books.",
"His early stories were edited by Gene Christie.",
"Two of the \"Major Sturdevant and his Washington Nights' Entertainment series\" are subtitled \"Stories of the Secret Service\", and two more are about Professor Forrester, an amateur detector of crimes.",
"One of the most complete bibliographies of Quinn has been published.",
"Someday I'll Kill You! was published by Black Dog Books.",
"The stories were published outside of Weird Tales between 1925 and 1963.",
"Night Shade Books published 5 hardcover volumes of Jules deGrandin stories.",
"Shadowridge Press published a facsimile of the 1948 Arkham House edition of \"Roads\".",
"20th-century American novelists American erotica writers American fantasy writers American horror writers American male novelists American science fiction writers"
] | <mask> (also known as Jerome Burke; December 1889 – December 24, 1969) was an American government lawyer, journalist, and pulp magazine author, most famous for his stories of the occult detective Jules de Grandin, published in Weird Tales. Biography
<mask> was born and lived in Washington, D.C. in 1889. In 1910 <mask> graduated from the law school of the National University and was admitted to the District of Columbia Bar. <mask> served in the Army in World War I. After his service he became editor of a group of trade papers in New York, where he taught medical jurisprudence and wrote technical articles and pulp magazine fiction. His first published work was "The Law of the Movies", in The Motion Picture Magazine, December 1917. (His story "Painted Gold" may have been written earlier.)"Demons of the Night" was published in Detective Story Magazine on March 19, 1918, followed by "Was She Mad?" on March 25, 1918. He published "The Stone Image" in 1919. He introduced Jules de Grandin as a character in 1925 (taking the character's surname from his own middle name), and continued writing stories about him until 1951. The longest of the de Grandin stories is the 1932 novel-length story The Devil's Bride, strongly influenced by Robert W. Chambers' 1920 novel The Slayer of Souls. In 1937 he returned to Washington to represent a chain of trade journals, and there subsequently became a government lawyer for the duration of World War II. He alternated between law and journalism all his life.He published over five hundred short stories. His first book, Roads (a surprising new origin for Santa Claus, drawn from the original Christian legends), was published by Arkham House in 1948. Ten of the Jules de Grandin stories were collected in The Phantom Fighter (Mycroft & Moran, an imprint of Arkham House), 1966. A broader selection of the stories, including the novel The Devil's Bride, was issued in a six-volume Popular Library paperback edition in 1967–77. A three-volume omnibus reportedly including all the de Grandin stories was issued by Battered Silicon Dispatch Box in 2001. Although the De Grandin stories were enormously popular on their initial publication, modern critics tend to regard them as the weakest part of <mask>'s work, with Brian Stableford describing the De Grandin stories "as indeed rather undistinguished", claiming they are full of stereotyped characters and poorly resolved plots. <mask> wrote several non-De Grandin tales in the 1940s and 1950s; Stableford states <mask>'s "best stories here are ironically perverted love stories", such as "The Globe of Memories" (1937) and
"Glamour" (1939).His writing was secondary to his career as a lawyer specializing in mortuary jurisprudence. He taught this subject at mortuary schools for many years, and for some 15 years was the editor of Casket & Sunnyside, a leading trade journal. His Jerome Burke stories are still published in the Dodge embalming magazine. Of his professional work, only two books were published. The first was A Syllabus of Mortuary Jurisprudence, published in book form in 1933 by Clement Williams of Kansas City, Kansas, with a foreword by C. A. Renouard (of the Renouard School of Embalming) and Clement Williams (of the Clement Williams School of Embalming). This was distilled from a lecture he gave in 1914. The text was extant as early as least 1924 / 1925, being serialized in Casket and Sunnyside.<mask> became editor of Casket and Sunnyside in December 1925. The second was An Encyclopedic Law Glossary For Funeral Directors and Embalmers, published by the Williams Institute of Mortuary Science, Kansas City 1940, with an introduction by <mask>, dated January 1940. This had a series of definitions of terms that had puzzled his students. Besides contributing to the then De-Ce-Co Magazine, later the Dodge Magazine, for the Dodge Chemical Co, of Cambridge, Massachusetts, <mask> wrote articles for The American Funeral Director and other trade journals. His Jerome Burke material, not necessarily in sequence, is available in This I Remember: Memoirs of a Funeral Director, published by the Battered Silicon Dispatch Box, with a foreword by Arnold Dodge. <mask> was a contemporary of Robert E. Howard, H. P. Lovecraft, and Clark Ashton Smith. Mary Elizabeth Counselman was a friend of <mask>'s and wrote a tribute to him after he died.<mask>'s posthumously published novel Alien Flesh (1977) is a sexually explicit erotic fantasy about a male Egyptologist who has a magical sex change into a beautiful young woman. It has been described as a "bold and striking celebration of sexual confusion" in the style of Pierre Louÿs. It was illustrated by Stephen Fabian. Recent publications
Night Creatures, a collection of stories by <mask>, edited by Peter Ruber and Joseph Wrzos for Ash-Tree Press appeared in (2003). Demons of the Night, another collection of his stories, was published by Black Dog Books, of Normal, Illinois. Edited by Gene Christie, it contains his early stories. It has two of the "Major Sturdevant and his Washington Nights' Entertainment series", subtitled "Stories of the Secret Service", and two more featuring Professor Forrester, another amateur detector of crimes.It also contains one of the most complete bibliographies of <mask> yet published. Someday I'll Kill You!, was published by Black Dog Books, of Normal, Illinois. Edited by Gene Christie, it contains all of <mask>'s non-series stories published outside of Weird Tales between 1925 and 1963. All of the Jules deGrandin stories were reprinted in 5 hardcover volumes in 2018 & 2019 by Night Shade Books. A facsimile of the 1948 Arkham House edition of "Roads" was published 2017 by Shadowridge Press. References
External links
Biographical information
1889 births
1969 deaths
20th-century American novelists
American erotica writers
American fantasy writers
American horror writers
American male novelists
American science fiction writers
Pulp fiction writers
Writers from Washington, D.C.
20th-century American male writers
20th-century American lawyers
National University School of Law alumni | [
"Seabury Grandin Quinn",
"Seabury Quinn",
"Quinn",
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"Quinn",
"Quinn",
"Quinn",
"Quinn",
"Quinn",
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"Quinn",
"Quinn"
] | <mask> was an American government lawyer, journalist, and pulp magazine author, most famous for his stories of the occult detective Jules de Grandin, published in Weird Tales. <mask> was born in Washington, D.C. in 1889. The National University graduate was admitted to the District of Columbia Bar in 1910. In World War I, he served in the Army. He was editor of a group of trade papers in New York, where he taught medical jurisprudence and wrote technical articles. The Motion Picture Magazine published "The Law of the Movies" in December 1917. His story "Painted Gold" may have been written before."Was She Mad?" and "Demons of the Night" were published in Detective Story Magazine. On March 25, 1918. "The Stone Image" was published in 1919. He introduced Jules de Grandin as a character in 1925 and continued writing stories about him until 1951. The Devil's Bride is the longest of the de Grandin stories and was written in 1932. He became a government lawyer during World War II after returning to Washington to represent a chain of trade journals. He was between journalism and law all his life.He published over 500 short stories. His first book, Roads, was published in 1948. The Phantom Fighter was a collection of Jules de Grandin stories. The Devil's Bride was included in a six-volume Popular Library paperback edition in 1967. Battered Silicon Dispatch Box issued a three-volume omnibus in 2001. Although the De Grandin stories were popular when they were first published, modern critics think they are the weakest part of the work, with Brian Stableford saying they are full of stereotyped characters and poorly written. Stableford states that the best stories here are ironically perverted love stories, such as "The Globe of Memories" and "Glamour".His writing was secondary to his career as a lawyer. He was the editor of a leading trade journal for 15 years and taught this subject for many years at mortuary schools. MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE Only two books were published. A syllabus of mortuary jurisprudence was published in 1933 by Clement Williams of Kansas City, Kansas. He gave a lecture in 1914. The text was written in the early 20th century.In December 1925, he became editor of the two newspapers. An Encyclopedic Law Glossary For Funeral Directors and Embalmers was published by the Williams Institute of Mortuary Science in Kansas City in 1940. His students were confused by the definitions of the terms. He wrote articles for The American Funeral Director and other journals, as well as contributing to the Dodge Magazine for the Dodge Chemical Co in Cambridge, Massachusetts. This I Remember: Memoirs of a Funeral Director was published by the Battered Silicon Dispatch Box and has a foreword by Arnold Dodge. He was a descendant of Robert E. Howard, H. P. Lovecraft, and Clark Ashton Smith. After he died, Mary Elizabeth Counselman wrote a tribute to him.Alien Flesh is a sexually explicit erotic fantasy about a male Egyptologist who has a magical sex change into a beautiful young woman. It was described as a celebration of sexual confusion in the style of Pierre Lous. Stephen Fabian illustrated it. Night Creatures was edited by Peter Ruber and Joseph Wrzos for Ash-Tree Press. His stories were published by Black Dog Books. His early stories were edited by Gene Christie. Two of the "Major Sturdevant and his Washington Nights' Entertainment series" are subtitled "Stories of the Secret Service", and two more are about Professor Forrester, an amateur detector of crimes.One of the most complete bibliographies of <mask> has been published. Someday I'll Kill You! was published by Black Dog Books. The stories were published outside of Weird Tales between 1925 and 1963. Night Shade Books published 5 hardcover volumes of Jules deGrandin stories. Shadowridge Press published a facsimile of the 1948 Arkham House edition of "Roads". 20th-century American novelists American erotica writers American fantasy writers American horror writers American male novelists American science fiction writers | [
"Seabury Grandin Quinn",
"Seabury",
"Quinn"
] |
15318437 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Velvet%20Sky | Velvet Sky | Jamie Lynn Szantyr (born June 2, 1981) is an American retired professional wrestler currently signed to NWA as a color commentator. She is best known for her time in Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) under the ring name Velvet Sky. She is a former two-time TNA Women's Knockout Champion and is a former TNA Knockouts Tag Team Champion as part of The Beautiful People (with Madison Rayne and Lacey Von Erich), with the group defending the title under the Freebird rule.
Professional wrestling career
Independent circuit (2003–2007)
Szantyr was trained by Jason Knight at the House of Pain Pro Wrestling Dojo in New Britain, Connecticut. After completing her training, she began working as a valet and wrestler on the independent circuit using the ring names Miss Talia, Talia Doll, and Talia Madison. On the independent circuit, she formed a tag team known as T&A with April Hunter.
Talia made her debut for World Xtreme Wrestling (WXW) on March 3, 2004, where she defeated Alere Little Feather. She won her first championship in professional wrestling, the WXW Women's Championship, after winning a battle royal on May 29, 2004. Talia went on to successfully defended her title against April Hunter, Cindy Rogers, Psycho and Ariel. On August 28, Talia teamed up with Alicia in a winning effort defeating Cindy Rogers and Mercedes Martinez in a tag team match, and defeated Becky Bayless in a bra and panties match on September 9. Talia continued her undefeated streak, successfully defending her title against Alere Little Feather, Luscious Lily, Cindy Rogers, Officer Mercy, and against Feather and Alicia in a triple threat match. On November 27, Talia teamed up with April Hunter in a winning effort defeating The Moonshiners (Lulu and Trinity H. Campbell). On December 11, Talia successfully defended her title against Krissy Vaine. The following week, Talia teamed up with The Moonshiners (Lulu and Trinity H. Campbell) defeating Alicia, Cindy Rogers and Mercedes Martinez in a six-woman tag team match. Talia's winning streak ended after she was defeated by Martinez on April 25, 2005. On July 8 at the WXW Spotsfest event, Talia lost the championship to Martinez. On September 12 at the WXW Tour, Talia unsuccessfully challenged Martinez for the title in a rematch. At the WXW 4th Annual Women's Elite 8 event, Talia unsuccessfully challenged Martinez again, this time in a triple threat match also involving Krissy Vaine.
Szantyr made a few appearances in World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) in 2005 and 2006. On the February 24, 2005 episode of WWE SmackDown!, she appeared as an extra during the JBL "Celebration of Excellence" party. She was then defeated by Victoria on July 11 in a match taped for WWE Heat. On January 2, 2006, she and Trinity were planted in the front row of the audience to be selected to dance with The Heart Throbs after their match in another Heat segment. She also auditioned for the 2007 Diva Search, but did not make the final eight. As Talia Madison, she held Defiant Pro Wrestling Women's title, which she won on April 8, 2006, after defeating Alere Little Feather and Nikki Roxx in a triple threat match.
Later that year, she debuted in MXW Pro Wrestling and defeated Alere Little Feather at Brass City Battle. She also wrestled in Women's Extreme Wrestling (WEW), where she mainly worked in tag team matches. She found championship success here as half of The Simple Girls/The Madison Sisters with her (kayfabe) sister Nikki Madison, and as the "T" half of the T&A tag team with April Hunter, defeating Team Blondage's Amber O'Neal and Lollipop to win the titles on WEW's April 6, 2006 pay-per-view. She also held the WEW World Women's title, defeating Angel Orsini on May 5, 2007.
Total Nonstop Action Wrestling
The Beautiful People (2007–2011)
When Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) announced the creation of their women's division in 2007, Szantyr, using her Talia Madison ring name, was announced as one of the ten wrestlers in a 10-woman gauntlet match to crown the first TNA Knockouts Champion at the Bound for Glory pay-per-view. Before the show, she made non-wrestling appearances on the October 5 episode of TNA Today and the October 11 episode of Impact!, standing at ringside for the debut match of Amazing Kong along with the other gauntlet match participants. In the weeks following the gauntlet match, her ring name was changed to Velvet Sky.
At the December Turning Point pay-per-view, Sky and Angelina Love formed an alliance and were dubbed Velvet Love Entertainment, later renamed The Beautiful People. After defeating ODB and Roxxi Laveaux early in the show, Love and Sky assisted Gail Kim in her match against Awesome Kong. They assisted Kim again after another match against Kong on the December 6 episode of Impact!, and at the Final Resolution pay-per-view, helping to stop a post-match brawl.
On the March 13 episode of Impact!, Sky and Love attacked Roxxi Laveaux and later that night Gail Kim, thus becoming villainous characters for the first time. At Lockdown, Sky and Love participated in the first ever Queen of the Cage match, which was won by Laveaux, when she pinned Love inside the cage. Sky and Love participated in the Make Over Battle Royal-Ladder Match at Sacrifice, which was won by Gail Kim. Around this time, Sky and Love added another factor to their gimmicks, placing brown paper bags over their opponents heads after defeating them. Soon after, Moose joined The Beautiful People, but she was quickly removed from the stable and the TNA roster after suffering an injury on the independent circuit. On July 17 episode of Impact!, Sky won a Knockouts battle royal to become the number one contender to the TNA Knockouts Championship, but lost the title match the next week, as well as two more title matches immediately following, to then-champion Taylor Wilde.
The Beautiful People began associating themselves with Cute Kip, who become known as their "fashionist". At Bound for Glory IV, The Beautiful People and Cute Kip were defeated by ODB, Rhaka Khan, and Rhino. In March 2009, the team gained a new member in Madison Rayne, while Kip was "fired" from the stable twice in the following month before finally becoming a road agent for the company. Sky was in Love's corner when she defeated Kong and Wilde to win the TNA Knockouts Championship at Lockdown. Sky was also in Love's corner at Slammiversary, where she helped her defeat Tara by spraying hairspray in her eyes. At Hard Justice, Sky, along with Love, competed in a tag match against ODB and Cody Deaner in a losing effort when Deaner pinned Sky, resulting in Love losing the Knockouts Championship to ODB. After the loss, Madison Rayne was kicked out of The Beautiful People, with the pair vowing revenge in the upcoming tournament for the TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship. The last of the four quarter final matches pitted The Beautiful People against Rayne and a mystery partner, who was later revealed to be the returning Roxxi. Regardless, The Beautiful People won the match and advanced to the semi-finals.
After the match was taped, Love was released from her TNA contract due to work visa issues. On the last episode of Impact! taped before her release, Love and Sky advanced to the finals of the tag team tournament by defeating Tara and Christy Hemme after interference from Madison Rayne. Afterwards, Rayne apologized to both Sky and Love, and was then welcomed back into the Beautiful People. At No Surrender, Sky and Rayne were defeated in the finals of the tournament by Sarita and Taylor Wilde. On October 1, Love's replacement Lacey Von Erich made her debut and joined the Beautiful People. Love would return to the company on the January 14, 2010, episode of Impact!, but instead of re-joining the Beautiful People, she attacked them, thus turning Love face.
On the March 8 episode of Impact!, Sky and Rayne defeated the teams of Love and Tara and Sarita and Taylor Wilde in a three-way match to win the vacant TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship, after interference from Daffney. The three members of the Beautiful People defended the titles under the Freebird rule. On the April 5 episode of Impact!, Sky was one of the four winners of the very first LockBox Showdown Elimination Tag Match. The box she opened contained a contract for Sky to challenge anyone of her choosing at any time, regardless of the stipulation. Sky then announced that she would be using her contract to face the new Knockouts Champion Angelina Love in a Leather and Lace match the following week. With Sky and Madison Rayne scheduled to receive a shot at the Knockouts Championship at Lockdown, the Beautiful People turned the Leather and Lace match into a three-on-one beat down, in order to soften Love up for the pay-per-view the following Sunday. At the pay-per-view, Rayne and Sky defeated Love and Tara, and Rayne became the new Knockouts Champion. Sky faced Love once again on the June 24 episode of Impact, and won by disqualification after receiving a DDT onto a steel chair, just like Von Erich the previous week.
In the summer of 2010, Sky began showing signs of a face turn, when Rayne began talking down to her and Von Erich, declaring that she did not need either of them, and then recruited a mystery woman hiding behind a motorcycle helmet to help her in her feud with Angelina Love. On the July 22 episode of Impact!, Sky refused to go along with Rayne, the mystery woman and Sarita, when they all finished assaulting Love and Taylor Wilde.
On the August 5 episode of Impact!, Sky and Von Erich lost the TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship to Hamada and Taylor Wilde, when Rayne's and the mystery woman's interference backfired. The following week, Sky cemented her face turn by attacking the mystery woman during Rayne's title match with Angelina Love, and in doing so caused a distraction, which cost Rayne the Knockouts Championship. On the August 19 episode of Impact!, Sky reunited with Angelina Love, accompanying her to the ring and helping her successfully defend the Knockouts Championship against Rayne. After the match, Sky and Love were beaten down by Rayne and the mystery woman.
Rayne's mysterious ally was finally unmasked as Tara on the September 2 episode of Impact!, when the two of them defeated Sky and Love in their first match together in a year. At No Surrender, Sky defeated Rayne in a singles match. Lacey Von Erich would join Sky and Love, after being saved by them from Rayne and Tara on the September 16 episode of Impact!. Von Erich, however, would leave the promotion two months later on November 11.
In October, Sky entered a feud with Sarita, who would score back–to–back pinfall victories over her on the October 28 and the November 4 episodes of Impact!, first in a six-Knockout tag team match and then in a singles match. On the December 9 episode of Impact! Sky and Love defeated Sarita and Daffney in the first round match of a tournament for the vacant Knockouts Tag Team Championship, but Sky was still unable to pin Sarita. Two weeks later, Sarita attacked Sky prior to her and Love's tournament final match. As a result, Winter, who had been stalking Love for the past months, took Sky's place in the match and teamed with Love to defeat Madison Rayne and Tara to win the Knockouts Tag Team Championship. The following week, Sarita defeated Sky in a Strap match. On the January 27 episode of Impact!, Sky brawled with Winter, claiming she was trying to break up the Beautiful People. Sarita pinned Sky once again on the February 17 episode of Impact! in a tag team match, where she teamed with Rosita. After the match, Sky challenged Sarita to a one–on–one match, where she agreed to put her career on the line. On the March 3 episode of Impact!, Sky was finally able to defeat Sarita in a singles match, salvaging her career in the process. On March 13 at Victory Road, Sky inadvertently cost Love and Winter the Knockouts Tag Team Championship in a match against Sarita and Rosita. On the March 24 episode of Impact!, Winter, seemingly having control over Love's actions, prevented her from saving Sky from a beat down at the hands of Sarita and Rosita. On the April 7 episode of Impact!, Love, still under Winter's influence, turned heel on Sky during a Knockouts Tag Team Championship match against Sarita and Rosita, and left her to be pinned by the champions, effectively ending the Beautiful People.
TNA Knockout Championship pursuits (2011–2012)
On the April 28 episode of Impact!, Angelina Love defeated Sky by submission in a singles match, no-selling all of her opponent's offense during the match. On the May 5 episode of Impact!, Sky pinned Winter in a two–on–three handicap match, where she teamed with Kurt Angle to face Winter, Love and Jeff Jarrett, announcing her intention of becoming the TNA Knockouts Champion in the process.
On the May 19 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky defeated Love and Winter in a two–on–one handicap match, but was afterwards attacked by the returning ODB, who claimed that she had gotten fired from TNA the previous June because of Sky. Sky and ODB faced each other in a singles match on the June 9 episode of Impact Wrestling, with Sky emerging victorious.
The following week, Sky and Ms. Tessmacher failed in their attempt to win the TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship from Rosita and Sarita due to interference from ODB. Afterwards, Sky was beaten down by ODB and her new tag team partner, Jacqueline. On the June 12 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky and Tessmacher were defeated by Jacqueline and ODB in a tag team match. The feud seemingly ended on the July 7 episode of Impact Wrestling, when Sky defeated ODB and Jacqueline in a two–on–one handicap match, forcing both of them out of TNA as per stipulation of the match. On the July 21 episode of Impact Wrestling, Knockouts Champion Mickie James awarded Sky a shot at her title, but before the match could take place, James was attacked by Angelina Love and Winter. When Sky tried to make the save, she was attacked by the returning ODB and Jacqueline, who were then in turn attacked by the also returning Traci Brooks.
On the September 15 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky defeated Angelina Love to qualify for a four-way Knockouts Championship match at Bound for Glory. On October 16 at Bound for Glory, Sky won the Knockouts Championship for the first time by defeating previous champion Winter, Madison Rayne and Mickie James in a four-way match, when Traci Brooks replaced original special guest referee Karen Jarrett, and counted the deciding pinfall. On the October 20 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky came to the ring and thanked the fans for supporting her. During her speech, she was attacked by the returning Gail Kim. On November 13 at Turning Point, Sky lost the Knockouts Championship to Gail Kim, ending her reign at 28 days. On the January 26 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky and Mickie James were defeated by Tara in a three-way number one contenders match for the Knockouts Championship. On the April 5 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky defeated Angelina Love, Madison Rayne, Mickie James, Tara and Winter in a six-way match to become the number one contender to Gail Kim's Knockouts Championship. On April 15 at Lockdown, Sky unsuccessfully challenged Kim for the title in a steel cage match. Sky received a rematch for the championship on the May 17 episode of Impact Wrestling, but was again defeated by Kim in a three-way match, which also included Brooke Tessmacher.
The following month, Sky and Mickie James ignited a feud, with James slowly turning villainous due to her jealousy of Sky. However, after weeks of inactivity, on July 24, it was reported by numerous wrestling sites that Szantyr was close to leaving TNA, after failing to come to terms on a new contract with the promotion. Two days later, Szantyr confirmed her departure from TNA, however, she was still listed as an active member of the roster on the company's website.
Lucha Libre AAA World Wide (2011)
On June 18, 2011, Sky made her debut for Mexican promotion Lucha Libre AAA World Wide at Triplemanía XIX, where she teamed with Angelina Love, Mickie James and Sexy Star to defeat Cynthia Moreno, Faby Apache, Lolita and Mari Apache in an eight-woman tag team match. On September 8, AAA announced that Sky would return to the promotion on October 9 at Héroes Inmortales. At the pay-per-view, Sky teamed with Jennifer Blake and Sexy Star to defeat Cynthia Moreno, Faby Apache and Mari Apache in a six-woman tag team "Glow in the Dark" match.
Return to the independent circuit (2012)
From June 30 to July 2, 2012, Sky took part in World Wrestling Council's (WWC) Anniversario weekend in Puerto Rico. On the first two nights, she was defeated in singles matches by Melina and, on the final night, she and Xix Savant defeated Melina and Davey Richards in a mixed tag team match.
Velvet made her debut for Bad Boys of Wrestling Federation (BBWF) on September 8 at the BBWF Caribbean Wrestling Bash Aruba The Legend Tour, where she competed against Angelina Love in a winning effort. The following night on the BBWF Caribbean Wrestling Bash Aruba The Legend Tour, Sky competed against Angelina Love in a losing effort.
Following her departure from TNA, Sky reunited with Angelina Love as the Beautiful People on September 22, 2012, at a Northeast Wrestling event, where they were defeated by Madison Rayne and Rosita. Sky made her debut for Family Wrestling Entertainment (FWE) on October 4, 2012, at the Back 2 Brooklyn internet pay-per-view, where she teamed up with Angelina Love to defeat the FWE Women's Champion Maria Kanellis and Katrina Lea in a tag team match. Sky made her debut for Maryland Championship Wrestling (MCW) on October 27 at MCW Monster Mash event, where she teamed up with Angelina Love in a winning effort defeating Jessie Kaye and Niya in a tag-team match.
Return to TNA
Knockouts Champion (2012–2013)
On the December 6 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky made her return during a in-ring segment between Mickie James and Knockouts Champion Tara, where she vowed to become champion again. The following week, Sky won her return match by defeating Madison Rayne. On January 13, 2013, at Genesis, Sky won a five-woman gauntlet match by last eliminating Gail Kim, to become the number one contender to the Knockouts Championship. On the following episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky again defeated Kim in a rematch to reaffirm her status as number one contender. The following week, Sky unsuccessfully challenged Tara for the championship after Tara's boyfriend Jessie interfered on her behalf. On the January 31 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky teamed up with James Storm and defeated Tara and Jessie in a mixed tag team match, after Sky pinned Tara.
On the February 21 episode of Impact Wrestling in London, England, Sky defeated Tara, Miss Tessmacher and Gail Kim in a fatal four-way elimination match, by last eliminating Kim to win the Knockouts Championship for the second time. Sky made her first successful title defense on the February 28 episode of Impact Wrestling, defeating Tara. On March 10 at Lockdown, Sky defeated Gail Kim to retain the championship. On the March 28 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky saved Taryn Terrell from an attack from Gail Kim and Tara. The following week, Sky teamed up with Terrell in a losing effort to Kim and Tara, after the special guest referee Joey Ryan made a fast count on Terrell. After the match, Terrell gave Ryan a low blow when Sky distracted him. TNA then announced that Sky had suffered a knee injury during the match. Despite the injury, Sky successfully defended the Knockouts Championship against Mickie James on the April 25 episode of Impact Wrestling. On the May 23 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky lost the championship to James, ending her reign at 117 days. In the following weeks, Sky would demand a rematch, but James would reply by avoiding her and later attacking Sky, as well as taking advantage of her injured leg, turning James villainous in the process. Sky and James eventually their rematch on the June 27 episode of Impact Wrestling, where James won by submitting Sky. Sky returned on the July 25 episode of Impact Wrestling, saying that she had made the mistake of letting James know she was injured, and that she would never make that mistake again, and Sky then sat ringside during James' title match with Gail Kim. Sky was supposed to team with ODB in a Knockouts hardcore tornado tag team match against Gail Kim and Mickie James at Hardcore Justice, however, Sky was not medically cleared to compete because of her knee injury, and the match was altered to a Knockouts triple threat hardcore match.
Relationship with Chris Sabin (2013–2014)
In mid–September 2013, Sky entered a romantic storyline with newly turned heel Chris Sabin (her real life boyfriend at the time), despite being a face herself. Sky would eventually help Sabin win the X Division Championship from his rival Austin Aries, and helped him successfully defend it multiple times on Impact Wrestling. On the January 30, 2014 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky reunited with her former Beautiful People partner Madison Rayne in a tag team match against Gail Kim and Lei'D Tapa, which they would win when Sky pinned Kim. After the match, Sky ended her relationship with Sabin. On the February 6 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky was confronted by Sabin and challenged to a match which took place the following week, but the match never started after Alpha Female attacked Sky and aligned herself with Sabin. This would lead to tag team matches between Sky and Alpha Female, where Rayne and Sky were defeated by Female and Tapa on the February 27 episode of Impact Wrestling. After the match, they were attacked by Tapa, Gail, and Female until ODB came to their aid. This led to a six–woman tag team match, where Sky, Rayne and ODB defeated Female, Tapa and Kim, when Sky pinned Female.
The Beautiful People reunion (2014–2016)
On the March 13 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky was called out by the returning Angelina Love, who wanted to reunite The Beautiful People, and a week later on Impact Wrestling, Sky accepted Love's offer, while Madison Rayne would decline. On the March 27 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky turned heel by attacking Rayne during her match with Love, allowing Love to get the win. The Beautiful People made their in–ring return as a team the following week on Impact Wrestling, defeating Rayne and Brittany, after Love pinned Brittany. On the April 17 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky unsuccessfully competed in a street fight against Rayne. On the May 1 episode of Impact Wrestling, The Beautiful People celebrated Love's record setting TNA Knockouts Championship win at Sacrifice. The celebration was interrupted by Gail Kim, which allowed Rayne and Brittany to strip Sky and Love of their evening gowns. This led to the Beautiful People defeating Rayne and Brittany in a tag team elimination evening gown match the following week. Sky was defeated by Kim on the May 15 episode of Impact Wrestling, after Kim issued a challenge for any member of The Beautiful People to wrestle her. The following week, Love issued an open challenge for her Knockouts Championship, which was accepted by Brittany, who was unsuccessful in her attempt. After the match, The Beautiful People humiliated Brittany by smearing lipstick on her face and placing a paper bag over her head, resulting in Kim coming to Brittany's aid and attacking Sky and Love. Sky would then aid Love in numerous title defenses against Rayne, Kim and Brittany. The Beautiful People interrupted the return celebration of Taryn Terrell, which lead to a tag team match June 26 episode of Impact Wrestling, where Sky and Love lost to Terrell and Gail Kim. On the June 26 episode of Impact Wrestling, Love lost the Knockouts Championship to Kim, despite interference from Sky. On the July 24 episode of Impact Wrestling, The Beautiful People would interrupt a championship match between Kim and Terrell, which led to Sky unsuccessfully challenging Kim for the title in a four-way match also involving Love and Terrell on the August 14 episode of Impact Wrestling. The feud between The Beautiful People and Gail Kim ended on the August 20 Impact Wrestling: Hardcore Justice special episode, where, despite Sky's interference, Kim defeated Love in a Last Knockout Standing match. At Bound for Glory, Sky faced Havok for the Knockouts Championship, but she was unsuccessful.
During this time, Love and Sky formed an alliance with The BroMans (Robbie E and Jessie Godderz). On the January 23 episode of Impact Wrestling during the Feast or Fired match, Sky grabbed a briefcase for Robbie E, and because Sky had retrieved the briefcase, she was forced by Robbie to open it, revealing a "fired" slip. Later, it was revealed that Sky's contract had legitimately expired, and TNA had opted not to renew it.
On the May 8, episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky made her return to TNA, emerging from the audience to attack Angelina Love, thus, turning face in the process and ending her association with The Beautiful People. On the May 29, 2015, episode of Impact Wrestling, Love brought out her own personal security team and provoked Sky, who was sitting in the audience; Sky jumped the barricade and attacked Love, but was removed from the arena by Love's security team. On the June 25 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky defeated Love to secure her spot on the roster.
Sky made her in-ring return on the July 8 episode of Impact Wrestling, defeating Madison Rayne. On the August 26 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky received a Knockouts Championship match against Brooke, but she was attacked by The Dollhouse (Jade and Marti Bell) during the match. Sky was later attacked by Rebel, who joined The Dollhouse. On the following week's episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky fought The Dollhouse again, only to be assisted by Angelina Love and Madison Rayne, thus reuniting The Beautiful People. On April 22, 2016, Sky left the company for the third time, with her being written off the Impact Wrestling series by being told that she was being put in a match against new Knockout roster member Sienna, with her job in TNA on the line if she were to lose the match, which she did by pinfall.
Return to independent circuit and retirement (2016–2017)
Sky returned to the independent circuit in a six-person tag team match as she teamed with So Over (Jimmy Preston and Mark Shurman) and defeated Jake Manning, Kamaitachi and Sumie Sakai. At MCW Autumn Armageddon Tour 2016, Sky would team with Bully Ray and Drolix to defeat Damian Martinez, Ken Dixon and Kennadi Brink in a No Disqualification six-person tag team match.
On July 6, 2016, Szantyr announced her retirement to focus on going back to college. She would later state that she was retired from in-ring action, but not from professional wrestling as a whole, as she would still do appearances.
Ring of Honor Wrestling (2019–2020)
On April 6, 2019, at ROH G1 Supercard, Velvet Sky officially reunited with Angelina Love and formed a new heel stable with Mandy Leon as The Allure by attacking Kelly Klein, Jenny Rose, and Stella Grey. During Masters of the Craft (2019) on April 14, 2019, during the match between Nick Lendl and Amy Rose The Allure was seen with selfie sticks and phones out as they walked down the ramp to where the bell ringer was and kicked her out. After the match Mandy Leon was seen confronting Amy Rose followed by Sky spraying hairspray in her eyes. In October 2020, her profile was removed from the ROH website.
National Wrestling Alliance (2021–present)
On March 23, 2021, Sky made her NWA debut as the show's new color commentator, working beside Joe Galli and Tim Storm.
Other media
She was featured on MTV's Made alongside A.J. Styles, Taylor Wilde, and Angelina Love. On January 24, 2009, she appeared as a soccerette on British television program Soccer AM, along with Angelina Love. In November 2010 she was a contestant on an all TNA week of Family Feud, teaming with Angelina Love, Christy Hemme, Lacey Von Erich and Tara against Jay Lethal, Matt Morgan, Mick Foley, Mr. Anderson and Rob Van Dam. In June 2012, she was featured in Montgomery Gentry's music video for their song "So Called Life". She has also made a cameo appearance in an episode of Impractical Jokers.
Personal life
Szantyr has Polish and Italian heritage in her family. In high school, Szantyr competed in cheerleading, softball, cross-country, football, and track.
She was previously engaged to Bubba Ray Dudley.
Championships and accomplishments
Defiant Pro Wrestling
DPW Women's Championship (1 time)
Georgia Wrestling Alliance
GWA Ladies Championship (1 time)
Models Mania
Woman of the Year (2013)
Pro Wrestling Illustrated
Ranked No. 11 of the top 50 female wrestlers in the PWI Female 50 in 2013
Pro Wrestling Insider
Female Hottie of the Year (2009)
TNT Pro Wrestling
TNT Women's Championship (1 time)
Total Nonstop Action Wrestling
TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship (1 time)1 – with Lacey Von Erich and Madison Rayne
TNA Women's Knockout Championship (2 times)
Feast or Fired (2015 – Pink Slip)
Universal Wrestling Association
UWA Women's Tag Team Championship (1 time) – with Ariel
Women's Extreme Wrestling
WEW World Championship (1 time)
WEW World Tag Team Championship (2 times) – with April Hunter (1) and Tiffany Madison (1)
World Xtreme Wrestling
WXW Women's Championship (1 time)
1Sky defended the title with either Von Erich or Rayne under the Freebird Rule.
References
External links
TNA Official Website – Velvet Sky Profile
Slam! Sports profile
1981 births
American female professional wrestlers
American people of Polish descent
American professional wrestlers of Italian descent
Living people
Professional wrestlers from Connecticut
Professional wrestling announcers
Professional wrestling managers and valets
Sportspeople from New Britain, Connecticut
Sportspeople from Waterbury, Connecticut
WWE Diva Search contestants
21st-century American women | [
"Jamie Lynn Szantyr (born June 2, 1981) is an American retired professional wrestler currently signed to NWA as a color commentator.",
"She is best known for her time in Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) under the ring name Velvet Sky.",
"She is a former two-time TNA Women's Knockout Champion and is a former TNA Knockouts Tag Team Champion as part of The Beautiful People (with Madison Rayne and Lacey Von Erich), with the group defending the title under the Freebird rule.",
"Professional wrestling career\n\nIndependent circuit (2003–2007)\n\nSzantyr was trained by Jason Knight at the House of Pain Pro Wrestling Dojo in New Britain, Connecticut.",
"After completing her training, she began working as a valet and wrestler on the independent circuit using the ring names Miss Talia, Talia Doll, and Talia Madison.",
"On the independent circuit, she formed a tag team known as T&A with April Hunter.",
"Talia made her debut for World Xtreme Wrestling (WXW) on March 3, 2004, where she defeated Alere Little Feather.",
"She won her first championship in professional wrestling, the WXW Women's Championship, after winning a battle royal on May 29, 2004.",
"Talia went on to successfully defended her title against April Hunter, Cindy Rogers, Psycho and Ariel.",
"On August 28, Talia teamed up with Alicia in a winning effort defeating Cindy Rogers and Mercedes Martinez in a tag team match, and defeated Becky Bayless in a bra and panties match on September 9.",
"Talia continued her undefeated streak, successfully defending her title against Alere Little Feather, Luscious Lily, Cindy Rogers, Officer Mercy, and against Feather and Alicia in a triple threat match.",
"On November 27, Talia teamed up with April Hunter in a winning effort defeating The Moonshiners (Lulu and Trinity H. Campbell).",
"On December 11, Talia successfully defended her title against Krissy Vaine.",
"The following week, Talia teamed up with The Moonshiners (Lulu and Trinity H. Campbell) defeating Alicia, Cindy Rogers and Mercedes Martinez in a six-woman tag team match.",
"Talia's winning streak ended after she was defeated by Martinez on April 25, 2005.",
"On July 8 at the WXW Spotsfest event, Talia lost the championship to Martinez.",
"On September 12 at the WXW Tour, Talia unsuccessfully challenged Martinez for the title in a rematch.",
"At the WXW 4th Annual Women's Elite 8 event, Talia unsuccessfully challenged Martinez again, this time in a triple threat match also involving Krissy Vaine.",
"Szantyr made a few appearances in World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) in 2005 and 2006.",
"On the February 24, 2005 episode of WWE SmackDown!, she appeared as an extra during the JBL \"Celebration of Excellence\" party.",
"She was then defeated by Victoria on July 11 in a match taped for WWE Heat.",
"On January 2, 2006, she and Trinity were planted in the front row of the audience to be selected to dance with The Heart Throbs after their match in another Heat segment.",
"She also auditioned for the 2007 Diva Search, but did not make the final eight.",
"As Talia Madison, she held Defiant Pro Wrestling Women's title, which she won on April 8, 2006, after defeating Alere Little Feather and Nikki Roxx in a triple threat match.",
"Later that year, she debuted in MXW Pro Wrestling and defeated Alere Little Feather at Brass City Battle.",
"She also wrestled in Women's Extreme Wrestling (WEW), where she mainly worked in tag team matches.",
"She found championship success here as half of The Simple Girls/The Madison Sisters with her (kayfabe) sister Nikki Madison, and as the \"T\" half of the T&A tag team with April Hunter, defeating Team Blondage's Amber O'Neal and Lollipop to win the titles on WEW's April 6, 2006 pay-per-view.",
"She also held the WEW World Women's title, defeating Angel Orsini on May 5, 2007.",
"Total Nonstop Action Wrestling\n\nThe Beautiful People (2007–2011)\n\nWhen Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) announced the creation of their women's division in 2007, Szantyr, using her Talia Madison ring name, was announced as one of the ten wrestlers in a 10-woman gauntlet match to crown the first TNA Knockouts Champion at the Bound for Glory pay-per-view.",
"Before the show, she made non-wrestling appearances on the October 5 episode of TNA Today and the October 11 episode of Impact!, standing at ringside for the debut match of Amazing Kong along with the other gauntlet match participants.",
"In the weeks following the gauntlet match, her ring name was changed to Velvet Sky.",
"At the December Turning Point pay-per-view, Sky and Angelina Love formed an alliance and were dubbed Velvet Love Entertainment, later renamed The Beautiful People.",
"After defeating ODB and Roxxi Laveaux early in the show, Love and Sky assisted Gail Kim in her match against Awesome Kong.",
"They assisted Kim again after another match against Kong on the December 6 episode of Impact!, and at the Final Resolution pay-per-view, helping to stop a post-match brawl.",
"On the March 13 episode of Impact!, Sky and Love attacked Roxxi Laveaux and later that night Gail Kim, thus becoming villainous characters for the first time.",
"At Lockdown, Sky and Love participated in the first ever Queen of the Cage match, which was won by Laveaux, when she pinned Love inside the cage.",
"Sky and Love participated in the Make Over Battle Royal-Ladder Match at Sacrifice, which was won by Gail Kim.",
"Around this time, Sky and Love added another factor to their gimmicks, placing brown paper bags over their opponents heads after defeating them.",
"Soon after, Moose joined The Beautiful People, but she was quickly removed from the stable and the TNA roster after suffering an injury on the independent circuit.",
"On July 17 episode of Impact!, Sky won a Knockouts battle royal to become the number one contender to the TNA Knockouts Championship, but lost the title match the next week, as well as two more title matches immediately following, to then-champion Taylor Wilde.",
"The Beautiful People began associating themselves with Cute Kip, who become known as their \"fashionist\".",
"At Bound for Glory IV, The Beautiful People and Cute Kip were defeated by ODB, Rhaka Khan, and Rhino.",
"In March 2009, the team gained a new member in Madison Rayne, while Kip was \"fired\" from the stable twice in the following month before finally becoming a road agent for the company.",
"Sky was in Love's corner when she defeated Kong and Wilde to win the TNA Knockouts Championship at Lockdown.",
"Sky was also in Love's corner at Slammiversary, where she helped her defeat Tara by spraying hairspray in her eyes.",
"At Hard Justice, Sky, along with Love, competed in a tag match against ODB and Cody Deaner in a losing effort when Deaner pinned Sky, resulting in Love losing the Knockouts Championship to ODB.",
"After the loss, Madison Rayne was kicked out of The Beautiful People, with the pair vowing revenge in the upcoming tournament for the TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship.",
"The last of the four quarter final matches pitted The Beautiful People against Rayne and a mystery partner, who was later revealed to be the returning Roxxi.",
"Regardless, The Beautiful People won the match and advanced to the semi-finals.",
"After the match was taped, Love was released from her TNA contract due to work visa issues.",
"On the last episode of Impact!",
"taped before her release, Love and Sky advanced to the finals of the tag team tournament by defeating Tara and Christy Hemme after interference from Madison Rayne.",
"Afterwards, Rayne apologized to both Sky and Love, and was then welcomed back into the Beautiful People.",
"At No Surrender, Sky and Rayne were defeated in the finals of the tournament by Sarita and Taylor Wilde.",
"On October 1, Love's replacement Lacey Von Erich made her debut and joined the Beautiful People.",
"Love would return to the company on the January 14, 2010, episode of Impact!, but instead of re-joining the Beautiful People, she attacked them, thus turning Love face.",
"On the March 8 episode of Impact!, Sky and Rayne defeated the teams of Love and Tara and Sarita and Taylor Wilde in a three-way match to win the vacant TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship, after interference from Daffney.",
"The three members of the Beautiful People defended the titles under the Freebird rule.",
"On the April 5 episode of Impact!, Sky was one of the four winners of the very first LockBox Showdown Elimination Tag Match.",
"The box she opened contained a contract for Sky to challenge anyone of her choosing at any time, regardless of the stipulation.",
"Sky then announced that she would be using her contract to face the new Knockouts Champion Angelina Love in a Leather and Lace match the following week.",
"With Sky and Madison Rayne scheduled to receive a shot at the Knockouts Championship at Lockdown, the Beautiful People turned the Leather and Lace match into a three-on-one beat down, in order to soften Love up for the pay-per-view the following Sunday.",
"At the pay-per-view, Rayne and Sky defeated Love and Tara, and Rayne became the new Knockouts Champion.",
"Sky faced Love once again on the June 24 episode of Impact, and won by disqualification after receiving a DDT onto a steel chair, just like Von Erich the previous week.",
"In the summer of 2010, Sky began showing signs of a face turn, when Rayne began talking down to her and Von Erich, declaring that she did not need either of them, and then recruited a mystery woman hiding behind a motorcycle helmet to help her in her feud with Angelina Love.",
"On the July 22 episode of Impact!, Sky refused to go along with Rayne, the mystery woman and Sarita, when they all finished assaulting Love and Taylor Wilde.",
"On the August 5 episode of Impact!, Sky and Von Erich lost the TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship to Hamada and Taylor Wilde, when Rayne's and the mystery woman's interference backfired.",
"The following week, Sky cemented her face turn by attacking the mystery woman during Rayne's title match with Angelina Love, and in doing so caused a distraction, which cost Rayne the Knockouts Championship.",
"On the August 19 episode of Impact!, Sky reunited with Angelina Love, accompanying her to the ring and helping her successfully defend the Knockouts Championship against Rayne.",
"After the match, Sky and Love were beaten down by Rayne and the mystery woman.",
"Rayne's mysterious ally was finally unmasked as Tara on the September 2 episode of Impact!, when the two of them defeated Sky and Love in their first match together in a year.",
"At No Surrender, Sky defeated Rayne in a singles match.",
"Lacey Von Erich would join Sky and Love, after being saved by them from Rayne and Tara on the September 16 episode of Impact!.",
"Von Erich, however, would leave the promotion two months later on November 11.",
"In October, Sky entered a feud with Sarita, who would score back–to–back pinfall victories over her on the October 28 and the November 4 episodes of Impact!, first in a six-Knockout tag team match and then in a singles match.",
"On the December 9 episode of Impact!",
"Sky and Love defeated Sarita and Daffney in the first round match of a tournament for the vacant Knockouts Tag Team Championship, but Sky was still unable to pin Sarita.",
"Two weeks later, Sarita attacked Sky prior to her and Love's tournament final match.",
"As a result, Winter, who had been stalking Love for the past months, took Sky's place in the match and teamed with Love to defeat Madison Rayne and Tara to win the Knockouts Tag Team Championship.",
"The following week, Sarita defeated Sky in a Strap match.",
"On the January 27 episode of Impact!, Sky brawled with Winter, claiming she was trying to break up the Beautiful People.",
"Sarita pinned Sky once again on the February 17 episode of Impact!",
"in a tag team match, where she teamed with Rosita.",
"After the match, Sky challenged Sarita to a one–on–one match, where she agreed to put her career on the line.",
"On the March 3 episode of Impact!, Sky was finally able to defeat Sarita in a singles match, salvaging her career in the process.",
"On March 13 at Victory Road, Sky inadvertently cost Love and Winter the Knockouts Tag Team Championship in a match against Sarita and Rosita.",
"On the March 24 episode of Impact!, Winter, seemingly having control over Love's actions, prevented her from saving Sky from a beat down at the hands of Sarita and Rosita.",
"On the April 7 episode of Impact!, Love, still under Winter's influence, turned heel on Sky during a Knockouts Tag Team Championship match against Sarita and Rosita, and left her to be pinned by the champions, effectively ending the Beautiful People.",
"TNA Knockout Championship pursuits (2011–2012)\nOn the April 28 episode of Impact!, Angelina Love defeated Sky by submission in a singles match, no-selling all of her opponent's offense during the match.",
"On the May 5 episode of Impact!, Sky pinned Winter in a two–on–three handicap match, where she teamed with Kurt Angle to face Winter, Love and Jeff Jarrett, announcing her intention of becoming the TNA Knockouts Champion in the process.",
"On the May 19 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky defeated Love and Winter in a two–on–one handicap match, but was afterwards attacked by the returning ODB, who claimed that she had gotten fired from TNA the previous June because of Sky.",
"Sky and ODB faced each other in a singles match on the June 9 episode of Impact Wrestling, with Sky emerging victorious.",
"The following week, Sky and Ms. Tessmacher failed in their attempt to win the TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship from Rosita and Sarita due to interference from ODB.",
"Afterwards, Sky was beaten down by ODB and her new tag team partner, Jacqueline.",
"On the June 12 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky and Tessmacher were defeated by Jacqueline and ODB in a tag team match.",
"The feud seemingly ended on the July 7 episode of Impact Wrestling, when Sky defeated ODB and Jacqueline in a two–on–one handicap match, forcing both of them out of TNA as per stipulation of the match.",
"On the July 21 episode of Impact Wrestling, Knockouts Champion Mickie James awarded Sky a shot at her title, but before the match could take place, James was attacked by Angelina Love and Winter.",
"When Sky tried to make the save, she was attacked by the returning ODB and Jacqueline, who were then in turn attacked by the also returning Traci Brooks.",
"On the September 15 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky defeated Angelina Love to qualify for a four-way Knockouts Championship match at Bound for Glory.",
"On October 16 at Bound for Glory, Sky won the Knockouts Championship for the first time by defeating previous champion Winter, Madison Rayne and Mickie James in a four-way match, when Traci Brooks replaced original special guest referee Karen Jarrett, and counted the deciding pinfall.",
"On the October 20 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky came to the ring and thanked the fans for supporting her.",
"During her speech, she was attacked by the returning Gail Kim.",
"On November 13 at Turning Point, Sky lost the Knockouts Championship to Gail Kim, ending her reign at 28 days.",
"On the January 26 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky and Mickie James were defeated by Tara in a three-way number one contenders match for the Knockouts Championship.",
"On the April 5 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky defeated Angelina Love, Madison Rayne, Mickie James, Tara and Winter in a six-way match to become the number one contender to Gail Kim's Knockouts Championship.",
"On April 15 at Lockdown, Sky unsuccessfully challenged Kim for the title in a steel cage match.",
"Sky received a rematch for the championship on the May 17 episode of Impact Wrestling, but was again defeated by Kim in a three-way match, which also included Brooke Tessmacher.",
"The following month, Sky and Mickie James ignited a feud, with James slowly turning villainous due to her jealousy of Sky.",
"However, after weeks of inactivity, on July 24, it was reported by numerous wrestling sites that Szantyr was close to leaving TNA, after failing to come to terms on a new contract with the promotion.",
"Two days later, Szantyr confirmed her departure from TNA, however, she was still listed as an active member of the roster on the company's website.",
"Lucha Libre AAA World Wide (2011)\nOn June 18, 2011, Sky made her debut for Mexican promotion Lucha Libre AAA World Wide at Triplemanía XIX, where she teamed with Angelina Love, Mickie James and Sexy Star to defeat Cynthia Moreno, Faby Apache, Lolita and Mari Apache in an eight-woman tag team match.",
"On September 8, AAA announced that Sky would return to the promotion on October 9 at Héroes Inmortales.",
"At the pay-per-view, Sky teamed with Jennifer Blake and Sexy Star to defeat Cynthia Moreno, Faby Apache and Mari Apache in a six-woman tag team \"Glow in the Dark\" match.",
"Return to the independent circuit (2012)\nFrom June 30 to July 2, 2012, Sky took part in World Wrestling Council's (WWC) Anniversario weekend in Puerto Rico.",
"On the first two nights, she was defeated in singles matches by Melina and, on the final night, she and Xix Savant defeated Melina and Davey Richards in a mixed tag team match.",
"Velvet made her debut for Bad Boys of Wrestling Federation (BBWF) on September 8 at the BBWF Caribbean Wrestling Bash Aruba The Legend Tour, where she competed against Angelina Love in a winning effort.",
"The following night on the BBWF Caribbean Wrestling Bash Aruba The Legend Tour, Sky competed against Angelina Love in a losing effort.",
"Following her departure from TNA, Sky reunited with Angelina Love as the Beautiful People on September 22, 2012, at a Northeast Wrestling event, where they were defeated by Madison Rayne and Rosita.",
"Sky made her debut for Family Wrestling Entertainment (FWE) on October 4, 2012, at the Back 2 Brooklyn internet pay-per-view, where she teamed up with Angelina Love to defeat the FWE Women's Champion Maria Kanellis and Katrina Lea in a tag team match.",
"Sky made her debut for Maryland Championship Wrestling (MCW) on October 27 at MCW Monster Mash event, where she teamed up with Angelina Love in a winning effort defeating Jessie Kaye and Niya in a tag-team match.",
"Return to TNA\n\nKnockouts Champion (2012–2013)\nOn the December 6 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky made her return during a in-ring segment between Mickie James and Knockouts Champion Tara, where she vowed to become champion again.",
"The following week, Sky won her return match by defeating Madison Rayne.",
"On January 13, 2013, at Genesis, Sky won a five-woman gauntlet match by last eliminating Gail Kim, to become the number one contender to the Knockouts Championship.",
"On the following episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky again defeated Kim in a rematch to reaffirm her status as number one contender.",
"The following week, Sky unsuccessfully challenged Tara for the championship after Tara's boyfriend Jessie interfered on her behalf.",
"On the January 31 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky teamed up with James Storm and defeated Tara and Jessie in a mixed tag team match, after Sky pinned Tara.",
"On the February 21 episode of Impact Wrestling in London, England, Sky defeated Tara, Miss Tessmacher and Gail Kim in a fatal four-way elimination match, by last eliminating Kim to win the Knockouts Championship for the second time.",
"Sky made her first successful title defense on the February 28 episode of Impact Wrestling, defeating Tara.",
"On March 10 at Lockdown, Sky defeated Gail Kim to retain the championship.",
"On the March 28 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky saved Taryn Terrell from an attack from Gail Kim and Tara.",
"The following week, Sky teamed up with Terrell in a losing effort to Kim and Tara, after the special guest referee Joey Ryan made a fast count on Terrell.",
"After the match, Terrell gave Ryan a low blow when Sky distracted him.",
"TNA then announced that Sky had suffered a knee injury during the match.",
"Despite the injury, Sky successfully defended the Knockouts Championship against Mickie James on the April 25 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"On the May 23 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky lost the championship to James, ending her reign at 117 days.",
"In the following weeks, Sky would demand a rematch, but James would reply by avoiding her and later attacking Sky, as well as taking advantage of her injured leg, turning James villainous in the process.",
"Sky and James eventually their rematch on the June 27 episode of Impact Wrestling, where James won by submitting Sky.",
"Sky returned on the July 25 episode of Impact Wrestling, saying that she had made the mistake of letting James know she was injured, and that she would never make that mistake again, and Sky then sat ringside during James' title match with Gail Kim.",
"Sky was supposed to team with ODB in a Knockouts hardcore tornado tag team match against Gail Kim and Mickie James at Hardcore Justice, however, Sky was not medically cleared to compete because of her knee injury, and the match was altered to a Knockouts triple threat hardcore match.",
"Relationship with Chris Sabin (2013–2014)\nIn mid–September 2013, Sky entered a romantic storyline with newly turned heel Chris Sabin (her real life boyfriend at the time), despite being a face herself.",
"Sky would eventually help Sabin win the X Division Championship from his rival Austin Aries, and helped him successfully defend it multiple times on Impact Wrestling.",
"On the January 30, 2014 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky reunited with her former Beautiful People partner Madison Rayne in a tag team match against Gail Kim and Lei'D Tapa, which they would win when Sky pinned Kim.",
"After the match, Sky ended her relationship with Sabin.",
"On the February 6 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky was confronted by Sabin and challenged to a match which took place the following week, but the match never started after Alpha Female attacked Sky and aligned herself with Sabin.",
"This would lead to tag team matches between Sky and Alpha Female, where Rayne and Sky were defeated by Female and Tapa on the February 27 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"After the match, they were attacked by Tapa, Gail, and Female until ODB came to their aid.",
"This led to a six–woman tag team match, where Sky, Rayne and ODB defeated Female, Tapa and Kim, when Sky pinned Female.",
"The Beautiful People reunion (2014–2016)\nOn the March 13 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky was called out by the returning Angelina Love, who wanted to reunite The Beautiful People, and a week later on Impact Wrestling, Sky accepted Love's offer, while Madison Rayne would decline.",
"On the March 27 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky turned heel by attacking Rayne during her match with Love, allowing Love to get the win.",
"The Beautiful People made their in–ring return as a team the following week on Impact Wrestling, defeating Rayne and Brittany, after Love pinned Brittany.",
"On the April 17 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky unsuccessfully competed in a street fight against Rayne.",
"On the May 1 episode of Impact Wrestling, The Beautiful People celebrated Love's record setting TNA Knockouts Championship win at Sacrifice.",
"The celebration was interrupted by Gail Kim, which allowed Rayne and Brittany to strip Sky and Love of their evening gowns.",
"This led to the Beautiful People defeating Rayne and Brittany in a tag team elimination evening gown match the following week.",
"Sky was defeated by Kim on the May 15 episode of Impact Wrestling, after Kim issued a challenge for any member of The Beautiful People to wrestle her.",
"The following week, Love issued an open challenge for her Knockouts Championship, which was accepted by Brittany, who was unsuccessful in her attempt.",
"After the match, The Beautiful People humiliated Brittany by smearing lipstick on her face and placing a paper bag over her head, resulting in Kim coming to Brittany's aid and attacking Sky and Love.",
"Sky would then aid Love in numerous title defenses against Rayne, Kim and Brittany.",
"The Beautiful People interrupted the return celebration of Taryn Terrell, which lead to a tag team match June 26 episode of Impact Wrestling, where Sky and Love lost to Terrell and Gail Kim.",
"On the June 26 episode of Impact Wrestling, Love lost the Knockouts Championship to Kim, despite interference from Sky.",
"On the July 24 episode of Impact Wrestling, The Beautiful People would interrupt a championship match between Kim and Terrell, which led to Sky unsuccessfully challenging Kim for the title in a four-way match also involving Love and Terrell on the August 14 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"The feud between The Beautiful People and Gail Kim ended on the August 20 Impact Wrestling: Hardcore Justice special episode, where, despite Sky's interference, Kim defeated Love in a Last Knockout Standing match.",
"At Bound for Glory, Sky faced Havok for the Knockouts Championship, but she was unsuccessful.",
"During this time, Love and Sky formed an alliance with The BroMans (Robbie E and Jessie Godderz).",
"On the January 23 episode of Impact Wrestling during the Feast or Fired match, Sky grabbed a briefcase for Robbie E, and because Sky had retrieved the briefcase, she was forced by Robbie to open it, revealing a \"fired\" slip.",
"Later, it was revealed that Sky's contract had legitimately expired, and TNA had opted not to renew it.",
"On the May 8, episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky made her return to TNA, emerging from the audience to attack Angelina Love, thus, turning face in the process and ending her association with The Beautiful People.",
"On the May 29, 2015, episode of Impact Wrestling, Love brought out her own personal security team and provoked Sky, who was sitting in the audience; Sky jumped the barricade and attacked Love, but was removed from the arena by Love's security team.",
"On the June 25 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky defeated Love to secure her spot on the roster.",
"Sky made her in-ring return on the July 8 episode of Impact Wrestling, defeating Madison Rayne.",
"On the August 26 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky received a Knockouts Championship match against Brooke, but she was attacked by The Dollhouse (Jade and Marti Bell) during the match.",
"Sky was later attacked by Rebel, who joined The Dollhouse.",
"On the following week's episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky fought The Dollhouse again, only to be assisted by Angelina Love and Madison Rayne, thus reuniting The Beautiful People.",
"On April 22, 2016, Sky left the company for the third time, with her being written off the Impact Wrestling series by being told that she was being put in a match against new Knockout roster member Sienna, with her job in TNA on the line if she were to lose the match, which she did by pinfall.",
"Return to independent circuit and retirement (2016–2017) \nSky returned to the independent circuit in a six-person tag team match as she teamed with So Over (Jimmy Preston and Mark Shurman) and defeated Jake Manning, Kamaitachi and Sumie Sakai.",
"At MCW Autumn Armageddon Tour 2016, Sky would team with Bully Ray and Drolix to defeat Damian Martinez, Ken Dixon and Kennadi Brink in a No Disqualification six-person tag team match.",
"On July 6, 2016, Szantyr announced her retirement to focus on going back to college.",
"She would later state that she was retired from in-ring action, but not from professional wrestling as a whole, as she would still do appearances.",
"Ring of Honor Wrestling (2019–2020) \nOn April 6, 2019, at ROH G1 Supercard, Velvet Sky officially reunited with Angelina Love and formed a new heel stable with Mandy Leon as The Allure by attacking Kelly Klein, Jenny Rose, and Stella Grey.",
"During Masters of the Craft (2019) on April 14, 2019, during the match between Nick Lendl and Amy Rose The Allure was seen with selfie sticks and phones out as they walked down the ramp to where the bell ringer was and kicked her out.",
"After the match Mandy Leon was seen confronting Amy Rose followed by Sky spraying hairspray in her eyes.",
"In October 2020, her profile was removed from the ROH website.",
"National Wrestling Alliance (2021–present)\nOn March 23, 2021, Sky made her NWA debut as the show's new color commentator, working beside Joe Galli and Tim Storm.",
"Other media\nShe was featured on MTV's Made alongside A.J.",
"Styles, Taylor Wilde, and Angelina Love.",
"On January 24, 2009, she appeared as a soccerette on British television program Soccer AM, along with Angelina Love.",
"In November 2010 she was a contestant on an all TNA week of Family Feud, teaming with Angelina Love, Christy Hemme, Lacey Von Erich and Tara against Jay Lethal, Matt Morgan, Mick Foley, Mr. Anderson and Rob Van Dam.",
"In June 2012, she was featured in Montgomery Gentry's music video for their song \"So Called Life\".",
"She has also made a cameo appearance in an episode of Impractical Jokers.",
"Personal life\nSzantyr has Polish and Italian heritage in her family.",
"In high school, Szantyr competed in cheerleading, softball, cross-country, football, and track.",
"She was previously engaged to Bubba Ray Dudley.",
"Championships and accomplishments\n\nDefiant Pro Wrestling\nDPW Women's Championship (1 time)\nGeorgia Wrestling Alliance\nGWA Ladies Championship (1 time)\nModels Mania\nWoman of the Year (2013)\nPro Wrestling Illustrated\nRanked No.",
"11 of the top 50 female wrestlers in the PWI Female 50 in 2013\nPro Wrestling Insider\nFemale Hottie of the Year (2009)\nTNT Pro Wrestling\nTNT Women's Championship (1 time)\nTotal Nonstop Action Wrestling\nTNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship (1 time)1 – with Lacey Von Erich and Madison Rayne\nTNA Women's Knockout Championship (2 times)\nFeast or Fired (2015 – Pink Slip)\nUniversal Wrestling Association\nUWA Women's Tag Team Championship (1 time) – with Ariel\nWomen's Extreme Wrestling\nWEW World Championship (1 time)\nWEW World Tag Team Championship (2 times) – with April Hunter (1) and Tiffany Madison (1)\nWorld Xtreme Wrestling\nWXW Women's Championship (1 time)\n\n1Sky defended the title with either Von Erich or Rayne under the Freebird Rule.",
"References\n\nExternal links\n\n TNA Official Website – Velvet Sky Profile\n \n \n Slam!",
"Sports profile\n \n \n\n1981 births\nAmerican female professional wrestlers\nAmerican people of Polish descent\nAmerican professional wrestlers of Italian descent\nLiving people\nProfessional wrestlers from Connecticut\nProfessional wrestling announcers\nProfessional wrestling managers and valets\nSportspeople from New Britain, Connecticut\nSportspeople from Waterbury, Connecticut\nWWE Diva Search contestants\n21st-century American women"
] | [
"Jamie Lynn Szantyr is an American retired professional wrestler currently signed to NWA as a color commentator.",
"She is best known for her time in Total Nonstop Action Wrestling under the ring name Velvet Sky.",
"She is currently a member of The Beautiful People, who are defending the title under the Freebird rule.",
"Szantyr was trained at the House of Pain Pro Wrestling Dojo in New Britain, Connecticut.",
"She began working as a wrestler and a valet on the independent circuit after completing her training.",
"She formed a tag team called T&A with April Hunter.",
"On March 3, 2004, she became the first woman to win a World XW match.",
"On May 29, 2004, she won the first championship in professional wrestling, the WXW Women's Championship.",
"She successfully defended her title against April Hunter, Cindy Rogers and Psycho.",
"In a tag team match on August 28, Talia andAlicia defeated Mercedes and Cindy Rogers, and in a bra and panties match on September 9, they defeated Becky Bayless.",
"In a triple threat match, Talia successfully defended her title against all but one of her opponents.",
"Talia and April Hunter defeated The Moonshiners on November 27.",
"She defended her title against Krissy Vaine.",
"In a six-woman tag team match, The Moonshiners defeated Mercedes and Cindy Rogers.",
"On April 25, 2005, Talia's winning streak ended.",
"The championship was lost on July 8.",
"The title was up for grabs on September 12 at the WXW Tour.",
"At the 4th Annual Women's Elite 8 event, Talia was defeated by Krissy Vaine in a triple threat match.",
"In 2005 and 2006 Szantyr appeared in World Wrestling Entertainment.",
"She was an extra on the February 24, 2005 episode of the show.",
"She was defeated by Victoria in a match on July 11.",
"On January 2, 2006 she and Trinity were planted in the front row of the audience to be selected to dance with The Heart Throbs after their match.",
"She tried out for the Diva Search in 2007, but didn't make the final eight.",
"She won the Defiant Pro Wrestling Women's title on April 8, 2006 after defeating two other wrestlers in a triple threat match.",
"At the Brass City Battle, she defeated Alere Littlefeather.",
"She worked in tag team matches in Women's Extreme Wrestling.",
"She found championship success here as half of The Simple Girls/The Madison Sisters with her sister, and as the \"T\" half of the T&A tag team with April Hunter.",
"She won the WEW World Women's title on May 5, 2007, defeating Angel Orsini.",
"When Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) announced the creation of their women's division in 2007, Szantyr was announced as one of the ten wrestlers in a 10-woman gauntlet match to crown.",
"She stood at ringside for the first match of the gauntlet match on the October 11 episode of Impact!, as well as other non-wrestling appearances.",
"She changed her ring name to Velvet Sky after the gauntlet match.",
"At the December Turning Point pay-per-view, Sky and Angelina Love formed an alliance and were dubbed The Beautiful People.",
"Gail Kim was assisted in her match against Awesome Kong by Love and Sky.",
"They assisted Kim after another match against Kong on the December 6 episode of Impact!, and at the Final Resolution pay-per-view, helping to stop a brawl.",
"Sky and Love became villainous characters for the first time on the March 13 episode of Impact!",
"Love was pinned by Laveaux in the first ever Queen of the Cage match at Lockdown.",
"Gail Kim won the Make Over Battle Royal-Ladder Match at Sacrifice.",
"Sky and Love put brown paper bags over their opponents heads after they defeated them.",
"After suffering an injury on the independent circuit, Moose was removed from the stable and the roster and joined The Beautiful People.",
"Sky won a battle royal on the July 17 episode of Impact!, but lost the title match the next week, as well as two more title matches immediately following, to then-champion Taylor Wilde.",
"Cute Kip became known as the \"fashionist\" of the Beautiful People.",
"The Beautiful People were defeated by ODB, Rhaka Khan, and Rhino at Bound for Glory IV.",
"In March of 2009, the team gained a new member in Madison Rayne, and in the following month, Kip was fired from the stable and eventually became a road agent for the company.",
"Sky was in Love's corner when she defeated Kong and Wilde to win the title.",
"Sky was in Love's corner at Slammiversary, where she helped her defeat Tara.",
"Sky and Love lost the Knockouts Championship to ODB when they were pinned by Deaner in a tag match at Hard Justice.",
"Madison Rayne was kicked out of The Beautiful People after the loss, with the pair promising revenge in the upcoming tournament.",
"The Beautiful People and a mystery partner faced off in the last of the four quarter final matches.",
"The Beautiful People advanced to the semi-finals.",
"Love was released from her contract due to visa issues.",
"On the last episode of Impact!",
"Love and Sky advanced to the finals of the tag team tournament after being interfered with by Madison Rayne.",
"After apologizing to Sky and Love, Rayne was welcomed back into the Beautiful People.",
"Sky and Rayne were defeated in the finals of the tournament by the Wildes.",
"Lacey Von Erich joined the Beautiful People on October 1.",
"Love returned to the company on the January 14, 2010 episode of Impact!, but instead of rejoining the Beautiful People, she attacked them.",
"On the March 8 episode of Impact!, Sky and Rayne defeated the teams of Love and Tara and Sarita and Taylor Wilde in a three-way match to win the vacant TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship.",
"The members of the Beautiful People defended their titles.",
"Sky was one of the four winners of the first LockBox Showdown Elimination Tag Match.",
"She opened the box and found a contract for Sky to challenge anyone of her choice at any time.",
"Sky said that she would be using her contract to face the new champion in a Leather and Lace match.",
"With Sky and Madison Rayne scheduled to receive a shot at the Knockouts Championship at Lockdown, the Beautiful People turned the Leather and Lace match into a three-on-one beat down.",
"At the pay-per-view, Love and Tara were defeated by Sky and Rayne.",
"On the June 24 episode of Impact, Sky defeated Love by disqualification after receiving a DDT onto a steel chair, just like Von Erich did the previous week.",
"In the summer of 2010, Sky began showing signs of a face turn, when she began talking down to her and Von Erich, declaring that she did not need either of them, and then recruited a mystery woman hiding behind a motorcycle helmet.",
"On the July 22 episode of Impact!, Sky refused to go along with the others when they attacked Love and Taylor Wilde.",
"Sky and Von Erich lost the TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship to the Wildes on the August 5th episode of Impact!",
"Sky caused a distraction by attacking the mystery woman during the title match of the Knockouts Championship, which cost Rayne the title.",
"On the August 19 episode of Impact!, Sky helped defend the Knockouts Championship against Rayne by accompanying her to the ring.",
"Sky and Love were beaten down by a mystery woman after the match.",
"On the September 2 episode of Impact!, the two of them defeated Sky and Love for the first time in a year.",
"Sky defeated Rayne in a singles match.",
"On the September 16 episode of Impact!, Lacey Von Erich was saved by Sky and Love.",
"Von Erich would leave the promotion two months later.",
"On the October 28 and November 4 episodes of Impact!, Sky entered a feud with Sarita, who would score back–to–back pinfall victories over her, first in a six–Knockout tag team match and then in a singles match.",
"On the December 9 episode of Impact!",
"Sky and Love defeated Daffney and Sarita in the first round of the tournament, but Sky was unable to pin them.",
"Sky was attacked prior to her and Love's match.",
"As a result, Winter, who had been stalking Love for the past months, took Sky's place in the match and teaming with Love to defeat Madison Rayne and Tara to win the Knockouts Tag Team Championship.",
"Sky was defeated in a Strap match by Sarita.",
"Sky accused Winter of trying to break up the Beautiful People on the January 27 episode of Impact!",
"Sky was pinned on the February 17 episode of Impact!",
"She was a part of a tag team match.",
"Sky challenged Sarita to a one–on–one match, where she agreed to put her career on the line.",
"Sky's career was saved on the March 3 episode of Impact!, when she defeated Sarita in a singles match.",
"Sky inadvertently cost Love and Winter the Knockouts the Tag Team Championship on March 13 at Victory Road.",
"On the March 24 episode of Impact!, Winter, seemingly having control over Love's actions, prevented her from saving Sky from a beat down.",
"On the April 7 episode of Impact!, Love, still under Winter's influence, turned heel on Sky and left her to be pinned by the champions, effectively ending the Beautiful People.",
"On the April 28 episode of Impact!, Love defeated Sky by submission in a singles match, no-selling all of her opponent's offense during the match.",
"Sky pinned Winter in a two–on–three handicap match on the May 5th episode of Impact!, announcing her intention of becoming the TNA Knockouts Champion in the process.",
"On the May 19 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky defeated Love and Winter in a two–on–one handicap match, but was attacked by the returning ODB, who claimed that she had gotten fired from TNA the previous June because of Sky.",
"Sky defeated ODB in a singles match on the June 9 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"Sky and Ms. Tessmacher were unable to win the TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship due to interference from ODB.",
"Sky was defeated by ODB and her new partner.",
"Sky and Tessmacher were defeated in a tag team match on the June 12 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"On the July 7 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky defeated ODB and Jacqueline in a two–on–one handicap match to end the feud.",
"Sky was given a shot at her title by Mickie James on the July 21 episode of Impact Wrestling, but before the match could take place, James was attacked by two women.",
"Sky was attacked by the returning ODB and others when she tried to make the save.",
"Sky qualified for a four-way knockouts championship match at Bound for Glory on the September 15 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"Sky won the Knockouts Championship for the first time when they defeated Winter, Madison Rayne and Mickie James in a four-way match at Bound for Glory on October 16.",
"Sky thanked the fans on the October 20 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"Gail Kim attacked her during her speech.",
"Gail Kim won the title on November 13 at Turning Point, ending Sky's reign at 28 days.",
"Sky and Mickie James were defeated by Tara in a three-way match for the Knockouts Championship on the January 26 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"Sky became the number one contender to Gail Kim's Knockouts Championship on the April 5 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"Sky tried to challenge Kim for the title in a steel cage match.",
"On the May 17 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky was defeated by Kim again, this time in a three-way match, which also included Brooke.",
"Sky and Mickie James started a feud due to Sky's jealousy.",
"Several wrestling websites reported on July 24 that Szantyr was close to leaving the promotion after failing to agree on a new contract.",
"Szantyr confirmed her departure from the company two days later, but she was still listed as an active member of the roster on the company's website.",
"Sky made her debut for Mexican promotion Lucha Libre AAA World Wide at Triplemana XIX in June of 2011.",
"Sky was going to return to the promotion on October 9.",
"Sky and Sexy Star defeated Cynthia, Faby Apache and Mari Apache in a six-woman tag team match at the pay-per-view.",
"Sky was in Puerto Rico from June 30 to July 2, 2012 for the World Wrestling Council's Anniversario weekend.",
"She and Xix Savant defeated Melina and Davey Richards in a mixed tag team match on the final night of the first two nights.",
"She made her debut for the Bad Boys of Wrestling Federation on September 8 at theBBWF Caribbean Wrestling Bash Aruba The Legend Tour, where she competed againstAngelina Love in a winning effort.",
"Sky was defeated byAngelina Love on the following night of the Caribbean Wrestling Bash on The Legend Tour.",
"Sky and the Beautiful People were defeated by Madison and Rosita at a Northeast Wrestling event on September 22, 2012 after Sky left TNA.",
"Sky made her debut for Family Wrestling Entertainment on October 4, 2012 at the Back 2 Brooklyn internet pay-per-view, where she was part of a tag team that defeated the FWE Women's Championship.",
"Sky made her debut for Maryland Championship Wrestling (MCW) on October 27 at MCW Monster Mash event, where she competed in a tag-team match with Angelina Love.",
"Sky made her return to the ring on the December 6 episode of Impact Wrestling, where she promised to become champion again.",
"Sky defeated Madison Rayne in her return match.",
"Sky became the number one contender to the Knockouts Championship after defeating Gail Kim in a five-woman gauntlet match.",
"Sky was the number one contender when she defeated Kim on the following episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"Sky tried to challenge Tara for the title after Tara's boyfriend interfered on her behalf.",
"Sky pinned Tara in a mixed tag team match on the January 31 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"On the February 21 episode of Impact Wrestling in London, England, Sky defeated Tara, Miss Tessmacher and Gail Kim in a fatal four-way elimination match to win the Knockouts Championship for the second time.",
"Sky defeated Tara on the February 28 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"Sky defeated Gail Kim to retain the title.",
"Taryn was saved from an attack by Gail Kim and Tara on the March 28 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"Sky and Terrell lost to Kim and Tara after the special guest referee made a fast count on them.",
"When Sky distracted Ryan, Terrell gave him a low blow.",
"Sky had an injury during the match.",
"Sky successfully defended the Knockouts Championship against Mickie James on the April 25 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"Sky lost the title to James on the May 23 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"In the following weeks, Sky would demand a sequel, but James would reply by avoiding her and attacking her, as well as taking advantage of her injured leg, turning James villainous in the process.",
"James defeated Sky on the June 27 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"Sky returned on the July 25 episode of Impact Wrestling, saying that she had made a mistake of letting James know she was injured, and that she would never make that mistake again, and she sat ringside during James' title match with Gail Kim.",
"Sky was supposed to team with ODB in a hardcore tornado tag team match against Gail Kim and Mickie James at Hardcore Justice, however, Sky was not medically cleared to compete because of her knee injury, and the match was altered to a triple threat hardcore match.",
"Sky entered a romantic storyline with Chris Sabin, her real life boyfriend at the time, despite being a face herself.",
"Sky helped Sabin win the X Division Championship, and helped him defend it multiple times on Impact Wrestling.",
"Sky and Madison were in a tag team match against Gail Kim and Lei'D Tapa on the January 30th episode of Impact Wrestling when Sky pinned Kim.",
"Sky ended her relationship with Sabin after the match.",
"On the February 6 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky was confronted by Sabin and challenged to a match which took place the following week, but the match never started after Alpha Female attacked Sky.",
"On the February 27 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky and Rayne were defeated by Female and Tapa in a tag team match.",
"ODB came to their aid after they were attacked by Tapa, Gail, and Female.",
"Sky pinned Female in a six–woman tag team match.",
"On the March 13 episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky was called out by the returning Angelina Love, who wanted to reunite The Beautiful People, and a week later on Impact Wrestling, Sky accepted Love's offer.",
"Sky turned heel on the March 27 episode of Impact Wrestling after attacking Rayne during her match with Love.",
"The Beautiful People defeated Rayne and Brittany on Impact Wrestling after Love pinned Brittany.",
"Sky tried to compete in a street fight on the April 17 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"Love's record setting win at Sacrifice was celebrated by The Beautiful People on the May 1 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"The celebration was interrupted by Gail Kim, which allowed Rayne and Brittany to take off their evening gowns.",
"The Beautiful People defeated Rayne and Brittany in a tag team elimination match the following week.",
"Sky was defeated by Kim on the May 15 episode of Impact Wrestling, after Kim issued a challenge for any member of The Beautiful People to wrestle her.",
"Brittany was unsuccessful in her attempt to accept Love's open challenge for her title.",
"Kim came to Brittany's aid and attacked Sky and Love after The Beautiful People humiliated her by putting a paper bag over her head.",
"Sky would help Love in many title defenses.",
"Sky and Love were defeated by Gail and Taryn Kim in a tag team match on the June 26 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"Love lost the Knockouts Championship to Kim on the June 26 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"Sky was unsuccessful in his attempt to challenge Kim for the title in a four-way match on the August 14 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"The feud between The Beautiful People and Gail Kim ended on the August 20 Impact Wrestling: Hardcore Justice special episode, where, despite Sky's interference, Kim defeated Love in a Last Standing match.",
"Sky was unsuccessful in her attempt to win the Knockouts Championship at Bound for Glory.",
"Love and Sky formed an alliance with The BroMans.",
"On the January 23 episode of Impact Wrestling during the Feast or Fired match, Sky grabbed a briefcase for Robbie E, and because Sky had retrieved it, she was forced to open it, revealing a \"fired\" slip.",
"It was revealed that Sky's contract had expired, and that they wouldn't be renewing it.",
"On the May 8, episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky made her return to the company, emerging from the audience to attack Love, thus ending her association with The Beautiful People.",
"On the May 29, 2015, episode of Impact Wrestling, Love brought out her own personal security team and provoked Sky, who was sitting in the audience; Sky jumped the barricade and attacked Love, but was removed from the arena by Love's security team.",
"Sky secured her spot on the roster after defeating Love on the June 25 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"Sky defeated Madison Rayne on the July 8 episode of Impact Wrestling.",
"Sky received a Knockouts Championship match against Brooke on the August 26 episode of Impact Wrestling, but she was attacked by The Dollhouse during the match.",
"Rebel joined The Dollhouse and attacked Sky.",
"On the following week's episode of Impact Wrestling, Sky fought The Dollhouse again, only to be assisted by Angelina Love and Madison Rayne, which led to the reunion of The Beautiful People.",
"Sky was written off the Impact Wrestling series by being told that she was being put in a match against a new roster member, with her job in the company on the line if she lost the match.",
"Sky returned to the independent circuit in a six-person tag team match as she and So Over defeated Jake Manning, Kamaitachi and Sumie Sakai.",
"Sky would team with Bully Ray and Drolix to defeat the other teams at the MCW Autumn Armageddon Tour.",
"Szantyr decided to retire to go back to college.",
"She retired from in-ring action, but not from professional wrestling as a whole, as she would still do appearances.",
"At the Ring of Honor G1 Supercard on April 6, 2019, Velvet Sky attacked Kelly Klein, Jenny Rose, and Stella Grey and formed a new heel stable with Mandy Leon as The Allure.",
"The Allure was kicked out of the Masters of the Craft match when they walked down the ramp with their phones out.",
"Sky sprayed a spray in Amy Rose's eyes after the match.",
"Her profile was removed from the website in October 2020.",
"Sky made her NWA debut as the show's new color commentator on March 23, 2021.",
"She was on MTV's Made with A.J.",
"Styles, Wilde, and Love.",
"On January 24, 2009, she appeared as a soccerette on British television program Soccer AM.",
"In November 2010 she was a contestant on an all TNA week of Family Feud, competing against Jay Lethal, Matt Morgan, Mick Foley, Mr. Anderson and Rob Van Dam.",
"In June of 2012 she was in a Montgomery Gentry music video.",
"She appeared in an episode of Impractical Jokers.",
"Szantyr has Polish and Italian heritage.",
"Szantyr competed in many sports in high school.",
"She was previously engaged to a man.",
"The Georgia Wrestling Alliance GWA Ladies Championship is the only ChampionshipDefiant Pro Wrestling has yet to win.",
"There are 11 of the top 50 female wrestlers in the Pro Wrestling Insider Female 50 in 2013).",
"There are links on the official website of the Velvet Sky Profile Slam!",
"Sports profile 1981 births American female professional wrestlers American people of Polish descent American professional wrestlers of Italian descent Living people Professional wrestlers from Connecticut"
] | Jamie Lynn Szantyr (born June 2, 1981) is an American retired professional wrestler currently signed to NWA as a color commentator. She is best known for her time in Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) under the ring name <mask>. She is a former two-time TNA Women's Knockout Champion and is a former TNA Knockouts Tag Team Champion as part of The Beautiful People (with Madison Rayne and Lacey Von Erich), with the group defending the title under the Freebird rule. Professional wrestling career
Independent circuit (2003–2007)
Szantyr was trained by Jason Knight at the House of Pain Pro Wrestling Dojo in New Britain, Connecticut. After completing her training, she began working as a valet and wrestler on the independent circuit using the ring names Miss Talia, Talia Doll, and Talia Madison. On the independent circuit, she formed a tag team known as T&A with April Hunter. Talia made her debut for World Xtreme Wrestling (WXW) on March 3, 2004, where she defeated Alere Little Feather.She won her first championship in professional wrestling, the WXW Women's Championship, after winning a battle royal on May 29, 2004. Talia went on to successfully defended her title against April Hunter, Cindy Rogers, Psycho and Ariel. On August 28, Talia teamed up with Alicia in a winning effort defeating Cindy Rogers and Mercedes Martinez in a tag team match, and defeated Becky Bayless in a bra and panties match on September 9. Talia continued her undefeated streak, successfully defending her title against Alere Little Feather, Luscious Lily, Cindy Rogers, Officer Mercy, and against Feather and Alicia in a triple threat match. On November 27, Talia teamed up with April Hunter in a winning effort defeating The Moonshiners (Lulu and Trinity H. Campbell). On December 11, Talia successfully defended her title against Krissy Vaine. The following week, Talia teamed up with The Moonshiners (Lulu and Trinity H. Campbell) defeating Alicia, Cindy Rogers and Mercedes Martinez in a six-woman tag team match.Talia's winning streak ended after she was defeated by Martinez on April 25, 2005. On July 8 at the WXW Spotsfest event, Talia lost the championship to Martinez. On September 12 at the WXW Tour, Talia unsuccessfully challenged Martinez for the title in a rematch. At the WXW 4th Annual Women's Elite 8 event, Talia unsuccessfully challenged Martinez again, this time in a triple threat match also involving Krissy Vaine. Szantyr made a few appearances in World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) in 2005 and 2006. On the February 24, 2005 episode of WWE SmackDown!, she appeared as an extra during the JBL "Celebration of Excellence" party. She was then defeated by Victoria on July 11 in a match taped for WWE Heat.On January 2, 2006, she and Trinity were planted in the front row of the audience to be selected to dance with The Heart Throbs after their match in another Heat segment. She also auditioned for the 2007 Diva Search, but did not make the final eight. As Talia Madison, she held Defiant Pro Wrestling Women's title, which she won on April 8, 2006, after defeating Alere Little Feather and Nikki Roxx in a triple threat match. Later that year, she debuted in MXW Pro Wrestling and defeated Alere Little Feather at Brass City Battle. She also wrestled in Women's Extreme Wrestling (WEW), where she mainly worked in tag team matches. She found championship success here as half of The Simple Girls/The Madison Sisters with her (kayfabe) sister Nikki Madison, and as the "T" half of the T&A tag team with April Hunter, defeating Team Blondage's Amber O'Neal and Lollipop to win the titles on WEW's April 6, 2006 pay-per-view. She also held the WEW World Women's title, defeating Angel Orsini on May 5, 2007.Total Nonstop Action Wrestling
The Beautiful People (2007–2011)
When Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) announced the creation of their women's division in 2007, Szantyr, using her Talia Madison ring name, was announced as one of the ten wrestlers in a 10-woman gauntlet match to crown the first TNA Knockouts Champion at the Bound for Glory pay-per-view. Before the show, she made non-wrestling appearances on the October 5 episode of TNA Today and the October 11 episode of Impact!, standing at ringside for the debut match of Amazing Kong along with the other gauntlet match participants. In the weeks following the gauntlet match, her ring name was changed to <mask>. At the December Turning Point pay-per-view, <mask> and Angelina Love formed an alliance and were dubbed Velvet Love Entertainment, later renamed The Beautiful People. After defeating ODB and Roxxi Laveaux early in the show, Love and <mask> assisted Gail Kim in her match against Awesome Kong. They assisted Kim again after another match against Kong on the December 6 episode of Impact!, and at the Final Resolution pay-per-view, helping to stop a post-match brawl. On the March 13 episode of Impact!, <mask> and Love attacked Roxxi Laveaux and later that night Gail Kim, thus becoming villainous characters for the first time.At Lockdown, <mask> and Love participated in the first ever Queen of the Cage match, which was won by Laveaux, when she pinned Love inside the cage. <mask> and Love participated in the Make Over Battle Royal-Ladder Match at Sacrifice, which was won by Gail Kim. Around this time, <mask> and Love added another factor to their gimmicks, placing brown paper bags over their opponents heads after defeating them. Soon after, Moose joined The Beautiful People, but she was quickly removed from the stable and the TNA roster after suffering an injury on the independent circuit. On July 17 episode of Impact!, <mask> won a Knockouts battle royal to become the number one contender to the TNA Knockouts Championship, but lost the title match the next week, as well as two more title matches immediately following, to then-champion Taylor Wilde. The Beautiful People began associating themselves with Cute Kip, who become known as their "fashionist". At Bound for Glory IV, The Beautiful People and Cute Kip were defeated by ODB, Rhaka Khan, and Rhino.In March 2009, the team gained a new member in Madison Rayne, while Kip was "fired" from the stable twice in the following month before finally becoming a road agent for the company. <mask> was in Love's corner when she defeated Kong and Wilde to win the TNA Knockouts Championship at Lockdown. <mask> was also in Love's corner at Slammiversary, where she helped her defeat Tara by spraying hairspray in her eyes. At Hard Justice, <mask>, along with Love, competed in a tag match against ODB and Cody Deaner in a losing effort when Deaner pinned <mask>, resulting in Love losing the Knockouts Championship to ODB. After the loss, Madison Rayne was kicked out of The Beautiful People, with the pair vowing revenge in the upcoming tournament for the TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship. The last of the four quarter final matches pitted The Beautiful People against Rayne and a mystery partner, who was later revealed to be the returning Roxxi. Regardless, The Beautiful People won the match and advanced to the semi-finals.After the match was taped, Love was released from her TNA contract due to work visa issues. On the last episode of Impact! taped before her release, Love and <mask> advanced to the finals of the tag team tournament by defeating Tara and Christy Hemme after interference from Madison Rayne. Afterwards, Rayne apologized to both <mask> and Love, and was then welcomed back into the Beautiful People. At No Surrender, <mask> and Rayne were defeated in the finals of the tournament by Sarita and Taylor Wilde. On October 1, Love's replacement Lacey Von Erich made her debut and joined the Beautiful People. Love would return to the company on the January 14, 2010, episode of Impact!, but instead of re-joining the Beautiful People, she attacked them, thus turning Love face.On the March 8 episode of Impact!, <mask> and Rayne defeated the teams of Love and Tara and Sarita and Taylor Wilde in a three-way match to win the vacant TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship, after interference from Daffney. The three members of the Beautiful People defended the titles under the Freebird rule. On the April 5 episode of Impact!, <mask> was one of the four winners of the very first LockBox Showdown Elimination Tag Match. The box she opened contained a contract for <mask> to challenge anyone of her choosing at any time, regardless of the stipulation. <mask> then announced that she would be using her contract to face the new Knockouts Champion Angelina Love in a Leather and Lace match the following week. With <mask> and Madison Rayne scheduled to receive a shot at the Knockouts Championship at Lockdown, the Beautiful People turned the Leather and Lace match into a three-on-one beat down, in order to soften Love up for the pay-per-view the following Sunday. At the pay-per-view, Rayne and <mask> defeated Love and Tara, and Rayne became the new Knockouts Champion.<mask> faced Love once again on the June 24 episode of Impact, and won by disqualification after receiving a DDT onto a steel chair, just like Von Erich the previous week. In the summer of 2010, <mask> began showing signs of a face turn, when Rayne began talking down to her and Von Erich, declaring that she did not need either of them, and then recruited a mystery woman hiding behind a motorcycle helmet to help her in her feud with Angelina Love. On the July 22 episode of Impact!, <mask> refused to go along with Rayne, the mystery woman and Sarita, when they all finished assaulting Love and Taylor Wilde. On the August 5 episode of Impact!, <mask> and Von Erich lost the TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship to Hamada and Taylor Wilde, when Rayne's and the mystery woman's interference backfired. The following week, <mask> cemented her face turn by attacking the mystery woman during Rayne's title match with Angelina Love, and in doing so caused a distraction, which cost Rayne the Knockouts Championship. On the August 19 episode of Impact!, <mask> reunited with Angelina Love, accompanying her to the ring and helping her successfully defend the Knockouts Championship against Rayne. After the match, <mask> and Love were beaten down by Rayne and the mystery woman.Rayne's mysterious ally was finally unmasked as Tara on the September 2 episode of Impact!, when the two of them defeated <mask> and Love in their first match together in a year. At No Surrender, <mask> defeated Rayne in a singles match. Lacey Von Erich would join <mask> and Love, after being saved by them from Rayne and Tara on the September 16 episode of Impact!. Von Erich, however, would leave the promotion two months later on November 11. In October, <mask> entered a feud with Sarita, who would score back–to–back pinfall victories over her on the October 28 and the November 4 episodes of Impact!, first in a six-Knockout tag team match and then in a singles match. On the December 9 episode of Impact! <mask> and Love defeated Sarita and Daffney in the first round match of a tournament for the vacant Knockouts Tag Team Championship, but <mask> was still unable to pin Sarita.Two weeks later, Sarita attacked <mask> prior to her and Love's tournament final match. As a result, Winter, who had been stalking Love for the past months, took <mask>'s place in the match and teamed with Love to defeat Madison Rayne and Tara to win the Knockouts Tag Team Championship. The following week, Sarita defeated <mask> in a Strap match. On the January 27 episode of Impact!, <mask> brawled with Winter, claiming she was trying to break up the Beautiful People. Sarita pinned <mask> once again on the February 17 episode of Impact! in a tag team match, where she teamed with Rosita. After the match, <mask> challenged Sarita to a one–on–one match, where she agreed to put her career on the line.On the March 3 episode of Impact!, <mask> was finally able to defeat Sarita in a singles match, salvaging her career in the process. On March 13 at Victory Road, <mask> inadvertently cost Love and Winter the Knockouts Tag Team Championship in a match against Sarita and Rosita. On the March 24 episode of Impact!, Winter, seemingly having control over Love's actions, prevented her from saving <mask> from a beat down at the hands of Sarita and Rosita. On the April 7 episode of Impact!, Love, still under Winter's influence, turned heel on <mask> during a Knockouts Tag Team Championship match against Sarita and Rosita, and left her to be pinned by the champions, effectively ending the Beautiful People. TNA Knockout Championship pursuits (2011–2012)
On the April 28 episode of Impact!, Angelina Love defeated <mask> by submission in a singles match, no-selling all of her opponent's offense during the match. On the May 5 episode of Impact!, <mask> pinned Winter in a two–on–three handicap match, where she teamed with Kurt Angle to face Winter, Love and Jeff Jarrett, announcing her intention of becoming the TNA Knockouts Champion in the process. On the May 19 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> defeated Love and Winter in a two–on–one handicap match, but was afterwards attacked by the returning ODB, who claimed that she had gotten fired from TNA the previous June because of <mask>.<mask> and ODB faced each other in a singles match on the June 9 episode of Impact Wrestling, with <mask> emerging victorious. The following week, <mask> and Ms. Tessmacher failed in their attempt to win the TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship from Rosita and Sarita due to interference from ODB. Afterwards, <mask> was beaten down by ODB and her new tag team partner, Jacqueline. On the June 12 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> and Tessmacher were defeated by Jacqueline and ODB in a tag team match. The feud seemingly ended on the July 7 episode of Impact Wrestling, when <mask> defeated ODB and Jacqueline in a two–on–one handicap match, forcing both of them out of TNA as per stipulation of the match. On the July 21 episode of Impact Wrestling, Knockouts Champion Mickie James awarded <mask> a shot at her title, but before the match could take place, James was attacked by Angelina Love and Winter. When <mask> tried to make the save, she was attacked by the returning ODB and Jacqueline, who were then in turn attacked by the also returning Traci Brooks.On the September 15 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> defeated Angelina Love to qualify for a four-way Knockouts Championship match at Bound for Glory. On October 16 at Bound for Glory, <mask> won the Knockouts Championship for the first time by defeating previous champion Winter, Madison Rayne and Mickie James in a four-way match, when Traci Brooks replaced original special guest referee Karen Jarrett, and counted the deciding pinfall. On the October 20 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> came to the ring and thanked the fans for supporting her. During her speech, she was attacked by the returning Gail Kim. On November 13 at Turning Point, <mask> lost the Knockouts Championship to Gail Kim, ending her reign at 28 days. On the January 26 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> and Mickie James were defeated by Tara in a three-way number one contenders match for the Knockouts Championship. On the April 5 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> defeated Angelina Love, Madison Rayne, Mickie James, Tara and Winter in a six-way match to become the number one contender to Gail Kim's Knockouts Championship.On April 15 at Lockdown, <mask> unsuccessfully challenged Kim for the title in a steel cage match. <mask> received a rematch for the championship on the May 17 episode of Impact Wrestling, but was again defeated by Kim in a three-way match, which also included Brooke Tessmacher. The following month, <mask> and Mickie James ignited a feud, with James slowly turning villainous due to her jealousy of <mask>. However, after weeks of inactivity, on July 24, it was reported by numerous wrestling sites that Szantyr was close to leaving TNA, after failing to come to terms on a new contract with the promotion. Two days later, Szantyr confirmed her departure from TNA, however, she was still listed as an active member of the roster on the company's website. Lucha Libre AAA World Wide (2011)
On June 18, 2011, <mask> made her debut for Mexican promotion Lucha Libre AAA World Wide at Triplemanía XIX, where she teamed with Angelina Love, Mickie James and Sexy Star to defeat Cynthia Moreno, Faby Apache, Lolita and Mari Apache in an eight-woman tag team match. On September 8, AAA announced that <mask> would return to the promotion on October 9 at Héroes Inmortales.At the pay-per-view, <mask> teamed with Jennifer Blake and Sexy Star to defeat Cynthia Moreno, Faby Apache and Mari Apache in a six-woman tag team "Glow in the Dark" match. Return to the independent circuit (2012)
From June 30 to July 2, 2012, <mask> took part in World Wrestling Council's (WWC) Anniversario weekend in Puerto Rico. On the first two nights, she was defeated in singles matches by Melina and, on the final night, she and Xix Savant defeated Melina and Davey Richards in a mixed tag team match. <mask> made her debut for Bad Boys of Wrestling Federation (BBWF) on September 8 at the BBWF Caribbean Wrestling Bash Aruba The Legend Tour, where she competed against Angelina Love in a winning effort. The following night on the BBWF Caribbean Wrestling Bash Aruba The Legend Tour, <mask> competed against Angelina Love in a losing effort. Following her departure from TNA, <mask> reunited with Angelina Love as the Beautiful People on September 22, 2012, at a Northeast Wrestling event, where they were defeated by Madison Rayne and Rosita. <mask> made her debut for Family Wrestling Entertainment (FWE) on October 4, 2012, at the Back 2 Brooklyn internet pay-per-view, where she teamed up with Angelina Love to defeat the FWE Women's Champion Maria Kanellis and Katrina Lea in a tag team match.<mask> made her debut for Maryland Championship Wrestling (MCW) on October 27 at MCW Monster Mash event, where she teamed up with Angelina Love in a winning effort defeating Jessie Kaye and Niya in a tag-team match. Return to TNA
Knockouts Champion (2012–2013)
On the December 6 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> made her return during a in-ring segment between Mickie James and Knockouts Champion Tara, where she vowed to become champion again. The following week, <mask> won her return match by defeating Madison Rayne. On January 13, 2013, at Genesis, <mask> won a five-woman gauntlet match by last eliminating Gail Kim, to become the number one contender to the Knockouts Championship. On the following episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> again defeated Kim in a rematch to reaffirm her status as number one contender. The following week, <mask> unsuccessfully challenged Tara for the championship after Tara's boyfriend Jessie interfered on her behalf. On the January 31 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> teamed up with James Storm and defeated Tara and Jessie in a mixed tag team match, after <mask> pinned Tara.On the February 21 episode of Impact Wrestling in London, England, <mask> defeated Tara, Miss Tessmacher and Gail Kim in a fatal four-way elimination match, by last eliminating Kim to win the Knockouts Championship for the second time. <mask> made her first successful title defense on the February 28 episode of Impact Wrestling, defeating Tara. On March 10 at Lockdown, <mask> defeated Gail Kim to retain the championship. On the March 28 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> saved Taryn Terrell from an attack from Gail Kim and Tara. The following week, <mask> teamed up with Terrell in a losing effort to Kim and Tara, after the special guest referee Joey Ryan made a fast count on Terrell. After the match, Terrell gave Ryan a low blow when <mask> distracted him. TNA then announced that <mask> had suffered a knee injury during the match.Despite the injury, <mask> successfully defended the Knockouts Championship against Mickie James on the April 25 episode of Impact Wrestling. On the May 23 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> lost the championship to James, ending her reign at 117 days. In the following weeks, <mask> would demand a rematch, but James would reply by avoiding her and later attacking <mask>, as well as taking advantage of her injured leg, turning James villainous in the process. <mask> and James eventually their rematch on the June 27 episode of Impact Wrestling, where James won by submitting <mask>. <mask> returned on the July 25 episode of Impact Wrestling, saying that she had made the mistake of letting James know she was injured, and that she would never make that mistake again, and <mask> then sat ringside during James' title match with Gail Kim. <mask> was supposed to team with ODB in a Knockouts hardcore tornado tag team match against Gail Kim and Mickie James at Hardcore Justice, however, <mask> was not medically cleared to compete because of her knee injury, and the match was altered to a Knockouts triple threat hardcore match. Relationship with Chris Sabin (2013–2014)
In mid–September 2013, <mask> entered a romantic storyline with newly turned heel Chris Sabin (her real life boyfriend at the time), despite being a face herself.<mask> would eventually help Sabin win the X Division Championship from his rival Austin Aries, and helped him successfully defend it multiple times on Impact Wrestling. On the January 30, 2014 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> reunited with her former Beautiful People partner Madison Rayne in a tag team match against Gail Kim and Lei'D Tapa, which they would win when <mask> pinned Kim. After the match, <mask> ended her relationship with Sabin. On the February 6 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> was confronted by Sabin and challenged to a match which took place the following week, but the match never started after Alpha Female attacked <mask> and aligned herself with Sabin. This would lead to tag team matches between <mask> and Alpha Female, where Rayne and <mask> were defeated by Female and Tapa on the February 27 episode of Impact Wrestling. After the match, they were attacked by Tapa, Gail, and Female until ODB came to their aid. This led to a six–woman tag team match, where <mask>, Rayne and ODB defeated Female, Tapa and Kim, when <mask> pinned Female.The Beautiful People reunion (2014–2016)
On the March 13 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> was called out by the returning Angelina Love, who wanted to reunite The Beautiful People, and a week later on Impact Wrestling, <mask> accepted Love's offer, while Madison Rayne would decline. On the March 27 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> turned heel by attacking Rayne during her match with Love, allowing Love to get the win. The Beautiful People made their in–ring return as a team the following week on Impact Wrestling, defeating Rayne and Brittany, after Love pinned Brittany. On the April 17 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> unsuccessfully competed in a street fight against Rayne. On the May 1 episode of Impact Wrestling, The Beautiful People celebrated Love's record setting TNA Knockouts Championship win at Sacrifice. The celebration was interrupted by Gail Kim, which allowed Rayne and Brittany to strip <mask> and Love of their evening gowns. This led to the Beautiful People defeating Rayne and Brittany in a tag team elimination evening gown match the following week.<mask> was defeated by Kim on the May 15 episode of Impact Wrestling, after Kim issued a challenge for any member of The Beautiful People to wrestle her. The following week, Love issued an open challenge for her Knockouts Championship, which was accepted by Brittany, who was unsuccessful in her attempt. After the match, The Beautiful People humiliated Brittany by smearing lipstick on her face and placing a paper bag over her head, resulting in Kim coming to Brittany's aid and attacking <mask> and Love. <mask> would then aid Love in numerous title defenses against Rayne, Kim and Brittany. The Beautiful People interrupted the return celebration of Taryn Terrell, which lead to a tag team match June 26 episode of Impact Wrestling, where <mask> and Love lost to Terrell and Gail Kim. On the June 26 episode of Impact Wrestling, Love lost the Knockouts Championship to Kim, despite interference from <mask>. On the July 24 episode of Impact Wrestling, The Beautiful People would interrupt a championship match between Kim and Terrell, which led to <mask> unsuccessfully challenging Kim for the title in a four-way match also involving Love and Terrell on the August 14 episode of Impact Wrestling.The feud between The Beautiful People and Gail Kim ended on the August 20 Impact Wrestling: Hardcore Justice special episode, where, despite <mask>'s interference, Kim defeated Love in a Last Knockout Standing match. At Bound for Glory, <mask> faced Havok for the Knockouts Championship, but she was unsuccessful. During this time, Love and <mask> formed an alliance with The BroMans (Robbie E and Jessie Godderz). On the January 23 episode of Impact Wrestling during the Feast or Fired match, <mask> grabbed a briefcase for Robbie E, and because <mask> had retrieved the briefcase, she was forced by Robbie to open it, revealing a "fired" slip. Later, it was revealed that <mask>'s contract had legitimately expired, and TNA had opted not to renew it. On the May 8, episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> made her return to TNA, emerging from the audience to attack Angelina Love, thus, turning face in the process and ending her association with The Beautiful People. On the May 29, 2015, episode of Impact Wrestling, Love brought out her own personal security team and provoked <mask>, who was sitting in the audience; <mask> jumped the barricade and attacked Love, but was removed from the arena by Love's security team.On the June 25 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> defeated Love to secure her spot on the roster. <mask> made her in-ring return on the July 8 episode of Impact Wrestling, defeating Madison Rayne. On the August 26 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> received a Knockouts Championship match against Brooke, but she was attacked by The Dollhouse (Jade and Marti Bell) during the match. <mask> was later attacked by Rebel, who joined The Dollhouse. On the following week's episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> fought The Dollhouse again, only to be assisted by Angelina Love and Madison Rayne, thus reuniting The Beautiful People. On April 22, 2016, <mask> left the company for the third time, with her being written off the Impact Wrestling series by being told that she was being put in a match against new Knockout roster member Sienna, with her job in TNA on the line if she were to lose the match, which she did by pinfall. Return to independent circuit and retirement (2016–2017)
<mask> returned to the independent circuit in a six-person tag team match as she teamed with So Over (Jimmy Preston and Mark Shurman) and defeated Jake Manning, Kamaitachi and Sumie Sakai.At MCW Autumn Armageddon Tour 2016, <mask> would team with Bully Ray and Drolix to defeat Damian Martinez, Ken Dixon and Kennadi Brink in a No Disqualification six-person tag team match. On July 6, 2016, Szantyr announced her retirement to focus on going back to college. She would later state that she was retired from in-ring action, but not from professional wrestling as a whole, as she would still do appearances. Ring of Honor Wrestling (2019–2020)
On April 6, 2019, at ROH G1 Supercard, <mask> officially reunited with Angelina Love and formed a new heel stable with Mandy Leon as The Allure by attacking Kelly Klein, Jenny Rose, and Stella Grey. During Masters of the Craft (2019) on April 14, 2019, during the match between Nick Lendl and Amy Rose The Allure was seen with selfie sticks and phones out as they walked down the ramp to where the bell ringer was and kicked her out. After the match Mandy Leon was seen confronting Amy Rose followed by <mask> spraying hairspray in her eyes. In October 2020, her profile was removed from the ROH website.National Wrestling Alliance (2021–present)
On March 23, 2021, <mask> made her NWA debut as the show's new color commentator, working beside Joe Galli and Tim Storm. Other media
She was featured on MTV's Made alongside A.J. Styles, Taylor Wilde, and Angelina Love. On January 24, 2009, she appeared as a soccerette on British television program Soccer AM, along with Angelina Love. In November 2010 she was a contestant on an all TNA week of Family Feud, teaming with Angelina Love, Christy Hemme, Lacey Von Erich and Tara against Jay Lethal, Matt Morgan, Mick Foley, Mr. Anderson and Rob Van Dam. In June 2012, she was featured in Montgomery Gentry's music video for their song "So Called Life". She has also made a cameo appearance in an episode of Impractical Jokers.Personal life
Szantyr has Polish and Italian heritage in her family. In high school, Szantyr competed in cheerleading, softball, cross-country, football, and track. She was previously engaged to Bubba Ray Dudley. Championships and accomplishments
Defiant Pro Wrestling
DPW Women's Championship (1 time)
Georgia Wrestling Alliance
GWA Ladies Championship (1 time)
Models Mania
Woman of the Year (2013)
Pro Wrestling Illustrated
Ranked No. 11 of the top 50 female wrestlers in the PWI Female 50 in 2013
Pro Wrestling Insider
Female Hottie of the Year (2009)
TNT Pro Wrestling
TNT Women's Championship (1 time)
Total Nonstop Action Wrestling
TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship (1 time)1 – with Lacey Von Erich and Madison Rayne
TNA Women's Knockout Championship (2 times)
Feast or Fired (2015 – Pink Slip)
Universal Wrestling Association
UWA Women's Tag Team Championship (1 time) – with Ariel
Women's Extreme Wrestling
WEW World Championship (1 time)
WEW World Tag Team Championship (2 times) – with April Hunter (1) and Tiffany Madison (1)
World Xtreme Wrestling
WXW Women's Championship (1 time)
1Sky defended the title with either Von Erich or Rayne under the Freebird Rule. References
External links
TNA Official Website – Velvet Sky Profile
Slam! Sports profile
1981 births
American female professional wrestlers
American people of Polish descent
American professional wrestlers of Italian descent
Living people
Professional wrestlers from Connecticut
Professional wrestling announcers
Professional wrestling managers and valets
Sportspeople from New Britain, Connecticut
Sportspeople from Waterbury, Connecticut
WWE Diva Search contestants
21st-century American women | [
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] | Jamie Lynn Szantyr is an American retired professional wrestler currently signed to NWA as a color commentator. She is best known for her time in Total Nonstop Action Wrestling under the ring name <mask>. She is currently a member of The Beautiful People, who are defending the title under the Freebird rule. Szantyr was trained at the House of Pain Pro Wrestling Dojo in New Britain, Connecticut. She began working as a wrestler and a valet on the independent circuit after completing her training. She formed a tag team called T&A with April Hunter. On March 3, 2004, she became the first woman to win a World XW match.On May 29, 2004, she won the first championship in professional wrestling, the WXW Women's Championship. She successfully defended her title against April Hunter, Cindy Rogers and Psycho. In a tag team match on August 28, Talia andAlicia defeated Mercedes and Cindy Rogers, and in a bra and panties match on September 9, they defeated Becky Bayless. In a triple threat match, Talia successfully defended her title against all but one of her opponents. Talia and April Hunter defeated The Moonshiners on November 27. She defended her title against Krissy Vaine. In a six-woman tag team match, The Moonshiners defeated Mercedes and Cindy Rogers.On April 25, 2005, Talia's winning streak ended. The championship was lost on July 8. The title was up for grabs on September 12 at the WXW Tour. At the 4th Annual Women's Elite 8 event, Talia was defeated by Krissy Vaine in a triple threat match. In 2005 and 2006 Szantyr appeared in World Wrestling Entertainment. She was an extra on the February 24, 2005 episode of the show. She was defeated by Victoria in a match on July 11.On January 2, 2006 she and Trinity were planted in the front row of the audience to be selected to dance with The Heart Throbs after their match. She tried out for the Diva Search in 2007, but didn't make the final eight. She won the Defiant Pro Wrestling Women's title on April 8, 2006 after defeating two other wrestlers in a triple threat match. At the Brass City Battle, she defeated Alere Littlefeather. She worked in tag team matches in Women's Extreme Wrestling. She found championship success here as half of The Simple Girls/The Madison Sisters with her sister, and as the "T" half of the T&A tag team with April Hunter. She won the WEW World Women's title on May 5, 2007, defeating Angel Orsini.When Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) announced the creation of their women's division in 2007, Szantyr was announced as one of the ten wrestlers in a 10-woman gauntlet match to crown. She stood at ringside for the first match of the gauntlet match on the October 11 episode of Impact!, as well as other non-wrestling appearances. She changed her ring name to <mask> after the gauntlet match. At the December Turning Point pay-per-view, <mask> and Angelina Love formed an alliance and were dubbed The Beautiful People. Gail Kim was assisted in her match against Awesome Kong by Love and <mask>. They assisted Kim after another match against Kong on the December 6 episode of Impact!, and at the Final Resolution pay-per-view, helping to stop a brawl. <mask> and Love became villainous characters for the first time on the March 13 episode of Impact!Love was pinned by Laveaux in the first ever Queen of the Cage match at Lockdown. Gail Kim won the Make Over Battle Royal-Ladder Match at Sacrifice. <mask> and Love put brown paper bags over their opponents heads after they defeated them. After suffering an injury on the independent circuit, Moose was removed from the stable and the roster and joined The Beautiful People. <mask> won a battle royal on the July 17 episode of Impact!, but lost the title match the next week, as well as two more title matches immediately following, to then-champion Taylor Wilde. Cute Kip became known as the "fashionist" of the Beautiful People. The Beautiful People were defeated by ODB, Rhaka Khan, and Rhino at Bound for Glory IV.In March of 2009, the team gained a new member in Madison Rayne, and in the following month, Kip was fired from the stable and eventually became a road agent for the company. <mask> was in Love's corner when she defeated Kong and Wilde to win the title. <mask> was in Love's corner at Slammiversary, where she helped her defeat Tara. <mask> and Love lost the Knockouts Championship to ODB when they were pinned by Deaner in a tag match at Hard Justice. Madison Rayne was kicked out of The Beautiful People after the loss, with the pair promising revenge in the upcoming tournament. The Beautiful People and a mystery partner faced off in the last of the four quarter final matches. The Beautiful People advanced to the semi-finals.Love was released from her contract due to visa issues. On the last episode of Impact! Love and <mask> advanced to the finals of the tag team tournament after being interfered with by Madison Rayne. After apologizing to <mask> and Love, Rayne was welcomed back into the Beautiful People. <mask> and Rayne were defeated in the finals of the tournament by the Wildes. Lacey Von Erich joined the Beautiful People on October 1. Love returned to the company on the January 14, 2010 episode of Impact!, but instead of rejoining the Beautiful People, she attacked them.On the March 8 episode of Impact!, <mask> and Rayne defeated the teams of Love and Tara and Sarita and Taylor Wilde in a three-way match to win the vacant TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship. The members of the Beautiful People defended their titles. <mask> was one of the four winners of the first LockBox Showdown Elimination Tag Match. She opened the box and found a contract for <mask> to challenge anyone of her choice at any time. <mask> said that she would be using her contract to face the new champion in a Leather and Lace match. With <mask> and Madison Rayne scheduled to receive a shot at the Knockouts Championship at Lockdown, the Beautiful People turned the Leather and Lace match into a three-on-one beat down. At the pay-per-view, Love and Tara were defeated by <mask> and Rayne.On the June 24 episode of Impact, <mask> defeated Love by disqualification after receiving a DDT onto a steel chair, just like Von Erich did the previous week. In the summer of 2010, <mask> began showing signs of a face turn, when she began talking down to her and Von Erich, declaring that she did not need either of them, and then recruited a mystery woman hiding behind a motorcycle helmet. On the July 22 episode of Impact!, <mask> refused to go along with the others when they attacked Love and Taylor Wilde. <mask> and Von Erich lost the TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship to the Wildes on the August 5th episode of Impact! <mask> caused a distraction by attacking the mystery woman during the title match of the Knockouts Championship, which cost Rayne the title. On the August 19 episode of Impact!, <mask> helped defend the Knockouts Championship against Rayne by accompanying her to the ring. <mask> and Love were beaten down by a mystery woman after the match.On the September 2 episode of Impact!, the two of them defeated <mask> and Love for the first time in a year. <mask> defeated Rayne in a singles match. On the September 16 episode of Impact!, Lacey Von Erich was saved by <mask> and Love. Von Erich would leave the promotion two months later. On the October 28 and November 4 episodes of Impact!, <mask> entered a feud with Sarita, who would score back–to–back pinfall victories over her, first in a six–Knockout tag team match and then in a singles match. On the December 9 episode of Impact! Sky and Love defeated Daffney and Sarita in the first round of the tournament, but <mask> was unable to pin them.<mask> was attacked prior to her and Love's match. As a result, Winter, who had been stalking Love for the past months, took <mask>'s place in the match and teaming with Love to defeat Madison Rayne and Tara to win the Knockouts Tag Team Championship. <mask> was defeated in a Strap match by Sarita. <mask> accused Winter of trying to break up the Beautiful People on the January 27 episode of Impact! <mask> was pinned on the February 17 episode of Impact! She was a part of a tag team match. <mask> challenged Sarita to a one–on–one match, where she agreed to put her career on the line.<mask>'s career was saved on the March 3 episode of Impact!, when she defeated Sarita in a singles match. <mask> inadvertently cost Love and Winter the Knockouts the Tag Team Championship on March 13 at Victory Road. On the March 24 episode of Impact!, Winter, seemingly having control over Love's actions, prevented her from saving <mask> from a beat down. On the April 7 episode of Impact!, Love, still under Winter's influence, turned heel on <mask> and left her to be pinned by the champions, effectively ending the Beautiful People. On the April 28 episode of Impact!, Love defeated <mask> by submission in a singles match, no-selling all of her opponent's offense during the match. <mask> pinned Winter in a two–on–three handicap match on the May 5th episode of Impact!, announcing her intention of becoming the TNA Knockouts Champion in the process. On the May 19 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> defeated Love and Winter in a two–on–one handicap match, but was attacked by the returning ODB, who claimed that she had gotten fired from TNA the previous June because of <mask>.<mask> defeated ODB in a singles match on the June 9 episode of Impact Wrestling. <mask> and Ms. Tessmacher were unable to win the TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship due to interference from ODB. <mask> was defeated by ODB and her new partner. <mask> and Tessmacher were defeated in a tag team match on the June 12 episode of Impact Wrestling. On the July 7 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> defeated ODB and Jacqueline in a two–on–one handicap match to end the feud. <mask> was given a shot at her title by Mickie James on the July 21 episode of Impact Wrestling, but before the match could take place, James was attacked by two women. <mask> was attacked by the returning ODB and others when she tried to make the save.<mask> qualified for a four-way knockouts championship match at Bound for Glory on the September 15 episode of Impact Wrestling. Sky won the Knockouts Championship for the first time when they defeated Winter, Madison Rayne and Mickie James in a four-way match at Bound for Glory on October 16. <mask> thanked the fans on the October 20 episode of Impact Wrestling. Gail Kim attacked her during her speech. Gail Kim won the title on November 13 at Turning Point, ending <mask>'s reign at 28 days. <mask> and Mickie James were defeated by Tara in a three-way match for the Knockouts Championship on the January 26 episode of Impact Wrestling. <mask> became the number one contender to Gail Kim's Knockouts Championship on the April 5 episode of Impact Wrestling.<mask> tried to challenge Kim for the title in a steel cage match. On the May 17 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> was defeated by Kim again, this time in a three-way match, which also included Brooke. <mask> and Mickie James started a feud due to <mask>'s jealousy. Several wrestling websites reported on July 24 that Szantyr was close to leaving the promotion after failing to agree on a new contract. Szantyr confirmed her departure from the company two days later, but she was still listed as an active member of the roster on the company's website. <mask> made her debut for Mexican promotion Lucha Libre AAA World Wide at Triplemana XIX in June of 2011. <mask> was going to return to the promotion on October 9.<mask> and Sexy Star defeated Cynthia, Faby Apache and Mari Apache in a six-woman tag team match at the pay-per-view. <mask> was in Puerto Rico from June 30 to July 2, 2012 for the World Wrestling Council's Anniversario weekend. She and Xix Savant defeated Melina and Davey Richards in a mixed tag team match on the final night of the first two nights. She made her debut for the Bad Boys of Wrestling Federation on September 8 at theBBWF Caribbean Wrestling Bash Aruba The Legend Tour, where she competed againstAngelina Love in a winning effort. <mask> Love on the following night of the Caribbean Wrestling Bash on The Legend Tour. <mask> and the Beautiful People were defeated by Madison and Rosita at a Northeast Wrestling event on September 22, 2012 after <mask> left TNA. <mask> made her debut for Family Wrestling Entertainment on October 4, 2012 at the Back 2 Brooklyn internet pay-per-view, where she was part of a tag team that defeated the FWE Women's Championship.<mask> made her debut for Maryland Championship Wrestling (MCW) on October 27 at MCW Monster Mash event, where she competed in a tag-team match with Angelina Love. <mask> made her return to the ring on the December 6 episode of Impact Wrestling, where she promised to become champion again. <mask> defeated Madison Rayne in her return match. <mask> became the number one contender to the Knockouts Championship after defeating Gail Kim in a five-woman gauntlet match. <mask> was the number one contender when she defeated Kim on the following episode of Impact Wrestling. <mask> tried to challenge Tara for the title after Tara's boyfriend interfered on her behalf. <mask> pinned Tara in a mixed tag team match on the January 31 episode of Impact Wrestling.On the February 21 episode of Impact Wrestling in London, England, <mask> defeated Tara, Miss Tessmacher and Gail Kim in a fatal four-way elimination match to win the Knockouts Championship for the second time. <mask> defeated Tara on the February 28 episode of Impact Wrestling. <mask> defeated Gail Kim to retain the title. Taryn was saved from an attack by Gail Kim and Tara on the March 28 episode of Impact Wrestling. <mask> and Terrell lost to Kim and Tara after the special guest referee made a fast count on them. When <mask> distracted Ryan, Terrell gave him a low blow. <mask> had an injury during the match.<mask> successfully defended the Knockouts Championship against Mickie James on the April 25 episode of Impact Wrestling. <mask> lost the title to James on the May 23 episode of Impact Wrestling. In the following weeks, <mask> would demand a sequel, but James would reply by avoiding her and attacking her, as well as taking advantage of her injured leg, turning James villainous in the process. James defeated <mask> on the June 27 episode of Impact Wrestling. <mask> returned on the July 25 episode of Impact Wrestling, saying that she had made a mistake of letting James know she was injured, and that she would never make that mistake again, and she sat ringside during James' title match with Gail Kim. <mask> was supposed to team with ODB in a hardcore tornado tag team match against Gail Kim and Mickie James at Hardcore Justice, however, <mask> was not medically cleared to compete because of her knee injury, and the match was altered to a triple threat hardcore match. <mask> entered a romantic storyline with Chris Sabin, her real life boyfriend at the time, despite being a face herself.<mask> helped Sabin win the X Division Championship, and helped him defend it multiple times on Impact Wrestling. <mask> and Madison were in a tag team match against Gail Kim and Lei'D Tapa on the January 30th episode of Impact Wrestling when <mask> pinned Kim. <mask> ended her relationship with Sabin after the match. On the February 6 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> was confronted by Sabin and challenged to a match which took place the following week, but the match never started after Alpha Female attacked <mask>. On the February 27 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> and Rayne were defeated by Female and Tapa in a tag team match. ODB came to their aid after they were attacked by Tapa, Gail, and Female. <mask> pinned Female in a six–woman tag team match.On the March 13 episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> was called out by the returning Angelina Love, who wanted to reunite The Beautiful People, and a week later on Impact Wrestling, <mask> accepted Love's offer. <mask> turned heel on the March 27 episode of Impact Wrestling after attacking Rayne during her match with Love. The Beautiful People defeated Rayne and Brittany on Impact Wrestling after Love pinned Brittany. <mask> tried to compete in a street fight on the April 17 episode of Impact Wrestling. Love's record setting win at Sacrifice was celebrated by The Beautiful People on the May 1 episode of Impact Wrestling. The celebration was interrupted by Gail Kim, which allowed Rayne and Brittany to take off their evening gowns. The Beautiful People defeated Rayne and Brittany in a tag team elimination match the following week.<mask> was defeated by Kim on the May 15 episode of Impact Wrestling, after Kim issued a challenge for any member of The Beautiful People to wrestle her. Brittany was unsuccessful in her attempt to accept Love's open challenge for her title. Kim came to Brittany's aid and attacked <mask> and Love after The Beautiful People humiliated her by putting a paper bag over her head. <mask> would help Love in many title defenses. <mask> and Love were defeated by Gail and Taryn Kim in a tag team match on the June 26 episode of Impact Wrestling. Love lost the Knockouts Championship to Kim on the June 26 episode of Impact Wrestling. <mask> was unsuccessful in his attempt to challenge Kim for the title in a four-way match on the August 14 episode of Impact Wrestling.The feud between The Beautiful People and Gail Kim ended on the August 20 Impact Wrestling: Hardcore Justice special episode, where, despite <mask>'s interference, Kim defeated Love in a Last Standing match. <mask> was unsuccessful in her attempt to win the Knockouts Championship at Bound for Glory. Love and <mask> formed an alliance with The BroMans. On the January 23 episode of Impact Wrestling during the Feast or Fired match, <mask> grabbed a briefcase for Robbie E, and because <mask> had retrieved it, she was forced to open it, revealing a "fired" slip. It was revealed that <mask>'s contract had expired, and that they wouldn't be renewing it. On the May 8, episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> made her return to the company, emerging from the audience to attack Love, thus ending her association with The Beautiful People. On the May 29, 2015, episode of Impact Wrestling, Love brought out her own personal security team and provoked <mask>, who was sitting in the audience; <mask> jumped the barricade and attacked Love, but was removed from the arena by Love's security team.<mask> secured her spot on the roster after defeating Love on the June 25 episode of Impact Wrestling. <mask> defeated Madison Rayne on the July 8 episode of Impact Wrestling. <mask> received a Knockouts Championship match against Brooke on the August 26 episode of Impact Wrestling, but she was attacked by The Dollhouse during the match. Rebel joined The Dollhouse and attacked <mask>. On the following week's episode of Impact Wrestling, <mask> fought The Dollhouse again, only to be assisted by Angelina Love and Madison Rayne, which led to the reunion of The Beautiful People. <mask> was written off the Impact Wrestling series by being told that she was being put in a match against a new roster member, with her job in the company on the line if she lost the match. <mask> returned to the independent circuit in a six-person tag team match as she and So Over defeated Jake Manning, Kamaitachi and Sumie Sakai.<mask> would team with Bully Ray and Drolix to defeat the other teams at the MCW Autumn Armageddon Tour. Szantyr decided to retire to go back to college. She retired from in-ring action, but not from professional wrestling as a whole, as she would still do appearances. At the Ring of Honor G1 Supercard on April 6, 2019, <mask> attacked Kelly Klein, Jenny Rose, and Stella Grey and formed a new heel stable with Mandy Leon as The Allure. The Allure was kicked out of the Masters of the Craft match when they walked down the ramp with their phones out. <mask> sprayed a spray in Amy Rose's eyes after the match. Her profile was removed from the website in October 2020.<mask> made her NWA debut as the show's new color commentator on March 23, 2021. She was on MTV's Made with A.J. Styles, Wilde, and Love. On January 24, 2009, she appeared as a soccerette on British television program Soccer AM. In November 2010 she was a contestant on an all TNA week of Family Feud, competing against Jay Lethal, Matt Morgan, Mick Foley, Mr. Anderson and Rob Van Dam. In June of 2012 she was in a Montgomery Gentry music video. She appeared in an episode of Impractical Jokers.Szantyr has Polish and Italian heritage. Szantyr competed in many sports in high school. She was previously engaged to a man. The Georgia Wrestling Alliance GWA Ladies Championship is the only ChampionshipDefiant Pro Wrestling has yet to win. 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358535 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xavier%20Cugat | Xavier Cugat | Xavier Cugat (; 1 January 1900 – 27 October 1990) was a Spanish musician and bandleader who spent his formative years in Havana, Cuba. A trained violinist and arranger, he was a leading figure in the spread of Latin music. In New York City he was the leader of the resident orchestra at the Waldorf–Astoria before and after World War II. He was also a cartoonist and a restaurateur. The personal papers of Xavier Cugat are preserved in the Biblioteca de Catalunya.
Life and career
Cugat was born Francisco de Asís Javier Cugat Mingall de Bru y Deulofeu in Girona, Catalonia, Spain. His family emigrated to Cuba when he was three years old. He studied classical violin and worked as a violinist at the age of nine in a silent movie theater to help pay for his education. He was first chair violinist for the Teatro Nacional Symphonic Orchestra. When he wasn't performing, he started drawing caricatures. On 6 July 1915 he and his family arrived in New York City on the SS Havana. Cugat appeared in recitals with Enrico Caruso, playing violin solos.
In the 1920s, he led a band that played often at the Cocoanut Grove, a club in Los Angeles. Cugat's friend, Charlie Chaplin, visited the club to dance the tango, so Cugat added tangos to the band's performances. Seeing how popular the dance was becoming, Cugat convinced the owner to hire South American dancers to give tango lessons. This, too, became popular, and Cugat made the dancers part of his orchestra. In 1928 he turned his act into the film Xavier Cugat and His Gigolos.
He worked for the Los Angeles Times as a cartoonist. His caricatures were nationally syndicated. They appeared in Photoplay magazine beginning with the November 1927 issue, under the byline "de Bru." His older brother, Francis, was an artist of some note, having painted cover art for F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby.
In 1931 Cugat took his band to New York for the 1931 opening of the Waldorf–Astoria hotel. He replaced Jack Denny as leader of the hotel's resident band. For sixteen years, he led the Waldorf–Astoria Orchestra, shuttling between New York and Los Angeles for most of the next 30 years. One of his trademark gestures was to hold a chihuahua while he waved his baton with the other arm.
His music career led to appearing in the films In Gay Madrid (1930), You Were Never Lovelier (1942), Week-End at the Waldorf (1945), Bathing Beauty (1944), Holiday in Mexico (1946), A Date with Judy (1948), On an Island with You (1948), and Chicago Syndicate (1955).
Cugat owned and operated the Mexican restaurant Casa Cugat in West Hollywood. The restaurant was frequented by Hollywood celebrities and featured two singing guitarists who would visit each table and play diners' favorite songs upon request. The restaurant began operations in the 1940s and closed in 1986.
The restaurant's exterior and a fanciful depiction of its interior can be found in scenes in the 1949 film Neptune's Daughter in which Cugat has a substantial role playing himself. A brief scene revolving around the restaurant can also be seen in the earlier 1943 film The Heat's On, also starring Cugat as himself.
Death
Cugat spent his last years in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain, living in a suite at Hotel Ritz es. He died of heart failure at age 90 in Barcelona and was buried in his native Girona. He was posthumously inducted into the International Latin Music Hall of Fame in 2001.
Marriages
Cugat was married five times. His first marriage was to Rita Montaner (1918–20), his second was to his band vocalist Carmen Castillo (1929–44), his third to actress Lorraine Allen (1947–52), his fourth to singer Abbe Lane (1952–64), and his fifth to Spanish guitarist and comic actress Charo (1966–78).
Recordings
Cugat recorded for Columbia (1940s and 1950s, and Epic), RCA Victor (1930s and 1950s), Mercury (1951–52 and the 1960s), and Decca (1960s). Dinah Shore made her first recordings as a vocalist with Cugat in 1939 and 1940 for RCA Victor. In 1940 his recording of "Perfidia" became a hit. Cugat followed trends closely, making records for the conga, the mambo, the cha-cha-cha, and the twist when these dances were popular. Several songs that he recorded, including "Perfidia", were used in the Wong Kar-wai films Days of Being Wild and 2046. In 1943 "Brazil" was Cugat's most successful chart hit. It spent seven weeks at No. 2 on the Billboard magazine National Best Selling Retail Records chart behind Harry James's song "I've Heard That Song Before". In the 1950s he made several recordings with his wife, singer Abbe Lane.
His orchestra included Desi Arnaz, Lina Romay, Abbe Lane, Tito Rodriguez, Yma Sumac, Miguelito Valdés, Frank Berardi, Gene Lorello, George Lopez, Glenn E. Brown, Henry Greher, Isabello Marerro, James English, John Haluko, Joseph Gutierrez, Luis Castellanos, Manuel Paxtot, Oswaldo Oliveira, Otto Bolívar, Otto Garcia, Rafael Angelo, Richard Hoffman, Robert De Joseph, and Robert Jones.
Discography
The Lady in Red (RCA Victor, 1935)
One, Two, Three, Kick – Congas (Victor, 1941)
Cugat's Favorite Rhumbas (Columbia, 1945)
In Santiago, Chile(Tain't Chilly At All)(Columbia], 1948)
Siesta (Columbia, 1948)
Tropical Bouquets (Columbia, 1949)
Relaxing with Cugat (Columbia, 1952)
Dancetime with Cugat (RCA Victor, 1953)
Cugat's Favorite Rhumbas (Columbia, 1954)
Ole! (Columbia, 1955)
Mambo at the Waldorf (Columbia, 1955)
Mambo! (Music for Latin Lovers) (Mercury, 1957)
The King Plays Some Aces (RCA Victor, 1958)
Cugat in Spain (RCA Victor, 1959)
Chile Con Cugie (RCA Victor, 1959)
The Latin Rhythms of Xavier Cugat (Harmony, 1960)
Cugat in France, Spain, and Italy (RCA, 1960)
Viva Cugat! (Mercury, 1961)
Cugat Plays Continental Hits (Mercury, 1962)
Most Popular Movie Hits As Styled By Cugat (Mercury, 1962)
Cugat's Golden Goodies (Mercury, 1963)
Plays the Music of Ernesto Lecuona (Mercury, 1964)
Midnight Roses (Decca, 1968)
Cugi's Cocktails (Mercury, 1963)
Cugat Caricatures (Mercury, 1964)
The Cugat Touch (Springboard, 1976)
References
External links
Personal papers of Xavier Cugat, Biblioteca de Catalunya; accessed 8 November 2015
About Xavier Cugat,
Xavier Cugat recordings at the Discography of American Historical Recordings.
1900 births
1990 deaths
People from Girona
Spanish emigrants to Cuba
20th-century Spanish musicians
20th-century violinists
American cartoonists
American people of Catalan descent
Big band bandleaders
Musicians from Catalonia
Cuban emigrants to the United States
Cuban musicians
Cuban people of Catalan descent
Latin jazz bandleaders
Latin jazz musicians
Latin jazz violinists
Rhumba musicians
Columbia Records artists
Mercury Records artists
RCA Victor artists
Los Angeles Times people | [
"Xavier Cugat (; 1 January 1900 – 27 October 1990) was a Spanish musician and bandleader who spent his formative years in Havana, Cuba.",
"A trained violinist and arranger, he was a leading figure in the spread of Latin music.",
"In New York City he was the leader of the resident orchestra at the Waldorf–Astoria before and after World War II.",
"He was also a cartoonist and a restaurateur.",
"The personal papers of Xavier Cugat are preserved in the Biblioteca de Catalunya.",
"Life and career\nCugat was born Francisco de Asís Javier Cugat Mingall de Bru y Deulofeu in Girona, Catalonia, Spain.",
"His family emigrated to Cuba when he was three years old.",
"He studied classical violin and worked as a violinist at the age of nine in a silent movie theater to help pay for his education.",
"He was first chair violinist for the Teatro Nacional Symphonic Orchestra.",
"When he wasn't performing, he started drawing caricatures.",
"On 6 July 1915 he and his family arrived in New York City on the SS Havana.",
"Cugat appeared in recitals with Enrico Caruso, playing violin solos.",
"In the 1920s, he led a band that played often at the Cocoanut Grove, a club in Los Angeles.",
"Cugat's friend, Charlie Chaplin, visited the club to dance the tango, so Cugat added tangos to the band's performances.",
"Seeing how popular the dance was becoming, Cugat convinced the owner to hire South American dancers to give tango lessons.",
"This, too, became popular, and Cugat made the dancers part of his orchestra.",
"In 1928 he turned his act into the film Xavier Cugat and His Gigolos.",
"He worked for the Los Angeles Times as a cartoonist.",
"His caricatures were nationally syndicated.",
"They appeared in Photoplay magazine beginning with the November 1927 issue, under the byline \"de Bru.\"",
"His older brother, Francis, was an artist of some note, having painted cover art for F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby.",
"In 1931 Cugat took his band to New York for the 1931 opening of the Waldorf–Astoria hotel.",
"He replaced Jack Denny as leader of the hotel's resident band.",
"For sixteen years, he led the Waldorf–Astoria Orchestra, shuttling between New York and Los Angeles for most of the next 30 years.",
"One of his trademark gestures was to hold a chihuahua while he waved his baton with the other arm.",
"His music career led to appearing in the films In Gay Madrid (1930), You Were Never Lovelier (1942), Week-End at the Waldorf (1945), Bathing Beauty (1944), Holiday in Mexico (1946), A Date with Judy (1948), On an Island with You (1948), and Chicago Syndicate (1955).",
"Cugat owned and operated the Mexican restaurant Casa Cugat in West Hollywood.",
"The restaurant was frequented by Hollywood celebrities and featured two singing guitarists who would visit each table and play diners' favorite songs upon request.",
"The restaurant began operations in the 1940s and closed in 1986.",
"The restaurant's exterior and a fanciful depiction of its interior can be found in scenes in the 1949 film Neptune's Daughter in which Cugat has a substantial role playing himself.",
"A brief scene revolving around the restaurant can also be seen in the earlier 1943 film The Heat's On, also starring Cugat as himself.",
"Death\n\nCugat spent his last years in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain, living in a suite at Hotel Ritz es.",
"He died of heart failure at age 90 in Barcelona and was buried in his native Girona.",
"He was posthumously inducted into the International Latin Music Hall of Fame in 2001.",
"Marriages\nCugat was married five times.",
"His first marriage was to Rita Montaner (1918–20), his second was to his band vocalist Carmen Castillo (1929–44), his third to actress Lorraine Allen (1947–52), his fourth to singer Abbe Lane (1952–64), and his fifth to Spanish guitarist and comic actress Charo (1966–78).",
"Recordings\nCugat recorded for Columbia (1940s and 1950s, and Epic), RCA Victor (1930s and 1950s), Mercury (1951–52 and the 1960s), and Decca (1960s).",
"Dinah Shore made her first recordings as a vocalist with Cugat in 1939 and 1940 for RCA Victor.",
"In 1940 his recording of \"Perfidia\" became a hit.",
"Cugat followed trends closely, making records for the conga, the mambo, the cha-cha-cha, and the twist when these dances were popular.",
"Several songs that he recorded, including \"Perfidia\", were used in the Wong Kar-wai films Days of Being Wild and 2046.",
"In 1943 \"Brazil\" was Cugat's most successful chart hit.",
"It spent seven weeks at No.",
"2 on the Billboard magazine National Best Selling Retail Records chart behind Harry James's song \"I've Heard That Song Before\".",
"In the 1950s he made several recordings with his wife, singer Abbe Lane.",
"His orchestra included Desi Arnaz, Lina Romay, Abbe Lane, Tito Rodriguez, Yma Sumac, Miguelito Valdés, Frank Berardi, Gene Lorello, George Lopez, Glenn E. Brown, Henry Greher, Isabello Marerro, James English, John Haluko, Joseph Gutierrez, Luis Castellanos, Manuel Paxtot, Oswaldo Oliveira, Otto Bolívar, Otto Garcia, Rafael Angelo, Richard Hoffman, Robert De Joseph, and Robert Jones.",
"Discography\n The Lady in Red (RCA Victor, 1935)\n One, Two, Three, Kick – Congas (Victor, 1941)\n Cugat's Favorite Rhumbas (Columbia, 1945)\n In Santiago, Chile(Tain't Chilly At All)(Columbia], 1948)\n Siesta (Columbia, 1948) \n Tropical Bouquets (Columbia, 1949)\n Relaxing with Cugat (Columbia, 1952)\n Dancetime with Cugat (RCA Victor, 1953)\n Cugat's Favorite Rhumbas (Columbia, 1954)\n Ole!",
"(Columbia, 1955)\n Mambo at the Waldorf (Columbia, 1955)\n Mambo!",
"(Music for Latin Lovers) (Mercury, 1957)\n The King Plays Some Aces (RCA Victor, 1958)\n Cugat in Spain (RCA Victor, 1959)\n Chile Con Cugie (RCA Victor, 1959)\n The Latin Rhythms of Xavier Cugat (Harmony, 1960)\n Cugat in France, Spain, and Italy (RCA, 1960)\n Viva Cugat!",
"(Mercury, 1961)\n Cugat Plays Continental Hits (Mercury, 1962)\n Most Popular Movie Hits As Styled By Cugat (Mercury, 1962)\n Cugat's Golden Goodies (Mercury, 1963)\n Plays the Music of Ernesto Lecuona (Mercury, 1964)\n Midnight Roses (Decca, 1968)\n Cugi's Cocktails (Mercury, 1963)\n Cugat Caricatures (Mercury, 1964)\n The Cugat Touch (Springboard, 1976)\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links\n Personal papers of Xavier Cugat, Biblioteca de Catalunya; accessed 8 November 2015\n About Xavier Cugat, \n Xavier Cugat recordings at the Discography of American Historical Recordings.",
"1900 births\n1990 deaths\nPeople from Girona\nSpanish emigrants to Cuba\n20th-century Spanish musicians\n20th-century violinists\nAmerican cartoonists\nAmerican people of Catalan descent\nBig band bandleaders\nMusicians from Catalonia\nCuban emigrants to the United States\nCuban musicians\nCuban people of Catalan descent\nLatin jazz bandleaders\nLatin jazz musicians\nLatin jazz violinists\nRhumba musicians\nColumbia Records artists\nMercury Records artists\nRCA Victor artists\nLos Angeles Times people"
] | [
"Cugat spent his formative years in Havana, Cuba.",
"He was a leader in the spread of Latin music.",
"He was the leader of the resident orchestra in New York City before and after World War II.",
"He ran a restaurant and was a cartoonist.",
"The Biblioteca de Catalunya has the personal papers of Cugat.",
"Cugat was born in Girona, Catalonia, Spain.",
"His family moved to Cuba when he was three years old.",
"At the age of nine, he worked as a violinist in a silent movie theater to help pay for his education.",
"He was the first chair violinist.",
"He started drawing caricatures when he wasn't performing.",
"On July 6, 1915, he and his family arrived in New York City.",
"Cugat was playing violin in the recitals.",
"He was the leader of a band that played at a club in Los Angeles in the 1920s.",
"Cugat added tangos to the band's performances after Charlie Chaplin visited the club to dance the tango.",
"Cugat convinced the owner to hire dancers from South America to teach tango.",
"Cugat made the dancers part of his orchestra.",
"He turned his act into a film.",
"He was a cartoonist for the Los Angeles Times.",
"His caricatures were syndicated.",
"They appeared under the byline \"de Bru\" in the November 1927 issue of Photoplay magazine.",
"His older brother, Francis, was an artist who painted cover art for a novel.",
"Cugat took his band to New York for the opening of the hotel in 1931.",
"Jack Denny was the leader of the hotel's resident band.",
"He spent most of the next 30 years shuttling between New York and Los Angeles.",
"One of his trademark gestures was to hold a chihuahua while he waved his baton.",
"In Gay Madrid, You Were Never Lovelier, Week-End at the Waldorf, Bathing Beauty, Holiday in Mexico, and A Date with Judy all appeared in his music career.",
"Casa Cugat was owned and operated by Cugat.",
"The restaurant was frequented by Hollywood celebrities and featured two singing guitarists who would visit each table and play their favorite songs.",
"The restaurant closed in 1986.",
"Cugat has a significant role in the 1949 film Neptune's Daughter, in which he portrays himself in a fanciful depiction of the restaurant's interior.",
"Cugat plays himself in the 1943 film The Heat's On, which has a scene revolving around the restaurant.",
"Death Cugat lived in a suite at the Hotel Ritz es in Barcelona.",
"He died of heart failure in Barcelona at the age of 90 and was buried in his native Girona.",
"He was a member of the International Latin Music Hall of Fame.",
"Cugat was married five times.",
"His first marriage was to Rita Montaner, his second was to his band vocalist Carmen Castillo, his third was to actress Lorraine Allen, his fourth was to singer Abbe Lane, and his fifth was to Spanish guitarist and comic actress Char.",
"Cugat recorded for Columbia, RCA Victor, Mercury, and Decca.",
"She made her first recordings as a vocalist with Cugat in 1939 and 1940.",
"\"Perfidia\" became a hit in 1940.",
"Cugat made records for the conga, the mambo, the cha-cha-cha, and the twist when these dances were popular.",
"\"Perfidia\", a song he recorded, was used in two Wong Kar-wai films.",
"Cugat's most successful chart hit was \"Brazil\" in 1943.",
"It was at the top for seven weeks.",
"Harry James's song \"I've Heard That Song Before\" was 2 on the National Best Selling Retail Records chart.",
"He made several recordings with his wife.",
"Frank Berardi, Gene Lorello, George Lopez, Glenn E. Brown, Henry Greher, Isabello Marerro, James English, and John Hal were part of his orchestra.",
"Cugat's Favorite Rhumbas (Columbia, 1945) is from The Lady in Red.",
"The Mambo at the Waldorf was filmed in Columbia in 1955.",
"Cugat in Spain and The Latin Rhythms of Cugat in France are music for Latin Lovers.",
"Cugat's Golden Goodies is one of the most popular movie hits of all time.",
"20th-century Spanish musicians, 20th-century violinists, American cartoonists and people of Catalan descent are some of the people who have died in the 1990s."
] | <mask> (; 1 January 1900 – 27 October 1990) was a Spanish musician and bandleader who spent his formative years in Havana, Cuba. A trained violinist and arranger, he was a leading figure in the spread of Latin music. In New York City he was the leader of the resident orchestra at the Waldorf–Astoria before and after World War II. He was also a cartoonist and a restaurateur. The personal papers of <mask> are preserved in the Biblioteca de Catalunya. Life and career
Cugat was born <mask>ru y Deulofeu in Girona, Catalonia, Spain. His family emigrated to Cuba when he was three years old.He studied classical violin and worked as a violinist at the age of nine in a silent movie theater to help pay for his education. He was first chair violinist for the Teatro Nacional Symphonic Orchestra. When he wasn't performing, he started drawing caricatures. On 6 July 1915 he and his family arrived in New York City on the SS Havana. Cugat appeared in recitals with Enrico Caruso, playing violin solos. In the 1920s, he led a band that played often at the Cocoanut Grove, a club in Los Angeles. Cugat's friend, Charlie Chaplin, visited the club to dance the tango, so Cugat added tangos to the band's performances.Seeing how popular the dance was becoming, Cugat convinced the owner to hire South American dancers to give tango lessons. This, too, became popular, and Cugat made the dancers part of his orchestra. In 1928 he turned his act into the film Xavier Cugat and His Gigolos. He worked for the Los Angeles Times as a cartoonist. His caricatures were nationally syndicated. They appeared in Photoplay magazine beginning with the November 1927 issue, under the byline "de Bru." His older brother, Francis, was an artist of some note, having painted cover art for F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby.In 1931 Cugat took his band to New York for the 1931 opening of the Waldorf–Astoria hotel. He replaced Jack Denny as leader of the hotel's resident band. For sixteen years, he led the Waldorf–Astoria Orchestra, shuttling between New York and Los Angeles for most of the next 30 years. One of his trademark gestures was to hold a chihuahua while he waved his baton with the other arm. His music career led to appearing in the films In Gay Madrid (1930), You Were Never Lovelier (1942), Week-End at the Waldorf (1945), Bathing Beauty (1944), Holiday in Mexico (1946), A Date with Judy (1948), On an Island with You (1948), and Chicago Syndicate (1955). Cugat owned and operated the Mexican restaurant Casa Cugat in West Hollywood. The restaurant was frequented by Hollywood celebrities and featured two singing guitarists who would visit each table and play diners' favorite songs upon request.The restaurant began operations in the 1940s and closed in 1986. The restaurant's exterior and a fanciful depiction of its interior can be found in scenes in the 1949 film Neptune's Daughter in which <mask> has a substantial role playing himself. A brief scene revolving around the restaurant can also be seen in the earlier 1943 film The Heat's On, also starring <mask> as himself. Death
<mask> spent his last years in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain, living in a suite at Hotel Ritz es. He died of heart failure at age 90 in Barcelona and was buried in his native Girona. He was posthumously inducted into the International Latin Music Hall of Fame in 2001. Marriages
Cugat was married five times.His first marriage was to Rita Montaner (1918–20), his second was to his band vocalist Carmen Castillo (1929–44), his third to actress Lorraine Allen (1947–52), his fourth to singer Abbe Lane (1952–64), and his fifth to Spanish guitarist and comic actress Charo (1966–78). Recordings
Cugat recorded for Columbia (1940s and 1950s, and Epic), RCA Victor (1930s and 1950s), Mercury (1951–52 and the 1960s), and Decca (1960s). Dinah Shore made her first recordings as a vocalist with Cugat in 1939 and 1940 for RCA Victor. In 1940 his recording of "Perfidia" became a hit. Cugat followed trends closely, making records for the conga, the mambo, the cha-cha-cha, and the twist when these dances were popular. Several songs that he recorded, including "Perfidia", were used in the Wong Kar-wai films Days of Being Wild and 2046. In 1943 "Brazil" was Cugat's most successful chart hit.It spent seven weeks at No. 2 on the Billboard magazine National Best Selling Retail Records chart behind Harry James's song "I've Heard That Song Before". In the 1950s he made several recordings with his wife, singer Abbe Lane. His orchestra included Desi Arnaz, Lina Romay, Abbe Lane, Tito Rodriguez, Yma Sumac, Miguelito Valdés, Frank Berardi, Gene Lorello, George Lopez, Glenn E. Brown, Henry Greher, Isabello Marerro, James English, John Haluko, Joseph Gutierrez, Luis Castellanos, Manuel Paxtot, Oswaldo Oliveira, Otto Bolívar, Otto Garcia, Rafael Angelo, Richard Hoffman, Robert De Joseph, and Robert Jones. Discography
The Lady in Red (RCA Victor, 1935)
One, Two, Three, Kick – Congas (Victor, 1941)
Cugat's Favorite Rhumbas (Columbia, 1945)
In Santiago, Chile(Tain't Chilly At All)(Columbia], 1948)
Siesta (Columbia, 1948)
Tropical Bouquets (Columbia, 1949)
Relaxing with Cugat (Columbia, 1952)
Dancetime with Cugat (RCA Victor, 1953)
Cugat's Favorite Rhumbas (Columbia, 1954)
Ole! (Columbia, 1955)
Mambo at the Waldorf (Columbia, 1955)
Mambo! (Music for Latin Lovers) (Mercury, 1957)
The King Plays Some Aces (RCA Victor, 1958)
Cugat in Spain (RCA Victor, 1959)
Chile Con Cugie (RCA Victor, 1959)
The Latin Rhythms of <mask> (Harmony, 1960)
Cugat in France, Spain, and Italy (RCA, 1960)
Viva Cugat!(Mercury, 1961)
Cugat Plays Continental Hits (Mercury, 1962)
Most Popular Movie Hits As Styled By Cugat (Mercury, 1962)
Cugat's Golden Goodies (Mercury, 1963)
Plays the Music of Ernesto Lecuona (Mercury, 1964)
Midnight Roses (Decca, 1968)
Cugi's Cocktails (Mercury, 1963)
Cugat Caricatures (Mercury, 1964)
The Cugat Touch (Springboard, 1976)
References
External links
Personal papers of <mask>, Biblioteca de Catalunya; accessed 8 November 2015
About <mask>,
<mask>t recordings at the Discography of American Historical Recordings. 1900 births
1990 deaths
People from Girona
Spanish emigrants to Cuba
20th-century Spanish musicians
20th-century violinists
American cartoonists
American people of Catalan descent
Big band bandleaders
Musicians from Catalonia
Cuban emigrants to the United States
Cuban musicians
Cuban people of Catalan descent
Latin jazz bandleaders
Latin jazz musicians
Latin jazz violinists
Rhumba musicians
Columbia Records artists
Mercury Records artists
RCA Victor artists
Los Angeles Times people | [
"Xavier Cugat",
"Xavier Cugat",
"Francisco de Asís Javier Cugat Mingall de B",
"Cugat",
"Cugat",
"Cugat",
"Xavier Cugat",
"Xavier Cugat",
"Xavier Cugat",
"Xavier Cuga"
] | Cugat spent his formative years in Havana, Cuba. He was a leader in the spread of Latin music. He was the leader of the resident orchestra in New York City before and after World War II. He ran a restaurant and was a cartoonist. The Biblioteca de Catalunya has the personal papers of Cugat. <mask> was born in Girona, Catalonia, Spain. His family moved to Cuba when he was three years old.At the age of nine, he worked as a violinist in a silent movie theater to help pay for his education. He was the first chair violinist. He started drawing caricatures when he wasn't performing. On July 6, 1915, he and his family arrived in New York City. Cugat was playing violin in the recitals. He was the leader of a band that played at a club in Los Angeles in the 1920s. Cugat added tangos to the band's performances after Charlie Chaplin visited the club to dance the tango.Cugat convinced the owner to hire dancers from South America to teach tango. Cugat made the dancers part of his orchestra. He turned his act into a film. He was a cartoonist for the Los Angeles Times. His caricatures were syndicated. They appeared under the byline "de Bru" in the November 1927 issue of Photoplay magazine. His older brother, Francis, was an artist who painted cover art for a novel.Cugat took his band to New York for the opening of the hotel in 1931. Jack Denny was the leader of the hotel's resident band. He spent most of the next 30 years shuttling between New York and Los Angeles. One of his trademark gestures was to hold a chihuahua while he waved his baton. In Gay Madrid, You Were Never Lovelier, Week-End at the Waldorf, Bathing Beauty, Holiday in Mexico, and A Date with Judy all appeared in his music career. Casa Cugat was owned and operated by Cugat. The restaurant was frequented by Hollywood celebrities and featured two singing guitarists who would visit each table and play their favorite songs.The restaurant closed in 1986. <mask> has a significant role in the 1949 film Neptune's Daughter, in which he portrays himself in a fanciful depiction of the restaurant's interior. <mask> plays himself in the 1943 film The Heat's On, which has a scene revolving around the restaurant. <mask> lived in a suite at the Hotel Ritz es in Barcelona. He died of heart failure in Barcelona at the age of 90 and was buried in his native Girona. He was a member of the International Latin Music Hall of Fame. Cugat was married five times.His first marriage was to Rita Montaner, his second was to his band vocalist Carmen Castillo, his third was to actress Lorraine Allen, his fourth was to singer Abbe Lane, and his fifth was to Spanish guitarist and comic actress Char. Cugat recorded for Columbia, RCA Victor, Mercury, and Decca. She made her first recordings as a vocalist with Cugat in 1939 and 1940. "Perfidia" became a hit in 1940. Cugat made records for the conga, the mambo, the cha-cha-cha, and the twist when these dances were popular. "Perfidia", a song he recorded, was used in two Wong Kar-wai films. Cugat's most successful chart hit was "Brazil" in 1943.It was at the top for seven weeks. Harry James's song "I've Heard That Song Before" was 2 on the National Best Selling Retail Records chart. He made several recordings with his wife. Frank Berardi, Gene Lorello, George Lopez, Glenn E. Brown, Henry Greher, Isabello Marerro, James English, and John Hal were part of his orchestra. Cugat's Favorite Rhumbas (Columbia, 1945) is from The Lady in Red. The Mambo at the Waldorf was filmed in Columbia in 1955. Cugat in Spain and The Latin Rhythms of Cugat in France are music for Latin Lovers.<mask>'s Golden Goodies is one of the most popular movie hits of all time. 20th-century Spanish musicians, 20th-century violinists, American cartoonists and people of Catalan descent are some of the people who have died in the 1990s. | [
"Cugat",
"Cugat",
"Cugat",
"Death Cugat",
"Cugat"
] |
18418767 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C.%20H.%20Brown | C. H. Brown | Rev. Charles Hunter Brown (aka Rev. Charles H. Brown and Rev. C.H. Brown)
(Feb. 2, 1907 - Jan. 17, 1996), an American building contractor, religious and community leader, did much to provide affordable housing, employment and on-the-job training, social and spiritual relief for many in Charlottesville and Albemarle County, Virginia during the 1940s through the early 1980s.
Early years
Reverend Charles Hunter Brown, born February 2, 1907 to Lacy and Martha Franklin Brown in the Proffit Historic District, Virginia was one of several sons born to the Browns. He often missed school to help out at home during the growing and harvesting season. As a young man, he sought employment away from the grueling life he had known as a farmer. His early employment included work with a company that laid Macadam roads. Rev. Brown’s call to the Ministry came in his late twenties. He fellowshipped with various Pentecostal churches even after he met and married Angie Loving. He later worked at odd jobs including the now defunct Arthur’s Grill in downtown Charlottesville, Virginia. It was then that the early seeds of entrepreneurship started to grow. In the meantime, he met Dr. John L. Manahan who owned Fairview Farm in Scottsville, VA located in Southern Albemarle County. Dr. Manahan hired him to be caretaker for his dairy farm. Brown, along with his wife and children moved into the manor house. There he had no problem getting into the swing of farming. Milking cows and transporting the milk to the Monticello Dairy in Charlottesville provided an occasional break from the farm. Maintenance work around the farm allowed him to practice what would become his profession.
Master Builder
Farming was what Brown did to earn the money he needed to move his family back to Charlottesville and pursue his dream of becoming a builder. He had frequently purchased tools and Audel manuals that he told his wife would one day make money for him. In the summer of 1945, Brown purchased a house on 10 ½ Street, now located in the Historic 10th and Page District that he subsequently remodeled and added on a 3-room apartment. He moved his family of 3 daughters and 2 sons back to town. For a while, he worked for H. T. Ferron, a company that made cinderblock; and for R. E. Lee & Sons who would later become a major player in the construction industry in Charlottesville. Later, he hired himself out as a carpenter remodeling houses and specializing in additions. Soon he had a contract to build his first house. By the mid-1950s, Blacks who wanted to build in Charlottesville and the surrounding counties started to seek him out.
12th and Rosser
It was in the mid-1940s that Rev. Brown and a few others started to hold worship services from house to house. They most often met in a 2-story house on Henry Avenue across from Moseley’s Store. Rev. Brown and Rev. Moseley managed to secure a plat of land on the corner of 12th Street, NW and Rosser Avenue. In 1947, it was there that Rev. Brown constructed Holy Temple Church of God in Christ, his first major non-residential building. Soon after building the church, Brown met E. R. Martin. After doing a number of jobs for Martin who owned a lot of property, a deal was struck that made Brown the owner of several acres of land on 12th Street, NW.
It was there that he built what would become the “family home.” The land had been a dumping area on a dead end street. However, the location was ideally suited for Brown and his family that had swelled to 5 daughters and 5 sons. Brown seemingly could not get away from farming. He maintained huge gardens and several pigs until the late 1950s. The vegetables from the gardens were shared with church members and neighbors alike. Brown eventually built and sold 4 more houses on the same block. Most of the houses were constructed of cinder block with 2 front dormers for less than $10,000. In 2006, some 45–50 years later, the average market price was $190,000. In 2020, the last house built sold for $300,000.
In April 2008, The Piedmont Area Preservation Alliance and the Charlottesville Architectural Review Board of Charlottesville, Virginia, recommended that Rev. Charles H. Brown's first non- residential structure, the Holy temple Church of God in Christ, be added to its list of important historic city buildings. In September 2008 the recommendation was accepted. In February 2021, the City of Charlottesville placed a plaque giving the honorary name of C. H. Brown Way to the area near the corner of 12th Street and Rosser Avenue.
Building Innovator
Rev. Brown became a licensed contractor in the city of Charlottesville in the mid-1950s. He built more than 50 residential and commercial structures as well as a dozen churches in Charlottesville and the surrounding counties. Because many were built for people with limited income and no means of financing such a project, Brown's challenge was to give his clients the best, as well as the most for their money. He became popular as a builder because he allowed his customers to make a small down payment and often financed the balance for them or sometimes even co-signed a note at the bank. His structure of choice was usually cinderblock. Many of his renovations or additions received a cosmetic coat of stucco. Brown’s reputation as a fair and honest man gained him the respect of both Whites and Blacks in the community. During his eulogy of Rev. Brown, Rev. Paul Coleman said "...Before there was urban renewal or redevelopment and housing, there was Rev. Brown."
Nearly all of his structures are still standing. Unlike houses that are constructed on a concrete slab today, Rev. Brown dug out the foundation; poured concrete footings and constructed the walls from the ground up. He studied drawings from books of plans that were available by mail. These books allowed him to use his natural artistic abilities to sketch out proposed house plans for his clients. He taught himself to read and interpret architectural drawings and blueprints. One of his most notable commercial structures was the EconoLodge, formerly the Econo Travel Lodge, at the University of Virginia which was demolished in 2013 http://insidecville.com/city/visionary-builder/ to create a green space. Having established himself in the business community as a master craftsman, Rev. Brown often did brickwork or concrete work for other contractors. As a skilled craftsman, he spent time teaching his laborers how to perform carpentry tasks and how to lay brick. One of his last major carpentry jobs was finish carpentry in the Main Post Office on Seminole trail when he was 80 years old.
Rev. Brown's Ministry
In 1960, Brown became Pastor of the church he had built some 13 years earlier. He and his sons, Ralph, an ordained Minister and Nehemiah Hunter Brown, a musician (who became a minister in 1980); brought a community-oriented flavor to the worship experience. The elder Rev. Brown was extremely supportive of youth in and out of the church. He opened the doors of the church to Nehemiah and a contingent of University of Virginia students as well as to local high school students who wanted to start a choir. The high school students formed an Interdenominational Gospel Choir which later became the Dimensions of Gospel who later bridged the gap between UVA students and local towns people. The University of Virginia students had been denied the use of facilities on the school grounds for rehearsals, but under the leadership that they found at Holy Temple Church of God in Christ , the renowned Black Voices of the University of Virginia were born. Of note is the selection of the Holy Temple Church site for consideration to be added to the Register of Historical Buildings. The building was selected because of its enduring architecture and its cultural significance to the community.
During his tenure as Pastor, Brown also served as the District Superintendent over other churches in the Charlottesville and Waynesboro, Virginia areas. Most notably, he was known as a Bible scholar and teacher. Being a mild-mannered, soft-spoken man gave him an air of aloofness that often gave way to a fathomless wisdom and generosity. He was active as a Pastor, attending State and National meetings until shortly before his death from the complications of congestive heart failure in 1996. In 1998, shortly after his death, a Virginia State House of Delegates Joint Resolution was issued recognizing Reverend Brown's work and contributions to the community. In July 2021, Rosser Avenue was given the honorary name of "C. H. Brown Way."
References
Virginia State House of Delegates Joint Resolution
WCAV - Centennial Celebration in Charlottesville. Posted: 11:10 PM Feb 3, 2007. Reporter: Jummy Olabanji
https://web.archive.org/web/20081006153244/http://preservecva.wordpress.com/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PXNZLTXKLtg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0B5DTWCy8Ho
American religious leaders
1907 births
1996 deaths | [
"Rev.",
"Charles Hunter Brown (aka Rev.",
"Charles H. Brown and Rev.",
"C.H.",
"Brown)\n(Feb. 2, 1907 - Jan. 17, 1996), an American building contractor, religious and community leader, did much to provide affordable housing, employment and on-the-job training, social and spiritual relief for many in Charlottesville and Albemarle County, Virginia during the 1940s through the early 1980s.",
"Early years\n\nReverend Charles Hunter Brown, born February 2, 1907 to Lacy and Martha Franklin Brown in the Proffit Historic District, Virginia was one of several sons born to the Browns.",
"He often missed school to help out at home during the growing and harvesting season.",
"As a young man, he sought employment away from the grueling life he had known as a farmer.",
"His early employment included work with a company that laid Macadam roads.",
"Rev.",
"Brown’s call to the Ministry came in his late twenties.",
"He fellowshipped with various Pentecostal churches even after he met and married Angie Loving.",
"He later worked at odd jobs including the now defunct Arthur’s Grill in downtown Charlottesville, Virginia.",
"It was then that the early seeds of entrepreneurship started to grow.",
"In the meantime, he met Dr. John L. Manahan who owned Fairview Farm in Scottsville, VA located in Southern Albemarle County.",
"Dr. Manahan hired him to be caretaker for his dairy farm.",
"Brown, along with his wife and children moved into the manor house.",
"There he had no problem getting into the swing of farming.",
"Milking cows and transporting the milk to the Monticello Dairy in Charlottesville provided an occasional break from the farm.",
"Maintenance work around the farm allowed him to practice what would become his profession.",
"Master Builder\n\nFarming was what Brown did to earn the money he needed to move his family back to Charlottesville and pursue his dream of becoming a builder.",
"He had frequently purchased tools and Audel manuals that he told his wife would one day make money for him.",
"In the summer of 1945, Brown purchased a house on 10 ½ Street, now located in the Historic 10th and Page District that he subsequently remodeled and added on a 3-room apartment.",
"He moved his family of 3 daughters and 2 sons back to town.",
"For a while, he worked for H. T. Ferron, a company that made cinderblock; and for R. E. Lee & Sons who would later become a major player in the construction industry in Charlottesville.",
"Later, he hired himself out as a carpenter remodeling houses and specializing in additions.",
"Soon he had a contract to build his first house.",
"By the mid-1950s, Blacks who wanted to build in Charlottesville and the surrounding counties started to seek him out.",
"12th and Rosser\n\nIt was in the mid-1940s that Rev.",
"Brown and a few others started to hold worship services from house to house.",
"They most often met in a 2-story house on Henry Avenue across from Moseley’s Store.",
"Rev.",
"Brown and Rev.",
"Moseley managed to secure a plat of land on the corner of 12th Street, NW and Rosser Avenue.",
"In 1947, it was there that Rev.",
"Brown constructed Holy Temple Church of God in Christ, his first major non-residential building.",
"Soon after building the church, Brown met E. R. Martin.",
"After doing a number of jobs for Martin who owned a lot of property, a deal was struck that made Brown the owner of several acres of land on 12th Street, NW.",
"It was there that he built what would become the “family home.” The land had been a dumping area on a dead end street.",
"However, the location was ideally suited for Brown and his family that had swelled to 5 daughters and 5 sons.",
"Brown seemingly could not get away from farming.",
"He maintained huge gardens and several pigs until the late 1950s.",
"The vegetables from the gardens were shared with church members and neighbors alike.",
"Brown eventually built and sold 4 more houses on the same block.",
"Most of the houses were constructed of cinder block with 2 front dormers for less than $10,000.",
"In 2006, some 45–50 years later, the average market price was $190,000.",
"In 2020, the last house built sold for $300,000.",
"In April 2008, The Piedmont Area Preservation Alliance and the Charlottesville Architectural Review Board of Charlottesville, Virginia, recommended that Rev.",
"Charles H. Brown's first non- residential structure, the Holy temple Church of God in Christ, be added to its list of important historic city buildings.",
"In September 2008 the recommendation was accepted.",
"In February 2021, the City of Charlottesville placed a plaque giving the honorary name of C. H. Brown Way to the area near the corner of 12th Street and Rosser Avenue.",
"Building Innovator\n\nRev.",
"Brown became a licensed contractor in the city of Charlottesville in the mid-1950s.",
"He built more than 50 residential and commercial structures as well as a dozen churches in Charlottesville and the surrounding counties.",
"Because many were built for people with limited income and no means of financing such a project, Brown's challenge was to give his clients the best, as well as the most for their money.",
"He became popular as a builder because he allowed his customers to make a small down payment and often financed the balance for them or sometimes even co-signed a note at the bank.",
"His structure of choice was usually cinderblock.",
"Many of his renovations or additions received a cosmetic coat of stucco.",
"Brown’s reputation as a fair and honest man gained him the respect of both Whites and Blacks in the community.",
"During his eulogy of Rev.",
"Brown, Rev.",
"Paul Coleman said \"...Before there was urban renewal or redevelopment and housing, there was Rev.",
"Brown.\"",
"Nearly all of his structures are still standing.",
"Unlike houses that are constructed on a concrete slab today, Rev.",
"Brown dug out the foundation; poured concrete footings and constructed the walls from the ground up.",
"He studied drawings from books of plans that were available by mail.",
"These books allowed him to use his natural artistic abilities to sketch out proposed house plans for his clients.",
"He taught himself to read and interpret architectural drawings and blueprints.",
"One of his most notable commercial structures was the EconoLodge, formerly the Econo Travel Lodge, at the University of Virginia which was demolished in 2013 http://insidecville.com/city/visionary-builder/ to create a green space.",
"Having established himself in the business community as a master craftsman, Rev.",
"Brown often did brickwork or concrete work for other contractors.",
"As a skilled craftsman, he spent time teaching his laborers how to perform carpentry tasks and how to lay brick.",
"One of his last major carpentry jobs was finish carpentry in the Main Post Office on Seminole trail when he was 80 years old.",
"Rev.",
"Brown's Ministry\n\nIn 1960, Brown became Pastor of the church he had built some 13 years earlier.",
"He and his sons, Ralph, an ordained Minister and Nehemiah Hunter Brown, a musician (who became a minister in 1980); brought a community-oriented flavor to the worship experience.",
"The elder Rev.",
"Brown was extremely supportive of youth in and out of the church.",
"He opened the doors of the church to Nehemiah and a contingent of University of Virginia students as well as to local high school students who wanted to start a choir.",
"The high school students formed an Interdenominational Gospel Choir which later became the Dimensions of Gospel who later bridged the gap between UVA students and local towns people.",
"The University of Virginia students had been denied the use of facilities on the school grounds for rehearsals, but under the leadership that they found at Holy Temple Church of God in Christ , the renowned Black Voices of the University of Virginia were born.",
"Of note is the selection of the Holy Temple Church site for consideration to be added to the Register of Historical Buildings.",
"The building was selected because of its enduring architecture and its cultural significance to the community.",
"During his tenure as Pastor, Brown also served as the District Superintendent over other churches in the Charlottesville and Waynesboro, Virginia areas.",
"Most notably, he was known as a Bible scholar and teacher.",
"Being a mild-mannered, soft-spoken man gave him an air of aloofness that often gave way to a fathomless wisdom and generosity.",
"He was active as a Pastor, attending State and National meetings until shortly before his death from the complications of congestive heart failure in 1996.",
"In 1998, shortly after his death, a Virginia State House of Delegates Joint Resolution was issued recognizing Reverend Brown's work and contributions to the community.",
"In July 2021, Rosser Avenue was given the honorary name of \"C. H. Brown Way.\"",
"References\nVirginia State House of Delegates Joint Resolution \n WCAV - Centennial Celebration in Charlottesville.",
"Posted: 11:10 PM Feb 3, 2007.",
"Reporter: Jummy Olabanji\nhttps://web.archive.org/web/20081006153244/http://preservecva.wordpress.com/\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PXNZLTXKLtg\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0B5DTWCy8Ho\n\nAmerican religious leaders\n1907 births\n1996 deaths"
] | [
"Rev.",
"The Rev. Charles Hunter Brown.",
"Charles H. Brown is a pastor.",
"C.H.",
"An American building contractor, religious and community leader, did much to provide affordable housing, employment and on-the-job training, social and spiritual relief for many in Virginia during the 1940s.",
"Reverend Charles Hunter Brown was one of several sons who were born to the Brown family.",
"During the growing and harvesting season, he missed school to help out at home.",
"As a young man, he sought employment away from a life of farming.",
"He was employed by a company that laid Macadam roads.",
"Rev.",
"Brown called the Ministry in his twenties.",
"He was a member of various Pentecostal churches after he met and married Angie Loving.",
"He worked at odd jobs, including at Arthur's Grill.",
"The early seeds of entrepreneurship started to grow.",
"He met the owner of the farm in Scottsville, VA.",
"He was hired to care for the dairy farm.",
"Brown and his family moved into the manor house.",
"He was able to get into the swing of farming.",
"Milking cows and transporting the milk to the Monticello Dairy provided an occasional break from the farm.",
"He was able to practice what he would become when he worked on the farm.",
"Master Builder Farming was what Brown did to earn the money he needed to move his family back to Charlottesville and pursue his dream of becoming a builder.",
"He told his wife that one day she would make money for him.",
"In the summer of 1945, Brown purchased a house on 10 12 Street in the Historic 10th and Page District and added a 3-room apartment.",
"He moved his family back to town.",
"He worked for two companies, one of which became a major player in the construction industry.",
"He hired himself as a carpenter to work on houses and additions.",
"He had a contract to build a house.",
"Blacks who wanted to build in the area started to seek him out.",
"In the mid-1940s, it was 12th and Rosser.",
"Brown began to hold worship services from house to house.",
"They met in a 2-story house on Henry Avenue.",
"Rev.",
"Brown and Rev.",
"There is a plat of land on the corner of 12th Street, NW and Rosser Avenue.",
"The Rev. was there in 1947.",
"Holy Temple Church of God in Christ was built by Brown.",
"Brown met E. R. Martin after building the church.",
"Brown became the owner of several acres of land on 12th Street, NW, after doing a number of jobs for Martin, who owned a lot of property.",
"He built the family home on the land that had been a dumping area.",
"The location was perfect for Brown and his family, which had grown to 5 daughters and 5 sons.",
"Brown was not able to get away from farming.",
"He had huge gardens and pigs.",
"The church members and neighbors shared the vegetables from the gardens.",
"Brown built and sold more houses on the same block.",
"Most of the cinder block houses were built for less than $10,000.",
"The average market price in 2006 was $190,000.",
"The last house built sold for $300,000.",
"The Piedmont Area Preservation Alliance and the Charlottesville Architectural Review Board recommended that Rev.",
"The Holy temple Church of God in Christ will be added to the list of important historic city buildings.",
"The recommendation was accepted in September of 2008.",
"The area near the corner of 12th Street and Rosser Avenue was renamed C. H. Brown Way in February of 2021.",
"Building innovative Rev.",
"In the mid-1950s, Brown became a licensed contractor.",
"More than 50 residential and commercial structures as well as a dozen churches were built by him.",
"Brown's challenge was to give his clients the best, as well as the most for their money, because many were built for people with limited income and no means of financing such a project.",
"He became popular as a builder because he allowed his customers to make a small down payment and often financed the balance for them or even co-signed a note at the bank.",
"Cinder block was the structure of choice for him.",
"A coat of stucco was given to many of his renovations.",
"Whites and Blacks respected Brown because of his reputation as a fair and honest man.",
"He spoke about Rev.",
"The Rev. Brown.",
"Paul Coleman said that before there was urban renewal there was Rev.",
"Brown.",
"Almost all of his structures are still standing.",
"The houses that are constructed on a concrete slab are different.",
"Brown dug out the foundation, poured concrete footings, and built the walls from the ground up.",
"He studied the drawings from the books.",
"He was able to use his artistic abilities to sketch out house plans for his clients.",
"He learned to read and interpret blueprints.",
"The Econo Lodge, formerly the Econo Travel Lodge, was demolished in order to create a green space.",
"He established himself in the business community as a master craftsman.",
"Brown did work for other contractors.",
"He taught his laborers how to lay brick and perform carpentry tasks.",
"When he was 80 years old, he finished carpentry in the Main Post Office.",
"Rev.",
"In 1960, Brown became the pastor of the church he had built 13 years before.",
"He and his sons brought a community-oriented flavor to the worship experience.",
"The older Rev.",
"Brown supported the youth in and out of the church.",
"The doors of the church were opened to Nehemiah and a group of University of Virginia students, as well as to local high school students who wanted to start a choir.",
"The high school students formed an Interdenominational Gospel Choir which later became the Dimensions of Gospel who bridged the gap between UVA students and local towns people.",
"The University of Virginia students were denied the use of facilities on the school grounds for rehearsals, but under the leadership that they found at Holy Temple Church of God in Christ, the renowned Black Voices of the University of Virginia were born.",
"The Holy Temple Church site is being considered for inclusion in the Register of Historical Buildings.",
"The cultural significance of the building was one of the reasons it was selected.",
"Brown served as the District Supremo over other churches in the area while he was the pastor.",
"He was a teacher and a Bible scholar.",
"Being a mild-mannered, soft-spoken man gave him an air of aloofness that often gave way to a fathomless wisdom and generosity.",
"He was a pastor until his death from heart failure in 1996.",
"A joint resolution was issued by the Virginia State House of Delegates after Reverend Brown's death.",
"Rosser Avenue was renamed \"C. H. Brown Way\" in July 2021.",
"There are references to the Virginia State House of Delegates Joint Resolution.",
"It was 11:10 PM on Feb 3, 2007.",
"Jummy Olabanji is a reporter."
] | Rev. <mask> (aka Rev. <mask><mask> and Rev. C.H<mask>)
(Feb. 2, 1907 - Jan. 17, 1996), an American building contractor, religious and community leader, did much to provide affordable housing, employment and on-the-job training, social and spiritual relief for many in Charlottesville and Albemarle County, Virginia during the 1940s through the early 1980s. Early years
Reverend <mask>, born February 2, 1907 to Lacy and <mask> in the Proffit Historic District, Virginia was one of several sons born to the Browns. He often missed school to help out at home during the growing and harvesting season.As a young man, he sought employment away from the grueling life he had known as a farmer. His early employment included work with a company that laid Macadam roads. Rev. <mask>’s call to the Ministry came in his late twenties. He fellowshipped with various Pentecostal churches even after he met and married Angie Loving. He later worked at odd jobs including the now defunct Arthur’s Grill in downtown Charlottesville, Virginia. It was then that the early seeds of entrepreneurship started to grow.In the meantime, he met Dr. John L. Manahan who owned Fairview Farm in Scottsville, VA located in Southern Albemarle County. Dr. Manahan hired him to be caretaker for his dairy farm. <mask>, along with his wife and children moved into the manor house. There he had no problem getting into the swing of farming. Milking cows and transporting the milk to the Monticello Dairy in Charlottesville provided an occasional break from the farm. Maintenance work around the farm allowed him to practice what would become his profession. Master Builder
Farming was what <mask> did to earn the money he needed to move his family back to Charlottesville and pursue his dream of becoming a builder.He had frequently purchased tools and Audel manuals that he told his wife would one day make money for him. In the summer of 1945, <mask> purchased a house on 10 ½ Street, now located in the Historic 10th and Page District that he subsequently remodeled and added on a 3-room apartment. He moved his family of 3 daughters and 2 sons back to town. For a while, he worked for H. T. Ferron, a company that made cinderblock; and for R. E. Lee & Sons who would later become a major player in the construction industry in Charlottesville. Later, he hired himself out as a carpenter remodeling houses and specializing in additions. Soon he had a contract to build his first house. By the mid-1950s, Blacks who wanted to build in Charlottesville and the surrounding counties started to seek him out.12th and Rosser
It was in the mid-1940s that Rev. <mask> and a few others started to hold worship services from house to house. They most often met in a 2-story house on Henry Avenue across from Moseley’s Store. Rev. <mask> and Rev. Moseley managed to secure a plat of land on the corner of 12th Street, NW and Rosser Avenue. In 1947, it was there that Rev.<mask> constructed Holy Temple Church of God in Christ, his first major non-residential building. Soon after building the church, <mask> met E. R. Martin. After doing a number of jobs for Martin who owned a lot of property, a deal was struck that made <mask> the owner of several acres of land on 12th Street, NW. It was there that he built what would become the “family home.” The land had been a dumping area on a dead end street. However, the location was ideally suited for <mask> and his family that had swelled to 5 daughters and 5 sons. <mask> seemingly could not get away from farming. He maintained huge gardens and several pigs until the late 1950s.The vegetables from the gardens were shared with church members and neighbors alike. <mask> eventually built and sold 4 more houses on the same block. Most of the houses were constructed of cinder block with 2 front dormers for less than $10,000. In 2006, some 45–50 years later, the average market price was $190,000. In 2020, the last house built sold for $300,000. In April 2008, The Piedmont Area Preservation Alliance and the Charlottesville Architectural Review Board of Charlottesville, Virginia, recommended that Rev. <mask><mask>'s first non- residential structure, the Holy temple Church of God in Christ, be added to its list of important historic city buildings.In September 2008 the recommendation was accepted. In February 2021, the City of Charlottesville placed a plaque giving the honorary name of C. H. <mask> Way to the area near the corner of 12th Street and Rosser Avenue. Building Innovator
Rev<mask> became a licensed contractor in the city of Charlottesville in the mid-1950s. He built more than 50 residential and commercial structures as well as a dozen churches in Charlottesville and the surrounding counties. Because many were built for people with limited income and no means of financing such a project, <mask>'s challenge was to give his clients the best, as well as the most for their money. He became popular as a builder because he allowed his customers to make a small down payment and often financed the balance for them or sometimes even co-signed a note at the bank.His structure of choice was usually cinderblock. Many of his renovations or additions received a cosmetic coat of stucco. <mask>’s reputation as a fair and honest man gained him the respect of both Whites and Blacks in the community. During his eulogy of Rev. <mask>, Rev. <mask> said "...Before there was urban renewal or redevelopment and housing, there was Rev. <mask>."Nearly all of his structures are still standing. Unlike houses that are constructed on a concrete slab today, Rev. <mask> dug out the foundation; poured concrete footings and constructed the walls from the ground up. He studied drawings from books of plans that were available by mail. These books allowed him to use his natural artistic abilities to sketch out proposed house plans for his clients. He taught himself to read and interpret architectural drawings and blueprints. One of his most notable commercial structures was the EconoLodge, formerly the Econo Travel Lodge, at the University of Virginia which was demolished in 2013 http://insidecville.com/city/visionary-builder/ to create a green space.Having established himself in the business community as a master craftsman, Rev. <mask> often did brickwork or concrete work for other contractors. As a skilled craftsman, he spent time teaching his laborers how to perform carpentry tasks and how to lay brick. One of his last major carpentry jobs was finish carpentry in the Main Post Office on Seminole trail when he was 80 years old. Rev. <mask>'s Ministry
In 1960, <mask> became Pastor of the church he had built some 13 years earlier. He and his sons, Ralph, an ordained Minister and Nehemiah <mask>, a musician (who became a minister in 1980); brought a community-oriented flavor to the worship experience.The elder Rev. <mask> was extremely supportive of youth in and out of the church. He opened the doors of the church to Nehemiah and a contingent of University of Virginia students as well as to local high school students who wanted to start a choir. The high school students formed an Interdenominational Gospel Choir which later became the Dimensions of Gospel who later bridged the gap between UVA students and local towns people. The University of Virginia students had been denied the use of facilities on the school grounds for rehearsals, but under the leadership that they found at Holy Temple Church of God in Christ , the renowned Black Voices of the University of Virginia were born. Of note is the selection of the Holy Temple Church site for consideration to be added to the Register of Historical Buildings. The building was selected because of its enduring architecture and its cultural significance to the community.During his tenure as Pastor, <mask> also served as the District Superintendent over other churches in the Charlottesville and Waynesboro, Virginia areas. Most notably, he was known as a Bible scholar and teacher. Being a mild-mannered, soft-spoken man gave him an air of aloofness that often gave way to a fathomless wisdom and generosity. He was active as a Pastor, attending State and National meetings until shortly before his death from the complications of congestive heart failure in 1996. In 1998, shortly after his death, a Virginia State House of Delegates Joint Resolution was issued recognizing <mask>'s work and contributions to the community. In July 2021, Rosser Avenue was given the honorary name of "C. H. Brown Way." References
Virginia State House of Delegates Joint Resolution
WCAV - Centennial Celebration in Charlottesville.Posted: 11:10 PM Feb 3, 2007. Reporter: Jummy Olabanji
https://web.archive.org/web/20081006153244/http://preservecva.wordpress.com/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PXNZLTXKLtg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0B5DTWCy8Ho
American religious leaders
1907 births
1996 deaths | [
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] | Rev. The Rev. <mask>. <mask><mask> is a pastor. <mask>. An American building contractor, religious and community leader, did much to provide affordable housing, employment and on-the-job training, social and spiritual relief for many in Virginia during the 1940s. Reverend <mask> was one of several sons who were born to the <mask> family. During the growing and harvesting season, he missed school to help out at home.As a young man, he sought employment away from a life of farming. He was employed by a company that laid Macadam roads. Rev. <mask> called the Ministry in his twenties. He was a member of various Pentecostal churches after he met and married Angie Loving. He worked at odd jobs, including at Arthur's Grill. The early seeds of entrepreneurship started to grow.He met the owner of the farm in Scottsville, VA. He was hired to care for the dairy farm. <mask> and his family moved into the manor house. He was able to get into the swing of farming. Milking cows and transporting the milk to the Monticello Dairy provided an occasional break from the farm. He was able to practice what he would become when he worked on the farm. Master Builder Farming was what <mask> did to earn the money he needed to move his family back to Charlottesville and pursue his dream of becoming a builder.He told his wife that one day she would make money for him. In the summer of 1945, <mask> purchased a house on 10 12 Street in the Historic 10th and Page District and added a 3-room apartment. He moved his family back to town. He worked for two companies, one of which became a major player in the construction industry. He hired himself as a carpenter to work on houses and additions. He had a contract to build a house. Blacks who wanted to build in the area started to seek him out.In the mid-1940s, it was 12th and Rosser. <mask> began to hold worship services from house to house. They met in a 2-story house on Henry Avenue. Rev. <mask> and Rev. There is a plat of land on the corner of 12th Street, NW and Rosser Avenue. The Rev. was there in 1947.Holy Temple Church of God in Christ was built by <mask>. <mask> met E. R. Martin after building the church. <mask> became the owner of several acres of land on 12th Street, NW, after doing a number of jobs for Martin, who owned a lot of property. He built the family home on the land that had been a dumping area. The location was perfect for <mask> and his family, which had grown to 5 daughters and 5 sons. <mask> was not able to get away from farming. He had huge gardens and pigs.The church members and neighbors shared the vegetables from the gardens. <mask> built and sold more houses on the same block. Most of the cinder block houses were built for less than $10,000. The average market price in 2006 was $190,000. The last house built sold for $300,000. The Piedmont Area Preservation Alliance and the Charlottesville Architectural Review Board recommended that Rev. The Holy temple Church of God in Christ will be added to the list of important historic city buildings.The recommendation was accepted in September of 2008. The area near the corner of 12th Street and Rosser Avenue was renamed C. H. Brown Way in February of 2021. Building innovative Rev. In the mid-1950s, <mask> became a licensed contractor. More than 50 residential and commercial structures as well as a dozen churches were built by him. <mask>'s challenge was to give his clients the best, as well as the most for their money, because many were built for people with limited income and no means of financing such a project. He became popular as a builder because he allowed his customers to make a small down payment and often financed the balance for them or even co-signed a note at the bank.Cinder block was the structure of choice for him. A coat of stucco was given to many of his renovations. Whites and Blacks respected <mask> because of his reputation as a fair and honest man. He spoke about Rev. The Rev. <mask>. <mask> said that before there was urban renewal there was Rev. <mask>.Almost all of his structures are still standing. The houses that are constructed on a concrete slab are different. <mask> dug out the foundation, poured concrete footings, and built the walls from the ground up. He studied the drawings from the books. He was able to use his artistic abilities to sketch out house plans for his clients. He learned to read and interpret blueprints. The Econo Lodge, formerly the Econo Travel Lodge, was demolished in order to create a green space.He established himself in the business community as a master craftsman. <mask> did work for other contractors. He taught his laborers how to lay brick and perform carpentry tasks. When he was 80 years old, he finished carpentry in the Main Post Office. Rev. In 1960, <mask> became the pastor of the church he had built 13 years before. He and his sons brought a community-oriented flavor to the worship experience.The older Rev. <mask> supported the youth in and out of the church. The doors of the church were opened to Nehemiah and a group of University of Virginia students, as well as to local high school students who wanted to start a choir. The high school students formed an Interdenominational Gospel Choir which later became the Dimensions of Gospel who bridged the gap between UVA students and local towns people. The University of Virginia students were denied the use of facilities on the school grounds for rehearsals, but under the leadership that they found at Holy Temple Church of God in Christ, the renowned Black Voices of the University of Virginia were born. The Holy Temple Church site is being considered for inclusion in the Register of Historical Buildings. The cultural significance of the building was one of the reasons it was selected.<mask> served as the District Supremo over other churches in the area while he was the pastor. He was a teacher and a Bible scholar. Being a mild-mannered, soft-spoken man gave him an air of aloofness that often gave way to a fathomless wisdom and generosity. He was a pastor until his death from heart failure in 1996. A joint resolution was issued by the Virginia State House of Delegates after <mask>'s death. Rosser Avenue was renamed "C. H. Brown Way" in July 2021. There are references to the Virginia State House of Delegates Joint Resolution.It was 11:10 PM on Feb 3, 2007. Jummy Olabanji is a reporter. | [
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535506 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lila%20Downs | Lila Downs | Ana Lila Downs Sánchez (born 19 September 1968) is a Mexican singer-songwriter and actress. She performs her own compositions and the works of others in multiple genres, as well as tapping into Mexican traditional and popular music. She also incorporates indigenous Mexican influences and has recorded songs in many indigenous languages such as Mixtec, Zapotec, Mayan, Nahuatl and Purépecha. Born and raised in Oaxaca, she primarily studied at the Institute of Arts by Oaxaca and briefly attended the University of Minnesota, before withdrawing to focus on her musical career. She soon began performing in the traditional music scene of Oaxaca City.
Her first album, Ofrenda, was released in 1994. In 1999, Downs came to prominence with her debut studio album, La Sandunga, which was a critical and commercial success. She achieved international success in 2001 with the album Border which emerged in the music scene of Mexico and Latin America in the early 2000s (decade). Downs's seventh album, Pecados y milagros (2011), topped album charts in most major markets and generated chart-topping world music albums. Her eighth album, "Balas y Chocolate", was released in 2015. "Salón Lágrimas y Deseo", her ninth album, came out in 2017.
Downs began performing in school, demonstrating her vocal ability with traditional music, Latin and American influences, and with her own original twist on dancing. Downs, a native Spanish speaker, also speaks fluent Mixtec and English. Downs through her activism has gone through great lengths to preserve the Mixtec language as well as many other Indigenous Mexican languages.
Influenced by Chavela Vargas, Mercedes Sosa, Lucha Villa, and Amparo Ochoa, Lila Downs is recognized for her flamboyant, diverse and outré contributions to the music industry through her traditional and authentic fashion, the majority of which are based around Mexico's indigenous peoples' styles, cultures and heritages, which show through her performances and music videos. Her achievements include one Grammy Award and three Latin Grammy Awards.
Besides her musical career, she involves herself with humanitarian causes and political activism, especially dealing with issues of Latin America's indigenous population.
Biography
Lila Downs was born on 19 September 1968, in Tlaxiaco, Oaxaca, Mexico. She is the daughter of Anita Sánchez, a Mixtec cabaret singer and Allen Downs, a Scottish-American professor of art and cinematographer from Minnesota. From an early age Downs showed interest in music. At the age of eight she began singing rancheras and other traditional Mexican songs. She began her professional career singing with mariachis. At fourteen she moved to the United States with her parents. She studied voice in Los Angeles and learned English, which her father helped her to perfect. When she was 16, her father died, and she decided to return to her native town Tlaxiaco with her mother.
One day while she was working in a store in the Mixtec mountains a man came in to ask her to translate his son's death certificate. She read that he had drowned trying to cross the border into the United States. This deeply affected her and has continued to influence her work. She talked about this in an NPR interview about her 2001 release entitled Border.
Although today Downs is proud of her origins there was a time when she felt shame regarding her Native American roots. "I was embarrassed to have Indian blood. I was embarrassed that my mother spoke her language in public." This led her on a path to find herself, which included dropping out of college, dyeing her hair blonde and following the band The Grateful Dead. After some time Downs found herself back in Oaxaca, a city in southern Mexico, working at her mother's auto parts store, where she met her future husband and musical collaborator, tenor saxophonist Paul Cohen.
Downs studied Anthropology at the University of Minnesota and voice in New York. Later she attended the Institute of Science and Arts of Oaxaca in Mexico to complete her studies.
At 25, after completing academic and music studies, Downs decided to return to Tlaxiaco. Paul Cohen always encouraged her musical ventures, and she joined a group percussion called Yodoyuxi's Cadets. Because Paul Cohen had business in the United States she began to live in both Minnesota and Oaxaca.
During her stay in Minnesota, Downs formed a group called La Trova Serrana which achieved great popularity among the Latin community within the United States, singing songs about the Zapotec values and culture. Upon her return to Mexico she started singing in bars, restaurants and clubs in the City of Oaxaca, as well as the city of Philadelphia and the state California in the United States, always with the support of US saxophonist Paul Cohen. She received many positive critical reviews, which led to her decision to undertake an extensive tour of Mexico.
Career
1994–1996: First albums
In 1994 Lila Downs independently made her first album, entitled Ofrenda. This was both a collection of traditional songs from Oaxaca and Mexico, and songs written by the singer with lyrics sung in Spanish, Mixtec and Zapotec (native languages of Oaxaca). The material was produced both independently and with the support of the Oaxacan Cultures Institute. Because this album was not a commercial success in LP or cassette, she never released a version on CD.
In 1996 Downs recorded a live session at a renowned café-bar of the City of Oaxaca. On this record Downs was accompanied by a set of well-known musicians who supported its interpretation of traditional themes, as well as country music and jazz. With this work Downs and her music became known in different parts of the Republic of Mexico, and this was their first album to be released on CD. The album had a big impact, despite limited promotion and the fact that only a small number of copies were made. This CD is now out of print, and although not available as part of the official discography of Lila Downs, can be found in digital format.
1997–1999: La Sandunga
In 1997 Lila Downs made a second recording, called "Traces", on which she performed material that was to be included in later albums such as La Sandunga, Tree of Life and Border. It is an extensive compilation of items in her traditional repertoire but, like its predecessor, had no commercial distribution, so this disc is also currently out of print.
It was not until 1999, when Downs signed with the label Narada Productions, that she achieved commercial success and made herself known internationally with the album La Sandunga. Recorded a year earlier, this material came to the forefront of Mexican music and her album was one of the first to merge the sounds of traditional music and modern rhythms as jazz, blues and bolero. The album was sung in Spanish and Mixtec, and was produced by Lila Downs and Paul Cohen with the support of Xquenda Cultural Association. Because of this success, Downs participated in the sound track of the Mexican film Green Stones and achieved great popularity in countries such as Mexico, United States, Spain, France, England and Germany, selling over 500,000 units worldwide.
1999–2000: Tree of Life/Yutu Tata
Downs's next album, Tree of Life, was released in 2000. With this album the fame of Downs continued to spread to other markets in England, Switzerland, Canada and especially the United States. This work found Downs turning to her indigenous past, and the album features pre-Hispanic sounds and instruments. Several of the songs on the album are sung in native Mexican languages such as Mixtec, Zapotec and Nahuatl. In October 2000, she began a two-month tour called the Tree of Life/Árbol de la vida, which included concerts in Latin America, Europe and the US. The tour began in Mexico and ended in Spain.
2001–2003: Border/La Linea
Border, released by EMI Music in 2001, was the first album by Downs to feature songs sung in English. The album was released simultaneously in the United States and Mexico. With this album Downs merged sounds from different genres such as traditional folk music, hip hop, rock and chilena. It included fifteen songs, eleven in Spanish, three in English and one in Mayan. The album received generally good reviews and placed seventh in "Top charts" of world music. It also stirred up controversy due to its frank discussion of immigration, Native American marginalization and the Acteal massacre. This drew criticism, especially from politicians and the church.
The album's first single was released in Mexico, "Mi corazón me recuerda", a poem by Chiapas poet Jaime Sabines. Set to music, it achieved moderate success on the Mexican music charts. In Spain the song "La Llorona", in France the song "Corazoncito Tirano" and in the United States the song "Medley: Pastures of Plenty/This Land Is Your Land/Land" were released as singles. The latter incorporates two Woody Guthrie songs, "Pastures of Plenty" and "This Land is Your Land" as well as original lyrics by Downs in "Land".
2004–2006: Una Sangre/One Blood
One Blood, one of Lila Downs's most successful albums, was released in April 2004, simultaneously in the United States, Spain, and Mexico. The lyrics on this album are about migration, discrimination and the case of Mexican human rights defender Digna Ochoa. In addition to traditional songs such as "La Bamba", "Viborita", and "La Cucaracha", the album includes genres such as son jarocho, jazz, rock and folk. This album contains thirteen tracks, three in English, one in Triqui, one in Purepecha and eight in Spanish. Lyrics were authored by Lila Downs, Paul Cohen, Celso Duarte, and Jose Martí. In 2005 Lila Downs received the Grammy Latino in the category of "Best Album of World Music" for this album and reached the top of the charts in United States, Mexico, Spain, United Kingdom, Germany and France.
2006–2008: La Cantina, entre copa y copa ...
Lila Downs took approximately one and a half years to prepare this project, which was released in April 2006. This CD draws on Mexican ranchero songs and merges sounds such as pop, rock, norteño, cumbia and hip-hop. This CD contains fifteen tracks, of which twelve are traditional Mexican repertoire authored by Lila Downs, and includes a version in English of "La cumbia del mole", the song that to date is the most well-known work by the artist. "La cumbia del mole" refers to the preparation of Mexican dish and tradition in Oaxaca. This single managed to position itself among the top of the charts in Mexico, United States, Canada and United Kingdom.
In 2007, Downs published a CD with the greatest success in Spanish to date, containing songs from her previous albums La Sandunga, Tree of Life, Border/The Line, One Blood and La Cantina. It was entitled simply The Very Best of Lila Downs and was accompanied with a DVD containing thirteen tracks recorded live at a concert in Madrid, Spain.
2008–2009: Shake Away/Ojo de Culebra
Two years after the release of La Cantina, in September 2008 Downs launched Ojo de Culebra in Europe, North America, Australia and Latin America. The album reached sixth place in sales in Mexico, Colombia, Argentina, Spain and several Latin American countries. The first single is titled "Ojo de Culebra" was contributed to by the Spanish singer La Mari by group of flamenco Chambao. The song is a merger of rock, cumbia and flamenco with some influences of reggae. This song was at the top of the charts of world music in several countries The second single was "Perro Negro", a merger of rock with ska, (which did not have as much of an international impact as its predecessor), featured Rubén Albarrán singer of the Mexican rock band Café Tacuba. "Little man" (released in the U.S. alone) and "Justice" were next two singles, the latter with the participation of the Spanish singer Enrique Bunbury. Raul Midon, Gilberto Gutierrez and Mercedes Sosa also contributed to this album.
The single "Black magic woman" achieved moderate success in Europe, United States and Canada, and the single "Silent Thunder" was later well received by the British market.
In October 2009 Lila Downs was honored by a plaque at the outskirts of her hometown and birthplace, Tlaxiaco, Mexico, and also was awarded the keys the city for her work preserving the language of Mixtec.
2010–present: Lila Downs y la Misteriosa, Pecados y Milagros
Lila Downs y la Misteriosa en Paris Live à FIP is the second live album by Downs, released on April 13, 2010, in Spain and France, the album was recorded in 2009 in Radio France studio 105 in Paris, France. It was released in May 2010 in the United States and in July in most other countries. It received positive feedback from critics. Lila Downs y la Misteriosa en Paris was released in Mexico with an edited version of the live concert on DVD and was number one in sales of Gender World Music for the music chain Mixup for three consecutive weeks. Although receiving little promotion the album has received moderate success on the Mexican charts. In a survey of the best albums of 2010 conducted by the Mexican television network Channel 22, this album was ranked number one.
Pecados y Milagros (Sins and Miracles) was the seventh studio album by Mexican singer-songwriter Lila Downs, released on October 18, 2011. The album cover was released on September 14, 2011.
The album debuted at number fifty two on the Billboard 200 becoming her fourth-highest peak on the chart. It also debuted at number one on the Billboard Top Latin Albums Chart and stayed there for over 3 consecutive weeks. This album has sold over 60.000 copies in the US and over 290.000 copies worldwide. The album was recorded in the Mexico City, and New York. Downs describes the album musically as having "a strong rock side" along with "traditional" and "Latino" songs. Celso Duarte is one of several collaborators to appear on the album, featuring on the first single "Palomo del comalito".
Other collaborations include songs with rappers Illya Kuryaki and the Valderramas, Celso Piña and Totó la Momposina. Downs ahas been touring through February 2017 in Mexico, the US and around the world, the Sins and Miracles Tour, which started in Mexico.
Audience members at a concert of February 18, 2012, at New York City El Museo del Barrio were informed that the concert was being recorded by HBO.
In 2015, Lila Downs joined the judging panel for The 14th Annual Independent Music Awards and by doing so, helped to assist the careers of upcoming independent artists.
On May 26, 2017, Downs released , under Sony Music Mexico/Latin. The first single of the album was "Peligrosa", followed over the summer by "Urge". Her next international tour started at the end of March 2017 on the West Coast of the US, followed by a series of performances in Mexico, Europe and Latin America. The album was awarded the Latin Grammy for Best Traditional Pop Vocal at the Latin Grammys in Las Vegas in November 2017.
In August 2021, she collaborated with Guatemalan singer-songwriter Sara Curruchich on the song "Pueblos", which was released on the International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples.
Musical tours
2005–2006: One Blood Tour
Due to the success of the albums One Blood and Border (2001 and 2004), the One Blood Tour took place and Downs performed 30 international shows on three continents. Countries such as the Philippines, Japan, China, Egypt and Afghanistan were included on the tour, where Downs was well received by the public.
In May 2007, Downs published a DVD collection as a document of that tour in a concert in Oaxaca and Mexico City; this DVD contained thirteen live tracks and a documentary as well as special features like interviews, short films by Allen Downs (Lila's father) and videos.
2008–2009: Shake Away Tour
In September 2008 the Ojo de Culebra World Tour started, which took place on four continents, and was the most successful tour for a Mexican artist.
In Latin America, Mexico was the country with the highest number of concerts (21 in total), the tour officially ended on October 30, 2009, giving a free concert in the Zocalo of Mexico City, followed by Colombia and Costa Rica, with three concerts each.
Although not part of the tour, Lila Downs appeared in the Live Earth in Germany, where she played three songs, and in late 2008 sang at the Harmony Festival held in California, United States.
2010: Black Magic Woman Tour
In March 2010, Lila Downs announced a world tour Black Magic Woman Tour which began in Buenos Aires, Argentina with three sold-out shows. This tour included several countries in America Asia and Europe in many of which attendance records were broken. The tour officially ended on November 17, 2010, in Square Dance by Oaxaca City where she had an audience of approximately seven thousand people.
2011–2014: Pecados y Milagros World Tour
Pecados y Milagros World Tour was Lila Downs' fourth musical tour in support of her seventh studio album, " Pecados y Milagros ", also her first album to win Grammy Awards, Latin Grammy Award for best folk album, and best Regional/Mexican Tejano album It was announced on October 3, 2011, through the official website of the singer. Lila Downs explains her meaning behind Pecados y Milagros, also known as "Sins and Miracles" talking about the drug-related violence involved in Mexico's cities. https://www.pri.org/stories/2011-11-07/what-mexican-singer-lila-downs-pecados-y-milagros-says-about-drug-violence
2015–2017: Balas y Chocolate World Tour
Balas y Chocolate World Tour is Lila Downs's fifth concert tour, and promoted her eighth studio album Balas y Chocolate (Bullets and chocolate (in Spanish).) It began on March 26 in Mexico City at the Plaza Condesa, presenting the repertoire of new music album of the same name tour. Canada in 2015, Spain has toured with great success (Cartagena, Barcelona, Valencia, Madrid etc. ), Paraguay, Chile, Argentina (Mendoza, Buenos Aires, Cordoba ), Bolivia, Ecuador, United States ( more than 20 cities, including New York City, Miami, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Step etc.) In 2016 she will be in London, Spain, Argentina and Peru. In August 2016, Lila Downs performed at the 21st Annual Santa Barbara Mariachi Festival alongside Aida Cuevas, Mariachi Sol de Mexico, Mariachi Nuevo Tecalitlan, and Mariachi Reyna de Los Angeles in Santa Barbara, CA.
2019–present: Al Chile Tour
Al Chile World Tour is Downs' sixth world tour. It was to see concerts in Mexico, the United States, Spain, Colombia and Chile for 2019 and 2020. However, due to the coronavirus pandemic, Downs was forced to cancel or postpone most of the concerts until 2021.
Acting
Downs has had small parts in such films as Frida, Fados and Hasta el último trago corazón; the latter is a documentary on Mexican music involving various exponents of the genre. Downs worked on the composition and arrangements for the musical Como agua para chocolate, based on the book by Laura Esquivel, which premiered at the Public Theater of New York and Broadway in late 2011 and early 2012. She participated in the filming of the U.S. film Mariachi Gringo directed by Tom Gustafson, where she worked alongside Mexican actresses Adriana Barraza, Martha Higareda and Canadian actor Shawn Ashmore. The film was released in 2012.
Soundtracks
In 2001, Downs was invited to participate in the soundtrack of the Mexican film Piedras Verdes where she performed "Cancion mixteca", in 2002 she participated in the soundtrack for the film Frida singing the song "Burn It Blue" which was nominated in the 75th Academy Awards in the category of Best Original Song. In 2005 she participated in the soundtrack for the film The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada with the song "Dónde estás papá". Downs has also participated in other soundtracks for films such as Real Women Have Curves and Tortilla Soup. In the film by Carlos Saura, Fados (2007), she sings an unforgettable version of "Foi na Travessa da Palha" in Portuguese.
Personal life
Since the beginning of her career she has been involved with Paul Cohen who is her partner and artistic director.
There has been much speculation in the media about the couple's personal life and that the couple could not have children.
In June 2010, Downs announced on her web site that, after several years of trying to be parents, she and Paul Cohen had adopted a child, Benito Dxuladi. They currently reside in Coyoacán in Mexico City and Oaxaca although most of the time they spend traveling.
Social activism
Downs has been a social activist throughout her entire career and works to maintain her cultural identity and her roots in the eye of social distress. For example, she sings with passion, and admiration for her home in Oaxaca, Mexico. Her music draws out many socially significant issues particularly with issues pertaining to the Indigenous, such as the mistreatment and misunderstanding of indigenous peoples of Oaxaca, by celebrating her Mixtec heritage through song. Her albums are socially significant, especially her album, One Blood, or Una Sangre, which includes songs such as "Dignificada", which is a song about Digna Ochoa's assassination. Digna Ochoa was a lawyer and social activist, and Downs featured her story on her album One Blood.
When asked if she is a politician, Downs said that she does not want to be a politician because she is not interested in power, instead she wants to support and change society through music.
On October 9, 2009, Downs, along with actress Salma Hayek represented Mexico participated in an event for the worldwide campaign of the One Drop foundation, to preserve water. They performed together with the founder of Cirque du Soleil, Shakira, U2, former Vice President Al Gore and other "world-class" personalities.
Contributions
In 2003 she was invited to the Twelve Girls Band concert in Shanghai, China, where she sang in French, Italian and English: Habanera from the opera Carmen, "Signore, ascolta!" from the opera Turandot, Summertime from Porgy and Bess and Ode to joy With Tim Sheff. She also participated on the album "Spain in my heart: Songs of the Spanish Civil War" with the song "El quinto regimiento".
In 2004 she collaborated with the Afghan singer Kulsoom Syed Ghulam on the album Lullabies from the Axis of Evil on the song "Lalolalo (Don't you Worry My Child)".
In 2005 she collaborated with the Galician band Luar Na Lubre on the album Saudade on the song "Domingo Ferreiro" performed in galician.
In 2006 she collaborated on the Brian Lynch and Eddie Palmieri album Simpático on the song "Que sería la vida" with Brian Lynch.
In 2007 she collaborated with the Argentinean band Los Calzones Rotos on the album Tanguito on the song "Loco". She also collaborated on the album "Homenaje a Pedro Infante: 50 aniversario" with the song "Amorcito corazón". And she collaborated with the Paraguayan musician Celso Duarte on the album "De sur a sur/From south to south" on the song "Petenera".
In 2008, on the Los Cojolites album No Tiene Fin, she sang on the song "La Herlinda" and "El Pescador" of the album Sin Fecha de Caducidad by the Mexican singer Celso Piña. She also participated on the album "Songs of the siren: Irresistible voices" with the song "La cumbia del mole". She participated on the album "¡Nueva York!" from the American musician Dan Zanes with the song "La bruja".
In 2009 she participated on the album of Basque singer Kepa Junkera, where she performs "Haurtxo Polita" in Euskara. She also sang "Razon de Vivir" on Mercedes Sosa's album Cantora, Vol. 2. That same year she also worked on the song "El Llorar" on Mexican musician Ernesto Anaya's album, Huapangueando. She equally participated on the album What About Me? from the UK duo 1 Giant Leap with the songs "Come to the edges" with Huun Huur Tu and "Solita sin soledad" with Carlos Santana. She participated on the album "Sweetheart: our favorite artists sing their favorite love songs" in the song "My One and Only Love". Also collaborated with the Brazilian musician Guilherme Monteiro on the album "Air" on the song "Retrato de un forró". And participated on the posthumous album "Duetos" from the Spanish singer Rocío Durcal on the song "Amor eterno".
In 2010, Lila Downs sang a duet with the Mexican singer-songwriter Benny Ibarra ("Calaveras"), on his album The March of the Living. The song was the second single for the album. She also sang "Historia de un amor" on Roberto Alagna's album "Pasión". She sang a duet "Vámonos" with the Mexican singer Chavela Vargas on her album "¡Por mi culpa! Chavela Vargas y sus amigos". She also collaborated with the Irish band The Chieftains on the album "San Patricio" on the song "La iguana" with The Chieftains and Ry Cooder.
In 2012 she collaborated on Kevin Johansen's album Bi with the song "Baja a la tierra", and on the album "Mujer Divina" from the Mexican singer Natalia Lafourcade on the song "La fugitiva"
In 2013 she collaborated on the album "Ciudadana del mundo vol. 1" on the songs "De que te cuidas" and "Latinoamerica" with Eugenia León, Moyenei, Betsy Pecanins, Tania Libertad and Cecilia Toussaint. She collaborated with the Mexican singer Leonel García on the album "Todas mías" on the song "Sirena". She also collaborated with the Mexican group Los Ángeles azules on the album "Como te voy a olvidar" on the song "El listón de tu pelo". She collaborated with the Spanish band Chambao on the album "10 años around the world" on the song "Papeles mojados". She participated on the album "Grandes éxitos de las sonoras, con la más grande, La Sonora Santanera" from the Mexican band La Sonora Santanera on the song "Tu voz".
Awards and recognition
Throughout her career Downs has received several awards, including a Grammy, 5 Latin Grammys and Lunas del Auditorio.
She has recently unveiled her star on the Walk of Fame located in the outskirts of Auditorio Nacional in Mexico City for her career. Her last album 'Balas Y Chocolate' was listed on i-Tunes as one of the years best in World Music 2015, was one of the UK Sunday Times best albums of the year and was a Best Album of the Year pick in Songlines Magazine, where she was featured on the cover of the June 2016 issue. Some of her most successful songs include: "Tengo miedo de quererte", "Estrella oscura", "La línea", "La llorona", "La cumbia del mole" y "Ojo de culebra".
In November, 2017 Lila's latest album; "Salón Lágrimas y Deseo" won Best Album Pop Traditional at the Latin Grammys in Las Vegas.
Discography
Albums
Ofrenda (1994)
Azulao: En vivo con Lila Downs (1996)
La Sandunga (Narada 1999)
Tree of Life (Yutu tata) (Narada 2000)
Border (La Línea) (Narada 2001)
One Blood (Una sangre) (Narada 2004)
La Cantina (Narada 2006)
The Very Best Of/El Alma de Lila Downs [CD] (EMI 2008)
Shake Away (Ojo de Culebra) (Manhattan Records 2008)
Lila Downs y La Misteriosa en Paris – Live a FIP [CD (Harmonia Mundi-Global Village Europe/US; various labels worldwide), (CD + DVD EMI Mexico) (2010)]
Pecados y Milagros (2011)
Balas y Chocolate (2015)
Salón, Lágrimas y Deseo (2017)
Al Chile (2019)
With the Brian Lynch/Eddie Palmieri Project
Simpático (artistShare, 2007)
'with Niña Pastori and Soledad Pastorutti
Raíz (2014)
DVD
Lotería Cantada (2006)
The Very Best Of/El Alma de Lila Downs [CD+DVD] (EMI 2008)
See also
List of Mexican actresses
References
External links
Official website
Lila Downs Music Videos on CompulsiveTraveler.tv
Lila Downs: beyond the border by Mary Armstrong, Sing Out! vol. 45 no. 4 Winter 2002
"Wise Latina", an interview with Guernica Magazine's Joel Whitney
Lila Downs biography and discography at World Music Central
Paste Magazine Article
"Lila Downs on BBC Newsnight" Interview by Secunder Kermani 2016
"Lila Downs: NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert" Lila Downs Tiny Desk Concert 2016
1968 births
Living people
Grammy Award winners
Singers from Oaxaca
University of Minnesota alumni
English-language singers from Mexico
French-language singers
Mixtecan-language singers
Nahuatl-language singers
Purépecha-language singers
Zapotec-language singers
Latin Grammy Award winners
Mayan-language singers
Mexican women singer-songwriters
Mexican singer-songwriters
Mexican people of American descent
Mexican people of English descent
Mexican people of Scottish descent
Mixtec people
Narada Productions artists
People from Tlaxiaco
Indigenous Mexicans
Sony Music Latin artists
Indigenous musicians of the Americas
Sony Music Mexico artists
Indigenous Mexican women
20th-century Native Americans
21st-century Native Americans
Women in Latin music | [
"Ana Lila Downs Sánchez (born 19 September 1968) is a Mexican singer-songwriter and actress.",
"She performs her own compositions and the works of others in multiple genres, as well as tapping into Mexican traditional and popular music.",
"She also incorporates indigenous Mexican influences and has recorded songs in many indigenous languages such as Mixtec, Zapotec, Mayan, Nahuatl and Purépecha.",
"Born and raised in Oaxaca, she primarily studied at the Institute of Arts by Oaxaca and briefly attended the University of Minnesota, before withdrawing to focus on her musical career.",
"She soon began performing in the traditional music scene of Oaxaca City.",
"Her first album, Ofrenda, was released in 1994.",
"In 1999, Downs came to prominence with her debut studio album, La Sandunga, which was a critical and commercial success.",
"She achieved international success in 2001 with the album Border which emerged in the music scene of Mexico and Latin America in the early 2000s (decade).",
"Downs's seventh album, Pecados y milagros (2011), topped album charts in most major markets and generated chart-topping world music albums.",
"Her eighth album, \"Balas y Chocolate\", was released in 2015.",
"\"Salón Lágrimas y Deseo\", her ninth album, came out in 2017.",
"Downs began performing in school, demonstrating her vocal ability with traditional music, Latin and American influences, and with her own original twist on dancing.",
"Downs, a native Spanish speaker, also speaks fluent Mixtec and English.",
"Downs through her activism has gone through great lengths to preserve the Mixtec language as well as many other Indigenous Mexican languages.",
"Influenced by Chavela Vargas, Mercedes Sosa, Lucha Villa, and Amparo Ochoa, Lila Downs is recognized for her flamboyant, diverse and outré contributions to the music industry through her traditional and authentic fashion, the majority of which are based around Mexico's indigenous peoples' styles, cultures and heritages, which show through her performances and music videos.",
"Her achievements include one Grammy Award and three Latin Grammy Awards.",
"Besides her musical career, she involves herself with humanitarian causes and political activism, especially dealing with issues of Latin America's indigenous population.",
"Biography \n\nLila Downs was born on 19 September 1968, in Tlaxiaco, Oaxaca, Mexico.",
"She is the daughter of Anita Sánchez, a Mixtec cabaret singer and Allen Downs, a Scottish-American professor of art and cinematographer from Minnesota.",
"From an early age Downs showed interest in music.",
"At the age of eight she began singing rancheras and other traditional Mexican songs.",
"She began her professional career singing with mariachis.",
"At fourteen she moved to the United States with her parents.",
"She studied voice in Los Angeles and learned English, which her father helped her to perfect.",
"When she was 16, her father died, and she decided to return to her native town Tlaxiaco with her mother.",
"One day while she was working in a store in the Mixtec mountains a man came in to ask her to translate his son's death certificate.",
"She read that he had drowned trying to cross the border into the United States.",
"This deeply affected her and has continued to influence her work.",
"She talked about this in an NPR interview about her 2001 release entitled Border.",
"Although today Downs is proud of her origins there was a time when she felt shame regarding her Native American roots.",
"\"I was embarrassed to have Indian blood.",
"I was embarrassed that my mother spoke her language in public.\"",
"This led her on a path to find herself, which included dropping out of college, dyeing her hair blonde and following the band The Grateful Dead.",
"After some time Downs found herself back in Oaxaca, a city in southern Mexico, working at her mother's auto parts store, where she met her future husband and musical collaborator, tenor saxophonist Paul Cohen.",
"Downs studied Anthropology at the University of Minnesota and voice in New York.",
"Later she attended the Institute of Science and Arts of Oaxaca in Mexico to complete her studies.",
"At 25, after completing academic and music studies, Downs decided to return to Tlaxiaco.",
"Paul Cohen always encouraged her musical ventures, and she joined a group percussion called Yodoyuxi's Cadets.",
"Because Paul Cohen had business in the United States she began to live in both Minnesota and Oaxaca.",
"During her stay in Minnesota, Downs formed a group called La Trova Serrana which achieved great popularity among the Latin community within the United States, singing songs about the Zapotec values and culture.",
"Upon her return to Mexico she started singing in bars, restaurants and clubs in the City of Oaxaca, as well as the city of Philadelphia and the state California in the United States, always with the support of US saxophonist Paul Cohen.",
"She received many positive critical reviews, which led to her decision to undertake an extensive tour of Mexico.",
"Career\n\n1994–1996: First albums \nIn 1994 Lila Downs independently made her first album, entitled Ofrenda.",
"This was both a collection of traditional songs from Oaxaca and Mexico, and songs written by the singer with lyrics sung in Spanish, Mixtec and Zapotec (native languages of Oaxaca).",
"The material was produced both independently and with the support of the Oaxacan Cultures Institute.",
"Because this album was not a commercial success in LP or cassette, she never released a version on CD.",
"In 1996 Downs recorded a live session at a renowned café-bar of the City of Oaxaca.",
"On this record Downs was accompanied by a set of well-known musicians who supported its interpretation of traditional themes, as well as country music and jazz.",
"With this work Downs and her music became known in different parts of the Republic of Mexico, and this was their first album to be released on CD.",
"The album had a big impact, despite limited promotion and the fact that only a small number of copies were made.",
"This CD is now out of print, and although not available as part of the official discography of Lila Downs, can be found in digital format.",
"1997–1999: La Sandunga \nIn 1997 Lila Downs made a second recording, called \"Traces\", on which she performed material that was to be included in later albums such as La Sandunga, Tree of Life and Border.",
"It is an extensive compilation of items in her traditional repertoire but, like its predecessor, had no commercial distribution, so this disc is also currently out of print.",
"It was not until 1999, when Downs signed with the label Narada Productions, that she achieved commercial success and made herself known internationally with the album La Sandunga.",
"Recorded a year earlier, this material came to the forefront of Mexican music and her album was one of the first to merge the sounds of traditional music and modern rhythms as jazz, blues and bolero.",
"The album was sung in Spanish and Mixtec, and was produced by Lila Downs and Paul Cohen with the support of Xquenda Cultural Association.",
"Because of this success, Downs participated in the sound track of the Mexican film Green Stones and achieved great popularity in countries such as Mexico, United States, Spain, France, England and Germany, selling over 500,000 units worldwide.",
"1999–2000: Tree of Life/Yutu Tata \nDowns's next album, Tree of Life, was released in 2000.",
"With this album the fame of Downs continued to spread to other markets in England, Switzerland, Canada and especially the United States.",
"This work found Downs turning to her indigenous past, and the album features pre-Hispanic sounds and instruments.",
"Several of the songs on the album are sung in native Mexican languages such as Mixtec, Zapotec and Nahuatl.",
"In October 2000, she began a two-month tour called the Tree of Life/Árbol de la vida, which included concerts in Latin America, Europe and the US.",
"The tour began in Mexico and ended in Spain.",
"2001–2003: Border/La Linea \nBorder, released by EMI Music in 2001, was the first album by Downs to feature songs sung in English.",
"The album was released simultaneously in the United States and Mexico.",
"With this album Downs merged sounds from different genres such as traditional folk music, hip hop, rock and chilena.",
"It included fifteen songs, eleven in Spanish, three in English and one in Mayan.",
"The album received generally good reviews and placed seventh in \"Top charts\" of world music.",
"It also stirred up controversy due to its frank discussion of immigration, Native American marginalization and the Acteal massacre.",
"This drew criticism, especially from politicians and the church.",
"The album's first single was released in Mexico, \"Mi corazón me recuerda\", a poem by Chiapas poet Jaime Sabines.",
"Set to music, it achieved moderate success on the Mexican music charts.",
"In Spain the song \"La Llorona\", in France the song \"Corazoncito Tirano\" and in the United States the song \"Medley: Pastures of Plenty/This Land Is Your Land/Land\" were released as singles.",
"The latter incorporates two Woody Guthrie songs, \"Pastures of Plenty\" and \"This Land is Your Land\" as well as original lyrics by Downs in \"Land\".",
"2004–2006: Una Sangre/One Blood \nOne Blood, one of Lila Downs's most successful albums, was released in April 2004, simultaneously in the United States, Spain, and Mexico.",
"The lyrics on this album are about migration, discrimination and the case of Mexican human rights defender Digna Ochoa.",
"In addition to traditional songs such as \"La Bamba\", \"Viborita\", and \"La Cucaracha\", the album includes genres such as son jarocho, jazz, rock and folk.",
"This album contains thirteen tracks, three in English, one in Triqui, one in Purepecha and eight in Spanish.",
"Lyrics were authored by Lila Downs, Paul Cohen, Celso Duarte, and Jose Martí.",
"In 2005 Lila Downs received the Grammy Latino in the category of \"Best Album of World Music\" for this album and reached the top of the charts in United States, Mexico, Spain, United Kingdom, Germany and France.",
"2006–2008: La Cantina, entre copa y copa ... \n\nLila Downs took approximately one and a half years to prepare this project, which was released in April 2006.",
"This CD draws on Mexican ranchero songs and merges sounds such as pop, rock, norteño, cumbia and hip-hop.",
"This CD contains fifteen tracks, of which twelve are traditional Mexican repertoire authored by Lila Downs, and includes a version in English of \"La cumbia del mole\", the song that to date is the most well-known work by the artist.",
"\"La cumbia del mole\" refers to the preparation of Mexican dish and tradition in Oaxaca.",
"This single managed to position itself among the top of the charts in Mexico, United States, Canada and United Kingdom.",
"In 2007, Downs published a CD with the greatest success in Spanish to date, containing songs from her previous albums La Sandunga, Tree of Life, Border/The Line, One Blood and La Cantina.",
"It was entitled simply The Very Best of Lila Downs and was accompanied with a DVD containing thirteen tracks recorded live at a concert in Madrid, Spain.",
"2008–2009: Shake Away/Ojo de Culebra \n\nTwo years after the release of La Cantina, in September 2008 Downs launched Ojo de Culebra in Europe, North America, Australia and Latin America.",
"The album reached sixth place in sales in Mexico, Colombia, Argentina, Spain and several Latin American countries.",
"The first single is titled \"Ojo de Culebra\" was contributed to by the Spanish singer La Mari by group of flamenco Chambao.",
"The song is a merger of rock, cumbia and flamenco with some influences of reggae.",
"This song was at the top of the charts of world music in several countries The second single was \"Perro Negro\", a merger of rock with ska, (which did not have as much of an international impact as its predecessor), featured Rubén Albarrán singer of the Mexican rock band Café Tacuba.",
"\"Little man\" (released in the U.S. alone) and \"Justice\" were next two singles, the latter with the participation of the Spanish singer Enrique Bunbury.",
"Raul Midon, Gilberto Gutierrez and Mercedes Sosa also contributed to this album.",
"The single \"Black magic woman\" achieved moderate success in Europe, United States and Canada, and the single \"Silent Thunder\" was later well received by the British market.",
"In October 2009 Lila Downs was honored by a plaque at the outskirts of her hometown and birthplace, Tlaxiaco, Mexico, and also was awarded the keys the city for her work preserving the language of Mixtec.",
"2010–present: Lila Downs y la Misteriosa, Pecados y Milagros \n\nLila Downs y la Misteriosa en Paris Live à FIP is the second live album by Downs, released on April 13, 2010, in Spain and France, the album was recorded in 2009 in Radio France studio 105 in Paris, France.",
"It was released in May 2010 in the United States and in July in most other countries.",
"It received positive feedback from critics.",
"Lila Downs y la Misteriosa en Paris was released in Mexico with an edited version of the live concert on DVD and was number one in sales of Gender World Music for the music chain Mixup for three consecutive weeks.",
"Although receiving little promotion the album has received moderate success on the Mexican charts.",
"In a survey of the best albums of 2010 conducted by the Mexican television network Channel 22, this album was ranked number one.",
"Pecados y Milagros (Sins and Miracles) was the seventh studio album by Mexican singer-songwriter Lila Downs, released on October 18, 2011.",
"The album cover was released on September 14, 2011.",
"The album debuted at number fifty two on the Billboard 200 becoming her fourth-highest peak on the chart.",
"It also debuted at number one on the Billboard Top Latin Albums Chart and stayed there for over 3 consecutive weeks.",
"This album has sold over 60.000 copies in the US and over 290.000 copies worldwide.",
"The album was recorded in the Mexico City, and New York.",
"Downs describes the album musically as having \"a strong rock side\" along with \"traditional\" and \"Latino\" songs.",
"Celso Duarte is one of several collaborators to appear on the album, featuring on the first single \"Palomo del comalito\".",
"Other collaborations include songs with rappers Illya Kuryaki and the Valderramas, Celso Piña and Totó la Momposina.",
"Downs ahas been touring through February 2017 in Mexico, the US and around the world, the Sins and Miracles Tour, which started in Mexico.",
"Audience members at a concert of February 18, 2012, at New York City El Museo del Barrio were informed that the concert was being recorded by HBO.",
"In 2015, Lila Downs joined the judging panel for The 14th Annual Independent Music Awards and by doing so, helped to assist the careers of upcoming independent artists.",
"On May 26, 2017, Downs released , under Sony Music Mexico/Latin.",
"The first single of the album was \"Peligrosa\", followed over the summer by \"Urge\".",
"Her next international tour started at the end of March 2017 on the West Coast of the US, followed by a series of performances in Mexico, Europe and Latin America.",
"The album was awarded the Latin Grammy for Best Traditional Pop Vocal at the Latin Grammys in Las Vegas in November 2017.",
"In August 2021, she collaborated with Guatemalan singer-songwriter Sara Curruchich on the song \"Pueblos\", which was released on the International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples.",
"Musical tours\n\n2005–2006: One Blood Tour \nDue to the success of the albums One Blood and Border (2001 and 2004), the One Blood Tour took place and Downs performed 30 international shows on three continents.",
"Countries such as the Philippines, Japan, China, Egypt and Afghanistan were included on the tour, where Downs was well received by the public.",
"In May 2007, Downs published a DVD collection as a document of that tour in a concert in Oaxaca and Mexico City; this DVD contained thirteen live tracks and a documentary as well as special features like interviews, short films by Allen Downs (Lila's father) and videos.",
"2008–2009: Shake Away Tour \n\nIn September 2008 the Ojo de Culebra World Tour started, which took place on four continents, and was the most successful tour for a Mexican artist.",
"In Latin America, Mexico was the country with the highest number of concerts (21 in total), the tour officially ended on October 30, 2009, giving a free concert in the Zocalo of Mexico City, followed by Colombia and Costa Rica, with three concerts each.",
"Although not part of the tour, Lila Downs appeared in the Live Earth in Germany, where she played three songs, and in late 2008 sang at the Harmony Festival held in California, United States.",
"2010: Black Magic Woman Tour \nIn March 2010, Lila Downs announced a world tour Black Magic Woman Tour which began in Buenos Aires, Argentina with three sold-out shows.",
"This tour included several countries in America Asia and Europe in many of which attendance records were broken.",
"The tour officially ended on November 17, 2010, in Square Dance by Oaxaca City where she had an audience of approximately seven thousand people.",
"2011–2014: Pecados y Milagros World Tour \nPecados y Milagros World Tour was Lila Downs' fourth musical tour in support of her seventh studio album, \" Pecados y Milagros \", also her first album to win Grammy Awards, Latin Grammy Award for best folk album, and best Regional/Mexican Tejano album It was announced on October 3, 2011, through the official website of the singer.",
"Lila Downs explains her meaning behind Pecados y Milagros, also known as \"Sins and Miracles\" talking about the drug-related violence involved in Mexico's cities.",
"https://www.pri.org/stories/2011-11-07/what-mexican-singer-lila-downs-pecados-y-milagros-says-about-drug-violence\n\n2015–2017: Balas y Chocolate World Tour \n\nBalas y Chocolate World Tour is Lila Downs's fifth concert tour, and promoted her eighth studio album Balas y Chocolate (Bullets and chocolate (in Spanish).)",
"It began on March 26 in Mexico City at the Plaza Condesa, presenting the repertoire of new music album of the same name tour.",
"Canada in 2015, Spain has toured with great success (Cartagena, Barcelona, Valencia, Madrid etc.",
"), Paraguay, Chile, Argentina (Mendoza, Buenos Aires, Cordoba ), Bolivia, Ecuador, United States ( more than 20 cities, including New York City, Miami, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Step etc.)",
"In 2016 she will be in London, Spain, Argentina and Peru.",
"In August 2016, Lila Downs performed at the 21st Annual Santa Barbara Mariachi Festival alongside Aida Cuevas, Mariachi Sol de Mexico, Mariachi Nuevo Tecalitlan, and Mariachi Reyna de Los Angeles in Santa Barbara, CA.",
"2019–present: Al Chile Tour \n\nAl Chile World Tour is Downs' sixth world tour.",
"It was to see concerts in Mexico, the United States, Spain, Colombia and Chile for 2019 and 2020.",
"However, due to the coronavirus pandemic, Downs was forced to cancel or postpone most of the concerts until 2021.",
"Acting \n\nDowns has had small parts in such films as Frida, Fados and Hasta el último trago corazón; the latter is a documentary on Mexican music involving various exponents of the genre.",
"Downs worked on the composition and arrangements for the musical Como agua para chocolate, based on the book by Laura Esquivel, which premiered at the Public Theater of New York and Broadway in late 2011 and early 2012.",
"She participated in the filming of the U.S. film Mariachi Gringo directed by Tom Gustafson, where she worked alongside Mexican actresses Adriana Barraza, Martha Higareda and Canadian actor Shawn Ashmore.",
"The film was released in 2012.",
"Soundtracks \nIn 2001, Downs was invited to participate in the soundtrack of the Mexican film Piedras Verdes where she performed \"Cancion mixteca\", in 2002 she participated in the soundtrack for the film Frida singing the song \"Burn It Blue\" which was nominated in the 75th Academy Awards in the category of Best Original Song.",
"In 2005 she participated in the soundtrack for the film The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada with the song \"Dónde estás papá\".",
"Downs has also participated in other soundtracks for films such as Real Women Have Curves and Tortilla Soup.",
"In the film by Carlos Saura, Fados (2007), she sings an unforgettable version of \"Foi na Travessa da Palha\" in Portuguese.",
"Personal life \nSince the beginning of her career she has been involved with Paul Cohen who is her partner and artistic director.",
"There has been much speculation in the media about the couple's personal life and that the couple could not have children.",
"In June 2010, Downs announced on her web site that, after several years of trying to be parents, she and Paul Cohen had adopted a child, Benito Dxuladi.",
"They currently reside in Coyoacán in Mexico City and Oaxaca although most of the time they spend traveling.",
"Social activism \nDowns has been a social activist throughout her entire career and works to maintain her cultural identity and her roots in the eye of social distress.",
"For example, she sings with passion, and admiration for her home in Oaxaca, Mexico.",
"Her music draws out many socially significant issues particularly with issues pertaining to the Indigenous, such as the mistreatment and misunderstanding of indigenous peoples of Oaxaca, by celebrating her Mixtec heritage through song.",
"Her albums are socially significant, especially her album, One Blood, or Una Sangre, which includes songs such as \"Dignificada\", which is a song about Digna Ochoa's assassination.",
"Digna Ochoa was a lawyer and social activist, and Downs featured her story on her album One Blood.",
"When asked if she is a politician, Downs said that she does not want to be a politician because she is not interested in power, instead she wants to support and change society through music.",
"On October 9, 2009, Downs, along with actress Salma Hayek represented Mexico participated in an event for the worldwide campaign of the One Drop foundation, to preserve water.",
"They performed together with the founder of Cirque du Soleil, Shakira, U2, former Vice President Al Gore and other \"world-class\" personalities.",
"Contributions \n\n In 2003 she was invited to the Twelve Girls Band concert in Shanghai, China, where she sang in French, Italian and English: Habanera from the opera Carmen, \"Signore, ascolta!\"",
"from the opera Turandot, Summertime from Porgy and Bess and Ode to joy With Tim Sheff.",
"She also participated on the album \"Spain in my heart: Songs of the Spanish Civil War\" with the song \"El quinto regimiento\".",
"In 2004 she collaborated with the Afghan singer Kulsoom Syed Ghulam on the album Lullabies from the Axis of Evil on the song \"Lalolalo (Don't you Worry My Child)\".",
"In 2005 she collaborated with the Galician band Luar Na Lubre on the album Saudade on the song \"Domingo Ferreiro\" performed in galician.",
"In 2006 she collaborated on the Brian Lynch and Eddie Palmieri album Simpático on the song \"Que sería la vida\" with Brian Lynch.",
"In 2007 she collaborated with the Argentinean band Los Calzones Rotos on the album Tanguito on the song \"Loco\".",
"She also collaborated on the album \"Homenaje a Pedro Infante: 50 aniversario\" with the song \"Amorcito corazón\".",
"And she collaborated with the Paraguayan musician Celso Duarte on the album \"De sur a sur/From south to south\" on the song \"Petenera\".",
"In 2008, on the Los Cojolites album No Tiene Fin, she sang on the song \"La Herlinda\" and \"El Pescador\" of the album Sin Fecha de Caducidad by the Mexican singer Celso Piña.",
"She also participated on the album \"Songs of the siren: Irresistible voices\" with the song \"La cumbia del mole\".",
"She participated on the album \"¡Nueva York!\"",
"from the American musician Dan Zanes with the song \"La bruja\".",
"In 2009 she participated on the album of Basque singer Kepa Junkera, where she performs \"Haurtxo Polita\" in Euskara.",
"She also sang \"Razon de Vivir\" on Mercedes Sosa's album Cantora, Vol.",
"2.",
"That same year she also worked on the song \"El Llorar\" on Mexican musician Ernesto Anaya's album, Huapangueando.",
"She equally participated on the album What About Me?",
"from the UK duo 1 Giant Leap with the songs \"Come to the edges\" with Huun Huur Tu and \"Solita sin soledad\" with Carlos Santana.",
"She participated on the album \"Sweetheart: our favorite artists sing their favorite love songs\" in the song \"My One and Only Love\".",
"Also collaborated with the Brazilian musician Guilherme Monteiro on the album \"Air\" on the song \"Retrato de un forró\".",
"And participated on the posthumous album \"Duetos\" from the Spanish singer Rocío Durcal on the song \"Amor eterno\".",
"In 2010, Lila Downs sang a duet with the Mexican singer-songwriter Benny Ibarra (\"Calaveras\"), on his album The March of the Living.",
"The song was the second single for the album.",
"She also sang \"Historia de un amor\" on Roberto Alagna's album \"Pasión\".",
"She sang a duet \"Vámonos\" with the Mexican singer Chavela Vargas on her album \"¡Por mi culpa!",
"Chavela Vargas y sus amigos\".",
"She also collaborated with the Irish band The Chieftains on the album \"San Patricio\" on the song \"La iguana\" with The Chieftains and Ry Cooder.",
"In 2012 she collaborated on Kevin Johansen's album Bi with the song \"Baja a la tierra\", and on the album \"Mujer Divina\" from the Mexican singer Natalia Lafourcade on the song \"La fugitiva\"\n In 2013 she collaborated on the album \"Ciudadana del mundo vol.",
"1\" on the songs \"De que te cuidas\" and \"Latinoamerica\" with Eugenia León, Moyenei, Betsy Pecanins, Tania Libertad and Cecilia Toussaint.",
"She collaborated with the Mexican singer Leonel García on the album \"Todas mías\" on the song \"Sirena\".",
"She also collaborated with the Mexican group Los Ángeles azules on the album \"Como te voy a olvidar\" on the song \"El listón de tu pelo\".",
"She collaborated with the Spanish band Chambao on the album \"10 años around the world\" on the song \"Papeles mojados\".",
"She participated on the album \"Grandes éxitos de las sonoras, con la más grande, La Sonora Santanera\" from the Mexican band La Sonora Santanera on the song \"Tu voz\".",
"Awards and recognition \nThroughout her career Downs has received several awards, including a Grammy, 5 Latin Grammys and Lunas del Auditorio.",
"She has recently unveiled her star on the Walk of Fame located in the outskirts of Auditorio Nacional in Mexico City for her career.",
"Her last album 'Balas Y Chocolate' was listed on i-Tunes as one of the years best in World Music 2015, was one of the UK Sunday Times best albums of the year and was a Best Album of the Year pick in Songlines Magazine, where she was featured on the cover of the June 2016 issue.",
"Some of her most successful songs include: \"Tengo miedo de quererte\", \"Estrella oscura\", \"La línea\", \"La llorona\", \"La cumbia del mole\" y \"Ojo de culebra\".",
"In November, 2017 Lila's latest album; \"Salón Lágrimas y Deseo\" won Best Album Pop Traditional at the Latin Grammys in Las Vegas.",
"vol.",
"45 no.",
"4 Winter 2002\n \"Wise Latina\", an interview with Guernica Magazine's Joel Whitney\n Lila Downs biography and discography at World Music Central\n Paste Magazine Article\n \"Lila Downs on BBC Newsnight\" Interview by Secunder Kermani 2016\n \"Lila Downs: NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert\" Lila Downs Tiny Desk Concert 2016\n\n1968 births\nLiving people\nGrammy Award winners\nSingers from Oaxaca\nUniversity of Minnesota alumni\nEnglish-language singers from Mexico\nFrench-language singers\nMixtecan-language singers\nNahuatl-language singers\nPurépecha-language singers\nZapotec-language singers\nLatin Grammy Award winners\nMayan-language singers\nMexican women singer-songwriters\nMexican singer-songwriters\nMexican people of American descent\nMexican people of English descent\nMexican people of Scottish descent\nMixtec people\nNarada Productions artists\nPeople from Tlaxiaco\nIndigenous Mexicans\nSony Music Latin artists\nIndigenous musicians of the Americas\nSony Music Mexico artists\nIndigenous Mexican women\n20th-century Native Americans\n21st-century Native Americans\nWomen in Latin music"
] | [
"Ana Downs Snchez is a Mexican singer and actress.",
"She performs her own compositions and the works of others in multiple genres, as well as tapping into Mexican traditional and popular music.",
"She has recorded songs in many indigenous languages and incorporates Mexican influences.",
"She studied at the Institute of Arts by Oaxaca and briefly attended the University of Minnesota before focusing on her musical career.",
"She began performing in Oaxaca City.",
"Ofrenda was her first album.",
"Downs' debut studio album, La Sandunga, was a critical and commercial success.",
"She achieved international success in 2001 with the album Border, which was a hit in Mexico and Latin America.",
"Downs's seventh album, Pecados y milagros, was a chart-topping world music album.",
"\"Balas y Chocolate\" was her eighth album.",
"\"Saln Lgrimas y Deseo\" was her ninth album.",
"Downs demonstrated her vocal ability with traditional music, Latin and American influences, and with her own original twist on dancing.",
"Downs is a native Spanish speaker.",
"Downs has gone through a lot of effort to preserve her Indigenous Mexican languages.",
"Influenced by a number of Mexicans, including Mercedes Sosa, Lucha Villa, and Amparo Ochoa, Lila Downs is known for her flamboyant, diverse and outré contributions to the music industry through her traditional and authentic fashion, the majority of which are based around Mexico's indigenous",
"Her accomplishments include three LatinGrammy Awards.",
"She deals with issues of Latin America's indigenous population as well as humanitarian causes and political activism.",
"Downs was born in Tlaxiaco, Oaxaca, Mexico.",
"She is the daughter of Allen Downs, a Scottish-American professor of art and cinematography from Minnesota.",
"Downs was interested in music from an early age.",
"She began singing rancheras at the age of eight.",
"She started singing with mariachis.",
"She moved to the United States at the age of fourteen.",
"Her father helped her perfect her English after she studied voice in Los Angeles.",
"She returned to her hometown of Tlaxiaco with her mother after her father died.",
"A man came in to ask her to translate his son's death certificate, while she was working in a store in the mountains.",
"He drowned trying to cross the border into the US.",
"She has continued to influence her work because of this.",
"She talked about this in her 2001 release.",
"Downs felt shame about her Native American roots when she was younger.",
"I was embarrassed to have Indian blood.",
"I was embarrassed that my mother spoke in public.",
"She dropped out of college and dyed her hair blonde in order to find herself.",
"Downs met her future husband and musical partner, Paul Cohen, while working at her mother's auto parts store in Oaxaca, Mexico.",
"Downs studied anthropology at the University of Minnesota and voice in New York.",
"She attended the Institute of Science and Arts of Oaxaca in Mexico to finish her studies.",
"Downs decided to return to Tlaxiaco after completing his studies.",
"She joined a percussion group called Yodoyuxi's Cadets and was encouraged by Paul Cohen.",
"She lived in both Minnesota and Oaxaca because of Paul Cohen.",
"Downs formed a group called La Trova Serrana, which was popular among the Latin community in the United States, singing songs about the Zapotec values and culture.",
"After returning to Mexico, she started singing in bars, restaurants and clubs in Oaxaca, as well as the city of Philadelphia and the state of California in the United States, with the support of US saxophonist Paul Cohen.",
"She decided to go on an extensive tour of Mexico after receiving many positive reviews.",
"Downs made her first album, Ofrenda, in 1994.",
"This was a collection of traditional songs from Oaxaca and Mexico, as well as songs written by the singer and sung in native languages of Oaxaca.",
"The Oaxacan Cultures Institute supported the production of the material.",
"She didn't release a CD version of the album because it wasn't a commercial success.",
"Downs recorded a live session in Oaxaca in 1996.",
"Downs was accompanied by a group of musicians who supported its interpretation of traditional themes, as well as country music and jazz.",
"Downs and her music became known in different parts of the Republic of Mexico, and this was their first album to be released on CD.",
"Despite limited promotion and the fact that only a small number of copies were made, the album had a big impact.",
"Although not included in the official discography of Lila Downs, this CD can be found in digital format.",
"The second recording, called \"Traces\", was made in 1997 and was to be included in later albums such as La Sandunga, Tree of Life and Border.",
"The previous disc had no commercial distribution, so this one is currently out of print.",
"Downs made herself known internationally with the album La Sandunga when she signed with the label Narada productions.",
"Her album was one of the first to combine the sounds of traditional music and modern rhythms as jazz, blues and bolero.",
"The Xquenda Cultural Association supported the production of the album, which was sung in Spanish and Mixtec.",
"Downs achieved great popularity in countries such as Mexico, United States, Spain, France, England and Germany because of his participation in the sound track of the Mexican film Green Stones.",
"Tree of Life was released in 2000.",
"Downs' fame spread to other markets in England, Switzerland, Canada and the United States with this album.",
"Downs turned to her indigenous past and the album features pre-Hispanic sounds and instruments.",
"Many of the songs on the album are sung in native Mexican languages.",
"In October 2000 she began a two-month tour called the Tree of Life/rbol de la vida, which included concerts in Latin America, Europe and the US.",
"The tour started in Mexico and ended in Spain.",
"Downs' first album, Border/La Linea Border, was released in 2001 and features songs sung in English.",
"The album was released in both the US and Mexico.",
"Downs combined sounds from different genres such as traditional folk music, hip hop, rock and chilena.",
"There were fifteen songs, eleven in Spanish, three in English and one in Mayan.",
"The album was seventh in the \"Top charts\" of world music.",
"It stirred up controversy due to its discussion of immigration, Native American marginalization and the Acteal massacre.",
"Politicians and the church criticized this.",
"\"Mi corazn me recuerda\" was the first single to be released in Mexico.",
"It achieved moderate success on the Mexican music charts.",
"The song \"La Llorona\" was released in Spain, France, and the United States as a single.",
"Two Woody Guthrie songs, \"Pastures of Plenty\" and \"This Land is Your Land\", as well as original lyrics by Downs, are included in the latter.",
"In April 2004, One Blood One Blood was released simultaneously in the United States, Spain, and Mexico.",
"This album has lyrics about migration, discrimination and the case of a Mexican human rights defender.",
"In addition to traditional songs such as \"La Bamba\", \"Viborita\", and \"La Cucaracha\", the album includes genres such as son jarocho, jazz, rock and folk.",
"There are three tracks in English, one in Triqui, and one in Purepecha.",
"The lyrics were written by Paul Cohen and others.",
"Downs' album reached the top of the charts in several countries, including the United States, Mexico, Spain, United Kingdom, Germany and France.",
"The project was released in April 2006 and took approximately one and a half years to prepare.",
"Pop, rock, norteo, cumbia and hip-hop are some of the sounds on this CD.",
"A version of \"La cumbia del mole\", the most well-known work by the artist, is included in the fifteen tracks on this CD.",
"\"La cumbia del mole\" means \"Mexican dish\" in Oaxaca.",
"This single made it to the top of the charts in Mexico, the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom.",
"Downs released a Spanish-language CD in 2007, containing songs from her previous albums La Sandunga, Tree of Life, Border/The Line, One Blood and La Cantina.",
"There was a DVD with thirteen tracks recorded live at a concert in Madrid, Spain.",
"Two years after the release of La Cantina, Downs launched Ojo de Culebra in Europe, North America, Australia and Latin America.",
"In Mexico, Argentina, Spain, and several Latin American countries, the album reached sixth place in sales.",
"The Spanish singer La Mari contributed to the first single, \"Ojo de Culebra\".",
"The song has influences of rock, cumbia and flamenco.",
"The second single was \"Perro Negro\", a merger of rock with ska, which did not have as much of an international impact as its predecessor.",
"\"Little man\" and \"Justice\" were the next two singles, with the participation of a Spanish singer.",
"This album was contributed to by several people.",
"The single \"Black magic woman\" achieved moderate success in Europe, United States and Canada, and the single \"Silent thunder\" was well received by the British market.",
"Downs was honored by a plaque at the outskirts of her hometown of Tlaxiaco, Mexico, as well as being awarded the keys to the city for her work preserving the language.",
"The second live album by Downs was released on April 13, 2010 in Spain and France.",
"It was released in the US in May 2010 and in most other countries in July.",
"Critics gave it positive feedback.",
"In Mexico, the edited version of the live concert on DVD was number one in sales of Gender World Music for three weeks in a row.",
"The album received little promotion but did well on the Mexican charts.",
"In a survey of the best albums of 2010 conducted by the Mexican television network Channel 22, this album was ranked number one.",
"The seventh studio album by Downs was released on October 18, 2011.",
"The album cover was released in 2011.",
"Her fourth-highest peak on the chart was her album's debut at number fifty two.",
"It stayed at the top of the chart for over 3 weeks.",
"Over 60.000 copies of this album have been sold in the US.",
"The album was made in Mexico City and New York.",
"The album has a strong rock side along with traditional and Latino songs.",
"The first single of the album is \"Palomo del comalito\".",
"Other collaborations include songs with Illya Kuryaki and the Valderramas.",
"In Mexico, the US and around the world, Downs has been on a tour called the Sins and Miracles Tour.",
"There was a concert at New York City El Museo del Barrio that was going to be recorded.",
"In 2015, Lila Downs joined the judging panel for The 14th Annual Independent Music Awards and helped to assist the careers of upcoming independent artists.",
"Downs was released by Sony Music Mexico/Latin.",
"\"Peligrosa\" and \"Urge\" were the first two single's of the album.",
"After a series of performances in Mexico, Europe and Latin America, her next international tour began at the end of March on the West Coast of the US.",
"The Latin Grammys in Las Vegas awarded the album the best traditional pop vocal.",
"The song \"Pueblos\" was released on the International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples.",
"Downs performed 30 international shows on three continents during the One Blood Tour due to the success of the albums One Blood and Border.",
"Downs was well received by the public in countries such as the Philippines, Japan, China, Egypt and Afghanistan.",
"In May 2007, Downs published a DVD collection as a document of that tour in a concert in Oaxaca and Mexico City; this DVD contained thirteen live tracks and a documentary as well as special features like interviews, short films by Allen Downs (Lila's father) and videos.",
"The most successful tour for a Mexican artist was the Shake Away Tour, which took place on four continents.",
"In Latin America, Mexico was the country with the highest number of concerts, the tour officially ended on October 30, 2009, giving a free concert in the Zocalo of Mexico City.",
"In Germany, where she played three songs, and in the United States, where she sang at a festival, Downs was not part of the tour.",
"The Black Magic Woman Tour began in Argentina with three sold-out shows.",
"Many attendance records were broken during this tour of America Asia and Europe.",
"The tour ended in Square Dance by Oaxaca City where she had an audience of seven thousand people.",
"The fourth musical tour in support of her seventh studio album was called the Pecados y Milagros World Tour.",
"\"Sins and Miracles\" is a talk about the drug-related violence in Mexico's cities.",
"The story about Mexican singer-lila-downes-pecados-y-milagros-says-about-drug-violence was published in 2011.",
"The new music album of the same name tour began in Mexico City on March 26 at the Plaza Condesa.",
"Spain has toured with great success in 2015.",
"More than 20 cities, including New York City, Miami, Hollywood, Los Angeles, and Step are in the United States.",
"She will be in London, Spain, Argentina and Peru.",
"The 21st Annual Santa Barbara Mariachi Festival was held in Santa Barbara, CA.",
"Downs' sixth world tour is the Al Chile Tour.",
"Concerts were to be held in Mexico, the United States, Spain, Colombia and Chile.",
"Downs was forced to cancel or delay most of the concerts due to the coronaviruses.",
"Hasta el ltimo trago corazn is a documentary on Mexican music and is one of the films acting Downs has had small parts in.",
"The Public Theater of New York and Broadway hosted a musical based on the book by Laura Esquivel in late 2011.",
"She was involved in the filming of the U.S. film Mariachi Gringo, where she worked with Mexican actresses and Canadian actor Shawn Ashmore.",
"In 2012 the film was released.",
"Downs performed \"Cancion mixteca\" in 2001 for the soundtrack of the Mexican film Piedras Verdes, which was nominated for an Academy Award.",
"She was a part of the soundtrack for The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada.",
"Downs was a part of the soundtracks for Real Women Have Curves and Tortilla Soup.",
"In the film by Carlos Saura, Fados, she sings a song in Portuguese.",
"Paul Cohen is her partner and artistic director.",
"There has been a lot of speculation in the media that the couple could not have children.",
"Downs announced on her website in June 2010 that she and Paul Cohen had adopted a child.",
"Most of the time they travel, they reside in Coyoacn in Mexico City and Oaxaca.",
"Downs has been a social activist her entire career and works to maintain her cultural identity and her roots in the eye of social distress.",
"She adores her home in Oaxaca, Mexico.",
"The mistreatment and misunderstanding of indigenous peoples of Oaxaca is one of the socially significant issues that she draws out in her music.",
"\"Dignificada\" is a song on her album, One Blood, which is about the assassination of a woman.",
"Downs featured the story of Digna Ochoa on her album One Blood.",
"Downs said that she doesn't want to be a politician because she wants to support and change society through music.",
"Downs and Hayek represented Mexico at an event for the worldwide campaign of the One Drop foundation, to preserve water.",
"They performed with some of the \"world-class\" people, including the founder of Cirque du Soleil and the former Vice President Al Gore.",
"She was invited to the Twelve Girls Band concert in China in 2003 where she sang in French, Italian and English: Habanera from the opera Carmen, \"Signore, ascolta!\"",
"From the opera Turandot to joy with Tim Sheff.",
"She was a part of the album \"Spain in my heart: Songs of the Spanish Civil War\".",
"She collaborated with the Afghan singer Kulsoom Syed Ghulam on a song in 2004.",
"She collaborated with the band Luar Na Lubre on a song called \"Domingo Ferreiro\".",
"She collaborated on a song with Brian Lynch on the album Simptico.",
"On the album Tanguito, she collaborated with the Argentinean band Los Calzones Rotos.",
"The song \"Amorcito corazn\" is on the album \"Homenaje a Pedro Infante: 50 aniversario\".",
"The song \"Petenera\" is on the album \"De sur a sur/From south to south\".",
"She sang on the song \"La Herlinda\" and the song \"El Pescador\" of the album Sin Fecha de Caducidad.",
"The song \"La cumbia del mole\" was a part of the album \"Songs of the siren: Irresistible voices\".",
"She was a part of the album \"Nueva York!\"",
"The song \"La bruja\" was written by the American musician Dan Zanes.",
"She performed \"Haurtxo Polita\" in Euskara on the album of Kepa Junkera.",
"She sang on Mercedes Sosa's album.",
"2.",
"She worked on a song called \"El Llorar\" on a Mexican musician's album.",
"She was a part of the album What About Me?",
"The songs \"Come to the edges\" with Huun Huur Tu and \"Solita sin soledad\" with Carlos Santana are from the UK duo 1 Giant Leap.",
"She sings in the song \"My One and Only Love\" on the album \"Sweetheart: our favorite artists sing their favorite love songs\".",
"The song \"Retrato de un forr\" was written by Guilherme Monteiro and 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611",
"The song \"Amor eterno\" was on the posthumous album \"Duetos\" from the Spanish singer Roco Durcal.",
"Downs sang a duet with Ibarra on his 2010 album The March of the Living.",
"The album had a second single.",
"On Roberto Alagna's album \"Pasin\", she sang \" Historia de un amor\".",
"She sang a duet with the Mexican singer on her album.",
"Amigos de Chavela Vargas.",
"She collaborated with the Irish band The Chieftains on a song called \"La iguana\".",
"She collaborated with Natalia Lafourcade on the song \"La fugitiva\" on the album \"Mujer Divina\".",
"There are two songs with Cecilia Toussaint and Betsy Pecanins.",
"On the album \"Todas mas\", she collaborated with the Mexican singer Leonel Garca.",
"On the album \"Como te voy a olvidar\", she collaborated with the Mexican group Los ngeles azules.",
"The song \"Papeles mojados\" is on the album \"10 aos around the world\".",
"She was a member of the Mexican band La Sonora Santanera on the song \"Tu voz\".",
"Downs has received several awards throughout her career.",
"She has a star on the Walk of Fame in Mexico City for her career.",
"Her last album 'Balas Y Chocolate' was listed on i-Tunes as one of the years best in World Music 2015, was one of the UK Sunday Times best albums of the year and was a Best Album of the Year pick in Songlines Magazine.",
"\"La lnea\", \"La llorona\", and \"Ojo deebra cul\" are some of her most successful songs.",
"\"Saln Lgrimas y Deseo\" won Best Pop Traditional at the Latin Grammys.",
"vol.",
"45 no.",
"\"Lila Downs: NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert\" is an interview with Secunder Kermani."
] | <mask> (born 19 September 1968) is a Mexican singer-songwriter and actress. She performs her own compositions and the works of others in multiple genres, as well as tapping into Mexican traditional and popular music. She also incorporates indigenous Mexican influences and has recorded songs in many indigenous languages such as Mixtec, Zapotec, Mayan, Nahuatl and Purépecha. Born and raised in Oaxaca, she primarily studied at the Institute of Arts by Oaxaca and briefly attended the University of Minnesota, before withdrawing to focus on her musical career. She soon began performing in the traditional music scene of Oaxaca City. Her first album, Ofrenda, was released in 1994. In 1999, <mask> came to prominence with her debut studio album, La Sandunga, which was a critical and commercial success.She achieved international success in 2001 with the album Border which emerged in the music scene of Mexico and Latin America in the early 2000s (decade). <mask>'s seventh album, Pecados y milagros (2011), topped album charts in most major markets and generated chart-topping world music albums. Her eighth album, "Balas y Chocolate", was released in 2015. "Salón Lágrimas y Deseo", her ninth album, came out in 2017. <mask> began performing in school, demonstrating her vocal ability with traditional music, Latin and American influences, and with her own original twist on dancing. <mask>, a native Spanish speaker, also speaks fluent Mixtec and English. <mask> through her activism has gone through great lengths to preserve the Mixtec language as well as many other Indigenous Mexican languages.Influenced by Chavela Vargas, Mercedes Sosa, Lucha Villa, and Amparo Ochoa, <mask> is recognized for her flamboyant, diverse and outré contributions to the music industry through her traditional and authentic fashion, the majority of which are based around Mexico's indigenous peoples' styles, cultures and heritages, which show through her performances and music videos. Her achievements include one Grammy Award and three Latin Grammy Awards. Besides her musical career, she involves herself with humanitarian causes and political activism, especially dealing with issues of Latin America's indigenous population. Biography
<mask> was born on 19 September 1968, in Tlaxiaco, Oaxaca, Mexico. She is the daughter of Anita Sánchez, a Mixtec cabaret singer and <mask>, a Scottish-American professor of art and cinematographer from Minnesota. From an early age <mask> showed interest in music. At the age of eight she began singing rancheras and other traditional Mexican songs.She began her professional career singing with mariachis. At fourteen she moved to the United States with her parents. She studied voice in Los Angeles and learned English, which her father helped her to perfect. When she was 16, her father died, and she decided to return to her native town Tlaxiaco with her mother. One day while she was working in a store in the Mixtec mountains a man came in to ask her to translate his son's death certificate. She read that he had drowned trying to cross the border into the United States. This deeply affected her and has continued to influence her work.She talked about this in an NPR interview about her 2001 release entitled Border. Although today <mask> is proud of her origins there was a time when she felt shame regarding her Native American roots. "I was embarrassed to have Indian blood. I was embarrassed that my mother spoke her language in public." This led her on a path to find herself, which included dropping out of college, dyeing her hair blonde and following the band The Grateful Dead. After some time <mask> found herself back in Oaxaca, a city in southern Mexico, working at her mother's auto parts store, where she met her future husband and musical collaborator, tenor saxophonist Paul Cohen. <mask> studied Anthropology at the University of Minnesota and voice in New York.Later she attended the Institute of Science and Arts of Oaxaca in Mexico to complete her studies. At 25, after completing academic and music studies, <mask> decided to return to Tlaxiaco. Paul Cohen always encouraged her musical ventures, and she joined a group percussion called Yodoyuxi's Cadets. Because Paul Cohen had business in the United States she began to live in both Minnesota and Oaxaca. During her stay in Minnesota, <mask> formed a group called La Trova Serrana which achieved great popularity among the Latin community within the United States, singing songs about the Zapotec values and culture. Upon her return to Mexico she started singing in bars, restaurants and clubs in the City of Oaxaca, as well as the city of Philadelphia and the state California in the United States, always with the support of US saxophonist Paul Cohen. She received many positive critical reviews, which led to her decision to undertake an extensive tour of Mexico.Career
1994–1996: First albums
In 1994 <mask> independently made her first album, entitled Ofrenda. This was both a collection of traditional songs from Oaxaca and Mexico, and songs written by the singer with lyrics sung in Spanish, Mixtec and Zapotec (native languages of Oaxaca). The material was produced both independently and with the support of the Oaxacan Cultures Institute. Because this album was not a commercial success in LP or cassette, she never released a version on CD. In 1996 <mask> recorded a live session at a renowned café-bar of the City of Oaxaca. On this record <mask> was accompanied by a set of well-known musicians who supported its interpretation of traditional themes, as well as country music and jazz. With this work <mask> and her music became known in different parts of the Republic of Mexico, and this was their first album to be released on CD.The album had a big impact, despite limited promotion and the fact that only a small number of copies were made. This CD is now out of print, and although not available as part of the official discography of <mask>, can be found in digital format. 1997–1999: La Sandunga
In 1997 <mask> made a second recording, called "Traces", on which she performed material that was to be included in later albums such as La Sandunga, Tree of Life and Border. It is an extensive compilation of items in her traditional repertoire but, like its predecessor, had no commercial distribution, so this disc is also currently out of print. It was not until 1999, when <mask> signed with the label Narada Productions, that she achieved commercial success and made herself known internationally with the album La Sandunga. Recorded a year earlier, this material came to the forefront of Mexican music and her album was one of the first to merge the sounds of traditional music and modern rhythms as jazz, blues and bolero. The album was sung in Spanish and Mixtec, and was produced by <mask> and Paul Cohen with the support of Xquenda Cultural Association.Because of this success, <mask> participated in the sound track of the Mexican film Green Stones and achieved great popularity in countries such as Mexico, United States, Spain, France, England and Germany, selling over 500,000 units worldwide. 1999–2000: Tree of Life/Yutu Tata
<mask>'s next album, Tree of Life, was released in 2000. With this album the fame of <mask> continued to spread to other markets in England, Switzerland, Canada and especially the United States. This work found <mask> turning to her indigenous past, and the album features pre-Hispanic sounds and instruments. Several of the songs on the album are sung in native Mexican languages such as Mixtec, Zapotec and Nahuatl. In October 2000, she began a two-month tour called the Tree of Life/Árbol de la vida, which included concerts in Latin America, Europe and the US. The tour began in Mexico and ended in Spain.2001–2003: Border/La Linea
Border, released by EMI Music in 2001, was the first album by <mask> to feature songs sung in English. The album was released simultaneously in the United States and Mexico. With this album <mask> merged sounds from different genres such as traditional folk music, hip hop, rock and chilena. It included fifteen songs, eleven in Spanish, three in English and one in Mayan. The album received generally good reviews and placed seventh in "Top charts" of world music. It also stirred up controversy due to its frank discussion of immigration, Native American marginalization and the Acteal massacre. This drew criticism, especially from politicians and the church.The album's first single was released in Mexico, "Mi corazón me recuerda", a poem by Chiapas poet Jaime Sabines. Set to music, it achieved moderate success on the Mexican music charts. In Spain the song "La Llorona", in France the song "Corazoncito Tirano" and in the United States the song "Medley: Pastures of Plenty/This Land Is Your Land/Land" were released as singles. The latter incorporates two Woody Guthrie songs, "Pastures of Plenty" and "This Land is Your Land" as well as original lyrics by <mask> in "Land". 2004–2006: Una Sangre/One Blood
One Blood, one of <mask>'s most successful albums, was released in April 2004, simultaneously in the United States, Spain, and Mexico. The lyrics on this album are about migration, discrimination and the case of Mexican human rights defender Digna Ochoa. In addition to traditional songs such as "La Bamba", "Viborita", and "La Cucaracha", the album includes genres such as son jarocho, jazz, rock and folk.This album contains thirteen tracks, three in English, one in Triqui, one in Purepecha and eight in Spanish. Lyrics were authored by <mask>, Paul Cohen, Celso Duarte, and Jose Martí. In 2005 <mask> received the Grammy Latino in the category of "Best Album of World Music" for this album and reached the top of the charts in United States, Mexico, Spain, United Kingdom, Germany and France. 2006–2008: La Cantina, entre copa y copa ...
<mask> took approximately one and a half years to prepare this project, which was released in April 2006. This CD draws on Mexican ranchero songs and merges sounds such as pop, rock, norteño, cumbia and hip-hop. This CD contains fifteen tracks, of which twelve are traditional Mexican repertoire authored by <mask>, and includes a version in English of "La cumbia del mole", the song that to date is the most well-known work by the artist. "La cumbia del mole" refers to the preparation of Mexican dish and tradition in Oaxaca.This single managed to position itself among the top of the charts in Mexico, United States, Canada and United Kingdom. In 2007, <mask> published a CD with the greatest success in Spanish to date, containing songs from her previous albums La Sandunga, Tree of Life, Border/The Line, One Blood and La Cantina. It was entitled simply The Very Best of <mask> and was accompanied with a DVD containing thirteen tracks recorded live at a concert in Madrid, Spain. 2008–2009: Shake Away/Ojo de Culebra
Two years after the release of La Cantina, in September 2008 <mask> launched Ojo de Culebra in Europe, North America, Australia and Latin America. The album reached sixth place in sales in Mexico, Colombia, Argentina, Spain and several Latin American countries. The first single is titled "Ojo de Culebra" was contributed to by the Spanish singer La Mari by group of flamenco Chambao. The song is a merger of rock, cumbia and flamenco with some influences of reggae.This song was at the top of the charts of world music in several countries The second single was "Perro Negro", a merger of rock with ska, (which did not have as much of an international impact as its predecessor), featured Rubén Albarrán singer of the Mexican rock band Café Tacuba. "Little man" (released in the U.S. alone) and "Justice" were next two singles, the latter with the participation of the Spanish singer Enrique Bunbury. Raul Midon, Gilberto Gutierrez and Mercedes Sosa also contributed to this album. The single "Black magic woman" achieved moderate success in Europe, United States and Canada, and the single "Silent Thunder" was later well received by the British market. In October 2009 <mask> was honored by a plaque at the outskirts of her hometown and birthplace, Tlaxiaco, Mexico, and also was awarded the keys the city for her work preserving the language of Mixtec. 2010–present: <mask> y la Misteriosa, Pecados y Milagros
Lila <mask> y la Misteriosa en Paris Live à FIP is the second live album by <mask>, released on April 13, 2010, in Spain and France, the album was recorded in 2009 in Radio France studio 105 in Paris, France. It was released in May 2010 in the United States and in July in most other countries.It received positive feedback from critics. <mask> y la Misteriosa en Paris was released in Mexico with an edited version of the live concert on DVD and was number one in sales of Gender World Music for the music chain Mixup for three consecutive weeks. Although receiving little promotion the album has received moderate success on the Mexican charts. In a survey of the best albums of 2010 conducted by the Mexican television network Channel 22, this album was ranked number one. Pecados y Milagros (Sins and Miracles) was the seventh studio album by Mexican singer-songwriter <mask>, released on October 18, 2011. The album cover was released on September 14, 2011. The album debuted at number fifty two on the Billboard 200 becoming her fourth-highest peak on the chart.It also debuted at number one on the Billboard Top Latin Albums Chart and stayed there for over 3 consecutive weeks. This album has sold over 60.000 copies in the US and over 290.000 copies worldwide. The album was recorded in the Mexico City, and New York. <mask> describes the album musically as having "a strong rock side" along with "traditional" and "Latino" songs. Celso Duarte is one of several collaborators to appear on the album, featuring on the first single "Palomo del comalito". Other collaborations include songs with rappers Illya Kuryaki and the Valderramas, Celso Piña and Totó la Momposina. <mask> ahas been touring through February 2017 in Mexico, the US and around the world, the Sins and Miracles Tour, which started in Mexico.Audience members at a concert of February 18, 2012, at New York City El Museo del Barrio were informed that the concert was being recorded by HBO. In 2015, <mask> joined the judging panel for The 14th Annual Independent Music Awards and by doing so, helped to assist the careers of upcoming independent artists. On May 26, 2017, <mask> released , under Sony Music Mexico/Latin. The first single of the album was "Peligrosa", followed over the summer by "Urge". Her next international tour started at the end of March 2017 on the West Coast of the US, followed by a series of performances in Mexico, Europe and Latin America. The album was awarded the Latin Grammy for Best Traditional Pop Vocal at the Latin Grammys in Las Vegas in November 2017. In August 2021, she collaborated with Guatemalan singer-songwriter Sara Curruchich on the song "Pueblos", which was released on the International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples.Musical tours
2005–2006: One Blood Tour
Due to the success of the albums One Blood and Border (2001 and 2004), the One Blood Tour took place and <mask> performed 30 international shows on three continents. Countries such as the Philippines, Japan, China, Egypt and Afghanistan were included on the tour, where <mask> was well received by the public. In May 2007, <mask> published a DVD collection as a document of that tour in a concert in Oaxaca and Mexico City; this DVD contained thirteen live tracks and a documentary as well as special features like interviews, short films by <mask> (<mask>'s father) and videos. 2008–2009: Shake Away Tour
In September 2008 the Ojo de Culebra World Tour started, which took place on four continents, and was the most successful tour for a Mexican artist. In Latin America, Mexico was the country with the highest number of concerts (21 in total), the tour officially ended on October 30, 2009, giving a free concert in the Zocalo of Mexico City, followed by Colombia and Costa Rica, with three concerts each. Although not part of the tour, <mask> appeared in the Live Earth in Germany, where she played three songs, and in late 2008 sang at the Harmony Festival held in California, United States. 2010: Black Magic Woman Tour
In March 2010, <mask> announced a world tour Black Magic Woman Tour which began in Buenos Aires, Argentina with three sold-out shows.This tour included several countries in America Asia and Europe in many of which attendance records were broken. The tour officially ended on November 17, 2010, in Square Dance by Oaxaca City where she had an audience of approximately seven thousand people. 2011–2014: Pecados y Milagros World Tour
Pecados y Milagros World Tour was <mask>' fourth musical tour in support of her seventh studio album, " Pecados y Milagros ", also her first album to win Grammy Awards, Latin Grammy Award for best folk album, and best Regional/Mexican Tejano album It was announced on October 3, 2011, through the official website of the singer. <mask> explains her meaning behind Pecados y Milagros, also known as "Sins and Miracles" talking about the drug-related violence involved in Mexico's cities. https://www.pri.org/stories/2011-11-07/what-mexican-singer-lila-downs-pecados-y-milagros-says-about-drug-violence
2015–2017: Balas y Chocolate World Tour
Balas y Chocolate World Tour is <mask>'s fifth concert tour, and promoted her eighth studio album Balas y Chocolate (Bullets and chocolate (in Spanish).) It began on March 26 in Mexico City at the Plaza Condesa, presenting the repertoire of new music album of the same name tour. Canada in 2015, Spain has toured with great success (Cartagena, Barcelona, Valencia, Madrid etc.), Paraguay, Chile, Argentina (Mendoza, Buenos Aires, Cordoba ), Bolivia, Ecuador, United States ( more than 20 cities, including New York City, Miami, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Step etc.) In 2016 she will be in London, Spain, Argentina and Peru. In August 2016, <mask> performed at the 21st Annual Santa Barbara Mariachi Festival alongside Aida Cuevas, Mariachi Sol de Mexico, Mariachi Nuevo Tecalitlan, and Mariachi Reyna de Los Angeles in Santa Barbara, CA. 2019–present: Al Chile Tour
Al Chile World Tour is <mask>' sixth world tour. It was to see concerts in Mexico, the United States, Spain, Colombia and Chile for 2019 and 2020. However, due to the coronavirus pandemic, <mask> was forced to cancel or postpone most of the concerts until 2021. Acting
<mask> has had small parts in such films as Frida, Fados and Hasta el último trago corazón; the latter is a documentary on Mexican music involving various exponents of the genre.<mask> worked on the composition and arrangements for the musical Como agua para chocolate, based on the book by Laura Esquivel, which premiered at the Public Theater of New York and Broadway in late 2011 and early 2012. She participated in the filming of the U.S. film Mariachi Gringo directed by Tom Gustafson, where she worked alongside Mexican actresses Adriana Barraza, Martha Higareda and Canadian actor Shawn Ashmore. The film was released in 2012. Soundtracks
In 2001, <mask> was invited to participate in the soundtrack of the Mexican film Piedras Verdes where she performed "Cancion mixteca", in 2002 she participated in the soundtrack for the film Frida singing the song "Burn It Blue" which was nominated in the 75th Academy Awards in the category of Best Original Song. In 2005 she participated in the soundtrack for the film The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada with the song "Dónde estás papá". <mask> has also participated in other soundtracks for films such as Real Women Have Curves and Tortilla Soup. In the film by Carlos Saura, Fados (2007), she sings an unforgettable version of "Foi na Travessa da Palha" in Portuguese.Personal life
Since the beginning of her career she has been involved with Paul Cohen who is her partner and artistic director. There has been much speculation in the media about the couple's personal life and that the couple could not have children. In June 2010, <mask> announced on her web site that, after several years of trying to be parents, she and Paul Cohen had adopted a child, Benito Dxuladi. They currently reside in Coyoacán in Mexico City and Oaxaca although most of the time they spend traveling. Social activism
<mask> has been a social activist throughout her entire career and works to maintain her cultural identity and her roots in the eye of social distress. For example, she sings with passion, and admiration for her home in Oaxaca, Mexico. Her music draws out many socially significant issues particularly with issues pertaining to the Indigenous, such as the mistreatment and misunderstanding of indigenous peoples of Oaxaca, by celebrating her Mixtec heritage through song.Her albums are socially significant, especially her album, One Blood, or Una Sangre, which includes songs such as "Dignificada", which is a song about Digna Ochoa's assassination. Digna Ochoa was a lawyer and social activist, and <mask> featured her story on her album One Blood. When asked if she is a politician, <mask> said that she does not want to be a politician because she is not interested in power, instead she wants to support and change society through music. On October 9, 2009, <mask>, along with actress Salma Hayek represented Mexico participated in an event for the worldwide campaign of the One Drop foundation, to preserve water. They performed together with the founder of Cirque du Soleil, Shakira, U2, former Vice President Al Gore and other "world-class" personalities. Contributions
In 2003 she was invited to the Twelve Girls Band concert in Shanghai, China, where she sang in French, Italian and English: Habanera from the opera Carmen, "Signore, ascolta!" from the opera Turandot, Summertime from Porgy and Bess and Ode to joy With Tim Sheff.She also participated on the album "Spain in my heart: Songs of the Spanish Civil War" with the song "El quinto regimiento". In 2004 she collaborated with the Afghan singer Kulsoom Syed Ghulam on the album Lullabies from the Axis of Evil on the song "Lalolalo (Don't you Worry My Child)". In 2005 she collaborated with the Galician band Luar Na Lubre on the album Saudade on the song "Domingo Ferreiro" performed in galician. In 2006 she collaborated on the Brian Lynch and Eddie Palmieri album Simpático on the song "Que sería la vida" with Brian Lynch. In 2007 she collaborated with the Argentinean band Los Calzones Rotos on the album Tanguito on the song "Loco". She also collaborated on the album "Homenaje a Pedro Infante: 50 aniversario" with the song "Amorcito corazón". And she collaborated with the Paraguayan musician Celso Duarte on the album "De sur a sur/From south to south" on the song "Petenera".In 2008, on the Los Cojolites album No Tiene Fin, she sang on the song "La Herlinda" and "El Pescador" of the album Sin Fecha de Caducidad by the Mexican singer Celso Piña. She also participated on the album "Songs of the siren: Irresistible voices" with the song "La cumbia del mole". She participated on the album "¡Nueva York!" from the American musician Dan Zanes with the song "La bruja". In 2009 she participated on the album of Basque singer Kepa Junkera, where she performs "Haurtxo Polita" in Euskara. She also sang "Razon de Vivir" on Mercedes Sosa's album Cantora, Vol. 2.That same year she also worked on the song "El Llorar" on Mexican musician Ernesto Anaya's album, Huapangueando. She equally participated on the album What About Me? from the UK duo 1 Giant Leap with the songs "Come to the edges" with Huun Huur Tu and "Solita sin soledad" with Carlos Santana. She participated on the album "Sweetheart: our favorite artists sing their favorite love songs" in the song "My One and Only Love". Also collaborated with the Brazilian musician Guilherme Monteiro on the album "Air" on the song "Retrato de un forró". And participated on the posthumous album "Duetos" from the Spanish singer Rocío Durcal on the song "Amor eterno". In 2010, <mask> sang a duet with the Mexican singer-songwriter Benny Ibarra ("Calaveras"), on his album The March of the Living.The song was the second single for the album. She also sang "Historia de un amor" on Roberto Alagna's album "Pasión". She sang a duet "Vámonos" with the Mexican singer Chavela Vargas on her album "¡Por mi culpa! Chavela Vargas y sus amigos". She also collaborated with the Irish band The Chieftains on the album "San Patricio" on the song "La iguana" with The Chieftains and Ry Cooder. In 2012 she collaborated on Kevin Johansen's album Bi with the song "Baja a la tierra", and on the album "Mujer Divina" from the Mexican singer Natalia Lafourcade on the song "La fugitiva"
In 2013 she collaborated on the album "Ciudadana del mundo vol. 1" on the songs "De que te cuidas" and "Latinoamerica" with Eugenia León, Moyenei, Betsy Pecanins, Tania Libertad and Cecilia Toussaint.She collaborated with the Mexican singer Leonel García on the album "Todas mías" on the song "Sirena". She also collaborated with the Mexican group Los Ángeles azules on the album "Como te voy a olvidar" on the song "El listón de tu pelo". She collaborated with the Spanish band Chambao on the album "10 años around the world" on the song "Papeles mojados". She participated on the album "Grandes éxitos de las sonoras, con la más grande, La Sonora Santanera" from the Mexican band La Sonora Santanera on the song "Tu voz". Awards and recognition
Throughout her career <mask> has received several awards, including a Grammy, 5 Latin Grammys and Lunas del Auditorio. She has recently unveiled her star on the Walk of Fame located in the outskirts of Auditorio Nacional in Mexico City for her career. Her last album 'Balas Y Chocolate' was listed on i-Tunes as one of the years best in World Music 2015, was one of the UK Sunday Times best albums of the year and was a Best Album of the Year pick in Songlines Magazine, where she was featured on the cover of the June 2016 issue.Some of her most successful songs include: "Tengo miedo de quererte", "Estrella oscura", "La línea", "La llorona", "La cumbia del mole" y "Ojo de culebra". In November, 2017 <mask>'s latest album; "Salón Lágrimas y Deseo" won Best Album Pop Traditional at the Latin Grammys in Las Vegas. vol. 45 no. 4 Winter 2002
"Wise Latina", an interview with Guernica Magazine's Joel Whitney
<mask> biography and discography at World Music Central
Paste Magazine Article
"<mask> on BBC Newsnight" Interview by Secunder Kermani 2016
"Lila Downs: NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert" Lila Downs Tiny Desk Concert 2016
1968 births
Living people
Grammy Award winners
Singers from Oaxaca
University of Minnesota alumni
English-language singers from Mexico
French-language singers
Mixtecan-language singers
Nahuatl-language singers
Purépecha-language singers
Zapotec-language singers
Latin Grammy Award winners
Mayan-language singers
Mexican women singer-songwriters
Mexican singer-songwriters
Mexican people of American descent
Mexican people of English descent
Mexican people of Scottish descent
Mixtec people
Narada Productions artists
People from Tlaxiaco
Indigenous Mexicans
Sony Music Latin artists
Indigenous musicians of the Americas
Sony Music Mexico artists
Indigenous Mexican women
20th-century Native Americans
21st-century Native Americans
Women in Latin music | [
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] | <mask> is a Mexican singer and actress. She performs her own compositions and the works of others in multiple genres, as well as tapping into Mexican traditional and popular music. She has recorded songs in many indigenous languages and incorporates Mexican influences. She studied at the Institute of Arts by Oaxaca and briefly attended the University of Minnesota before focusing on her musical career. She began performing in Oaxaca City. Ofrenda was her first album. <mask>' debut studio album, La Sandunga, was a critical and commercial success.She achieved international success in 2001 with the album Border, which was a hit in Mexico and Latin America. <mask>'s seventh album, Pecados y milagros, was a chart-topping world music album. "Balas y Chocolate" was her eighth album. "Saln Lgrimas y Deseo" was her ninth album. <mask> demonstrated her vocal ability with traditional music, Latin and American influences, and with her own original twist on dancing. <mask> is a native Spanish speaker. <mask> has gone through a lot of effort to preserve her Indigenous Mexican languages.Influenced by a number of Mexicans, including Mercedes Sosa, Lucha Villa, and Amparo Ochoa, <mask> is known for her flamboyant, diverse and outré contributions to the music industry through her traditional and authentic fashion, the majority of which are based around Mexico's indigenous Her accomplishments include three LatinGrammy Awards. She deals with issues of Latin America's indigenous population as well as humanitarian causes and political activism. <mask> was born in Tlaxiaco, Oaxaca, Mexico. She is the daughter of <mask>, a Scottish-American professor of art and cinematography from Minnesota. <mask> was interested in music from an early age. She began singing rancheras at the age of eight.She started singing with mariachis. She moved to the United States at the age of fourteen. Her father helped her perfect her English after she studied voice in Los Angeles. She returned to her hometown of Tlaxiaco with her mother after her father died. A man came in to ask her to translate his son's death certificate, while she was working in a store in the mountains. He drowned trying to cross the border into the US. She has continued to influence her work because of this.She talked about this in her 2001 release. <mask> felt shame about her Native American roots when she was younger. I was embarrassed to have Indian blood. I was embarrassed that my mother spoke in public. She dropped out of college and dyed her hair blonde in order to find herself. <mask> met her future husband and musical partner, Paul Cohen, while working at her mother's auto parts store in Oaxaca, Mexico. <mask> studied anthropology at the University of Minnesota and voice in New York.She attended the Institute of Science and Arts of Oaxaca in Mexico to finish her studies. <mask> decided to return to Tlaxiaco after completing his studies. She joined a percussion group called Yodoyuxi's Cadets and was encouraged by Paul Cohen. She lived in both Minnesota and Oaxaca because of Paul Cohen. <mask> formed a group called La Trova Serrana, which was popular among the Latin community in the United States, singing songs about the Zapotec values and culture. After returning to Mexico, she started singing in bars, restaurants and clubs in Oaxaca, as well as the city of Philadelphia and the state of California in the United States, with the support of US saxophonist Paul Cohen. She decided to go on an extensive tour of Mexico after receiving many positive reviews.<mask> made her first album, Ofrenda, in 1994. This was a collection of traditional songs from Oaxaca and Mexico, as well as songs written by the singer and sung in native languages of Oaxaca. The Oaxacan Cultures Institute supported the production of the material. She didn't release a CD version of the album because it wasn't a commercial success. <mask> recorded a live session in Oaxaca in 1996. <mask> was accompanied by a group of musicians who supported its interpretation of traditional themes, as well as country music and jazz. <mask> and her music became known in different parts of the Republic of Mexico, and this was their first album to be released on CD.Despite limited promotion and the fact that only a small number of copies were made, the album had a big impact. Although not included in the official discography of <mask>, this CD can be found in digital format. The second recording, called "Traces", was made in 1997 and was to be included in later albums such as La Sandunga, Tree of Life and Border. The previous disc had no commercial distribution, so this one is currently out of print. <mask> made herself known internationally with the album La Sandunga when she signed with the label Narada productions. Her album was one of the first to combine the sounds of traditional music and modern rhythms as jazz, blues and bolero. The Xquenda Cultural Association supported the production of the album, which was sung in Spanish and Mixtec.<mask> achieved great popularity in countries such as Mexico, United States, Spain, France, England and Germany because of his participation in the sound track of the Mexican film Green Stones. Tree of Life was released in 2000. <mask>' fame spread to other markets in England, Switzerland, Canada and the United States with this album. <mask> turned to her indigenous past and the album features pre-Hispanic sounds and instruments. Many of the songs on the album are sung in native Mexican languages. In October 2000 she began a two-month tour called the Tree of Life/rbol de la vida, which included concerts in Latin America, Europe and the US. The tour started in Mexico and ended in Spain.<mask>' first album, Border/La Linea Border, was released in 2001 and features songs sung in English. The album was released in both the US and Mexico. <mask> combined sounds from different genres such as traditional folk music, hip hop, rock and chilena. There were fifteen songs, eleven in Spanish, three in English and one in Mayan. The album was seventh in the "Top charts" of world music. It stirred up controversy due to its discussion of immigration, Native American marginalization and the Acteal massacre. Politicians and the church criticized this."Mi corazn me recuerda" was the first single to be released in Mexico. It achieved moderate success on the Mexican music charts. The song "La Llorona" was released in Spain, France, and the United States as a single. Two Woody Guthrie songs, "Pastures of Plenty" and "This Land is Your Land", as well as original lyrics by <mask>, are included in the latter. In April 2004, One Blood One Blood was released simultaneously in the United States, Spain, and Mexico. This album has lyrics about migration, discrimination and the case of a Mexican human rights defender. In addition to traditional songs such as "La Bamba", "Viborita", and "La Cucaracha", the album includes genres such as son jarocho, jazz, rock and folk.There are three tracks in English, one in Triqui, and one in Purepecha. The lyrics were written by Paul Cohen and others. <mask>' album reached the top of the charts in several countries, including the United States, Mexico, Spain, United Kingdom, Germany and France. The project was released in April 2006 and took approximately one and a half years to prepare. Pop, rock, norteo, cumbia and hip-hop are some of the sounds on this CD. A version of "La cumbia del mole", the most well-known work by the artist, is included in the fifteen tracks on this CD. "La cumbia del mole" means "Mexican dish" in Oaxaca.This single made it to the top of the charts in Mexico, the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom. <mask> released a Spanish-language CD in 2007, containing songs from her previous albums La Sandunga, Tree of Life, Border/The Line, One Blood and La Cantina. There was a DVD with thirteen tracks recorded live at a concert in Madrid, Spain. Two years after the release of La Cantina, <mask> launched Ojo de Culebra in Europe, North America, Australia and Latin America. In Mexico, Argentina, Spain, and several Latin American countries, the album reached sixth place in sales. The Spanish singer La Mari contributed to the first single, "Ojo de Culebra". The song has influences of rock, cumbia and flamenco.The second single was "Perro Negro", a merger of rock with ska, which did not have as much of an international impact as its predecessor. "Little man" and "Justice" were the next two singles, with the participation of a Spanish singer. This album was contributed to by several people. The single "Black magic woman" achieved moderate success in Europe, United States and Canada, and the single "Silent thunder" was well received by the British market. <mask> was honored by a plaque at the outskirts of her hometown of Tlaxiaco, Mexico, as well as being awarded the keys to the city for her work preserving the language. The second live album by <mask> was released on April 13, 2010 in Spain and France. It was released in the US in May 2010 and in most other countries in July.Critics gave it positive feedback. In Mexico, the edited version of the live concert on DVD was number one in sales of Gender World Music for three weeks in a row. The album received little promotion but did well on the Mexican charts. In a survey of the best albums of 2010 conducted by the Mexican television network Channel 22, this album was ranked number one. The seventh studio album by <mask> was released on October 18, 2011. The album cover was released in 2011. Her fourth-highest peak on the chart was her album's debut at number fifty two.It stayed at the top of the chart for over 3 weeks. Over 60.000 copies of this album have been sold in the US. The album was made in Mexico City and New York. The album has a strong rock side along with traditional and Latino songs. The first single of the album is "Palomo del comalito". Other collaborations include songs with Illya Kuryaki and the Valderramas. In Mexico, the US and around the world, <mask> has been on a tour called the Sins and Miracles Tour.There was a concert at New York City El Museo del Barrio that was going to be recorded. In 2015, <mask> joined the judging panel for The 14th Annual Independent Music Awards and helped to assist the careers of upcoming independent artists. <mask> was released by Sony Music Mexico/Latin. "Peligrosa" and "Urge" were the first two single's of the album. After a series of performances in Mexico, Europe and Latin America, her next international tour began at the end of March on the West Coast of the US. The Latin Grammys in Las Vegas awarded the album the best traditional pop vocal. The song "Pueblos" was released on the International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples.<mask> performed 30 international shows on three continents during the One Blood Tour due to the success of the albums One Blood and Border. <mask> was well received by the public in countries such as the Philippines, Japan, China, Egypt and Afghanistan. In May 2007, <mask> published a DVD collection as a document of that tour in a concert in Oaxaca and Mexico City; this DVD contained thirteen live tracks and a documentary as well as special features like interviews, short films by <mask> (<mask>'s father) and videos. The most successful tour for a Mexican artist was the Shake Away Tour, which took place on four continents. In Latin America, Mexico was the country with the highest number of concerts, the tour officially ended on October 30, 2009, giving a free concert in the Zocalo of Mexico City. In Germany, where she played three songs, and in the United States, where she sang at a festival, <mask> was not part of the tour. The Black Magic Woman Tour began in Argentina with three sold-out shows.Many attendance records were broken during this tour of America Asia and Europe. The tour ended in Square Dance by Oaxaca City where she had an audience of seven thousand people. The fourth musical tour in support of her seventh studio album was called the Pecados y Milagros World Tour. "Sins and Miracles" is a talk about the drug-related violence in Mexico's cities. The story about Mexican singer-lila-downes-pecados-y-milagros-says-about-drug-violence was published in 2011. The new music album of the same name tour began in Mexico City on March 26 at the Plaza Condesa. Spain has toured with great success in 2015.More than 20 cities, including New York City, Miami, Hollywood, Los Angeles, and Step are in the United States. She will be in London, Spain, Argentina and Peru. The 21st Annual Santa Barbara Mariachi Festival was held in Santa Barbara, CA. <mask>' sixth world tour is the Al Chile Tour. Concerts were to be held in Mexico, the United States, Spain, Colombia and Chile. <mask> was forced to cancel or delay most of the concerts due to the coronaviruses. Hasta el ltimo trago corazn is a documentary on Mexican music and is one of the films acting <mask> has had small parts in.The Public Theater of New York and Broadway hosted a musical based on the book by Laura Esquivel in late 2011. She was involved in the filming of the U.S. film Mariachi Gringo, where she worked with Mexican actresses and Canadian actor Shawn Ashmore. In 2012 the film was released. <mask> performed "Cancion mixteca" in 2001 for the soundtrack of the Mexican film Piedras Verdes, which was nominated for an Academy Award. She was a part of the soundtrack for The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada. <mask> was a part of the soundtracks for Real Women Have Curves and Tortilla Soup. In the film by Carlos Saura, Fados, she sings a song in Portuguese.Paul Cohen is her partner and artistic director. There has been a lot of speculation in the media that the couple could not have children. <mask> announced on her website in June 2010 that she and Paul Cohen had adopted a child. Most of the time they travel, they reside in Coyoacn in Mexico City and Oaxaca. <mask> has been a social activist her entire career and works to maintain her cultural identity and her roots in the eye of social distress. She adores her home in Oaxaca, Mexico. The mistreatment and misunderstanding of indigenous peoples of Oaxaca is one of the socially significant issues that she draws out in her music."Dignificada" is a song on her album, One Blood, which is about the assassination of a woman. <mask> featured the story of Digna Ochoa on her album One Blood. <mask> said that she doesn't want to be a politician because she wants to support and change society through music. <mask> and Hayek represented Mexico at an event for the worldwide campaign of the One Drop foundation, to preserve water. They performed with some of the "world-class" people, including the founder of Cirque du Soleil and the former Vice President Al Gore. She was invited to the Twelve Girls Band concert in China in 2003 where she sang in French, Italian and English: Habanera from the opera Carmen, "Signore, ascolta!" From the opera Turandot to joy with Tim Sheff.She was a part of the album "Spain in my heart: Songs of the Spanish Civil War". She collaborated with the Afghan singer Kulsoom Syed Ghulam on a song in 2004. She collaborated with the band Luar Na Lubre on a song called "Domingo Ferreiro". She collaborated on a song with Brian Lynch on the album Simptico. On the album Tanguito, she collaborated with the Argentinean band Los Calzones Rotos. The song "Amorcito corazn" is on the album "Homenaje a Pedro Infante: 50 aniversario". The song "Petenera" is on the album "De sur a sur/From south to south".She sang on the song "La Herlinda" and the song "El Pescador" of the album Sin Fecha de Caducidad. The song "La cumbia del mole" was a part of the album "Songs of the siren: Irresistible voices". She was a part of the album "Nueva York!" The song "La bruja" was written by the American musician Dan Zanes. She performed "Haurtxo Polita" in Euskara on the album of Kepa Junkera. She sang on Mercedes Sosa's album. 2.She worked on a song called "El Llorar" on a Mexican musician's album. She was a part of the album What About Me? The songs "Come to the edges" with Huun Huur Tu and "Solita sin soledad" with Carlos Santana are from the UK duo 1 Giant Leap. She sings in the song "My One and Only Love" on the album "Sweetheart: our favorite artists sing their favorite love songs". The song "Retrato de un forr" was written by Guilherme Monteiro and 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 The song "Amor eterno" was on the posthumous album "Duetos" from the Spanish singer Roco Durcal. Downs sang a duet with Ibarra on his 2010 album The March of the Living.The album had a second single. On Roberto Alagna's album "Pasin", she sang " Historia de un amor". She sang a duet with the Mexican singer on her album. Amigos de Chavela Vargas. She collaborated with the Irish band The Chieftains on a song called "La iguana". She collaborated with Natalia Lafourcade on the song "La fugitiva" on the album "Mujer Divina". There are two songs with Cecilia Toussaint and Betsy Pecanins.On the album "Todas mas", she collaborated with the Mexican singer Leonel Garca. On the album "Como te voy a olvidar", she collaborated with the Mexican group Los ngeles azules. The song "Papeles mojados" is on the album "10 aos around the world". She was a member of the Mexican band La Sonora Santanera on the song "Tu voz". <mask> has received several awards throughout her career. She has a star on the Walk of Fame in Mexico City for her career. Her last album 'Balas Y Chocolate' was listed on i-Tunes as one of the years best in World Music 2015, was one of the UK Sunday Times best albums of the year and was a Best Album of the Year pick in Songlines Magazine."La lnea", "La llorona", and "Ojo deebra cul" are some of her most successful songs. "Saln Lgrimas y Deseo" won Best Pop Traditional at the Latin Grammys. vol. 45 no. "Lila Downs: NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert" is an interview with Secunder Kermani. | [
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21375491 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butch%20Hartman%20%28racing%20driver%29 | Butch Hartman (racing driver) | Larry "Butch" Hartman (May 11, 1940 – December 21, 1994) was an American stock car racing national champion in the United States Automobile Club (USAC) from Zanesville, Ohio. After winning the USAC Stock Car Rookie of the Year award in 1966, the series' Most Improved Driver in 1967, and its Most Outstanding Driver the following year. He won five USAC Stock car national titles in the 1970s. Hartman had the fourth highest number of USAC Stock car wins in the series' history. Hartman raced in twenty NASCAR stock car races; his highest finish was a fifth-place run at National 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway (now Lowe's Motor Speedway). Hartman worked full-time at his father's company, building his own engines and towing his cars to the track each weekend. In 1968, he became the first rookie to lead the Daytona 500.
He was an independent driver in an era of factory teams. He raced a No. 75 Dodge car with yellow and black colors, sponsored by his father's company "Hartman White and Autocar Truck Sales and Service".
Early life
Hartman was a second generation racer. His father, Dick, started racing sprint cars in 1949. By 1951, the elder Hartman was racing two cars and won 126 races in a two-year period.
Hartman began working on cars at age 7 when he helped his father warm up cars for his father's automobile repair company. For his ninth birthday, his father gave an old 1939 Ford sedan to him and his brother Terry for them to drive around in a field in an adjacent property, with the condition that the brothers needed to repair the car. They nicknamed the car "Death and Destruction". After attending Otterbein College for one year, he was sent to the United States Marines for four years.
Racing career
USAC stock cars
In 1964, Hartman started competing in up to five stock cars races in a weekend, driving with his father and uncle. "When we had the time," Butch said, "we'd sleep for a couple of hours in ditches alongside the road. When we didn't, one of us would stand on the running board of our old Buick and fuel our pickup truck with a five-gallon can of gas while we were tearing down the road. I think we invented in-flight refueling."
In 1966, Hartman entered a 1965 Dodge Coronet in his first USAC race. He was awarded the series' Rookie of the Year award for 1966. He had his first NASCAR start that season, a 14th-place finish at the Grand National Series' National 500 at Charlotte and a win in the ARCA series at Salem. He followed up in 1967 as the series' Most Improved Driver, then was the Most Outstanding Driver in 1968. He competed in five Grand National events that year, with 10th-place finishes at Atlanta Motor Speedway and Rockingham.
Hartman had his first USAC Stock car win in 1969 at Wisconsin International Raceway and his first 500-mile win in 1971 at Pocono Raceway driving a winged Dodge Charger Daytona in the first Pocono 500. The race featured Wally Dallenbach Sr., A. J. Foyt, Roger McCluskey, Al Unser, Bobby Unser, NASCAR drivers Jim Paschal and LeeRoy Yarbrough, AMA racer Gene Romero, modified racers Geoff Bodine and Toby Tobias, road racer Brian Redman, and USAC stock car regulars Jack Bowsher, Don White, and Norm Nelson. After completing 41 laps, the race was postponed for a week after it was rained out. The following Saturday, Hartman beat Lem Blankenship in a late race duel. Hartman won his first USAC championship that year. He had a win at the Knoxville Raceway that season.
Hartman won his second USAC Stock car title in 1972. He had a consistent season with nine top-five finishes in eighteen races. He had one start in NASCAR's Grand National division; the fifth-place finish was his highest finish in his NASCAR career. The event was FIA sanctioned and USAC drivers were encouraged to race in the event. He got a Junie Donlavey ride after USAC regular Ramo Stott has a second-place finish at Talladega Superspeedway earlier that season. The 1973 USAC season had 16 races. He won seven races and had 12 top-five finishes to record his third straight championship.
Hartman was trailing Norm Nelson by 40 points going into the final race of the 1974 USAC season. He won the race at Des Moines; Nelson finished 7th and Hartman won the title by 30 points. In the 19 race season, Hartman had won eight races to record his fourth straight championship. Hartman battled Ramo Stott for the 1975 championship, but a blown motor at the Governor's Cup 250 at the Milwaukee Mile ended his title hopes causing him to finish second in the season points. Hartman surprised people by switching to a Chevrolet Camaro for the 1976 USAC stock car season which he won his fifth championship in the new car.
Hartman was critical of USAC's promotion of its stock car series compared to how the sanctioning body promoted its championship cars and how NASCAR billed its stock cars. "…nobody ever heard of our stock car racing circuit. We get second billing everywhere to the championship cars. Here I am a two-time champion (in 1972) and nobody knows who I am."
In 1977, he decided to race in NASCAR's top division, then called the Winston Cup. As a five-time USAC stock car champion, he had been receiving less money and received a lower billing at USAC stock car races than USAC champ car and NASCAR stock car drivers. He competed in 11 events and finished 31st in season points, with two Top 10 finishes in a Chevrolet Chevelle. He competed in one NASCAR event in 1978 and another in 1979 before returning to USAC. He had to use #00, as another driver had taken #75. USAC's stock car series had become stagnant, and it was gone by 1985. Hartman had retired in the early 1980s.
Awards
He was inducted in the National Dirt Late Model Hall of Fame in 2004 for his USAC Stock Car championships and scoring "hundreds of feature wins and track titles in long career."
Personal life
He was the son of Dick Hartman, owner of Hartman, White, Autocar in Zanesville, OH. He was the nephew of Hartman, mentioned in the base article. Hartman's youngest son Bart Hartman became a racer; as of 2007 he raced dirt late models in Ohio.
References
External links
1940 births
1994 deaths
NASCAR drivers
Otterbein University alumni
Sportspeople from Zanesville, Ohio
Racing drivers from Ohio | [
"Larry \"Butch\" Hartman (May 11, 1940 – December 21, 1994) was an American stock car racing national champion in the United States Automobile Club (USAC) from Zanesville, Ohio.",
"After winning the USAC Stock Car Rookie of the Year award in 1966, the series' Most Improved Driver in 1967, and its Most Outstanding Driver the following year.",
"He won five USAC Stock car national titles in the 1970s.",
"Hartman had the fourth highest number of USAC Stock car wins in the series' history.",
"Hartman raced in twenty NASCAR stock car races; his highest finish was a fifth-place run at National 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway (now Lowe's Motor Speedway).",
"Hartman worked full-time at his father's company, building his own engines and towing his cars to the track each weekend.",
"In 1968, he became the first rookie to lead the Daytona 500.",
"He was an independent driver in an era of factory teams.",
"He raced a No.",
"75 Dodge car with yellow and black colors, sponsored by his father's company \"Hartman White and Autocar Truck Sales and Service\".",
"Early life\nHartman was a second generation racer.",
"His father, Dick, started racing sprint cars in 1949.",
"By 1951, the elder Hartman was racing two cars and won 126 races in a two-year period.",
"Hartman began working on cars at age 7 when he helped his father warm up cars for his father's automobile repair company.",
"For his ninth birthday, his father gave an old 1939 Ford sedan to him and his brother Terry for them to drive around in a field in an adjacent property, with the condition that the brothers needed to repair the car.",
"They nicknamed the car \"Death and Destruction\".",
"After attending Otterbein College for one year, he was sent to the United States Marines for four years.",
"Racing career\n\nUSAC stock cars\nIn 1964, Hartman started competing in up to five stock cars races in a weekend, driving with his father and uncle.",
"\"When we had the time,\" Butch said, \"we'd sleep for a couple of hours in ditches alongside the road.",
"When we didn't, one of us would stand on the running board of our old Buick and fuel our pickup truck with a five-gallon can of gas while we were tearing down the road.",
"I think we invented in-flight refueling.\"",
"In 1966, Hartman entered a 1965 Dodge Coronet in his first USAC race.",
"He was awarded the series' Rookie of the Year award for 1966.",
"He had his first NASCAR start that season, a 14th-place finish at the Grand National Series' National 500 at Charlotte and a win in the ARCA series at Salem.",
"He followed up in 1967 as the series' Most Improved Driver, then was the Most Outstanding Driver in 1968.",
"He competed in five Grand National events that year, with 10th-place finishes at Atlanta Motor Speedway and Rockingham.",
"Hartman had his first USAC Stock car win in 1969 at Wisconsin International Raceway and his first 500-mile win in 1971 at Pocono Raceway driving a winged Dodge Charger Daytona in the first Pocono 500.",
"The race featured Wally Dallenbach Sr., A. J. Foyt, Roger McCluskey, Al Unser, Bobby Unser, NASCAR drivers Jim Paschal and LeeRoy Yarbrough, AMA racer Gene Romero, modified racers Geoff Bodine and Toby Tobias, road racer Brian Redman, and USAC stock car regulars Jack Bowsher, Don White, and Norm Nelson.",
"After completing 41 laps, the race was postponed for a week after it was rained out.",
"The following Saturday, Hartman beat Lem Blankenship in a late race duel.",
"Hartman won his first USAC championship that year.",
"He had a win at the Knoxville Raceway that season.",
"Hartman won his second USAC Stock car title in 1972.",
"He had a consistent season with nine top-five finishes in eighteen races.",
"He had one start in NASCAR's Grand National division; the fifth-place finish was his highest finish in his NASCAR career.",
"The event was FIA sanctioned and USAC drivers were encouraged to race in the event.",
"He got a Junie Donlavey ride after USAC regular Ramo Stott has a second-place finish at Talladega Superspeedway earlier that season.",
"The 1973 USAC season had 16 races.",
"He won seven races and had 12 top-five finishes to record his third straight championship.",
"Hartman was trailing Norm Nelson by 40 points going into the final race of the 1974 USAC season.",
"He won the race at Des Moines; Nelson finished 7th and Hartman won the title by 30 points.",
"In the 19 race season, Hartman had won eight races to record his fourth straight championship.",
"Hartman battled Ramo Stott for the 1975 championship, but a blown motor at the Governor's Cup 250 at the Milwaukee Mile ended his title hopes causing him to finish second in the season points.",
"Hartman surprised people by switching to a Chevrolet Camaro for the 1976 USAC stock car season which he won his fifth championship in the new car.",
"Hartman was critical of USAC's promotion of its stock car series compared to how the sanctioning body promoted its championship cars and how NASCAR billed its stock cars.",
"\"…nobody ever heard of our stock car racing circuit.",
"We get second billing everywhere to the championship cars.",
"Here I am a two-time champion (in 1972) and nobody knows who I am.\"",
"In 1977, he decided to race in NASCAR's top division, then called the Winston Cup.",
"As a five-time USAC stock car champion, he had been receiving less money and received a lower billing at USAC stock car races than USAC champ car and NASCAR stock car drivers.",
"He competed in 11 events and finished 31st in season points, with two Top 10 finishes in a Chevrolet Chevelle.",
"He competed in one NASCAR event in 1978 and another in 1979 before returning to USAC.",
"He had to use #00, as another driver had taken #75.",
"USAC's stock car series had become stagnant, and it was gone by 1985.",
"Hartman had retired in the early 1980s.",
"Awards\nHe was inducted in the National Dirt Late Model Hall of Fame in 2004 for his USAC Stock Car championships and scoring \"hundreds of feature wins and track titles in long career.\"",
"Personal life\nHe was the son of Dick Hartman, owner of Hartman, White, Autocar in Zanesville, OH.",
"He was the nephew of Hartman, mentioned in the base article.",
"Hartman's youngest son Bart Hartman became a racer; as of 2007 he raced dirt late models in Ohio.",
"References\n\nExternal links\n \n\n1940 births\n1994 deaths\nNASCAR drivers\nOtterbein University alumni\nSportspeople from Zanesville, Ohio\nRacing drivers from Ohio"
] | [
"Larry \"Butch\" Hartman was an American stock car racing national champion from Ohio.",
"After winning the USAC Stock Car Newcomer of the Year award in 1966, the series' Most Improved Driver in 1967, and its Most Outstanding Driver the following year.",
"He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"Hartman had the fourth highest number of USAC Stock car wins.",
"Hartman's highest finish in stock car races was a fifth-place finish at the National 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.",
"Hartman worked full-time at his father's company, building his own engines and towing his cars to the track.",
"He was the first rookies to lead the Daytona 500.",
"He was an independent driver.",
"He raced a car.",
"His father's company \"Hartman White and Autocar Truck Sales and Service\" sponsored the 75 Dodge car.",
"Hartman was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"Dick started racing sprint cars in 1949.",
"Hartman was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"Hartman began working on cars when he was 7 years old.",
"For his ninth birthday, his father gave an old 1939 Ford sedan to him and his brother Terry for them to drive around in, with the condition that the brothers needed to repair the car.",
"The car was nicknamed \"Death and Destruction\".",
"He was sent to the United States Marines for four years after attending a college.",
"Hartman competed in up to five USAC stock cars races in a weekend with his father and uncle.",
"We used to sleep in ditches alongside the road when we had the time.",
"While we were tearing down the road, one of us would stand on the running board of our old Buick and fuel our pickup truck with a five-gallon can of gas.",
"I believe we invented in-flight refueling.",
"Hartman entered his first USAC race in 1966.",
"He won the series' rookies of the year award in 1966.",
"He had his first NASCAR start that season, a 14th-place finish at the Grand National Series' National 500 at Charlotte.",
"He was the Most Improved Driver in 1967, then the Most Outstanding Driver in 1968.",
"He competed in five Grand National events that year, with 10th-place finishes.",
"Hartman had his first USAC Stock car win in 1969 at Wisconsin International Raceway and his first 500-mile win in 1971 at Pocono Raceway.",
"The race featured several drivers, including A. J. Foyt, Al Unser, Bobby Unser, NASCAR drivers Jim Paschal and LeeRoy Yarbrough, and road racer Brian Redman.",
"The race was postponed for a week after it was rained out.",
"Hartman beat Lem Blankenship in a late race.",
"Hartman won his first USAC championship.",
"He won at the Knoxville Raceway.",
"Hartman won his second USAC Stock car title.",
"He had nine top-five finishes in eighteen races.",
"He had a fifth-place finish in NASCAR's Grand National division, which was his highest finish in his career.",
"The USAC drivers were encouraged to race in the event.",
"He got a Junie Donlavey ride after Ramo Stott had a second-place finish in the USAC.",
"The USAC had 16 races in 1973.",
"He won seven races and had 12 top-five finishes.",
"Hartman was 40 points behind Norm Nelson going into the final race of the 1974 USAC season.",
"Hartman won the title by 30 points, after Nelson finished 7th and he won the race.",
"Hartman was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"A blown motor at the Governor's Cup 250 at the Milwaukee Mile ended Hartman's title hopes, but he still finished second in the season points.",
"Hartman won his fifth USAC stock car championship in the new Chevrolet Camaro, which he switched to for the 1976 season.",
"Hartman was critical of USAC's promotion of its stock car series compared to how NASCAR promoted its stock cars and how the sanctioning body promoted its championship cars.",
"Nobody heard of the stock car racing circuit.",
"Second billing is given to the championship cars.",
"In 1972 I was a two-time champion and nobody knows who I am.",
"He decided to race in NASCAR's top division in 1977.",
"As a five-time USAC stock car champion, he had been receiving less money and received a lower billing at USAC stock car races than USAC champ car and NASCAR stock car drivers.",
"He finished 31st in season points with two Top 10 finishes in a Chevrolet Chevelle.",
"He competed in two NASCAR events in 1978 and 1979.",
"He had to use the same number as the other driver.",
"The stock car series was gone by 1985.",
"Hartman retired in the early 1980s.",
"He was in the National Dirt Late Model Hall of Fame in 2004 for his USAC Stock Car titles and for scoring \"hundreds of feature wins and track titles in a long career.\"",
"He was the son of Dick Hartman, the owner of Hartman, White.",
"He was the nephew of Hartman.",
"As of 2007, Hartman's youngest son Bart Hartman raced dirt late models in Ohio.",
"There are external links to 1940 births and 1994 deaths of NASCAR drivers."
] | Larry "<mask><mask> (May 11, 1940 – December 21, 1994) was an American stock car racing national champion in the United States Automobile Club (USAC) from Zanesville, Ohio. After winning the USAC Stock Car Rookie of the Year award in 1966, the series' Most Improved Driver in 1967, and its Most Outstanding Driver the following year. He won five USAC Stock car national titles in the 1970s. Hartman had the fourth highest number of USAC Stock car wins in the series' history. Hartman raced in twenty NASCAR stock car races; his highest finish was a fifth-place run at National 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway (now Lowe's Motor Speedway). Hartman worked full-time at his father's company, building his own engines and towing his cars to the track each weekend. In 1968, he became the first rookie to lead the Daytona 500.He was an independent driver in an era of factory teams. He raced a No. 75 Dodge car with yellow and black colors, sponsored by his father's company "Hartman White and Autocar Truck Sales and Service". Early life
Hartman was a second generation racer. His father, Dick, started racing sprint cars in 1949. By 1951, the elder Hartman was racing two cars and won 126 races in a two-year period. Hartman began working on cars at age 7 when he helped his father warm up cars for his father's automobile repair company.For his ninth birthday, his father gave an old 1939 Ford sedan to him and his brother Terry for them to drive around in a field in an adjacent property, with the condition that the brothers needed to repair the car. They nicknamed the car "Death and Destruction". After attending Otterbein College for one year, he was sent to the United States Marines for four years. Racing career
USAC stock cars
In 1964, Hartman started competing in up to five stock cars races in a weekend, driving with his father and uncle. "When we had the time," <mask> said, "we'd sleep for a couple of hours in ditches alongside the road. When we didn't, one of us would stand on the running board of our old Buick and fuel our pickup truck with a five-gallon can of gas while we were tearing down the road. I think we invented in-flight refueling."In 1966, <mask> entered a 1965 Dodge Coronet in his first USAC race. He was awarded the series' Rookie of the Year award for 1966. He had his first NASCAR start that season, a 14th-place finish at the Grand National Series' National 500 at Charlotte and a win in the ARCA series at Salem. He followed up in 1967 as the series' Most Improved Driver, then was the Most Outstanding Driver in 1968. He competed in five Grand National events that year, with 10th-place finishes at Atlanta Motor Speedway and Rockingham. <mask> had his first USAC Stock car win in 1969 at Wisconsin International Raceway and his first 500-mile win in 1971 at Pocono Raceway driving a winged Dodge Charger Daytona in the first Pocono 500. The race featured Wally Dallenbach Sr., A. J. Foyt, Roger McCluskey, Al Unser, Bobby Unser, NASCAR drivers Jim Paschal and LeeRoy Yarbrough, AMA racer Gene Romero, modified racers Geoff Bodine and Toby Tobias, road racer Brian Redman, and USAC stock car regulars Jack Bowsher, Don White, and Norm Nelson.After completing 41 laps, the race was postponed for a week after it was rained out. The following Saturday, <mask> beat Lem Blankenship in a late race duel. <mask> won his first USAC championship that year. He had a win at the Knoxville Raceway that season. <mask> won his second USAC Stock car title in 1972. He had a consistent season with nine top-five finishes in eighteen races. He had one start in NASCAR's Grand National division; the fifth-place finish was his highest finish in his NASCAR career.The event was FIA sanctioned and USAC drivers were encouraged to race in the event. He got a Junie Donlavey ride after USAC regular Ramo Stott has a second-place finish at Talladega Superspeedway earlier that season. The 1973 USAC season had 16 races. He won seven races and had 12 top-five finishes to record his third straight championship. <mask> was trailing Norm Nelson by 40 points going into the final race of the 1974 USAC season. He won the race at Des Moines; Nelson finished 7th and <mask> won the title by 30 points. In the 19 race season, <mask> had won eight races to record his fourth straight championship.Hartman battled Ramo Stott for the 1975 championship, but a blown motor at the Governor's Cup 250 at the Milwaukee Mile ended his title hopes causing him to finish second in the season points. Hartman surprised people by switching to a Chevrolet Camaro for the 1976 USAC stock car season which he won his fifth championship in the new car. Hartman was critical of USAC's promotion of its stock car series compared to how the sanctioning body promoted its championship cars and how NASCAR billed its stock cars. "…nobody ever heard of our stock car racing circuit. We get second billing everywhere to the championship cars. Here I am a two-time champion (in 1972) and nobody knows who I am." In 1977, he decided to race in NASCAR's top division, then called the Winston Cup.As a five-time USAC stock car champion, he had been receiving less money and received a lower billing at USAC stock car races than USAC champ car and NASCAR stock car drivers. He competed in 11 events and finished 31st in season points, with two Top 10 finishes in a Chevrolet Chevelle. He competed in one NASCAR event in 1978 and another in 1979 before returning to USAC. He had to use #00, as another driver had taken #75. USAC's stock car series had become stagnant, and it was gone by 1985. Hartman had retired in the early 1980s. Awards
He was inducted in the National Dirt Late Model Hall of Fame in 2004 for his USAC Stock Car championships and scoring "hundreds of feature wins and track titles in long career."Personal life
He was the son of <mask>, owner of Hartman, White, Autocar in Zanesville, OH. He was the nephew of Hartman, mentioned in the base article. <mask>'s youngest son <mask> became a racer; as of 2007 he raced dirt late models in Ohio. References
External links
1940 births
1994 deaths
NASCAR drivers
Otterbein University alumni
Sportspeople from Zanesville, Ohio
Racing drivers from Ohio | [
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"Dick Hartman",
"Hartman",
"Bart Hartman"
] | Larry "<mask>" <mask> was an American stock car racing national champion from Ohio. After winning the USAC Stock Car Newcomer of the Year award in 1966, the series' Most Improved Driver in 1967, and its Most Outstanding Driver the following year. He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 Hartman had the fourth highest number of USAC Stock car wins. Hartman's highest finish in stock car races was a fifth-place finish at the National 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Hartman worked full-time at his father's company, building his own engines and towing his cars to the track. He was the first rookies to lead the Daytona 500.He was an independent driver. He raced a car. His father's company "Hartman White and Autocar Truck Sales and Service" sponsored the 75 Dodge car. Hartman was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 Dick started racing sprint cars in 1949. Hartman was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 Hartman began working on cars when he was 7 years old.For his ninth birthday, his father gave an old 1939 Ford sedan to him and his brother Terry for them to drive around in, with the condition that the brothers needed to repair the car. The car was nicknamed "Death and Destruction". He was sent to the United States Marines for four years after attending a college. Hartman competed in up to five USAC stock cars races in a weekend with his father and uncle. We used to sleep in ditches alongside the road when we had the time. While we were tearing down the road, one of us would stand on the running board of our old Buick and fuel our pickup truck with a five-gallon can of gas. I believe we invented in-flight refueling.<mask> entered his first USAC race in 1966. He won the series' rookies of the year award in 1966. He had his first NASCAR start that season, a 14th-place finish at the Grand National Series' National 500 at Charlotte. He was the Most Improved Driver in 1967, then the Most Outstanding Driver in 1968. He competed in five Grand National events that year, with 10th-place finishes. <mask> had his first USAC Stock car win in 1969 at Wisconsin International Raceway and his first 500-mile win in 1971 at Pocono Raceway. The race featured several drivers, including A. J. Foyt, Al Unser, Bobby Unser, NASCAR drivers Jim Paschal and LeeRoy Yarbrough, and road racer Brian Redman.The race was postponed for a week after it was rained out. <mask> beat Lem Blankenship in a late race. <mask> won his first USAC championship. He won at the Knoxville Raceway. <mask> won his second USAC Stock car title. He had nine top-five finishes in eighteen races. He had a fifth-place finish in NASCAR's Grand National division, which was his highest finish in his career.The USAC drivers were encouraged to race in the event. He got a Junie Donlavey ride after Ramo Stott had a second-place finish in the USAC. The USAC had 16 races in 1973. He won seven races and had 12 top-five finishes. <mask> was 40 points behind Norm Nelson going into the final race of the 1974 USAC season. <mask> won the title by 30 points, after Nelson finished 7th and he won the race. Hartman was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217A blown motor at the Governor's Cup 250 at the Milwaukee Mile ended <mask>'s title hopes, but he still finished second in the season points. <mask> won his fifth USAC stock car championship in the new Chevrolet Camaro, which he switched to for the 1976 season. <mask> was critical of USAC's promotion of its stock car series compared to how NASCAR promoted its stock cars and how the sanctioning body promoted its championship cars. Nobody heard of the stock car racing circuit. Second billing is given to the championship cars. In 1972 I was a two-time champion and nobody knows who I am. He decided to race in NASCAR's top division in 1977.As a five-time USAC stock car champion, he had been receiving less money and received a lower billing at USAC stock car races than USAC champ car and NASCAR stock car drivers. He finished 31st in season points with two Top 10 finishes in a Chevrolet Chevelle. He competed in two NASCAR events in 1978 and 1979. He had to use the same number as the other driver. The stock car series was gone by 1985. <mask> retired in the early 1980s. He was in the National Dirt Late Model Hall of Fame in 2004 for his USAC Stock Car titles and for scoring "hundreds of feature wins and track titles in a long career."He was the son of <mask>, the owner of Hartman, White. He was the nephew of Hartman. As of 2007, <mask>'s youngest son <mask> raced dirt late models in Ohio. There are external links to 1940 births and 1994 deaths of NASCAR drivers. | [
"Butch",
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] |
755755 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick%20Lucey | Patrick Lucey | Patrick Joseph Lucey (March 21, 1918 – May 10, 2014) was an American politician. A member of the Democratic Party, he served as the 38th Governor of Wisconsin from 1971 to 1977. He was also independent presidential candidate John B. Anderson's running mate in the 1980 presidential election.
Born in La Crosse, Wisconsin, Lucey served in state and local government offices after graduating from the University of Wisconsin. He served in the Quartermaster Corps of the United States Army during World War II. He held the position of Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin from 1965 to 1967 and unsuccessfully challenged Governor Warren P. Knowles in the 1966 gubernatorial election.
Lucey won the 1970 Wisconsin gubernatorial election and served as governor until 1977, when he accepted President Jimmy Carter's appointment to the position of United States Ambassador to Mexico. As governor, Lucey presided over the merger of the Wisconsin State University system and the University of Wisconsin System. In 1980, he agreed to serve as the running mate to John B. Anderson, a former Republican Congressman. The ticket of Anderson and Lucey won 6.6% of the popular vote in the 1980 election, which saw the defeat of Carter by Republican nominee Ronald Reagan.
Early life and education
Lucey was born in La Crosse, Wisconsin on March 21, 1918, the son of Ella (McNamara) and Gregory Lucey. He grew up in the village of Ferryville, Wisconsin and graduated from Campion High School in nearby Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin in 1935. He later attended St. Thomas College in Saint Paul, Minnesota. During World War II Lucey was drafted and served in the United States Army Quartermaster Corps in the Caribbean until he was discharged with the rank of captain in 1945. After the war, Lucey graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1946 with a B.A. in philosophy.
Political career
Lucey served as justice of the peace in Ferryville, Wisconsin in 1946. He also served on the De Soto School Board and was board treasurer in 1946. Lucey served in the Wisconsin State Assembly from 1949 to 1951. From 1957 to 1963 he served as state chairman of the Democratic Party. Lucey was a Wisconsin campaign aide of John F. Kennedy in his presidential run in 1960.
In 1964, Lucey was elected Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin and served one term from 1965 to 1967. At this time the governor and lieutenant governor of Wisconsin were elected on separate tickets, and voters chose Lucey, a Democrat, as lieutenant governor while simultaneously electing Republican Warren P. Knowles as governor (An amendment to the Wisconsin Constitution in 1967 combined elections for governor and lieutenant governor onto a single ticket).
Lucey ran as the Democratic candidate for governor of Wisconsin in 1966 but failed to unseat incumbent Warren Knowles. He was initially a supporter of Senator Robert F. Kennedy in his 1968 presidential bid, but began working for Senator Eugene McCarthy's presidential campaign following Kennedy's assassination. He was the acting director of the McCarthy campaign at the 1968 Democratic National Convention. In 1970, Lucey campaigned again for governor and was elected with 54 percent of the vote. Lucey was the first Wisconsin governor elected to a four-year term after a 1967 amendment to the state constitution extended terms from two years to four. He took office on January 4, 1971. Lucey ran successfully for a second term as governor in 1974, but he resigned effective July 6, 1977 to accept a nomination as United States Ambassador to Mexico.
University of Wisconsin System merger
One of Lucey's executive initiatives was to revive an idea to merge the state's two university systems, the Wisconsin State University (WSU) system and the University of Wisconsin System, with campuses at Madison, Milwaukee, Green Bay, and Parkside (Racine–Kenosha), as well as the University of Wisconsin–Extension. The idea was suggested in the 1940s and 1950s by Governors Oscar Rennebohm and Walter J. Kohler, Jr.
In 1971, Lucey raised the issue again, saying a merger would contain the growing costs of two systems; give order to the increasing higher education demands of the state; control program duplication; and provide for a united voice and single UW budget. Madison faculty and administrators by and large opposed the merger, fearing it would diminish the great state university. Most WSU faculty and administrators favored the merger, believing it would add prestige to their institutions and level the playing field for state funding.
Merger legislation easily passed the Democratic-controlled Assembly. After much maneuvering and lobbying, it was approved by a one-vote margin in the Republican-controlled Senate. It took until 1974 for implementation legislation to be finalized. "I had to be pretty heavy-handedno merger, no budget," said Lucey in an interview following his term in office.
Other gubernatorial accomplishments
Lucey also recommended additional funding for tourism, which spurred development throughout the state. Two examples were the expansion of the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources park system and the Mt. Telemark Resort in Cable, Wisconsin. Since 1974, Cable and Mt. Telemark host the American Birkebeiner each year, the largest cross-country ski race in North America. He appointed a number of task forces to address minority concerns, including the Governor's Investigating Committee on Problems of Wisconsin's Spanish Speaking Communities, which identified the lack of programs to address the Mexican American and Puerto Ricans' lack of access to education, health, housing, and work across the state. At a time when there were over 30,000 Mexican Americans living in Wisconsin, with half living in Milwaukee, less than 10 Mexican Americans were enrolled at UW-Milwaukee.
1980 vice presidential campaign
The John Anderson—Patrick Lucey presidential ticket received 5,719,437 votes for 6.6 percent of the total vote in the 1980 presidential election, despite a 25% showing in early polls by Anderson and a spirited televised debate between Anderson and Ronald Reagan.
2011 Wisconsin Supreme Court election
In 2011, Lucey, although a Democrat, acted as David Prosser's campaign co-chairman. On March 31, 2011, he resigned from Prosser's campaign and endorsed JoAnne Kloppenburg, attributing his decision to Prosser's "disturbing distemper and lack of civility", while praising Kloppenburg for "[adhering] throughout the campaign to even-handedness and non-partisanship and [exhibiting] both promising judicial temperament and good grace, even in the heat of a fierce campaign."
Death
Lucey died on May 10, 2014, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin at the age of 96.
Legacy
In September 2009, Lucey was honored with a Wisconsin Historical Society marker in Ferryville. In October 2013, Wisconsin Highway 35 between Ferryville and Prairie du Chien was renamed the "Governor Patrick Lucey Highway" in his honor. Lucey also had a biography written about his time in politics.
Electoral history
References
External links
|-
|-
|-
|-
|-
1918 births
2014 deaths
20th-century American politicians
Ambassadors of the United States to Mexico
United States Army personnel of World War II
Democratic Party state governors of the United States
Governors of Wisconsin
Lieutenant Governors of Wisconsin
Members of the Wisconsin State Assembly
Military personnel from Wisconsin
People from Crawford County, Wisconsin
Politicians from La Crosse, Wisconsin
School board members in Wisconsin
United States Army officers
1980 United States vice-presidential candidates
University of St. Thomas (Minnesota) alumni
University of Wisconsin–Madison alumni
Wisconsin Democrats
Wisconsin Independents
Wisconsin state court judges
20th-century American judges
20th-century American diplomats | [
"Patrick Joseph Lucey (March 21, 1918 – May 10, 2014) was an American politician.",
"A member of the Democratic Party, he served as the 38th Governor of Wisconsin from 1971 to 1977.",
"He was also independent presidential candidate John B. Anderson's running mate in the 1980 presidential election.",
"Born in La Crosse, Wisconsin, Lucey served in state and local government offices after graduating from the University of Wisconsin.",
"He served in the Quartermaster Corps of the United States Army during World War II.",
"He held the position of Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin from 1965 to 1967 and unsuccessfully challenged Governor Warren P. Knowles in the 1966 gubernatorial election.",
"Lucey won the 1970 Wisconsin gubernatorial election and served as governor until 1977, when he accepted President Jimmy Carter's appointment to the position of United States Ambassador to Mexico.",
"As governor, Lucey presided over the merger of the Wisconsin State University system and the University of Wisconsin System.",
"In 1980, he agreed to serve as the running mate to John B. Anderson, a former Republican Congressman.",
"The ticket of Anderson and Lucey won 6.6% of the popular vote in the 1980 election, which saw the defeat of Carter by Republican nominee Ronald Reagan.",
"Early life and education\nLucey was born in La Crosse, Wisconsin on March 21, 1918, the son of Ella (McNamara) and Gregory Lucey.",
"He grew up in the village of Ferryville, Wisconsin and graduated from Campion High School in nearby Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin in 1935.",
"He later attended St. Thomas College in Saint Paul, Minnesota.",
"During World War II Lucey was drafted and served in the United States Army Quartermaster Corps in the Caribbean until he was discharged with the rank of captain in 1945.",
"After the war, Lucey graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1946 with a B.A.",
"in philosophy.",
"Political career\n\nLucey served as justice of the peace in Ferryville, Wisconsin in 1946.",
"He also served on the De Soto School Board and was board treasurer in 1946.",
"Lucey served in the Wisconsin State Assembly from 1949 to 1951.",
"From 1957 to 1963 he served as state chairman of the Democratic Party.",
"Lucey was a Wisconsin campaign aide of John F. Kennedy in his presidential run in 1960.",
"In 1964, Lucey was elected Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin and served one term from 1965 to 1967.",
"At this time the governor and lieutenant governor of Wisconsin were elected on separate tickets, and voters chose Lucey, a Democrat, as lieutenant governor while simultaneously electing Republican Warren P. Knowles as governor (An amendment to the Wisconsin Constitution in 1967 combined elections for governor and lieutenant governor onto a single ticket).",
"Lucey ran as the Democratic candidate for governor of Wisconsin in 1966 but failed to unseat incumbent Warren Knowles.",
"He was initially a supporter of Senator Robert F. Kennedy in his 1968 presidential bid, but began working for Senator Eugene McCarthy's presidential campaign following Kennedy's assassination.",
"He was the acting director of the McCarthy campaign at the 1968 Democratic National Convention.",
"In 1970, Lucey campaigned again for governor and was elected with 54 percent of the vote.",
"Lucey was the first Wisconsin governor elected to a four-year term after a 1967 amendment to the state constitution extended terms from two years to four.",
"He took office on January 4, 1971.",
"Lucey ran successfully for a second term as governor in 1974, but he resigned effective July 6, 1977 to accept a nomination as United States Ambassador to Mexico.",
"University of Wisconsin System merger\nOne of Lucey's executive initiatives was to revive an idea to merge the state's two university systems, the Wisconsin State University (WSU) system and the University of Wisconsin System, with campuses at Madison, Milwaukee, Green Bay, and Parkside (Racine–Kenosha), as well as the University of Wisconsin–Extension.",
"The idea was suggested in the 1940s and 1950s by Governors Oscar Rennebohm and Walter J. Kohler, Jr.",
"In 1971, Lucey raised the issue again, saying a merger would contain the growing costs of two systems; give order to the increasing higher education demands of the state; control program duplication; and provide for a united voice and single UW budget.",
"Madison faculty and administrators by and large opposed the merger, fearing it would diminish the great state university.",
"Most WSU faculty and administrators favored the merger, believing it would add prestige to their institutions and level the playing field for state funding.",
"Merger legislation easily passed the Democratic-controlled Assembly.",
"After much maneuvering and lobbying, it was approved by a one-vote margin in the Republican-controlled Senate.",
"It took until 1974 for implementation legislation to be finalized.",
"\"I had to be pretty heavy-handedno merger, no budget,\" said Lucey in an interview following his term in office.",
"Other gubernatorial accomplishments\nLucey also recommended additional funding for tourism, which spurred development throughout the state.",
"Two examples were the expansion of the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources park system and the Mt.",
"Telemark Resort in Cable, Wisconsin.",
"Since 1974, Cable and Mt.",
"Telemark host the American Birkebeiner each year, the largest cross-country ski race in North America.",
"He appointed a number of task forces to address minority concerns, including the Governor's Investigating Committee on Problems of Wisconsin's Spanish Speaking Communities, which identified the lack of programs to address the Mexican American and Puerto Ricans' lack of access to education, health, housing, and work across the state.",
"At a time when there were over 30,000 Mexican Americans living in Wisconsin, with half living in Milwaukee, less than 10 Mexican Americans were enrolled at UW-Milwaukee.",
"1980 vice presidential campaign\nThe John Anderson—Patrick Lucey presidential ticket received 5,719,437 votes for 6.6 percent of the total vote in the 1980 presidential election, despite a 25% showing in early polls by Anderson and a spirited televised debate between Anderson and Ronald Reagan.",
"2011 Wisconsin Supreme Court election\n\nIn 2011, Lucey, although a Democrat, acted as David Prosser's campaign co-chairman.",
"On March 31, 2011, he resigned from Prosser's campaign and endorsed JoAnne Kloppenburg, attributing his decision to Prosser's \"disturbing distemper and lack of civility\", while praising Kloppenburg for \"[adhering] throughout the campaign to even-handedness and non-partisanship and [exhibiting] both promising judicial temperament and good grace, even in the heat of a fierce campaign.\"",
"Death\nLucey died on May 10, 2014, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin at the age of 96.",
"Legacy\nIn September 2009, Lucey was honored with a Wisconsin Historical Society marker in Ferryville.",
"In October 2013, Wisconsin Highway 35 between Ferryville and Prairie du Chien was renamed the \"Governor Patrick Lucey Highway\" in his honor.",
"Lucey also had a biography written about his time in politics.",
"Electoral history\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links\n \n\n|-\n\n|-\n\n|-\n\n|-\n\n|-\n\n1918 births\n2014 deaths\n20th-century American politicians\nAmbassadors of the United States to Mexico\nUnited States Army personnel of World War II\nDemocratic Party state governors of the United States\nGovernors of Wisconsin\nLieutenant Governors of Wisconsin\nMembers of the Wisconsin State Assembly\nMilitary personnel from Wisconsin\nPeople from Crawford County, Wisconsin\nPoliticians from La Crosse, Wisconsin\nSchool board members in Wisconsin\nUnited States Army officers\n1980 United States vice-presidential candidates\nUniversity of St. Thomas (Minnesota) alumni\nUniversity of Wisconsin–Madison alumni\nWisconsin Democrats\nWisconsin Independents\nWisconsin state court judges\n20th-century American judges\n20th-century American diplomats"
] | [
"Patrick Joseph Lucey was an American politician.",
"He served as the 38th Governor of Wisconsin from 1971 to 1977.",
"He was John B. Anderson's running mate in the 1980 presidential election.",
"After graduating from the University of Wisconsin, Lucey served in state and local government offices.",
"He served in the United States Army during World War II.",
"He was the Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin from 1966 to 1967, but was defeated in the 1966 governor's election.",
"When Jimmy Carter was appointed to the position of United States Ambassador to Mexico, he accepted the position of governor of Wisconsin, where he served until 1977.",
"The University of Wisconsin System and the Wisconsin State University system were merged.",
"He agreed to be John B. Anderson's running mate in 1980.",
"Carter was defeated by Ronald Reagan in the popular vote in the 1980 election.",
"On March 21, 1918, Lucey was born in La Crosse, Wisconsin, the son of Ella and Gregory.",
"He graduated from Campion High School in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin in 1935, after growing up in Ferryville, Wisconsin.",
"He attended St. Thomas College in Minnesota.",
"He was discharged with the rank of captain in 1945 after serving in the United States Army Quartermaster Corps in the Caribbean during World War II.",
"After the war, he graduated from the University of Wisconsin with a B.A.",
"It's in philosophy.",
"In 1946, Lucey was justice of the peace in Ferryville, Wisconsin.",
"He was the board's treasurer in 1946.",
"From 1949 to 1951, Lucey was a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly.",
"He was the state chairman of the Democratic Party from 1957 to 1963.",
"John F. Kennedy ran for president in 1960.",
"From 1965 to 1967, Lucey was the Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin.",
"The governor and lieutenant governor of Wisconsin were elected on separate tickets, and voters chose one of them.",
"The Democratic candidate for governor of Wisconsin in 1966 failed to beat the incumbent.",
"After Kennedy's assassination, he began working for Senator Eugene McCarthy's presidential campaign.",
"The McCarthy campaign had an acting director at the Democratic National Convention.",
"In 1970, Lucey was elected governor with 54 percent of the vote.",
"After a 1967 amendment to the state constitution extended terms from two years to four, Lucey was the first Wisconsin governor elected to a four-year term.",
"On January 4, 1971, he took office.",
"After running for a second term as governor in 1974, he resigned to become the United States Ambassador to Mexico.",
"One of the executive initiatives was to revive the idea of merging the University of Wisconsin System with the Wisconsin State University.",
"Governors Oscar Rennebohm and Walter J. Kohler, Jr. suggested the idea in the 1940s and 1950s.",
"In 1971 the issue was raised again, this time saying a merger would contain the growing costs of two systems, give order to the increasing higher education demands of the state, and provide for a united voice and single UW budget.",
"The merger was opposed by faculty and administrators of the great state university.",
"The merger was favored by most of the faculty and administrators because it would add prestige to their institutions and level the playing field for state funding.",
"The legislation was easily passed by the Assembly.",
"It was approved by a single vote in the Republican-controlled Senate.",
"Implementation legislation was finalized in 1974.",
"In an interview following his term in office, Lucey said he had to be heavy-handed.",
"Additional funding for tourism spurred development throughout the state.",
"The expansion of the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources park system was one example.",
"The Telemark Resort is in Wisconsin.",
"Mt. and Cable have been in existence since 1974.",
"The American Birkebeiner is the largest cross-country ski race in North America.",
"The Governor's Investigating Committee on Problems of Wisconsin's Spanish Speaking Communities identified the lack of programs to address the Mexican American and Puerto Ricans' lack of access to education, health, housing, and work.",
"Less than 10 Mexican Americans were Enrolled at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee at a time when there were over 30,000 Mexican Americans living in Wisconsin.",
"Despite a 25% showing in early polls by Anderson and a spirited televised debate between Anderson and Ronald Reagan, the John Anderson–Patrick Lucey presidential ticket received over 5 million votes for 6.6 percent of the total vote in the 1980 presidential election.",
"David Prosser's campaign co-chairman in the Wisconsin Supreme Court election was a Democrat.",
"On March 31, 2011, he resigned from Prosser's campaign and endorsed JoAnne Kloppenburg, attributing his decision to Prosser's \"disturbing distemper and lack of civility\".",
"Death Lucey died in Milwaukee, Wisconsin at the age of 96.",
"In September 2009, a Wisconsin Historical Society marker was placed in Ferryville.",
"The highway between Ferryville and Prairie du Chien was renamed in honor of the governor.",
"He had a biography written about his time in politics.",
"There are links to electoral history in the External links."
] | <mask> (March 21, 1918 – May 10, 2014) was an American politician. A member of the Democratic Party, he served as the 38th Governor of Wisconsin from 1971 to 1977. He was also independent presidential candidate John B. Anderson's running mate in the 1980 presidential election. Born in La Crosse, Wisconsin, Lucey served in state and local government offices after graduating from the University of Wisconsin. He served in the Quartermaster Corps of the United States Army during World War II. He held the position of Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin from 1965 to 1967 and unsuccessfully challenged Governor Warren P. Knowles in the 1966 gubernatorial election. Lucey won the 1970 Wisconsin gubernatorial election and served as governor until 1977, when he accepted President Jimmy Carter's appointment to the position of United States Ambassador to Mexico.As governor, Lucey presided over the merger of the Wisconsin State University system and the University of Wisconsin System. In 1980, he agreed to serve as the running mate to John B. Anderson, a former Republican Congressman. The ticket of Anderson and Lucey won 6.6% of the popular vote in the 1980 election, which saw the defeat of Carter by Republican nominee Ronald Reagan. Early life and education
<mask> was born in La Crosse, Wisconsin on March 21, 1918, the son of Ella (McNamara) and <mask>. He grew up in the village of Ferryville, Wisconsin and graduated from Campion High School in nearby Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin in 1935. He later attended St. Thomas College in Saint Paul, Minnesota. During World War II <mask> was drafted and served in the United States Army Quartermaster Corps in the Caribbean until he was discharged with the rank of captain in 1945.After the war, <mask> graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1946 with a B.A. in philosophy. Political career
<mask> served as justice of the peace in Ferryville, Wisconsin in 1946. He also served on the De Soto School Board and was board treasurer in 1946. Lucey served in the Wisconsin State Assembly from 1949 to 1951. From 1957 to 1963 he served as state chairman of the Democratic Party. Lucey was a Wisconsin campaign aide of John F. Kennedy in his presidential run in 1960.In 1964, <mask> was elected Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin and served one term from 1965 to 1967. At this time the governor and lieutenant governor of Wisconsin were elected on separate tickets, and voters chose <mask>, a Democrat, as lieutenant governor while simultaneously electing Republican Warren P. Knowles as governor (An amendment to the Wisconsin Constitution in 1967 combined elections for governor and lieutenant governor onto a single ticket). <mask> ran as the Democratic candidate for governor of Wisconsin in 1966 but failed to unseat incumbent Warren Knowles. He was initially a supporter of Senator Robert F. Kennedy in his 1968 presidential bid, but began working for Senator Eugene McCarthy's presidential campaign following Kennedy's assassination. He was the acting director of the McCarthy campaign at the 1968 Democratic National Convention. In 1970, <mask> campaigned again for governor and was elected with 54 percent of the vote. Lucey was the first Wisconsin governor elected to a four-year term after a 1967 amendment to the state constitution extended terms from two years to four.He took office on January 4, 1971. <mask> ran successfully for a second term as governor in 1974, but he resigned effective July 6, 1977 to accept a nomination as United States Ambassador to Mexico. University of Wisconsin System merger
One of Lucey's executive initiatives was to revive an idea to merge the state's two university systems, the Wisconsin State University (WSU) system and the University of Wisconsin System, with campuses at Madison, Milwaukee, Green Bay, and Parkside (Racine–Kenosha), as well as the University of Wisconsin–Extension. The idea was suggested in the 1940s and 1950s by Governors Oscar Rennebohm and Walter J. Kohler, Jr. In 1971, Lucey raised the issue again, saying a merger would contain the growing costs of two systems; give order to the increasing higher education demands of the state; control program duplication; and provide for a united voice and single UW budget. Madison faculty and administrators by and large opposed the merger, fearing it would diminish the great state university. Most WSU faculty and administrators favored the merger, believing it would add prestige to their institutions and level the playing field for state funding.Merger legislation easily passed the Democratic-controlled Assembly. After much maneuvering and lobbying, it was approved by a one-vote margin in the Republican-controlled Senate. It took until 1974 for implementation legislation to be finalized. "I had to be pretty heavy-handedno merger, no budget," said Lucey in an interview following his term in office. Other gubernatorial accomplishments
Lucey also recommended additional funding for tourism, which spurred development throughout the state. Two examples were the expansion of the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources park system and the Mt. Telemark Resort in Cable, Wisconsin.Since 1974, Cable and Mt. Telemark host the American Birkebeiner each year, the largest cross-country ski race in North America. He appointed a number of task forces to address minority concerns, including the Governor's Investigating Committee on Problems of Wisconsin's Spanish Speaking Communities, which identified the lack of programs to address the Mexican American and Puerto Ricans' lack of access to education, health, housing, and work across the state. At a time when there were over 30,000 Mexican Americans living in Wisconsin, with half living in Milwaukee, less than 10 Mexican Americans were enrolled at UW-Milwaukee. 1980 vice presidential campaign
The John Anderson—<mask> presidential ticket received 5,719,437 votes for 6.6 percent of the total vote in the 1980 presidential election, despite a 25% showing in early polls by Anderson and a spirited televised debate between Anderson and Ronald Reagan. 2011 Wisconsin Supreme Court election
In 2011, <mask>, although a Democrat, acted as David Prosser's campaign co-chairman. On March 31, 2011, he resigned from Prosser's campaign and endorsed JoAnne Kloppenburg, attributing his decision to Prosser's "disturbing distemper and lack of civility", while praising Kloppenburg for "[adhering] throughout the campaign to even-handedness and non-partisanship and [exhibiting] both promising judicial temperament and good grace, even in the heat of a fierce campaign."Death
<mask> died on May 10, 2014, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin at the age of 96. Legacy
In September 2009, Lucey was honored with a Wisconsin Historical Society marker in Ferryville. In October 2013, Wisconsin Highway 35 between Ferryville and Prairie du Chien was renamed the "<mask> <mask> Highway" in his honor. Lucey also had a biography written about his time in politics. Electoral history
References
External links
|-
|-
|-
|-
|-
1918 births
2014 deaths
20th-century American politicians
Ambassadors of the United States to Mexico
United States Army personnel of World War II
Democratic Party state governors of the United States
Governors of Wisconsin
Lieutenant Governors of Wisconsin
Members of the Wisconsin State Assembly
Military personnel from Wisconsin
People from Crawford County, Wisconsin
Politicians from La Crosse, Wisconsin
School board members in Wisconsin
United States Army officers
1980 United States vice-presidential candidates
University of St. Thomas (Minnesota) alumni
University of Wisconsin–Madison alumni
Wisconsin Democrats
Wisconsin Independents
Wisconsin state court judges
20th-century American judges
20th-century American diplomats | [
"Patrick Joseph Lucey",
"Lucey",
"Gregory Lucey",
"Lucey",
"Lucey",
"Lucey",
"Lucey",
"Lucey",
"Lucey",
"Lucey",
"Lucey",
"Patrick Lucey",
"Lucey",
"Lucey",
"Governor Patrick",
"Lucey"
] | <mask> was an American politician. He served as the 38th Governor of Wisconsin from 1971 to 1977. He was John B. Anderson's running mate in the 1980 presidential election. After graduating from the University of Wisconsin, <mask> served in state and local government offices. He served in the United States Army during World War II. He was the Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin from 1966 to 1967, but was defeated in the 1966 governor's election. When Jimmy Carter was appointed to the position of United States Ambassador to Mexico, he accepted the position of governor of Wisconsin, where he served until 1977.The University of Wisconsin System and the Wisconsin State University system were merged. He agreed to be John B. Anderson's running mate in 1980. Carter was defeated by Ronald Reagan in the popular vote in the 1980 election. On March 21, 1918, <mask> was born in La Crosse, Wisconsin, the son of Ella and Gregory. He graduated from Campion High School in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin in 1935, after growing up in Ferryville, Wisconsin. He attended St. Thomas College in Minnesota. He was discharged with the rank of captain in 1945 after serving in the United States Army Quartermaster Corps in the Caribbean during World War II.After the war, he graduated from the University of Wisconsin with a B.A. It's in philosophy. In 1946, <mask> was justice of the peace in Ferryville, Wisconsin. He was the board's treasurer in 1946. From 1949 to 1951, <mask> was a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly. He was the state chairman of the Democratic Party from 1957 to 1963. John F. Kennedy ran for president in 1960.From 1965 to 1967, <mask> was the Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin. The governor and lieutenant governor of Wisconsin were elected on separate tickets, and voters chose one of them. The Democratic candidate for governor of Wisconsin in 1966 failed to beat the incumbent. After Kennedy's assassination, he began working for Senator Eugene McCarthy's presidential campaign. The McCarthy campaign had an acting director at the Democratic National Convention. In 1970, <mask> was elected governor with 54 percent of the vote. After a 1967 amendment to the state constitution extended terms from two years to four, <mask> was the first Wisconsin governor elected to a four-year term.On January 4, 1971, he took office. After running for a second term as governor in 1974, he resigned to become the United States Ambassador to Mexico. One of the executive initiatives was to revive the idea of merging the University of Wisconsin System with the Wisconsin State University. Governors Oscar Rennebohm and Walter J. Kohler, Jr. suggested the idea in the 1940s and 1950s. In 1971 the issue was raised again, this time saying a merger would contain the growing costs of two systems, give order to the increasing higher education demands of the state, and provide for a united voice and single UW budget. The merger was opposed by faculty and administrators of the great state university. The merger was favored by most of the faculty and administrators because it would add prestige to their institutions and level the playing field for state funding.The legislation was easily passed by the Assembly. It was approved by a single vote in the Republican-controlled Senate. Implementation legislation was finalized in 1974. In an interview following his term in office, <mask> said he had to be heavy-handed. Additional funding for tourism spurred development throughout the state. The expansion of the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources park system was one example. The Telemark Resort is in Wisconsin.Mt. and Cable have been in existence since 1974. The American Birkebeiner is the largest cross-country ski race in North America. The Governor's Investigating Committee on Problems of Wisconsin's Spanish Speaking Communities identified the lack of programs to address the Mexican American and Puerto Ricans' lack of access to education, health, housing, and work. Less than 10 Mexican Americans were Enrolled at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee at a time when there were over 30,000 Mexican Americans living in Wisconsin. Despite a 25% showing in early polls by Anderson and a spirited televised debate between Anderson and Ronald Reagan, the John Anderson–<mask>y presidential ticket received over 5 million votes for 6.6 percent of the total vote in the 1980 presidential election. David Prosser's campaign co-chairman in the Wisconsin Supreme Court election was a Democrat. On March 31, 2011, he resigned from Prosser's campaign and endorsed JoAnne Kloppenburg, attributing his decision to Prosser's "disturbing distemper and lack of civility".Death <mask> died in Milwaukee, Wisconsin at the age of 96. In September 2009, a Wisconsin Historical Society marker was placed in Ferryville. The highway between Ferryville and Prairie du Chien was renamed in honor of the governor. He had a biography written about his time in politics. There are links to electoral history in the External links. | [
"Patrick Joseph Lucey",
"Lucey",
"Lucey",
"Lucey",
"Lucey",
"Lucey",
"Lucey",
"Lucey",
"Lucey",
"Patrick Luce",
"Lucey"
] |
24244810 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosalie%20Edge | Rosalie Edge | Rosalie Barrow Edge (November 3, 1877 – November 30, 1962) was an environmental advocate, New York socialite, suffragist, and amateur birdwatcher who in 1929 established the Emergency Conservation Committee to expose the conservation establishment's ineffectiveness, and strongly advocate for species preservation. In 1934 Edge also founded the world's first preserve for birds of prey — Hawk Mountain Sanctuary near Kempton, Pennsylvania. During the Great Depression, Edge was considered the United States' most militant conservationist (Hawk of Mercy). In 1948, a profile of her in The New Yorker described her as "the only honest, unselfish, indomitable hellcat in the history of conservation" (New Yorker, April 17, 1948).
Early life
On November 3, 1877, Mabel Rosalie Barrow was born in New York City, the youngest of five surviving children of John Wylie Barrow and Harriet Bowen Woodward Barrow, she was a descendant of the prominent New York Dutch American Evertson family. John Wylie Barrow, a wealthy British importer and accountant, was a first cousin to Charles Dickens.
In May 1909, 32-year-old Mabel Rosalie went to Yokohama, Japan, to marry Charles Noel Edge, a British civil engineer. After traveling in Asia for about three years in connection with Charles's employment, the Edges returned to New York permanently. Their children Peter and Margaret were born in New York (Rosalie Edge, Hawk of Mercy).
Suffrage
In 1915, Edge joined the Equal Franchise Society, becoming a social activist for the first time in the women's voting rights movement. Edge gave speeches and wrote pro-suffrage pamphlets, and later served as the secretary-treasurer of the New York State Woman Suffrage Party under Carrie Chapman Catt.
Birdwatching
Edge began to take a strong interest in birdwatching in the 1920s, when she joined ornithologists and amateur birdwatchers in Central Park. She was inspired to become a conservation activist after reading of the slaughter of 70,000 bald eagles in the Alaskan Territory, without any protest from the leading bird protection organizations of the day. She also denounced the common practice of appreciating birds by killing and mounting them for study, regardless of species' rarity.
Education
While Edge was not formally trained in the natural sciences, she was educated by top forest and wildlife professionals, such as Robert Marshall, William Temple Hornaday, J. "Ding" Darling, Aldo Leopold, and others. Willard Gibbs Van Name, a zoologist with the American Museum of Natural History in New York and nephew of the mathematician Josiah Willard Gibbs, was a key mentor who wrote Emergency Conservation Committee (ECC) pamphlets, which Edge signed and distributed nationwide. Edge became expert enough to write and advocate knowledgeably on a wide variety of conservation topics. Among them were the importance of preserving birds of prey and maintaining species diversity, the dangers of toxins and pesticides up to DDT, and the necessity of protecting virgin forests.
Emergency Conservation Committee
Prior to establishing Hawk Mountain Sanctuary, Edge founded and ran the Emergency Conservation Committee (ECC) from 1929 until she died. The ECC's emphasis on the need to protect all species of birds and animals while they were common so that they did not become rare, was a dramatic shift from the standard thinking and practice in conservation of only preserving species that had a quantifiable economic value. As a full-time volunteer environmental activist, she also asserted that it was every person's civic duty to protect nature, working through the legislative process to achieve this. One of her first undertakings as a conservationist activist was to prod the National Association of Audubon Societies (now called the National Audubon Society) to take much stronger measures to protect many bird species it had previously ignored.
In 1931, Edge had filed a suit against the Audubon Society to obtain its membership mailing list. A judgment in her favor gave her access to about 11,000 Audubon members who were subsequently informed about what she considered lapses in the organization's defense of birds and wildlife. A bitter feud between Edge and the Audubon Society led to the resignation of its longtime president and a significant decline in membership. The break between the National Audubon Society and Edge lasted until a few weeks before her death in November 1962.
Hawk Mountain Sanctuary
In 1934, after decades of hawk and eagle slaughter on a ridge in the Appalachian Mountains in Pennsylvania, Edge unilaterally ended the annual shoot by buying the property and turning it into a sanctuary. Willard Gibbs Van Name, the American Museum of Natural History zoologist who advised her and secretly wrote her earliest ECC pamphlets, lent her $500 to obtain a lease-buy option on about 1,340 acres. In time, the Hawk Mountain Sanctuary Association grew to about 2,500 acres.
Conservation accomplishments
In addition to founding the ECC and Hawk Mountain Sanctuary, Edge led the national grassroots campaigns to create Olympic National Park (1938) and Kings Canyon National Park (1940), and successfully lobbied Congress to purchase about 8,000 acres of old-growth sugar pines on the perimeter of Yosemite National Park that were to be logged. She influenced founders of The Wilderness Society, The Nature Conservancy, and Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), along with other major wildlife protection and environmental organizations created during and just after the 30 years when she dominated the conservation movement. In 1960, Hawk Mountain Sanctuary provided the scientist and author Rachel Carson with significant migration data that enabled her to link the decline in the juvenile raptor population to DDT, in her best-selling book, Silent Spring.
A photocopy of her typescript autobiography was released in 1978 under the title An Implacable Widow.
References
Specific
External links
http://www.hawkmountain.org
http://www.eowilsoncenter.org/welcome.html
American people of Dutch descent
American socialites
American conservationists
1877 births
1962 deaths
Birdwatchers
People from Berks County, Pennsylvania
Activists from New York City
Activists from Pennsylvania | [
"Rosalie Barrow Edge (November 3, 1877 – November 30, 1962) was an environmental advocate, New York socialite, suffragist, and amateur birdwatcher who in 1929 established the Emergency Conservation Committee to expose the conservation establishment's ineffectiveness, and strongly advocate for species preservation.",
"In 1934 Edge also founded the world's first preserve for birds of prey — Hawk Mountain Sanctuary near Kempton, Pennsylvania.",
"During the Great Depression, Edge was considered the United States' most militant conservationist (Hawk of Mercy).",
"In 1948, a profile of her in The New Yorker described her as \"the only honest, unselfish, indomitable hellcat in the history of conservation\" (New Yorker, April 17, 1948).",
"Early life\nOn November 3, 1877, Mabel Rosalie Barrow was born in New York City, the youngest of five surviving children of John Wylie Barrow and Harriet Bowen Woodward Barrow, she was a descendant of the prominent New York Dutch American Evertson family.",
"John Wylie Barrow, a wealthy British importer and accountant, was a first cousin to Charles Dickens.",
"In May 1909, 32-year-old Mabel Rosalie went to Yokohama, Japan, to marry Charles Noel Edge, a British civil engineer.",
"After traveling in Asia for about three years in connection with Charles's employment, the Edges returned to New York permanently.",
"Their children Peter and Margaret were born in New York (Rosalie Edge, Hawk of Mercy).",
"Suffrage\nIn 1915, Edge joined the Equal Franchise Society, becoming a social activist for the first time in the women's voting rights movement.",
"Edge gave speeches and wrote pro-suffrage pamphlets, and later served as the secretary-treasurer of the New York State Woman Suffrage Party under Carrie Chapman Catt.",
"Birdwatching\nEdge began to take a strong interest in birdwatching in the 1920s, when she joined ornithologists and amateur birdwatchers in Central Park.",
"She was inspired to become a conservation activist after reading of the slaughter of 70,000 bald eagles in the Alaskan Territory, without any protest from the leading bird protection organizations of the day.",
"She also denounced the common practice of appreciating birds by killing and mounting them for study, regardless of species' rarity.",
"Education\nWhile Edge was not formally trained in the natural sciences, she was educated by top forest and wildlife professionals, such as Robert Marshall, William Temple Hornaday, J.",
"\"Ding\" Darling, Aldo Leopold, and others.",
"Willard Gibbs Van Name, a zoologist with the American Museum of Natural History in New York and nephew of the mathematician Josiah Willard Gibbs, was a key mentor who wrote Emergency Conservation Committee (ECC) pamphlets, which Edge signed and distributed nationwide.",
"Edge became expert enough to write and advocate knowledgeably on a wide variety of conservation topics.",
"Among them were the importance of preserving birds of prey and maintaining species diversity, the dangers of toxins and pesticides up to DDT, and the necessity of protecting virgin forests.",
"Emergency Conservation Committee\nPrior to establishing Hawk Mountain Sanctuary, Edge founded and ran the Emergency Conservation Committee (ECC) from 1929 until she died.",
"The ECC's emphasis on the need to protect all species of birds and animals while they were common so that they did not become rare, was a dramatic shift from the standard thinking and practice in conservation of only preserving species that had a quantifiable economic value.",
"As a full-time volunteer environmental activist, she also asserted that it was every person's civic duty to protect nature, working through the legislative process to achieve this.",
"One of her first undertakings as a conservationist activist was to prod the National Association of Audubon Societies (now called the National Audubon Society) to take much stronger measures to protect many bird species it had previously ignored.",
"In 1931, Edge had filed a suit against the Audubon Society to obtain its membership mailing list.",
"A judgment in her favor gave her access to about 11,000 Audubon members who were subsequently informed about what she considered lapses in the organization's defense of birds and wildlife.",
"A bitter feud between Edge and the Audubon Society led to the resignation of its longtime president and a significant decline in membership.",
"The break between the National Audubon Society and Edge lasted until a few weeks before her death in November 1962.",
"Hawk Mountain Sanctuary\nIn 1934, after decades of hawk and eagle slaughter on a ridge in the Appalachian Mountains in Pennsylvania, Edge unilaterally ended the annual shoot by buying the property and turning it into a sanctuary.",
"Willard Gibbs Van Name, the American Museum of Natural History zoologist who advised her and secretly wrote her earliest ECC pamphlets, lent her $500 to obtain a lease-buy option on about 1,340 acres.",
"In time, the Hawk Mountain Sanctuary Association grew to about 2,500 acres.",
"Conservation accomplishments\nIn addition to founding the ECC and Hawk Mountain Sanctuary, Edge led the national grassroots campaigns to create Olympic National Park (1938) and Kings Canyon National Park (1940), and successfully lobbied Congress to purchase about 8,000 acres of old-growth sugar pines on the perimeter of Yosemite National Park that were to be logged.",
"She influenced founders of The Wilderness Society, The Nature Conservancy, and Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), along with other major wildlife protection and environmental organizations created during and just after the 30 years when she dominated the conservation movement.",
"In 1960, Hawk Mountain Sanctuary provided the scientist and author Rachel Carson with significant migration data that enabled her to link the decline in the juvenile raptor population to DDT, in her best-selling book, Silent Spring.",
"A photocopy of her typescript autobiography was released in 1978 under the title An Implacable Widow.",
"References\n\nSpecific\n\nExternal links\nhttp://www.hawkmountain.org\nhttp://www.eowilsoncenter.org/welcome.html\n\nAmerican people of Dutch descent\nAmerican socialites\nAmerican conservationists\n1877 births\n1962 deaths\nBirdwatchers\nPeople from Berks County, Pennsylvania\nActivists from New York City\nActivists from Pennsylvania"
] | [
"A suffragist, birdwatcher, and environmental advocate, Rosalie Barrow Edge established the Emergency Conservation Committee in 1929 to expose the ineffectiveness of the preservation establishment.",
"The world's first preserve for birds of prey was founded in 1934 by Edge.",
"Edge was considered the United States' most militant environmentalist during the Great Depression.",
"In 1948, a profile of her in The New Yorker described her as a \"hellcat in the history ofConservation\".",
"A descendant of the prominent New York Dutch American Evertson family, the youngest of five surviving children was born in New York City on November 3, 1877.",
"The first cousin of Charles Dickens was a wealthy British importer and accountant.",
"In 1909, a British civil engineer, Charles Noel Edge, married a Japanese woman.",
"After traveling in Asia for three years, the Edges returned to New York.",
"Their children were born in New York.",
"Edge became a social activist for the first time in the women's voting rights movement after joining the Equal Franchise Society.",
"Edge was the secretary-treasurer of the New York State Woman Suffrage Party.",
"Birdwatching Edge joined ornithologists and amateur birdwatchers in Central Park in the 1920s.",
"There was no protest from the leading bird protection organizations of the day after she read about the slaughter of 70,000 bald eagles in the Alaskan Territory.",
"She denounced the practice of killing and mounting birds for study regardless of their rarity.",
"Edge was educated by top forest and wildlife professionals, such as Robert Marshall and William Temple Hornaday.",
"Aldo Leopold, \"Ding\" Darling, and others.",
"The nephew of a mathematician, a zoologist with the American Museum of Natural History in New York, and a key mentor to Edge, wrote EmergencyConservation Committee pamphlets, which Edge signed and distributed nationwide.",
"Edge was able to write and advocate knowledgeably on a wide variety of topics.",
"The importance of preserving birds of prey, the dangers of toxins and pesticides, and the necessity of protecting virgin forests were included.",
"Edge founded and ran the Emergency Conservation Committee from 1929 until she died.",
"The ECC's emphasis on the need to protect all species of birds and animals while they were common so that they did not become rare was a dramatic shift from the standard thinking and practice.",
"She said that it was her civic duty to protect nature as a full-time volunteer environmental activist.",
"She wanted the National Association of Audubon Societies to take stronger measures to protect many bird species that it had previously ignored.",
"Edge had sued the Audubon Society to get its mailing list.",
"A judgment in her favor gave her access to about 11,000 Audubon members who were subsequently informed about what she thought about the organization's defense of birds and wildlife.",
"A bitter feud between Edge and the Audubon Society resulted in the resignation of its president and a decline in membership.",
"Edge and the National Audubon Society had a break for a few weeks before she died.",
"Edge bought the property and turned it into a sanctuary after decades of hawk and eagle slaughter on the ridge.",
"The American Museum of Natural History zoologist, who advised her and secretly wrote her earliest ECC pamphlets, lent her $500 to get a lease- buy option on about 1,340 acres.",
"The association grew to 2,500 acres.",
"In addition to founding the ECC and Hawk Mountain Sanctuary, Edge led the national grassroots campaigns to create Olympic National Park and Kings Canyon National Park.",
"She influenced the founding of The Wilderness Society, The Nature Conservancy, and Environmental Defense Fund, along with other major wildlife protection and environmental organizations.",
"In 1960, Hawk Mountain Sanctuary provided the scientist and author Rachel Carson with significant migration data that enabled her to link the decline in the juvenile raptor population to DDT, in her best-selling book, Silent Spring.",
"An Implacable Widow was the title of her typescript autobiography that was released in 1978.",
"There are External links at http://www.hawkmountain.org and http://www.eowilsoncenter.org."
] | <mask> (November 3, 1877 – November 30, 1962) was an environmental advocate, New York socialite, suffragist, and amateur birdwatcher who in 1929 established the Emergency Conservation Committee to expose the conservation establishment's ineffectiveness, and strongly advocate for species preservation. In 1934 <mask> also founded the world's first preserve for birds of prey — Hawk Mountain Sanctuary near Kempton, Pennsylvania. During the Great Depression, <mask> was considered the United States' most militant conservationist (Hawk of Mercy). In 1948, a profile of her in The New Yorker described her as "the only honest, unselfish, indomitable hellcat in the history of conservation" (New Yorker, April 17, 1948). Early life
On November 3, 1877, <mask> was born in New York City, the youngest of five surviving children of John Wylie Barrow and Harriet Bowen Woodward Barrow, she was a descendant of the prominent New York Dutch American Evertson family. John Wylie Barrow, a wealthy British importer and accountant, was a first cousin to Charles Dickens. In May 1909, 32-year-old <mask> went to Yokohama, Japan, to marry <mask>, a British civil engineer.After traveling in Asia for about three years in connection with Charles's employment, the <mask>s returned to New York permanently. Their children Peter and Margaret were born in New York (<mask> <mask>, Hawk of Mercy). Suffrage
In 1915, <mask> joined the Equal Franchise Society, becoming a social activist for the first time in the women's voting rights movement. <mask> gave speeches and wrote pro-suffrage pamphlets, and later served as the secretary-treasurer of the New York State Woman Suffrage Party under Carrie Chapman Catt. Birdwatching
<mask> began to take a strong interest in birdwatching in the 1920s, when she joined ornithologists and amateur birdwatchers in Central Park. She was inspired to become a conservation activist after reading of the slaughter of 70,000 bald eagles in the Alaskan Territory, without any protest from the leading bird protection organizations of the day. She also denounced the common practice of appreciating birds by killing and mounting them for study, regardless of species' rarity.Education
While <mask> was not formally trained in the natural sciences, she was educated by top forest and wildlife professionals, such as Robert Marshall, William Temple Hornaday, J. "Ding" Darling, Aldo Leopold, and others. Willard Gibbs Van Name, a zoologist with the American Museum of Natural History in New York and nephew of the mathematician Josiah Willard Gibbs, was a key mentor who wrote Emergency Conservation Committee (ECC) pamphlets, which <mask> signed and distributed nationwide. <mask> became expert enough to write and advocate knowledgeably on a wide variety of conservation topics. Among them were the importance of preserving birds of prey and maintaining species diversity, the dangers of toxins and pesticides up to DDT, and the necessity of protecting virgin forests. Emergency Conservation Committee
Prior to establishing Hawk Mountain Sanctuary, <mask> founded and ran the Emergency Conservation Committee (ECC) from 1929 until she died. The ECC's emphasis on the need to protect all species of birds and animals while they were common so that they did not become rare, was a dramatic shift from the standard thinking and practice in conservation of only preserving species that had a quantifiable economic value.As a full-time volunteer environmental activist, she also asserted that it was every person's civic duty to protect nature, working through the legislative process to achieve this. One of her first undertakings as a conservationist activist was to prod the National Association of Audubon Societies (now called the National Audubon Society) to take much stronger measures to protect many bird species it had previously ignored. In 1931, <mask> had filed a suit against the Audubon Society to obtain its membership mailing list. A judgment in her favor gave her access to about 11,000 Audubon members who were subsequently informed about what she considered lapses in the organization's defense of birds and wildlife. A bitter feud between <mask> and the Audubon Society led to the resignation of its longtime president and a significant decline in membership. The break between the National Audubon Society and Edge lasted until a few weeks before her death in November 1962. Hawk Mountain Sanctuary
In 1934, after decades of hawk and eagle slaughter on a ridge in the Appalachian Mountains in Pennsylvania, <mask> unilaterally ended the annual shoot by buying the property and turning it into a sanctuary.Willard Gibbs Van Name, the American Museum of Natural History zoologist who advised her and secretly wrote her earliest ECC pamphlets, lent her $500 to obtain a lease-buy option on about 1,340 acres. In time, the Hawk Mountain Sanctuary Association grew to about 2,500 acres. Conservation accomplishments
In addition to founding the ECC and Hawk Mountain Sanctuary, <mask> led the national grassroots campaigns to create Olympic National Park (1938) and Kings Canyon National Park (1940), and successfully lobbied Congress to purchase about 8,000 acres of old-growth sugar pines on the perimeter of Yosemite National Park that were to be logged. She influenced founders of The Wilderness Society, The Nature Conservancy, and Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), along with other major wildlife protection and environmental organizations created during and just after the 30 years when she dominated the conservation movement. In 1960, Hawk Mountain Sanctuary provided the scientist and author Rachel Carson with significant migration data that enabled her to link the decline in the juvenile raptor population to DDT, in her best-selling book, Silent Spring. A photocopy of her typescript autobiography was released in 1978 under the title An Implacable Widow. References
Specific
External links
http://www.hawkmountain.org
http://www.eowilsoncenter.org/welcome.html
American people of Dutch descent
American socialites
American conservationists
1877 births
1962 deaths
Birdwatchers
People from Berks County, Pennsylvania
Activists from New York City
Activists from Pennsylvania | [
"Rosalie Barrow Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Mabel Rosalie Barrow",
"Mabel Rosalie",
"Charles Noel Edge",
"Edge",
"Rosalie",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge"
] | A suffragist, birdwatcher, and environmental advocate, <mask> established the Emergency Conservation Committee in 1929 to expose the ineffectiveness of the preservation establishment. The world's first preserve for birds of prey was founded in 1934 by <mask>. <mask> was considered the United States' most militant environmentalist during the Great Depression. In 1948, a profile of her in The New Yorker described her as a "hellcat in the history ofConservation". A descendant of the prominent New York Dutch American Evertson family, the youngest of five surviving children was born in New York City on November 3, 1877. The first cousin of Charles Dickens was a wealthy British importer and accountant. In 1909, a British civil engineer, <mask>, married a Japanese woman.After traveling in Asia for three years, the <mask>s returned to New York. Their children were born in New York. <mask> became a social activist for the first time in the women's voting rights movement after joining the Equal Franchise Society. <mask> was the secretary-treasurer of the New York State Woman Suffrage Party. Birdwatching <mask> joined ornithologists and amateur birdwatchers in Central Park in the 1920s. There was no protest from the leading bird protection organizations of the day after she read about the slaughter of 70,000 bald eagles in the Alaskan Territory. She denounced the practice of killing and mounting birds for study regardless of their rarity.<mask> was educated by top forest and wildlife professionals, such as Robert Marshall and William Temple Hornaday. Aldo Leopold, "Ding" Darling, and others. The nephew of a mathematician, a zoologist with the American Museum of Natural History in New York, and a key mentor to <mask>, wrote EmergencyConservation Committee pamphlets, which <mask> signed and distributed nationwide. <mask> was able to write and advocate knowledgeably on a wide variety of topics. The importance of preserving birds of prey, the dangers of toxins and pesticides, and the necessity of protecting virgin forests were included. <mask> founded and ran the Emergency Conservation Committee from 1929 until she died. The ECC's emphasis on the need to protect all species of birds and animals while they were common so that they did not become rare was a dramatic shift from the standard thinking and practice.She said that it was her civic duty to protect nature as a full-time volunteer environmental activist. She wanted the National Association of Audubon Societies to take stronger measures to protect many bird species that it had previously ignored. <mask> had sued the Audubon Society to get its mailing list. A judgment in her favor gave her access to about 11,000 Audubon members who were subsequently informed about what she thought about the organization's defense of birds and wildlife. A bitter feud between <mask> and the Audubon Society resulted in the resignation of its president and a decline in membership. <mask> and the National Audubon Society had a break for a few weeks before she died. <mask> bought the property and turned it into a sanctuary after decades of hawk and eagle slaughter on the ridge.The American Museum of Natural History zoologist, who advised her and secretly wrote her earliest ECC pamphlets, lent her $500 to get a lease- buy option on about 1,340 acres. The association grew to 2,500 acres. In addition to founding the ECC and Hawk Mountain Sanctuary, <mask> led the national grassroots campaigns to create Olympic National Park and Kings Canyon National Park. She influenced the founding of The Wilderness Society, The Nature Conservancy, and Environmental Defense Fund, along with other major wildlife protection and environmental organizations. In 1960, Hawk Mountain Sanctuary provided the scientist and author Rachel Carson with significant migration data that enabled her to link the decline in the juvenile raptor population to DDT, in her best-selling book, Silent Spring. An Implacable Widow was the title of her typescript autobiography that was released in 1978. There are External links at http://www.hawkmountain.org and http://www.eowilsoncenter.org. | [
"Rosalie Barrow Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Charles Noel Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge",
"Edge"
] |
1031419 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%20Klauder | Charles Klauder | Charles Zeller Klauder (February 9, 1872 – October 30, 1938) was an American architect best known for his work on university buildings and campus designs, especially his Cathedral of Learning at the University of Pittsburgh, the first educational skyscraper.
Biography
Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Klauder was the son of Louis and Anna Koehler Klauder, who had immigrated to Philadelphia from Germany. He studied architecture at the School of Industrial Art at the Pennsylvania Museum. At age 15, he entered the office of Theophilus Parsons Chandler, Jr. Beginning in 1893 he worked for prominent Philadelphia architectural firms, including Wilson Brothers & Company, Cope & Stewardson, and Horace Trumbauer. In 1900, Klauder became chief draughtsman for Frank Miles Day & Brother, which led to a 1911 partnership, and the firm's eventual renaming as Day & Klauder. Klauder continued the firm after Day's 1918 death.
Klauder teamed with the English-born Day to design some of the nation's most influential and distinguished campus buildings during the heyday of university expansion in the early 20th century. Along with Cope & Stewardson, Day & Klauder may be credited with the invention of the Collegiate Gothic idiom in American architecture. Their early work at Princeton and Cornell universities set the standard for dormitory and classroom designs in the Ivy League. Klauder extended the Gothic idiom during the 1920s to incorporate elements of Art Deco abstraction and modern building technology. He created campus plans for the University of Colorado (1917) in Boulder, St Paul's School in Concord, NH, Pennsylvania State University at University Park, and Concordia Seminary in St Louis, MO. His work at Princeton included dining halls (1913), Dickinson Hall (1929), dormitories (1921), the Holder group (1928), and the university's second library (1927).
Several of his landmark Neo-Gothic buildings at the University of Pittsburgh are the Cathedral of Learning, Heinz Memorial Chapel and the Stephen Foster Memorial. The Cathedral of Learning, upon its completion, was the tallest educational building in the world, and today it ranks behind only a tower at Moscow University. It is also listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
The Marks Scout Resource Center at 22nd and Winter Streets in Philadelphia was built in 1929. Klauder designed the building in the Beaux Arts style.
Klauder considered his greatest achievement to be the Commons Room of the Cathedral of Learning at the University of Pittsburgh. The Commons Room is a fifteenth-century English perpendicular Gothic-style hall that covers half an acre (2,000 m2) and extends upwards four stories, reaching tall.
For his lifelong architectural work, Klauder has received the gold medal, Architectural League, N.Y. 1921; Grand Prix Pan American Congress of Architects, 1927; Architectural Medal, Olympic Games, 1928. Klauder was a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects. In 1938 he was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Associate Academician.
Klauder died aged 66 on October 30, 1938. His remains are interred at West Laurel Hill Cemetery in Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania.
Architectural Work (Partial listing)
Brown University
Littlefield Hall, 1925
Hegeman Hall, 1926
Metcalf Research Laboratory, 1938
University of Colorado Boulder
Campus master plan, University of Colorado, 1918. 15 buildings of the University of Colorado Boulder in the Tuscan Vernacular Revival style, characterized by rough, textured sandstone walls with sloping, multi-leveled red-tiled roofs and Indiana limestone trim, were designed by Klauder between 1921 and 1939. The oldest buildings of the CU-Boulder campus, such as Old Main (1876) and Macky Auditorium (1923), are in the Collegiate Gothic style of many East Coast schools.
Norlin Library, final building designed by Klauder on the CU Boulder campus, 1939
Concordia Seminary, Clayton, Missouri
14 buildings including:
Martin Luther Tower
Cornell University
Baker Hall and Baker Tower, 1913
Founders Hall
Lyon Hall, 1928
McFaddin Hall, 1928
War Memorial, 1928
Mennen Hall, 1931
Franklin and Marshall College
Dietz-Santee Dormitory
Franklin-Meyran Dormitory
Biesecker Gymnasium
Hensel Auditorium
Fackenthal Laboratories, now the Harris Center for Business, Government, and Public Policy
Central Heating Plant
Fackenthal Pool
Franklin and Marshall College Master Plan
University of Pennsylvania
Franklin Field 1922, 1925
Palestra
Hutchinson Gymnasium, 1926–1928
Coxe 1926 and Sharpe 1929 Wings of the University Museum
Alterations to Weightman Hall
University of Pittsburgh
Cathedral of Learning 1926-1937
Heinz Memorial Chapel 1933-1938
Stephen Foster Memorial 1937
Princeton University
15 buildings including:
Walker Hall, 1930
Holder Hall, 1909, Day & Brother.
University Dining Halls, 1916, Day & Klauber.
Joline Hall, 1939
St. Paul's School
Central Heating Plant
Quadrangle Dorms
Pennsylvania State University
College Master Plan
Sackett Building
Buckhout and Borland Labs
Steidle Building
The Nittany Lion Inn
Additions to Pond Lab and Sparks Building
The Power Plant
Henderson Building
(New) Old Main
Rec Hall
Pattee Library
Burrowes Building
Electrical Engineering West
Osmond and Frear Labs
Ag Engineering
Ferguson Building
The Poultry Plant
Additions to Steidle and Sparks
University of Chicago
Eckhart Hall
Other academic buildings
Peabody Museum, Yale University, 1916–24.
Main Hall and Dormitory, Mercersburg Academy, 1927.
Pendleton Hall, Wellesley College, 1934.
Library, Albion College, 1937.
Non-academic buildings
First Presbyterian Church, Kalamazoo, Michigan, 1926–30.
Marks Boy Scout Resource Center, Philadelphia, 1929–30.
Mary E. Switzer Memorial Building, Washington, D.C., with Louis A. Simon, 1939.
Gallery
Bibliography
Notes
References
External links
Charles Z. Klauder Collection at the Carnegie Mellon University Architecture Archives
1872 births
1938 deaths
Gothic Revival architects
University of the Arts (Philadelphia) alumni
American people of German descent
American architects
Olympic competitors in art competitions | [
"Charles Zeller Klauder (February 9, 1872 – October 30, 1938) was an American architect best known for his work on university buildings and campus designs, especially his Cathedral of Learning at the University of Pittsburgh, the first educational skyscraper.",
"Biography\n\nBorn in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Klauder was the son of Louis and Anna Koehler Klauder, who had immigrated to Philadelphia from Germany.",
"He studied architecture at the School of Industrial Art at the Pennsylvania Museum.",
"At age 15, he entered the office of Theophilus Parsons Chandler, Jr. Beginning in 1893 he worked for prominent Philadelphia architectural firms, including Wilson Brothers & Company, Cope & Stewardson, and Horace Trumbauer.",
"In 1900, Klauder became chief draughtsman for Frank Miles Day & Brother, which led to a 1911 partnership, and the firm's eventual renaming as Day & Klauder.",
"Klauder continued the firm after Day's 1918 death.",
"Klauder teamed with the English-born Day to design some of the nation's most influential and distinguished campus buildings during the heyday of university expansion in the early 20th century.",
"Along with Cope & Stewardson, Day & Klauder may be credited with the invention of the Collegiate Gothic idiom in American architecture.",
"Their early work at Princeton and Cornell universities set the standard for dormitory and classroom designs in the Ivy League.",
"Klauder extended the Gothic idiom during the 1920s to incorporate elements of Art Deco abstraction and modern building technology.",
"He created campus plans for the University of Colorado (1917) in Boulder, St Paul's School in Concord, NH, Pennsylvania State University at University Park, and Concordia Seminary in St Louis, MO.",
"His work at Princeton included dining halls (1913), Dickinson Hall (1929), dormitories (1921), the Holder group (1928), and the university's second library (1927).",
"Several of his landmark Neo-Gothic buildings at the University of Pittsburgh are the Cathedral of Learning, Heinz Memorial Chapel and the Stephen Foster Memorial.",
"The Cathedral of Learning, upon its completion, was the tallest educational building in the world, and today it ranks behind only a tower at Moscow University.",
"It is also listed on the National Register of Historic Places.",
"The Marks Scout Resource Center at 22nd and Winter Streets in Philadelphia was built in 1929.",
"Klauder designed the building in the Beaux Arts style.",
"Klauder considered his greatest achievement to be the Commons Room of the Cathedral of Learning at the University of Pittsburgh.",
"The Commons Room is a fifteenth-century English perpendicular Gothic-style hall that covers half an acre (2,000 m2) and extends upwards four stories, reaching tall.",
"For his lifelong architectural work, Klauder has received the gold medal, Architectural League, N.Y. 1921; Grand Prix Pan American Congress of Architects, 1927; Architectural Medal, Olympic Games, 1928.",
"Klauder was a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects.",
"In 1938 he was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Associate Academician.",
"Klauder died aged 66 on October 30, 1938.",
"His remains are interred at West Laurel Hill Cemetery in Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania.",
"Architectural Work (Partial listing)\n\nBrown University\n\n Littlefield Hall, 1925\nHegeman Hall, 1926\n Metcalf Research Laboratory, 1938\n\nUniversity of Colorado Boulder\n\nCampus master plan, University of Colorado, 1918.",
"15 buildings of the University of Colorado Boulder in the Tuscan Vernacular Revival style, characterized by rough, textured sandstone walls with sloping, multi-leveled red-tiled roofs and Indiana limestone trim, were designed by Klauder between 1921 and 1939.",
"The oldest buildings of the CU-Boulder campus, such as Old Main (1876) and Macky Auditorium (1923), are in the Collegiate Gothic style of many East Coast schools.",
"Norlin Library, final building designed by Klauder on the CU Boulder campus, 1939\n\nConcordia Seminary, Clayton, Missouri\n14 buildings including:\nMartin Luther Tower\n\nCornell University\n Baker Hall and Baker Tower, 1913\nFounders Hall\nLyon Hall, 1928\nMcFaddin Hall, 1928\nWar Memorial, 1928\nMennen Hall, 1931\n\nFranklin and Marshall College\nDietz-Santee Dormitory\nFranklin-Meyran Dormitory\nBiesecker Gymnasium\nHensel Auditorium\nFackenthal Laboratories, now the Harris Center for Business, Government, and Public Policy\nCentral Heating Plant\nFackenthal Pool\nFranklin and Marshall College Master Plan\n\nUniversity of Pennsylvania\nFranklin Field 1922, 1925\nPalestra\nHutchinson Gymnasium, 1926–1928\nCoxe 1926 and Sharpe 1929 Wings of the University Museum\nAlterations to Weightman Hall\n\nUniversity of Pittsburgh\nCathedral of Learning 1926-1937\nHeinz Memorial Chapel 1933-1938\nStephen Foster Memorial 1937\n\nPrinceton University\n15 buildings including:\nWalker Hall, 1930\nHolder Hall, 1909, Day & Brother.",
"University Dining Halls, 1916, Day & Klauber.",
"Joline Hall, 1939\n\nSt. Paul's School\nCentral Heating Plant\nQuadrangle Dorms\n\nPennsylvania State University\nCollege Master Plan\nSackett Building\nBuckhout and Borland Labs\nSteidle Building\nThe Nittany Lion Inn\nAdditions to Pond Lab and Sparks Building\nThe Power Plant\nHenderson Building\n(New) Old Main\nRec Hall\nPattee Library\nBurrowes Building\nElectrical Engineering West\nOsmond and Frear Labs\nAg Engineering\nFerguson Building\nThe Poultry Plant\nAdditions to Steidle and Sparks\n\nUniversity of Chicago\nEckhart Hall\n\nOther academic buildings\nPeabody Museum, Yale University, 1916–24.",
"Main Hall and Dormitory, Mercersburg Academy, 1927.",
"Pendleton Hall, Wellesley College, 1934.",
"Library, Albion College, 1937.",
"Non-academic buildings\nFirst Presbyterian Church, Kalamazoo, Michigan, 1926–30.",
"Marks Boy Scout Resource Center, Philadelphia, 1929–30.",
"Mary E. Switzer Memorial Building, Washington, D.C., with Louis A. Simon, 1939.",
"Gallery\n\nBibliography\n\nNotes\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links\n\n Charles Z. Klauder Collection at the Carnegie Mellon University Architecture Archives\n\n1872 births\n1938 deaths\nGothic Revival architects\nUniversity of the Arts (Philadelphia) alumni\nAmerican people of German descent\nAmerican architects\nOlympic competitors in art competitions"
] | [
"The Cathedral of Learning at the University of Pittsburgh, the first educational skyscraper, was designed by Charles Zeller Klauder, an American architect best known for his work on university buildings and campus designs.",
"Klauder was the son of Louis and Anna Koehler, who had migrated to Philadelphia from Germany.",
"He studied architecture at the Pennsylvania Museum.",
"He began working for several Philadelphia architectural firms in 1893.",
"The firm's name was changed to Day & Klauder in 1911, after the chief draughtsman became a partner.",
"The firm continued after Day's death.",
"During the heyday of university expansion in the early 20th century, Klauder and Day designed some of the nation's most influential and distinguished campus buildings.",
"The invention of the Collegiate Gothic idiom in American architecture may be attributed to Day & Klauder.",
"The standard for dormitory and classroom designs in the Ivy League was set by their early work.",
"Art Deco and modern building technology were incorporated into the Gothic idiom during the 1920s.",
"He created campus plans for the University of Colorado in Boulder, St Paul's School in Concord, NH, and Pennsylvania State University at University Park.",
"His work at the university included dining halls, Dickinson Hall, dormitories, and the second library.",
"The Cathedral of Learning is one of the landmark buildings at the University of Pittsburgh.",
"The Cathedral of Learning is the second tallest educational building in the world after Moscow University.",
"The National Register of Historic Places includes it.",
"The Marks Scout Resource Center was built in 1929.",
"The building was designed in Beaux Arts style.",
"He considered the Commons Room of the Cathedral of Learning at the University of Pittsburgh to be his greatest achievement.",
"The Commons Room is a fifteen-century English Gothic-style hall that spans half an acre and is four stories tall.",
"The gold medal, Architectural League, N.Y., was awarded to him in 1921.",
"He was a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects.",
"He was an Associate Academician in the National Academy of Design.",
"On October 30, 1938, Klauder died.",
"His remains are buried at a cemetery in Pennsylvania.",
"The University of Colorado Boulder campus master plan was created in 1918.",
"The 15 buildings of the University of Colorado Boulder in the Tuscan Vernacular Revival style are characterized by rough, textured sandstone walls with sloping, multi-leveled red-tiled roofs and Indiana limestone trim.",
"Old Main and Macky Auditorium were built in the style of many East Coast schools.",
"The last building designed by Klauder was the Norlin Library on the CU Boulder campus.",
"The University Dining Halls were built in 1916.",
"St. Paul's School Central Heating Plant Quadrangle Dorms Pennsylvania State University College Master Plan Buckhout and Borland Labs Steidle Building The Nittany Lion Inn additions to Pond Lab and the Power Plant Henderson Building",
"The Main Hall and Dormitory was built in 1927.",
"Wellesley College's Pendleton Hall was built in 1934.",
"The library is at the college.",
"The First Presbyterian Church is a non-academic building.",
"The Marks Boy Scout Resource Center was founded in Philadelphia in 1929.",
"There is a building in Washington, D.C. with Louis A. Simon.",
"There are external links to the Charles Z. Klauder Collection at the Carnegie Mellon University."
] | <mask> (February 9, 1872 – October 30, 1938) was an American architect best known for his work on university buildings and campus designs, especially his Cathedral of Learning at the University of Pittsburgh, the first educational skyscraper. Biography
Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, <mask> was the son of Louis and <mask>, who had immigrated to Philadelphia from Germany. He studied architecture at the School of Industrial Art at the Pennsylvania Museum. At age 15, he entered the office of Theophilus Parsons Chandler, Jr. Beginning in 1893 he worked for prominent Philadelphia architectural firms, including Wilson Brothers & Company, Cope & Stewardson, and Horace Trumbauer. In 1900, <mask>der. <mask> continued the firm after Day's 1918 death. Klauder teamed with the English-born Day to design some of the nation's most influential and distinguished campus buildings during the heyday of university expansion in the early 20th century.Along with Cope & Stewardson, Day & Klauder may be credited with the invention of the Collegiate Gothic idiom in American architecture. Their early work at Princeton and Cornell universities set the standard for dormitory and classroom designs in the Ivy League. Klauder extended the Gothic idiom during the 1920s to incorporate elements of Art Deco abstraction and modern building technology. He created campus plans for the University of Colorado (1917) in Boulder, St Paul's School in Concord, NH, Pennsylvania State University at University Park, and Concordia Seminary in St Louis, MO. His work at Princeton included dining halls (1913), Dickinson Hall (1929), dormitories (1921), the Holder group (1928), and the university's second library (1927). Several of his landmark Neo-Gothic buildings at the University of Pittsburgh are the Cathedral of Learning, Heinz Memorial Chapel and the Stephen Foster Memorial. The Cathedral of Learning, upon its completion, was the tallest educational building in the world, and today it ranks behind only a tower at Moscow University.It is also listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The Marks Scout Resource Center at 22nd and Winter Streets in Philadelphia was built in 1929. <mask> designed the building in the Beaux Arts style. Klauder considered his greatest achievement to be the Commons Room of the Cathedral of Learning at the University of Pittsburgh. The Commons Room is a fifteenth-century English perpendicular Gothic-style hall that covers half an acre (2,000 m2) and extends upwards four stories, reaching tall. For his lifelong architectural work, <mask> has received the gold medal, Architectural League, N.Y. 1921; Grand Prix Pan American Congress of Architects, 1927; Architectural Medal, Olympic Games, 1928. Klauder was a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects.In 1938 he was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Associate Academician. Klauder died aged 66 on October 30, 1938. His remains are interred at West Laurel Hill Cemetery in Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania. Architectural Work (Partial listing)
Brown University
Littlefield Hall, 1925
Hegeman Hall, 1926
Metcalf Research Laboratory, 1938
University of Colorado Boulder
Campus master plan, University of Colorado, 1918. 15 buildings of the University of Colorado Boulder in the Tuscan Vernacular Revival style, characterized by rough, textured sandstone walls with sloping, multi-leveled red-tiled roofs and Indiana limestone trim, were designed by Klauder between 1921 and 1939. The oldest buildings of the CU-Boulder campus, such as Old Main (1876) and Macky Auditorium (1923), are in the Collegiate Gothic style of many East Coast schools. Norlin Library, final building designed by Klauder on the CU Boulder campus, 1939
Concordia Seminary, Clayton, Missouri
14 buildings including:
Martin Luther Tower
Cornell University
Baker Hall and Baker Tower, 1913
Founders Hall
Lyon Hall, 1928
McFaddin Hall, 1928
War Memorial, 1928
Mennen Hall, 1931
Franklin and Marshall College
Dietz-Santee Dormitory
Franklin-Meyran Dormitory
Biesecker Gymnasium
Hensel Auditorium
Fackenthal Laboratories, now the Harris Center for Business, Government, and Public Policy
Central Heating Plant
Fackenthal Pool
Franklin and Marshall College Master Plan
University of Pennsylvania
Franklin Field 1922, 1925
Palestra
Hutchinson Gymnasium, 1926–1928
Coxe 1926 and Sharpe 1929 Wings of the University Museum
Alterations to Weightman Hall
University of Pittsburgh
Cathedral of Learning 1926-1937
Heinz Memorial Chapel 1933-1938
Stephen Foster Memorial 1937
Princeton University
15 buildings including:
Walker Hall, 1930
Holder Hall, 1909, Day & Brother.University Dining Halls, 1916, Day & Klauber. Joline Hall, 1939
St. Paul's School
Central Heating Plant
Quadrangle Dorms
Pennsylvania State University
College Master Plan
Sackett Building
Buckhout and Borland Labs
Steidle Building
The Nittany Lion Inn
Additions to Pond Lab and Sparks Building
The Power Plant
Henderson Building
(New) Old Main
Rec Hall
Pattee Library
Burrowes Building
Electrical Engineering West
Osmond and Frear Labs
Ag Engineering
Ferguson Building
The Poultry Plant
Additions to Steidle and Sparks
University of Chicago
Eckhart Hall
Other academic buildings
Peabody Museum, Yale University, 1916–24. Main Hall and Dormitory, Mercersburg Academy, 1927. Pendleton Hall, Wellesley College, 1934. Library, Albion College, 1937. Non-academic buildings
First Presbyterian Church, Kalamazoo, Michigan, 1926–30. Marks Boy Scout Resource Center, Philadelphia, 1929–30.Mary E. Switzer Memorial Building, Washington, D.C., with Louis A. Simon, 1939. Gallery
Bibliography
Notes
References
External links
Charles Z. Klauder Collection at the Carnegie Mellon University Architecture Archives
1872 births
1938 deaths
Gothic Revival architects
University of the Arts (Philadelphia) alumni
American people of German descent
American architects
Olympic competitors in art competitions | [
"Charles Zeller Klauder",
"Klauder",
"Anna Koehler Klauder",
"Klauderlau",
"Klauder",
"Klauder",
"Klauder"
] | The Cathedral of Learning at the University of Pittsburgh, the first educational skyscraper, was designed by <mask>, an American architect best known for his work on university buildings and campus designs. <mask> was the son of Louis and Anna Koehler, who had migrated to Philadelphia from Germany. He studied architecture at the Pennsylvania Museum. He began working for several Philadelphia architectural firms in 1893. The firm's name was changed to Day & Klauder in 1911, after the chief draughtsman became a partner. The firm continued after Day's death. During the heyday of university expansion in the early 20th century, Klauder and Day designed some of the nation's most influential and distinguished campus buildings.The invention of the Collegiate Gothic idiom in American architecture may be attributed to Day & Klauder. The standard for dormitory and classroom designs in the Ivy League was set by their early work. Art Deco and modern building technology were incorporated into the Gothic idiom during the 1920s. He created campus plans for the University of Colorado in Boulder, St Paul's School in Concord, NH, and Pennsylvania State University at University Park. His work at the university included dining halls, Dickinson Hall, dormitories, and the second library. The Cathedral of Learning is one of the landmark buildings at the University of Pittsburgh. The Cathedral of Learning is the second tallest educational building in the world after Moscow University.The National Register of Historic Places includes it. The Marks Scout Resource Center was built in 1929. The building was designed in Beaux Arts style. He considered the Commons Room of the Cathedral of Learning at the University of Pittsburgh to be his greatest achievement. The Commons Room is a fifteen-century English Gothic-style hall that spans half an acre and is four stories tall. The gold medal, Architectural League, N.Y., was awarded to him in 1921. He was a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects.He was an Associate Academician in the National Academy of Design. On October 30, 1938, Klauder died. His remains are buried at a cemetery in Pennsylvania. The University of Colorado Boulder campus master plan was created in 1918. The 15 buildings of the University of Colorado Boulder in the Tuscan Vernacular Revival style are characterized by rough, textured sandstone walls with sloping, multi-leveled red-tiled roofs and Indiana limestone trim. Old Main and Macky Auditorium were built in the style of many East Coast schools. The last building designed by Klauder was the Norlin Library on the CU Boulder campus.The University Dining Halls were built in 1916. St. Paul's School Central Heating Plant Quadrangle Dorms Pennsylvania State University College Master Plan Buckhout and Borland Labs Steidle Building The Nittany Lion Inn additions to Pond Lab and the Power Plant Henderson Building The Main Hall and Dormitory was built in 1927. Wellesley College's Pendleton Hall was built in 1934. The library is at the college. The First Presbyterian Church is a non-academic building. The Marks Boy Scout Resource Center was founded in Philadelphia in 1929.There is a building in Washington, D.C. with Louis A. Simon. There are external links to the <mask> Z. Klauder Collection at the Carnegie Mellon University. | [
"Charles Zeller Klauder",
"Klauder",
"Charles"
] |
27246393 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Craig%20Kimbrel | Craig Kimbrel | Craig Michael Kimbrel (born May 28, 1988) is an American professional baseball pitcher for the Chicago White Sox of Major League Baseball (MLB). He previously played for the San Diego Padres, Boston Red Sox, Atlanta Braves, and Chicago Cubs. He is an eight-time All-Star, two-time Reliever of the Year, and a 2018 World Series champion. He is known for his triple-digit fastball, as well as his unique pre-pitch stare. Listed at and , he both throws and bats right-handed.
As a rookie with the Braves in 2011, Kimbrel was named their closer, and set an MLB record for saves by a rookie, with 46. He was awarded the National League's (NL) 2011 Rookie of the Year Award. He led the NL in saves for four consecutive seasons (2011– 2014). He recorded his 200th save in June 2015 with the Padres, and his 300th save in May 2018 with the Red Sox, making him the youngest pitcher in MLB history to reach the milestone.
Early life
Craig is the son of Mike and Sandy Kimbrel. He attended Lee High School in Huntsville, Alabama, where he played baseball and was a quarterback for the football team.
Kimbrel attended Wallace State Community College. While at Wallace State in 2007, Kimbrel had an 8–0 win-loss record with a 1.99 earned run average (ERA) as a freshman in 2007, serving as the team's closer and a spot starter. In 2008, he was 9–3 with a 2.88 ERA, striking out 123 hitters in 81 innings pitched, mainly as a reliever.
Professional career
The Atlanta Braves selected Kimbrel in the 33rd round of the 2007 MLB draft, but he elected to remain at Wallace State in order to improve his draft position. He was then taken by the Braves in the third round, with the 96th overall selection, of the 2008 MLB draft.
Atlanta Braves (2010–2014)
2010
Kimbrel got his first call-up from the Gwinnett Braves on May 15, 2010, to replace the injured Jair Jurrjens on the roster. He was called up for the second time in his career on June 4, 2010, to replace Takashi Saito, who was placed on the 15-day DL. He earned his first major league save on September 19, 2010 against the New York Mets. Kimbrel's record for the 2010 season was 4–0, with one save and a 0.44 ERA in innings. He recorded 40 strikeouts and 16 walks. In the 2010 NLDS, he was the losing pitcher in Game 3 against the eventual World Series Champion San Francisco Giants.
2011
Kimbrel made the roster to start the 2011 season as the team's primary closer. He was successful in his first four save opportunities before blowing his first career save on April 21, 2011. On June 3, 2011 in a game versus the New York Mets, Kimbrel passed the record for most saves by a National League rookie before the All-Star break. He is the fastest Braves pitcher to reach 100 career strikeouts, doing so in career innings. His new record surpassed the previous record set by John Rocker in the 1998–1999 season, where it took Rocker 70 career innings to reach the 100 career strikeout mark. On July 5, his 26th save matched Jonathan Papelbon's record for most saves by a rookie before the All-Star break. On July 7, Kimbrel's 27th save of the year against the Colorado Rockies broke Papelbon's record.
Kimbrel was selected to the 2011 All Star Game during his first full season in the majors. San Francisco Giants manager Bruce Bochy chose Kimbrel as a replacement for Giants pitcher Matt Cain.
On July 22, 2011 in a game versus the Cincinnati Reds, Kimbrel broke the Braves rookie record for saves in a season (31).
On August 9, 2011 in a game versus the Florida Marlins, Kimbrel tied the National League rookie record for saves in a season (36 by Todd Worrell of the St. Louis Cardinals in 1986). He broke that record on August 17 in a game versus the San Francisco Giants. On August 21, 2011, Kimbrel recorded his 100th strike out which coincided with his 39th save of the season and a string of innings without yielding a run. On August 23, 2011, Kimbrel recorded his 40th save, tying the rookie save record of Neftalí Feliz. He subsequently broke this record with his 41st save on August 31 with two strikeouts in a game against the Washington Nationals. At the time, he led the majors in saves and had not given up a run in his last 34 innings. The following night, Kimbrel surpassed Cliff Lee's mark of 34 scoreless innings with scoreless innings for the longest scoreless streak in the majors in 2011. He was named the NL Rookie of the Month and Delivery Man of the Month for August 2011. His scoreless inning streak came to an end after innings, on September 9, 2011.
The Braves' season ended when Kimbrel blew a save against the Philadelphia Phillies in the last game of the season. The loss knocked Atlanta out of playoff contention, completing a historic late-season collapse that squandered an early September lead of games in the National League Wild Card race. Kimbrel's mediocre September (4.76 ERA) led to charges that manager Fredi González had overworked him over the course of the season.
Kimbrel ended the season tied for the National League lead with 46 saves—surpassing the previous rookie record of 40, set by Feliz in 2010—and led major league relievers with 127 strikeouts in 77 innings.
On November 14, the Baseball Writers' Association of America announced the results of their 2011 National League Rookie of the Year vote; Craig Kimbrel received all 32 first-place ballots—the first unanimous selection since 2001 winner Albert Pujols—for 160 points. Freddie Freeman finished second in the voting with 21 second-place votes and seven third-place votes, for a total of 70 points—making the pair the first teammates to take the top two spots since 1989, when the Chicago Cubs' Jerome Walton and Dwight Smith came in first and second in the balloting. The only other time two Braves finished in the top five, the organization was still located in Milwaukee—Gene Conley was voted third-best rookie of the 1954 season; Hank Aaron came in fourth. He was also named the Players Choice Awards NL Outstanding Rookie by the Major League Baseball Players Association.
2012
Kimbrel again made the All-Star team in 2012. He struck out the two batters he faced. He won the Delivery Man of the Month Award for September 2012. On September 26, he struck out four batters in the ninth inning.
Kimbrel was thoroughly dominant throughout the 2012 season. He led the National League with 42 saves (in 45 opportunities) and Win Probability Added among pitchers. He struck out 116 batters in innings, producing a K/9 rate of 16.7. In so doing, he also became the first pitcher in history to strike out at least half the batters he faced during a season. He also went to an 0–2 count on 56% of the batters he faced. Kimbrel allowed only 3.9 hits and 2.0 walks per 9 innings he pitched, giving him a WHIP of 0.65 and a batting average against of .126. He finished with an ERA of 1.01. He won the NL Rolaids Relief Man Award. Kimbrel finished fifth in the 2012 National League Cy Young Award voting, and eighth in the 2012 National League MVP voting.
2013
Kimbrel began the 2013 season with three blown saves during his first nine save opportunities, tying his personal record for blown saves during the entire 2012 season. Nonetheless, on May 9, 2013 in a game against the San Francisco Giants, Kimbrel earned his 100th save making him the second youngest player in MLB history to reach that mark. With a save against the Cardinals on July 27, 2013, he became only the second Atlanta pitcher after John Smoltz to have three 30-save seasons. Kimbrel surpassed John Smoltz's Braves record of 27 consecutive saves on August 17, 2013.
On September 27, Kimbrel recorded his 50th save of the season in a game against the Philadelphia Phillies. In doing so, he became the 11th pitcher in Major League history to have a 50-save season. He won the Delivery Man of the Year Award (across all of MLB) and also was voted the "GIBBY Awards" Closer of the Year – by the fans, media, team front-office personnel, former players, and SABR.
2014
On February 16, 2014, Kimbrel agreed to a four-year, $42 million extension with the Braves that ran through 2017, with an option for 2018. On April 2, Kimbrel tied Gene Garber's 141 saves with the Braves, good for second in franchise history. Two days later, April 4, Kimbrel recorded his 142nd career save, to move into sole possession of second place. On April 25, 2014, Kimbrel became the fastest pitcher ever to reach 400 strikeouts—reaching the mark in 236 innings' worth of work. On June 6, 2014, Kimbrel recorded his 155th save in a game against the Arizona Diamondbacks, surpassing John Smoltz as the new franchise leader in saves. On August 29, 2014, Kimbrel recorded his 40th save of the season. He became the third pitcher to reach that single-season milestone in four straight seasons. Kimbrel finished the season with a 1.61 ERA and 95 strikeouts in innings. He led the National League with 47 saves, becoming the first pitcher to lead the NL in saves for four consecutive seasons since Bruce Sutter (1979–82).
San Diego Padres (2015)
On April 5, 2015, Kimbrel was traded to the San Diego Padres along with outfielder Melvin Upton, Jr., in exchange for Carlos Quentin, Cameron Maybin, prospects Matt Wisler, Jordan Paroubeck, and the 41st overall pick in the 2015 MLB draft.
On June 8, Kimbrel recorded his 200th career save against his former team, the Braves. He became the fastest pitcher ever to reach that milestone, taking only 318 games to do so.
In his one season with the Padres, Kimbrel made 61 appearances, finishing 53 games while recording 39 saves; he struck out 87 while walking 22 in innings pitched with a 2.58 ERA.
Boston Red Sox (2016–2018)
On November 13, 2015, the Padres traded Kimbrel to the Boston Red Sox in exchange for Manuel Margot, Javy Guerra, Carlos Asuaje, and Logan Allen.
2016
On July 8, 2016, Kimbrel injured his knee while taking warmups. The next day, an MRI revealed that there was a tear in the medial meniscus of the left knee. The injury required surgery, and three to six weeks to recover. He returned to the bullpen at the start of August.
For the 2016 Red Sox, Kimbrel made 57 regular season appearances, finishing 47 games while recording 31 saves. In 53 innings pitched, he had a 3.40 ERA while striking out 83 and walking 30.
In the 2016 American League Division Series, Kimbrel made two appearances; he retired all four batters he faced, three by strikeout, as the Red Sox were swept by the Cleveland Indians.
2017
Going into the 2017 season, Kimbrel changed his entry song from "Welcome to the Jungle" by Guns N' Roses to Ted Nugent's "Stranglehold".
On May 11, 2017, against the Milwaukee Brewers at Miller Park, Kimbrel struck out the side in the ninth inning on nine consecutive pitches, joining Pedro Martínez and Clay Buchholz as the only pitchers in franchise history to accomplish this feat, commonly referred to as an immaculate inning. Two weeks later, Kimbrel recorded a second four-strikeout inning while facing the Texas Rangers. Kimbrel was subsequently named AL Reliever of the Month for May.
For the 2017 Red Sox, Kimbrel made 67 regular season appearances, finishing 51 games while recording 35 saves. In 69 innings pitched, he had a 1.43 ERA while striking out 126 and walking 14. Of all MLB pitchers, he held right-handed batters to the lowest batting average, .108 (in 30 or more innings).
In the 2017 American League Division Series, Kimbrel made two one-inning appearances; he faced a total of 12 batters, giving up four hits, one walk, and one run while recording two strikeouts, as the Red Sox lost to the eventual World Series champions, the Houston Astros.
2018
On May 5, 2018, facing the Texas Rangers, Kimbrel recorded his 300th career save. He achieved this milestone in fewer games (494), fewer save opportunities (330), and at a younger age (29) than any other pitcher. On July 8, Kimbrel recorded his 27th save of the season, and was named to the 2018 MLB All-Star Game. For the 2018 regular season, Kimbrel recorded 42 saves in 63 appearances, pitching to a 2.74 ERA with 96 strikeouts in innings.
In the postseason, Kimbrel recorded six saves while allowing seven earned runs in innings, as the Red Sox went on to win the World Series over the Los Angeles Dodgers in five games. On November 12, Kimbrel declined Boston's one-year, $17.9 million qualifying offer, thus becoming a free agent.
Kimbrel did not sign with any teams during the off-season, remaining a free agent into the 2019 season.
Chicago Cubs (2019–2021)
On June 7, 2019, Kimbrel signed with the Chicago Cubs on a three-year contract, reportedly worth $43 million. On June 27, he was added to the Cubs' major league roster from the Triple-A Iowa Cubs, and recorded his first save of the season, against Atlanta. On August 5, 2019, he was placed on IL for a knee inflammation. On August 18, 2019, he was reactivated from the IL to help the Cubs beleaguered bullpen. He finished the year 0–4 with 13 saves and a 6.53 ERA in 23 games.
In the pandemic-shortened 2020 season, Kimbrel went 0–1 with a 5.28 ERA and recorded 28 strikeouts and 12 walks in innings.
On May 26, 2021, Kimbrel advanced to 11th on the all time saves list after the Cubs beat the Pirates 4–1 at Pittsburgh. On June 24, 2021, Kimbrel pitched a combined no-hitter against the Los Angeles Dodgers along with Zach Davies, Ryan Tepera, and Andrew Chafin.
Chicago White Sox (2021–present)
On July 30, 2021, the Cubs traded Kimbrel to the Chicago White Sox in exchange for Nick Madrigal and Codi Heuer. On November 22, the White Sox picked up his $16 million option for the 2022 season.
International career
Kimbrel was named the closer for Team USA in the 2013 World Baseball Classic. Despite not surrendering one lead off double all year with the Braves in 2012, Kimbrel gave one up to Nelson Cruz of the Dominican Republic in their round two matchup. Kimbrel would go on to give up two runs in the game, and be the losing pitcher in Team USA's 3–1 loss to the eventual champions.
Pitching style
Kimbrel uses a combination of a four-seam fastball and a power curveball to get outs. His fastball averages and occasionally tops out at . His curve, thrown with a "spike" grip, stays in the mid-to-upper 80s. The whiff rate of his four-seamer is 33%, and the curve is at 52%. This combination contributes to a career strikeouts per nine innings rate of 14.7 (). He is also tied for third among all pitchers from 2002–2012 in the highest percentage of pitches that resulted in swinging strikes.
Kimbrel's four-seam fastball was the 12th-fastest among Major League relievers in the 2011 season. In addition, he threw the hardest curveball, averaging . His fastball had the fifth-highest whiff rate among relief pitchers (32%), and he also had the highest whiff rate of any reliever's curveball, at better than 55%. His pre-pitch stance has also been widely noted and has been dubbed "Kimbreling" or "Spider Arms".
Personal life
Kimbrel has two brothers, Alan and Matt. Matt Kimbrel played baseball in the Braves minor league system for three seasons before being released.
Kimbrel married former Wallace State cheerleader Ashley Holt in 2012. The couple's daughter was born on November 3, 2017. She was born with heart defects and has undergone two surgeries.
Kimbrel is a born again Christian: "At one point in my life, I had everything that I wanted, but something was still missing. I think that’s a story that a lot of people can tell who’ve had success, who’ve made money. All those things don’t fill you. They sometimes make you more empty and the only answer is Jesus and what we can do to let everyone know who He is. … That is our mission as Christians is to let everyone know who Jesus is and that should be our fulfillment."
See also
List of Major League Baseball single-inning strikeout leaders
List of Major League Baseball annual saves leaders
Notes
References
External links
1988 births
Living people
American League All-Stars
Atlanta Braves players
Baseball players from Alabama
Boston Red Sox players
Chicago Cubs players
Chicago White Sox players
Danville Braves players
Gwinnett Braves players
Iowa Cubs players
Major League Baseball pitchers
Major League Baseball Rookie of the Year Award winners
Mississippi Braves players
Myrtle Beach Pelicans players
National League All-Stars
National League saves champions
Peoria Saguaros players
Rome Braves players
San Diego Padres players
Sportspeople from Huntsville, Alabama
Wallace State Lions baseball players
World Baseball Classic players of the United States
2013 World Baseball Classic players | [
"Craig Michael Kimbrel (born May 28, 1988) is an American professional baseball pitcher for the Chicago White Sox of Major League Baseball (MLB).",
"He previously played for the San Diego Padres, Boston Red Sox, Atlanta Braves, and Chicago Cubs.",
"He is an eight-time All-Star, two-time Reliever of the Year, and a 2018 World Series champion.",
"He is known for his triple-digit fastball, as well as his unique pre-pitch stare.",
"Listed at and , he both throws and bats right-handed.",
"As a rookie with the Braves in 2011, Kimbrel was named their closer, and set an MLB record for saves by a rookie, with 46.",
"He was awarded the National League's (NL) 2011 Rookie of the Year Award.",
"He led the NL in saves for four consecutive seasons (2011– 2014).",
"He recorded his 200th save in June 2015 with the Padres, and his 300th save in May 2018 with the Red Sox, making him the youngest pitcher in MLB history to reach the milestone.",
"Early life\nCraig is the son of Mike and Sandy Kimbrel.",
"He attended Lee High School in Huntsville, Alabama, where he played baseball and was a quarterback for the football team.",
"Kimbrel attended Wallace State Community College.",
"While at Wallace State in 2007, Kimbrel had an 8–0 win-loss record with a 1.99 earned run average (ERA) as a freshman in 2007, serving as the team's closer and a spot starter.",
"In 2008, he was 9–3 with a 2.88 ERA, striking out 123 hitters in 81 innings pitched, mainly as a reliever.",
"Professional career\nThe Atlanta Braves selected Kimbrel in the 33rd round of the 2007 MLB draft, but he elected to remain at Wallace State in order to improve his draft position.",
"He was then taken by the Braves in the third round, with the 96th overall selection, of the 2008 MLB draft.",
"Atlanta Braves (2010–2014)\n\n2010\nKimbrel got his first call-up from the Gwinnett Braves on May 15, 2010, to replace the injured Jair Jurrjens on the roster.",
"He was called up for the second time in his career on June 4, 2010, to replace Takashi Saito, who was placed on the 15-day DL.",
"He earned his first major league save on September 19, 2010 against the New York Mets.",
"Kimbrel's record for the 2010 season was 4–0, with one save and a 0.44 ERA in innings.",
"He recorded 40 strikeouts and 16 walks.",
"In the 2010 NLDS, he was the losing pitcher in Game 3 against the eventual World Series Champion San Francisco Giants.",
"2011\nKimbrel made the roster to start the 2011 season as the team's primary closer.",
"He was successful in his first four save opportunities before blowing his first career save on April 21, 2011.",
"On June 3, 2011 in a game versus the New York Mets, Kimbrel passed the record for most saves by a National League rookie before the All-Star break.",
"He is the fastest Braves pitcher to reach 100 career strikeouts, doing so in career innings.",
"His new record surpassed the previous record set by John Rocker in the 1998–1999 season, where it took Rocker 70 career innings to reach the 100 career strikeout mark.",
"On July 5, his 26th save matched Jonathan Papelbon's record for most saves by a rookie before the All-Star break.",
"On July 7, Kimbrel's 27th save of the year against the Colorado Rockies broke Papelbon's record.",
"Kimbrel was selected to the 2011 All Star Game during his first full season in the majors.",
"San Francisco Giants manager Bruce Bochy chose Kimbrel as a replacement for Giants pitcher Matt Cain.",
"On July 22, 2011 in a game versus the Cincinnati Reds, Kimbrel broke the Braves rookie record for saves in a season (31).",
"On August 9, 2011 in a game versus the Florida Marlins, Kimbrel tied the National League rookie record for saves in a season (36 by Todd Worrell of the St. Louis Cardinals in 1986).",
"He broke that record on August 17 in a game versus the San Francisco Giants.",
"On August 21, 2011, Kimbrel recorded his 100th strike out which coincided with his 39th save of the season and a string of innings without yielding a run.",
"On August 23, 2011, Kimbrel recorded his 40th save, tying the rookie save record of Neftalí Feliz.",
"He subsequently broke this record with his 41st save on August 31 with two strikeouts in a game against the Washington Nationals.",
"At the time, he led the majors in saves and had not given up a run in his last 34 innings.",
"The following night, Kimbrel surpassed Cliff Lee's mark of 34 scoreless innings with scoreless innings for the longest scoreless streak in the majors in 2011.",
"He was named the NL Rookie of the Month and Delivery Man of the Month for August 2011.",
"His scoreless inning streak came to an end after innings, on September 9, 2011.",
"The Braves' season ended when Kimbrel blew a save against the Philadelphia Phillies in the last game of the season.",
"The loss knocked Atlanta out of playoff contention, completing a historic late-season collapse that squandered an early September lead of games in the National League Wild Card race.",
"Kimbrel's mediocre September (4.76 ERA) led to charges that manager Fredi González had overworked him over the course of the season.",
"Kimbrel ended the season tied for the National League lead with 46 saves—surpassing the previous rookie record of 40, set by Feliz in 2010—and led major league relievers with 127 strikeouts in 77 innings.",
"On November 14, the Baseball Writers' Association of America announced the results of their 2011 National League Rookie of the Year vote; Craig Kimbrel received all 32 first-place ballots—the first unanimous selection since 2001 winner Albert Pujols—for 160 points.",
"Freddie Freeman finished second in the voting with 21 second-place votes and seven third-place votes, for a total of 70 points—making the pair the first teammates to take the top two spots since 1989, when the Chicago Cubs' Jerome Walton and Dwight Smith came in first and second in the balloting.",
"The only other time two Braves finished in the top five, the organization was still located in Milwaukee—Gene Conley was voted third-best rookie of the 1954 season; Hank Aaron came in fourth.",
"He was also named the Players Choice Awards NL Outstanding Rookie by the Major League Baseball Players Association.",
"2012\nKimbrel again made the All-Star team in 2012.",
"He struck out the two batters he faced.",
"He won the Delivery Man of the Month Award for September 2012.",
"On September 26, he struck out four batters in the ninth inning.",
"Kimbrel was thoroughly dominant throughout the 2012 season.",
"He led the National League with 42 saves (in 45 opportunities) and Win Probability Added among pitchers.",
"He struck out 116 batters in innings, producing a K/9 rate of 16.7.",
"In so doing, he also became the first pitcher in history to strike out at least half the batters he faced during a season.",
"He also went to an 0–2 count on 56% of the batters he faced.",
"Kimbrel allowed only 3.9 hits and 2.0 walks per 9 innings he pitched, giving him a WHIP of 0.65 and a batting average against of .126.",
"He finished with an ERA of 1.01.",
"He won the NL Rolaids Relief Man Award.",
"Kimbrel finished fifth in the 2012 National League Cy Young Award voting, and eighth in the 2012 National League MVP voting.",
"2013\n\nKimbrel began the 2013 season with three blown saves during his first nine save opportunities, tying his personal record for blown saves during the entire 2012 season.",
"Nonetheless, on May 9, 2013 in a game against the San Francisco Giants, Kimbrel earned his 100th save making him the second youngest player in MLB history to reach that mark.",
"With a save against the Cardinals on July 27, 2013, he became only the second Atlanta pitcher after John Smoltz to have three 30-save seasons.",
"Kimbrel surpassed John Smoltz's Braves record of 27 consecutive saves on August 17, 2013.",
"On September 27, Kimbrel recorded his 50th save of the season in a game against the Philadelphia Phillies.",
"In doing so, he became the 11th pitcher in Major League history to have a 50-save season.",
"He won the Delivery Man of the Year Award (across all of MLB) and also was voted the \"GIBBY Awards\" Closer of the Year – by the fans, media, team front-office personnel, former players, and SABR.",
"2014\nOn February 16, 2014, Kimbrel agreed to a four-year, $42 million extension with the Braves that ran through 2017, with an option for 2018.",
"On April 2, Kimbrel tied Gene Garber's 141 saves with the Braves, good for second in franchise history.",
"Two days later, April 4, Kimbrel recorded his 142nd career save, to move into sole possession of second place.",
"On April 25, 2014, Kimbrel became the fastest pitcher ever to reach 400 strikeouts—reaching the mark in 236 innings' worth of work.",
"On June 6, 2014, Kimbrel recorded his 155th save in a game against the Arizona Diamondbacks, surpassing John Smoltz as the new franchise leader in saves.",
"On August 29, 2014, Kimbrel recorded his 40th save of the season.",
"He became the third pitcher to reach that single-season milestone in four straight seasons.",
"Kimbrel finished the season with a 1.61 ERA and 95 strikeouts in innings.",
"He led the National League with 47 saves, becoming the first pitcher to lead the NL in saves for four consecutive seasons since Bruce Sutter (1979–82).",
"San Diego Padres (2015) \n\nOn April 5, 2015, Kimbrel was traded to the San Diego Padres along with outfielder Melvin Upton, Jr., in exchange for Carlos Quentin, Cameron Maybin, prospects Matt Wisler, Jordan Paroubeck, and the 41st overall pick in the 2015 MLB draft.",
"On June 8, Kimbrel recorded his 200th career save against his former team, the Braves.",
"He became the fastest pitcher ever to reach that milestone, taking only 318 games to do so.",
"In his one season with the Padres, Kimbrel made 61 appearances, finishing 53 games while recording 39 saves; he struck out 87 while walking 22 in innings pitched with a 2.58 ERA.",
"Boston Red Sox (2016–2018)\nOn November 13, 2015, the Padres traded Kimbrel to the Boston Red Sox in exchange for Manuel Margot, Javy Guerra, Carlos Asuaje, and Logan Allen.",
"2016\nOn July 8, 2016, Kimbrel injured his knee while taking warmups.",
"The next day, an MRI revealed that there was a tear in the medial meniscus of the left knee.",
"The injury required surgery, and three to six weeks to recover.",
"He returned to the bullpen at the start of August.",
"For the 2016 Red Sox, Kimbrel made 57 regular season appearances, finishing 47 games while recording 31 saves.",
"In 53 innings pitched, he had a 3.40 ERA while striking out 83 and walking 30.",
"In the 2016 American League Division Series, Kimbrel made two appearances; he retired all four batters he faced, three by strikeout, as the Red Sox were swept by the Cleveland Indians.",
"2017\nGoing into the 2017 season, Kimbrel changed his entry song from \"Welcome to the Jungle\" by Guns N' Roses to Ted Nugent's \"Stranglehold\".",
"On May 11, 2017, against the Milwaukee Brewers at Miller Park, Kimbrel struck out the side in the ninth inning on nine consecutive pitches, joining Pedro Martínez and Clay Buchholz as the only pitchers in franchise history to accomplish this feat, commonly referred to as an immaculate inning.",
"Two weeks later, Kimbrel recorded a second four-strikeout inning while facing the Texas Rangers.",
"Kimbrel was subsequently named AL Reliever of the Month for May.",
"For the 2017 Red Sox, Kimbrel made 67 regular season appearances, finishing 51 games while recording 35 saves.",
"In 69 innings pitched, he had a 1.43 ERA while striking out 126 and walking 14.",
"Of all MLB pitchers, he held right-handed batters to the lowest batting average, .108 (in 30 or more innings).",
"In the 2017 American League Division Series, Kimbrel made two one-inning appearances; he faced a total of 12 batters, giving up four hits, one walk, and one run while recording two strikeouts, as the Red Sox lost to the eventual World Series champions, the Houston Astros.",
"2018\nOn May 5, 2018, facing the Texas Rangers, Kimbrel recorded his 300th career save.",
"He achieved this milestone in fewer games (494), fewer save opportunities (330), and at a younger age (29) than any other pitcher.",
"On July 8, Kimbrel recorded his 27th save of the season, and was named to the 2018 MLB All-Star Game.",
"For the 2018 regular season, Kimbrel recorded 42 saves in 63 appearances, pitching to a 2.74 ERA with 96 strikeouts in innings.",
"In the postseason, Kimbrel recorded six saves while allowing seven earned runs in innings, as the Red Sox went on to win the World Series over the Los Angeles Dodgers in five games.",
"On November 12, Kimbrel declined Boston's one-year, $17.9 million qualifying offer, thus becoming a free agent.",
"Kimbrel did not sign with any teams during the off-season, remaining a free agent into the 2019 season.",
"Chicago Cubs (2019–2021)\nOn June 7, 2019, Kimbrel signed with the Chicago Cubs on a three-year contract, reportedly worth $43 million.",
"On June 27, he was added to the Cubs' major league roster from the Triple-A Iowa Cubs, and recorded his first save of the season, against Atlanta.",
"On August 5, 2019, he was placed on IL for a knee inflammation.",
"On August 18, 2019, he was reactivated from the IL to help the Cubs beleaguered bullpen.",
"He finished the year 0–4 with 13 saves and a 6.53 ERA in 23 games.",
"In the pandemic-shortened 2020 season, Kimbrel went 0–1 with a 5.28 ERA and recorded 28 strikeouts and 12 walks in innings.",
"On May 26, 2021, Kimbrel advanced to 11th on the all time saves list after the Cubs beat the Pirates 4–1 at Pittsburgh.",
"On June 24, 2021, Kimbrel pitched a combined no-hitter against the Los Angeles Dodgers along with Zach Davies, Ryan Tepera, and Andrew Chafin.",
"Chicago White Sox (2021–present)\nOn July 30, 2021, the Cubs traded Kimbrel to the Chicago White Sox in exchange for Nick Madrigal and Codi Heuer.",
"On November 22, the White Sox picked up his $16 million option for the 2022 season.",
"International career\nKimbrel was named the closer for Team USA in the 2013 World Baseball Classic.",
"Despite not surrendering one lead off double all year with the Braves in 2012, Kimbrel gave one up to Nelson Cruz of the Dominican Republic in their round two matchup.",
"Kimbrel would go on to give up two runs in the game, and be the losing pitcher in Team USA's 3–1 loss to the eventual champions.",
"Pitching style\nKimbrel uses a combination of a four-seam fastball and a power curveball to get outs.",
"His fastball averages and occasionally tops out at .",
"His curve, thrown with a \"spike\" grip, stays in the mid-to-upper 80s.",
"The whiff rate of his four-seamer is 33%, and the curve is at 52%.",
"This combination contributes to a career strikeouts per nine innings rate of 14.7 ().",
"He is also tied for third among all pitchers from 2002–2012 in the highest percentage of pitches that resulted in swinging strikes.",
"Kimbrel's four-seam fastball was the 12th-fastest among Major League relievers in the 2011 season.",
"In addition, he threw the hardest curveball, averaging .",
"His fastball had the fifth-highest whiff rate among relief pitchers (32%), and he also had the highest whiff rate of any reliever's curveball, at better than 55%.",
"His pre-pitch stance has also been widely noted and has been dubbed \"Kimbreling\" or \"Spider Arms\".",
"Personal life\nKimbrel has two brothers, Alan and Matt.",
"Matt Kimbrel played baseball in the Braves minor league system for three seasons before being released.",
"Kimbrel married former Wallace State cheerleader Ashley Holt in 2012.",
"The couple's daughter was born on November 3, 2017.",
"She was born with heart defects and has undergone two surgeries.",
"Kimbrel is a born again Christian: \"At one point in my life, I had everything that I wanted, but something was still missing.",
"I think that’s a story that a lot of people can tell who’ve had success, who’ve made money.",
"All those things don’t fill you.",
"They sometimes make you more empty and the only answer is Jesus and what we can do to let everyone know who He is.",
"… That is our mission as Christians is to let everyone know who Jesus is and that should be our fulfillment.\"",
"See also\n\n List of Major League Baseball single-inning strikeout leaders\n List of Major League Baseball annual saves leaders\n\nNotes\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links\n\n1988 births\nLiving people\nAmerican League All-Stars\nAtlanta Braves players\nBaseball players from Alabama\nBoston Red Sox players\nChicago Cubs players\nChicago White Sox players\nDanville Braves players\nGwinnett Braves players\nIowa Cubs players\nMajor League Baseball pitchers\nMajor League Baseball Rookie of the Year Award winners\nMississippi Braves players\nMyrtle Beach Pelicans players\nNational League All-Stars\nNational League saves champions\nPeoria Saguaros players\nRome Braves players\nSan Diego Padres players\nSportspeople from Huntsville, Alabama\nWallace State Lions baseball players\nWorld Baseball Classic players of the United States\n2013 World Baseball Classic players"
] | [
"Craig Michael Kimbrel (born May 28, 1988) is an American professional baseball pitcher.",
"He played for the San Diego Padres, Boston Red Sox, Atlanta Braves, and Chicago Cubs.",
"He is an eight-time All-Star, two-time Reliever of the Year, and a World Series champion.",
"He has a unique pre-pitch stare and is known for his triple-digit fastball.",
"He throws and bats right-handed.",
"Kimbrel set an MLB record for saves by a rookies, with 46, as a member of the Braves.",
"He won the NL's 2011 rookies of the year award.",
"He led the NL in saves for four years in a row.",
"In June 2015 he recorded his 200th save for the Padres, and in May of last year he became the youngest pitcher in MLB history to reach 300 saves.",
"Craig is the son of Mike and Sandy Kimbrel.",
"He was a quarterback for the football team at Lee High School in Alabama.",
"Kimbrel was a student at Wallace State Community College.",
"As a freshman at Wallace State, Kimbrel was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"He struck out 123 hitters in 81 appearances in 2008, mainly as a relief pitcher.",
"The Atlanta Braves selected Kimbrel in the 33rd round of the MLB draft, but he chose to stay at Wallace State in order to improve his draft position.",
"He was taken by the Braves in the third round of the 2008 MLB draft.",
"Kimbrel got his first call-up from the Braves on May 15, 2010, to replace the injured Jair Jurrjens.",
"He was called up for the second time in his career on June 4, 2010, to replace Saito, who was placed on the 15-day disabled list.",
"His first major league save was against the New York Mets.",
"Kimbrel's record for the 2010 season was 4–0, with one save and a 0.44 earned run average.",
"He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"He was the losing pitcher in the 2010 NLDS against the Giants.",
"Kimbrel was the team's primary closer in 2011.",
"He blew his first career save on April 21, 2011.",
"Kimbrel passed the record for most saves by a National League rookies before the All-Star break on June 3, 2011.",
"He is the fastest Braves pitcher to reach 100 career strikeouts.",
"The previous record was set by John Rocker, who took 70 years to reach the 100 career strikeout mark.",
"Jonathan Papelbon's record for most saves by a rookies before the All-Star break was matched by him on July 5.",
"Kimbrel's 27th save of the year against the Colorado Rockies broke Papelbon's record.",
"Kimbrel was selected to the All Star Game in his first full season in the majors.",
"Kimbrel was chosen as a replacement by the San Francisco Giants.",
"Kimbrel broke the Braves rookies record for saves in a season on July 22, 2011.",
"Kimbrel tied the National League rookies record for saves in a season on August 9, 2011.",
"He broke the record in a game against the Giants.",
"Kimbrel recorded his 100th strike out and 39th save of the season on August 21, 2011.",
"Kimbrel recorded his 40th save on August 23, 2011.",
"He broke the record with his 41st save on August 31 in a game against the Washington Nationals.",
"He was leading the majors in saves and had not given up a run in his last 34 outings.",
"Kimbrel became the first pitcher in major league history to not give up a hit in 34 consecutive appearances when he did so on the following night.",
"He was the Delivery Man of the month for August.",
"His streak of not giving up a point came to an end on September 9, 2011.",
"Kimbrel blew a save in the last game of the season for the Braves.",
"The loss knocked Atlanta out of playoff contention, completing a historic late-season collapse that wiped out an early lead of games in the National League Wild Card race.",
"Kimbrel's mediocre September (4.76 ERA) led to charges that manager Fredi Gonzlez had exhausted him over the course of the season.",
"Kimbrel finished the season tied for the National League lead with 46 saves and led the majors in strikeouts with 127.",
"The Baseball Writers' Association of America announced the results of their 2011 National League rookies of the year on November 14, and Craig Kimbrel received all 32 first-place votes for 160 points.",
"It was the first time since 1989 that two teammates took the top two spots on the same ballot.",
"The only other time two Braves finished in the top five, the organization was still located in Milwaukee and Gene Conley was voted third-best rookies of the 1954.",
"The Major League Baseball Players Association named him NL Outstanding Freshman.",
"Kimbrel made the All-Star team for the second year in a row.",
"He struck out the two batters he faced.",
"He was the Delivery Man of the month in September.",
"He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"Kimbrel was unstoppable in the 2012 season.",
"He led the National League with 42 saves in 45 opportunities.",
"He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"He became the first pitcher in history to strike out at least half the batters he faced.",
"He went to an 0–2 count on 50% of the hitters he faced.",
"Kimbrel was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"He had an earned run rate of 1.01.",
"The NL Rolaids Relief Man Award was won by him.",
"In the 2012 National League Cy Young Award voting, Kimbrel finished fifth and eighth.",
"Kimbrel had three blown saves in his first nine save opportunities, tying his personal record for the entire 2012 season.",
"Kimbrel became the second youngest player in MLB history to reach 100 saves when he did so in a game against the San Francisco Giants.",
"He became the second Atlanta pitcher after John Smoltz to have three 30-save seasons.",
"Kimbrel had a Braves record of 27 consecutive saves.",
"Kimbrel recorded his 50th save of the season on September 27 against Philadelphia.",
"He became the 11th pitcher in Major League history to have a 50-save season.",
"He was voted the Closer of the Year by the fans, media, team front-office personnel, former players, and SABR, as well as the Delivery Man of the Year.",
"Kimbrel agreed to a four-year, $42 million extension with the Braves on February 16, 2014.",
"On April 2, Kimbrel tied Gene Garber's 141 saves with the Braves, good for second in franchise history.",
"Kimbrel recorded his 142nd career save on April 4, moving into sole possession of second place.",
"Kimbrel was the fastest pitcher to reach 400 strikeouts, reaching the mark in 236 hours' worth of work.",
"Kimbrel became the new franchise leader in saves when he recorded his 155th save in a game against Arizona.",
"Kimbrel recorded his 40th save of the season.",
"He is the third pitcher to reach that milestone in four straight seasons.",
"Kimbrel finished the season with a 1.61 ERA and 95 strikeouts.",
"He became the first pitcher in four years to lead the NL in saves with 47.",
"On April 5, 2015, Kimbrel was traded to the San Diego Padres along with outfielder Melvin Upton, Jr., in exchange for the 41st overall pick in the 2015 MLB draft.",
"Kimbrel recorded his 200th career save against his former team.",
"He took only 318 games to reach that milestone.",
"In his one season with the Padres, Kimbrel made 61 appearances and recorded 39 saves while striking out 87 and walking 22.",
"On November 13, 2015, the Padres traded Kimbrel to the Boston Red Sox in exchange for five other players.",
"Kimbrel injured his knee in July of 2016",
"There was a tear in the left knee on the next day.",
"It took three to six weeks for the injury to heal.",
"He went back to the mound at the beginning of August.",
"Kimbrel made 57 regular season appearances for the Red Sox in 2016 and finished 47 games with 31 saves.",
"He had a 3.40 ERA while striking out 83 and walking 30 in 53 appearances.",
"In the 2016 American League Division Series, Kimbrel retired all four batters he faced, three by strikeout, as the Red Sox were swept by the Cleveland Indians.",
"Kimbrel changed his entry song to Ted Nugent's \"Stranglehold\" from Guns N' Roses' \"Welcome to the Jungle\".",
"On May 11, 2017, against the Milwaukee Brewers at Miller Park, Kimbrel struck out the side in the ninth on nine consecutive pitches, becoming the only pitcher in franchise history to do this.",
"Kimbrel recorded his second four-strikeout outing in two weeks against the Texas Rangers.",
"Kimbrel was named the American League Reliever of the Month for May.",
"Kimbrel made 67 regular season appearances and finished 51 games with 35 saves.",
"He had a 1.43 ERA while striking out 126 and walking 14.",
"Right-handed hitters were held to the lowest batting average by all MLB pitchers.",
"Kimbrel made two one-inning appearances in the American League Division Series, giving up four hits, one walk, and one run while recording two strikeouts, as the Red Sox lost to the Houston Astros.",
"Kimbrel recorded his 300th career save on May 5, 2018, against the Texas Rangers.",
"He achieved this milestone in less games than any other pitcher, and at a younger age.",
"Kimbrel was named to the MLB All-Star Game on July 8 after recording his 27th save of the season.",
"Kimbrel was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"In the playoffs, Kimbrel recorded six saves while allowing seven earned runs, as the Red Sox went on to win the World Series over the Los Angeles Dodgers in five games.",
"Kimbrel became a free agent after declining Boston's one-year, $17.9 million offer.",
"Kimbrel was a free agent and did not sign with any teams during the off-season.",
"Kimbrel signed a three-year contract with the Chicago Cubs on June 7, 2019.",
"He recorded his first save of the season against Atlanta on June 27 after being added to the Cubs' major league roster.",
"He was placed on IL for a knee inflammation.",
"He was activated from the IL to help the Cubs.",
"He was 0–4 with 13 saves and a 6.53 earned run average in 23 games.",
"Kimbrel went 0–1 with a 5.28 earned run average and recorded 28 strikeouts and 12 walks.",
"Kimbrel moved to 11th on the all time saves list after the Cubs beat the Pirates.",
"Kimbrel and his teammates pitched a combined no-hitter against the Los Angeles Dodgers.",
"The Cubs traded Kimbrel to the Whites in exchange for Nick Madrigal and Codi Heuer.",
"His $16 million option was picked up by the White Sox on November 22.",
"Kimbrel was named the closer for Team USA in the World Baseball Classic.",
"Kimbrel didn't give up a lead off double all year with the Braves, but he did give up one to Nelson Cruz of the Dominican Republic.",
"Kimbrel was the losing pitcher in Team USA's 3–1 loss to the eventual champion.",
"Kimbrel uses a combination of two pitches to get outs.",
"His average is 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611",
"His curve is in the mid- to-upper 80s.",
"His four-seamer has a whiff rate of 33% and a curve of 52%.",
"The combination contributes to a career strikeout rate of 14.7%.",
"He is tied for third in the highest percentage of pitches that resulted in swinging strikes from 2002 to 2012 among all pitchers.",
"Kimbrel's four-seamer was the 12th-fastest among Major League pitchers.",
"He averaged the hardest curveball.",
"He had the fifth-highest whiff rate among relief pitchers, and he also had the highest whiff rate of any relief pitcher's curveball.",
"His stance before the pitch has been dubbed \"Kimbreling\" or \"Spider Arms\".",
"Kimbrel has two brothers.",
"Kimbrel was released from the Braves minor league system after three seasons.",
"Kimbrel was married to a former Wallace State cheerleader.",
"The couple's daughter was born in November.",
"She has undergone two surgeries after being born with heart defects.",
"At one point in my life, I had everything that I wanted, but something was still missing.",
"A lot of people can tell a story about someone who has made money.",
"All those things are not enough for you.",
"When they make you more empty, the only answer is Jesus and what we can do to let everyone know who he is.",
"Our goal as Christians is to let everyone know who Jesus is and that should be our fulfillment.",
"List of Major League Baseball single-inning strikeout leaders List of Major League Baseball annual saves leaders"
] | <mask> (born May 28, 1988) is an American professional baseball pitcher for the Chicago White Sox of Major League Baseball (MLB). He previously played for the San Diego Padres, Boston Red Sox, Atlanta Braves, and Chicago Cubs. He is an eight-time All-Star, two-time Reliever of the Year, and a 2018 World Series champion. He is known for his triple-digit fastball, as well as his unique pre-pitch stare. Listed at and , he both throws and bats right-handed. As a rookie with the Braves in 2011, Kimbrel was named their closer, and set an MLB record for saves by a rookie, with 46. He was awarded the National League's (NL) 2011 Rookie of the Year Award.He led the NL in saves for four consecutive seasons (2011– 2014). He recorded his 200th save in June 2015 with the Padres, and his 300th save in May 2018 with the Red Sox, making him the youngest pitcher in MLB history to reach the milestone. Early life
<mask> is the son of Mike and <mask>. He attended Lee High School in Huntsville, Alabama, where he played baseball and was a quarterback for the football team. Kimbrel attended Wallace State Community College. While at Wallace State in 2007, Kimbrel had an 8–0 win-loss record with a 1.99 earned run average (ERA) as a freshman in 2007, serving as the team's closer and a spot starter. In 2008, he was 9–3 with a 2.88 ERA, striking out 123 hitters in 81 innings pitched, mainly as a reliever.Professional career
The Atlanta Braves selected Kimbrel in the 33rd round of the 2007 MLB draft, but he elected to remain at Wallace State in order to improve his draft position. He was then taken by the Braves in the third round, with the 96th overall selection, of the 2008 MLB draft. Atlanta Braves (2010–2014)
2010
Kimbrel got his first call-up from the Gwinnett Braves on May 15, 2010, to replace the injured Jair Jurrjens on the roster. He was called up for the second time in his career on June 4, 2010, to replace Takashi Saito, who was placed on the 15-day DL. He earned his first major league save on September 19, 2010 against the New York Mets. Kimbrel's record for the 2010 season was 4–0, with one save and a 0.44 ERA in innings. He recorded 40 strikeouts and 16 walks.In the 2010 NLDS, he was the losing pitcher in Game 3 against the eventual World Series Champion San Francisco Giants. 2011
Kimbrel made the roster to start the 2011 season as the team's primary closer. He was successful in his first four save opportunities before blowing his first career save on April 21, 2011. On June 3, 2011 in a game versus the New York Mets, Kimbrel passed the record for most saves by a National League rookie before the All-Star break. He is the fastest Braves pitcher to reach 100 career strikeouts, doing so in career innings. His new record surpassed the previous record set by John Rocker in the 1998–1999 season, where it took Rocker 70 career innings to reach the 100 career strikeout mark. On July 5, his 26th save matched Jonathan Papelbon's record for most saves by a rookie before the All-Star break.On July 7, Kimbrel's 27th save of the year against the Colorado Rockies broke Papelbon's record. Kimbrel was selected to the 2011 All Star Game during his first full season in the majors. San Francisco Giants manager Bruce Bochy chose Kimbrel as a replacement for Giants pitcher Matt Cain. On July 22, 2011 in a game versus the Cincinnati Reds, Kimbrel broke the Braves rookie record for saves in a season (31). On August 9, 2011 in a game versus the Florida Marlins, Kimbrel tied the National League rookie record for saves in a season (36 by Todd Worrell of the St. Louis Cardinals in 1986). He broke that record on August 17 in a game versus the San Francisco Giants. On August 21, 2011, Kimbrel recorded his 100th strike out which coincided with his 39th save of the season and a string of innings without yielding a run.On August 23, 2011, <mask> recorded his 40th save, tying the rookie save record of Neftalí Feliz. He subsequently broke this record with his 41st save on August 31 with two strikeouts in a game against the Washington Nationals. At the time, he led the majors in saves and had not given up a run in his last 34 innings. The following night, Kimbrel surpassed Cliff Lee's mark of 34 scoreless innings with scoreless innings for the longest scoreless streak in the majors in 2011. He was named the NL Rookie of the Month and Delivery Man of the Month for August 2011. His scoreless inning streak came to an end after innings, on September 9, 2011. The Braves' season ended when Kimbrel blew a save against the Philadelphia Phillies in the last game of the season.The loss knocked Atlanta out of playoff contention, completing a historic late-season collapse that squandered an early September lead of games in the National League Wild Card race. <mask>'s mediocre September (4.76 ERA) led to charges that manager Fredi González had overworked him over the course of the season. Kimbrel ended the season tied for the National League lead with 46 saves—surpassing the previous rookie record of 40, set by Feliz in 2010—and led major league relievers with 127 strikeouts in 77 innings. On November 14, the Baseball Writers' Association of America announced the results of their 2011 National League Rookie of the Year vote; <mask> received all 32 first-place ballots—the first unanimous selection since 2001 winner Albert Pujols—for 160 points. Freddie Freeman finished second in the voting with 21 second-place votes and seven third-place votes, for a total of 70 points—making the pair the first teammates to take the top two spots since 1989, when the Chicago Cubs' Jerome Walton and Dwight Smith came in first and second in the balloting. The only other time two Braves finished in the top five, the organization was still located in Milwaukee—Gene Conley was voted third-best rookie of the 1954 season; Hank Aaron came in fourth. He was also named the Players Choice Awards NL Outstanding Rookie by the Major League Baseball Players Association.2012
Kimbrel again made the All-Star team in 2012. He struck out the two batters he faced. He won the Delivery Man of the Month Award for September 2012. On September 26, he struck out four batters in the ninth inning. Kimbrel was thoroughly dominant throughout the 2012 season. He led the National League with 42 saves (in 45 opportunities) and Win Probability Added among pitchers. He struck out 116 batters in innings, producing a K/9 rate of 16.7.In so doing, he also became the first pitcher in history to strike out at least half the batters he faced during a season. He also went to an 0–2 count on 56% of the batters he faced. Kimbrel allowed only 3.9 hits and 2.0 walks per 9 innings he pitched, giving him a WHIP of 0.65 and a batting average against of .126. He finished with an ERA of 1.01. He won the NL Rolaids Relief Man Award. Kimbrel finished fifth in the 2012 National League Cy Young Award voting, and eighth in the 2012 National League MVP voting. 2013
Kimbrel began the 2013 season with three blown saves during his first nine save opportunities, tying his personal record for blown saves during the entire 2012 season.Nonetheless, on May 9, 2013 in a game against the San Francisco Giants, Kimbrel earned his 100th save making him the second youngest player in MLB history to reach that mark. With a save against the Cardinals on July 27, 2013, he became only the second Atlanta pitcher after John Smoltz to have three 30-save seasons. Kimbrel surpassed John Smoltz's Braves record of 27 consecutive saves on August 17, 2013. On September 27, Kimbrel recorded his 50th save of the season in a game against the Philadelphia Phillies. In doing so, he became the 11th pitcher in Major League history to have a 50-save season. He won the Delivery Man of the Year Award (across all of MLB) and also was voted the "GIBBY Awards" Closer of the Year – by the fans, media, team front-office personnel, former players, and SABR. 2014
On February 16, 2014, Kimbrel agreed to a four-year, $42 million extension with the Braves that ran through 2017, with an option for 2018.On April 2, Kimbrel tied Gene Garber's 141 saves with the Braves, good for second in franchise history. Two days later, April 4, Kimbrel recorded his 142nd career save, to move into sole possession of second place. On April 25, 2014, Kimbrel became the fastest pitcher ever to reach 400 strikeouts—reaching the mark in 236 innings' worth of work. On June 6, 2014, Kimbrel recorded his 155th save in a game against the Arizona Diamondbacks, surpassing John Smoltz as the new franchise leader in saves. On August 29, 2014, Kimbrel recorded his 40th save of the season. He became the third pitcher to reach that single-season milestone in four straight seasons. Kimbrel finished the season with a 1.61 ERA and 95 strikeouts in innings.He led the National League with 47 saves, becoming the first pitcher to lead the NL in saves for four consecutive seasons since Bruce Sutter (1979–82). San Diego Padres (2015)
On April 5, 2015, <mask> was traded to the San Diego Padres along with outfielder Melvin Upton, Jr., in exchange for Carlos Quentin, Cameron Maybin, prospects Matt Wisler, Jordan Paroubeck, and the 41st overall pick in the 2015 MLB draft. On June 8, Kimbrel recorded his 200th career save against his former team, the Braves. He became the fastest pitcher ever to reach that milestone, taking only 318 games to do so. In his one season with the Padres, Kimbrel made 61 appearances, finishing 53 games while recording 39 saves; he struck out 87 while walking 22 in innings pitched with a 2.58 ERA. Boston Red Sox (2016–2018)
On November 13, 2015, the Padres traded <mask> to the Boston Red Sox in exchange for Manuel Margot, Javy Guerra, Carlos Asuaje, and Logan Allen. 2016
On July 8, 2016, Kimbrel injured his knee while taking warmups.The next day, an MRI revealed that there was a tear in the medial meniscus of the left knee. The injury required surgery, and three to six weeks to recover. He returned to the bullpen at the start of August. For the 2016 Red Sox, Kimbrel made 57 regular season appearances, finishing 47 games while recording 31 saves. In 53 innings pitched, he had a 3.40 ERA while striking out 83 and walking 30. In the 2016 American League Division Series, Kimbrel made two appearances; he retired all four batters he faced, three by strikeout, as the Red Sox were swept by the Cleveland Indians. 2017
Going into the 2017 season, Kimbrel changed his entry song from "Welcome to the Jungle" by Guns N' Roses to Ted Nugent's "Stranglehold".On May 11, 2017, against the Milwaukee Brewers at Miller Park, Kimbrel struck out the side in the ninth inning on nine consecutive pitches, joining Pedro Martínez and Clay Buchholz as the only pitchers in franchise history to accomplish this feat, commonly referred to as an immaculate inning. Two weeks later, Kimbrel recorded a second four-strikeout inning while facing the Texas Rangers. Kimbrel was subsequently named AL Reliever of the Month for May. For the 2017 Red Sox, Kimbrel made 67 regular season appearances, finishing 51 games while recording 35 saves. In 69 innings pitched, he had a 1.43 ERA while striking out 126 and walking 14. Of all MLB pitchers, he held right-handed batters to the lowest batting average, .108 (in 30 or more innings). In the 2017 American League Division Series, Kimbrel made two one-inning appearances; he faced a total of 12 batters, giving up four hits, one walk, and one run while recording two strikeouts, as the Red Sox lost to the eventual World Series champions, the Houston Astros.2018
On May 5, 2018, facing the Texas Rangers, Kimbrel recorded his 300th career save. He achieved this milestone in fewer games (494), fewer save opportunities (330), and at a younger age (29) than any other pitcher. On July 8, Kimbrel recorded his 27th save of the season, and was named to the 2018 MLB All-Star Game. For the 2018 regular season, Kimbrel recorded 42 saves in 63 appearances, pitching to a 2.74 ERA with 96 strikeouts in innings. In the postseason, Kimbrel recorded six saves while allowing seven earned runs in innings, as the Red Sox went on to win the World Series over the Los Angeles Dodgers in five games. On November 12, Kimbrel declined Boston's one-year, $17.9 million qualifying offer, thus becoming a free agent. Kimbrel did not sign with any teams during the off-season, remaining a free agent into the 2019 season.Chicago Cubs (2019–2021)
On June 7, 2019, Kimbrel signed with the Chicago Cubs on a three-year contract, reportedly worth $43 million. On June 27, he was added to the Cubs' major league roster from the Triple-A Iowa Cubs, and recorded his first save of the season, against Atlanta. On August 5, 2019, he was placed on IL for a knee inflammation. On August 18, 2019, he was reactivated from the IL to help the Cubs beleaguered bullpen. He finished the year 0–4 with 13 saves and a 6.53 ERA in 23 games. In the pandemic-shortened 2020 season, Kimbrel went 0–1 with a 5.28 ERA and recorded 28 strikeouts and 12 walks in innings. On May 26, 2021, Kimbrel advanced to 11th on the all time saves list after the Cubs beat the Pirates 4–1 at Pittsburgh.On June 24, 2021, Kimbrel pitched a combined no-hitter against the Los Angeles Dodgers along with Zach Davies, Ryan Tepera, and Andrew Chafin. Chicago White Sox (2021–present)
On July 30, 2021, the Cubs traded <mask> to the Chicago White Sox in exchange for Nick Madrigal and Codi Heuer. On November 22, the White Sox picked up his $16 million option for the 2022 season. International career
Kimbrel was named the closer for Team USA in the 2013 World Baseball Classic. Despite not surrendering one lead off double all year with the Braves in 2012, Kimbrel gave one up to Nelson Cruz of the Dominican Republic in their round two matchup. Kimbrel would go on to give up two runs in the game, and be the losing pitcher in Team USA's 3–1 loss to the eventual champions. Pitching style
Kimbrel uses a combination of a four-seam fastball and a power curveball to get outs.His fastball averages and occasionally tops out at . His curve, thrown with a "spike" grip, stays in the mid-to-upper 80s. The whiff rate of his four-seamer is 33%, and the curve is at 52%. This combination contributes to a career strikeouts per nine innings rate of 14.7 (). He is also tied for third among all pitchers from 2002–2012 in the highest percentage of pitches that resulted in swinging strikes. Kimbrel's four-seam fastball was the 12th-fastest among Major League relievers in the 2011 season. In addition, he threw the hardest curveball, averaging .His fastball had the fifth-highest whiff rate among relief pitchers (32%), and he also had the highest whiff rate of any reliever's curveball, at better than 55%. His pre-pitch stance has also been widely noted and has been dubbed "Kimbreling" or "Spider Arms". Personal life
Kimbrel has two brothers, Alan and Matt. Matt Kimbrel played baseball in the Braves minor league system for three seasons before being released. Kimbrel married former Wallace State cheerleader Ashley Holt in 2012. The couple's daughter was born on November 3, 2017. She was born with heart defects and has undergone two surgeries.Kimbrel is a born again Christian: "At one point in my life, I had everything that I wanted, but something was still missing. I think that’s a story that a lot of people can tell who’ve had success, who’ve made money. All those things don’t fill you. They sometimes make you more empty and the only answer is Jesus and what we can do to let everyone know who He is. … That is our mission as Christians is to let everyone know who Jesus is and that should be our fulfillment." See also
List of Major League Baseball single-inning strikeout leaders
List of Major League Baseball annual saves leaders
Notes
References
External links
1988 births
Living people
American League All-Stars
Atlanta Braves players
Baseball players from Alabama
Boston Red Sox players
Chicago Cubs players
Chicago White Sox players
Danville Braves players
Gwinnett Braves players
Iowa Cubs players
Major League Baseball pitchers
Major League Baseball Rookie of the Year Award winners
Mississippi Braves players
Myrtle Beach Pelicans players
National League All-Stars
National League saves champions
Peoria Saguaros players
Rome Braves players
San Diego Padres players
Sportspeople from Huntsville, Alabama
Wallace State Lions baseball players
World Baseball Classic players of the United States
2013 World Baseball Classic players | [
"Craig Michael Kimbrel",
"Craig",
"Sandy Kimbrel",
"Kimbrel",
"Kimbrel",
"Craig Kimbrel",
"Kimbrel",
"Kimbrel",
"Kimbrel"
] | <mask> (born May 28, 1988) is an American professional baseball pitcher. He played for the San Diego Padres, Boston Red Sox, Atlanta Braves, and Chicago Cubs. He is an eight-time All-Star, two-time Reliever of the Year, and a World Series champion. He has a unique pre-pitch stare and is known for his triple-digit fastball. He throws and bats right-handed. Kimbrel set an MLB record for saves by a rookies, with 46, as a member of the Braves. He won the NL's 2011 rookies of the year award.He led the NL in saves for four years in a row. In June 2015 he recorded his 200th save for the Padres, and in May of last year he became the youngest pitcher in MLB history to reach 300 saves. <mask> is the son of Mike and <mask>. He was a quarterback for the football team at Lee High School in Alabama. Kimbrel was a student at Wallace State Community College. As a freshman at Wallace State, Kimbrel was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 He struck out 123 hitters in 81 appearances in 2008, mainly as a relief pitcher.The Atlanta Braves selected Kimbrel in the 33rd round of the MLB draft, but he chose to stay at Wallace State in order to improve his draft position. He was taken by the Braves in the third round of the 2008 MLB draft. Kimbrel got his first call-up from the Braves on May 15, 2010, to replace the injured Jair Jurrjens. He was called up for the second time in his career on June 4, 2010, to replace Saito, who was placed on the 15-day disabled list. His first major league save was against the New York Mets. Kimbrel's record for the 2010 season was 4–0, with one save and a 0.44 earned run average. He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217He was the losing pitcher in the 2010 NLDS against the Giants. Kimbrel was the team's primary closer in 2011. He blew his first career save on April 21, 2011. Kimbrel passed the record for most saves by a National League rookies before the All-Star break on June 3, 2011. He is the fastest Braves pitcher to reach 100 career strikeouts. The previous record was set by John Rocker, who took 70 years to reach the 100 career strikeout mark. Jonathan Papelbon's record for most saves by a rookies before the All-Star break was matched by him on July 5.<mask>'s 27th save of the year against the Colorado Rockies broke Papelbon's record. <mask> was selected to the All Star Game in his first full season in the majors. <mask> was chosen as a replacement by the San Francisco Giants. Kimbrel broke the Braves rookies record for saves in a season on July 22, 2011. Kimbrel tied the National League rookies record for saves in a season on August 9, 2011. He broke the record in a game against the Giants. Kimbrel recorded his 100th strike out and 39th save of the season on August 21, 2011.<mask> recorded his 40th save on August 23, 2011. He broke the record with his 41st save on August 31 in a game against the Washington Nationals. He was leading the majors in saves and had not given up a run in his last 34 outings. Kimbrel became the first pitcher in major league history to not give up a hit in 34 consecutive appearances when he did so on the following night. He was the Delivery Man of the month for August. His streak of not giving up a point came to an end on September 9, 2011. Kimbrel blew a save in the last game of the season for the Braves.The loss knocked Atlanta out of playoff contention, completing a historic late-season collapse that wiped out an early lead of games in the National League Wild Card race. <mask>'s mediocre September (4.76 ERA) led to charges that manager Fredi Gonzlez had exhausted him over the course of the season. Kimbrel finished the season tied for the National League lead with 46 saves and led the majors in strikeouts with 127. The Baseball Writers' Association of America announced the results of their 2011 National League rookies of the year on November 14, and <mask>l received all 32 first-place votes for 160 points. It was the first time since 1989 that two teammates took the top two spots on the same ballot. The only other time two Braves finished in the top five, the organization was still located in Milwaukee and Gene Conley was voted third-best rookies of the 1954. The Major League Baseball Players Association named him NL Outstanding Freshman.Kimbrel made the All-Star team for the second year in a row. He struck out the two batters he faced. He was the Delivery Man of the month in September. He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 Kimbrel was unstoppable in the 2012 season. He led the National League with 42 saves in 45 opportunities. He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217He became the first pitcher in history to strike out at least half the batters he faced. He went to an 0–2 count on 50% of the hitters he faced. Kimbrel was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 He had an earned run rate of 1.01. The NL Rolaids Relief Man Award was won by him. In the 2012 National League Cy Young Award voting, Kimbrel finished fifth and eighth. Kimbrel had three blown saves in his first nine save opportunities, tying his personal record for the entire 2012 season.Kimbrel became the second youngest player in MLB history to reach 100 saves when he did so in a game against the San Francisco Giants. He became the second Atlanta pitcher after John Smoltz to have three 30-save seasons. Kimbrel had a Braves record of 27 consecutive saves. Kimbrel recorded his 50th save of the season on September 27 against Philadelphia. He became the 11th pitcher in Major League history to have a 50-save season. He was voted the Closer of the Year by the fans, media, team front-office personnel, former players, and SABR, as well as the Delivery Man of the Year. Kimbrel agreed to a four-year, $42 million extension with the Braves on February 16, 2014.On April 2, Kimbrel tied Gene Garber's 141 saves with the Braves, good for second in franchise history. <mask> recorded his 142nd career save on April 4, moving into sole possession of second place. Kimbrel was the fastest pitcher to reach 400 strikeouts, reaching the mark in 236 hours' worth of work. Kimbrel became the new franchise leader in saves when he recorded his 155th save in a game against Arizona. Kimbrel recorded his 40th save of the season. He is the third pitcher to reach that milestone in four straight seasons. Kimbrel finished the season with a 1.61 ERA and 95 strikeouts.He became the first pitcher in four years to lead the NL in saves with 47. On April 5, 2015, Kimbrel was traded to the San Diego Padres along with outfielder Melvin Upton, Jr., in exchange for the 41st overall pick in the 2015 MLB draft. Kimbrel recorded his 200th career save against his former team. He took only 318 games to reach that milestone. In his one season with the Padres, Kimbrel made 61 appearances and recorded 39 saves while striking out 87 and walking 22. On November 13, 2015, the Padres traded Kimbrel to the Boston Red Sox in exchange for five other players. Kimbrel injured his knee in July of 2016There was a tear in the left knee on the next day. It took three to six weeks for the injury to heal. He went back to the mound at the beginning of August. Kimbrel made 57 regular season appearances for the Red Sox in 2016 and finished 47 games with 31 saves. He had a 3.40 ERA while striking out 83 and walking 30 in 53 appearances. In the 2016 American League Division Series, Kimbrel retired all four batters he faced, three by strikeout, as the Red Sox were swept by the Cleveland Indians. Kimbrel changed his entry song to Ted Nugent's "Stranglehold" from Guns N' Roses' "Welcome to the Jungle".On May 11, 2017, against the Milwaukee Brewers at Miller Park, Kimbrel struck out the side in the ninth on nine consecutive pitches, becoming the only pitcher in franchise history to do this. Kimbrel recorded his second four-strikeout outing in two weeks against the Texas Rangers. Kimbrel was named the American League Reliever of the Month for May. Kimbrel made 67 regular season appearances and finished 51 games with 35 saves. He had a 1.43 ERA while striking out 126 and walking 14. Right-handed hitters were held to the lowest batting average by all MLB pitchers. Kimbrel made two one-inning appearances in the American League Division Series, giving up four hits, one walk, and one run while recording two strikeouts, as the Red Sox lost to the Houston Astros.Kimbrel recorded his 300th career save on May 5, 2018, against the Texas Rangers. He achieved this milestone in less games than any other pitcher, and at a younger age. Kimbrel was named to the MLB All-Star Game on July 8 after recording his 27th save of the season. Kimbrel was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 In the playoffs, Kimbrel recorded six saves while allowing seven earned runs, as the Red Sox went on to win the World Series over the Los Angeles Dodgers in five games. Kimbrel became a free agent after declining Boston's one-year, $17.9 million offer. Kimbrel was a free agent and did not sign with any teams during the off-season.<mask> signed a three-year contract with the Chicago Cubs on June 7, 2019. He recorded his first save of the season against Atlanta on June 27 after being added to the Cubs' major league roster. He was placed on IL for a knee inflammation. He was activated from the IL to help the Cubs. He was 0–4 with 13 saves and a 6.53 earned run average in 23 games. Kimbrel went 0–1 with a 5.28 earned run average and recorded 28 strikeouts and 12 walks. Kimbrel moved to 11th on the all time saves list after the Cubs beat the Pirates.<mask> and his teammates pitched a combined no-hitter against the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Cubs traded Kimbrel to the Whites in exchange for Nick Madrigal and Codi Heuer. His $16 million option was picked up by the White Sox on November 22. Kimbrel was named the closer for Team USA in the World Baseball Classic. Kimbrel didn't give up a lead off double all year with the Braves, but he did give up one to Nelson Cruz of the Dominican Republic. Kimbrel was the losing pitcher in Team USA's 3–1 loss to the eventual champion. Kimbrel uses a combination of two pitches to get outs.His average is 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 His curve is in the mid- to-upper 80s. His four-seamer has a whiff rate of 33% and a curve of 52%. The combination contributes to a career strikeout rate of 14.7%. He is tied for third in the highest percentage of pitches that resulted in swinging strikes from 2002 to 2012 among all pitchers. Kimbrel's four-seamer was the 12th-fastest among Major League pitchers. He averaged the hardest curveball.He had the fifth-highest whiff rate among relief pitchers, and he also had the highest whiff rate of any relief pitcher's curveball. His stance before the pitch has been dubbed "Kimbreling" or "Spider Arms". Kimbrel has two brothers. Kimbrel was released from the Braves minor league system after three seasons. Kimbrel was married to a former Wallace State cheerleader. The couple's daughter was born in November. She has undergone two surgeries after being born with heart defects.At one point in my life, I had everything that I wanted, but something was still missing. A lot of people can tell a story about someone who has made money. All those things are not enough for you. When they make you more empty, the only answer is Jesus and what we can do to let everyone know who he is. Our goal as Christians is to let everyone know who Jesus is and that should be our fulfillment. List of Major League Baseball single-inning strikeout leaders List of Major League Baseball annual saves leaders | [
"Craig Michael Kimbrel",
"Craig",
"Sandy Kimbrel",
"Kimbrel",
"Kimbrel",
"Kimbrel",
"Kimbrel",
"Kimbrel",
"Craig Kimbre",
"Kimbrel",
"Kimbrel",
"Kimbrel"
] |
1346821 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunnar%20S%C3%B8nsteby | Gunnar Sønsteby | Gunnar Fridtjof Thurmann Sønsteby DSO ( 1918 – 10 May 2012) was a member of the Norwegian resistance movement during the German occupation of Norway in World War II. Known by the nickname "Kjakan" ("The Chin") and as "Agent No. 24", he was the most highly decorated citizen in Norway, including being the only person to have been awarded the War Cross with three swords, Norway's highest military decoration.
Early life and education
Born in Rjukan, in Telemark, he was the son of Margit and Gustav Sønsteby. As a boy he enjoyed walking in the mountains around Rjukan with his school friends, many of whom later became members of the Resistance alongside him. He attended what is now Rjukan videregående skole, earning an examen atrium. Among the members of his graduating class in 1937 were later Resistance fighters such as Knut Haugland, Halvor Rivrud, Olav Skogen, Leif Nilsen, Rolf Solem, Turjus Aarnes, Knut Berge, and Einar Nordgaard.
After graduating from gymnasium, he moved to Oslo, where he studied at Otto Treiders Business School. The next year he began studying social economy at the University of Oslo. While in Oslo he also carried out his obligatory military service and worked in a series of jobs.
Second World War
Sønsteby was working as an accountant when the Germans occupied Norway in 1940. Norway's regular armed forces surrendered on 10 June 1940, after two months of fighting, and the country was subsequently occupied by the Germans. He quickly joined the Norwegian Resistance forces in Østlandet. He fought in Philip Hansteen's ski company. He was also involved in the underground press.
In 1941 he was brought into the secret British military unit called Special Operations Executive (SOE) at their office in Stockholm. He became "Agent 24" in the SOE. While on assignment in Stockholm in 1942, he was interned and imprisoned for three months by Swedish police, but managed to convince them that he was not the same Gunnar Sønsteby for whom they were looking. Back in Norway in 1943, he was caught by the Gestapo but managed to escape and flee to Sweden. From there, he was sent to Britain, where in June of that year he enrolled in the Linge Company, which was formed to participate in British-led operations in Norway, to organise, instruct, and the lead the Norwegian Resistance Movement, to serve as a link between the home front and the outside world, and to perform intelligence work. In October, he parachuted into Norway and became a leader of the Milorg group. In that same month he also became head of the newly established Oslo Gang, a sabotage group, whose other members were Andreas Aubert, Viggo Axelsen, Gregers Gram, Henrik Hop, William Houlder, Max Manus, Martin Olsen, Arthur Pevik, Birger Rasmussen, Tor Stenersen, and Edvard Tallaksen. The British historian William Mackenzie called the Oslo Gang "the best group of saboteurs in Europe".
After saboteur training in England in 1943, he became the contact for all SOE agents in eastern Norway and head of the Norwegian Independent Company 1 group in Oslo. This group performed several spectacular acts of sabotage; among them smuggling out plates for the printing of Norwegian kroner from the Norwegian Central Bank to the exiled government in London and blowing up the office for Norwegian forced labour, thereby stopping the Nazis' plan of sending young Norwegian men to the Eastern Front.
Sønsteby's gang also carried out the "Mardonius" action, blowing up several ships in Oslo harbour in April 1943. They also attacked Kongsberg munitions factory in September 1944, destroying guns and vital machine tools. In addition, they killed several leading figures in the Occupation Forces, including the Nazi head of police in Norway, Karl Marthinsen.
Other actions included the theft of 75,000 ration books, which allowed pressure to be placed on authorities, stopping a threatened cut in rations; the destruction of sulphuric acid manufacturing facilities in Lysaker; destroying or seriously damaging over 40 aircraft, and related equipment which were being repaired at a tram company depot in Korsvoll; destroying a railway locomotive which was under repair at Skabo; destroying a number of Bofors guns, a field gun and vital machine tools at the Kongsberg arms factory; and starting a large fire in an oil storage depot at Oslo harbour which destroyed large quantities of oil and other specialist lubricants. After D-Day, Sønsteby concentrated largely on bombing Norwegian railways, thereby keeping German reinforcements from being moved back to the front line. His team also sank the German transport ship Donau outside Drobak in 1945.
Operating in occupied territory, and being high on the Gestapo list of wanted men, Sønsteby became a master of disguise. He operated under 30 to 40 different names and identities, and the Germans did not acquire his real name until near the end of the war. They were never able to catch him. His obituary in Aftenposten attributed his ability to elude capture to "resourcefulness, luck, intuition," and "such an entirely ordinary appearance that he was hardly noticed when he rode his bicycle through Oslo's streets."
Sønsteby himself explained his ability to get through the war without capture on his ability to carry out many of his actions himself and on his ability to arrange for his own ID papers. He had 20 to 30 places where he spent the night, many for only one night at a time, and never used any of them for more than a couple months. To avoid detection, he moved from flat to flat almost daily. One of his hideaways was above a bakery. "When I came to the baker's shop I always looked at the girl selling bread. If she gave a special face I would know the Germans were there. I would turn around," Sønsteby later said. Aftenposten described him as having "nerves of steel" and he himself said that he had inherited a strong psychological makeup from his parents. "I was so cold," he once said, "that some time I didn't react the way I should have." During the last six months of the war he carried a hand grenade at all times, so that he could commit suicide if he was arrested. Not until the very end of the war, he explained, did he begin to experience anxiety.
Sønsteby was a "master forger who could replicate the signature of Nazi police chief Karl Marthinsen."
As a punishment for Sønsteby's activities, his father was arrested by the Gestapo and held as a hostage for almost two years, from February 1943 to December 1944.
Assassinations of informants
When Sønsteby was 80 years old, he said "Of course wrong decisions were made, also by the Resistance Movement. But one must remember that war was going on. It did happen that we had to kill without being sure that the person concerned was an informant. But the decisions were correct—there and then."
Post-war activities
The Nazis withdrew from Norway on 8 May, and on 13 May Sønsteby led the cortege when Crown Prince Olav, the first member of the royal family to return from exile in London, arrived in Oslo. On 7 June, Sønsteby served as bodyguard for the Crown Prince and his family at the homecoming of the rest of the royal family, including King Haakon.
After the liberation of Norway, he refused job offers from both the British and Norwegian intelligence services. "I didn't want any more war," he explained. "I had had enough. I'd lost five years of my life." Instead, in the autumn of 1945, Sønsteby moved to Boston, where he worked at a government purchasing center in New York and took part in an executive study program at Harvard Business School. He worked for Standard Oil (Esso). In 1949 he returned home to Norway, where he held several major positions in private business. Later, he also worked at the Norwegian Home Front Museum.
Throughout the post war years and particularly after his retirement, Sønsteby gave many lectures in an effort to pass on the lessons of the Second World War to future generations. His credo, he said, was as follows: "As long as I live, I will tell the important facts. The historians can analyze, but I was there." Harald Stanghelle wrote in 2018 that Sønsteby was for many years a "living war encyclopedia" who helped serve as "an effective political vaccine against all forms of fascism" and who, while "factually oriented and sober," could get angry in debates at persons who tried to equate democracies with autocracies and had little patience for "historyless historians and ignorant journalists." At the same time, he minimised his own personal contributions to the war effort, saying that the merchant marines had played a more significant role in Norway's fight against the Nazi occupiers.
Two days before Sønsteby's death, Norwegian Financial Minister Sigbjørn Johnsen unveiled a statue of Sønsteby at Rjukan torg and stated, "Gunnar Sønstebye is a great hero who risked his life so that we could win our freedom and our democracy".
Honours and Awards
Captain (Kaptein) Sønsteby is the only person awarded the War Cross with Three Swords (more properly known as "War Cross with sword and two swords"). All three awards were made in 1946.
His additional recognitions include the following:
In 1945, Sønsteby was awarded the British Distinguished Service Order and the U.S. Medal of Freedom with Silver Palm.
In 2001 he was awarded the American-Scandinavian Foundation's culture award.
On 13 May 2007, a statue of him was erected on Solli plass in Oslo. The statue was sculpted by Per Ung and portrays a 25-year-old Sønsteby standing next to his bicycle. The statue was unveiled by King Harald of Norway.
Poland awarded him the Medal Pro Memoria in 2007.
On his 90th birthday on 2008, he was honoured with a reception at Akershus Fortress attended by King Harald V of Norway and the other members of the Royal Family.
In 2008 he was the first non-American awarded the United States Special Operations Command Medal.
There are monuments for him in Oslo (at Solli Plass) and in Rjukan.
In November 2011 a portrait of Sønsteby by Ross Kolby was unveiled at Norway's Restistance Museum in Oslo. It is permanently exhibited in Sønsteby's last office at Akershus Fortress.
After death
A state funeral for Sønsteby was held on 25 May 2012 in Oslo Domkirke.
Twenty-four soldiers from Hans Majestet Kongens Garde provided an honour guard, while the service was attended by the King of Norway, the Prime Minister of Norway, current and seven past Ministers of Defence, and the Chief of Defence. Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom was represented by a wreath. Several embassies to Norway were represented, including the United States Ambassador to Norway Barry B. White.
The pallbearers were six officers, a break from the norm of using soldiers drafted from the King's Guard, and as they carried the coffin from the church, four Air Force F-16s performed a missing man flypast.
A book of condolences at Armed Forces Museum in Oslo, was opened to the public on 11 May 2012.
Memorial fund
The establishment of a Gunnar Sønstebye Memorial Fund was discussed a half year before his death. The Fund was created with donations from Erling Lorentzen, Hans Hermann Horn, and the Inge Steensland Foundation. The Fund presents an annual memorial prize, the Gunnar Sønsteby Prize, consisting of a sum of money and a miniature of Per Ung's statue of Sønstebye in Studenterlunden. The prize was first awarded on 5 January 2012. The winners have included Per Edgar Kokkvold and Kristin Solberg (2015), Deeyah Khan and Trond Bakkevig (2016), and ten Norwegian veterans (2017).
In popular culture
Gunnar Sønsteby is portrayed by Knut Joner in the 2008 Norwegian World War II-biopic Max Manus.
References
External links
No24 home page
Gunnar Sønsteby — obituary in the Daily Telegraph
Gunnar Sønsteby — obituary in the Guardian
Signatories of the book of condolences at Armed Forces Museum (Norway) :
Jens Stoltenberg, Espen Barth Eide , Harald Sunde (general)
1918 births
2012 deaths
Companions of the Distinguished Service Order
Norwegian Army personnel of World War II
People from Rjukan
University of Oslo alumni
Harvard Business School alumni
Norwegian resistance members
World War II resistance press activists
Norwegian World War II memoirists
Recipients of the War Cross with Sword (Norway)
Recipients of the Medal of Freedom | [
"Gunnar Fridtjof Thurmann Sønsteby DSO ( 1918 – 10 May 2012) was a member of the Norwegian resistance movement during the German occupation of Norway in World War II.",
"Known by the nickname \"Kjakan\" (\"The Chin\") and as \"Agent No.",
"24\", he was the most highly decorated citizen in Norway, including being the only person to have been awarded the War Cross with three swords, Norway's highest military decoration.",
"Early life and education \nBorn in Rjukan, in Telemark, he was the son of Margit and Gustav Sønsteby.",
"As a boy he enjoyed walking in the mountains around Rjukan with his school friends, many of whom later became members of the Resistance alongside him.",
"He attended what is now Rjukan videregående skole, earning an examen atrium.",
"Among the members of his graduating class in 1937 were later Resistance fighters such as Knut Haugland, Halvor Rivrud, Olav Skogen, Leif Nilsen, Rolf Solem, Turjus Aarnes, Knut Berge, and Einar Nordgaard.",
"After graduating from gymnasium, he moved to Oslo, where he studied at Otto Treiders Business School.",
"The next year he began studying social economy at the University of Oslo.",
"While in Oslo he also carried out his obligatory military service and worked in a series of jobs.",
"Second World War\nSønsteby was working as an accountant when the Germans occupied Norway in 1940.",
"Norway's regular armed forces surrendered on 10 June 1940, after two months of fighting, and the country was subsequently occupied by the Germans.",
"He quickly joined the Norwegian Resistance forces in Østlandet.",
"He fought in Philip Hansteen's ski company.",
"He was also involved in the underground press.",
"In 1941 he was brought into the secret British military unit called Special Operations Executive (SOE) at their office in Stockholm.",
"He became \"Agent 24\" in the SOE.",
"While on assignment in Stockholm in 1942, he was interned and imprisoned for three months by Swedish police, but managed to convince them that he was not the same Gunnar Sønsteby for whom they were looking.",
"Back in Norway in 1943, he was caught by the Gestapo but managed to escape and flee to Sweden.",
"From there, he was sent to Britain, where in June of that year he enrolled in the Linge Company, which was formed to participate in British-led operations in Norway, to organise, instruct, and the lead the Norwegian Resistance Movement, to serve as a link between the home front and the outside world, and to perform intelligence work.",
"In October, he parachuted into Norway and became a leader of the Milorg group.",
"In that same month he also became head of the newly established Oslo Gang, a sabotage group, whose other members were Andreas Aubert, Viggo Axelsen, Gregers Gram, Henrik Hop, William Houlder, Max Manus, Martin Olsen, Arthur Pevik, Birger Rasmussen, Tor Stenersen, and Edvard Tallaksen.",
"The British historian William Mackenzie called the Oslo Gang \"the best group of saboteurs in Europe\".",
"After saboteur training in England in 1943, he became the contact for all SOE agents in eastern Norway and head of the Norwegian Independent Company 1 group in Oslo.",
"This group performed several spectacular acts of sabotage; among them smuggling out plates for the printing of Norwegian kroner from the Norwegian Central Bank to the exiled government in London and blowing up the office for Norwegian forced labour, thereby stopping the Nazis' plan of sending young Norwegian men to the Eastern Front.",
"Sønsteby's gang also carried out the \"Mardonius\" action, blowing up several ships in Oslo harbour in April 1943.",
"They also attacked Kongsberg munitions factory in September 1944, destroying guns and vital machine tools.",
"In addition, they killed several leading figures in the Occupation Forces, including the Nazi head of police in Norway, Karl Marthinsen.",
"Other actions included the theft of 75,000 ration books, which allowed pressure to be placed on authorities, stopping a threatened cut in rations; the destruction of sulphuric acid manufacturing facilities in Lysaker; destroying or seriously damaging over 40 aircraft, and related equipment which were being repaired at a tram company depot in Korsvoll; destroying a railway locomotive which was under repair at Skabo; destroying a number of Bofors guns, a field gun and vital machine tools at the Kongsberg arms factory; and starting a large fire in an oil storage depot at Oslo harbour which destroyed large quantities of oil and other specialist lubricants.",
"After D-Day, Sønsteby concentrated largely on bombing Norwegian railways, thereby keeping German reinforcements from being moved back to the front line.",
"His team also sank the German transport ship Donau outside Drobak in 1945.",
"Operating in occupied territory, and being high on the Gestapo list of wanted men, Sønsteby became a master of disguise.",
"He operated under 30 to 40 different names and identities, and the Germans did not acquire his real name until near the end of the war.",
"They were never able to catch him.",
"His obituary in Aftenposten attributed his ability to elude capture to \"resourcefulness, luck, intuition,\" and \"such an entirely ordinary appearance that he was hardly noticed when he rode his bicycle through Oslo's streets.\"",
"Sønsteby himself explained his ability to get through the war without capture on his ability to carry out many of his actions himself and on his ability to arrange for his own ID papers.",
"He had 20 to 30 places where he spent the night, many for only one night at a time, and never used any of them for more than a couple months.",
"To avoid detection, he moved from flat to flat almost daily.",
"One of his hideaways was above a bakery.",
"\"When I came to the baker's shop I always looked at the girl selling bread.",
"If she gave a special face I would know the Germans were there.",
"I would turn around,\" Sønsteby later said.",
"Aftenposten described him as having \"nerves of steel\" and he himself said that he had inherited a strong psychological makeup from his parents.",
"\"I was so cold,\" he once said, \"that some time I didn't react the way I should have.\"",
"During the last six months of the war he carried a hand grenade at all times, so that he could commit suicide if he was arrested.",
"Not until the very end of the war, he explained, did he begin to experience anxiety.",
"Sønsteby was a \"master forger who could replicate the signature of Nazi police chief Karl Marthinsen.\"",
"As a punishment for Sønsteby's activities, his father was arrested by the Gestapo and held as a hostage for almost two years, from February 1943 to December 1944.",
"Assassinations of informants\nWhen Sønsteby was 80 years old, he said \"Of course wrong decisions were made, also by the Resistance Movement.",
"But one must remember that war was going on.",
"It did happen that we had to kill without being sure that the person concerned was an informant.",
"But the decisions were correct—there and then.\"",
"Post-war activities\nThe Nazis withdrew from Norway on 8 May, and on 13 May Sønsteby led the cortege when Crown Prince Olav, the first member of the royal family to return from exile in London, arrived in Oslo.",
"On 7 June, Sønsteby served as bodyguard for the Crown Prince and his family at the homecoming of the rest of the royal family, including King Haakon.",
"After the liberation of Norway, he refused job offers from both the British and Norwegian intelligence services.",
"\"I didn't want any more war,\" he explained.",
"\"I had had enough.",
"I'd lost five years of my life.\"",
"Instead, in the autumn of 1945, Sønsteby moved to Boston, where he worked at a government purchasing center in New York and took part in an executive study program at Harvard Business School.",
"He worked for Standard Oil (Esso).",
"In 1949 he returned home to Norway, where he held several major positions in private business.",
"Later, he also worked at the Norwegian Home Front Museum.",
"Throughout the post war years and particularly after his retirement, Sønsteby gave many lectures in an effort to pass on the lessons of the Second World War to future generations.",
"His credo, he said, was as follows: \"As long as I live, I will tell the important facts.",
"The historians can analyze, but I was there.\"",
"Harald Stanghelle wrote in 2018 that Sønsteby was for many years a \"living war encyclopedia\" who helped serve as \"an effective political vaccine against all forms of fascism\" and who, while \"factually oriented and sober,\" could get angry in debates at persons who tried to equate democracies with autocracies and had little patience for \"historyless historians and ignorant journalists.\"",
"At the same time, he minimised his own personal contributions to the war effort, saying that the merchant marines had played a more significant role in Norway's fight against the Nazi occupiers.",
"Two days before Sønsteby's death, Norwegian Financial Minister Sigbjørn Johnsen unveiled a statue of Sønsteby at Rjukan torg and stated, \"Gunnar Sønstebye is a great hero who risked his life so that we could win our freedom and our democracy\".",
"Honours and Awards \nCaptain (Kaptein) Sønsteby is the only person awarded the War Cross with Three Swords (more properly known as \"War Cross with sword and two swords\").",
"All three awards were made in 1946.",
"His additional recognitions include the following:\n In 1945, Sønsteby was awarded the British Distinguished Service Order and the U.S. Medal of Freedom with Silver Palm.",
"In 2001 he was awarded the American-Scandinavian Foundation's culture award.",
"On 13 May 2007, a statue of him was erected on Solli plass in Oslo.",
"The statue was sculpted by Per Ung and portrays a 25-year-old Sønsteby standing next to his bicycle.",
"The statue was unveiled by King Harald of Norway.",
"Poland awarded him the Medal Pro Memoria in 2007.",
"On his 90th birthday on 2008, he was honoured with a reception at Akershus Fortress attended by King Harald V of Norway and the other members of the Royal Family.",
"In 2008 he was the first non-American awarded the United States Special Operations Command Medal.",
"There are monuments for him in Oslo (at Solli Plass) and in Rjukan.",
"In November 2011 a portrait of Sønsteby by Ross Kolby was unveiled at Norway's Restistance Museum in Oslo.",
"It is permanently exhibited in Sønsteby's last office at Akershus Fortress.",
"After death\nA state funeral for Sønsteby was held on 25 May 2012 in Oslo Domkirke.",
"Twenty-four soldiers from Hans Majestet Kongens Garde provided an honour guard, while the service was attended by the King of Norway, the Prime Minister of Norway, current and seven past Ministers of Defence, and the Chief of Defence.",
"Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom was represented by a wreath.",
"Several embassies to Norway were represented, including the United States Ambassador to Norway Barry B.",
"White.",
"The pallbearers were six officers, a break from the norm of using soldiers drafted from the King's Guard, and as they carried the coffin from the church, four Air Force F-16s performed a missing man flypast.",
"A book of condolences at Armed Forces Museum in Oslo, was opened to the public on 11 May 2012.",
"Memorial fund \nThe establishment of a Gunnar Sønstebye Memorial Fund was discussed a half year before his death.",
"The Fund was created with donations from Erling Lorentzen, Hans Hermann Horn, and the Inge Steensland Foundation.",
"The Fund presents an annual memorial prize, the Gunnar Sønsteby Prize, consisting of a sum of money and a miniature of Per Ung's statue of Sønstebye in Studenterlunden.",
"The prize was first awarded on 5 January 2012.",
"The winners have included Per Edgar Kokkvold and Kristin Solberg (2015), Deeyah Khan and Trond Bakkevig (2016), and ten Norwegian veterans (2017).",
"In popular culture\nGunnar Sønsteby is portrayed by Knut Joner in the 2008 Norwegian World War II-biopic Max Manus.",
"References\n\nExternal links\n\n No24 home page \n Gunnar Sønsteby — obituary in the Daily Telegraph\n Gunnar Sønsteby — obituary in the Guardian\n\nSignatories of the book of condolences at Armed Forces Museum (Norway) :\nJens Stoltenberg, Espen Barth Eide , Harald Sunde (general) \n\n1918 births\n2012 deaths\nCompanions of the Distinguished Service Order\nNorwegian Army personnel of World War II\nPeople from Rjukan\nUniversity of Oslo alumni\nHarvard Business School alumni\nNorwegian resistance members\nWorld War II resistance press activists\nNorwegian World War II memoirists\nRecipients of the War Cross with Sword (Norway)\nRecipients of the Medal of Freedom"
] | [
"During the German occupation of Norway in World War II, a member of the Norwegian resistance movement was named Gunnar Fridtjof Thurmann Snsteby DSO.",
"\"Kjakan\" is also known as \"Agent No.\"",
"He was the most decorated citizen in Norway and the only one to have been awarded the War Cross with three swords.",
"He was the son of Margit and Gustav Snsteby and was born in Rjukan.",
"Many of his school friends became members of the Resistance as a result of walking in the mountains with him.",
"He earned an examen atrium after attending what is now Rjukan.",
"Resistance fighters such as Knut Haugland, Halvor Rivrud, Olav Skogen, Leif Nilsen, Rolf Solem, Turjus Aarnes, and Knut Berge were members of his graduating class in 1937.",
"He studied at the Otto Treiders Business School after graduating from the gymnasium.",
"He began studying the social economy at the university.",
"He had to serve in the military and worked in a number of jobs.",
"When the Germans occupied Norway in 1940, Snsteby was an accountant.",
"The country was occupied by the Germans after two months of fighting on June 10, 1940.",
"He joined the Norwegian Resistance quickly.",
"He was a member of Philip Hansteen's ski company.",
"He was involved in the underground press.",
"He was brought into the secret British military unit called Special Operations Executive in 1941.",
"He became an agent in the SOE.",
"While on assignment in Stockholm in 1942, he was imprisoned for three months by Swedish police, but was able to convince them that he was not the same person as the one they were looking for.",
"He escaped from the Gestapo in Norway in 1943 and went to Sweden.",
"In June of that year, he was sent to Britain, where he joined the Linge Company, which was formed to participate in British-led operations in Norway, to serve as a link between the home front and the Norwegian Resistance movement.",
"He became the leader of the group after he parachuted into Norway.",
"He became head of the newly established Oslo Gang, a sabotage group, in that same month.",
"The best group of saboteurs in Europe, according to a British historian.",
"After saboteur training in England, he became the contact for all SOE agents in eastern Norway and the head of the Norwegian Independent Company 1 group.",
"The group smuggled out plates for the printing of Norwegian kroner from the Norwegian Central Bank to the exiled government in London and blew up the office for Norwegian forced labour in order to stop the Nazis from sending young Norwegian men to the Eastern Front.",
"The \"Mardonius\" action was carried out by Snsteby's gang in April 1943.",
"They destroyed guns and vital machine tools when they attacked Kongsberg in 1944.",
"The Nazi head of police in Norway, Karl Marthinsen, was killed by them.",
"The theft of 75,000 ration books, which allowed pressure to be placed on authorities, was one of the actions.",
"Snsteby kept German reinforcements from being moved back to the front line by bombing Norwegian railways.",
"The German transport ship Donau was sunk by his team.",
"Snsteby was high on the Gestapo list and became a master of disguise.",
"The Germans did not get to know his real name until after the war ended.",
"They couldn't catch him.",
"His ability to evade capture was attributed to \"resourcefulness, luck, intuition, and an entirely ordinary appearance that he was hardly noticed when he rode his bicycle through the streets\" in his obituary.",
"Snsteby explained his ability to get through the war without being captured, his ability to carry out many of his actions himself, and his ability to arrange for his own ID papers.",
"He had up to 30 places where he spent the night, many for only one night at a time, and never used any of them for more than a couple months.",
"He moved from flat to flat to avoid detection.",
"He had a hideaway above a bakery.",
"I looked at the girl selling bread when I came to the baker's shop.",
"I would know the Germans were there if she gave a special face.",
"Snsteby said that he would turn around.",
"He said that he had a strong psychological makeup from his parents, and that he had been described as having \"nerves of steel\".",
"He once said that he was so cold that he didn't react the way he should have.",
"During the last six months of the war, he carried a hand grenade so that he could commit suicide if arrested.",
"He said that he did not experience anxiety until the end of the war.",
"Snsteby could duplicate the signature of Nazi police chief Karl Marthinsen.",
"After Snsteby's activities, his father was arrested by the Gestapo and held as a hostage for almost two years.",
"He said that wrong decisions were made by the Resistance Movement when he was 80 years old.",
"One must remember that the war was going on.",
"We had to kill someone without being sure that they were an Informant.",
"The decisions were correct.",
"Crown Prince Olav, the first member of the royal family to return from exile in London, arrived in Norway on 13 May after the Nazis withdrew from the country on 8 May.",
"Snsteby was bodyguard for the Crown Prince and his family at the return of the rest of the royal family.",
"He refused job offers from both the British and Norwegian intelligence services after the liberation of Norway.",
"He said he didn't want another war.",
"I had run out of time.",
"I had lost five years of my life.",
"Instead, in the autumn of 1945, Snsteby moved to Boston, where he worked at a government purchasing center in New York and took part in an executive study program at Harvard Business School.",
"He was employed by Standard Oil.",
"He held several major positions in private business when he returned to Norway in 1949.",
"He worked at the Norwegian Home Front Museum.",
"Snsteby gave many lectures in an effort to pass on the lessons of the Second World War to future generations.",
"\"As long as I live, I will tell the important facts,\" he said.",
"The historians can look at it, but I was there.",
"For many years, Snsteby was a \"living war encyclopedia\" who helped serve as an effective political vaccine against all forms of fascism and who could get angry in debates at people who tried to undermine him.",
"He minimized his own contributions to the war effort, saying that the merchant marines played a more significant role in the fight against the Nazi occupiers.",
"Two days before Snsteby's death, Norwegian Financial Minister Sigbjrn Johnsen unveiled a statue of Snsteby at Rjukan torg.",
"Captain (Kaptein) Snsteby is the only person to have received the War Cross with three swords.",
"The awards were made in 1946.",
"The U.S. medal of freedom with silver palm was awarded to Snsteby in 1945.",
"He received the American-Scandinavian Foundation's culture award in 2001.",
"A statue of him was built on Solli plass.",
"The statue depicts Snsteby standing next to his bicycle and was sculpted by Per Ung.",
"The King of Norway unveiled the statue.",
"He received the Medal Pro Memoria from Poland.",
"On his 90th birthday in 2008, he was honoured with a reception at Akershus Fortress attended by King Harald V of Norway and other members of the Royal Family.",
"He was the first non-American to receive the United States Special Operations Command medal.",
"There are monuments for him in Rjukan.",
"A portrait of Snsteby was unveiled in November of 2011.",
"Snsteby's last office is at Akershus Fortress.",
"On May 25, 2012 a state funeral was held for Snsteby.",
"The service was attended by the King of Norway, the Prime Minister of Norway, current and seven past Ministers of Defence, and the Chief of Defence.",
"The wreath represented Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom.",
"The United States Ambassador to Norway was present.",
"White.",
"The pallbearers were six officers, a break from the norm of using soldiers drafted from the King's Guard, and as they carried the coffin from the church, four Air Force F-16s performed a missing man flypast.",
"The public was able to read the book at the museum.",
"The establishment of a memorial fund was discussed a half year before his death.",
"The Fund was created with donations.",
"The annual memorial prize is a sum of money and a miniature of Per Ung's statue of Snstebye.",
"On January 5, 2012 the prize was awarded.",
"There have been winners in each of the last two years.",
"The 2008 Norwegian World War II-biopic Max Manus features Knut Joner as Gunnar Snsteby.",
"The obituary of Gunnar Snsteby was published in the Daily Telegraph and in the Guardian."
] | <mask> DSO ( 1918 – 10 May 2012) was a member of the Norwegian resistance movement during the German occupation of Norway in World War II. Known by the nickname "Kjakan" ("The Chin") and as "Agent No. 24", he was the most highly decorated citizen in Norway, including being the only person to have been awarded the War Cross with three swords, Norway's highest military decoration. Early life and education
Born in Rjukan, in Telemark, he was the son of Margit and <mask>. As a boy he enjoyed walking in the mountains around Rjukan with his school friends, many of whom later became members of the Resistance alongside him. He attended what is now Rjukan videregående skole, earning an examen atrium. Among the members of his graduating class in 1937 were later Resistance fighters such as Knut Haugland, Halvor Rivrud, Olav Skogen, Leif Nilsen, Rolf Solem, Turjus Aarnes, Knut Berge, and Einar Nordgaard.After graduating from gymnasium, he moved to Oslo, where he studied at Otto Treiders Business School. The next year he began studying social economy at the University of Oslo. While in Oslo he also carried out his obligatory military service and worked in a series of jobs. Second World War
Sønsteby was working as an accountant when the Germans occupied Norway in 1940. Norway's regular armed forces surrendered on 10 June 1940, after two months of fighting, and the country was subsequently occupied by the Germans. He quickly joined the Norwegian Resistance forces in Østlandet. He fought in Philip Hansteen's ski company.He was also involved in the underground press. In 1941 he was brought into the secret British military unit called Special Operations Executive (SOE) at their office in Stockholm. He became "Agent 24" in the SOE. While on assignment in Stockholm in 1942, he was interned and imprisoned for three months by Swedish police, but managed to convince them that he was not the same <mask> Sønsteby for whom they were looking. Back in Norway in 1943, he was caught by the Gestapo but managed to escape and flee to Sweden. From there, he was sent to Britain, where in June of that year he enrolled in the Linge Company, which was formed to participate in British-led operations in Norway, to organise, instruct, and the lead the Norwegian Resistance Movement, to serve as a link between the home front and the outside world, and to perform intelligence work. In October, he parachuted into Norway and became a leader of the Milorg group.In that same month he also became head of the newly established Oslo Gang, a sabotage group, whose other members were Andreas Aubert, Viggo Axelsen, Gregers Gram, Henrik Hop, William Houlder, Max Manus, Martin Olsen, Arthur Pevik, Birger Rasmussen, Tor Stenersen, and Edvard Tallaksen. The British historian William Mackenzie called the Oslo Gang "the best group of saboteurs in Europe". After saboteur training in England in 1943, he became the contact for all SOE agents in eastern Norway and head of the Norwegian Independent Company 1 group in Oslo. This group performed several spectacular acts of sabotage; among them smuggling out plates for the printing of Norwegian kroner from the Norwegian Central Bank to the exiled government in London and blowing up the office for Norwegian forced labour, thereby stopping the Nazis' plan of sending young Norwegian men to the Eastern Front. Sønsteby's gang also carried out the "Mardonius" action, blowing up several ships in Oslo harbour in April 1943. They also attacked Kongsberg munitions factory in September 1944, destroying guns and vital machine tools. In addition, they killed several leading figures in the Occupation Forces, including the Nazi head of police in Norway, Karl Marthinsen.Other actions included the theft of 75,000 ration books, which allowed pressure to be placed on authorities, stopping a threatened cut in rations; the destruction of sulphuric acid manufacturing facilities in Lysaker; destroying or seriously damaging over 40 aircraft, and related equipment which were being repaired at a tram company depot in Korsvoll; destroying a railway locomotive which was under repair at Skabo; destroying a number of Bofors guns, a field gun and vital machine tools at the Kongsberg arms factory; and starting a large fire in an oil storage depot at Oslo harbour which destroyed large quantities of oil and other specialist lubricants. After D-Day, Sønsteby concentrated largely on bombing Norwegian railways, thereby keeping German reinforcements from being moved back to the front line. His team also sank the German transport ship Donau outside Drobak in 1945. Operating in occupied territory, and being high on the Gestapo list of wanted men, Sønsteby became a master of disguise. He operated under 30 to 40 different names and identities, and the Germans did not acquire his real name until near the end of the war. They were never able to catch him. His obituary in Aftenposten attributed his ability to elude capture to "resourcefulness, luck, intuition," and "such an entirely ordinary appearance that he was hardly noticed when he rode his bicycle through Oslo's streets."<mask> himself explained his ability to get through the war without capture on his ability to carry out many of his actions himself and on his ability to arrange for his own ID papers. He had 20 to 30 places where he spent the night, many for only one night at a time, and never used any of them for more than a couple months. To avoid detection, he moved from flat to flat almost daily. One of his hideaways was above a bakery. "When I came to the baker's shop I always looked at the girl selling bread. If she gave a special face I would know the Germans were there. I would turn around," Sønsteby later said.Aftenposten described him as having "nerves of steel" and he himself said that he had inherited a strong psychological makeup from his parents. "I was so cold," he once said, "that some time I didn't react the way I should have." During the last six months of the war he carried a hand grenade at all times, so that he could commit suicide if he was arrested. Not until the very end of the war, he explained, did he begin to experience anxiety. Sønsteby was a "master forger who could replicate the signature of Nazi police chief Karl Marthinsen." As a punishment for Sønsteby's activities, his father was arrested by the Gestapo and held as a hostage for almost two years, from February 1943 to December 1944. Assassinations of informants
When Sønsteby was 80 years old, he said "Of course wrong decisions were made, also by the Resistance Movement.But one must remember that war was going on. It did happen that we had to kill without being sure that the person concerned was an informant. But the decisions were correct—there and then." Post-war activities
The Nazis withdrew from Norway on 8 May, and on 13 May Sønsteby led the cortege when Crown Prince Olav, the first member of the royal family to return from exile in London, arrived in Oslo. On 7 June, Sønsteby served as bodyguard for the Crown Prince and his family at the homecoming of the rest of the royal family, including King Haakon. After the liberation of Norway, he refused job offers from both the British and Norwegian intelligence services. "I didn't want any more war," he explained."I had had enough. I'd lost five years of my life." Instead, in the autumn of 1945, Sønsteby moved to Boston, where he worked at a government purchasing center in New York and took part in an executive study program at Harvard Business School. He worked for Standard Oil (Esso). In 1949 he returned home to Norway, where he held several major positions in private business. Later, he also worked at the Norwegian Home Front Museum. Throughout the post war years and particularly after his retirement, Sønsteby gave many lectures in an effort to pass on the lessons of the Second World War to future generations.His credo, he said, was as follows: "As long as I live, I will tell the important facts. The historians can analyze, but I was there." Harald Stanghelle wrote in 2018 that Sønsteby was for many years a "living war encyclopedia" who helped serve as "an effective political vaccine against all forms of fascism" and who, while "factually oriented and sober," could get angry in debates at persons who tried to equate democracies with autocracies and had little patience for "historyless historians and ignorant journalists." At the same time, he minimised his own personal contributions to the war effort, saying that the merchant marines had played a more significant role in Norway's fight against the Nazi occupiers. Two days before Sønsteby's death, Norwegian Financial Minister Sigbjørn Johnsen unveiled a statue of Sønsteby at Rjukan torg and stated, "<mask> <mask> is a great hero who risked his life so that we could win our freedom and our democracy". Honours and Awards
Captain (Kaptein) Sønsteby is the only person awarded the War Cross with Three Swords (more properly known as "War Cross with sword and two swords"). All three awards were made in 1946.His additional recognitions include the following:
In 1945, Sønsteby was awarded the British Distinguished Service Order and the U.S. Medal of Freedom with Silver Palm. In 2001 he was awarded the American-Scandinavian Foundation's culture award. On 13 May 2007, a statue of him was erected on Solli plass in Oslo. The statue was sculpted by Per Ung and portrays a 25-year-old Sønsteby standing next to his bicycle. The statue was unveiled by King Harald of Norway. Poland awarded him the Medal Pro Memoria in 2007. On his 90th birthday on 2008, he was honoured with a reception at Akershus Fortress attended by King Harald V of Norway and the other members of the Royal Family.In 2008 he was the first non-American awarded the United States Special Operations Command Medal. There are monuments for him in Oslo (at Solli Plass) and in Rjukan. In November 2011 a portrait of Sønsteby by Ross Kolby was unveiled at Norway's Restistance Museum in Oslo. It is permanently exhibited in Sønsteby's last office at Akershus Fortress. After death
A state funeral for Sønsteby was held on 25 May 2012 in Oslo Domkirke. Twenty-four soldiers from Hans Majestet Kongens Garde provided an honour guard, while the service was attended by the King of Norway, the Prime Minister of Norway, current and seven past Ministers of Defence, and the Chief of Defence. Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom was represented by a wreath.Several embassies to Norway were represented, including the United States Ambassador to Norway Barry B. White. The pallbearers were six officers, a break from the norm of using soldiers drafted from the King's Guard, and as they carried the coffin from the church, four Air Force F-16s performed a missing man flypast. A book of condolences at Armed Forces Museum in Oslo, was opened to the public on 11 May 2012. Memorial fund
The establishment of a Gunnar Sønstebye Memorial Fund was discussed a half year before his death. The Fund was created with donations from Erling Lorentzen, Hans Hermann Horn, and the Inge Steensland Foundation. The Fund presents an annual memorial prize, the Gunnar Sønsteby Prize, consisting of a sum of money and a miniature of Per Ung's statue of Sønstebye in Studenterlunden.The prize was first awarded on 5 January 2012. The winners have included Per Edgar Kokkvold and Kristin Solberg (2015), Deeyah Khan and Trond Bakkevig (2016), and ten Norwegian veterans (2017). In popular culture
<mask> <mask> is portrayed by Knut Joner in the 2008 Norwegian World War II-biopic Max Manus. References
External links
No24 home page
<mask> <mask> — obituary in the Daily Telegraph
<mask> <mask> — obituary in the Guardian
Signatories of the book of condolences at Armed Forces Museum (Norway) :
Jens Stoltenberg, Espen Barth Eide , Harald Sunde (general)
1918 births
2012 deaths
Companions of the Distinguished Service Order
Norwegian Army personnel of World War II
People from Rjukan
University of Oslo alumni
Harvard Business School alumni
Norwegian resistance members
World War II resistance press activists
Norwegian World War II memoirists
Recipients of the War Cross with Sword (Norway)
Recipients of the Medal of Freedom | [
"Gunnar Fridtjof Thurmann Sønsteby",
"Gustav Sønsteby",
"Gunnar",
"Sønsteby",
"Gunnar",
"Sønstebye",
"Gunnar",
"Sønsteby",
"Gunnar",
"Sønsteby",
"Gunnar",
"Sønsteby"
] | During the German occupation of Norway in World War II, a member of the Norwegian resistance movement was named <mask>eby DSO. "Kjakan" is also known as "Agent No." He was the most decorated citizen in Norway and the only one to have been awarded the War Cross with three swords. He was the son of Margit and Gustav Snsteby and was born in Rjukan. Many of his school friends became members of the Resistance as a result of walking in the mountains with him. He earned an examen atrium after attending what is now Rjukan. Resistance fighters such as Knut Haugland, Halvor Rivrud, Olav Skogen, Leif Nilsen, Rolf Solem, Turjus Aarnes, and Knut Berge were members of his graduating class in 1937.He studied at the Otto Treiders Business School after graduating from the gymnasium. He began studying the social economy at the university. He had to serve in the military and worked in a number of jobs. When the Germans occupied Norway in 1940, Snsteby was an accountant. The country was occupied by the Germans after two months of fighting on June 10, 1940. He joined the Norwegian Resistance quickly. He was a member of Philip Hansteen's ski company.He was involved in the underground press. He was brought into the secret British military unit called Special Operations Executive in 1941. He became an agent in the SOE. While on assignment in Stockholm in 1942, he was imprisoned for three months by Swedish police, but was able to convince them that he was not the same person as the one they were looking for. He escaped from the Gestapo in Norway in 1943 and went to Sweden. In June of that year, he was sent to Britain, where he joined the Linge Company, which was formed to participate in British-led operations in Norway, to serve as a link between the home front and the Norwegian Resistance movement. He became the leader of the group after he parachuted into Norway.He became head of the newly established Oslo Gang, a sabotage group, in that same month. The best group of saboteurs in Europe, according to a British historian. After saboteur training in England, he became the contact for all SOE agents in eastern Norway and the head of the Norwegian Independent Company 1 group. The group smuggled out plates for the printing of Norwegian kroner from the Norwegian Central Bank to the exiled government in London and blew up the office for Norwegian forced labour in order to stop the Nazis from sending young Norwegian men to the Eastern Front. The "Mardonius" action was carried out by Snsteby's gang in April 1943. They destroyed guns and vital machine tools when they attacked Kongsberg in 1944. The Nazi head of police in Norway, Karl Marthinsen, was killed by them.The theft of 75,000 ration books, which allowed pressure to be placed on authorities, was one of the actions. Snsteby kept German reinforcements from being moved back to the front line by bombing Norwegian railways. The German transport ship Donau was sunk by his team. Snsteby was high on the Gestapo list and became a master of disguise. The Germans did not get to know his real name until after the war ended. They couldn't catch him. His ability to evade capture was attributed to "resourcefulness, luck, intuition, and an entirely ordinary appearance that he was hardly noticed when he rode his bicycle through the streets" in his obituary.Snsteby explained his ability to get through the war without being captured, his ability to carry out many of his actions himself, and his ability to arrange for his own ID papers. He had up to 30 places where he spent the night, many for only one night at a time, and never used any of them for more than a couple months. He moved from flat to flat to avoid detection. He had a hideaway above a bakery. I looked at the girl selling bread when I came to the baker's shop. I would know the Germans were there if she gave a special face. Snsteby said that he would turn around.He said that he had a strong psychological makeup from his parents, and that he had been described as having "nerves of steel". He once said that he was so cold that he didn't react the way he should have. During the last six months of the war, he carried a hand grenade so that he could commit suicide if arrested. He said that he did not experience anxiety until the end of the war. Snsteby could duplicate the signature of Nazi police chief Karl Marthinsen. After Snsteby's activities, his father was arrested by the Gestapo and held as a hostage for almost two years. He said that wrong decisions were made by the Resistance Movement when he was 80 years old.One must remember that the war was going on. We had to kill someone without being sure that they were an Informant. The decisions were correct. Crown Prince Olav, the first member of the royal family to return from exile in London, arrived in Norway on 13 May after the Nazis withdrew from the country on 8 May. Snsteby was bodyguard for the Crown Prince and his family at the return of the rest of the royal family. He refused job offers from both the British and Norwegian intelligence services after the liberation of Norway. He said he didn't want another war.I had run out of time. I had lost five years of my life. Instead, in the autumn of 1945, Snsteby moved to Boston, where he worked at a government purchasing center in New York and took part in an executive study program at Harvard Business School. He was employed by Standard Oil. He held several major positions in private business when he returned to Norway in 1949. He worked at the Norwegian Home Front Museum. Snsteby gave many lectures in an effort to pass on the lessons of the Second World War to future generations."As long as I live, I will tell the important facts," he said. The historians can look at it, but I was there. For many years, Snsteby was a "living war encyclopedia" who helped serve as an effective political vaccine against all forms of fascism and who could get angry in debates at people who tried to undermine him. He minimized his own contributions to the war effort, saying that the merchant marines played a more significant role in the fight against the Nazi occupiers. Two days before Snsteby's death, Norwegian Financial Minister Sigbjrn Johnsen unveiled a statue of Snsteby at Rjukan torg. Captain (Kaptein) Snsteby is the only person to have received the War Cross with three swords. The awards were made in 1946.The U.S. medal of freedom with silver palm was awarded to Snsteby in 1945. He received the American-Scandinavian Foundation's culture award in 2001. A statue of him was built on Solli plass. The statue depicts Snsteby standing next to his bicycle and was sculpted by Per Ung. The King of Norway unveiled the statue. He received the Medal Pro Memoria from Poland. On his 90th birthday in 2008, he was honoured with a reception at Akershus Fortress attended by King Harald V of Norway and other members of the Royal Family.He was the first non-American to receive the United States Special Operations Command medal. There are monuments for him in Rjukan. A portrait of Snsteby was unveiled in November of 2011. Snsteby's last office is at Akershus Fortress. On May 25, 2012 a state funeral was held for Snsteby. The service was attended by the King of Norway, the Prime Minister of Norway, current and seven past Ministers of Defence, and the Chief of Defence. The wreath represented Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom.The United States Ambassador to Norway was present. White. The pallbearers were six officers, a break from the norm of using soldiers drafted from the King's Guard, and as they carried the coffin from the church, four Air Force F-16s performed a missing man flypast. The public was able to read the book at the museum. The establishment of a memorial fund was discussed a half year before his death. The Fund was created with donations. The annual memorial prize is a sum of money and a miniature of Per Ung's statue of Snstebye.On January 5, 2012 the prize was awarded. There have been winners in each of the last two years. The 2008 Norwegian World War II-biopic Max Manus features Knut Joner as <mask> Snsteby. The obituary of <mask> Snsteby was published in the Daily Telegraph and in the Guardian. | [
"Gunnar Fridtjof Thurmann Snst",
"Gunnar",
"Gunnar"
] |
30696273 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alena%20Zavarzina | Alena Zavarzina | Alena Igorevna Zavarzina (; born 27 May 1989) is a Russian former snowboarder specializing in parallel slalom and parallel giant slalom disciplines. She is the 2011 World champion and bronze medalist from the 2014 Winter Olympics in parallel giant slalom. She won the parallel giant slalom crystal globe in 2016/17 World Cup season.
Career
Zavarzina started snowboarding at the age of 10 in her hometown Novosibirsk. She was participating in big air competitions before switching to the alpine snowboarding. She made her first appearance in National Championships as an 11-year-old, in 2000.
Early years: Europa Cup success
Zavarzina made her World Cup debut on 23 October 2006 in a parallel slalom race in Landgraaf where she finished in 31st place and scored her first World Cup points. It was her only World Cup start of the season and she mainly participated in Europa Cup for the next couple of seasons. She won three Europa Cup races during the 2007/08 season and placed third in the overall rankings. She won a bronze medal in parallel giant slalom at the 2008 Junior World Championships in Valmalenco. In the following season, despite managing only one victory in Europa Cup, Zavarzina reached the podium five times and finished the season as the runner-up in the overall standings. With that promising performances in the Europa Cup, Zavarzina was given a spot in the parallel giant slalom race at the 2009 World Championships in Gangwon, but she was unable to qualify for the elimination round after finishing 21st in qualification round. At the 2009 Junior World Championships in Nagano, she won a silver medal in parallel slalom, the discipline that she made only one podium in her Europa Cup career. She made four appearances in the World Cup during the 2008/09 season but passed the qualification round only once, in Landgraaf where she made her World Cup debut.
2009–2011: Breakthrough and World Championship title
Zavarzina became a regular World Cup competitor in 2009/10 season. She won her first World Cup victory in a parallel giant slalom race in Telluride, Colorado which was also her first World Cup podium. She reached a podium one more time during the season with a runner-up finish in Stoneham, Canada and finished the season in eighth-place in the parallel overall rankings. At the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, Zavarzina made the 17th quickest time in the qualification round and missed out to advance for the elimination round by seven hundredths of a second as a fastest loser while her teammate Yekaterina Ilyukhina winning the silver medal.
Zavarzina started 2010/11 season in very good form with two podiums from her first two races. By doing so, she reached a podium in a parallel slalom race for the first time in her career and became the part of the Russian podium sweep in Limone Piemonte, the first ever in the history of the Parallel World Cup. At the 2011 World Championships in La Molina, Zavarzina won the gold medal in the parallel giant slalom and became the second ever Russian snowboarder to claim a World title after Yekaterina Tudegesheva who won the gold medal, also in parallel giant slalom, in 2007. In the parallel slalom event, Zavarzina tore ligaments in her right knee and sustained a season-ending injury during the qualification round after setting the fastest time in the first run of the qualification in blue course. After her success in World Championships, Zavarzina was awarded the title of Honoured Master of Sports of Russia.
2011–2014: Injury comeback and Olympic bronze medal
After returning from the injury, Zavarzina struggled to regain her form throughout the 2011/12 season, her eighth-place finish in Telluride was her best performance of the season. In the following season, her results started to improve. Although she did not manage to reach World Cup podium during the season, she made a couple of fourth-place finishes in Bad Gastein and Arosa. At the 2013 World Championships in Stoneham, Zavarzina was unable to defend her World title and eliminated in the quarter finals in the parallel giant slalom event. In the parallel slalom, she was knocked out from the competition in the first elimination round.
Zavarzina has not started well to 2013/14 season and failed to pass the qualification round in her first three World Cup races. During the parallel slalom race in Bad Gastein on 12 January 2014, a month before the Olympics was due to begin, she took a heavy fall and broke her left arm. She competed with a brace on her left arm at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi and won a bronze medal in the parallel giant slalom, just a few minutes before her husband Vic Wild claimed the gold medal in the same discipline. This was only the second time a husband and wife had won medals in the same event at the Olympic Winter Games. Three days later in the inaugural Olympic parallel slalom, she was eliminated in the 1/8 finals by the eventual champion Julia Dujmovits and placed thirteenth while her husband went on to win the gold medal in the men's event. After the Olympics, Zavarzina received the Order "For Merit to the Fatherland" (second class) for "her great contribution to the development of physical culture and sports, with high sporting achievements at the 2014 Winter Olympic Games in Sochi".
2014–2017: World Championship medals and first World Cup title
After more than four years without a podium in World Cup level, Zavarzina returned to the World Cup podium with a third-place finish in the parallel slalom race in Montafon at the beginning of the 2014/15 season. At the 2015 World Championships in Kreischberg, she won a silver medal in parallel giant slalom after losing to Claudia Riegler in the repeat of the 2011 final, and finished fifth in the parallel slalom. She reached her second World Cup podium of the season at the season finale in Winterberg, and finished the season in thirteenth place in the overall World Cup standings.
In 2015/16 season, Zavarzina won her second career World Cup victory, this time in parallel slalom, in Winterberg which was also her sole World Cup podium of the season. At the end of the season she finished eighth in the overall rankings, her highest since 2009/10 season.
Zavarzina's best season in terms of World Cup results came in the 2016/17 season. She won two World Cup parallel giant slalom races in Bansko and Bokwang, the latter was also the test event for the upcoming Winter Olympic Games, and grabbed one more podium spot in the same discipline with a third place-finish in the season-opener in Carezza. Although her podiums came in parallel giant slalom, she won a bronze medal in the parallel slalom at the 2017 World Championships in Sierra Nevada which was her first senior medal in this discipline. With this medal, Zavarzina completed the full set of medals (gold, silver and bronze) from the World Championships. In the parallel giant slalom event, Zavarzina set the second fastest time in the qualification round but lost to her teammate Yekaterina Tudegesheva in the quarter finals. At the end of the season, Zavarzina clinched the parallel giant slalom crystal globe for the first time in her career. She was also leading the parallel overall World Cup standings by a slim margin over Ester Ledecká prior to the season finale in Winterberg, but Ledecká finished as the runner-up in the last race of the season while Zavarzina was seventh and claimed the overall crystal globe ahead of Zavarzina.
2017–2018: Third Winter Olympics and retirement
Zavarzina opened the 2017/18 season with a promising fourth-place finish in the first race of the season in Carezza, but she had a poor run of results in the following World Cup races. She reached her first podium of the season in Rogla in the parallel giant slalom race through the end of January. She backed that up with another fourth-place finish in the same discipline in Bansko, the last World Cup stage before the Olympic Games.
Zavarzina was one of the Russian athletes that permitted by the IOC to participate at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang under the neutral flag. She said that in the course of preparation for the Olympics she had to "sign a lot of unpleasant papers" and claimed that "unequal conditions" have been created for Russian athletes. At the Olympics, she qualified for the main round in the parallel giant slalom by setting the second fastest time in qualification but missed the medals after falling in both semi final and bronze medal final and finished in fourth-place. She told in an interview that during her time in Pyeongchang, she has taken three doping tests in the early hours of the morning in the period of one week.
After the Olympics, Zavarzina skipped the World Cup event in Kayseri, stating that the Parallel Giant Slalom title is already out of her reach and she need to recover herself after the Games. She returned to World Cup podium in Scuol with a runner-up finish in parallel giant slalom, losing to Ledecká by 0.02 seconds in the final. She was also second in the last race of the season, parallel slalom in Winterberg, and finished the season in sixth-place in the overall World Cup standings.
On 31 August 2018, Zavarzina announced her retirement with a written manifesto which was published on the website of Match TV in which she explained her reasons for retirement. She confirmed that she has not been paid a salary since 2017 and stated that she will not receive a presidential scholarship for her results in 2017 and 2018, as well as funding for 2019 unless she undergo the in-depth medical examination and pass. She added that passing this medical examination is impossible for her since her medical condition is no longer suitable for sports due to the tightening of the rules by the FMBA (Federal Medical-Biological Agency), although her condition have remained unchanged in the last two years. She said that she was in exactly the same situation last year and still went to the Olympics although according to the rules she did not have the right to be in the Russian national team. She also criticized the Russian Ministry of Sports and Russian Snowboard Federation for their lack of support for the sport and empty promises through the years.
Personal life
Zavarzina was born in Novosibirsk. She studied visual arts in the Novosibirsk branch of
the Moscow State Pedagogical University before transferring to the Moscow branch of the university. She graduated from the management department of the Moscow Technological Institute in 2017. After her retirement from competitive snowboarding, Zavarzina entered Central Saint Martins College of Arts and Design with the aim of becoming an art director in the future.
Since 2011, Zavarzina is married to double Olympic champion Vic Wild, a former member of the U.S snowboard team who is now competing for Russia after receiving a Russian citizenship in 2012. Prior to the Winter Olympics in Sochi, she and her husband signed a contract with Petrodvorets Watch Factory, the factory that manufactures the Raketa watches. She has become the face of the company's advertising campaign and a member of the board of directors while her husband was appointed a strategic director of the factory. She's the brand ambassador for Toyota Russia, Tag Heuer, S7 Airlines and Zasport, the official outfitter of the Russian Olympic team. On 28 May 2017, she was appointed to the International Ski Federation (FIS) Athletes' Commission as an elected member for a two-year term. She's also one of the ambassadors of the 2019 Winter Universiade which was held in Krasnoyarsk in March 2019.
In her spare time, Zavarzina likes to photograph and paint.
World Cup results
All results are sourced from the International Ski Federation (FIS).
Season titles
1 titles – (1 parallel giant slalom)
Season standings
Race podiums
4 wins – (1 PSL, 3 PGS)
13 podiums – (5 PSL, 8 PGS)
Olympic results
1 medal – (1 bronze)
World Championships results
3 medals – (1 gold, 1 silver, 1 bronze)
References
External links
1989 births
Living people
Olympic snowboarders of Russia
Sportspeople from Novosibirsk
Russian female snowboarders
Snowboarders at the 2010 Winter Olympics
Snowboarders at the 2014 Winter Olympics
Snowboarders at the 2018 Winter Olympics
Medalists at the 2014 Winter Olympics
Olympic bronze medalists for Russia
Olympic medalists in snowboarding | [
"Alena Igorevna Zavarzina (; born 27 May 1989) is a Russian former snowboarder specializing in parallel slalom and parallel giant slalom disciplines.",
"She is the 2011 World champion and bronze medalist from the 2014 Winter Olympics in parallel giant slalom.",
"She won the parallel giant slalom crystal globe in 2016/17 World Cup season.",
"Career\nZavarzina started snowboarding at the age of 10 in her hometown Novosibirsk.",
"She was participating in big air competitions before switching to the alpine snowboarding.",
"She made her first appearance in National Championships as an 11-year-old, in 2000.",
"Early years: Europa Cup success\nZavarzina made her World Cup debut on 23 October 2006 in a parallel slalom race in Landgraaf where she finished in 31st place and scored her first World Cup points.",
"It was her only World Cup start of the season and she mainly participated in Europa Cup for the next couple of seasons.",
"She won three Europa Cup races during the 2007/08 season and placed third in the overall rankings.",
"She won a bronze medal in parallel giant slalom at the 2008 Junior World Championships in Valmalenco.",
"In the following season, despite managing only one victory in Europa Cup, Zavarzina reached the podium five times and finished the season as the runner-up in the overall standings.",
"With that promising performances in the Europa Cup, Zavarzina was given a spot in the parallel giant slalom race at the 2009 World Championships in Gangwon, but she was unable to qualify for the elimination round after finishing 21st in qualification round.",
"At the 2009 Junior World Championships in Nagano, she won a silver medal in parallel slalom, the discipline that she made only one podium in her Europa Cup career.",
"She made four appearances in the World Cup during the 2008/09 season but passed the qualification round only once, in Landgraaf where she made her World Cup debut.",
"2009–2011: Breakthrough and World Championship title\nZavarzina became a regular World Cup competitor in 2009/10 season.",
"She won her first World Cup victory in a parallel giant slalom race in Telluride, Colorado which was also her first World Cup podium.",
"She reached a podium one more time during the season with a runner-up finish in Stoneham, Canada and finished the season in eighth-place in the parallel overall rankings.",
"At the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, Zavarzina made the 17th quickest time in the qualification round and missed out to advance for the elimination round by seven hundredths of a second as a fastest loser while her teammate Yekaterina Ilyukhina winning the silver medal.",
"Zavarzina started 2010/11 season in very good form with two podiums from her first two races.",
"By doing so, she reached a podium in a parallel slalom race for the first time in her career and became the part of the Russian podium sweep in Limone Piemonte, the first ever in the history of the Parallel World Cup.",
"At the 2011 World Championships in La Molina, Zavarzina won the gold medal in the parallel giant slalom and became the second ever Russian snowboarder to claim a World title after Yekaterina Tudegesheva who won the gold medal, also in parallel giant slalom, in 2007.",
"In the parallel slalom event, Zavarzina tore ligaments in her right knee and sustained a season-ending injury during the qualification round after setting the fastest time in the first run of the qualification in blue course.",
"After her success in World Championships, Zavarzina was awarded the title of Honoured Master of Sports of Russia.",
"2011–2014: Injury comeback and Olympic bronze medal\nAfter returning from the injury, Zavarzina struggled to regain her form throughout the 2011/12 season, her eighth-place finish in Telluride was her best performance of the season.",
"In the following season, her results started to improve.",
"Although she did not manage to reach World Cup podium during the season, she made a couple of fourth-place finishes in Bad Gastein and Arosa.",
"At the 2013 World Championships in Stoneham, Zavarzina was unable to defend her World title and eliminated in the quarter finals in the parallel giant slalom event.",
"In the parallel slalom, she was knocked out from the competition in the first elimination round.",
"Zavarzina has not started well to 2013/14 season and failed to pass the qualification round in her first three World Cup races.",
"During the parallel slalom race in Bad Gastein on 12 January 2014, a month before the Olympics was due to begin, she took a heavy fall and broke her left arm.",
"She competed with a brace on her left arm at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi and won a bronze medal in the parallel giant slalom, just a few minutes before her husband Vic Wild claimed the gold medal in the same discipline.",
"This was only the second time a husband and wife had won medals in the same event at the Olympic Winter Games.",
"Three days later in the inaugural Olympic parallel slalom, she was eliminated in the 1/8 finals by the eventual champion Julia Dujmovits and placed thirteenth while her husband went on to win the gold medal in the men's event.",
"After the Olympics, Zavarzina received the Order \"For Merit to the Fatherland\" (second class) for \"her great contribution to the development of physical culture and sports, with high sporting achievements at the 2014 Winter Olympic Games in Sochi\".",
"2014–2017: World Championship medals and first World Cup title\nAfter more than four years without a podium in World Cup level, Zavarzina returned to the World Cup podium with a third-place finish in the parallel slalom race in Montafon at the beginning of the 2014/15 season.",
"At the 2015 World Championships in Kreischberg, she won a silver medal in parallel giant slalom after losing to Claudia Riegler in the repeat of the 2011 final, and finished fifth in the parallel slalom.",
"She reached her second World Cup podium of the season at the season finale in Winterberg, and finished the season in thirteenth place in the overall World Cup standings.",
"In 2015/16 season, Zavarzina won her second career World Cup victory, this time in parallel slalom, in Winterberg which was also her sole World Cup podium of the season.",
"At the end of the season she finished eighth in the overall rankings, her highest since 2009/10 season.",
"Zavarzina's best season in terms of World Cup results came in the 2016/17 season.",
"She won two World Cup parallel giant slalom races in Bansko and Bokwang, the latter was also the test event for the upcoming Winter Olympic Games, and grabbed one more podium spot in the same discipline with a third place-finish in the season-opener in Carezza.",
"Although her podiums came in parallel giant slalom, she won a bronze medal in the parallel slalom at the 2017 World Championships in Sierra Nevada which was her first senior medal in this discipline.",
"With this medal, Zavarzina completed the full set of medals (gold, silver and bronze) from the World Championships.",
"In the parallel giant slalom event, Zavarzina set the second fastest time in the qualification round but lost to her teammate Yekaterina Tudegesheva in the quarter finals.",
"At the end of the season, Zavarzina clinched the parallel giant slalom crystal globe for the first time in her career.",
"She was also leading the parallel overall World Cup standings by a slim margin over Ester Ledecká prior to the season finale in Winterberg, but Ledecká finished as the runner-up in the last race of the season while Zavarzina was seventh and claimed the overall crystal globe ahead of Zavarzina.",
"2017–2018: Third Winter Olympics and retirement\nZavarzina opened the 2017/18 season with a promising fourth-place finish in the first race of the season in Carezza, but she had a poor run of results in the following World Cup races.",
"She reached her first podium of the season in Rogla in the parallel giant slalom race through the end of January.",
"She backed that up with another fourth-place finish in the same discipline in Bansko, the last World Cup stage before the Olympic Games.",
"Zavarzina was one of the Russian athletes that permitted by the IOC to participate at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang under the neutral flag.",
"She said that in the course of preparation for the Olympics she had to \"sign a lot of unpleasant papers\" and claimed that \"unequal conditions\" have been created for Russian athletes.",
"At the Olympics, she qualified for the main round in the parallel giant slalom by setting the second fastest time in qualification but missed the medals after falling in both semi final and bronze medal final and finished in fourth-place.",
"She told in an interview that during her time in Pyeongchang, she has taken three doping tests in the early hours of the morning in the period of one week.",
"After the Olympics, Zavarzina skipped the World Cup event in Kayseri, stating that the Parallel Giant Slalom title is already out of her reach and she need to recover herself after the Games.",
"She returned to World Cup podium in Scuol with a runner-up finish in parallel giant slalom, losing to Ledecká by 0.02 seconds in the final.",
"She was also second in the last race of the season, parallel slalom in Winterberg, and finished the season in sixth-place in the overall World Cup standings.",
"On 31 August 2018, Zavarzina announced her retirement with a written manifesto which was published on the website of Match TV in which she explained her reasons for retirement.",
"She confirmed that she has not been paid a salary since 2017 and stated that she will not receive a presidential scholarship for her results in 2017 and 2018, as well as funding for 2019 unless she undergo the in-depth medical examination and pass.",
"She added that passing this medical examination is impossible for her since her medical condition is no longer suitable for sports due to the tightening of the rules by the FMBA (Federal Medical-Biological Agency), although her condition have remained unchanged in the last two years.",
"She said that she was in exactly the same situation last year and still went to the Olympics although according to the rules she did not have the right to be in the Russian national team.",
"She also criticized the Russian Ministry of Sports and Russian Snowboard Federation for their lack of support for the sport and empty promises through the years.",
"Personal life\n\nZavarzina was born in Novosibirsk.",
"She studied visual arts in the Novosibirsk branch of \nthe Moscow State Pedagogical University before transferring to the Moscow branch of the university.",
"She graduated from the management department of the Moscow Technological Institute in 2017.",
"After her retirement from competitive snowboarding, Zavarzina entered Central Saint Martins College of Arts and Design with the aim of becoming an art director in the future.",
"Since 2011, Zavarzina is married to double Olympic champion Vic Wild, a former member of the U.S snowboard team who is now competing for Russia after receiving a Russian citizenship in 2012.",
"Prior to the Winter Olympics in Sochi, she and her husband signed a contract with Petrodvorets Watch Factory, the factory that manufactures the Raketa watches.",
"She has become the face of the company's advertising campaign and a member of the board of directors while her husband was appointed a strategic director of the factory.",
"She's the brand ambassador for Toyota Russia, Tag Heuer, S7 Airlines and Zasport, the official outfitter of the Russian Olympic team.",
"On 28 May 2017, she was appointed to the International Ski Federation (FIS) Athletes' Commission as an elected member for a two-year term.",
"She's also one of the ambassadors of the 2019 Winter Universiade which was held in Krasnoyarsk in March 2019.",
"In her spare time, Zavarzina likes to photograph and paint.",
"World Cup results\nAll results are sourced from the International Ski Federation (FIS).",
"Season titles\n 1 titles – (1 parallel giant slalom)\n\nSeason standings\n\nRace podiums\n 4 wins – (1 PSL, 3 PGS)\n 13 podiums – (5 PSL, 8 PGS)\n\nOlympic results \n 1 medal – (1 bronze)\n\nWorld Championships results\n 3 medals – (1 gold, 1 silver, 1 bronze)\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links\n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\n1989 births\nLiving people\nOlympic snowboarders of Russia\nSportspeople from Novosibirsk\nRussian female snowboarders\nSnowboarders at the 2010 Winter Olympics\nSnowboarders at the 2014 Winter Olympics\nSnowboarders at the 2018 Winter Olympics\nMedalists at the 2014 Winter Olympics\nOlympic bronze medalists for Russia\nOlympic medalists in snowboarding"
] | [
"Alena Zavarzina is a Russian snowboarder who specializes in parallel slalom and parallel giant slalom disciplines.",
"She won a bronze medal in the Winter Olympics in parallel giant slalom.",
"She won the parallel giant slalom crystal globe.",
"Zavarzina started snowboarding at the age of 10.",
"She switched to snowboarding after competing in big air contests.",
"She made her first appearance in the National Championships at the age of 11.",
"Zavarzina made her World Cup debut on October 23, 2006 in a parallel slalom race in Landgraaf, where she finished in 31st place and scored her first World Cup points.",
"It was her only World Cup start of the season and she mainly participated in theEuropa Cup for the next couple of seasons.",
"She placed third in the overall rankings after winning three races in the 2007/08 season.",
"She won a bronze medal in the parallel giant slalom at the Junior World Championships.",
"Zavarzina reached the podium five times and finished the season as the runner-up despite only winning one game.",
"Zavarzina was given a spot in the parallel giant slalom race at the World Championships in Gangwon, but she was unable to qualify for the elimination round after finishing 21st in the qualification round.",
"She won a silver medal in parallel slalom at the Junior World Championships in 2009, her only podium finish in her career.",
"During the 2008/09 season, she made four appearances in the World Cup, but only passed the qualification round once.",
"Zavarzina became a regular World Cup competitor in the 2010 season.",
"She won her first World Cup victory in a parallel giant slalom race in Colorado.",
"She reached a podium one more time during the season with a runner-up finish in Stoneham, Canada, and finished the season in eighth-place in the parallel overall rankings.",
"Zavarzina missed out on the elimination round by seven hundredths of a second because she was the fastest loser in the qualification round.",
"Zavarzina had a good start to the season with two podiums from her first two races.",
"She became part of the Russian podium sweep in Limone Piemonte, the first ever in the history of the Parallel World Cup, by reaching a podium in a parallel slalom race for the first time in her career.",
"Zavarzina became the second Russian snowboarder to win a World title after Yekaterina Tudegesheva who won the gold medal in parallel giant slalom in 2007.",
"After setting the fastest time in the first run of the qualification in the blue course, Zavarzina injured her knee and will miss the rest of the season.",
"Zavarzina was awarded the title of Honoured Master of Sports of Russia after her success in the World Championships.",
"After returning from an injury, Zavarzina struggled to regain her form, but her eighth-place finish in Telluride was her best performance of the season.",
"Her results improved in the following season.",
"She made a couple of fourth-place finishes in Bad Gastein and Arosa, despite not reaching a World Cup podium.",
"At the World Championships in Stoneham, Zavarzina was unable to defend her title and was eliminated in the quarter finals.",
"She was knocked out in the first round of the parallel slalom.",
"Zavarzina failed to pass the qualification round in her first three World Cup races.",
"She broke her arm during the parallel slalom race in Bad Gastein a month before the Olympics began.",
"A few minutes before her husband won the gold medal in the parallel giant slalom at the Winter Olympics, she won a bronze medal with a brace on her left arm.",
"The first time a husband and wife won medals in the same event was at the Olympics.",
"While her husband won the gold medal in the men's event, she was eliminated in the first round of the parallel slalom by Julia Dujmovits, who went on to win the gold medal.",
"The Order \"For Merit to the Fatherland\" was given to Zavarzina for her contribution to the development of physical culture and sports.",
"After more than four years without a podium in World Cup level, Zavarzina returned to the World Cup podium with a third-place finish in the parallel slalom race in Montafon at the beginning of the 2014/15 season.",
"She won a silver medal in parallel giant slalom at the World Championships in 2015, after losing in the repeat of the 2011 final, and finished fifth in the parallel slalom.",
"At the season finale in Winterberg, she reached her second World Cup podium of the season and finished the season in 13th place.",
"Zavarzina won her second career World Cup victory in parallel slalom in Winterberg, which was her sole World Cup podium of the season.",
"She finished eighth in the overall rankings at the end of the season.",
"The best World Cup season for Zavarzina was in the 2016/17 season.",
"She won two World Cup parallel giant slalom races in Bansko and Bokwang, the latter was also the test event for the upcoming Winter Olympic Games, and grabbed one more podium spot in the same discipline with a third place-finish in the season-opener in Carezza.",
"She won a bronze medal in the parallel slalom at the World Championships in Sierra Nevada, which was her first senior medal in this discipline.",
"Zavarzina won gold, silver and bronze at the World Championships.",
"Zavarzina set the second fastest time in the qualification round but lost to her teammate in the quarter finals.",
"Zavarzina won the parallel giant slalom crystal globe for the first time in her career.",
"She was leading the parallel World Cup by a slim margin over Ledeck prior to the season finale in Winterberg, but Ledeck finished as the runner-up in the last race of the season while Zavarzina claimed the overall crystal globe.",
"The third Winter Olympics and retirement of Zavarzina began with a fourth-place finish in the first race of the season in Carezza, but she had a poor run of results in the following World Cup races.",
"She finished third in the parallel giant slalom race at the end of January.",
"She finished fourth in the same discipline in the last World Cup stage before the Olympics.",
"One of the Russian athletes that were allowed by the IOC to participate in the Winter Olympics in South Korea was Zavarzina.",
"She said that she had to sign a lot of unpleasant papers in order to get ready for the Olympics.",
"At the Olympics, she qualified for the main round in the parallel giant slalom by setting the second fastest time in qualification but missed the medals after falling in both semi final and bronze medal final.",
"During her time in the Olympics, she has taken three drug tests in the early hours of the morning.",
"Zavarzina decided to skip the World Cup event in Kayseri because the Parallel Giant Slalom title is out of her reach.",
"She finished second in the parallel giant slalom and lost to Ledeck in the final.",
"In the last race of the season, parallel slalom in Winterberg, she was second and finished the season in sixth place.",
"Zavarzina explained her reasons for retirement in a written manifesto which was published on the website of Match TV.",
"She has not been paid a salary since the beginning of the year and will not receive a presidential scholarship for her results in the next two years unless she passes a medical exam.",
"She said that since her medical condition is no longer suitable for sports, it is impossible for her to pass the medical examination.",
"She said that she did not have the right to be in the Russian national team, but still went to the Olympics.",
"She criticized the Russian Ministry of Sports and Russian Snowboard Federation for their lack of support for the sport.",
"Zavarzina was born in Novosibirsk.",
"She studied visual arts at the Novosibirsk branch of the Moscow State Pedagogical University.",
"She graduated from the management department of the Moscow Technological Institute.",
"Zavarzina entered the Central Saint Martins College of Arts and Design in order to become an art director in the future.",
"Zavarzina is married to Vic Wild, a former member of the U.S snowboard team who is now competing for Russia after receiving a Russian citizenship.",
"The Raketa watches were manufactured by the Petrodvorets Watch Factory, which she and her husband signed a contract with prior to the Winter Olympics.",
"While her husband was appointed a strategic director of the factory, she became the face of the company's advertising campaign and a member of the board of directors.",
"She is the brand ambassador for Toyota Russia, Tag Heuer, S7 Airlines and Zasport.",
"She was appointed to the International Ski Federation's Athletes' Commission as an elected member for two years.",
"The Winter Universiade was held in Krasnoyarsk in March of 2019.",
"Zavarzina likes to photograph and paint.",
"The results are from the International Ski Federation.",
"The season ended with 1 parallel giant slalom title."
] | <mask>na <mask> (; born 27 May 1989) is a Russian former snowboarder specializing in parallel slalom and parallel giant slalom disciplines. She is the 2011 World champion and bronze medalist from the 2014 Winter Olympics in parallel giant slalom. She won the parallel giant slalom crystal globe in 2016/17 World Cup season. Career
<mask> started snowboarding at the age of 10 in her hometown Novosibirsk. She was participating in big air competitions before switching to the alpine snowboarding. She made her first appearance in National Championships as an 11-year-old, in 2000. Early years: Europa Cup success
<mask> made her World Cup debut on 23 October 2006 in a parallel slalom race in Landgraaf where she finished in 31st place and scored her first World Cup points.It was her only World Cup start of the season and she mainly participated in Europa Cup for the next couple of seasons. She won three Europa Cup races during the 2007/08 season and placed third in the overall rankings. She won a bronze medal in parallel giant slalom at the 2008 Junior World Championships in Valmalenco. In the following season, despite managing only one victory in Europa Cup, <mask> reached the podium five times and finished the season as the runner-up in the overall standings. With that promising performances in the Europa Cup, <mask> was given a spot in the parallel giant slalom race at the 2009 World Championships in Gangwon, but she was unable to qualify for the elimination round after finishing 21st in qualification round. At the 2009 Junior World Championships in Nagano, she won a silver medal in parallel slalom, the discipline that she made only one podium in her Europa Cup career. She made four appearances in the World Cup during the 2008/09 season but passed the qualification round only once, in Landgraaf where she made her World Cup debut.2009–2011: Breakthrough and World Championship title
<mask> became a regular World Cup competitor in 2009/10 season. She won her first World Cup victory in a parallel giant slalom race in Telluride, Colorado which was also her first World Cup podium. She reached a podium one more time during the season with a runner-up finish in Stoneham, Canada and finished the season in eighth-place in the parallel overall rankings. At the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, <mask> made the 17th quickest time in the qualification round and missed out to advance for the elimination round by seven hundredths of a second as a fastest loser while her teammate Yekaterina Ilyukhina winning the silver medal. <mask> started 2010/11 season in very good form with two podiums from her first two races. By doing so, she reached a podium in a parallel slalom race for the first time in her career and became the part of the Russian podium sweep in Limone Piemonte, the first ever in the history of the Parallel World Cup. At the 2011 World Championships in La Molina, <mask> won the gold medal in the parallel giant slalom and became the second ever Russian snowboarder to claim a World title after Yekaterina Tudegesheva who won the gold medal, also in parallel giant slalom, in 2007.In the parallel slalom event, <mask> tore ligaments in her right knee and sustained a season-ending injury during the qualification round after setting the fastest time in the first run of the qualification in blue course. After her success in World Championships, <mask> was awarded the title of Honoured Master of Sports of Russia. 2011–2014: Injury comeback and Olympic bronze medal
After returning from the injury, <mask> struggled to regain her form throughout the 2011/12 season, her eighth-place finish in Telluride was her best performance of the season. In the following season, her results started to improve. Although she did not manage to reach World Cup podium during the season, she made a couple of fourth-place finishes in Bad Gastein and Arosa. At the 2013 World Championships in Stoneham, <mask> was unable to defend her World title and eliminated in the quarter finals in the parallel giant slalom event. In the parallel slalom, she was knocked out from the competition in the first elimination round.<mask> has not started well to 2013/14 season and failed to pass the qualification round in her first three World Cup races. During the parallel slalom race in Bad Gastein on 12 January 2014, a month before the Olympics was due to begin, she took a heavy fall and broke her left arm. She competed with a brace on her left arm at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi and won a bronze medal in the parallel giant slalom, just a few minutes before her husband Vic Wild claimed the gold medal in the same discipline. This was only the second time a husband and wife had won medals in the same event at the Olympic Winter Games. Three days later in the inaugural Olympic parallel slalom, she was eliminated in the 1/8 finals by the eventual champion Julia Dujmovits and placed thirteenth while her husband went on to win the gold medal in the men's event. After the Olympics, Zavarzina received the Order "For Merit to the Fatherland" (second class) for "her great contribution to the development of physical culture and sports, with high sporting achievements at the 2014 Winter Olympic Games in Sochi". 2014–2017: World Championship medals and first World Cup title
After more than four years without a podium in World Cup level, <mask> returned to the World Cup podium with a third-place finish in the parallel slalom race in Montafon at the beginning of the 2014/15 season.At the 2015 World Championships in Kreischberg, she won a silver medal in parallel giant slalom after losing to Claudia Riegler in the repeat of the 2011 final, and finished fifth in the parallel slalom. She reached her second World Cup podium of the season at the season finale in Winterberg, and finished the season in thirteenth place in the overall World Cup standings. In 2015/16 season, <mask> won her second career World Cup victory, this time in parallel slalom, in Winterberg which was also her sole World Cup podium of the season. At the end of the season she finished eighth in the overall rankings, her highest since 2009/10 season. <mask>'s best season in terms of World Cup results came in the 2016/17 season. She won two World Cup parallel giant slalom races in Bansko and Bokwang, the latter was also the test event for the upcoming Winter Olympic Games, and grabbed one more podium spot in the same discipline with a third place-finish in the season-opener in Carezza. Although her podiums came in parallel giant slalom, she won a bronze medal in the parallel slalom at the 2017 World Championships in Sierra Nevada which was her first senior medal in this discipline.With this medal, <mask> completed the full set of medals (gold, silver and bronze) from the World Championships. In the parallel giant slalom event, <mask> set the second fastest time in the qualification round but lost to her teammate Yekaterina Tudegesheva in the quarter finals. At the end of the season, <mask> clinched the parallel giant slalom crystal globe for the first time in her career. She was also leading the parallel overall World Cup standings by a slim margin over Ester Ledecká prior to the season finale in Winterberg, but Ledecká finished as the runner-up in the last race of the season while <mask> was seventh and claimed the overall crystal globe ahead of Zavarzina. 2017–2018: Third Winter Olympics and retirement
<mask> opened the 2017/18 season with a promising fourth-place finish in the first race of the season in Carezza, but she had a poor run of results in the following World Cup races. She reached her first podium of the season in Rogla in the parallel giant slalom race through the end of January. She backed that up with another fourth-place finish in the same discipline in Bansko, the last World Cup stage before the Olympic Games.<mask> was one of the Russian athletes that permitted by the IOC to participate at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang under the neutral flag. She said that in the course of preparation for the Olympics she had to "sign a lot of unpleasant papers" and claimed that "unequal conditions" have been created for Russian athletes. At the Olympics, she qualified for the main round in the parallel giant slalom by setting the second fastest time in qualification but missed the medals after falling in both semi final and bronze medal final and finished in fourth-place. She told in an interview that during her time in Pyeongchang, she has taken three doping tests in the early hours of the morning in the period of one week. After the Olympics, <mask> skipped the World Cup event in Kayseri, stating that the Parallel Giant Slalom title is already out of her reach and she need to recover herself after the Games. She returned to World Cup podium in Scuol with a runner-up finish in parallel giant slalom, losing to Ledecká by 0.02 seconds in the final. She was also second in the last race of the season, parallel slalom in Winterberg, and finished the season in sixth-place in the overall World Cup standings.On 31 August 2018, <mask> announced her retirement with a written manifesto which was published on the website of Match TV in which she explained her reasons for retirement. She confirmed that she has not been paid a salary since 2017 and stated that she will not receive a presidential scholarship for her results in 2017 and 2018, as well as funding for 2019 unless she undergo the in-depth medical examination and pass. She added that passing this medical examination is impossible for her since her medical condition is no longer suitable for sports due to the tightening of the rules by the FMBA (Federal Medical-Biological Agency), although her condition have remained unchanged in the last two years. She said that she was in exactly the same situation last year and still went to the Olympics although according to the rules she did not have the right to be in the Russian national team. She also criticized the Russian Ministry of Sports and Russian Snowboard Federation for their lack of support for the sport and empty promises through the years. Personal life
<mask> was born in Novosibirsk. She studied visual arts in the Novosibirsk branch of
the Moscow State Pedagogical University before transferring to the Moscow branch of the university.She graduated from the management department of the Moscow Technological Institute in 2017. After her retirement from competitive snowboarding, <mask> entered Central Saint Martins College of Arts and Design with the aim of becoming an art director in the future. Since 2011, <mask> is married to double Olympic champion Vic Wild, a former member of the U.S snowboard team who is now competing for Russia after receiving a Russian citizenship in 2012. Prior to the Winter Olympics in Sochi, she and her husband signed a contract with Petrodvorets Watch Factory, the factory that manufactures the Raketa watches. She has become the face of the company's advertising campaign and a member of the board of directors while her husband was appointed a strategic director of the factory. She's the brand ambassador for Toyota Russia, Tag Heuer, S7 Airlines and Zasport, the official outfitter of the Russian Olympic team. On 28 May 2017, she was appointed to the International Ski Federation (FIS) Athletes' Commission as an elected member for a two-year term.She's also one of the ambassadors of the 2019 Winter Universiade which was held in Krasnoyarsk in March 2019. In her spare time, Zavarzina likes to photograph and paint. World Cup results
All results are sourced from the International Ski Federation (FIS). Season titles
1 titles – (1 parallel giant slalom)
Season standings
Race podiums
4 wins – (1 PSL, 3 PGS)
13 podiums – (5 PSL, 8 PGS)
Olympic results
1 medal – (1 bronze)
World Championships results
3 medals – (1 gold, 1 silver, 1 bronze)
References
External links
1989 births
Living people
Olympic snowboarders of Russia
Sportspeople from Novosibirsk
Russian female snowboarders
Snowboarders at the 2010 Winter Olympics
Snowboarders at the 2014 Winter Olympics
Snowboarders at the 2018 Winter Olympics
Medalists at the 2014 Winter Olympics
Olympic bronze medalists for Russia
Olympic medalists in snowboarding | [
"Alena Igorev",
"Zavarzina",
"Zavarzina",
"Zavarzina",
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] | <mask> is a Russian snowboarder who specializes in parallel slalom and parallel giant slalom disciplines. She won a bronze medal in the Winter Olympics in parallel giant slalom. She won the parallel giant slalom crystal globe. <mask> started snowboarding at the age of 10. She switched to snowboarding after competing in big air contests. She made her first appearance in the National Championships at the age of 11. <mask> made her World Cup debut on October 23, 2006 in a parallel slalom race in Landgraaf, where she finished in 31st place and scored her first World Cup points.It was her only World Cup start of the season and she mainly participated in theEuropa Cup for the next couple of seasons. She placed third in the overall rankings after winning three races in the 2007/08 season. She won a bronze medal in the parallel giant slalom at the Junior World Championships. <mask> reached the podium five times and finished the season as the runner-up despite only winning one game. <mask> was given a spot in the parallel giant slalom race at the World Championships in Gangwon, but she was unable to qualify for the elimination round after finishing 21st in the qualification round. She won a silver medal in parallel slalom at the Junior World Championships in 2009, her only podium finish in her career. During the 2008/09 season, she made four appearances in the World Cup, but only passed the qualification round once.<mask> became a regular World Cup competitor in the 2010 season. She won her first World Cup victory in a parallel giant slalom race in Colorado. She reached a podium one more time during the season with a runner-up finish in Stoneham, Canada, and finished the season in eighth-place in the parallel overall rankings. <mask> missed out on the elimination round by seven hundredths of a second because she was the fastest loser in the qualification round. <mask> had a good start to the season with two podiums from her first two races. She became part of the Russian podium sweep in Limone Piemonte, the first ever in the history of the Parallel World Cup, by reaching a podium in a parallel slalom race for the first time in her career. <mask> became the second Russian snowboarder to win a World title after Yekaterina Tudegesheva who won the gold medal in parallel giant slalom in 2007.After setting the fastest time in the first run of the qualification in the blue course, <mask> injured her knee and will miss the rest of the season. <mask> was awarded the title of Honoured Master of Sports of Russia after her success in the World Championships. After returning from an injury, <mask> struggled to regain her form, but her eighth-place finish in Telluride was her best performance of the season. Her results improved in the following season. She made a couple of fourth-place finishes in Bad Gastein and Arosa, despite not reaching a World Cup podium. At the World Championships in Stoneham, <mask> was unable to defend her title and was eliminated in the quarter finals. She was knocked out in the first round of the parallel slalom.Zavarzina failed to pass the qualification round in her first three World Cup races. She broke her arm during the parallel slalom race in Bad Gastein a month before the Olympics began. A few minutes before her husband won the gold medal in the parallel giant slalom at the Winter Olympics, she won a bronze medal with a brace on her left arm. The first time a husband and wife won medals in the same event was at the Olympics. While her husband won the gold medal in the men's event, she was eliminated in the first round of the parallel slalom by Julia Dujmovits, who went on to win the gold medal. The Order "For Merit to the Fatherland" was given to <mask> for her contribution to the development of physical culture and sports. After more than four years without a podium in World Cup level, <mask> returned to the World Cup podium with a third-place finish in the parallel slalom race in Montafon at the beginning of the 2014/15 season.She won a silver medal in parallel giant slalom at the World Championships in 2015, after losing in the repeat of the 2011 final, and finished fifth in the parallel slalom. At the season finale in Winterberg, she reached her second World Cup podium of the season and finished the season in 13th place. <mask> won her second career World Cup victory in parallel slalom in Winterberg, which was her sole World Cup podium of the season. She finished eighth in the overall rankings at the end of the season. The best World Cup season for <mask> was in the 2016/17 season. She won two World Cup parallel giant slalom races in Bansko and Bokwang, the latter was also the test event for the upcoming Winter Olympic Games, and grabbed one more podium spot in the same discipline with a third place-finish in the season-opener in Carezza. She won a bronze medal in the parallel slalom at the World Championships in Sierra Nevada, which was her first senior medal in this discipline.<mask> won gold, silver and bronze at the World Championships. <mask> set the second fastest time in the qualification round but lost to her teammate in the quarter finals. <mask> won the parallel giant slalom crystal globe for the first time in her career. She was leading the parallel World Cup by a slim margin over Ledeck prior to the season finale in Winterberg, but Ledeck finished as the runner-up in the last race of the season while <mask> claimed the overall crystal globe. The third Winter Olympics and retirement of <mask> began with a fourth-place finish in the first race of the season in Carezza, but she had a poor run of results in the following World Cup races. She finished third in the parallel giant slalom race at the end of January. She finished fourth in the same discipline in the last World Cup stage before the Olympics.One of the Russian athletes that were allowed by the IOC to participate in the Winter Olympics in South Korea was <mask>. She said that she had to sign a lot of unpleasant papers in order to get ready for the Olympics. At the Olympics, she qualified for the main round in the parallel giant slalom by setting the second fastest time in qualification but missed the medals after falling in both semi final and bronze medal final. During her time in the Olympics, she has taken three drug tests in the early hours of the morning. <mask> decided to skip the World Cup event in Kayseri because the Parallel Giant Slalom title is out of her reach. She finished second in the parallel giant slalom and lost to Ledeck in the final. In the last race of the season, parallel slalom in Winterberg, she was second and finished the season in sixth place.<mask> explained her reasons for retirement in a written manifesto which was published on the website of Match TV. She has not been paid a salary since the beginning of the year and will not receive a presidential scholarship for her results in the next two years unless she passes a medical exam. She said that since her medical condition is no longer suitable for sports, it is impossible for her to pass the medical examination. She said that she did not have the right to be in the Russian national team, but still went to the Olympics. She criticized the Russian Ministry of Sports and Russian Snowboard Federation for their lack of support for the sport. <mask> was born in Novosibirsk. She studied visual arts at the Novosibirsk branch of the Moscow State Pedagogical University.She graduated from the management department of the Moscow Technological Institute. Zavarzina entered the Central Saint Martins College of Arts and Design in order to become an art director in the future. <mask> is married to Vic Wild, a former member of the U.S snowboard team who is now competing for Russia after receiving a Russian citizenship. The Raketa watches were manufactured by the Petrodvorets Watch Factory, which she and her husband signed a contract with prior to the Winter Olympics. While her husband was appointed a strategic director of the factory, she became the face of the company's advertising campaign and a member of the board of directors. She is the brand ambassador for Toyota Russia, Tag Heuer, S7 Airlines and Zasport. She was appointed to the International Ski Federation's Athletes' Commission as an elected member for two years.The Winter Universiade was held in Krasnoyarsk in March of 2019. <mask> likes to photograph and paint. The results are from the International Ski Federation. The season ended with 1 parallel giant slalom title. | [
"Alena Zavarzina",
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"Zavarzina",
"Zavarzina",
"Zavarzina",
"Zavarzina",
"Zavarzina",
"Zavarzina"
] |
1702945 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David%20Patrick%20Kelly | David Patrick Kelly | David Patrick Kelly (born January 23, 1951) is an American actor, musician and lyricist who has appeared in numerous films and television series. He is best known for his role as the main antagonist, Luther, in the cult film The Warriors (1979). Kelly is also known for his collaborations with Spike Lee, in the films Malcolm X (1992), Crooklyn (1994), and Chi-Raq (2015), and with David Lynch, appearing in Wild at Heart (1990) as well as Twin Peaks (1990–91) and its 2017 revival.
Kelly's other credits include roles in 48 Hrs. (1982), Commando (1985), The Crow (1994), The Funeral and Last Man Standing (both 1996), The Longest Yard (2005), as President Harry S. Truman in Flags of Our Fathers (2006), and a recurring role in The Blacklist (2015).
Early life
Kelly was born in Detroit, Michigan to Margaret Elizabeth (Murphy) and Robert Corby Kelly, an accountant. His father received a Bronze Star Medal for service during the Battle of the Bulge in World War II. His grandfather, Daniel Murphy, was from Lisnashearshane, Duhallow, County Cork, Ireland. His great-grand-uncle was Father William Corby, chaplain of the Irish Brigade at Gettysburg. As detailed in Corby's book, Memoir of Chaplain Life: 3 Years With the Irish Brigade, Father Corby eventually became president of the University of Notre Dame.
Kelly was given a mandolin on Saint Patrick's Day 1964 by his mother and considers that to have been the greatest influence on his artistic life.
As an undergraduate student, Kelly wrote the lyrics and music for four musicals produced in Detroit. These four productions were Lysistrata (by Aristophanes), The World from My Window (based on a book of children's poems), a project based on Gulliver's Travels (in the land of horses) and Home for Silent Clowns, a mime show with songs.
Kelly graduated cum laude with a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the University of Detroit, and was also a student of Marcel Marceau and Mira Rostova.
Career
Film
In his debut role of Luther in the 1979 cult film The Warriors, Kelly screeches the famous line, "Warriors...come out to play-ee-ay!!", which he improvised while clanging three empty beer bottles together. In the 1982 film 48 Hrs., starring Nick Nolte and Eddie Murphy, director Walter Hill rewrote a role for Kelly and again named the character "Luther".
Kelly's film credits include Commando (1985), in which he played Sully, The Crow, Crooklyn, Hammett, Wild at Heart, Dreamscape, The Adventures of Ford Fairlane, Last Man Standing, Songcatcher, K-PAX, the 2005 remake of The Longest Yard, Flags of Our Fathers, John Wick (reprising his role as Charlie in John Wick: Chapter Two), and Chi-Raq. He also appeared in the 1996 video game Ripper.
Television
Kelly's television guest appearances include Twin Peaks, Miami Vice, Moonlighting, Spenser: For Hire, Ghostwriter, Third Watch, Hack, Kidnapped, Law & Order, Law & Order: Criminal Intent, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, Gossip Girl, Louie, Blue Bloods, The Blacklist, and Feed the Beast.
Stage
He performed in a few Off-Off-Broadway theater productions during the 1970s and 1980s. These included Wilford Leach's C.O.R.F.A.X. (Don't Ask), produced at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in 1975, and Ireneusz Iredyński's An Altar to Himself, as adapted by Michal Kobialka and Liz Diamond and directed by Virlana Tkacz at La MaMa in 1989. He also appeared in the April 1974 production of Mr. Jello, written and directed by George Birimisa, and then performed a song for which he wrote the music from Mr. Jello, at a benefit hosted by La MaMa to honor H.M. Koutoukas, called "For the Benefit of Harry", also in 1974. In 1976, he performed in La MaMa's "Cracker Club Country Fair Gala" in segments from Paul Foster's Silver Queen and Leonard Melfi's Horse Opera.
Kelly originated the role of Da in Once on Broadway, which was awarded the 2012 Tony Award for Best Musical. In 1998, he played Feste in the Lincoln Center production of Twelfth Night.
Kelly has frequently appeared at the Hartford Stage Company in Hartford, Connecticut, starring in the title roles in Georg Buchner's Woyzeck and Molière's Tartuffe. He also played Iago in Othello and Hoss in Sam Shepard's Tooth Of Crime. At the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts, he played the title role in Luigi Pirandello's Enrico IV and starred in an adaption of the Yuan dynasty classic Snow in June.
He has also appeared in four plays by avant-garde playwright Richard Foreman: Pearls for Pigs, The Mind King, Film Is Evil/Radio Is Good, and The Cure. In 2015, he appeared as Michaud, alongside Keira Knightley, in the Roundabout Theatre Company's production of Helen Edmundson's adaptation of Thérèse Raquin in the Studio 54 space.
Music
As a composer and musician, Kelly participated in New York's rock and cabaret scene, playing such legendary venues as Max's Kansas City, Reno Sweeney's, CBGB, and The Lower Manhattan Ocean Club. He also wrote the music for the titular song of George Birimisa's Mr. Jello, which was produced at La MaMa in 1974.
In May 2008, he released a CD of his original music titled David Patrick Kelly: Rip Van Boy Man, which contained new songs and live recordings from his club days in 1975.
Awards
Kelly played Dropshadow in David Lynch's film Wild At Heart, which won the Palme d'Or at Cannes in 1990. Kelly sang and played mandolin on the Grammy Award-winning soundtrack for the musical Once. He received a Connecticut Critics Circle Award for his performance in Tartuffe at Hartford Stage, and was nominated for a Lucille Lortel Award for his performance in Nathan Louis Jackson's When I Come To Die at LCT3 in Manhattan. In 1998, Kelly received an Obie Award for sustained excellence for his theater work in classics, new plays, and the avant-garde.
Personal life
Kelly married theater actress and writer Juliana Francis at St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery in Manhattan on August 14, 2005. They have a daughter named Margarethe Jane Kelly born in 2008.
Filmography
Film
2020
The Return of Tragedy (Bertrand Mandico)
John Katebush
Television
Video games
References
External links
David Patrick Kelly at the Internet Off-Broadway Database
David Patrick Kelly on Aveleyman.com
Kelly's page on La MaMa Archives Digital Collections
1951 births
American male film actors
American male television actors
American male stage actors
American people of Irish descent
Living people
Male actors from Detroit
University of Detroit Mercy alumni | [
"David Patrick Kelly (born January 23, 1951) is an American actor, musician and lyricist who has appeared in numerous films and television series.",
"He is best known for his role as the main antagonist, Luther, in the cult film The Warriors (1979).",
"Kelly is also known for his collaborations with Spike Lee, in the films Malcolm X (1992), Crooklyn (1994), and Chi-Raq (2015), and with David Lynch, appearing in Wild at Heart (1990) as well as Twin Peaks (1990–91) and its 2017 revival.",
"Kelly's other credits include roles in 48 Hrs.",
"(1982), Commando (1985), The Crow (1994), The Funeral and Last Man Standing (both 1996), The Longest Yard (2005), as President Harry S. Truman in Flags of Our Fathers (2006), and a recurring role in The Blacklist (2015).",
"Early life\nKelly was born in Detroit, Michigan to Margaret Elizabeth (Murphy) and Robert Corby Kelly, an accountant.",
"His father received a Bronze Star Medal for service during the Battle of the Bulge in World War II.",
"His grandfather, Daniel Murphy, was from Lisnashearshane, Duhallow, County Cork, Ireland.",
"His great-grand-uncle was Father William Corby, chaplain of the Irish Brigade at Gettysburg.",
"As detailed in Corby's book, Memoir of Chaplain Life: 3 Years With the Irish Brigade, Father Corby eventually became president of the University of Notre Dame.",
"Kelly was given a mandolin on Saint Patrick's Day 1964 by his mother and considers that to have been the greatest influence on his artistic life.",
"As an undergraduate student, Kelly wrote the lyrics and music for four musicals produced in Detroit.",
"These four productions were Lysistrata (by Aristophanes), The World from My Window (based on a book of children's poems), a project based on Gulliver's Travels (in the land of horses) and Home for Silent Clowns, a mime show with songs.",
"Kelly graduated cum laude with a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the University of Detroit, and was also a student of Marcel Marceau and Mira Rostova.",
"Career\n\nFilm\nIn his debut role of Luther in the 1979 cult film The Warriors, Kelly screeches the famous line, \"Warriors...come out to play-ee-ay!!",
"\", which he improvised while clanging three empty beer bottles together.",
"In the 1982 film 48 Hrs., starring Nick Nolte and Eddie Murphy, director Walter Hill rewrote a role for Kelly and again named the character \"Luther\".",
"Kelly's film credits include Commando (1985), in which he played Sully, The Crow, Crooklyn, Hammett, Wild at Heart, Dreamscape, The Adventures of Ford Fairlane, Last Man Standing, Songcatcher, K-PAX, the 2005 remake of The Longest Yard, Flags of Our Fathers, John Wick (reprising his role as Charlie in John Wick: Chapter Two), and Chi-Raq.",
"He also appeared in the 1996 video game Ripper.",
"Television\nKelly's television guest appearances include Twin Peaks, Miami Vice, Moonlighting, Spenser: For Hire, Ghostwriter, Third Watch, Hack, Kidnapped, Law & Order, Law & Order: Criminal Intent, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, Gossip Girl, Louie, Blue Bloods, The Blacklist, and Feed the Beast.",
"Stage\nHe performed in a few Off-Off-Broadway theater productions during the 1970s and 1980s.",
"These included Wilford Leach's C.O.R.F.A.X.",
"(Don't Ask), produced at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in 1975, and Ireneusz Iredyński's An Altar to Himself, as adapted by Michal Kobialka and Liz Diamond and directed by Virlana Tkacz at La MaMa in 1989.",
"He also appeared in the April 1974 production of Mr. Jello, written and directed by George Birimisa, and then performed a song for which he wrote the music from Mr. Jello, at a benefit hosted by La MaMa to honor H.M. Koutoukas, called \"For the Benefit of Harry\", also in 1974.",
"In 1976, he performed in La MaMa's \"Cracker Club Country Fair Gala\" in segments from Paul Foster's Silver Queen and Leonard Melfi's Horse Opera.",
"Kelly originated the role of Da in Once on Broadway, which was awarded the 2012 Tony Award for Best Musical.",
"In 1998, he played Feste in the Lincoln Center production of Twelfth Night.",
"Kelly has frequently appeared at the Hartford Stage Company in Hartford, Connecticut, starring in the title roles in Georg Buchner's Woyzeck and Molière's Tartuffe.",
"He also played Iago in Othello and Hoss in Sam Shepard's Tooth Of Crime.",
"At the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts, he played the title role in Luigi Pirandello's Enrico IV and starred in an adaption of the Yuan dynasty classic Snow in June.",
"He has also appeared in four plays by avant-garde playwright Richard Foreman: Pearls for Pigs, The Mind King, Film Is Evil/Radio Is Good, and The Cure.",
"In 2015, he appeared as Michaud, alongside Keira Knightley, in the Roundabout Theatre Company's production of Helen Edmundson's adaptation of Thérèse Raquin in the Studio 54 space.",
"Music\nAs a composer and musician, Kelly participated in New York's rock and cabaret scene, playing such legendary venues as Max's Kansas City, Reno Sweeney's, CBGB, and The Lower Manhattan Ocean Club.",
"He also wrote the music for the titular song of George Birimisa's Mr. Jello, which was produced at La MaMa in 1974.",
"In May 2008, he released a CD of his original music titled David Patrick Kelly: Rip Van Boy Man, which contained new songs and live recordings from his club days in 1975.",
"Awards\nKelly played Dropshadow in David Lynch's film Wild At Heart, which won the Palme d'Or at Cannes in 1990.",
"Kelly sang and played mandolin on the Grammy Award-winning soundtrack for the musical Once.",
"He received a Connecticut Critics Circle Award for his performance in Tartuffe at Hartford Stage, and was nominated for a Lucille Lortel Award for his performance in Nathan Louis Jackson's When I Come To Die at LCT3 in Manhattan.",
"In 1998, Kelly received an Obie Award for sustained excellence for his theater work in classics, new plays, and the avant-garde.",
"Personal life\nKelly married theater actress and writer Juliana Francis at St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery in Manhattan on August 14, 2005.",
"They have a daughter named Margarethe Jane Kelly born in 2008.",
"Filmography\n\nFilm\n\n2020\nThe Return of Tragedy (Bertrand Mandico)\nJohn Katebush\n\nTelevision\n\nVideo games\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links\n \n \n \n David Patrick Kelly at the Internet Off-Broadway Database\n David Patrick Kelly on Aveleyman.com\n Kelly's page on La MaMa Archives Digital Collections\n\n1951 births\nAmerican male film actors\nAmerican male television actors\nAmerican male stage actors\nAmerican people of Irish descent\nLiving people\nMale actors from Detroit\nUniversity of Detroit Mercy alumni"
] | [
"David Patrick Kelly is an American actor, musician and lyricist who has appeared in numerous films and television series.",
"He played Luther in the cult film The Warriors.",
"Kelly has worked with Spike Lee, David Lynch, and Chi-Raq, as well as appearing in Wild at Heart and Twin Peaks.",
"Kelly has roles in 48 Hours.",
"The Longest Yard is a recurring role in The Blacklist.",
"Margaret Elizabeth Murphy and Robert Corby Kelly were the parents of Kelly.",
"During World War II, his father received a Bronze Star medal.",
"Daniel Murphy was from County Cork, Ireland.",
"Father William Corby was a priest at Gettysburg.",
"Father Corby became president of the University of Notre Dame as a result of his memoirs.",
"The greatest influence on Kelly's artistic life was given to him by his mother on Saint Patrick's Day 1964.",
"Kelly was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"The World from My Window is based on a book of children's poems and Home for Silent Clowns is a mime show with songs.",
"Kelly graduated cum laude from the University of Detroit with a Bachelor of Fine Arts.",
"In his debut role of Luther in the cult film The Warriors, Kelly exclaimed, \"Warriors...come out to play-ee-ay!!\"",
"He clanged three empty beer bottles together.",
"The character \"Luther\" was re-written for Kelly in the 1982 film 48 Hrs., starring Nick Nolte and Eddie Murphy.",
"Kelly's films include The Crow, Wild at Heart, Dreamscape, The Adventures of Ford Fairlane, Last Man Standing, Songcatcher, K-PAX, and the 2005 remake of The Longest Yard, Flags.",
"He appeared in a video game.",
"Twin Peaks, Miami Vice, Spenser: For Hire, Ghostwriter, Third Watch, Hack, Kidnapped, Law & Order, Law & Order: Criminal Intent, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, Gossip Girl, and more are some of Kelly's television guest appearances.",
"He performed in a few Off-Off-Broadway theater productions.",
"Wilford Leach's C.O.R.F.A.X was included.",
"An Altar to Himself and (Don't Ask) were both produced at La Ma Ma Experimental Theatre Club.",
"He wrote the music for Mr. Jello at a benefit hosted by La Ma Ma.",
"In 1976, he performed in segments from Paul Foster's Silver Queen and Leonard Melfi's Horse Opera.",
"Kelly originated the role of Da in Once on Broadway, which won the 2012 Tony Award for Best Musical.",
"He played Feste in the Lincoln Center production of Twelfth Night in 1998.",
"Kelly played the title role in Molire's Tartuffe at the Hartford Stage Company.",
"Iago and Hoss were both played by him.",
"He played the title role in a remake of Snow at the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts.",
"He has appeared in four plays by Richard Foreman: Pearls for Pigs, The Mind King, Film Is Evil/Radio Is Good, and The Cure.",
"He played Michaud in the Roundabout Theatre Company's production of Thérse Raquin in the studio 54 space.",
"Kelly was involved in New York's rock and cabaret scene, playing venues such as Max's Kansas City, Reno Sweeney's, CBGB, and The Lower Manhattan Ocean Club.",
"He wrote the music for the song Mr. Jello, which was produced at La Ma Ma in 1974.",
"In May 2008, he released a CD of his original music titled David Patrick Kelly: Rip Van Boy Man, which contained new songs and live recordings from his club days in 1975.",
"Kelly played Dropshadow in David Lynch's film Wild At Heart, which won the Palme d'Or in 1990.",
"The musical Once won aGrammy Award for best soundtrack.",
"He was nominated for a Lortel Award for his performance in Nathan Louis Jackson's When I Come To Die at LCT3 in Manhattan, and he received a Connecticut Critics Circle Award for his performance in Tartuffe at Hartford Stage.",
"Kelly received an Obie Award in 1998 for his theater work in classics, new plays, and the avant-garde.",
"On August 14, 2005, Kelly married Juliana Francis at St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery.",
"Margarethe Jane Kelly was born in 2008.",
"David Patrick Kelly's page on La Ma Ma Archives Digital Collections 1951 births American male film actors can be found on Aveleyman.com."
] | <mask> (born January 23, 1951) is an American actor, musician and lyricist who has appeared in numerous films and television series. He is best known for his role as the main antagonist, Luther, in the cult film The Warriors (1979). <mask> is also known for his collaborations with Spike Lee, in the films Malcolm X (1992), Crooklyn (1994), and Chi-Raq (2015), and with <mask>, appearing in Wild at Heart (1990) as well as Twin Peaks (1990–91) and its 2017 revival. <mask>'s other credits include roles in 48 Hrs. (1982), Commando (1985), The Crow (1994), The Funeral and Last Man Standing (both 1996), The Longest Yard (2005), as President Harry S. Truman in Flags of Our Fathers (2006), and a recurring role in The Blacklist (2015). Early life
<mask> was born in Detroit, Michigan to Margaret Elizabeth (Murphy) and <mask>, an accountant. His father received a Bronze Star Medal for service during the Battle of the Bulge in World War II.His grandfather, Daniel Murphy, was from Lisnashearshane, Duhallow, County Cork, Ireland. His great-grand-uncle was Father William Corby, chaplain of the Irish Brigade at Gettysburg. As detailed in Corby's book, Memoir of Chaplain Life: 3 Years With the Irish Brigade, Father Corby eventually became president of the University of Notre Dame. <mask> was given a mandolin on Saint Patrick's Day 1964 by his mother and considers that to have been the greatest influence on his artistic life. As an undergraduate student, <mask> wrote the lyrics and music for four musicals produced in Detroit. These four productions were Lysistrata (by Aristophanes), The World from My Window (based on a book of children's poems), a project based on Gulliver's Travels (in the land of horses) and Home for Silent Clowns, a mime show with songs. <mask> graduated cum laude with a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the University of Detroit, and was also a student of Marcel Marceau and Mira Rostova.Career
Film
In his debut role of Luther in the 1979 cult film The Warriors, <mask> screeches the famous line, "Warriors...come out to play-ee-ay!! ", which he improvised while clanging three empty beer bottles together. In the 1982 film 48 Hrs., starring Nick Nolte and Eddie Murphy, director Walter Hill rewrote a role for <mask> and again named the character "Luther". <mask>'s film credits include Commando (1985), in which he played Sully, The Crow, Crooklyn, Hammett, Wild at Heart, Dreamscape, The Adventures of Ford Fairlane, Last Man Standing, Songcatcher, K-PAX, the 2005 remake of The Longest Yard, Flags of Our Fathers, John Wick (reprising his role as Charlie in John Wick: Chapter Two), and Chi-Raq. He also appeared in the 1996 video game Ripper. Television
<mask>'s television guest appearances include Twin Peaks, Miami Vice, Moonlighting, Spenser: For Hire, Ghostwriter, Third Watch, Hack, Kidnapped, Law & Order, Law & Order: Criminal Intent, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, Gossip Girl, Louie, Blue Bloods, The Blacklist, and Feed the Beast. Stage
He performed in a few Off-Off-Broadway theater productions during the 1970s and 1980s.These included Wilford Leach's C.O.R.F.A.X. (Don't Ask), produced at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in 1975, and Ireneusz Iredyński's An Altar to Himself, as adapted by Michal Kobialka and Liz Diamond and directed by Virlana Tkacz at La MaMa in 1989. He also appeared in the April 1974 production of Mr. Jello, written and directed by George Birimisa, and then performed a song for which he wrote the music from Mr. Jello, at a benefit hosted by La MaMa to honor H.M. Koutoukas, called "For the Benefit of Harry", also in 1974. In 1976, he performed in La MaMa's "Cracker Club Country Fair Gala" in segments from Paul Foster's Silver Queen and Leonard Melfi's Horse Opera. <mask> originated the role of Da in Once on Broadway, which was awarded the 2012 Tony Award for Best Musical. In 1998, he played Feste in the Lincoln Center production of Twelfth Night. <mask> has frequently appeared at the Hartford Stage Company in Hartford, Connecticut, starring in the title roles in Georg Buchner's Woyzeck and Molière's Tartuffe.He also played Iago in Othello and Hoss in Sam Shepard's Tooth Of Crime. At the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts, he played the title role in Luigi Pirandello's Enrico IV and starred in an adaption of the Yuan dynasty classic Snow in June. He has also appeared in four plays by avant-garde playwright Richard Foreman: Pearls for Pigs, The Mind King, Film Is Evil/Radio Is Good, and The Cure. In 2015, he appeared as Michaud, alongside Keira Knightley, in the Roundabout Theatre Company's production of Helen Edmundson's adaptation of Thérèse Raquin in the Studio 54 space. Music
As a composer and musician, <mask> participated in New York's rock and cabaret scene, playing such legendary venues as Max's Kansas City, Reno Sweeney's, CBGB, and The Lower Manhattan Ocean Club. He also wrote the music for the titular song of George Birimisa's Mr. Jello, which was produced at La MaMa in 1974. In May 2008, he released a CD of his original music titled <mask> <mask>: Rip Van Boy Man, which contained new songs and live recordings from his club days in 1975.Awards
<mask> played Dropshadow in <mask>'s film Wild At Heart, which won the Palme d'Or at Cannes in 1990. <mask> sang and played mandolin on the Grammy Award-winning soundtrack for the musical Once. He received a Connecticut Critics Circle Award for his performance in Tartuffe at Hartford Stage, and was nominated for a Lucille Lortel Award for his performance in Nathan Louis Jackson's When I Come To Die at LCT3 in Manhattan. In 1998, <mask> received an Obie Award for sustained excellence for his theater work in classics, new plays, and the avant-garde. Personal life
<mask> married theater actress and writer Juliana Francis at St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery in Manhattan on August 14, 2005. They have a daughter named Margarethe <mask> born in 2008. Filmography
Film
2020
The Return of Tragedy (Bertrand Mandico)
John Katebush
Television
Video games
References
External links
<mask> <mask> at the Internet Off-Broadway Database
<mask> <mask> on Aveleyman.com
<mask>'s page on La MaMa Archives Digital Collections
1951 births
American male film actors
American male television actors
American male stage actors
American people of Irish descent
Living people
Male actors from Detroit
University of Detroit Mercy alumni | [
"David Patrick Kelly",
"Kelly",
"David Lynch",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Robert Corby Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"David Patrick",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"David Lynch",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Jane Kelly",
"David Patrick",
"Kelly",
"David Patrick",
"Kelly",
"Kelly"
] | <mask> is an American actor, musician and lyricist who has appeared in numerous films and television series. He played Luther in the cult film The Warriors. <mask> has worked with Spike Lee, <mask>, and Chi-Raq, as well as appearing in Wild at Heart and Twin Peaks. <mask> has roles in 48 Hours. The Longest Yard is a recurring role in The Blacklist. Margaret Elizabeth Murphy and <mask> were the parents of <mask>. During World War II, his father received a Bronze Star medal.Daniel Murphy was from County Cork, Ireland. Father William Corby was a priest at Gettysburg. Father Corby became president of the University of Notre Dame as a result of his memoirs. The greatest influence on <mask>'s artistic life was given to him by his mother on Saint Patrick's Day 1964. <mask> was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 The World from My Window is based on a book of children's poems and Home for Silent Clowns is a mime show with songs. <mask> graduated cum laude from the University of Detroit with a Bachelor of Fine Arts.In his debut role of Luther in the cult film The Warriors, <mask> exclaimed, "Warriors...come out to play-ee-ay!!" He clanged three empty beer bottles together. The character "Luther" was re-written for <mask> in the 1982 film 48 Hrs., starring Nick Nolte and Eddie Murphy. <mask>'s films include The Crow, Wild at Heart, Dreamscape, The Adventures of Ford Fairlane, Last Man Standing, Songcatcher, K-PAX, and the 2005 remake of The Longest Yard, Flags. He appeared in a video game. Twin Peaks, Miami Vice, Spenser: For Hire, Ghostwriter, Third Watch, Hack, Kidnapped, Law & Order, Law & Order: Criminal Intent, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, Gossip Girl, and more are some of <mask>'s television guest appearances. He performed in a few Off-Off-Broadway theater productions.Wilford Leach's C.O.R.F.A.X was included. An Altar to Himself and (Don't Ask) were both produced at La Ma Ma Experimental Theatre Club. He wrote the music for Mr. Jello at a benefit hosted by La Ma Ma. In 1976, he performed in segments from Paul Foster's Silver Queen and Leonard Melfi's Horse Opera. <mask> originated the role of Da in Once on Broadway, which won the 2012 Tony Award for Best Musical. He played Feste in the Lincoln Center production of Twelfth Night in 1998. <mask> played the title role in Molire's Tartuffe at the Hartford Stage Company.Iago and Hoss were both played by him. He played the title role in a remake of Snow at the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He has appeared in four plays by Richard Foreman: Pearls for Pigs, The Mind King, Film Is Evil/Radio Is Good, and The Cure. He played Michaud in the Roundabout Theatre Company's production of Thérse Raquin in the studio 54 space. <mask> was involved in New York's rock and cabaret scene, playing venues such as Max's Kansas City, Reno Sweeney's, CBGB, and The Lower Manhattan Ocean Club. He wrote the music for the song Mr. Jello, which was produced at La Ma Ma in 1974. In May 2008, he released a CD of his original music titled <mask> <mask>: Rip Van Boy Man, which contained new songs and live recordings from his club days in 1975.<mask> played Dropshadow in <mask>'s film Wild At Heart, which won the Palme d'Or in 1990. The musical Once won aGrammy Award for best soundtrack. He was nominated for a Lortel Award for his performance in Nathan Louis Jackson's When I Come To Die at LCT3 in Manhattan, and he received a Connecticut Critics Circle Award for his performance in Tartuffe at Hartford Stage. <mask> received an Obie Award in 1998 for his theater work in classics, new plays, and the avant-garde. On August 14, 2005, <mask> married Juliana Francis at St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery. Margarethe <mask> was born in 2008. <mask> <mask>'s page on La Ma Ma Archives Digital Collections 1951 births American male film actors can be found on Aveleyman.com. | [
"David Patrick Kelly",
"Kelly",
"David Lynch",
"Kelly",
"Robert Corby Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"David Patrick",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"David Lynch",
"Kelly",
"Kelly",
"Jane Kelly",
"David Patrick",
"Kelly"
] |
33458478 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George%20Keate | George Keate | George Keate (1729–1797) was an English poet and writer. He was a versatile author, known as an artist, who travelled and became a friend of Voltaire.
Life
He was son of George Keate of Isleworth, Middlesex, who married Rachel Kawolski, daughter of Count Christian Kawolski. He was born at Trowbridge in Wiltshire, where his father had property, on 30 November 1729 (according to Daniel Lysons, his baptism was not entered in the Isleworth register until 29 November 1730). Together with Gilbert Wakefield, William Hayley, Francis Maseres, and others, he was educated by the Rev. Richard Wooddeson of Kingston upon Thames.
On leaving school Keate was articled as clerk to Robert Palmer, steward to the Duke of Bedford. He entered the Inner Temple in 1751, was called to the bar in 1753, and made bencher of his inn in 1791, but never practised the law. In 1850, Henderson inherited his family's money when his mother died. Keate's money came from the dozens of houses that his family owned in Whitechapel. Eight years after his death the income was worth £700 per year.
For some years Keate lived abroad, mainly at Geneva, where he met Voltaire, and in 1755 he was at Rome. After settling in England Keate began to write. He was in turn poet, naturalist, antiquary, and artist. A founder member of the Society of Artists in 1761, he was one of those who left it for the Royal Academy in 1768. He was elected Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London and Fellow of the Royal Society in 1766.
Fanny Burney describes Keate in her Early Diary, especially his habit of talking about his own works. Other stories of Keate are in Richard Brinsley Peake's Memoirs of the Colman Family, and Mary Delany in her Autobiography describes visiting his museum in 1779.
During the last few years of life his health visibly declined, and he died suddenly at 10 Charlotte Street, Bloomsbury, on 28 June 1797. He was buried at Isleworth on 6 July, and a white marble monument, with bust by Joseph Nollekens, was placed near the spot where he and his wife, who died 18 March 1800, aged 70, were buried. His specimens of shells were sold by auction after his death. Francis Douce's gift of coins to the Bodleian Library included the collection of Keate.
Works
Keate wrote as an amateur. His works were:
Ancient and Modern Rome, 1760; an anonymous poem in blank verse, written in 1755.
Short Account of the Ancient History, present Government and Laws of the Republic of Geneva, 1761; dedicated to Voltaire.
Epistle [in verse] from Lady Jane Grey to Lord Guildford Dudley, supposed to have been written in the Tower of London a few days before they were executed, 1762.
The Alps, a Poem, 1763, dedicated to Edward Young.
Netley Abbey, an Elegy, 1764; 2nd ed. 1769, and often reprinted with John Bullar's Visit to Netley Abbey.
The Temple Student, an Epistle to a Friend', 1765.Poem to the Memory of the celebrated Mrs. Cibber, 1766, anonymous; for Susannah Maria Cibber.Ferney; an Epistle to Voltaire, 1768. In praise of Voltaire and his works, but with compliments to Shakespeare, for which the author was rewarded, in the jubilee year 1769, by the mayor and corporation of Stratford-upon-Avon, with an ink-stand made out of a mulberry-tree planted by Shakespeare, and with the freedom of the town.The Monument in Arcadia, a dramatic poem in two acts, 1773; suggested by Nicolas Poussin's picture Les Bergers d'Arcadie of shepherds and shepherdesses contemplating a monument with the words Et in Arcadia ego; used by Christian Felix Weiße for a libretto to a lost opera by Johann Adam Hiller.Sketches from Nature, taken and coloured in a Journey to Margate, 1779, 2 vols.; an imitation of Laurence Sterne, which passed through several editions, and was translated into French.Poetical Works, 1781, 2 vols.; they were dedicated to Dr. William Heberden, and included all his published poems, with many additions, the main being one canto of the Helvetiad, written at Geneva in 1756, and intended for a description of the revolution in Switzerland in the fourteenth century. He was dissuaded by Voltaire from completing it.Epistle to Angelica Kauffman, 1781.The Distressed Poet, a Serio-comic Poem, 1787; describing his troubles through a protracted suit at common law with his architect, Robert Adam.Account of the Pelew Islands, from the Journals of Captain Henry Wilson and some of his officers, shipwrecked there in the Antelope in August 1783, 1788. This work was based on the account of Henry Wilson. It was often reprinted (with a supplement by John Pearce Hockin in 1803), including in an abridged version, and was translated into French (1793) and German (1800). The French translation has been attributed to Mirabeau.
Some of Keate's poems are in George Pearch's Collection, iii. 269–74; and he wrote prologues and epilogues for the dramatic representations at Newcome's School in Hackney, besides adapting Voltaire's Sémiramis for the stage. Keate also contributed "Observations on some Roman Earthenware" to Archæologia. vi. 125–9.
Between 1766 and 1789 Keate exhibited six pictures at the Society of Artists and thirty at the Royal Academy. His correspondence with Voltaire and Edward Young went to the British Museum (Addit. MSS. 30991–2).
Family
Keate married in February 1769 Jane Catharine, daughter of Joseph Hudson, who had been Dutch consul at Tunis, and only sister of Sir Charles Grave Hudson, bart., of Wanlip, Leicestershire. Their issue was one daughter, Georgiana Jane Keate afterwards Mrs. Henderson (1770–1850), who exhibited four pictures at the Society of Artists in 1791, and painted from memory a portrait of Prince Lee Boo, fifteen months after his death, for her father's account of the Pelew islands. She married, on 9 June 1796, John Henderson, B.C.L. (1764–1843), of Adelphi Terrace, London, one of the early patrons of Thomas Girtin and J. M. W. Turner, and himself an amateur artist. Their children were Charles Cooper Henderson, John Henderson, and three daughters, who died unmarried. There are portraits of the mother by Angelica Kauffman and John Russell, R.A. She died 8 January 1850, and was buried in her husband's grave at Kensal Green Cemetery.
Notes
Further reading
Susan Bennett (2008), '''I Admired Your Talent' – The Artistic Life of Georgiana Jane Henderson (née Keate) (1771–1850),
External links
George Keate at the Eighteenth-Century Poetry Archive (ECPA)
Attribution
1729 births
1797 deaths
People from Isleworth
Fellows of the Society of Antiquaries of London
Fellows of the Royal Society
English male poets
English male non-fiction writers | [
"George Keate (1729–1797) was an English poet and writer.",
"He was a versatile author, known as an artist, who travelled and became a friend of Voltaire.",
"Life\nHe was son of George Keate of Isleworth, Middlesex, who married Rachel Kawolski, daughter of Count Christian Kawolski.",
"He was born at Trowbridge in Wiltshire, where his father had property, on 30 November 1729 (according to Daniel Lysons, his baptism was not entered in the Isleworth register until 29 November 1730).",
"Together with Gilbert Wakefield, William Hayley, Francis Maseres, and others, he was educated by the Rev.",
"Richard Wooddeson of Kingston upon Thames.",
"On leaving school Keate was articled as clerk to Robert Palmer, steward to the Duke of Bedford.",
"He entered the Inner Temple in 1751, was called to the bar in 1753, and made bencher of his inn in 1791, but never practised the law.",
"In 1850, Henderson inherited his family's money when his mother died.",
"Keate's money came from the dozens of houses that his family owned in Whitechapel.",
"Eight years after his death the income was worth £700 per year.",
"For some years Keate lived abroad, mainly at Geneva, where he met Voltaire, and in 1755 he was at Rome.",
"After settling in England Keate began to write.",
"He was in turn poet, naturalist, antiquary, and artist.",
"A founder member of the Society of Artists in 1761, he was one of those who left it for the Royal Academy in 1768.",
"He was elected Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London and Fellow of the Royal Society in 1766.",
"Fanny Burney describes Keate in her Early Diary, especially his habit of talking about his own works.",
"Other stories of Keate are in Richard Brinsley Peake's Memoirs of the Colman Family, and Mary Delany in her Autobiography describes visiting his museum in 1779.",
"During the last few years of life his health visibly declined, and he died suddenly at 10 Charlotte Street, Bloomsbury, on 28 June 1797.",
"He was buried at Isleworth on 6 July, and a white marble monument, with bust by Joseph Nollekens, was placed near the spot where he and his wife, who died 18 March 1800, aged 70, were buried.",
"His specimens of shells were sold by auction after his death.",
"Francis Douce's gift of coins to the Bodleian Library included the collection of Keate.",
"Works\nKeate wrote as an amateur.",
"His works were:\n\nAncient and Modern Rome, 1760; an anonymous poem in blank verse, written in 1755.",
"Short Account of the Ancient History, present Government and Laws of the Republic of Geneva, 1761; dedicated to Voltaire.",
"Epistle [in verse] from Lady Jane Grey to Lord Guildford Dudley, supposed to have been written in the Tower of London a few days before they were executed, 1762.",
"The Alps, a Poem, 1763, dedicated to Edward Young.",
"Netley Abbey, an Elegy, 1764; 2nd ed.",
"1769, and often reprinted with John Bullar's Visit to Netley Abbey.",
"The Temple Student, an Epistle to a Friend', 1765.Poem to the Memory of the celebrated Mrs. Cibber, 1766, anonymous; for Susannah Maria Cibber.Ferney; an Epistle to Voltaire, 1768.",
"In praise of Voltaire and his works, but with compliments to Shakespeare, for which the author was rewarded, in the jubilee year 1769, by the mayor and corporation of Stratford-upon-Avon, with an ink-stand made out of a mulberry-tree planted by Shakespeare, and with the freedom of the town.The Monument in Arcadia, a dramatic poem in two acts, 1773; suggested by Nicolas Poussin's picture Les Bergers d'Arcadie of shepherds and shepherdesses contemplating a monument with the words Et in Arcadia ego; used by Christian Felix Weiße for a libretto to a lost opera by Johann Adam Hiller.Sketches from Nature, taken and coloured in a Journey to Margate, 1779, 2 vols.",
"; an imitation of Laurence Sterne, which passed through several editions, and was translated into French.Poetical Works, 1781, 2 vols.",
"; they were dedicated to Dr. William Heberden, and included all his published poems, with many additions, the main being one canto of the Helvetiad, written at Geneva in 1756, and intended for a description of the revolution in Switzerland in the fourteenth century.",
"He was dissuaded by Voltaire from completing it.Epistle to Angelica Kauffman, 1781.The Distressed Poet, a Serio-comic Poem, 1787; describing his troubles through a protracted suit at common law with his architect, Robert Adam.Account of the Pelew Islands, from the Journals of Captain Henry Wilson and some of his officers, shipwrecked there in the Antelope in August 1783, 1788.",
"This work was based on the account of Henry Wilson.",
"It was often reprinted (with a supplement by John Pearce Hockin in 1803), including in an abridged version, and was translated into French (1793) and German (1800).",
"The French translation has been attributed to Mirabeau.",
"Some of Keate's poems are in George Pearch's Collection, iii.",
"269–74; and he wrote prologues and epilogues for the dramatic representations at Newcome's School in Hackney, besides adapting Voltaire's Sémiramis for the stage.",
"Keate also contributed \"Observations on some Roman Earthenware\" to Archæologia.",
"vi.",
"125–9.",
"Between 1766 and 1789 Keate exhibited six pictures at the Society of Artists and thirty at the Royal Academy.",
"His correspondence with Voltaire and Edward Young went to the British Museum (Addit.",
"MSS.",
"30991–2).",
"Family\nKeate married in February 1769 Jane Catharine, daughter of Joseph Hudson, who had been Dutch consul at Tunis, and only sister of Sir Charles Grave Hudson, bart., of Wanlip, Leicestershire.",
"Their issue was one daughter, Georgiana Jane Keate afterwards Mrs. Henderson (1770–1850), who exhibited four pictures at the Society of Artists in 1791, and painted from memory a portrait of Prince Lee Boo, fifteen months after his death, for her father's account of the Pelew islands.",
"She married, on 9 June 1796, John Henderson, B.C.L.",
"(1764–1843), of Adelphi Terrace, London, one of the early patrons of Thomas Girtin and J. M. W. Turner, and himself an amateur artist.",
"Their children were Charles Cooper Henderson, John Henderson, and three daughters, who died unmarried.",
"There are portraits of the mother by Angelica Kauffman and John Russell, R.A. She died 8 January 1850, and was buried in her husband's grave at Kensal Green Cemetery.",
"Notes\n\nFurther reading\nSusan Bennett (2008), '''I Admired Your Talent' – The Artistic Life of Georgiana Jane Henderson (née Keate) (1771–1850),\n\nExternal links\n George Keate at the Eighteenth-Century Poetry Archive (ECPA)\n\nAttribution\n\n1729 births\n1797 deaths\nPeople from Isleworth\nFellows of the Society of Antiquaries of London\nFellows of the Royal Society\nEnglish male poets\nEnglish male non-fiction writers"
] | [
"George Keate was an English poet and writer.",
"He was an artist who traveled and became a friend of Voltaire.",
"He was the son of George Keate and Rachel Kawolski.",
"His father's property was located at Trowbridge in Wiltshire, where he was born on November 30, 1729.",
"He was educated by the Rev. with Gilbert, William, Francis, and others.",
"Richard Wooddeson is from Kingston upon Thames.",
"Keate was clerk to Robert Palmer when he was a student.",
"He was called to the bar in 1753 and made a bencher of his inn in 1791, but never practised the law.",
"When his mother died, Henderson got his family's money.",
"Keate's family DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch",
"His income was worth 700 dollars per year after he died.",
"In 1755, Keate was at Rome, where he met Voltaire.",
"Keate began to write after moving to England.",
"He was 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884",
"One of the founding members of the Society of Artists left for the Royal Academy in 1768.",
"He was a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1766.",
"Keate talked about his own works a lot in the Early Diary.",
"Other stories of Keate can be found in Richard Brinsley Peake's memoir and in Mary Delany's autobiography.",
"He died suddenly at 10 Charlotte Street in Bloomsbury on June 28, 1797, after his health began to decline in the last few years of his life.",
"A white marble monument with a bust by Joseph Nollekens was placed near the spot where he and his wife were buried.",
"His shells were sold at an auction after he died.",
"The collection of Keate was included in the gift of coins by Francis Douce.",
"Keate wrote as an amateur.",
"An anonymous poem in blank verse was written in 1755.",
"The Government and Laws of the Republic of Geneva were dedicated to Voltaire.",
"The letter from Lady Jane Grey to Lord Guildford Dudley was supposed to have been written in the Tower of London a few days before they were executed.",
"Edward Young was the subject of The Alps, a poem.",
"Netley Abbey, an Elegy, was published in 1764.",
"John Bullar's Visit to Netley Abbey was often reprinted.",
"An anonymous letter was written to the memory of Mrs. Cibber, an anonymous letter was written to the memory of Susannah Maria Cibber, and an anonymous letter was written to the memory of Voltaire.",
"The ink-stand made out of a tree planted by Shakespeare was given to the author by the mayor and corporation of Stratford-upon-Avon in the year 1769.",
"Poetic Works, 1781, 2 vols. were translated into French, and were an imitation of Laurence Sterne.",
"They were dedicated to Dr. William Heberden, and included all of his published poems, one of which was intended for a description of the revolution in Switzerland in the 14th century.",
"The Distressed Poet, a Serio-comic Poem, describes his troubles through a lengthy suit of common law with his architect, Robert Adam.",
"The account of Henry Wilson was used in this work.",
"It was translated into French and German in the 18th century.",
"Mirabeau is the author of the French translation.",
"George Pearch's collection contains some of Keate's poems.",
"The dramatic representations at Newcome's School in Hackney were adapted for the stage by him.",
"\"Observations on some Roman Earthenware\" was contributed by Keate.",
"It was vi.",
"The score was 125–9.",
"Between 1766 and 1789, Keate exhibited six pictures at the Society of Artists and thirty pictures at the Royal Academy.",
"The British Museum held his correspondence with Edward Young.",
"There is a person named Misters.",
"301–299",
"The only sister of Sir Charles Grave Hudson, bart., was married to the family Keate in February 1769.",
"Their issue was one daughter, Georgiana Jane Keate, who painted a portrait of Prince Lee Boo fifteen months after his death for her father's account.",
"John Henderson, B.C.L. married her on 9 June 1796.",
"One of the early patrons of Thomas Girtin and J. M. W. Turner was an amateur artist.",
"Their children were Charles Cooper Henderson, John Henderson, and three daughters.",
"The mother was buried in her husband's grave at Kensal Green Cemetery after she died.",
"There are External links to George Keate at the Eighteenth-century Poetry Archive."
] | <mask> (1729–1797) was an English poet and writer. He was a versatile author, known as an artist, who travelled and became a friend of Voltaire. Life
He was son of <mask> of Isleworth, Middlesex, who married Rachel Kawolski, daughter of Count Christian Kawolski. He was born at Trowbridge in Wiltshire, where his father had property, on 30 November 1729 (according to Daniel Lysons, his baptism was not entered in the Isleworth register until 29 November 1730). Together with Gilbert Wakefield, William Hayley, Francis Maseres, and others, he was educated by the Rev. Richard Wooddeson of Kingston upon Thames. On leaving school <mask> was articled as clerk to Robert Palmer, steward to the Duke of Bedford.He entered the Inner Temple in 1751, was called to the bar in 1753, and made bencher of his inn in 1791, but never practised the law. In 1850, Henderson inherited his family's money when his mother died. <mask>'s money came from the dozens of houses that his family owned in Whitechapel. Eight years after his death the income was worth £700 per year. For some years Keate lived abroad, mainly at Geneva, where he met Voltaire, and in 1755 he was at Rome. After settling in England Keate began to write. He was in turn poet, naturalist, antiquary, and artist.A founder member of the Society of Artists in 1761, he was one of those who left it for the Royal Academy in 1768. He was elected Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London and Fellow of the Royal Society in 1766. Fanny Burney describes <mask> in her Early Diary, especially his habit of talking about his own works. Other stories of <mask> are in Richard Brinsley Peake's Memoirs of the Colman Family, and Mary Delany in her Autobiography describes visiting his museum in 1779. During the last few years of life his health visibly declined, and he died suddenly at 10 Charlotte Street, Bloomsbury, on 28 June 1797. He was buried at Isleworth on 6 July, and a white marble monument, with bust by Joseph Nollekens, was placed near the spot where he and his wife, who died 18 March 1800, aged 70, were buried. His specimens of shells were sold by auction after his death.Francis Douce's gift of coins to the Bodleian Library included the collection of Keate. Works
Keate wrote as an amateur. His works were:
Ancient and Modern Rome, 1760; an anonymous poem in blank verse, written in 1755. Short Account of the Ancient History, present Government and Laws of the Republic of Geneva, 1761; dedicated to Voltaire. Epistle [in verse] from Lady Jane Grey to Lord Guildford Dudley, supposed to have been written in the Tower of London a few days before they were executed, 1762. The Alps, a Poem, 1763, dedicated to Edward Young. Netley Abbey, an Elegy, 1764; 2nd ed.1769, and often reprinted with John Bullar's Visit to Netley Abbey. The Temple Student, an Epistle to a Friend', 1765.Poem to the Memory of the celebrated Mrs. Cibber, 1766, anonymous; for Susannah Maria Cibber.Ferney; an Epistle to Voltaire, 1768. In praise of Voltaire and his works, but with compliments to Shakespeare, for which the author was rewarded, in the jubilee year 1769, by the mayor and corporation of Stratford-upon-Avon, with an ink-stand made out of a mulberry-tree planted by Shakespeare, and with the freedom of the town.The Monument in Arcadia, a dramatic poem in two acts, 1773; suggested by Nicolas Poussin's picture Les Bergers d'Arcadie of shepherds and shepherdesses contemplating a monument with the words Et in Arcadia ego; used by Christian Felix Weiße for a libretto to a lost opera by Johann Adam Hiller.Sketches from Nature, taken and coloured in a Journey to Margate, 1779, 2 vols. ; an imitation of Laurence Sterne, which passed through several editions, and was translated into French.Poetical Works, 1781, 2 vols. ; they were dedicated to Dr. William Heberden, and included all his published poems, with many additions, the main being one canto of the Helvetiad, written at Geneva in 1756, and intended for a description of the revolution in Switzerland in the fourteenth century. He was dissuaded by Voltaire from completing it.Epistle to Angelica Kauffman, 1781.The Distressed Poet, a Serio-comic Poem, 1787; describing his troubles through a protracted suit at common law with his architect, Robert Adam.Account of the Pelew Islands, from the Journals of Captain Henry Wilson and some of his officers, shipwrecked there in the Antelope in August 1783, 1788. This work was based on the account of Henry Wilson.It was often reprinted (with a supplement by John Pearce Hockin in 1803), including in an abridged version, and was translated into French (1793) and German (1800). The French translation has been attributed to Mirabeau. Some of <mask>'s poems are in <mask>'s Collection, iii. 269–74; and he wrote prologues and epilogues for the dramatic representations at Newcome's School in Hackney, besides adapting Voltaire's Sémiramis for the stage. <mask> also contributed "Observations on some Roman Earthenware" to Archæologia. vi. 125–9.Between 1766 and 1789 Keate exhibited six pictures at the Society of Artists and thirty at the Royal Academy. His correspondence with Voltaire and Edward Young went to the British Museum (Addit. MSS. 30991–2). Family
Keate married in February 1769 Jane Catharine, daughter of Joseph Hudson, who had been Dutch consul at Tunis, and only sister of Sir Charles Grave Hudson, bart., of Wanlip, Leicestershire. Their issue was one daughter, Georgiana Jane Keate afterwards Mrs. Henderson (1770–1850), who exhibited four pictures at the Society of Artists in 1791, and painted from memory a portrait of Prince Lee Boo, fifteen months after his death, for her father's account of the Pelew islands. She married, on 9 June 1796, John Henderson, B.C.L.(1764–1843), of Adelphi Terrace, London, one of the early patrons of Thomas Girtin and J. M. W. Turner, and himself an amateur artist. Their children were Charles Cooper Henderson, John Henderson, and three daughters, who died unmarried. There are portraits of the mother by Angelica Kauffman and John Russell, R.A. She died 8 January 1850, and was buried in her husband's grave at Kensal Green Cemetery. Notes
Further reading
Susan Bennett (2008), '''I Admired Your Talent' – The Artistic Life of Georgiana Jane Henderson (née <mask>) (1771–1850),
External links
<mask> at the Eighteenth-Century Poetry Archive (ECPA)
Attribution
1729 births
1797 deaths
People from Isleworth
Fellows of the Society of Antiquaries of London
Fellows of the Royal Society
English male poets
English male non-fiction writers | [
"George Keate",
"George Keate",
"Keate",
"Keate",
"Keate",
"Keate",
"Keate",
"George Pearch",
"Keate",
"Keate",
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] | <mask> was an English poet and writer. He was an artist who traveled and became a friend of Voltaire. He was the son of <mask> and Rachel Kawolski. His father's property was located at Trowbridge in Wiltshire, where he was born on November 30, 1729. He was educated by the Rev. with Gilbert, William, Francis, and others. Richard Wooddeson is from Kingston upon Thames. <mask> was clerk to Robert Palmer when he was a student.He was called to the bar in 1753 and made a bencher of his inn in 1791, but never practised the law. When his mother died, Henderson got his family's money. <mask>'s family DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch His income was worth 700 dollars per year after he died. In 1755, Keate was at Rome, where he met Voltaire. Keate began to write after moving to England. He was 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884One of the founding members of the Society of Artists left for the Royal Academy in 1768. He was a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1766. <mask> talked about his own works a lot in the Early Diary. Other stories of <mask> can be found in Richard Brinsley Peake's memoir and in Mary Delany's autobiography. He died suddenly at 10 Charlotte Street in Bloomsbury on June 28, 1797, after his health began to decline in the last few years of his life. A white marble monument with a bust by Joseph Nollekens was placed near the spot where he and his wife were buried. His shells were sold at an auction after he died.The collection of Keate was included in the gift of coins by Francis Douce. <mask> wrote as an amateur. An anonymous poem in blank verse was written in 1755. The Government and Laws of the Republic of Geneva were dedicated to Voltaire. The letter from Lady Jane Grey to Lord Guildford Dudley was supposed to have been written in the Tower of London a few days before they were executed. Edward Young was the subject of The Alps, a poem. Netley Abbey, an Elegy, was published in 1764.John Bullar's Visit to Netley Abbey was often reprinted. An anonymous letter was written to the memory of Mrs. Cibber, an anonymous letter was written to the memory of Susannah Maria Cibber, and an anonymous letter was written to the memory of Voltaire. The ink-stand made out of a tree planted by Shakespeare was given to the author by the mayor and corporation of Stratford-upon-Avon in the year 1769. Poetic Works, 1781, 2 vols. were translated into French, and were an imitation of Laurence Sterne. They were dedicated to Dr. William Heberden, and included all of his published poems, one of which was intended for a description of the revolution in Switzerland in the 14th century. The Distressed Poet, a Serio-comic Poem, describes his troubles through a lengthy suit of common law with his architect, Robert Adam. The account of Henry Wilson was used in this work.It was translated into French and German in the 18th century. Mirabeau is the author of the French translation. <mask>'s collection contains some of <mask>'s poems. The dramatic representations at Newcome's School in Hackney were adapted for the stage by him. "Observations on some Roman Earthenware" was contributed by <mask>. It was vi. The score was 125–9.Between 1766 and 1789, Keate exhibited six pictures at the Society of Artists and thirty pictures at the Royal Academy. The British Museum held his correspondence with Edward Young. There is a person named Misters. 301–299 The only sister of Sir Charles Grave Hudson, bart., was married to the family Keate in February 1769. Their issue was one daughter, Georgiana <mask>, who painted a portrait of Prince Lee Boo fifteen months after his death for her father's account. John Henderson, B.C.L. married her on 9 June 1796.One of the early patrons of Thomas Girtin and J. M. W. Turner was an amateur artist. Their children were Charles Cooper Henderson, John Henderson, and three daughters. The mother was buried in her husband's grave at Kensal Green Cemetery after she died. There are External links to <mask> at the Eighteenth-century Poetry Archive. | [
"George Keate",
"George Keate",
"Keate",
"Keate",
"Keate",
"Keate",
"Keate",
"George Pearch",
"Keate",
"Keate",
"Jane Keate",
"George Keate"
] |
2383576 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wim%20Delvoye | Wim Delvoye | Wim Delvoye (born 1965 in Wervik, West Flanders) is a Belgian neo-conceptual artist known for his inventive and often shocking projects. Much of his work is focused on the body. As the critic Robert Enright wrote in the art magazine Border Crossings, "Delvoye is involved in a way of making art that reorients our understanding of how beauty can be created". Wim Delvoye has an eclectic oeuvre, exposing his interest in a range of themes, from bodily function, and scatology to the function of art in the current market economy, and numerous subjects in between. He lives and works in Ghent (Belgium).
Early life
Delvoye was raised in Wervik, a small town in West Flanders, Belgium. He did not have a religious upbringing but has been influenced by the Roman Catholic architecture that surrounded him. In a conversation with Michaël Amy of the New York Times, Delvoye stated, "I have vivid memories of crowds marching behind a single statue as well as of people kneeling in front of painted and carved altarpieces… Although I was barely aware of the ideas lurking behind these types of images, I soon understood that paintings and sculptures were of great importance".
Career
Growing up, Delvoye attended exhibitions with his parents, and his love of drawing eventually led him to art school, the Royal Academy of Fine Arts (Ghent). Delvoye has said that the pessimistic expectations for Belgian art students freed him, essentially making him realize that he “had nothing to lose”. Shortly thereafter, Delvoye began painting over wallpaper and carpets, coloring in the existing patterns and defying the tendency towards free expression vibrant in the art world at the time.
Delvoye considers himself an originator of concepts—he is attracted initially to the theory behind pieces, instead of the act of painting itself. After 1990, specialists directed by Delvoye have executed most of his work. In 1992, Delvoye received international recognition with the presentation of his “Mosaic” at Documenta IX, a symmetrical display of glazed tiles featuring photographs of his own excrement. The organizer of Documenta IX, Jan Hoet claimed, “The strength of Wim Delvoye lies in his ability to engineer conflict by combining the fine arts and folk art, and playing seriousness against irony.” Three of his most well known projects are “Cloaca”, “Art Farm”, and a series of Gothic works.
Cloaca
Delvoye is perhaps best known for his digestive machine, Cloaca, which he unveiled at the Museum voor Hedendaagse Kunst, Antwerp, after eight years of consultation with experts in fields ranging from plumbing to gastroenterology. As a comment on the Belgians’ love of fine dining, Cloaca is a large installation that turns food into feces, allowing Delvoye to explore the digestive process. In his large mechanism, food begins at a long, transparent bowl (mouth), travels through a number of machine-like assembly stations, and ends in hard matter which is separated from liquid through a cylinder. Delvoye collects and sells the realistically smelling output, suspended in small jars of resin at his Ghent studio. When asked about his inspiration, Delvoye stated that everything in modern life is pointless. The most useless object he could create was a machine that serves no purpose at all, besides the reduction of food to waste. Cloaca has appeared in many incarnations, including Cloaca Original, Cloaca - New & Improved, Cloaca Turbo, Cloaca Quattro, Cloaca N° 5, and Personal Cloaca. Delvoye also sold specially printed toilet paper as a souvenir of the exhibit. In 2016, 5 rolls from the 2007 Mudam Luxembourg exhibit were offered for re-sale for US$300 through an online vendor.
Commissioned Cloaca for MONA
Previously, Delvoye claimed that he would never sell a Cloaca machine to a museum as he could never trust that the curator would maintain the installation properly. However, after two years of discussion with David Walsh, Delvoye agreed to construct a custom Cloaca built specifically for the Museum of Old and New Art in Hobart, Tasmania. The new installation is suspended from the museum ceiling in a room custom-built for it.
Art Farm
Though Delvoye started tattooing pig skins taken from slaughterhouses in the United States in 1992, he began to tattoo live pigs in 1997. Delvoye was interested in the idea that “the pig would literally grow in value," both in a physical and economic sense. He ultimately moved the operation to an Art Farm in China in 2004. The pigs have been inked with a diverse array of designs, including the trivial, such as skulls and crosses, to Louis Vuitton designs, to designs dictated by the pig's anatomy". In an interview with ArtAsiaPacific's Paul Laster, Delvoye described the process of tattooing a live pig, "we sedate it, shave it and apply Vaseline to its skin".
Gothic works
Delvoye is additionally well known for his “gothic” style work. In 2001, Delvoye, with the help of a radiologist, had several of his friends paint themselves with small amounts of barium, and perform explicit sexual acts in medical X-ray clinics. He then used the X-ray scans to fill gothic window frames instead of classic stained glass. Delvoye suggests that radiography reduces the body to a machine. When he was not an active participant, Delvoye observed from a computer screen in another room, allowing the subjects enough distance to perform normally, although Delvoye has described the whole operation as "very medical, very antiseptic". Delvoye also creates oversized laser-cut steel sculptures of objects typically found in construction (like a cement truck), customized in seventeenth-century Flemish Baroque style. These structures juxtapose "medieval craftsmanship with Gothic filigree". Delvoye brings together the heavy, brute force of contemporary machinery and the delicate craftsmanship associated with Gothic architecture.
In a 2013 show in New York City, Delvoye showed intricate laser-cut works combining architectural and figurative references with shapes such as a Möbius band or a Rorschach inkblot.
See also
Digesting Duck
Useless machine
Artistic scandal
References
External links
Wim Delvoye's website
Wim Delvoye at Sperone Westwater, New York
Wim Delvoye at ARNDT Berlin
Wim Delvoye at Galerie Emmanuel Perrotin, Miami & Paris
Wim Delvoye on the Time Europe website (2003)
We Make Money Not Art, "Wim Delvoye: Cloaca 2000-2007"
Wim Delvoye on Artnet
"Cloaca" exhibition in the New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York (2002)
"Cloaca" - An Interview with Josefina Ayerza
Interview with Fabian Stech
special interview about the Discobolos in Roubaix city (french language)
norwegian news story about Delvoyes move to China (norwegian language)
Wim Delvoye at the Future Pass exhibition in Venice 2011
Artist's page at Gary Tatintsian Gallery website
1965 births
Living people
People from Wervik
Belgian contemporary artists
Conceptual artists
Animal cruelty incidents
Royal Academy of Fine Arts (Ghent) alumni
Recycled art artists | [
"Wim Delvoye (born 1965 in Wervik, West Flanders) is a Belgian neo-conceptual artist known for his inventive and often shocking projects.",
"Much of his work is focused on the body.",
"As the critic Robert Enright wrote in the art magazine Border Crossings, \"Delvoye is involved in a way of making art that reorients our understanding of how beauty can be created\".",
"Wim Delvoye has an eclectic oeuvre, exposing his interest in a range of themes, from bodily function, and scatology to the function of art in the current market economy, and numerous subjects in between.",
"He lives and works in Ghent (Belgium).",
"Early life\nDelvoye was raised in Wervik, a small town in West Flanders, Belgium.",
"He did not have a religious upbringing but has been influenced by the Roman Catholic architecture that surrounded him.",
"In a conversation with Michaël Amy of the New York Times, Delvoye stated, \"I have vivid memories of crowds marching behind a single statue as well as of people kneeling in front of painted and carved altarpieces… Although I was barely aware of the ideas lurking behind these types of images, I soon understood that paintings and sculptures were of great importance\".",
"Career\nGrowing up, Delvoye attended exhibitions with his parents, and his love of drawing eventually led him to art school, the Royal Academy of Fine Arts (Ghent).",
"Delvoye has said that the pessimistic expectations for Belgian art students freed him, essentially making him realize that he “had nothing to lose”.",
"Shortly thereafter, Delvoye began painting over wallpaper and carpets, coloring in the existing patterns and defying the tendency towards free expression vibrant in the art world at the time.",
"Delvoye considers himself an originator of concepts—he is attracted initially to the theory behind pieces, instead of the act of painting itself.",
"After 1990, specialists directed by Delvoye have executed most of his work.",
"In 1992, Delvoye received international recognition with the presentation of his “Mosaic” at Documenta IX, a symmetrical display of glazed tiles featuring photographs of his own excrement.",
"The organizer of Documenta IX, Jan Hoet claimed, “The strength of Wim Delvoye lies in his ability to engineer conflict by combining the fine arts and folk art, and playing seriousness against irony.” Three of his most well known projects are “Cloaca”, “Art Farm”, and a series of Gothic works.",
"Cloaca\n\nDelvoye is perhaps best known for his digestive machine, Cloaca, which he unveiled at the Museum voor Hedendaagse Kunst, Antwerp, after eight years of consultation with experts in fields ranging from plumbing to gastroenterology.",
"As a comment on the Belgians’ love of fine dining, Cloaca is a large installation that turns food into feces, allowing Delvoye to explore the digestive process.",
"In his large mechanism, food begins at a long, transparent bowl (mouth), travels through a number of machine-like assembly stations, and ends in hard matter which is separated from liquid through a cylinder.",
"Delvoye collects and sells the realistically smelling output, suspended in small jars of resin at his Ghent studio.",
"When asked about his inspiration, Delvoye stated that everything in modern life is pointless.",
"The most useless object he could create was a machine that serves no purpose at all, besides the reduction of food to waste.",
"Cloaca has appeared in many incarnations, including Cloaca Original, Cloaca - New & Improved, Cloaca Turbo, Cloaca Quattro, Cloaca N° 5, and Personal Cloaca.",
"Delvoye also sold specially printed toilet paper as a souvenir of the exhibit.",
"In 2016, 5 rolls from the 2007 Mudam Luxembourg exhibit were offered for re-sale for US$300 through an online vendor.",
"Commissioned Cloaca for MONA\nPreviously, Delvoye claimed that he would never sell a Cloaca machine to a museum as he could never trust that the curator would maintain the installation properly.",
"However, after two years of discussion with David Walsh, Delvoye agreed to construct a custom Cloaca built specifically for the Museum of Old and New Art in Hobart, Tasmania.",
"The new installation is suspended from the museum ceiling in a room custom-built for it.",
"Art Farm\nThough Delvoye started tattooing pig skins taken from slaughterhouses in the United States in 1992, he began to tattoo live pigs in 1997.",
"Delvoye was interested in the idea that “the pig would literally grow in value,\" both in a physical and economic sense.",
"He ultimately moved the operation to an Art Farm in China in 2004.",
"The pigs have been inked with a diverse array of designs, including the trivial, such as skulls and crosses, to Louis Vuitton designs, to designs dictated by the pig's anatomy\".",
"In an interview with ArtAsiaPacific's Paul Laster, Delvoye described the process of tattooing a live pig, \"we sedate it, shave it and apply Vaseline to its skin\".",
"Gothic works\nDelvoye is additionally well known for his “gothic” style work.",
"In 2001, Delvoye, with the help of a radiologist, had several of his friends paint themselves with small amounts of barium, and perform explicit sexual acts in medical X-ray clinics.",
"He then used the X-ray scans to fill gothic window frames instead of classic stained glass.",
"Delvoye suggests that radiography reduces the body to a machine.",
"When he was not an active participant, Delvoye observed from a computer screen in another room, allowing the subjects enough distance to perform normally, although Delvoye has described the whole operation as \"very medical, very antiseptic\".",
"Delvoye also creates oversized laser-cut steel sculptures of objects typically found in construction (like a cement truck), customized in seventeenth-century Flemish Baroque style.",
"These structures juxtapose \"medieval craftsmanship with Gothic filigree\".",
"Delvoye brings together the heavy, brute force of contemporary machinery and the delicate craftsmanship associated with Gothic architecture.",
"In a 2013 show in New York City, Delvoye showed intricate laser-cut works combining architectural and figurative references with shapes such as a Möbius band or a Rorschach inkblot.",
"See also\nDigesting Duck\nUseless machine\n Artistic scandal\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links\n\nWim Delvoye's website\nWim Delvoye at Sperone Westwater, New York\nWim Delvoye at ARNDT Berlin\nWim Delvoye at Galerie Emmanuel Perrotin, Miami & Paris\nWim Delvoye on the Time Europe website (2003)\n We Make Money Not Art, \"Wim Delvoye: Cloaca 2000-2007\"\n Wim Delvoye on Artnet\n\"Cloaca\" exhibition in the New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York (2002)\n\"Cloaca\" - An Interview with Josefina Ayerza\n Interview with Fabian Stech\nspecial interview about the Discobolos in Roubaix city (french language)\nnorwegian news story about Delvoyes move to China (norwegian language)\nWim Delvoye at the Future Pass exhibition in Venice 2011\nArtist's page at Gary Tatintsian Gallery website\n\n1965 births\nLiving people\nPeople from Wervik\nBelgian contemporary artists\nConceptual artists\nAnimal cruelty incidents\nRoyal Academy of Fine Arts (Ghent) alumni\nRecycled art artists"
] | [
"Belgian neo-conceptual artist Wim Delvoye is known for his innovative and often shocking projects.",
"His work focuses on the body.",
"Delvoye is involved in a way of making art that reorients our understanding of how beauty can be created.",
"A wide range of themes, from bodily function, and scatology to the function of art in the current market economy, and numerous subjects in between, are exposed by Wim Delvoye's eclectic oeuvre.",
"He lives and works in Belgium.",
"Delvoye was raised in a small town in West Flanders.",
"He was influenced by the Roman Catholic architecture that surrounded him.",
"In a conversation with the New York Times, Delvoye stated, \"I have vivid memories of crowds marching behind a single statue as well as of people kneeling in front of painted and carved altarpieces.\"",
"Growing up, Delvoye attended exhibitions with his parents, and his love of drawing eventually led him to art school.",
"Delvoye said that the pessimistic expectations for Belgian art students made him realize that he had nothing to lose.",
"Delvoye began painting over wallpaper and carpets, coloring in the existing patterns and bucking the tendency towards free expression in the art world at the time.",
"Delvoye believes that he is an originator of concepts because he is attracted to the theory behind the pieces.",
"Most of the work was done by specialists directed by Delvoye.",
"In 1992, Delvoye received international recognition with the presentation of his \"Mosaic\" at Documenta IX, a symmetrical display of glazed tiles featuring photographs of his own excrement.",
"According to the organizers of Documenta IX, the strength of Delvoye lies in his ability to engineer conflict by combining the fine arts and folk art, and playing seriousness against irony.",
"After eight years of consultation with experts in a variety of fields, Cloaca Delvoye unveiled his digestive machine, Cloaca.",
"As a comment on the Belgians love of fine dining, Cloaca is a large installation that turns food into feces.",
"In his large mechanism, food begins at a long, transparent bowl, travels through a number of machine-like assembly stations, and ends in hard matter which is separated from liquid through a cylinder.",
"Delvoye collects and sells the smell in small jars at his studio.",
"Delvoye stated that everything in modern life is pointless.",
"The most useless object he could create was a machine that only reduced food to waste.",
"There are many different versions of Cloaca, including Cloaca Original, Cloaca - New & Improved, Cloaca N 5, and Personal Cloaca.",
"The souvenir of the exhibit was specially printed toilet paper.",
"5 rolls from the Mudam Luxembourg exhibit were offered for re-sale in 2016 for US$300.",
"Delvoye claimed that he wouldn't sell a Cloaca machine to a museum as he didn't trust the curator to maintain the installation properly.",
"After two years of discussion, Delvoye agreed to build a custom Cloaca for the Museum of Old and New Art.",
"The ceiling of the museum is being suspended for the new installation.",
"Delvoye began to tattoo live pigs in 1997 after tattooing pig skins in 1992.",
"The idea that the pig would grow in value was something that Delvoye was interested in.",
"He moved the operation to China in 2004.",
"The pigs have been inked with a variety of designs, including the trivial, such as skulls and crosses, to Louis Vuitton designs, to designs dictated by the pig's anatomy.",
"Delvoye explained the process of tattooing a live pig in an interview with Paul Laster.",
"Gothic works by Delvoye are well known.",
"In 2001, Delvoye had several of his friends paint themselves with small amounts of barium, and perform explicit sexual acts in medical X-ray clinics.",
"He used X-ray scans to fill gothic window frames.",
"The body can be reduced to a machine.",
"Delvoye was able to observe the operation from a computer screen in another room because he was not an active participant.",
"A cement truck is one of the oversized laser-cut steel sculptures created by Delvoye.",
"\"Medieval craftsmanship with Gothic filigree\" is what these structures say.",
"Gothic architecture and contemporary machinery are brought together by Delvoye.",
"In a show in New York City, Delvoye showed intricate laser-cut works combining architectural and figurative references with shapes such as a Mbius band or a Rorschach inkblot.",
"See also Digesting Duck Useless machine."
] | <mask> (born 1965 in Wervik, West Flanders) is a Belgian neo-conceptual artist known for his inventive and often shocking projects. Much of his work is focused on the body. As the critic Robert Enright wrote in the art magazine Border Crossings, "Delvoye is involved in a way of making art that reorients our understanding of how beauty can be created". <mask>e has an eclectic oeuvre, exposing his interest in a range of themes, from bodily function, and scatology to the function of art in the current market economy, and numerous subjects in between. He lives and works in Ghent (Belgium). Early life
Delvoye was raised in Wervik, a small town in West Flanders, Belgium. He did not have a religious upbringing but has been influenced by the Roman Catholic architecture that surrounded him.In a conversation with Michaël Amy of the New York Times, Delvoye stated, "I have vivid memories of crowds marching behind a single statue as well as of people kneeling in front of painted and carved altarpieces… Although I was barely aware of the ideas lurking behind these types of images, I soon understood that paintings and sculptures were of great importance". Career
Growing up, Delvoye attended exhibitions with his parents, and his love of drawing eventually led him to art school, the Royal Academy of Fine Arts (Ghent). Delvoye has said that the pessimistic expectations for Belgian art students freed him, essentially making him realize that he “had nothing to lose”. Shortly thereafter, Delvoye began painting over wallpaper and carpets, coloring in the existing patterns and defying the tendency towards free expression vibrant in the art world at the time. Delvoye considers himself an originator of concepts—he is attracted initially to the theory behind pieces, instead of the act of painting itself. After 1990, specialists directed by Delvoye have executed most of his work. In 1992, Delvoye received international recognition with the presentation of his “Mosaic” at Documenta IX, a symmetrical display of glazed tiles featuring photographs of his own excrement.The organizer of Documenta IX, Jan Hoet claimed, “The strength of <mask> Delvoye lies in his ability to engineer conflict by combining the fine arts and folk art, and playing seriousness against irony.” Three of his most well known projects are “Cloaca”, “Art Farm”, and a series of Gothic works. Cloaca
Delvoye is perhaps best known for his digestive machine, Cloaca, which he unveiled at the Museum voor Hedendaagse Kunst, Antwerp, after eight years of consultation with experts in fields ranging from plumbing to gastroenterology. As a comment on the Belgians’ love of fine dining, Cloaca is a large installation that turns food into feces, allowing Delvoye to explore the digestive process. In his large mechanism, food begins at a long, transparent bowl (mouth), travels through a number of machine-like assembly stations, and ends in hard matter which is separated from liquid through a cylinder. Delvoye collects and sells the realistically smelling output, suspended in small jars of resin at his Ghent studio. When asked about his inspiration, Delvoye stated that everything in modern life is pointless. The most useless object he could create was a machine that serves no purpose at all, besides the reduction of food to waste.Cloaca has appeared in many incarnations, including Cloaca Original, Cloaca - New & Improved, Cloaca Turbo, Cloaca Quattro, Cloaca N° 5, and Personal Cloaca. Delvoye also sold specially printed toilet paper as a souvenir of the exhibit. In 2016, 5 rolls from the 2007 Mudam Luxembourg exhibit were offered for re-sale for US$300 through an online vendor. Commissioned Cloaca for MONA
Previously, Delvoye claimed that he would never sell a Cloaca machine to a museum as he could never trust that the curator would maintain the installation properly. However, after two years of discussion with David Walsh, Delvoye agreed to construct a custom Cloaca built specifically for the Museum of Old and New Art in Hobart, Tasmania. The new installation is suspended from the museum ceiling in a room custom-built for it. Art Farm
Though Delvoye started tattooing pig skins taken from slaughterhouses in the United States in 1992, he began to tattoo live pigs in 1997.Delvoye was interested in the idea that “the pig would literally grow in value," both in a physical and economic sense. He ultimately moved the operation to an Art Farm in China in 2004. The pigs have been inked with a diverse array of designs, including the trivial, such as skulls and crosses, to Louis Vuitton designs, to designs dictated by the pig's anatomy". In an interview with ArtAsiaPacific's Paul Laster, Delvoye described the process of tattooing a live pig, "we sedate it, shave it and apply Vaseline to its skin". Gothic works
Delvoye is additionally well known for his “gothic” style work. In 2001, Delvoye, with the help of a radiologist, had several of his friends paint themselves with small amounts of barium, and perform explicit sexual acts in medical X-ray clinics. He then used the X-ray scans to fill gothic window frames instead of classic stained glass.Delvoye suggests that radiography reduces the body to a machine. When he was not an active participant, Delvoye observed from a computer screen in another room, allowing the subjects enough distance to perform normally, although Delvoye has described the whole operation as "very medical, very antiseptic". Delvoye also creates oversized laser-cut steel sculptures of objects typically found in construction (like a cement truck), customized in seventeenth-century Flemish Baroque style. These structures juxtapose "medieval craftsmanship with Gothic filigree". Delvoye brings together the heavy, brute force of contemporary machinery and the delicate craftsmanship associated with Gothic architecture. In a 2013 show in New York City, Delvoye showed intricate laser-cut works combining architectural and figurative references with shapes such as a Möbius band or a Rorschach inkblot. See also
Digesting Duck
Useless machine
Artistic scandal
References
External links
Wim Delvoye's website
<mask> Delvoye at Sperone Westwater, New York
Wim Delvoye at ARNDT Berlin
Wim Delvoye at Galerie Emmanuel Perrotin, Miami & Paris
Wim Delvoye on the Time Europe website (2003)
We Make Money Not Art, "Wim Delvoye: Cloaca 2000-2007"
Wim Delvoye on Artnet
"Cloaca" exhibition in the New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York (2002)
"Cloaca" - An Interview with Josefina Ayerza
Interview with Fabian Stech
special interview about the Discobolos in Roubaix city (french language)
norwegian news story about Delvoyes move to China (norwegian language)
<mask> Delvoye at the Future Pass exhibition in Venice 2011
Artist's page at Gary Tatintsian Gallery website
1965 births
Living people
People from Wervik
Belgian contemporary artists
Conceptual artists
Animal cruelty incidents
Royal Academy of Fine Arts (Ghent) alumni
Recycled art artists | [
"Wim Delvoye",
"Wim Delvoy",
"Wim",
"Wim",
"Wim"
] | Belgian neo-conceptual artist <mask> is known for his innovative and often shocking projects. His work focuses on the body. Delvoye is involved in a way of making art that reorients our understanding of how beauty can be created. A wide range of themes, from bodily function, and scatology to the function of art in the current market economy, and numerous subjects in between, are exposed by <mask>e's eclectic oeuvre. He lives and works in Belgium. Delvoye was raised in a small town in West Flanders. He was influenced by the Roman Catholic architecture that surrounded him.In a conversation with the New York Times, Delvoye stated, "I have vivid memories of crowds marching behind a single statue as well as of people kneeling in front of painted and carved altarpieces." Growing up, Delvoye attended exhibitions with his parents, and his love of drawing eventually led him to art school. Delvoye said that the pessimistic expectations for Belgian art students made him realize that he had nothing to lose. Delvoye began painting over wallpaper and carpets, coloring in the existing patterns and bucking the tendency towards free expression in the art world at the time. Delvoye believes that he is an originator of concepts because he is attracted to the theory behind the pieces. Most of the work was done by specialists directed by Delvoye. In 1992, Delvoye received international recognition with the presentation of his "Mosaic" at Documenta IX, a symmetrical display of glazed tiles featuring photographs of his own excrement.According to the organizers of Documenta IX, the strength of Delvoye lies in his ability to engineer conflict by combining the fine arts and folk art, and playing seriousness against irony. After eight years of consultation with experts in a variety of fields, Cloaca Delvoye unveiled his digestive machine, Cloaca. As a comment on the Belgians love of fine dining, Cloaca is a large installation that turns food into feces. In his large mechanism, food begins at a long, transparent bowl, travels through a number of machine-like assembly stations, and ends in hard matter which is separated from liquid through a cylinder. Delvoye collects and sells the smell in small jars at his studio. Delvoye stated that everything in modern life is pointless. The most useless object he could create was a machine that only reduced food to waste.There are many different versions of Cloaca, including Cloaca Original, Cloaca - New & Improved, Cloaca N 5, and Personal Cloaca. The souvenir of the exhibit was specially printed toilet paper. 5 rolls from the Mudam Luxembourg exhibit were offered for re-sale in 2016 for US$300. Delvoye claimed that he wouldn't sell a Cloaca machine to a museum as he didn't trust the curator to maintain the installation properly. After two years of discussion, Delvoye agreed to build a custom Cloaca for the Museum of Old and New Art. The ceiling of the museum is being suspended for the new installation. Delvoye began to tattoo live pigs in 1997 after tattooing pig skins in 1992.The idea that the pig would grow in value was something that Delvoye was interested in. He moved the operation to China in 2004. The pigs have been inked with a variety of designs, including the trivial, such as skulls and crosses, to Louis Vuitton designs, to designs dictated by the pig's anatomy. Delvoye explained the process of tattooing a live pig in an interview with Paul Laster. Gothic works by Delvoye are well known. In 2001, Delvoye had several of his friends paint themselves with small amounts of barium, and perform explicit sexual acts in medical X-ray clinics. He used X-ray scans to fill gothic window frames.The body can be reduced to a machine. Delvoye was able to observe the operation from a computer screen in another room because he was not an active participant. A cement truck is one of the oversized laser-cut steel sculptures created by Delvoye. "Medieval craftsmanship with Gothic filigree" is what these structures say. Gothic architecture and contemporary machinery are brought together by Delvoye. In a show in New York City, Delvoye showed intricate laser-cut works combining architectural and figurative references with shapes such as a Mbius band or a Rorschach inkblot. See also Digesting Duck Useless machine. | [
"Wim Delvoye",
"Wim Delvoy"
] |
38512266 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veronica%20Dahl | Veronica Dahl | Verónica Dahl is an Argentine/Canadian computer scientist, who is recognized as one of the 15 founders of the field of logic programming.
Early life
Dahl attended college at Buenos Aires University, and graduated from there with a degree in computer science in 1974. As the political conflict in Argentina increased, Dahl attended graduate school in France. In 1977, she was the first graduate at the Université d'Aix-Marseille to receive a doctorate in Artificial Intelligence.
Career
While involved in the research for her doctorate, Dahl became a pioneer in the field of logic programming, developing both the first logic programming database system, and an (also logic-programmed) front end to consult it in a human language (Spanish). Dahl's research and methodologies became multi-disciplinary including Computational Linguistics, Computational Molecular Biology, and Artificial Intelligence. She became an associate professor at Simon Fraser University in 1982, and became a full professor there in 1991. In 1996 she was honoured by the Logic Programming Association as one of the 15 founders of the Logic Programming Field, and has extensively pioneered as well the areas of Logic Grammars and Constraint Handling Rules.
Dahl is a woman pioneer in a male-dominated field. She fought gender inequality while she was a professor at Simon Fraser University, both through mentoring and role modelling, and through concrete actions. After Simon Fraser University refused to reimburse her $17 for childcare expenses while she was delivering a guest speech in Victoria, where she’d traveled with her nursing baby, she went first to her department and then Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) with her protest, which ended with the NSERC changing their policy to make childcare a covered expense for nursing researchers they funded. She proposed and actively promoted the provision of childcare at logic programming conferences, until it was adopted formally into their constitution, and is now routinely offered as a result. She also obtained a change in SFU's legislation when it resulted in her graduate student being timed out for delays caused by life-threatening medical conditions upon birthing twins.
She has developed numerous international research projects and collaborations, most notably with Denmark, Spain, Portugal, Germany and France, and worked with IBM, Vancouver Software Labs, International Artificial Intelligence. In her work with IBM, she obtained a record-breaking research contract. She served as president of the Association of Logic Programming from 2001-2005. She was awarded the prestigious Marie Curie Chair of Excellence 2008-2011 from the European Commission for her pioneering work on Constraint Solving and Language Processing for Bioinformatics. In 2012 she quit her Full Professor position at Simon Fraser University in order to focus on research. SFU awarded her Lifetime Professor Emerits status as from 2013. Her research program continues under NSERC funding, as well as through her own AI company, Regenerative AI, and she serves at the Scientific Advisory Board of IMDEA Software. She balances her scientific activities with artistic ones, as a student of music, theatre and dance, and performs regularly as singer and guitarist in Vancouver.
Research
Dahl's research is focused on "bridging the gap between the formal and the humanistic sciences, and to achieve more human-like communication with computers". As such it is multi-faceted, but always pivoting around the main incarnations of inferential programming that she helped pioneer: Logic programming, Constraint- based Programming, and Logic Grammars. She also incorporated non-classical reasoning capabilities into Prolog, Hyprolog and CHRG. Dahl's research has had theoretical and practical impact in logic, linguistics, computational intelligence, internet programming, virtual worlds and molecular biology.
Her work on discovering signature oligos, which resulted in software being used daily at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, has also been used to complete the validation of an array for all Phytophthora species, with high impact for forestry (as one of the species is the causal agent of the sudden oak death which is devastating California), for marine sciences (it has been used to monitor biodiversity in Hawaïian coral reefs), for entomology (for characterizing biting flies) and for detecting fraudulent fish sales. Her present research focuses on grammar induction for under-resourced languages and on solidarity vs. domination-promoting uses of AI.
Most Significant Scholarly Publications
Language-proficient Knowledge Bases and the World Wide Web
Intelligent methodologies for Life Sciences, in particular Molecular Biology
Properties as constraints—from parsing to cognitive modeling
Integrating high level methodologies into a new language: HYPROLOG
Honors and awards
Dahl has received many honors and awards in her career. In 1994, Dahl received the Calouste Gulbenkian Award for Science and Technology. In 1997, she was named as one of the founding members in logic programming by the Association for Logic Programming. In 2009, she received the Best Promising Paper Award at the Third International Work-Conference on the Interplay between Natural and Artificial Computation (2009).
Books
(1989) Abramson, H. & Dahl, V. Logic Grammars. Springer.
Literary works
Prose
(1999) Love to Hide, Love to Invent. First Prize in the Prose Category, Cecilia Lamont Literary Contest.
(2000) Detour. First Prize, Crime55 literary contest.
(2000) A Case of Possession. First Prize in the Prose Category, Cecilia Lamont Literary Contest.
Poetry
(2000) Wholeness. Finalist of the 11th Annual Poetry contest, Hope Writers Guild.
(2000) Life Tides. Finalist of the Millenium 2000 Poetry contest.
See also
Logic programming
Timeline of women in science
References
Living people
Argentine emigrants to Canada
Argentine computer scientists
Canadian computer scientists
Argentine women scientists
Simon Fraser University faculty
Logic programming researchers
Canadian women computer scientists
20th-century Canadian women scientists
21st-century Canadian women scientists
Year of birth missing (living people) | [
"Verónica Dahl is an Argentine/Canadian computer scientist, who is recognized as one of the 15 founders of the field of logic programming.",
"Early life\nDahl attended college at Buenos Aires University, and graduated from there with a degree in computer science in 1974.",
"As the political conflict in Argentina increased, Dahl attended graduate school in France.",
"In 1977, she was the first graduate at the Université d'Aix-Marseille to receive a doctorate in Artificial Intelligence.",
"Career\nWhile involved in the research for her doctorate, Dahl became a pioneer in the field of logic programming, developing both the first logic programming database system, and an (also logic-programmed) front end to consult it in a human language (Spanish).",
"Dahl's research and methodologies became multi-disciplinary including Computational Linguistics, Computational Molecular Biology, and Artificial Intelligence.",
"She became an associate professor at Simon Fraser University in 1982, and became a full professor there in 1991.",
"In 1996 she was honoured by the Logic Programming Association as one of the 15 founders of the Logic Programming Field, and has extensively pioneered as well the areas of Logic Grammars and Constraint Handling Rules.",
"Dahl is a woman pioneer in a male-dominated field.",
"She fought gender inequality while she was a professor at Simon Fraser University, both through mentoring and role modelling, and through concrete actions.",
"After Simon Fraser University refused to reimburse her $17 for childcare expenses while she was delivering a guest speech in Victoria, where she’d traveled with her nursing baby, she went first to her department and then Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) with her protest, which ended with the NSERC changing their policy to make childcare a covered expense for nursing researchers they funded.",
"She proposed and actively promoted the provision of childcare at logic programming conferences, until it was adopted formally into their constitution, and is now routinely offered as a result.",
"She also obtained a change in SFU's legislation when it resulted in her graduate student being timed out for delays caused by life-threatening medical conditions upon birthing twins.",
"She has developed numerous international research projects and collaborations, most notably with Denmark, Spain, Portugal, Germany and France, and worked with IBM, Vancouver Software Labs, International Artificial Intelligence.",
"In her work with IBM, she obtained a record-breaking research contract.",
"She served as president of the Association of Logic Programming from 2001-2005.",
"She was awarded the prestigious Marie Curie Chair of Excellence 2008-2011 from the European Commission for her pioneering work on Constraint Solving and Language Processing for Bioinformatics.",
"In 2012 she quit her Full Professor position at Simon Fraser University in order to focus on research.",
"SFU awarded her Lifetime Professor Emerits status as from 2013.",
"Her research program continues under NSERC funding, as well as through her own AI company, Regenerative AI, and she serves at the Scientific Advisory Board of IMDEA Software.",
"She balances her scientific activities with artistic ones, as a student of music, theatre and dance, and performs regularly as singer and guitarist in Vancouver.",
"Research\nDahl's research is focused on \"bridging the gap between the formal and the humanistic sciences, and to achieve more human-like communication with computers\".",
"As such it is multi-faceted, but always pivoting around the main incarnations of inferential programming that she helped pioneer: Logic programming, Constraint- based Programming, and Logic Grammars.",
"She also incorporated non-classical reasoning capabilities into Prolog, Hyprolog and CHRG.",
"Dahl's research has had theoretical and practical impact in logic, linguistics, computational intelligence, internet programming, virtual worlds and molecular biology.",
"Her work on discovering signature oligos, which resulted in software being used daily at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, has also been used to complete the validation of an array for all Phytophthora species, with high impact for forestry (as one of the species is the causal agent of the sudden oak death which is devastating California), for marine sciences (it has been used to monitor biodiversity in Hawaïian coral reefs), for entomology (for characterizing biting flies) and for detecting fraudulent fish sales.",
"Her present research focuses on grammar induction for under-resourced languages and on solidarity vs. domination-promoting uses of AI.",
"Most Significant Scholarly Publications\n Language-proficient Knowledge Bases and the World Wide Web\n Intelligent methodologies for Life Sciences, in particular Molecular Biology\n Properties as constraints—from parsing to cognitive modeling\n Integrating high level methodologies into a new language: HYPROLOG\n\nHonors and awards\nDahl has received many honors and awards in her career.",
"In 1994, Dahl received the Calouste Gulbenkian Award for Science and Technology.",
"In 1997, she was named as one of the founding members in logic programming by the Association for Logic Programming.",
"In 2009, she received the Best Promising Paper Award at the Third International Work-Conference on the Interplay between Natural and Artificial Computation (2009).",
"Books\n(1989) Abramson, H. & Dahl, V. Logic Grammars.",
"Springer.",
"Literary works\n\nProse\n(1999) Love to Hide, Love to Invent.",
"First Prize in the Prose Category, Cecilia Lamont Literary Contest.",
"(2000) Detour.",
"First Prize, Crime55 literary contest.",
"(2000) A Case of Possession.",
"First Prize in the Prose Category, Cecilia Lamont Literary Contest.",
"Poetry\n(2000) Wholeness.",
"Finalist of the 11th Annual Poetry contest, Hope Writers Guild.",
"(2000) Life Tides.",
"Finalist of the Millenium 2000 Poetry contest.",
"See also\n Logic programming\n Timeline of women in science\n\nReferences\n\nLiving people\nArgentine emigrants to Canada\nArgentine computer scientists\nCanadian computer scientists\nArgentine women scientists\nSimon Fraser University faculty\nLogic programming researchers\nCanadian women computer scientists\n20th-century Canadian women scientists\n21st-century Canadian women scientists\nYear of birth missing (living people)"
] | [
"One of the founding fathers of the field of logic programming is Vernica Dahl.",
"After graduating from college with a degree in computer science, Dahl went to work for IBM.",
"As the political conflict in Argentina increased, he attended graduate school in France.",
"She was the first graduate of the Université d'Aix-Marseille to receive a PhD in Artificial Intelligence.",
"She became a pioneer in the field of logic programming when she developed the first logic programming database system and a front end to consult it in a human language.",
"Computational Linguistics, Computational Biology, and Artificial Intelligence are some of the disciplines that are multi-disciplinary.",
"She became a full professor at Simon Fraser University in 1991.",
"She was honoured by the Logic Programming Association in 1996 as one of the 15 founding members of the field.",
"A woman is a pioneer in a male-dominated field.",
"She was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"She went first to her department and then the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) with her protest after Simon Fraser University refused to reimburse her $17 for childcare expenses while she was delivering a guest speech in Victoria.",
"She proposed and promoted the provision of child care at logic programming conferences until they adopted it into their constitution.",
"When her graduate student was timed out for delays caused by life-threatening medical conditions, she obtained a change in the legislation.",
"She has collaborated with many countries, most notably with Spain, Portugal, Germany and France.",
"A record-breaking research contract was obtained by her in her work with IBM.",
"She was president of the Association of Logic Programming from 2001 to 2005.",
"The European Commission awarded her the Marie Curie Chair of excellence for her work on Constraint Solving and Language Processing for Bioinformatics.",
"She left her Full Professor position at Simon Fraser University in order to focus on research.",
"Her Lifetime Professor Emerits status was awarded by SFU.",
"Her research program continues under the auspices of the NSERC, as well as through her own company, and she is a member of the Scientific Advisory Board.",
"She is a student of music, theatre and dance and performs regularly as a singer and guitarist.",
"To achieve more human-like communication with computers, Research Dahl's research is focused onbridging the gap between the formal and the humanistic sciences.",
"It is multi-faceted, but always focuses on the main incarnations of inferential programming that she helped pioneer.",
"She incorporated non-classical reasoning into Prolog.",
"The impact of Dahl's research has been in logic, linguistics, computational intelligence, internet programming, virtual worlds and molecular biology.",
"Her work on discovering signature oligos, which resulted in software being used daily at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, has also been used to complete the validation of an array for all Phytophthora species.",
"Her current research focuses on under-resourced languages and solidarity vs. domination-promoting uses of artificial intelligence.",
"The World Wide Web Intelligent methodologies for Life Sciences, in particular, Integrating high level methodologies into a new language, is one of the most significant scholarly publications.",
"The Calouste Gulbenkian Award for Science and Technology was given to Dahl in 1994.",
"She was one of the founding members of the Association for Logic Programming.",
"She received an award for her paper at the Third International Work-Conference on the Interplay between Natural and Artificial Computation.",
"The books were written by H. and V. Logic Grammars.",
"Springer.",
"Love to Hide, Love to Invent is a literary work.",
"The first prize in the literary contest was for the prose category.",
"There was a tour in 2000.",
"The first prize in the literary contest was Crime55.",
"There is a case of possession.",
"The first prize in the literary contest was for the prose category.",
"Wholeness is a poem.",
"The Hope Writers Guild was a finalist in the poetry contest.",
"Life Tides was a movie.",
"The poet was a finalist in the Millenium 2000 poetry contest.",
"Canadian women computer scientists, Argentine computer scientists, Canadian women scientists, Canadian women scientists, Canadian women scientists, Canadian women scientists, Canadian women scientists, Argentine computer scientists, Canadian computer scientists, Canadian women scientists, Argentine computer scientists, Canadian women scientists, Canadian women scientists, Canadian women scientists, Canadian"
] | <mask> is an Argentine/Canadian computer scientist, who is recognized as one of the 15 founders of the field of logic programming. Early life
<mask> attended college at Buenos Aires University, and graduated from there with a degree in computer science in 1974. As the political conflict in Argentina increased, <mask> attended graduate school in France. In 1977, she was the first graduate at the Université d'Aix-Marseille to receive a doctorate in Artificial Intelligence. Career
While involved in the research for her doctorate, <mask> became a pioneer in the field of logic programming, developing both the first logic programming database system, and an (also logic-programmed) front end to consult it in a human language (Spanish). <mask>'s research and methodologies became multi-disciplinary including Computational Linguistics, Computational Molecular Biology, and Artificial Intelligence. She became an associate professor at Simon Fraser University in 1982, and became a full professor there in 1991.In 1996 she was honoured by the Logic Programming Association as one of the 15 founders of the Logic Programming Field, and has extensively pioneered as well the areas of Logic Grammars and Constraint Handling Rules. <mask> is a woman pioneer in a male-dominated field. She fought gender inequality while she was a professor at Simon Fraser University, both through mentoring and role modelling, and through concrete actions. After Simon Fraser University refused to reimburse her $17 for childcare expenses while she was delivering a guest speech in Victoria, where she’d traveled with her nursing baby, she went first to her department and then Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) with her protest, which ended with the NSERC changing their policy to make childcare a covered expense for nursing researchers they funded. She proposed and actively promoted the provision of childcare at logic programming conferences, until it was adopted formally into their constitution, and is now routinely offered as a result. She also obtained a change in SFU's legislation when it resulted in her graduate student being timed out for delays caused by life-threatening medical conditions upon birthing twins. She has developed numerous international research projects and collaborations, most notably with Denmark, Spain, Portugal, Germany and France, and worked with IBM, Vancouver Software Labs, International Artificial Intelligence.In her work with IBM, she obtained a record-breaking research contract. She served as president of the Association of Logic Programming from 2001-2005. She was awarded the prestigious Marie Curie Chair of Excellence 2008-2011 from the European Commission for her pioneering work on Constraint Solving and Language Processing for Bioinformatics. In 2012 she quit her Full Professor position at Simon Fraser University in order to focus on research. SFU awarded her Lifetime Professor Emerits status as from 2013. Her research program continues under NSERC funding, as well as through her own AI company, Regenerative AI, and she serves at the Scientific Advisory Board of IMDEA Software. She balances her scientific activities with artistic ones, as a student of music, theatre and dance, and performs regularly as singer and guitarist in Vancouver.Research
<mask>'s research is focused on "bridging the gap between the formal and the humanistic sciences, and to achieve more human-like communication with computers". As such it is multi-faceted, but always pivoting around the main incarnations of inferential programming that she helped pioneer: Logic programming, Constraint- based Programming, and Logic Grammars. She also incorporated non-classical reasoning capabilities into Prolog, Hyprolog and CHRG. <mask>'s research has had theoretical and practical impact in logic, linguistics, computational intelligence, internet programming, virtual worlds and molecular biology. Her work on discovering signature oligos, which resulted in software being used daily at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, has also been used to complete the validation of an array for all Phytophthora species, with high impact for forestry (as one of the species is the causal agent of the sudden oak death which is devastating California), for marine sciences (it has been used to monitor biodiversity in Hawaïian coral reefs), for entomology (for characterizing biting flies) and for detecting fraudulent fish sales. Her present research focuses on grammar induction for under-resourced languages and on solidarity vs. domination-promoting uses of AI. Most Significant Scholarly Publications
Language-proficient Knowledge Bases and the World Wide Web
Intelligent methodologies for Life Sciences, in particular Molecular Biology
Properties as constraints—from parsing to cognitive modeling
Integrating high level methodologies into a new language: HYPROLOG
Honors and awards
<mask> has received many honors and awards in her career.In 1994, <mask> received the Calouste Gulbenkian Award for Science and Technology. In 1997, she was named as one of the founding members in logic programming by the Association for Logic Programming. In 2009, she received the Best Promising Paper Award at the Third International Work-Conference on the Interplay between Natural and Artificial Computation (2009). Books
(1989) Abramson, H. & <mask>, V. Logic Grammars. Springer. Literary works
Prose
(1999) Love to Hide, Love to Invent. First Prize in the Prose Category, Cecilia Lamont Literary Contest.(2000) Detour. First Prize, Crime55 literary contest. (2000) A Case of Possession. First Prize in the Prose Category, Cecilia Lamont Literary Contest. Poetry
(2000) Wholeness. Finalist of the 11th Annual Poetry contest, Hope Writers Guild. (2000) Life Tides.Finalist of the Millenium 2000 Poetry contest. See also
Logic programming
Timeline of women in science
References
Living people
Argentine emigrants to Canada
Argentine computer scientists
Canadian computer scientists
Argentine women scientists
Simon Fraser University faculty
Logic programming researchers
Canadian women computer scientists
20th-century Canadian women scientists
21st-century Canadian women scientists
Year of birth missing (living people) | [
"Verónica Dahl",
"Dahl",
"Dahl",
"Dahl",
"Dahl",
"Dahl",
"Dahl",
"Dahl",
"Dahl",
"Dahl",
"Dahl"
] | One of the founding fathers of the field of logic programming is <mask>. After graduating from college with a degree in computer science, <mask> went to work for IBM. As the political conflict in Argentina increased, he attended graduate school in France. She was the first graduate of the Université d'Aix-Marseille to receive a PhD in Artificial Intelligence. She became a pioneer in the field of logic programming when she developed the first logic programming database system and a front end to consult it in a human language. Computational Linguistics, Computational Biology, and Artificial Intelligence are some of the disciplines that are multi-disciplinary. She became a full professor at Simon Fraser University in 1991.She was honoured by the Logic Programming Association in 1996 as one of the 15 founding members of the field. A woman is a pioneer in a male-dominated field. She was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 She went first to her department and then the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) with her protest after Simon Fraser University refused to reimburse her $17 for childcare expenses while she was delivering a guest speech in Victoria. She proposed and promoted the provision of child care at logic programming conferences until they adopted it into their constitution. When her graduate student was timed out for delays caused by life-threatening medical conditions, she obtained a change in the legislation. She has collaborated with many countries, most notably with Spain, Portugal, Germany and France.A record-breaking research contract was obtained by her in her work with IBM. She was president of the Association of Logic Programming from 2001 to 2005. The European Commission awarded her the Marie Curie Chair of excellence for her work on Constraint Solving and Language Processing for Bioinformatics. She left her Full Professor position at Simon Fraser University in order to focus on research. Her Lifetime Professor Emerits status was awarded by SFU. Her research program continues under the auspices of the NSERC, as well as through her own company, and she is a member of the Scientific Advisory Board. She is a student of music, theatre and dance and performs regularly as a singer and guitarist.To achieve more human-like communication with computers, Research Dahl's research is focused onbridging the gap between the formal and the humanistic sciences. It is multi-faceted, but always focuses on the main incarnations of inferential programming that she helped pioneer. She incorporated non-classical reasoning into Prolog. The impact of <mask>'s research has been in logic, linguistics, computational intelligence, internet programming, virtual worlds and molecular biology. Her work on discovering signature oligos, which resulted in software being used daily at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, has also been used to complete the validation of an array for all Phytophthora species. Her current research focuses on under-resourced languages and solidarity vs. domination-promoting uses of artificial intelligence. The World Wide Web Intelligent methodologies for Life Sciences, in particular, Integrating high level methodologies into a new language, is one of the most significant scholarly publications.The Calouste Gulbenkian Award for Science and Technology was given to <mask> in 1994. She was one of the founding members of the Association for Logic Programming. She received an award for her paper at the Third International Work-Conference on the Interplay between Natural and Artificial Computation. The books were written by H. and V. Logic Grammars. Springer. Love to Hide, Love to Invent is a literary work. The first prize in the literary contest was for the prose category.There was a tour in 2000. The first prize in the literary contest was Crime55. There is a case of possession. The first prize in the literary contest was for the prose category. Wholeness is a poem. The Hope Writers Guild was a finalist in the poetry contest. Life Tides was a movie.The poet was a finalist in the Millenium 2000 poetry contest. Canadian women computer scientists, Argentine computer scientists, Canadian women scientists, Canadian women scientists, Canadian women scientists, Canadian women scientists, Canadian women scientists, Argentine computer scientists, Canadian computer scientists, Canadian women scientists, Argentine computer scientists, Canadian women scientists, Canadian women scientists, Canadian women scientists, Canadian | [
"Vernica Dahl",
"Dahl",
"Dahl",
"Dahl"
] |
2961054 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Costante%20Girardengo | Costante Girardengo | Costante Girardengo (; 18 March 1893 – 9 February 1978) was an Italian professional road bicycle racer, considered by many to be one of the finest riders in the history of the sport. He was the first rider to be declared a "Campionissimo" or "champion of champions" by the Italian media and fans. At the height of his popularity in the 1920s he was said to be more popular than Mussolini and it was decreed that all express trains should stop in his home town Novi Ligure, an honour only normally awarded to heads of state.
His career achievements include two wins in the Giro d'Italia, six wins in Milan–San Remo, three wins in the Giro di Lombardia; he was also Italian road race champion on nine occasions. His professional career was extensive, lasting from 1912 to 1936 and was interrupted by World War I which robbed Girardengo of some of his best years. He was ranked number one in the World in 1919, 1922, 1923, 1925 and 1926. He raced almost exclusively in his home country as was the custom in those days, as foreign travel was not easy. Girardengo was of only small stature and this earned him the nickname "The Novi Runt".
Career
Born in Novi Ligure (province of Alessandria, Piedmont), Costante Girardengo turned professional in 1913 at the age of 20 for the Maino-Dunlop team after impressing as an amateur the previous year by finishing runner up in the Tour of Tuscany. He met with immediate success winning a stage in the Giro d’Italia (his first of 30 stage wins in the Giro) and becoming Italian road race champion. He repeated these successes in 1914 and also took his first of his five wins in Milano–Torino. 1914 saw Girardengo win the longest ever stage in the Giro d'Italia, a 430 kilometre leg between Lucca and Rome. Later that same year Girardengo took part in the Tour de France for the only time in his career, riding as a guest for the Automoto team he crashed several times in stages five and six and abandoned the race. 1915 saw him take another win in Milano–Torino but Milan–San Remo resulted in disappointment when he was disqualified after winning the race for going off course.
Much of the professional cycle racing was stopped after 1915 because of the First World War and it was not until 1918 that Girardengo took another win, taking the first of his six victories in Milan–San Remo, a record which Eddy Merckx eventually eclipsed over 50 years later. He also finished in the first three of the same race every year from 1917 to 1926 and was first over the Turchino Pass on five occasions. His post 1918 form was all the more remarkable as during the First World War Girardengo had contracted Spanish flu and nearly died, his manager believing a survivor of that disease could not race properly refused at one point to renew his licence.
Girardengo took the first of his Giro d’Italia wins in 1919 (including seven stage wins), however his form in the Giro was not always good and he abandoned the race in the early stages in 1920, 1921 and 1922 before dominating in 1923. 1923 was undoubtedly Girardengo’s best year with 16 victories, he took his second Giro d’Italia win including eight of the ten stages as well as many of the top Italian one day races. Despite racing in Italy for most of his career, Girardengo had a burning desire to win Paris–Roubaix, he first raced there in 1921 but he was unlucky on several occasions, breaking his bike when well placed and never coming close to winning. In 1924 Girardengo won the GP Wolber in France, then regarded as the unofficial World Championship.
Girardengo finished runner up in the inaugural World Championship road race held on the Nürburgring in Germany in 1927, the four man Italian team also included Alfredo Binda, Gaetano Belloni and Domenico Piemontesi, the Italians worked perfectly as a team with Binda breaking away 20 miles from the finish to win comfortably, the Italians filled the first four places on that rainy day in Germany. He took his sixth win in Milan–San Remo in 1928 and this was his last big victory on the road although he continued riding until the 1936 season when he retired at the age of 43.
After his retirement Girardengo became involved as a coach of the professional Maino team. He also became the head coach of the Italian national squad for a time, advising Gino Bartali when he won the 1938 Tour de France. Later on he gave his name “Girardengo” to a brand of motorbikes manufactured between 1951 and 1954 in the northern Italian city of Alessandria.
He has been immortalised in Italian popular culture through the critically acclaimed song "Il Bandito e il Campione" by Francesco De Gregori that juxtaposes his life with that of his childhood friend the notorious bandit and outlaw Sante Pollastri.
He died in 1978 at Cassano Spinola, just outside Novi Ligure, at the age of 84.
Major results
Source:
1912
1st Coppa de Bagni di Casciana
1913
1st Road race, Italian National Road Race Championship
1st Stage 6 Giro d'Italia
Corsa XX Septembre
1st Overall
1st Stage 2
1st Coppa Borzino
1st Gran Fondo
1914
1st Road race, Italian National Road Race Championship
1st Stage 3 Giro d'Italia
1st Milano–Torino
2nd Overall Giro della Romagna
2nd Giro dell'Emilia
1915
1st Milano–Torino
1917
2nd Milan–San Remo
2nd Overall Giro della Provincia Milan (with Angelo Gremo)
2nd Milan-Bellagio-Varèse
1918
1st Milan–San Remo
1st Giro dell'Emilia
1st Serravalle-Arquata
1st Turin-Arquata (with Gaetano Belloni, Lauro Bordin, and Luigi Lucotti)
2nd Milan-Varèse
1919
1st Road race, Italian National Road Race Championship
Giro d'Italia
1st Overall
1st Stages 1, 2, 6, 7, 8, 9, & 10
1st Giro di Lombardia
1st Milan-Modène
1st Milano–Torino
1st Giro del Piemonte
1st Overall Giro della Provincia Milan (with Angelo Gremo)
Rome-Trente-Trieste
1st Overall
1st Stages 1, 2, & 3
1st Giro dell'Emilia
2nd Milan–San Remo
1920
1st Road race, Italian National Road Race Championship
1st Milan-Modène
1st Giro del Piemonte
1st Milano–Torino
1st Turin-Gênes
2nd Giro dell'Emilia
2nd Milan-San Pellegrino
2nd Overall Giro della Provincia Milan (with Annoni)
3rd Milan–San Remo
1921
1st Road race, Italian National Road Race Championship
1st Milan–San Remo
1st Giro di Lombardia
1st Giro dell'Emilia
1st Stages 1, 2, 3, & 4 Giro d'Italia
1st Milan-San Pellegrino
1st Genoa–Nice
1st Overall Corsa XX Septembre
1st Overall Giro della Provincia Milan (with Giuseppe Azzini)
2nd Milan-Modène
1922
1st Road race, Italian National Road Race Championship
1st Giro di Lombardia
1st Overall Corsa XX Septembre
1st Giro dell'Emilia
1st Giro di Romagna
1st Tour du Lac Leman
1st Critérium de Genève
1st Tour des Deux Golfes
1st Giro della Provincia de Milan (with Belloni)
1st Stage 2 Giro d'Italia
2nd Milan–San Remo
1923
1st Road race, Italian National Road Race Championship
Giro d'Italia
1st Overall
1st Stages 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, & 10
1st Milan–San Remo
1st Overall Corsa XX Septembre
1st Milano–Torino
1st Giro del Veneto
1st Giro di Toscana
1st Giro de la Province de Turin (with Giovanni Brunero)
1924
1st Road race, Italian National Road Race Championship
1st Giro del Piemonte
1st Giro del Veneto
1st Giro di Toscana
1st GP Wolber
1st G.P Milazzo
2nd Giro di Lombardia
3rd Milan–San Remo
1925
1st Road race, Italian National Road Race Championship
1st Milan–San Remo
1st Critérium National
1st Giro del Veneto
1st Overall Corsa XX Septembre
1st Giro dell'Emilia
1st G.P Milazzo
Giro de la Province de Milan
1st Overall (with Ottavio Bottecchia)
1st Stage 1
Giro d'Italia
2nd Overall
1st Stages 2, 4, 7, 9, 10, & 11
2nd Critérium des As à Turin
1926
1st Milan–San Remo
1st Giro di Romagna
1st Giro del Veneto
1st Stages 4 & 5 Giro d'Italia
2nd Giro di Toscana
3rd Giro del Piemonte
3rd Critérium de Genève
1927
1st 6 Days of Milan (with Alfredo Binda)
2nd Professional road race, UCI Road World Championships
2nd G.P de Turin
1928
1st Milan–San Remo
1st Milan-Modène
1st 6 Days of Milan (with Pietro Linari)
1st 6 Days ofBreslau (with Willy Rieger)
1st 6 Days of Leipzig (with Antonio Negrini)
1929
2nd 6 Days of Paris (with Pietro Linari)
1930
5th Milan–San Remo
1932
2nd Overall Giro de la Province de Milan (with Learco Guerra)
1935
1st Stage 3 Giro delle Quattro
2nd Asti-Ceriale
3rd Circuit Apuan
3rd Circuit d'Imola
See also
Legends of Italian sport - Walk of Fame
References
Citations
Further reading
A Century of Cycling, William Fotheringham,
European Cycling, The 20 Greatest Races, Noel Henderson,
External links
1893 births
1978 deaths
People from Novi Ligure
Giro d'Italia winners
Italian Giro d'Italia stage winners
Italian male cyclists
Sportspeople from Piedmont | [
"Costante Girardengo (; 18 March 1893 – 9 February 1978) was an Italian professional road bicycle racer, considered by many to be one of the finest riders in the history of the sport.",
"He was the first rider to be declared a \"Campionissimo\" or \"champion of champions\" by the Italian media and fans.",
"At the height of his popularity in the 1920s he was said to be more popular than Mussolini and it was decreed that all express trains should stop in his home town Novi Ligure, an honour only normally awarded to heads of state.",
"His career achievements include two wins in the Giro d'Italia, six wins in Milan–San Remo, three wins in the Giro di Lombardia; he was also Italian road race champion on nine occasions.",
"His professional career was extensive, lasting from 1912 to 1936 and was interrupted by World War I which robbed Girardengo of some of his best years.",
"He was ranked number one in the World in 1919, 1922, 1923, 1925 and 1926.",
"He raced almost exclusively in his home country as was the custom in those days, as foreign travel was not easy.",
"Girardengo was of only small stature and this earned him the nickname \"The Novi Runt\".",
"Career\nBorn in Novi Ligure (province of Alessandria, Piedmont), Costante Girardengo turned professional in 1913 at the age of 20 for the Maino-Dunlop team after impressing as an amateur the previous year by finishing runner up in the Tour of Tuscany.",
"He met with immediate success winning a stage in the Giro d’Italia (his first of 30 stage wins in the Giro) and becoming Italian road race champion.",
"He repeated these successes in 1914 and also took his first of his five wins in Milano–Torino.",
"1914 saw Girardengo win the longest ever stage in the Giro d'Italia, a 430 kilometre leg between Lucca and Rome.",
"Later that same year Girardengo took part in the Tour de France for the only time in his career, riding as a guest for the Automoto team he crashed several times in stages five and six and abandoned the race.",
"1915 saw him take another win in Milano–Torino but Milan–San Remo resulted in disappointment when he was disqualified after winning the race for going off course.",
"Much of the professional cycle racing was stopped after 1915 because of the First World War and it was not until 1918 that Girardengo took another win, taking the first of his six victories in Milan–San Remo, a record which Eddy Merckx eventually eclipsed over 50 years later.",
"He also finished in the first three of the same race every year from 1917 to 1926 and was first over the Turchino Pass on five occasions.",
"His post 1918 form was all the more remarkable as during the First World War Girardengo had contracted Spanish flu and nearly died, his manager believing a survivor of that disease could not race properly refused at one point to renew his licence.",
"Girardengo took the first of his Giro d’Italia wins in 1919 (including seven stage wins), however his form in the Giro was not always good and he abandoned the race in the early stages in 1920, 1921 and 1922 before dominating in 1923.",
"1923 was undoubtedly Girardengo’s best year with 16 victories, he took his second Giro d’Italia win including eight of the ten stages as well as many of the top Italian one day races.",
"Despite racing in Italy for most of his career, Girardengo had a burning desire to win Paris–Roubaix, he first raced there in 1921 but he was unlucky on several occasions, breaking his bike when well placed and never coming close to winning.",
"In 1924 Girardengo won the GP Wolber in France, then regarded as the unofficial World Championship.",
"Girardengo finished runner up in the inaugural World Championship road race held on the Nürburgring in Germany in 1927, the four man Italian team also included Alfredo Binda, Gaetano Belloni and Domenico Piemontesi, the Italians worked perfectly as a team with Binda breaking away 20 miles from the finish to win comfortably, the Italians filled the first four places on that rainy day in Germany.",
"He took his sixth win in Milan–San Remo in 1928 and this was his last big victory on the road although he continued riding until the 1936 season when he retired at the age of 43.",
"After his retirement Girardengo became involved as a coach of the professional Maino team.",
"He also became the head coach of the Italian national squad for a time, advising Gino Bartali when he won the 1938 Tour de France.",
"Later on he gave his name “Girardengo” to a brand of motorbikes manufactured between 1951 and 1954 in the northern Italian city of Alessandria.",
"He has been immortalised in Italian popular culture through the critically acclaimed song \"Il Bandito e il Campione\" by Francesco De Gregori that juxtaposes his life with that of his childhood friend the notorious bandit and outlaw Sante Pollastri.",
"He died in 1978 at Cassano Spinola, just outside Novi Ligure, at the age of 84."
] | [
"One of the finest riders in the history of the sport was Costante Girardengo, who was an Italian professional road bicycle racer.",
"He was the first rider to be declared a \"Campionissimo\" or \"champion of champions\" by the Italian media.",
"At the height of his popularity in the 1920s he was said to be more popular than Mussolini and it was decided that all express trains should stop in his hometown of Novi Ligure.",
"His career achievements include two wins in the Giro d'Italia, six wins in Milan–San Remo, three wins in the Giro di Lombardia, and nine victories as Italian road race champion.",
"World War I interrupted his professional career, which lasted from 1912 to 1936, robbing him of some of his best years.",
"In 1919, 1922, 1923, 1925 and 1926, he was the number one in the world.",
"He raced almost exclusively in his home country, as foreign travel was not easy in those days.",
"The nickname \"The Novi Runt\" was given to him because of his small stature.",
"After finishing runner up in the Tour of Tuscany as an amateur, Costante Girardengo became a professional at the age of 20 for the Maino-Dunlop team.",
"He became Italian road race champion after winning a stage in the Giro d'Italia, his first of 30 stage wins in the Giro.",
"In 1914, he took his first of his five wins in Milano–Torino.",
"The longest stage in the Giro d'Italia was won by Girardengo.",
"The year before, he took part in the Tour de France for the first time in his career, riding as a guest for the Automoto team, but he crashed several times in stages five and six and abandoned the race.",
"He was disqualified in Milan–San Remo after winning the race for going off course.",
"Much of the professional cycle racing was stopped after 1915 because of the First World War and it was not until 1918 that Girardengo took another win, taking the first of his six victories in Milan–San Remo.",
"He was first over the Turchino Pass five times and finished in the first three of the same race every year from 1917 to 1926.",
"During the First World War, his manager believed a survivor of Spanish flu could not race properly and refused to renew his licence.",
"In 1919, he took the first of his Giro d'Italia wins, however his form in the Giro was not always good and he abandoned the race in the early stages in 1920, 1921 and 1922.",
"His best year was 1923, he won 16 races, including eight of the ten stages of the Giro d'Italia, as well as many of the top Italian one day races.",
"Despite being 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884",
"In 1924, Girardengo won the GP Wolber in France and became the unofficial World Championship.",
"Gaetano Belloni and Domenico Piemontesi were part of the Italian team that finished second in the inaugural World Championship road race held on the Nrburgring in Germany in 1927.",
"He took his sixth win in Milan–San Remo in 1928 and this was his last big victory on the road, although he continued riding until the 1936 season when he retired at the age of 43.",
"He became a coach of the Maino team after his retirement.",
"He was the head coach of the Italian national squad for a time, and he advised the winner of the 1938 Tour de France.",
"He gave his name to a brand of motorbikes manufactured in the northern Italian city of Alessandria.",
"The song \"Il Bandito e il Campione\" is a song about the life of a childhood friend of the notorious bandit and outlaw Sante Pollastri.",
"He died in 1978 at the age of 84."
] | <mask> (; 18 March 1893 – 9 February 1978) was an Italian professional road bicycle racer, considered by many to be one of the finest riders in the history of the sport. He was the first rider to be declared a "Campionissimo" or "champion of champions" by the Italian media and fans. At the height of his popularity in the 1920s he was said to be more popular than Mussolini and it was decreed that all express trains should stop in his home town Novi Ligure, an honour only normally awarded to heads of state. His career achievements include two wins in the Giro d'Italia, six wins in Milan–San Remo, three wins in the Giro di Lombardia; he was also Italian road race champion on nine occasions. His professional career was extensive, lasting from 1912 to 1936 and was interrupted by World War I which robbed <mask> of some of his best years. He was ranked number one in the World in 1919, 1922, 1923, 1925 and 1926. He raced almost exclusively in his home country as was the custom in those days, as foreign travel was not easy.Girardengo was of only small stature and this earned him the nickname "The Novi Runt". Career
Born in Novi Ligure (province of Alessandria, Piedmont), <mask> <mask> turned professional in 1913 at the age of 20 for the Maino-Dunlop team after impressing as an amateur the previous year by finishing runner up in the Tour of Tuscany. He met with immediate success winning a stage in the Giro d’Italia (his first of 30 stage wins in the Giro) and becoming Italian road race champion. He repeated these successes in 1914 and also took his first of his five wins in Milano–Torino. 1914 saw Girardengo win the longest ever stage in the Giro d'Italia, a 430 kilometre leg between Lucca and Rome. Later that same year Girardengo took part in the Tour de France for the only time in his career, riding as a guest for the Automoto team he crashed several times in stages five and six and abandoned the race. 1915 saw him take another win in Milano–Torino but Milan–San Remo resulted in disappointment when he was disqualified after winning the race for going off course.Much of the professional cycle racing was stopped after 1915 because of the First World War and it was not until 1918 that <mask> took another win, taking the first of his six victories in Milan–San Remo, a record which Eddy Merckx eventually eclipsed over 50 years later. He also finished in the first three of the same race every year from 1917 to 1926 and was first over the Turchino Pass on five occasions. His post 1918 form was all the more remarkable as during the First World War <mask> had contracted Spanish flu and nearly died, his manager believing a survivor of that disease could not race properly refused at one point to renew his licence. <mask> took the first of his Giro d’Italia wins in 1919 (including seven stage wins), however his form in the Giro was not always good and he abandoned the race in the early stages in 1920, 1921 and 1922 before dominating in 1923. 1923 was undoubtedly Girardengo’s best year with 16 victories, he took his second Giro d’Italia win including eight of the ten stages as well as many of the top Italian one day races. Despite racing in Italy for most of his career, <mask> had a burning desire to win Paris–Roubaix, he first raced there in 1921 but he was unlucky on several occasions, breaking his bike when well placed and never coming close to winning. In 1924 <mask> won the GP Wolber in France, then regarded as the unofficial World Championship.<mask> finished runner up in the inaugural World Championship road race held on the Nürburgring in Germany in 1927, the four man Italian team also included Alfredo Binda, Gaetano Belloni and Domenico Piemontesi, the Italians worked perfectly as a team with Binda breaking away 20 miles from the finish to win comfortably, the Italians filled the first four places on that rainy day in Germany. He took his sixth win in Milan–San Remo in 1928 and this was his last big victory on the road although he continued riding until the 1936 season when he retired at the age of 43. After his retirement <mask> became involved as a coach of the professional Maino team. He also became the head coach of the Italian national squad for a time, advising Gino Bartali when he won the 1938 Tour de France. Later on he gave his name “Girardengo” to a brand of motorbikes manufactured between 1951 and 1954 in the northern Italian city of Alessandria. He has been immortalised in Italian popular culture through the critically acclaimed song "Il Bandito e il Campione" by Francesco De Gregori that juxtaposes his life with that of his childhood friend the notorious bandit and outlaw Sante Pollastri. He died in 1978 at Cassano Spinola, just outside Novi Ligure, at the age of 84. | [
"Costante Girardengo",
"Girardengo",
"Costante",
"Girardengo",
"Girardengo",
"Girardengo",
"Girardengo",
"Girardengo",
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] | One of the finest riders in the history of the sport was <mask>, who was an Italian professional road bicycle racer. He was the first rider to be declared a "Campionissimo" or "champion of champions" by the Italian media. At the height of his popularity in the 1920s he was said to be more popular than Mussolini and it was decided that all express trains should stop in his hometown of Novi Ligure. His career achievements include two wins in the Giro d'Italia, six wins in Milan–San Remo, three wins in the Giro di Lombardia, and nine victories as Italian road race champion. World War I interrupted his professional career, which lasted from 1912 to 1936, robbing him of some of his best years. In 1919, 1922, 1923, 1925 and 1926, he was the number one in the world. He raced almost exclusively in his home country, as foreign travel was not easy in those days.The nickname "The Novi Runt" was given to him because of his small stature. After finishing runner up in the Tour of Tuscany as an amateur, <mask> <mask> became a professional at the age of 20 for the Maino-Dunlop team. He became Italian road race champion after winning a stage in the Giro d'Italia, his first of 30 stage wins in the Giro. In 1914, he took his first of his five wins in Milano–Torino. The longest stage in the Giro d'Italia was won by <mask>. The year before, he took part in the Tour de France for the first time in his career, riding as a guest for the Automoto team, but he crashed several times in stages five and six and abandoned the race. He was disqualified in Milan–San Remo after winning the race for going off course.Much of the professional cycle racing was stopped after 1915 because of the First World War and it was not until 1918 that <mask> took another win, taking the first of his six victories in Milan–San Remo. He was first over the Turchino Pass five times and finished in the first three of the same race every year from 1917 to 1926. During the First World War, his manager believed a survivor of Spanish flu could not race properly and refused to renew his licence. In 1919, he took the first of his Giro d'Italia wins, however his form in the Giro was not always good and he abandoned the race in the early stages in 1920, 1921 and 1922. His best year was 1923, he won 16 races, including eight of the ten stages of the Giro d'Italia, as well as many of the top Italian one day races. Despite being 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 In 1924, Girardengo won the GP Wolber in France and became the unofficial World Championship.Gaetano Belloni and Domenico Piemontesi were part of the Italian team that finished second in the inaugural World Championship road race held on the Nrburgring in Germany in 1927. He took his sixth win in Milan–San Remo in 1928 and this was his last big victory on the road, although he continued riding until the 1936 season when he retired at the age of 43. He became a coach of the Maino team after his retirement. He was the head coach of the Italian national squad for a time, and he advised the winner of the 1938 Tour de France. He gave his name to a brand of motorbikes manufactured in the northern Italian city of Alessandria. The song "Il Bandito e il Campione" is a song about the life of a childhood friend of the notorious bandit and outlaw Sante Pollastri. He died in 1978 at the age of 84. | [
"Costante Girardengo",
"Costante",
"Girardengo",
"Girardengo",
"Girardengo"
] |
42306155 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No-Hee%20Park | No-Hee Park | No-Hee Park is the Dean of the School of Dentistry at the University of California, Los Angeles. He is also a researcher and scientist in the field of oral and craniofacial research. He has more than 170 scientific publications, nine invited review articles, nine book chapters and 180 abstracts for national and international scientific presentations.
Early life and education
Park was born in 1944 in Danyang County, South Korea. His family then moved to Daejeon City, where he attended elementary, junior high, and high school. In high school, Park practiced Judo, a form of martial arts; by the time he went to college, he had earned a black belt.
Park entered Seoul National University in 1962 and received a Certificate in the Arts and Sciences. In 1964, he attended Seoul National University's College of Dentistry, and received a DDS in 1968. As a dental student, he was heavily involved in scientific research, specifically pharmacology and biological chemistry. He went on to receive a Certificate in Periodontics in 1971 from Seoul National University. He then was drafted into the Korean Army, where he served for three years, 1971 to 1974, retiring as a captain.
Park was given the opportunity to conduct research for a year as a postdoctoral fellow at the Medical College of Georgia at Georgia Regents University in 1975. At the end of the year, he decided to stay and pursue a PhD degree in Pharmacology, which he received in 1978. From 1978 to 1982 he served as a research associate at the Harvard University/Eye Research Institute, while pursuing a Certificate in Virology and Molecular Biology Fellowship, which he earned in 1980. He then entered Harvard School of Dental Medicine to work towards an American dental degree, and he received a Doctor of Dental Medicine (DMD) degree in 1982.
Career
In 1982 he became an assistant professor in the Department of Oral Biology and Pathophysiology at the Harvard School of Dental Medicine. In 1984 he relocated to the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) School of Dentistry, starting as an associate professor in the Section of Oral Biology for a year, then becoming a professor in 1985. In 2004, he also became a professor in the Department of Medicine (Division of Hematology and Oncology) at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. In 2006 he was named a distinguished professor at both schools. During his time at UCLA, Park also served as the associate director of UCLA Dental Research Institute (July 1986 – June 1990), the associate dean for Research, UCLA School of Dentistry (January 1997 – June 1998), and the director of the UCLA Dental Research Institute (January 1995 – June 2002). He is currently serving as dean of the UCLA School of Dentistry.
Academic and research achievements
Park's early foray into research (1975–1983) focused on the study of molecular mechanisms of numerous antiviral agents (e.g., Zovirax®) against herpes simplex virus by evaluating their therapeutic efficacy in animal models. In 1983, Park changed the focus of his research to the study of the mechanisms of human oral cancer development, clarifying and expounding the role of human papillomavirus in the development of human cancer.
Between 1978 and 2014, while at Harvard and UCLA, Park received close to $60 million extramural funds from the U.S. government and private industry for his research programs, and he trained more than 100 postdoctoral fellows, research students, and visiting faculty members. Many of the people he trained have gone on to become university faculty members in the United States and many other countries, including Korea, Japan, China and various European countries.
He has held leadership positions in numerous research organizations. He served NIH as a grant review committee member (1998, 1990, 1993, 1991–95, 1995, 1997–98, 2005) and has been an editorial board member of numerous journals, including the Journal of Dental Research (1995–1997), International Journal of Oral Biology (1996–2001), European Journal of Cancer (1995–1999), International Journal of Oncology (1996–present), the Electronic Journal of Biotechnology (1997–present), Odontology (2000–present), and Critical Review of Oncogenesis (2011–present).
Inventions and patents
“Medical herbs and their anti-microbial applications”, UCLA case N. 2002-409-1 (inventor)
“Tumor Suppressive Effect of hnRNP G”, UCLA case No.2006-093 (primary inventor)
“Conversion of Normal Human Oral Keratinocytes to Pluipotent Stem Cells’, UCLA Case No. 2011-061 (co-primary inventor)
The Utilization Of Anti-Il-36 Receptor Antibody To Treat Drug-Induced Osteonecrosis Of The Jaw, 2013
Selected honors and awards
2001: Distinguished Scientist Award from the International Association for Dental Research (IADR), Chiba, Japan
2001: Recognized as a Distinguished Dean, UCLA School of Dentistry
2002: Distinguished Overseas Compatriots' Prize (Distinguished Scientist in the Area of Natural Sciences), KBS (Korean Broadcasting System: KBS, Seoul, Korea
2002: The First Alumnus of the Year, Seoul National University College of Dentistry, Seoul, Korea
2006: Awarded title of “Distinguished Professor (of Dentistry and Medicine)”, UCLA
2007: Distinguished Alumnus of the Year, Seoul National University (University wide selection), Seoul, Korea
2007: Silver Anniversary Award, Harvard University
2009: Establishment of “Dr. No-Hee Park Endowed Chair in Dentistry” at the UCLA
2010: The Gies Award as the Most Achieved Dental Educator by the Gies Foundation of the American Dental Education Association (ADEA) Dr. Park was selected for his achievements as an educator in the dentistry field.
2010: Distinguished Alumnus of the Year, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, Georgia
2012: AAAS Fellowship - Dr. Park was awarded for significant contributions to the field of oral cancer and dental education, particularly for oral carcinogenesis, viral infection and cellular aging.
2012: Eminent Scholar, Kyung Hee University, Seoul, Korea
Personal life
No-Hee Park married Yubai Park in 1969. They have a daughter, son-in-law, and granddaughter, who reside in Atlanta, Georgia.
References
1944 births
Living people
South Korean dentists
American dentistry academics
American dentists
Seoul National University alumni
Harvard School of Dental Medicine alumni | [
"No-Hee Park is the Dean of the School of Dentistry at the University of California, Los Angeles.",
"He is also a researcher and scientist in the field of oral and craniofacial research.",
"He has more than 170 scientific publications, nine invited review articles, nine book chapters and 180 abstracts for national and international scientific presentations.",
"Early life and education \nPark was born in 1944 in Danyang County, South Korea.",
"His family then moved to Daejeon City, where he attended elementary, junior high, and high school.",
"In high school, Park practiced Judo, a form of martial arts; by the time he went to college, he had earned a black belt.",
"Park entered Seoul National University in 1962 and received a Certificate in the Arts and Sciences.",
"In 1964, he attended Seoul National University's College of Dentistry, and received a DDS in 1968.",
"As a dental student, he was heavily involved in scientific research, specifically pharmacology and biological chemistry.",
"He went on to receive a Certificate in Periodontics in 1971 from Seoul National University.",
"He then was drafted into the Korean Army, where he served for three years, 1971 to 1974, retiring as a captain.",
"Park was given the opportunity to conduct research for a year as a postdoctoral fellow at the Medical College of Georgia at Georgia Regents University in 1975.",
"At the end of the year, he decided to stay and pursue a PhD degree in Pharmacology, which he received in 1978.",
"From 1978 to 1982 he served as a research associate at the Harvard University/Eye Research Institute, while pursuing a Certificate in Virology and Molecular Biology Fellowship, which he earned in 1980.",
"He then entered Harvard School of Dental Medicine to work towards an American dental degree, and he received a Doctor of Dental Medicine (DMD) degree in 1982.",
"Career \nIn 1982 he became an assistant professor in the Department of Oral Biology and Pathophysiology at the Harvard School of Dental Medicine.",
"In 1984 he relocated to the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) School of Dentistry, starting as an associate professor in the Section of Oral Biology for a year, then becoming a professor in 1985.",
"In 2004, he also became a professor in the Department of Medicine (Division of Hematology and Oncology) at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA.",
"In 2006 he was named a distinguished professor at both schools.",
"During his time at UCLA, Park also served as the associate director of UCLA Dental Research Institute (July 1986 – June 1990), the associate dean for Research, UCLA School of Dentistry (January 1997 – June 1998), and the director of the UCLA Dental Research Institute (January 1995 – June 2002).",
"He is currently serving as dean of the UCLA School of Dentistry.",
"Academic and research achievements \n\nPark's early foray into research (1975–1983) focused on the study of molecular mechanisms of numerous antiviral agents (e.g., Zovirax®) against herpes simplex virus by evaluating their therapeutic efficacy in animal models.",
"In 1983, Park changed the focus of his research to the study of the mechanisms of human oral cancer development, clarifying and expounding the role of human papillomavirus in the development of human cancer.",
"Between 1978 and 2014, while at Harvard and UCLA, Park received close to $60 million extramural funds from the U.S. government and private industry for his research programs, and he trained more than 100 postdoctoral fellows, research students, and visiting faculty members.",
"Many of the people he trained have gone on to become university faculty members in the United States and many other countries, including Korea, Japan, China and various European countries.",
"He has held leadership positions in numerous research organizations.",
"He served NIH as a grant review committee member (1998, 1990, 1993, 1991–95, 1995, 1997–98, 2005) and has been an editorial board member of numerous journals, including the Journal of Dental Research (1995–1997), International Journal of Oral Biology (1996–2001), European Journal of Cancer (1995–1999), International Journal of Oncology (1996–present), the Electronic Journal of Biotechnology (1997–present), Odontology (2000–present), and Critical Review of Oncogenesis (2011–present).",
"Inventions and patents \n\n “Medical herbs and their anti-microbial applications”, UCLA case N. 2002-409-1 (inventor)\n “Tumor Suppressive Effect of hnRNP G”, UCLA case No.2006-093 (primary inventor)\n “Conversion of Normal Human Oral Keratinocytes to Pluipotent Stem Cells’, UCLA Case No.",
"2011-061 (co-primary inventor)\n The Utilization Of Anti-Il-36 Receptor Antibody To Treat Drug-Induced Osteonecrosis Of The Jaw, 2013\n\nSelected honors and awards \n\n 2001:\tDistinguished Scientist Award from the International Association for Dental Research (IADR), Chiba, Japan\n 2001:\tRecognized as a Distinguished Dean, UCLA School of Dentistry \n 2002:\tDistinguished Overseas Compatriots' Prize (Distinguished Scientist in the Area of Natural Sciences), KBS (Korean Broadcasting System: KBS, Seoul, Korea\n 2002:\tThe First Alumnus of the Year, Seoul National University College of Dentistry, Seoul, Korea\n 2006: \tAwarded title of “Distinguished Professor (of Dentistry and Medicine)”, UCLA\n 2007:\tDistinguished Alumnus of the Year, Seoul National University (University wide selection), Seoul, Korea\n 2007:\tSilver Anniversary Award, Harvard University\n 2009:\tEstablishment of “Dr.",
"No-Hee Park Endowed Chair in Dentistry” at the UCLA\n 2010:\tThe Gies Award as the Most Achieved Dental Educator by the Gies Foundation of the American Dental Education Association (ADEA) Dr. Park was selected for his achievements as an educator in the dentistry field.",
"2010: Distinguished Alumnus of the Year, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, Georgia\n 2012: AAAS Fellowship - Dr. Park was awarded for significant contributions to the field of oral cancer and dental education, particularly for oral carcinogenesis, viral infection and cellular aging.",
"2012: Eminent Scholar, Kyung Hee University, Seoul, Korea\n\nPersonal life \nNo-Hee Park married Yubai Park in 1969.",
"They have a daughter, son-in-law, and granddaughter, who reside in Atlanta, Georgia.",
"References \n\n1944 births\nLiving people\nSouth Korean dentists\nAmerican dentistry academics\nAmerican dentists\nSeoul National University alumni\nHarvard School of Dental Medicine alumni"
] | [
"No-Hee Park is the Dean of the School of Dentistry at the University of California, Los Angeles.",
"He is a researcher in the field of oral and craniofacial research.",
"He has more than 170 scientific publications, nine invited review articles, nine book chapters, and 180 abstract for national and international scientific presentations.",
"Park was born in South Korea in 1944.",
"MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE",
"Park earned a black belt after practicing martial arts in high school.",
"Park received a certificate in the arts and sciences at the university.",
"He received a DDS in 1968 after attending the College of Dentistry.",
"He was heavily involved in scientific research as a dental student.",
"He received a certificate in Periodontics from the university.",
"He served in the Korean Army for three years, 1971 to 1974, retiring as a captain.",
"Park was given the opportunity to conduct research for a year as a fellow at the Medical College of Georgia in 1975.",
"He received a PhD degree in 1978 and decided at the end of the year to stay.",
"He was a research associate at the Harvard University/Eye Research Institute from 1978 to 1982 and earned a certificate in infectious diseases in 1980.",
"He received a Doctor of Dental Medicine degree from Harvard in 1982.",
"He was an assistant professor in the Department of Oral Biology and Pathophysiology at the Harvard School of Dental Medicine.",
"He started as an associate professor in the Section of Oral Biology at the UCLA School of Dentistry in 1984 and became a professor in 1985.",
"He became a professor in the Department of Medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine in 2004.",
"He was named a distinguished professor in 2006",
"Park was the associate director of the UCLA Dental Research Institute from July 1986 to June 1990 and the dean of the UCLA School of Dentistry from January 1997 to June 1998.",
"He is the dean of the UCLA School of Dentistry.",
"Park's early research focused on the study of the mechanisms of multiple antiviral agents, including Zovirax, in order to evaluate their therapeutic efficacy in animal models.",
"In 1983, Park changed the focus of his research to the study of the mechanisms of human oral cancer development, clarifying and expounding the role of human papillomaviruses in the development of human cancer.",
"Park received close to $60 million in extramural funds from the U.S. government and private industry while he was at Harvard and UCLA.",
"Many of the people he trained went on to become university faculty members in the United States and many other countries.",
"He has held leadership positions.",
"He has been an editorial board member of numerous journals, including the Journal of Dental Research and the International Journal of Oral Biology.",
"Inventions and patents related to medical herbs and their anti-microbial applications.",
"The International Association for Dental Research recognized the co-primary inventor with a distinguished scientist award in 2001.",
"The Gies Award as the Most Achieved Dental Educator was presented to Dr. Park at the UCLA 2010: The No-Hee Park Endowed Chair in Dentistry.",
"The Medical College of Georgia awarded Dr. Park a fellowship for his contributions to the field of oral cancer and dental education.",
"No-Hee Park married Yubai Park in 1969.",
"A daughter, son-in-law, and granddaughter reside in Atlanta, Georgia.",
"There are people from South Korean dentists to Harvard School of Dental Medicine alumni."
] | <mask> is the Dean of the School of Dentistry at the University of California, Los Angeles. He is also a researcher and scientist in the field of oral and craniofacial research. He has more than 170 scientific publications, nine invited review articles, nine book chapters and 180 abstracts for national and international scientific presentations. Early life and education
<mask> was born in 1944 in Danyang County, South Korea. His family then moved to Daejeon City, where he attended elementary, junior high, and high school. In high school, <mask> practiced Judo, a form of martial arts; by the time he went to college, he had earned a black belt. <mask> entered Seoul National University in 1962 and received a Certificate in the Arts and Sciences.In 1964, he attended Seoul National University's College of Dentistry, and received a DDS in 1968. As a dental student, he was heavily involved in scientific research, specifically pharmacology and biological chemistry. He went on to receive a Certificate in Periodontics in 1971 from Seoul National University. He then was drafted into the Korean Army, where he served for three years, 1971 to 1974, retiring as a captain. <mask> was given the opportunity to conduct research for a year as a postdoctoral fellow at the Medical College of Georgia at Georgia Regents University in 1975. At the end of the year, he decided to stay and pursue a PhD degree in Pharmacology, which he received in 1978. From 1978 to 1982 he served as a research associate at the Harvard University/Eye Research Institute, while pursuing a Certificate in Virology and Molecular Biology Fellowship, which he earned in 1980.He then entered Harvard School of Dental Medicine to work towards an American dental degree, and he received a Doctor of Dental Medicine (DMD) degree in 1982. Career
In 1982 he became an assistant professor in the Department of Oral Biology and Pathophysiology at the Harvard School of Dental Medicine. In 1984 he relocated to the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) School of Dentistry, starting as an associate professor in the Section of Oral Biology for a year, then becoming a professor in 1985. In 2004, he also became a professor in the Department of Medicine (Division of Hematology and Oncology) at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. In 2006 he was named a distinguished professor at both schools. During his time at UCLA, <mask> also served as the associate director of UCLA Dental Research Institute (July 1986 – June 1990), the associate dean for Research, UCLA School of Dentistry (January 1997 – June 1998), and the director of the UCLA Dental Research Institute (January 1995 – June 2002). He is currently serving as dean of the UCLA School of Dentistry.Academic and research achievements
<mask>'s early foray into research (1975–1983) focused on the study of molecular mechanisms of numerous antiviral agents (e.g., Zovirax®) against herpes simplex virus by evaluating their therapeutic efficacy in animal models. In 1983, <mask> changed the focus of his research to the study of the mechanisms of human oral cancer development, clarifying and expounding the role of human papillomavirus in the development of human cancer. Between 1978 and 2014, while at Harvard and UCLA, <mask> received close to $60 million extramural funds from the U.S. government and private industry for his research programs, and he trained more than 100 postdoctoral fellows, research students, and visiting faculty members. Many of the people he trained have gone on to become university faculty members in the United States and many other countries, including Korea, Japan, China and various European countries. He has held leadership positions in numerous research organizations. He served NIH as a grant review committee member (1998, 1990, 1993, 1991–95, 1995, 1997–98, 2005) and has been an editorial board member of numerous journals, including the Journal of Dental Research (1995–1997), International Journal of Oral Biology (1996–2001), European Journal of Cancer (1995–1999), International Journal of Oncology (1996–present), the Electronic Journal of Biotechnology (1997–present), Odontology (2000–present), and Critical Review of Oncogenesis (2011–present). Inventions and patents
“Medical herbs and their anti-microbial applications”, UCLA case N. 2002-409-1 (inventor)
“Tumor Suppressive Effect of hnRNP G”, UCLA case No.2006-093 (primary inventor)
“Conversion of Normal Human Oral Keratinocytes to Pluipotent Stem Cells’, UCLA Case No.2011-061 (co-primary inventor)
The Utilization Of Anti-Il-36 Receptor Antibody To Treat Drug-Induced Osteonecrosis Of The Jaw, 2013
Selected honors and awards
2001: Distinguished Scientist Award from the International Association for Dental Research (IADR), Chiba, Japan
2001: Recognized as a Distinguished Dean, UCLA School of Dentistry
2002: Distinguished Overseas Compatriots' Prize (Distinguished Scientist in the Area of Natural Sciences), KBS (Korean Broadcasting System: KBS, Seoul, Korea
2002: The First Alumnus of the Year, Seoul National University College of Dentistry, Seoul, Korea
2006: Awarded title of “Distinguished Professor (of Dentistry and Medicine)”, UCLA
2007: Distinguished Alumnus of the Year, Seoul National University (University wide selection), Seoul, Korea
2007: Silver Anniversary Award, Harvard University
2009: Establishment of “Dr. No-Hee <mask> Endowed Chair in Dentistry” at the UCLA
2010: The Gies Award as the Most Achieved Dental Educator by the Gies Foundation of the American Dental Education Association (ADEA) Dr<mask> was selected for his achievements as an educator in the dentistry field. 2010: Distinguished Alumnus of the Year, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, Georgia
2012: AAAS Fellowship - Dr<mask> was awarded for significant contributions to the field of oral cancer and dental education, particularly for oral carcinogenesis, viral infection and cellular aging. 2012: Eminent Scholar, Kyung Hee University, Seoul, Korea
Personal life
No-Hee <mask> married Yubai <mask> in 1969. They have a daughter, son-in-law, and granddaughter, who reside in Atlanta, Georgia. References
1944 births
Living people
South Korean dentists
American dentistry academics
American dentists
Seoul National University alumni
Harvard School of Dental Medicine alumni | [
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] | <mask> is the Dean of the School of Dentistry at the University of California, Los Angeles. He is a researcher in the field of oral and craniofacial research. He has more than 170 scientific publications, nine invited review articles, nine book chapters, and 180 abstract for national and international scientific presentations. <mask> was born in South Korea in 1944. MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE MzE <mask> earned a black belt after practicing martial arts in high school. <mask> received a certificate in the arts and sciences at the university.He received a DDS in 1968 after attending the College of Dentistry. He was heavily involved in scientific research as a dental student. He received a certificate in Periodontics from the university. He served in the Korean Army for three years, 1971 to 1974, retiring as a captain. <mask> was given the opportunity to conduct research for a year as a fellow at the Medical College of Georgia in 1975. He received a PhD degree in 1978 and decided at the end of the year to stay. He was a research associate at the Harvard University/Eye Research Institute from 1978 to 1982 and earned a certificate in infectious diseases in 1980.He received a Doctor of Dental Medicine degree from Harvard in 1982. He was an assistant professor in the Department of Oral Biology and Pathophysiology at the Harvard School of Dental Medicine. He started as an associate professor in the Section of Oral Biology at the UCLA School of Dentistry in 1984 and became a professor in 1985. He became a professor in the Department of Medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine in 2004. He was named a distinguished professor in 2006 <mask> was the associate director of the UCLA Dental Research Institute from July 1986 to June 1990 and the dean of the UCLA School of Dentistry from January 1997 to June 1998. He is the dean of the UCLA School of Dentistry.<mask>'s early research focused on the study of the mechanisms of multiple antiviral agents, including Zovirax, in order to evaluate their therapeutic efficacy in animal models. In 1983, <mask> changed the focus of his research to the study of the mechanisms of human oral cancer development, clarifying and expounding the role of human papillomaviruses in the development of human cancer. <mask> received close to $60 million in extramural funds from the U.S. government and private industry while he was at Harvard and UCLA. Many of the people he trained went on to become university faculty members in the United States and many other countries. He has held leadership positions. He has been an editorial board member of numerous journals, including the Journal of Dental Research and the International Journal of Oral Biology. Inventions and patents related to medical herbs and their anti-microbial applications.The International Association for Dental Research recognized the co-primary inventor with a distinguished scientist award in 2001. The Gies Award as the Most Achieved Dental Educator was presented to Dr<mask> at the UCLA 2010: The No-Hee <mask> Endowed Chair in Dentistry. The Medical College of Georgia awarded Dr<mask> a fellowship for his contributions to the field of oral cancer and dental education. No-Hee <mask> married Yubai <mask> in 1969. A daughter, son-in-law, and granddaughter reside in Atlanta, Georgia. There are people from South Korean dentists to Harvard School of Dental Medicine alumni. | [
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3713462 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuta%20Iyama | Yuta Iyama | is a Japanese professional Go player. In April 2016, he became the first player in Japanese history to hold all seven major titles simultaneously. In January 2018, Iyama became the first professional Go player to be awarded Japan's People's Honour Award.
Biography
Born in Osaka, Iyama became the first professional of the Heisei period. He began playing Go at the age of five and reached the rank of 3 dan amateur a year later. It was at this time Kunio Ishii became Iyama's teacher, with the two playing thousands of games online. He won the national elementary school championship twice, in 1997 and 1998. Iyama became an insei in October 1998 and challenged for a professional spot in 2001. He lost to Kohei Kawada. The following year, he challenged again and passed the qualifying test. At the time, Iyama was the fourth youngest professional behind Cho Chikun, Utaro Hashimoto and Satoshi Yuki.
Iyama was promoted to 2 dan on 4 September 2002. During the China-Japan Agon Cup in 2002, Iyama played an unofficial match with Chen Yaoye. Iyama lost the match by resignation. In June 2003, Iyama was promoted to 3 dan for his performances in the Oteai. Nearly two years later, Iyama was promoted to 4 dan under the newly revised promotion rules.
He met his rival, Daisuke Murakawa, a fellow player from the Kansai region, in the final section of the 30th Shinjin-O. Taking white, Iyama went on to win by 5.5 points. Iyama won the first major game of his career when he defeated Cho U by resignation in the 20th Agon Cup. He would go on to win the tournament, becoming the youngest title holder in Japanese history at 16 years and five months. The previous holder of the record was Cho Chikun, who won the Shin-Ei, a tournament open to young players only, at 17 years. As a result of winning the tournament, Iyama was directly promoted to 7 dan and became the youngest 7 dan in Japanese Go.
Before winning the Agon Cup, Iyama won the Nakano Cup, a privately sponsored unofficial tournament, and unsuccessfully challenged for the Shinjin-O title, losing to Kim Shushun. Iyama was a member of the Japanese team at the 6th Asian New Star Match, where he won one match. Japan finished in third place behind South Korea and China. Iyama participated in the China-Japan Agon Cup in 2006, losing to Gu Li by resignation.
Iyama won two awards for his performance during the 2005 season: the New Star award and an award for having the highest winning percentage (75.47%). In August 2006, Iyama made it to the last game of the 61st Honinbo preliminary stage. Facing Cho Sonjin (a former Honinbo), Iyama took black and lost by resignation. Had Iyama won, he would have been the youngest participant of the Honinbo league at 17 years. Three months after his unsuccessful Honinbo league bid, Iyama participated in the first edition of the Daiwa Cup, an internet tournament. Iyama qualified for the main tournament, but was unable to challenge for the title.
Iyama won his second official tournament when he defeated Kenichi Mochizuki in the Shinjin-O final. In September 2007, Iyama reached the challenger final of his first major title, the Tengen. Taking black, Iyama lost to Keigo Yamashita by 1.5 points and was unable to challenge title-holder Rin Kono. Iyama qualified for his first international tournament, the 21st Fujitsu Cup, by defeating Kanketsu Rin and Michihiro Morita in the preliminary stages. In the main tournament, Iyama defeated Taiwanese representative Zhou Junxun, but lost to Korea's Lee Sedol in the second round.
In March 2008, Iyama participated in the 1st Yugen Cup, a tournament pitting veteran professionals against newly promoted youngsters. He finished in 6th place, but won all six of his games. Iyama reached the final round of the preliminary tournament for the 13th LG Cup, but was unable to make the final tournament. No other Japanese players qualified.
Two months later, in July 2008, Iyama won the 33rd Meijin league. At the age of 19, Iyama became the youngest ever challenger for the Meijin title and the youngest challenger for any of the major titles. He broke a record held by Cho Chikun, who challenged for the Oza title in 1976 at the age of 20 years. As a result of winning the league, Iyama was directly promoted to 8 dan. Iyama's title bid was unsuccessful as he lost in seven games to title-holder Cho U.
A few days after earning the right to challenge for the 33rd Meijin, Iyama defeated Cho U in the final of the 1st Daiwa Cup Grand Champion, an internet tournament for winners of the other Daiwa Cup tournaments. Iyama was also a part of the Japanese team at the 1st World Mind Sports Games. While challenging for the Meijin title, Iyama faced Cho u again, this time in the Oza challenger finals. Iyama took black and lost by resignation.
A month later, in October 2008, Iyama reached another challenger finals. He faced Norimoto Yoda in challenger finals of the 33rd Kisei and lost by resignation. In March 2008, Iyama participated in the inaugural BC Card Cup as one of Japan's two representatives, Cho Chikun being the other. Chikun was knocked out in the first round by Paek Hongsuk, but Iyama won two games in a row against Kim Seongjae and On Sojin. Iyama came up against Cho Hanseung in the third round and was eliminated by the Korean representative.
That same month Iyama participated in two unofficial tournaments, the Yugen Cup, which he won, and the RICOH Rengo Cup. Iyama and partner Xie Yimin lost to Naoki Hane and Keiko Kato in the final of the Rengo Cup. Iyama also won the Kido "Outstanding Player" award for his performances during the 2008 season.
Iyama was one of four Japanese participants at the 14th LG Cup, where he won his first game against Yun Junsang and lost his second game against Lee Chang-ho. Iyama also reached the challenger finals of the 34th Gosei, but eventually lost to Satoshi Yuki by 1.5 points.
After losing the Meijin the previous year, Iyama won the Meijin league again in July 2009 and earned the right to challenge Cho U. He went undefeated in the league, becoming the fourth player in the modern-era to go undefeated in the Meijin league. Two months later Iyama qualified for his first Honinbo league.
Iyama lost the first game of his Meijin challenge, but then went on to win four in-a-row. As a result, Iyama broke three records: youngest major title winner, youngest Meijin and youngest 9 dan, breaking records set by Cho Chikun, Rin Kaiho and his opponent in the Meijin finals, Cho U. Iyama also won the Ryusei title, televised on the date of the final Meijin match.
In December 2009, Iyama participated in his first Nongshim Cup. He was the third Japanese player and lost his game to Xie He, who won five straight games before losing to Naoki Hane. Iyama led the Japanese most wins list in 2009 with a record of 43 wins and 14 losses. Iyama was also awarded the Shusai Prize for his performances during the 2009 season. In February 2010, Iyama lost the final of the 5th Daiwa Cup to Rin Kono.
In May, Iyama reached the challenger finals for the 65th Honinbo, but lost to Keigo Yamashita. As a result, for finishing runner-up of the NHK Cup in 2010, Iyama was qualified for the 22nd Asian TV Cup. He lost to Lee Chang-ho in the first round. Iyama was also a representative of the Japanese team at the 16th Asian Games. In October 2010, Iyama was invited to the World Meijin tournament along with Gu Li and Lee Chang-ho. Iyama finished in third place. Iyama then defended his Meijin title in straight wins against Shinji Takao.
In 2010, Iyama won the third most prize money in Japan with 56,482,000 Yen. He unsuccessfully challenged Cho U for the Kisei title in 2011. Iyama won his second major title, the Judan, in 2011.
In January 2017, Iyama was awarded the Shusai Prize, which honors the outstanding player of the previous year. It was his fifth consecutive Shusai Prize. In February 2017, Iyama was awarded the Kido Prize for "Most outstanding player" for winning all top seven titles.
Iyama is scheduled to play in the 2017 World Go Championship.
Promotion record
Career record
Titles and runners-up
Awards
2010 Osaka Culture Prize
2018 People's Honour Award
References
1989 births
Japanese Go players
Living people
People from Higashiōsaka
Asian Games medalists in go
Go players at the 2010 Asian Games
Asian Games bronze medalists for Japan
Medalists at the 2010 Asian Games
People's Honour Award winners | [
"is a Japanese professional Go player.",
"In April 2016, he became the first player in Japanese history to hold all seven major titles simultaneously.",
"In January 2018, Iyama became the first professional Go player to be awarded Japan's People's Honour Award.",
"Biography\nBorn in Osaka, Iyama became the first professional of the Heisei period.",
"He began playing Go at the age of five and reached the rank of 3 dan amateur a year later.",
"It was at this time Kunio Ishii became Iyama's teacher, with the two playing thousands of games online.",
"He won the national elementary school championship twice, in 1997 and 1998.",
"Iyama became an insei in October 1998 and challenged for a professional spot in 2001.",
"He lost to Kohei Kawada.",
"The following year, he challenged again and passed the qualifying test.",
"At the time, Iyama was the fourth youngest professional behind Cho Chikun, Utaro Hashimoto and Satoshi Yuki.",
"Iyama was promoted to 2 dan on 4 September 2002.",
"During the China-Japan Agon Cup in 2002, Iyama played an unofficial match with Chen Yaoye.",
"Iyama lost the match by resignation.",
"In June 2003, Iyama was promoted to 3 dan for his performances in the Oteai.",
"Nearly two years later, Iyama was promoted to 4 dan under the newly revised promotion rules.",
"He met his rival, Daisuke Murakawa, a fellow player from the Kansai region, in the final section of the 30th Shinjin-O.",
"Taking white, Iyama went on to win by 5.5 points.",
"Iyama won the first major game of his career when he defeated Cho U by resignation in the 20th Agon Cup.",
"He would go on to win the tournament, becoming the youngest title holder in Japanese history at 16 years and five months.",
"The previous holder of the record was Cho Chikun, who won the Shin-Ei, a tournament open to young players only, at 17 years.",
"As a result of winning the tournament, Iyama was directly promoted to 7 dan and became the youngest 7 dan in Japanese Go.",
"Before winning the Agon Cup, Iyama won the Nakano Cup, a privately sponsored unofficial tournament, and unsuccessfully challenged for the Shinjin-O title, losing to Kim Shushun.",
"Iyama was a member of the Japanese team at the 6th Asian New Star Match, where he won one match.",
"Japan finished in third place behind South Korea and China.",
"Iyama participated in the China-Japan Agon Cup in 2006, losing to Gu Li by resignation.",
"Iyama won two awards for his performance during the 2005 season: the New Star award and an award for having the highest winning percentage (75.47%).",
"In August 2006, Iyama made it to the last game of the 61st Honinbo preliminary stage.",
"Facing Cho Sonjin (a former Honinbo), Iyama took black and lost by resignation.",
"Had Iyama won, he would have been the youngest participant of the Honinbo league at 17 years.",
"Three months after his unsuccessful Honinbo league bid, Iyama participated in the first edition of the Daiwa Cup, an internet tournament.",
"Iyama qualified for the main tournament, but was unable to challenge for the title.",
"Iyama won his second official tournament when he defeated Kenichi Mochizuki in the Shinjin-O final.",
"In September 2007, Iyama reached the challenger final of his first major title, the Tengen.",
"Taking black, Iyama lost to Keigo Yamashita by 1.5 points and was unable to challenge title-holder Rin Kono.",
"Iyama qualified for his first international tournament, the 21st Fujitsu Cup, by defeating Kanketsu Rin and Michihiro Morita in the preliminary stages.",
"In the main tournament, Iyama defeated Taiwanese representative Zhou Junxun, but lost to Korea's Lee Sedol in the second round.",
"In March 2008, Iyama participated in the 1st Yugen Cup, a tournament pitting veteran professionals against newly promoted youngsters.",
"He finished in 6th place, but won all six of his games.",
"Iyama reached the final round of the preliminary tournament for the 13th LG Cup, but was unable to make the final tournament.",
"No other Japanese players qualified.",
"Two months later, in July 2008, Iyama won the 33rd Meijin league.",
"At the age of 19, Iyama became the youngest ever challenger for the Meijin title and the youngest challenger for any of the major titles.",
"He broke a record held by Cho Chikun, who challenged for the Oza title in 1976 at the age of 20 years.",
"As a result of winning the league, Iyama was directly promoted to 8 dan.",
"Iyama's title bid was unsuccessful as he lost in seven games to title-holder Cho U.",
"A few days after earning the right to challenge for the 33rd Meijin, Iyama defeated Cho U in the final of the 1st Daiwa Cup Grand Champion, an internet tournament for winners of the other Daiwa Cup tournaments.",
"Iyama was also a part of the Japanese team at the 1st World Mind Sports Games.",
"While challenging for the Meijin title, Iyama faced Cho u again, this time in the Oza challenger finals.",
"Iyama took black and lost by resignation.",
"A month later, in October 2008, Iyama reached another challenger finals.",
"He faced Norimoto Yoda in challenger finals of the 33rd Kisei and lost by resignation.",
"In March 2008, Iyama participated in the inaugural BC Card Cup as one of Japan's two representatives, Cho Chikun being the other.",
"Chikun was knocked out in the first round by Paek Hongsuk, but Iyama won two games in a row against Kim Seongjae and On Sojin.",
"Iyama came up against Cho Hanseung in the third round and was eliminated by the Korean representative.",
"That same month Iyama participated in two unofficial tournaments, the Yugen Cup, which he won, and the RICOH Rengo Cup.",
"Iyama and partner Xie Yimin lost to Naoki Hane and Keiko Kato in the final of the Rengo Cup.",
"Iyama also won the Kido \"Outstanding Player\" award for his performances during the 2008 season.",
"Iyama was one of four Japanese participants at the 14th LG Cup, where he won his first game against Yun Junsang and lost his second game against Lee Chang-ho.",
"Iyama also reached the challenger finals of the 34th Gosei, but eventually lost to Satoshi Yuki by 1.5 points.",
"After losing the Meijin the previous year, Iyama won the Meijin league again in July 2009 and earned the right to challenge Cho U.",
"He went undefeated in the league, becoming the fourth player in the modern-era to go undefeated in the Meijin league.",
"Two months later Iyama qualified for his first Honinbo league.",
"Iyama lost the first game of his Meijin challenge, but then went on to win four in-a-row.",
"As a result, Iyama broke three records: youngest major title winner, youngest Meijin and youngest 9 dan, breaking records set by Cho Chikun, Rin Kaiho and his opponent in the Meijin finals, Cho U. Iyama also won the Ryusei title, televised on the date of the final Meijin match.",
"In December 2009, Iyama participated in his first Nongshim Cup.",
"He was the third Japanese player and lost his game to Xie He, who won five straight games before losing to Naoki Hane.",
"Iyama led the Japanese most wins list in 2009 with a record of 43 wins and 14 losses.",
"Iyama was also awarded the Shusai Prize for his performances during the 2009 season.",
"In February 2010, Iyama lost the final of the 5th Daiwa Cup to Rin Kono.",
"In May, Iyama reached the challenger finals for the 65th Honinbo, but lost to Keigo Yamashita.",
"As a result, for finishing runner-up of the NHK Cup in 2010, Iyama was qualified for the 22nd Asian TV Cup.",
"He lost to Lee Chang-ho in the first round.",
"Iyama was also a representative of the Japanese team at the 16th Asian Games.",
"In October 2010, Iyama was invited to the World Meijin tournament along with Gu Li and Lee Chang-ho.",
"Iyama finished in third place.",
"Iyama then defended his Meijin title in straight wins against Shinji Takao.",
"In 2010, Iyama won the third most prize money in Japan with 56,482,000 Yen.",
"He unsuccessfully challenged Cho U for the Kisei title in 2011.",
"Iyama won his second major title, the Judan, in 2011.",
"In January 2017, Iyama was awarded the Shusai Prize, which honors the outstanding player of the previous year.",
"It was his fifth consecutive Shusai Prize.",
"In February 2017, Iyama was awarded the Kido Prize for \"Most outstanding player\" for winning all top seven titles.",
"Iyama is scheduled to play in the 2017 World Go Championship.",
"Promotion record\n\nCareer record\n\nTitles and runners-up\n\nAwards\n 2010 Osaka Culture Prize\n 2018 People's Honour Award\n\nReferences\n\n1989 births\nJapanese Go players\nLiving people\nPeople from Higashiōsaka\nAsian Games medalists in go\nGo players at the 2010 Asian Games\nAsian Games bronze medalists for Japan\nMedalists at the 2010 Asian Games\nPeople's Honour Award winners"
] | [
"He is a professional Go player.",
"He became the first player in Japanese history to hold all seven major titles at the same time.",
"Iyama was the first professional Go player to be awarded the Japan's People's Honour Award.",
"Iyama was the first professional of the Heisei period.",
"He reached the rank of amateur after playing Go for five years.",
"At this time, Iyama's teacher was Kunio Ishii, who was playing thousands of games online.",
"In 1997 and 1998 he won the national elementary school championship.",
"Iyama challenged for a professional spot in 2001 after becoming an insei.",
"He lost to a person.",
"He passed the test the next year.",
"Iyama was the fourth youngest professional at the time.",
"Iyama was promoted to 2 Dan on September 4, 2002.",
"Iyama and Chen Yaoye played an unofficial match during the Agon Cup.",
"Iyama resigned from the match.",
"Iyama was promoted to 3 Dan in June of 2003 for his performances in the Oteai.",
"Iyama was promoted to 4 Dan nearly two years later.",
"They met in the final section of the 30th Shinjin-O.",
"Iyama won by 5.5 points.",
"Iyama won the first major game of his career when he defeated Cho U in the 20th Agon Cup.",
"He became the youngest title holder in Japanese history at 16 years and five months.",
"The previous record was held by Cho Chikun, who won the Shin-Ei at 17 years old.",
"Iyama became the youngest 7dan in Japanese Go after winning the tournament.",
"Iyama lost to Kim Shushun in the Nakano Cup before he won the Agon Cup.",
"Iyama won one match at the 6th Asian New Star Match.",
"South Korea and China finished ahead of Japan.",
"Iyama lost to Gu Li in the Agon Cup.",
"Iyama won two awards for his performance during the 2005 season, the New Star award and an award for having the highest winning percentage.",
"Iyama made it to the last game of the Honinbo preliminary stage.",
"Iyama resigned against Cho Sonjin, a former Honinbo.",
"Iyama would have been the youngest participant in the Honinbo league at 17 years old.",
"Iyama participated in the first edition of the Daiwa Cup, an internet tournament, three months after his unsuccessful Honinbo league bid.",
"Iyama was unable to challenge for the title after he qualified for the main tournament.",
"Iyama won his second tournament when he defeated Kenichi Mochizuki.",
"The Tengen was Iyama's first major title.",
"Iyama was unable to challenge Rin Kono because he lost to Keigo Yamashita by 1.5 points.",
"Iyama qualified for his first international tournament by defeating Kanketsu Rin and Michihiro Morita in the preliminary stages.",
"In the main tournament, Iyama defeated Zhou Junxun, but lost to Lee Sedol in the second round.",
"In March 2008, Iyama participated in the 1st Yugen Cup, a tournament pitting veteran professionals against newly promoted youngsters.",
"He won all six of his games and finished in 6th place.",
"Iyama reached the final round of the preliminary tournament, but couldn't make the final tournament.",
"There were no other Japanese players who qualified.",
"Iyama won the 33rd Meijin league in July of 2008.",
"Iyama was the youngest challenger for any of the major titles when he was 19 years old.",
"Cho Chikun set the record at the age of 20 years when he challenged for the Oza title.",
"Iyama was promoted to 8 Dan as a result of winning the league.",
"Iyama lost in seven games to Cho U.",
"After earning the right to challenge for the 33rd Meijin, Iyama defeated Cho U in the final of the 1st Daiwa Cup Grand Champion, an internet tournament for winners of the other Daiwa Cup tournaments.",
"At the 1st World Mind Sports Games, Iyama was a part of the Japanese team.",
"Iyama faced Cho again in the Oza challenger finals, this time for the Meijin title.",
"Iyama resigned after taking black.",
"In October 2008, Iyama reached another challenger finals.",
"He was defeated in the challenger finals of the 33rd Kisei.",
"Iyama was one of the two representatives from Japan in the inaugural BC Card Cup.",
"Chikun was knocked out in the first round by Paek Hongsuk, but Iyama won two games in a row against Kim Seongjae and On Sojin.",
"The Korean representative eliminated Iyama in the third round.",
"Iyama participated in two unofficial tournaments that month, the Yugen Cup and the RICOH Rengo Cup.",
"The Rengo Cup final was between Naoki Hane and Keiko Kato and Iyama and Xie Yimin.",
"The Kido \"Outstanding Player\" award was won by Iyama.",
"Iyama won his first game against Junsang, but lost his second game against Chang-ho.",
"Iyama reached the challenger finals of the 34th Gosei, but lost to Satoshi Yuki by 1.5 points.",
"Iyama won the Meijin league again in July of 2009, and was given the right to challenge Cho U.",
"He became the fourth player in the modern-era to go perfect in the Meijin league.",
"Iyama qualified for his first Honinbo league two months later.",
"Iyama was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"Iyama broke three records: youngest major title winner, youngest Meijin and youngest 9dan, breaking records set by Cho Chikun, Rin Kaiho and his opponent in the Meijin finals, Cho U. Iyama also won the Ryusei title.",
"Iyama participated in his first cup.",
"Xie He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"Iyama had a record of 43 wins and 14 losses in 2009.",
"The Shusai Prize was awarded to Iyama.",
"Iyama lost the final of the Daiwa Cup to Rin Kono.",
"Iyama lost to Keigo Yamashita in the challenger finals of the 65th Honinbo.",
"Iyama qualified for the 22nd Asian TV Cup after finishing runner-up in the NHK Cup.",
"He lost to Lee Chang-ho.",
"At the 16th Asian Games, Iyama was a member of the Japanese team.",
"Iyama was invited to the World Meijin tournament along with Gu Li and Lee Chang-ho.",
"Iyama finished third.",
"Iyama successfully defended his title against Takao.",
"Iyama won the third most prize money in Japan in 2010.",
"He tried to challenge Cho U for the Kisei title.",
"The Judan was Iyama's second major title.",
"The outstanding player of the previous year is awarded the Shusai Prize.",
"He has won the Shusai Prize for five years in a row.",
"The Kido Prize was given to Iyama for winning all the top seven titles.",
"Iyama is going to play in the World Go Championship.",
"The titles and runners-up of the 2010 Osaka Culture Prize were given to people from Higashisaka."
] | is a Japanese professional Go player. In April 2016, he became the first player in Japanese history to hold all seven major titles simultaneously. In January 2018, <mask> became the first professional Go player to be awarded Japan's People's Honour Award. Biography
Born in Osaka, <mask> became the first professional of the Heisei period. He began playing Go at the age of five and reached the rank of 3 dan amateur a year later. It was at this time Kunio Ishii became <mask>'s teacher, with the two playing thousands of games online. He won the national elementary school championship twice, in 1997 and 1998.<mask> became an insei in October 1998 and challenged for a professional spot in 2001. He lost to Kohei Kawada. The following year, he challenged again and passed the qualifying test. At the time, <mask> was the fourth youngest professional behind Cho Chikun, Utaro Hashimoto and Satoshi Yuki. <mask> was promoted to 2 dan on 4 September 2002. During the China-Japan Agon Cup in 2002, <mask> played an unofficial match with Chen Yaoye. <mask> lost the match by resignation.In June 2003, <mask> was promoted to 3 dan for his performances in the Oteai. Nearly two years later, <mask> was promoted to 4 dan under the newly revised promotion rules. He met his rival, Daisuke Murakawa, a fellow player from the Kansai region, in the final section of the 30th Shinjin-O. Taking white, <mask> went on to win by 5.5 points. <mask> won the first major game of his career when he defeated Cho U by resignation in the 20th Agon Cup. He would go on to win the tournament, becoming the youngest title holder in Japanese history at 16 years and five months. The previous holder of the record was Cho Chikun, who won the Shin-Ei, a tournament open to young players only, at 17 years.As a result of winning the tournament, <mask> was directly promoted to 7 dan and became the youngest 7 dan in Japanese Go. Before winning the Agon Cup, <mask> won the Nakano Cup, a privately sponsored unofficial tournament, and unsuccessfully challenged for the Shinjin-O title, losing to Kim Shushun. <mask> was a member of the Japanese team at the 6th Asian New Star Match, where he won one match. Japan finished in third place behind South Korea and China. <mask> participated in the China-Japan Agon Cup in 2006, losing to Gu Li by resignation. <mask> won two awards for his performance during the 2005 season: the New Star award and an award for having the highest winning percentage (75.47%). In August 2006, <mask> made it to the last game of the 61st Honinbo preliminary stage.Facing Cho Sonjin (a former Honinbo), <mask> took black and lost by resignation. Had <mask> won, he would have been the youngest participant of the Honinbo league at 17 years. Three months after his unsuccessful Honinbo league bid, <mask> participated in the first edition of the Daiwa Cup, an internet tournament. <mask> qualified for the main tournament, but was unable to challenge for the title. <mask> won his second official tournament when he defeated Kenichi Mochizuki in the Shinjin-O final. In September 2007, <mask> reached the challenger final of his first major title, the Tengen. Taking black, <mask> lost to Keigo Yamashita by 1.5 points and was unable to challenge title-holder Rin Kono.<mask> qualified for his first international tournament, the 21st Fujitsu Cup, by defeating Kanketsu Rin and Michihiro Morita in the preliminary stages. In the main tournament, <mask> defeated Taiwanese representative Zhou Junxun, but lost to Korea's Lee Sedol in the second round. In March 2008, <mask> participated in the 1st Yugen Cup, a tournament pitting veteran professionals against newly promoted youngsters. He finished in 6th place, but won all six of his games. <mask> reached the final round of the preliminary tournament for the 13th LG Cup, but was unable to make the final tournament. No other Japanese players qualified. Two months later, in July 2008, <mask> won the 33rd Meijin league.At the age of 19, <mask> became the youngest ever challenger for the Meijin title and the youngest challenger for any of the major titles. He broke a record held by Cho Chikun, who challenged for the Oza title in 1976 at the age of 20 years. As a result of winning the league, <mask> was directly promoted to 8 dan. <mask>'s title bid was unsuccessful as he lost in seven games to title-holder Cho U. A few days after earning the right to challenge for the 33rd Meijin, <mask> defeated Cho U in the final of the 1st Daiwa Cup Grand Champion, an internet tournament for winners of the other Daiwa Cup tournaments. <mask> was also a part of the Japanese team at the 1st World Mind Sports Games. While challenging for the Meijin title, <mask> faced Cho u again, this time in the Oza challenger finals.<mask> took black and lost by resignation. A month later, in October 2008, <mask> reached another challenger finals. He faced Norimoto Yoda in challenger finals of the 33rd Kisei and lost by resignation. In March 2008, <mask> participated in the inaugural BC Card Cup as one of Japan's two representatives, Cho Chikun being the other. Chikun was knocked out in the first round by Paek Hongsuk, but <mask> won two games in a row against Kim Seongjae and On Sojin. <mask> came up against Cho Hanseung in the third round and was eliminated by the Korean representative. That same month <mask> participated in two unofficial tournaments, the Yugen Cup, which he won, and the RICOH Rengo Cup.<mask> and partner Xie Yimin lost to Naoki Hane and Keiko Kato in the final of the Rengo Cup. <mask> also won the Kido "Outstanding Player" award for his performances during the 2008 season. <mask> was one of four Japanese participants at the 14th LG Cup, where he won his first game against Yun Junsang and lost his second game against Lee Chang-ho. <mask> also reached the challenger finals of the 34th Gosei, but eventually lost to Satoshi Yuki by 1.5 points. After losing the Meijin the previous year, <mask> won the Meijin league again in July 2009 and earned the right to challenge Cho U. He went undefeated in the league, becoming the fourth player in the modern-era to go undefeated in the Meijin league. Two months later <mask> qualified for his first Honinbo league.<mask> lost the first game of his Meijin challenge, but then went on to win four in-a-row. As a result, <mask> broke three records: youngest major title winner, youngest Meijin and youngest 9 dan, breaking records set by Cho Chikun, Rin Kaiho and his opponent in the Meijin finals, Cho U. <mask> also won the Ryusei title, televised on the date of the final Meijin match. In December 2009, <mask> participated in his first Nongshim Cup. He was the third Japanese player and lost his game to Xie He, who won five straight games before losing to Naoki Hane. <mask> led the Japanese most wins list in 2009 with a record of 43 wins and 14 losses. <mask> was also awarded the Shusai Prize for his performances during the 2009 season. In February 2010, <mask> lost the final of the 5th Daiwa Cup to Rin Kono.In May, <mask> reached the challenger finals for the 65th Honinbo, but lost to Keigo Yamashita. As a result, for finishing runner-up of the NHK Cup in 2010, <mask> was qualified for the 22nd Asian TV Cup. He lost to Lee Chang-ho in the first round. <mask> was also a representative of the Japanese team at the 16th Asian Games. In October 2010, <mask> was invited to the World Meijin tournament along with Gu Li and Lee Chang-ho. <mask> finished in third place. <mask> then defended his Meijin title in straight wins against Shinji Takao.In 2010, <mask> won the third most prize money in Japan with 56,482,000 Yen. He unsuccessfully challenged Cho U for the Kisei title in 2011. <mask> won his second major title, the Judan, in 2011. In January 2017, <mask> was awarded the Shusai Prize, which honors the outstanding player of the previous year. It was his fifth consecutive Shusai Prize. In February 2017, <mask> was awarded the Kido Prize for "Most outstanding player" for winning all top seven titles. <mask> is scheduled to play in the 2017 World Go Championship.Promotion record
Career record
Titles and runners-up
Awards
2010 Osaka Culture Prize
2018 People's Honour Award
References
1989 births
Japanese Go players
Living people
People from Higashiōsaka
Asian Games medalists in go
Go players at the 2010 Asian Games
Asian Games bronze medalists for Japan
Medalists at the 2010 Asian Games
People's Honour Award winners | [
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] | He is a professional Go player. He became the first player in Japanese history to hold all seven major titles at the same time. <mask> was the first professional Go player to be awarded the Japan's People's Honour Award. <mask> was the first professional of the Heisei period. He reached the rank of amateur after playing Go for five years. At this time, <mask>'s teacher was Kunio Ishii, who was playing thousands of games online. In 1997 and 1998 he won the national elementary school championship.<mask> challenged for a professional spot in 2001 after becoming an insei. He lost to a person. He passed the test the next year. <mask> was the fourth youngest professional at the time. <mask> was promoted to 2 Dan on September 4, 2002. <mask> and Chen Yaoye played an unofficial match during the Agon Cup. <mask> resigned from the match.<mask> was promoted to 3 Dan in June of 2003 for his performances in the Oteai. <mask> was promoted to 4 Dan nearly two years later. They met in the final section of the 30th Shinjin-O. <mask> won by 5.5 points. <mask> won the first major game of his career when he defeated Cho U in the 20th Agon Cup. He became the youngest title holder in Japanese history at 16 years and five months. The previous record was held by Cho Chikun, who won the Shin-Ei at 17 years old.<mask> became the youngest 7dan in Japanese Go after winning the tournament. <mask> lost to Kim Shushun in the Nakano Cup before he won the Agon Cup. <mask> won one match at the 6th Asian New Star Match. South Korea and China finished ahead of Japan. <mask> lost to Gu Li in the Agon Cup. <mask> won two awards for his performance during the 2005 season, the New Star award and an award for having the highest winning percentage. <mask> made it to the last game of the Honinbo preliminary stage.<mask> resigned against Cho Sonjin, a former Honinbo. <mask> would have been the youngest participant in the Honinbo league at 17 years old. <mask> participated in the first edition of the Daiwa Cup, an internet tournament, three months after his unsuccessful Honinbo league bid. <mask> was unable to challenge for the title after he qualified for the main tournament. <mask> won his second tournament when he defeated Kenichi Mochizuki. The Tengen was <mask>'s first major title. <mask> was unable to challenge Rin Kono because he lost to Keigo Yamashita by 1.5 points.<mask> qualified for his first international tournament by defeating Kanketsu Rin and Michihiro Morita in the preliminary stages. In the main tournament, <mask> defeated Zhou Junxun, but lost to Lee Sedol in the second round. In March 2008, <mask> participated in the 1st Yugen Cup, a tournament pitting veteran professionals against newly promoted youngsters. He won all six of his games and finished in 6th place. <mask> reached the final round of the preliminary tournament, but couldn't make the final tournament. There were no other Japanese players who qualified. <mask> won the 33rd Meijin league in July of 2008.<mask> was the youngest challenger for any of the major titles when he was 19 years old. Cho Chikun set the record at the age of 20 years when he challenged for the Oza title. <mask> was promoted to 8 Dan as a result of winning the league. <mask> lost in seven games to Cho U. After earning the right to challenge for the 33rd Meijin, <mask> defeated Cho U in the final of the 1st Daiwa Cup Grand Champion, an internet tournament for winners of the other Daiwa Cup tournaments. At the 1st World Mind Sports Games, <mask> was a part of the Japanese team. <mask> faced Cho again in the Oza challenger finals, this time for the Meijin title.<mask> resigned after taking black. In October 2008, <mask> reached another challenger finals. He was defeated in the challenger finals of the 33rd Kisei. <mask> was one of the two representatives from Japan in the inaugural BC Card Cup. Chikun was knocked out in the first round by Paek Hongsuk, but <mask> won two games in a row against Kim Seongjae and On Sojin. The Korean representative eliminated <mask> in the third round. <mask> participated in two unofficial tournaments that month, the Yugen Cup and the RICOH Rengo Cup.The Rengo Cup final was between Naoki Hane and Keiko Kato and <mask> and Xie Yimin. The Kido "Outstanding Player" award was won by <mask>. <mask> won his first game against Junsang, but lost his second game against Chang-ho. <mask> reached the challenger finals of the 34th Gosei, but lost to Satoshi Yuki by 1.5 points. <mask> won the Meijin league again in July of 2009, and was given the right to challenge Cho U. He became the fourth player in the modern-era to go perfect in the Meijin league. <mask> qualified for his first Honinbo league two months later.Iyama was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 Iyama broke three records: youngest major title winner, youngest Meijin and youngest 9dan, breaking records set by Cho Chikun, Rin Kaiho and his opponent in the Meijin finals, Cho U. Iyama also won the Ryusei title. Iyama participated in his first cup. Xie He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 Iyama had a record of 43 wins and 14 losses in 2009. The Shusai Prize was awarded to Iyama. Iyama lost the final of the Daiwa Cup to Rin Kono.<mask> lost to Keigo Yamashita in the challenger finals of the 65th Honinbo. <mask> qualified for the 22nd Asian TV Cup after finishing runner-up in the NHK Cup. He lost to Lee Chang-ho. At the 16th Asian Games, <mask> was a member of the Japanese team. <mask> was invited to the World Meijin tournament along with Gu Li and Lee Chang-ho. <mask> finished third. <mask> successfully defended his title against Takao.<mask> won the third most prize money in Japan in 2010. He tried to challenge Cho U for the Kisei title. The Judan was <mask>'s second major title. The outstanding player of the previous year is awarded the Shusai Prize. He has won the Shusai Prize for five years in a row. The Kido Prize was given to <mask> for winning all the top seven titles. <mask> is going to play in the World Go Championship.The titles and runners-up of the 2010 Osaka Culture Prize were given to people from Higashisaka. | [
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46834680 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pavel%20Belov | Pavel Belov | Pavel Alexeyevich Belov (; 18 February 1897 – 3 December 1963) was a Soviet Army colonel general and a Hero of the Soviet Union. He was nicknamed the "Fox" by the Germans, and personally led the longest successful raid of the war, lasting five months behind the German lines.
At the beginning of the war, Belov commanded the 2nd Cavalry Corps. During the Battle of Moscow on 26 November, it was renamed and given the honor of becoming the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps. The divisions also received 'Guards' designations. The newly established cavalry corps played a pivotal role in stopping Guderian's Panzers in 1941 on the southern outposts of Moscow near the town of Kashira. His unit was among the first to start the counterattack in the Battle of Moscow. Following the winter-counterattack they penetrated deep into the enemy rear being cut off in the process. During Battle of Rzhev Belov would lead a successful five-month raid with the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps behind Army Group Center.
After returning from the raid in the summer of 1942, he was promoted and given command of the 61st Army, which he led for the rest of the war finishing the war in Battle of Berlin on the Elbe River, his successor became Viktor Kirillovich Baranov. Belov's command of the army included the Battle of Kursk in 1943. Later taking part in Operation Bagration where his units helped to liberate the Fortress of Brest. later the units participated Riga Offensive the Courland Pocket followed by the defeat of the German Pomeranian offensive in early 1945. The 61st Army alongside the 1st Polish Army had the responsibility of encircling the German capital from the north meeting the Americans on the Elbe in the Battle of Berlin. Overall he is considered as one of the most talented and daring generals of the Second World War. He has earned legendary status and could be considered as one of the greatest cavalry generals. Considering his accomplishments through 1941-1945 his adaptation of combining horses, tanks, artillery, and aircraft on a modern battlefield resulted in the victory against a more technologically advanced enemy often in most desperate parts of the Eastern Front.
Belov was one of the few generals not affected by Stalin's military purges despite having a Polish wife. From the first days, he demonstrated effective tactics against the onslaught of Blitzkrieg, along with Dovator earning first tactical victories for the Red Army. Due to the constant retreats, the unit played rear guard duties, especially during the Uman disaster. The unit, additionally played a rescue role for the many trapped troops in the Battle of Kyiv, which Belov's forces unsuccessfully tried to save. Stalin called his unit the "Fire Squad" as he was often thrown in the most difficult parts of the front expected to save the situation. Pavel Belov was very respected among his peers as he was a general who truly cared about his soldiers. He often refused to send his units into pointless attacks that his superiors often demanded, this could possibly explain why he was only awarded the Gold star in 1944, considering all of his admiration by the foe along with his incredible accomplishments on the battlefield.
Early life, World War I, and Russian Civil War
Born in Shuya on 18 February 1897, in to a working-class family. Pavel Alexeyevich Belov worked at the railway station in Ivanovo-Voznesensk. Conscripted into the Imperial Russian Army in May 1916, Belov became a private in the 4th Reserve Cavalry Regiment. After graduating from the regimental training detachment in February 1917, he was sent to serve as a junior unter-ofitser with the 7th Marching Squadron of the 17th Hussar Regiment. Due to his above-average education, Belov was selected for a preparatory course at the 2nd Kyiv School of Praporshchiks in September. Granted leave in late November following the October Revolution, Belov did not return to the army.
Conscripted into the Red Army in July 1918 during the Russian Civil War, Belov was appointed a Vsevobuch instructor in the Yaroslavl Military District, where he provided military training for railway workers. He commanded a platoon of the Separate Cavalry Battalion in Tambov from July 1919, and in February 1920 transferred to command a platoon of the 1st Reserve Cavalry Regiment of the Southern Front. Belov became secretary of the party bureau and regimental adjutant in May, and in October was transferred to the Caucasian Front, serving there as a squadron commander of the 1st and 2nd Reserve Cavalry Regiments.
Interwar period
After the end of the war, Belov was appointed assistant commander of the 1st Reserve Cavalry Regiment of the 2nd Don Rifle Division in June 1921. In September of that year, he was transferred to the 14th Cavalry Division to serve as assistant commander of its 82nd Cavalry Regiment, and was later appointed commander of the 81st Cavalry Regiment. After graduating from the Cavalry Improvement Course for Senior Commanders of the North Caucasus Military District in August 1927, Belov was appointed commander of the 60th Separate Reserve Squadron of the 10th Cavalry Division (renumbered from the 14th), now stationed in the Moscow Military District. After serving as assistant chief of the 4th department of the staff of the district from May 1929, in June 1931 Belov became an officer for special assignments under Semyon Budyonny, who was then a member of the Revolutionary Military Council. In September 1932 he was appointed assistant inspector of cavalry with the Cavalry Inspectorate, before graduating from the Frunze Military Academy in 1933.
Belov was sent to the 7th Samara Cavalry Division, stationed in the Belorussian Military District, in January 1934, serving as assistant commander and later succeeding to the command of the division. Having received the rank of kombrig when the Red Army introduced personal military ranks in November 1935, he became chief of staff of the 5th Cavalry Corps in July 1937, and participated in the Soviet invasion of Poland in September 1939. Promoted to komdiv, Belov became a major general in June 1940 when the army introduced general officer ranks, and in October of that year was appointed commander of the 96th Mountain Rifle Division of the Kiev Special Military District. In March 1941 he advanced to command the 2nd Cavalry Corps of the district.
World War II
Operation Barbarossa
After Operation Barbarossa began, Belov led the corps in fighting on the Southern Front, completing a number of combat missions to quickly cover the front of the 9th and 18th armies of the Southern Front and hold the line on the Dniester. He conducted a fighting retreat from Tiraspol to Kiev. During the Kiev operation, which ended in the defeat of Soviet troops in Ukraine, he waged successful defensive battles in the direction of Romny-Shtepovka, and even launched a strong counterattack in this area, which made it possible to save part of the encircled troops. During the summer-autumn battles of 1941, he was awarded the Order of Lenin.
During the October 1941 German offensive towards Moscow, Army Group Center was stuck in the rasputitsa. These muddy periods are of particular interest because they enhanced the operations of the Belov's cavalry as it defeated the bogged down German 25th Motorized Division in September 1941. The mud-caused quagmire was also a factor in the Soviet Army's failure to support Belov's 1st Guards Cavalry Corps' return to friendly lines after its five-month raid behind enemy German lines in April 1942.
Battle of Moscow
In September 1941, Belov's 2nd Cavalry Corps had been transferred to the Western Front to defend the approaches to Moscow. By late October, after fighting on the flanks of the German assault at Orel and Tula, the 2nd Cavalry Corps was withdrawn from the line and send into Stavka Reserve to be rebuilt. On 26 November, it was renamed the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps. The corps' divisions also received 'Guards' designations. The new honorific title did not come with new weapons. On the eve of the Moscow counter-offensive, Belov made a personal appeal, with Marshal Zhukov's support, directly to Stalin for the rearmament of his corps. Belov's men were armed primarily with rifles, giving the German infantry a clear advantage. After Belov's meeting with Stalin, he was promised 1,500 automatic weapons and two new batteries of new 76mm guns to replace his worn-out guns.
He played a key role in stopping Operation Typhoon, the German code-name for the assault on Moscow. Particularly in stopping Heinz Guderian's Panzers outside of Kashira on the southern flank of Moscow thus saving both Moscow and besieged Tula. Guderian's penetration had culminated by forming a salient north-east of Tula, threatening the towns of Kashira and Riazan. The 2nd Panzer Army was poised to enter Moscow from the south and south-west. Guderian had attempted to seize Tula from the rear and was strung out without reserves. The corps along with the 50th Army and 10th Army were to hold out at all costs, while the mobile group Belov with cavalry, tanks, katysha rockets, airborne units, and additional rifle troops began the offensive. By 5 December, Guderian's armored assault had ground to a halt against the stubborn defenses of Belov's 1st Guards Cavalry Corps outside of Kashira. The first stroke of the Western Front's counter-offensive on the outskirts of Moscow fell up Guderian's 2nd Panzer Army. The Germans in this sector had an advantage in men, equipment, and tanks where the average front line saw the disparity of 3-1 tanks in Guderian's favor.
Not only did the guards' cavalry corps heroically hold its position after many German counter-attacks, but some units also managed to be the first to counter-attack on the night of 27–28 November, thus leading the Soviet forces as the vanguard of the Moscow counter-attack.
On the eve of 5 December, the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps reinforced with the 9th Tank Brigade which at that moment was regarded to be the most elite and capable tank unit lead the attack along with the 173rd Rifle Division in the vicinity of Gritchino. On the Corps western flank was the 50th army that successfully defended Tula. The 50th Army attacked along with the 10th Army which covered Belov's eastern flank. The forces smashed against German 17th Panzer Division, 17th Motorized Division, and the 18th Panzer Division, which saw many towns and villages liberated. Many Soviet soldiers for the first time saw the horrors that were happening behind the rear; this motivated many to fight harder as many now understood that their relatives were suffering immensely under the occupation.
The Guards then liberated the important industrial city of Stalinogorsk after coming to the help of the 330th Rifle Division of the 10th Army, which unsuccessfully was trying to take the city. The cavalry used outflanking maneuvers to take both parts I and II of the industrial city in four days of intense fighting. Some local citizens also actively participated in the battle. While the Corps was pushing further in the direction of the south-west, the German 17th Panzer Division, 167th Division, and parts of 29th Motorized Division blew up a dam. Hoping to stop or at least slow Belov, however, due to the cold the water quickly froze and Belov's forces continued to pursue. Eventually, with the success of the 10th and 50th Armies the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps was able to drive the Germans the furthest from Moscow as far as 250 km, this event caused Hitler to sack Heinz Guderian on 25 December 1941. In the Documentary Moscow strikes back Pavel Belov and the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps are given significant attention on their heroic actions. This demonstrated to the world that the proper and skillful use of cavalry can destroy even the best German armored units. The documentary became an instant hit showing the realities of war, winning Stalin Prize in addition internationally winning the 15th Academy Awards for Best Documentary in 1942.
Battle of Rzhev and the Raid
The winter of 1941-1942 was extremely severe. Mean temperatures near Moscow during January 1942 were -32 °F or -35 °C with the lowest temperature recorded on 26 January 1941 -63 °F/-52 °C. In the counterattack and the general offensive of Soviet troops in the western direction, the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps under the command of Belov distinguished himself more than once in battles: after the Rzhev-Vyazma operation (1942), being surrounded, he fought in the enemy's rear for more than five months. Belov's 1st Guards Cavalry Corps along with the 33rd Army controlled a pocket from south of Smolensk-Vyazma in size of 2 500 km2/1 553 mile² area. In his pocket, Belov mustered 2000 men from the cavalry, partisans, paratroopers, and riflemen, supported by a battalion of eight tanks including one KV heavy and one T-34 medium tank.
A certain recognition of Belov's merits at the initial stage of the war may be the fact that the chief of the General Staff of the Wehrmacht, Franz Halder, repeatedly mentions the general in his diaries (much more often than any of the Soviet commanders), giving his actions a positive characterization.
On June 16, General Franz Halder, head of the OKH, wrote in his operations diary:
"Cav Corps Belov has again broken out and is moving in the direction of Kirov. Nothing we could brag about. Cav Corps Belov is now floating around the area west of Kirov. Quite a man, that we have to send no less than seven divisions after him." Halder also wrote "Belov did it, after all, keeping seven German divisions on the jump."
The former Chief of staff of the Fourth Army wrote an appropriate tribute to Belov's accomplishments.
"The episode cause many humorous remarks at the time and the motorized troops which had taken part in the operations became the butt of those jokes. I admire General Belov as a soldier and I was secretly glad he escaped. It was said he was received with all honors in Moscow and rightly so."
The 1st Guards Cavalry Corps escaped the pocket, although the 11th Cavalry Corps did not.
From Kursk to Berlin
From June 1942 until the end of the war, Belov commanded the 61st Army. The army fought defensive and offensive battles south and south-west of Bely until mid-1943. As part of the Bryansk Front, they participated in the Oryol Operation in July and August 1943. Commanding the 61st Army, Belov especially proved himself in the battle for the Dnieper: from September 26 to October 1, 1943, formations and units of the army crossed the Dnieper near the village of Lubech and captured the bridgehead on the right bank. For the successful crossing of the Dnieper, Belov was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union. Subsequently, the army took part in the Gomel-Rechitsa, Kalinkovichi-Mozyr, Belorussian, Riga offensive operations, the blocking of the Courland group, in the Warsaw-Poznan, East Pomeranian and Berlin offensive operations.
Postwar
After World War II, he commanded the South Ural Military District for ten years. He then chaired the Voluntary Association for Support of the Army, Air Force, and Navy (DOSAAF). Belov retired from the military in 1960 and died on 3 December three years later. He was buried with military honors at the Novodevichy Cemetery.
Awards and honors
USSR
Foreign Awards
See also
Georgy Zhukov
Vasily Chuikov
Ivan Konev
Konstantin Rokossovsky
Lev Dovator
Issa Pliyev
Viktor Kirillovich Baranov
References
Sources
Printed
Online
1897 births
1963 deaths
People from Shuya
People from Shuysky Uyezd
Bolsheviks
Second convocation members of the Soviet of the Union
Third convocation members of the Soviet of the Union
Fourth convocation members of the Soviet of the Union
Fifth convocation members of the Soviet of Nationalities
Soviet colonel generals
Frunze Military Academy alumni
Russian military personnel of World War I
People of the Soviet invasion of Poland
Soviet military personnel of World War II
Russian people of World War II
Heroes of the Soviet Union
Recipients of the Order of Lenin
Recipients of the Order of the Red Banner
Recipients of the Order of Suvorov, 1st class
Recipients of the Order of Kutuzov, 1st class
Knights of the Virtuti Militari
Recipients of the Order of the Cross of Grunwald, 3rd class
Burials at Novodevichy Cemetery | [
"Pavel Alexeyevich Belov (; 18 February 1897 – 3 December 1963) was a Soviet Army colonel general and a Hero of the Soviet Union.",
"He was nicknamed the \"Fox\" by the Germans, and personally led the longest successful raid of the war, lasting five months behind the German lines.",
"At the beginning of the war, Belov commanded the 2nd Cavalry Corps.",
"During the Battle of Moscow on 26 November, it was renamed and given the honor of becoming the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps.",
"The divisions also received 'Guards' designations.",
"The newly established cavalry corps played a pivotal role in stopping Guderian's Panzers in 1941 on the southern outposts of Moscow near the town of Kashira.",
"His unit was among the first to start the counterattack in the Battle of Moscow.",
"Following the winter-counterattack they penetrated deep into the enemy rear being cut off in the process.",
"During Battle of Rzhev Belov would lead a successful five-month raid with the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps behind Army Group Center.",
"After returning from the raid in the summer of 1942, he was promoted and given command of the 61st Army, which he led for the rest of the war finishing the war in Battle of Berlin on the Elbe River, his successor became Viktor Kirillovich Baranov.",
"Belov's command of the army included the Battle of Kursk in 1943.",
"Later taking part in Operation Bagration where his units helped to liberate the Fortress of Brest.",
"later the units participated Riga Offensive the Courland Pocket followed by the defeat of the German Pomeranian offensive in early 1945.",
"The 61st Army alongside the 1st Polish Army had the responsibility of encircling the German capital from the north meeting the Americans on the Elbe in the Battle of Berlin.",
"Overall he is considered as one of the most talented and daring generals of the Second World War.",
"He has earned legendary status and could be considered as one of the greatest cavalry generals.",
"Considering his accomplishments through 1941-1945 his adaptation of combining horses, tanks, artillery, and aircraft on a modern battlefield resulted in the victory against a more technologically advanced enemy often in most desperate parts of the Eastern Front.",
"Belov was one of the few generals not affected by Stalin's military purges despite having a Polish wife.",
"From the first days, he demonstrated effective tactics against the onslaught of Blitzkrieg, along with Dovator earning first tactical victories for the Red Army.",
"Due to the constant retreats, the unit played rear guard duties, especially during the Uman disaster.",
"The unit, additionally played a rescue role for the many trapped troops in the Battle of Kyiv, which Belov's forces unsuccessfully tried to save.",
"Stalin called his unit the \"Fire Squad\" as he was often thrown in the most difficult parts of the front expected to save the situation.",
"Pavel Belov was very respected among his peers as he was a general who truly cared about his soldiers.",
"He often refused to send his units into pointless attacks that his superiors often demanded, this could possibly explain why he was only awarded the Gold star in 1944, considering all of his admiration by the foe along with his incredible accomplishments on the battlefield.",
"Early life, World War I, and Russian Civil War\nBorn in Shuya on 18 February 1897, in to a working-class family.",
"Pavel Alexeyevich Belov worked at the railway station in Ivanovo-Voznesensk.",
"Conscripted into the Imperial Russian Army in May 1916, Belov became a private in the 4th Reserve Cavalry Regiment.",
"After graduating from the regimental training detachment in February 1917, he was sent to serve as a junior unter-ofitser with the 7th Marching Squadron of the 17th Hussar Regiment.",
"Due to his above-average education, Belov was selected for a preparatory course at the 2nd Kyiv School of Praporshchiks in September.",
"Granted leave in late November following the October Revolution, Belov did not return to the army.",
"Conscripted into the Red Army in July 1918 during the Russian Civil War, Belov was appointed a Vsevobuch instructor in the Yaroslavl Military District, where he provided military training for railway workers.",
"He commanded a platoon of the Separate Cavalry Battalion in Tambov from July 1919, and in February 1920 transferred to command a platoon of the 1st Reserve Cavalry Regiment of the Southern Front.",
"Belov became secretary of the party bureau and regimental adjutant in May, and in October was transferred to the Caucasian Front, serving there as a squadron commander of the 1st and 2nd Reserve Cavalry Regiments.",
"Interwar period\nAfter the end of the war, Belov was appointed assistant commander of the 1st Reserve Cavalry Regiment of the 2nd Don Rifle Division in June 1921.",
"In September of that year, he was transferred to the 14th Cavalry Division to serve as assistant commander of its 82nd Cavalry Regiment, and was later appointed commander of the 81st Cavalry Regiment.",
"After graduating from the Cavalry Improvement Course for Senior Commanders of the North Caucasus Military District in August 1927, Belov was appointed commander of the 60th Separate Reserve Squadron of the 10th Cavalry Division (renumbered from the 14th), now stationed in the Moscow Military District.",
"After serving as assistant chief of the 4th department of the staff of the district from May 1929, in June 1931 Belov became an officer for special assignments under Semyon Budyonny, who was then a member of the Revolutionary Military Council.",
"In September 1932 he was appointed assistant inspector of cavalry with the Cavalry Inspectorate, before graduating from the Frunze Military Academy in 1933.",
"Belov was sent to the 7th Samara Cavalry Division, stationed in the Belorussian Military District, in January 1934, serving as assistant commander and later succeeding to the command of the division.",
"Having received the rank of kombrig when the Red Army introduced personal military ranks in November 1935, he became chief of staff of the 5th Cavalry Corps in July 1937, and participated in the Soviet invasion of Poland in September 1939.",
"Promoted to komdiv, Belov became a major general in June 1940 when the army introduced general officer ranks, and in October of that year was appointed commander of the 96th Mountain Rifle Division of the Kiev Special Military District.",
"In March 1941 he advanced to command the 2nd Cavalry Corps of the district.",
"World War II\n\nOperation Barbarossa\nAfter Operation Barbarossa began, Belov led the corps in fighting on the Southern Front, completing a number of combat missions to quickly cover the front of the 9th and 18th armies of the Southern Front and hold the line on the Dniester.",
"He conducted a fighting retreat from Tiraspol to Kiev.",
"During the Kiev operation, which ended in the defeat of Soviet troops in Ukraine, he waged successful defensive battles in the direction of Romny-Shtepovka, and even launched a strong counterattack in this area, which made it possible to save part of the encircled troops.",
"During the summer-autumn battles of 1941, he was awarded the Order of Lenin.",
"During the October 1941 German offensive towards Moscow, Army Group Center was stuck in the rasputitsa.",
"These muddy periods are of particular interest because they enhanced the operations of the Belov's cavalry as it defeated the bogged down German 25th Motorized Division in September 1941.",
"The mud-caused quagmire was also a factor in the Soviet Army's failure to support Belov's 1st Guards Cavalry Corps' return to friendly lines after its five-month raid behind enemy German lines in April 1942.",
"Battle of Moscow\nIn September 1941, Belov's 2nd Cavalry Corps had been transferred to the Western Front to defend the approaches to Moscow.",
"By late October, after fighting on the flanks of the German assault at Orel and Tula, the 2nd Cavalry Corps was withdrawn from the line and send into Stavka Reserve to be rebuilt.",
"On 26 November, it was renamed the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps.",
"The corps' divisions also received 'Guards' designations.",
"The new honorific title did not come with new weapons.",
"On the eve of the Moscow counter-offensive, Belov made a personal appeal, with Marshal Zhukov's support, directly to Stalin for the rearmament of his corps.",
"Belov's men were armed primarily with rifles, giving the German infantry a clear advantage.",
"After Belov's meeting with Stalin, he was promised 1,500 automatic weapons and two new batteries of new 76mm guns to replace his worn-out guns.",
"He played a key role in stopping Operation Typhoon, the German code-name for the assault on Moscow.",
"Particularly in stopping Heinz Guderian's Panzers outside of Kashira on the southern flank of Moscow thus saving both Moscow and besieged Tula.",
"Guderian's penetration had culminated by forming a salient north-east of Tula, threatening the towns of Kashira and Riazan.",
"The 2nd Panzer Army was poised to enter Moscow from the south and south-west.",
"Guderian had attempted to seize Tula from the rear and was strung out without reserves.",
"The corps along with the 50th Army and 10th Army were to hold out at all costs, while the mobile group Belov with cavalry, tanks, katysha rockets, airborne units, and additional rifle troops began the offensive.",
"By 5 December, Guderian's armored assault had ground to a halt against the stubborn defenses of Belov's 1st Guards Cavalry Corps outside of Kashira.",
"The first stroke of the Western Front's counter-offensive on the outskirts of Moscow fell up Guderian's 2nd Panzer Army.",
"The Germans in this sector had an advantage in men, equipment, and tanks where the average front line saw the disparity of 3-1 tanks in Guderian's favor.",
"Not only did the guards' cavalry corps heroically hold its position after many German counter-attacks, but some units also managed to be the first to counter-attack on the night of 27–28 November, thus leading the Soviet forces as the vanguard of the Moscow counter-attack.",
"On the eve of 5 December, the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps reinforced with the 9th Tank Brigade which at that moment was regarded to be the most elite and capable tank unit lead the attack along with the 173rd Rifle Division in the vicinity of Gritchino.",
"On the Corps western flank was the 50th army that successfully defended Tula.",
"The 50th Army attacked along with the 10th Army which covered Belov's eastern flank.",
"The forces smashed against German 17th Panzer Division, 17th Motorized Division, and the 18th Panzer Division, which saw many towns and villages liberated.",
"Many Soviet soldiers for the first time saw the horrors that were happening behind the rear; this motivated many to fight harder as many now understood that their relatives were suffering immensely under the occupation.",
"The Guards then liberated the important industrial city of Stalinogorsk after coming to the help of the 330th Rifle Division of the 10th Army, which unsuccessfully was trying to take the city.",
"The cavalry used outflanking maneuvers to take both parts I and II of the industrial city in four days of intense fighting.",
"Some local citizens also actively participated in the battle.",
"While the Corps was pushing further in the direction of the south-west, the German 17th Panzer Division, 167th Division, and parts of 29th Motorized Division blew up a dam.",
"Hoping to stop or at least slow Belov, however, due to the cold the water quickly froze and Belov's forces continued to pursue.",
"Eventually, with the success of the 10th and 50th Armies the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps was able to drive the Germans the furthest from Moscow as far as 250 km, this event caused Hitler to sack Heinz Guderian on 25 December 1941.",
"In the Documentary Moscow strikes back Pavel Belov and the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps are given significant attention on their heroic actions.",
"This demonstrated to the world that the proper and skillful use of cavalry can destroy even the best German armored units.",
"The documentary became an instant hit showing the realities of war, winning Stalin Prize in addition internationally winning the 15th Academy Awards for Best Documentary in 1942.",
"Battle of Rzhev and the Raid\nThe winter of 1941-1942 was extremely severe.",
"Mean temperatures near Moscow during January 1942 were -32 °F or -35 °C with the lowest temperature recorded on 26 January 1941 -63 °F/-52 °C.",
"In the counterattack and the general offensive of Soviet troops in the western direction, the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps under the command of Belov distinguished himself more than once in battles: after the Rzhev-Vyazma operation (1942), being surrounded, he fought in the enemy's rear for more than five months.",
"Belov's 1st Guards Cavalry Corps along with the 33rd Army controlled a pocket from south of Smolensk-Vyazma in size of 2 500 km2/1 553 mile² area.",
"In his pocket, Belov mustered 2000 men from the cavalry, partisans, paratroopers, and riflemen, supported by a battalion of eight tanks including one KV heavy and one T-34 medium tank.",
"A certain recognition of Belov's merits at the initial stage of the war may be the fact that the chief of the General Staff of the Wehrmacht, Franz Halder, repeatedly mentions the general in his diaries (much more often than any of the Soviet commanders), giving his actions a positive characterization.",
"On June 16, General Franz Halder, head of the OKH, wrote in his operations diary:\n\n\"Cav Corps Belov has again broken out and is moving in the direction of Kirov.",
"Nothing we could brag about.",
"Cav Corps Belov is now floating around the area west of Kirov.",
"Quite a man, that we have to send no less than seven divisions after him.\"",
"Halder also wrote \"Belov did it, after all, keeping seven German divisions on the jump.\"",
"The former Chief of staff of the Fourth Army wrote an appropriate tribute to Belov's accomplishments.",
"\"The episode cause many humorous remarks at the time and the motorized troops which had taken part in the operations became the butt of those jokes.",
"I admire General Belov as a soldier and I was secretly glad he escaped.",
"It was said he was received with all honors in Moscow and rightly so.\"",
"The 1st Guards Cavalry Corps escaped the pocket, although the 11th Cavalry Corps did not.",
"From Kursk to Berlin\nFrom June 1942 until the end of the war, Belov commanded the 61st Army.",
"The army fought defensive and offensive battles south and south-west of Bely until mid-1943.",
"As part of the Bryansk Front, they participated in the Oryol Operation in July and August 1943.",
"Commanding the 61st Army, Belov especially proved himself in the battle for the Dnieper: from September 26 to October 1, 1943, formations and units of the army crossed the Dnieper near the village of Lubech and captured the bridgehead on the right bank.",
"For the successful crossing of the Dnieper, Belov was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.",
"Subsequently, the army took part in the Gomel-Rechitsa, Kalinkovichi-Mozyr, Belorussian, Riga offensive operations, the blocking of the Courland group, in the Warsaw-Poznan, East Pomeranian and Berlin offensive operations.",
"Postwar\nAfter World War II, he commanded the South Ural Military District for ten years.",
"He then chaired the Voluntary Association for Support of the Army, Air Force, and Navy (DOSAAF).",
"Belov retired from the military in 1960 and died on 3 December three years later.",
"He was buried with military honors at the Novodevichy Cemetery.",
"Awards and honors\nUSSR\n\nForeign Awards\n\nSee also\n Georgy Zhukov\n Vasily Chuikov\n Ivan Konev\n Konstantin Rokossovsky\n Lev Dovator\n Issa Pliyev\n Viktor Kirillovich Baranov\n\nReferences\n\nSources\n\nPrinted\n\nOnline\n\n \n\n1897 births\n1963 deaths\nPeople from Shuya\nPeople from Shuysky Uyezd\nBolsheviks\nSecond convocation members of the Soviet of the Union\nThird convocation members of the Soviet of the Union\nFourth convocation members of the Soviet of the Union\nFifth convocation members of the Soviet of Nationalities\nSoviet colonel generals\nFrunze Military Academy alumni\nRussian military personnel of World War I\nPeople of the Soviet invasion of Poland\nSoviet military personnel of World War II\nRussian people of World War II\nHeroes of the Soviet Union\nRecipients of the Order of Lenin\nRecipients of the Order of the Red Banner\nRecipients of the Order of Suvorov, 1st class\nRecipients of the Order of Kutuzov, 1st class\nKnights of the Virtuti Militari\nRecipients of the Order of the Cross of Grunwald, 3rd class\nBurials at Novodevichy Cemetery"
] | [
"The Hero of the Soviet Union was a Soviet Army colonel general.",
"He personally led the longest successful raid of the war, lasting five months behind the German lines.",
"The 2nd Cavalry Corps was commanded by Belov at the beginning of the war.",
"It was given the honor of becoming the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps during the Battle of Moscow.",
"The divisions were given the 'Guards' designation.",
"The southern outposts of Moscow near the town of Kashira were stopped by the newly established cavalry corps.",
"His unit was one of the first to start the attack.",
"They penetrated into the enemy's rear and were cut off in the process.",
"During the Battle of Rzhev Belov led a raid with the 1st Guards.",
"After returning from the raid in the summer of 1942, he was promoted and given command of the 61st Army, which he led for the rest of the war.",
"The Battle of Kursk was included in Belov's command.",
"His units helped liberate the Fortress of Brest.",
"The defeat of the German Pomeranian offensive in early 1945 was followed by the participation of the units in the Riga offensive.",
"The 61st Army and the 1st Polish Army were responsible for encircling the German capital from the north and the Americans on the Elbe in the Battle of Berlin.",
"He was one of the most daring and talented generals of the Second World War.",
"He could be considered one of the greatest cavalry generals.",
"Considering his accomplishments through 1941-1945 his adaptation of combining horses, tanks, artillery, and aircraft on a modern battlefield resulted in the victory against a more technologically advanced enemy in most desperate parts of the Eastern Front.",
"Despite having a Polish wife, Belov was not affected by Stalin's military purges.",
"He demonstrated effective tactics against the onslaught of Blitzkrieg and Dovator earned first tactical victories for the Red Army.",
"During the Uman disaster, the unit played rear guard duties due to the constant retreats.",
"Many troops were trapped in the Battle of Kyiv and the unit played a rescue role.",
"Stalin's unit was called the \"Fire Squad\" because he was often thrown in the most difficult parts of the front to save the situation.",
"The general was respected by his peers as he cared about his soldiers.",
"He was awarded the gold star in 1944 because he refused to send his units into pointless attacks that his superiors often demanded.",
"The Russian Civil War was born in Shuya on 18 February 1897, in to a working-class family.",
"There was a railway station in Ivanovo-Voznsknese.",
"Belov joined the Imperial Russian Army in 1916 and became a private.",
"He was sent to serve with the 7th Marching Squadron of the 17th Hussar Regiment after graduating from training.",
"In September, Belov was selected for a course at the 2nd Kyiv School of Praporshchiks due to his above average education.",
"After the October Revolution, Belov did not return to the army.",
"During the Russian Civil War, Belov was drafted into the Red Army and was assigned to the Yaroslavl Military District, where he provided military training for railway workers.",
"He commanded a platoon of the Separate Cavalry Battalion in Tambov from July 1919 to February 1920.",
"In May, Belov became secretary of the party bureau, and in October he was transferred to the Caucasian Front, where he was a squadron commander of the 1st and 2nd Reserve Cavalry Regiments.",
"In June 1921, Belov was appointed assistant commander of the 1st Reserve Cavalry Regiment of the 2nd Don Rifle Division.",
"In September of that year, he was transferred to the 14th Cavalry Division to serve as an assistant commander, and later was appointed commander of the 81st Cavalry Regiment.",
"The commander of the 60th Separate Reserve Squadron of the 10th Cavalry Division is currently stationed in the Moscow Military District.",
"After serving as assistant chief of the 4th department of the staff of the district from May 1929 to June 1931, Belov became an officer for special assignments under Semyon Budyonny, who was a member of the Revolutionary Military Council.",
"He graduated from the Frunze Military Academy in 1933 and was an assistant inspector of cavalry.",
"In January 1934, Belov was sent to the 7th Samara Cavalry Division, which later became the command of the division.",
"When personal military ranks were introduced by the Red Army in 1935, he became the chief of staff of the 5th Cavalry Corps and participated in the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939.",
"In October of 1940, Belov was appointed commander of the 96th Mountain Rifle Division of the Kiev Special Military District after being promoted to major general.",
"He commanded the 2nd Cavalry Corps of the district in March 1941.",
"Belov led the corps in fighting on the Southern Front, completing a number of combat missions to quickly cover the front of the 9th and 18th armies of the Southern Front and hold the line on the Dniester.",
"He retreated from Tiraspol to Kiev.",
"He waged successful defensive battles in the direction of Romny-Shtepovka, which made it possible to save part of the encircled troops.",
"During the summer-autumn battles of 1941, he was awarded the Order of Lenin.",
"The Army Group Center was stuck in the rasputitsa during the German offensive towards Moscow.",
"The Belov's cavalry were able to defeat the bogged down German 25th Motorized Division in September 1941 because of these muddy periods.",
"The mud-caused quagmire was a factor in the Soviet Army's failure to support Belov's 1st Guards Cavalry Corps' return to friendly lines after its five-month raid behind enemy German lines in April 1942.",
"The 2nd Cavalry Corps was transferred to the Western Front to defend the approaches to Moscow.",
"After fighting on the flanks of the German assault at Orel and Tula, the 2nd Cavalry Corps was withdrawn from the line and sent to rebuild.",
"The 1st Guards Cavalry Corps was renamed on November 26.",
"The 'Guards' designation was given to the corps' divisions.",
"New weapons did not come with the new honorific title.",
"On the eve of the Moscow counter-offensive, Belov made a personal appeal to Stalin for the rearmament of his corps.",
"The German infantry had a clear advantage because Belov's men were mostly armed with rifles.",
"He was promised 1,500 automatic weapons and two new batteries of 76mm guns after his meeting with Stalin.",
"He was involved in stopping the assault on Moscow.",
"Moscow and Tula were saved by stopping the Panzers outside of Kashira on the southern flank of Moscow.",
"The towns of Kashira and Riazan were threatened by the formation of a north- east of Tula.",
"From the south and south-west, the 2nd Panzer Army was about to enter Moscow.",
"Tula was strung out without reserves after being attempted to seize from the rear.",
"The corps along with the 50th Army and 10th Army were to hold out at all costs, while the mobile group Belov with cavalry, tanks, katysha rockets, airborne units, and additional rifle troops began the offensive.",
"Guderian's armored assault had stopped against the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps outside of Kashira by 5 December.",
"On the outskirts of Moscow, the first stroke of the Western Front's counter-offensive fell on the 2nd Panzer Army.",
"The Germans in this sector had an advantage in men, equipment, and tanks where the average front line saw the disparity of 3-1 tanks in Guderian's favor.",
"The guards' cavalry corps heroically held its position after many German counter-attacks, and some units also managed to be the first to counter-attack on the night of 27–28 November.",
"The 9th tank brigade was reinforced with the 1st Guards cavalry corps on the eve of 5 December, which was considered to be the most elite and capable tank unit in the area.",
"The 50th army successfully defended Tula.",
"The 50th Army attacked along with the 10th Army.",
"Many towns and villages were liberated by the forces against the German 17th Panzer Division, 17th Motorized Division, and the 18th Panzer Division.",
"Many Soviet soldiers saw the horrors behind the rear for the first time and this motivated them to fight harder.",
"The 330th Rifle Division of the 10th Army tried to take the city but it was liberated by the Guards.",
"In four days of intense fighting, the cavalry used outflanking maneuvers to take both parts of the industrial city.",
"Local citizens were involved in the battle.",
"The German 17th Panzer Division, 167th Division, and parts of 29th Motorized Division blew up a dam while the Corps was pushing further in the direction of the south-west.",
"Due to the cold, the water quickly froze and Belov's forces continued to pursue.",
"After the success of the 10th and 50th Armies, the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps was able to drive the Germans the furthest from Moscow as far as 250 km.",
"The 1st Guards Cavalry Corps are given a lot of attention in the documentary.",
"The use of cavalry can destroy even the best German armored units.",
"The documentary won the 15th Academy Awards for Best Documentary in 1942 and became an instant hit showing the realities of war.",
"The winter of 1941-1942 was extremely cold.",
"The mean temperature in Moscow in January 1942 was -32 F or -35 C, with the lowest recorded temperature being -63 F/ 52 C.",
"The 1st Guards Cavalry Corps under the command of Belov distinguished himself more than once in battles, after the Rzhev-Vyazma operation, being surrounded, he fought in the enemy's rear.",
"The 33rd Army and Belov's 1st Guards Cavalry Corps controlled a pocket from south of Smolensk-Vyazma in size of 2 500 km2.",
"2000 men from the cavalry, partisans, paratroopers, and riflemen were supported by a battalion of eight tanks.",
"The chief of the General Staff of the Wehrmacht, Franz Halder, repeatedly mentions the general in his diaries, giving his actions more credence than any of the Soviet commanders.",
"General Halder wrote in his diary on June 16 that theCav Corps Belov was moving in the direction of Kirov.",
"We couldn't brag about anything.",
"The area west of Kirov is now home to the Cav Corps Belov.",
"We have to send seven divisions after him.",
"Halder wrote \"Belov did it, after all, keeping seven German divisions on the jump.\"",
"A tribute was written by the former Chief of staff of the Fourth Army.",
"The motorized troops which had taken part in the operations became the butt of many jokes because of the episode.",
"I was happy that General Belov escaped.",
"He was given all honors in Moscow.",
"The 11th Cavalry Corps did not escape the pocket.",
"From June 1942 until the end of the war, Belov commanded the 61st Army.",
"The army fought battles in the south and west of Bely.",
"They were part of the Bryansk Front in the summer of 1943.",
"During the battle for the Dnieper from September 26 to October 1, 1943, formations and units of the army crossed the Dnieper and captured the bridgehead on the right bank.",
"The title of Hero of the Soviet Union was given to Belov for crossing the Dnieper.",
"The blocking of the Courland group was one of the offensive operations that the army took part in.",
"He commanded the South Ural Military District for ten years after World War II.",
"The Voluntary Association for Support of the Army, Air Force, and Navy was chaired by him.",
"Three years after Belov retired from the military, he died.",
"He was buried with military honors.",
"The Awards and honors of the USSR Foreign Awards can be found here."
] | <mask> (; 18 February 1897 – 3 December 1963) was a Soviet Army colonel general and a Hero of the Soviet Union. He was nicknamed the "Fox" by the Germans, and personally led the longest successful raid of the war, lasting five months behind the German lines. At the beginning of the war, <mask> commanded the 2nd Cavalry Corps. During the Battle of Moscow on 26 November, it was renamed and given the honor of becoming the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps. The divisions also received 'Guards' designations. The newly established cavalry corps played a pivotal role in stopping Guderian's Panzers in 1941 on the southern outposts of Moscow near the town of Kashira. His unit was among the first to start the counterattack in the Battle of Moscow.Following the winter-counterattack they penetrated deep into the enemy rear being cut off in the process. During Battle of Rzhev <mask> would lead a successful five-month raid with the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps behind Army Group Center. After returning from the raid in the summer of 1942, he was promoted and given command of the 61st Army, which he led for the rest of the war finishing the war in Battle of Berlin on the Elbe River, his successor became Viktor Kirillovich Baranov. <mask>'s command of the army included the Battle of Kursk in 1943. Later taking part in Operation Bagration where his units helped to liberate the Fortress of Brest. later the units participated Riga Offensive the Courland Pocket followed by the defeat of the German Pomeranian offensive in early 1945. The 61st Army alongside the 1st Polish Army had the responsibility of encircling the German capital from the north meeting the Americans on the Elbe in the Battle of Berlin.Overall he is considered as one of the most talented and daring generals of the Second World War. He has earned legendary status and could be considered as one of the greatest cavalry generals. Considering his accomplishments through 1941-1945 his adaptation of combining horses, tanks, artillery, and aircraft on a modern battlefield resulted in the victory against a more technologically advanced enemy often in most desperate parts of the Eastern Front. <mask> was one of the few generals not affected by Stalin's military purges despite having a Polish wife. From the first days, he demonstrated effective tactics against the onslaught of Blitzkrieg, along with Dovator earning first tactical victories for the Red Army. Due to the constant retreats, the unit played rear guard duties, especially during the Uman disaster. The unit, additionally played a rescue role for the many trapped troops in the Battle of Kyiv, which <mask>'s forces unsuccessfully tried to save.Stalin called his unit the "Fire Squad" as he was often thrown in the most difficult parts of the front expected to save the situation. <mask> was very respected among his peers as he was a general who truly cared about his soldiers. He often refused to send his units into pointless attacks that his superiors often demanded, this could possibly explain why he was only awarded the Gold star in 1944, considering all of his admiration by the foe along with his incredible accomplishments on the battlefield. Early life, World War I, and Russian Civil War
Born in Shuya on 18 February 1897, in to a working-class family. <mask> <mask> worked at the railway station in Ivanovo-Voznesensk. Conscripted into the Imperial Russian Army in May 1916, <mask> became a private in the 4th Reserve Cavalry Regiment. After graduating from the regimental training detachment in February 1917, he was sent to serve as a junior unter-ofitser with the 7th Marching Squadron of the 17th Hussar Regiment.Due to his above-average education, <mask> was selected for a preparatory course at the 2nd Kyiv School of Praporshchiks in September. Granted leave in late November following the October Revolution, <mask> did not return to the army. Conscripted into the Red Army in July 1918 during the Russian Civil War, <mask> was appointed a Vsevobuch instructor in the Yaroslavl Military District, where he provided military training for railway workers. He commanded a platoon of the Separate Cavalry Battalion in Tambov from July 1919, and in February 1920 transferred to command a platoon of the 1st Reserve Cavalry Regiment of the Southern Front. <mask> became secretary of the party bureau and regimental adjutant in May, and in October was transferred to the Caucasian Front, serving there as a squadron commander of the 1st and 2nd Reserve Cavalry Regiments. Interwar period
After the end of the war, <mask> was appointed assistant commander of the 1st Reserve Cavalry Regiment of the 2nd Don Rifle Division in June 1921. In September of that year, he was transferred to the 14th Cavalry Division to serve as assistant commander of its 82nd Cavalry Regiment, and was later appointed commander of the 81st Cavalry Regiment.After graduating from the Cavalry Improvement Course for Senior Commanders of the North Caucasus Military District in August 1927, <mask> was appointed commander of the 60th Separate Reserve Squadron of the 10th Cavalry Division (renumbered from the 14th), now stationed in the Moscow Military District. After serving as assistant chief of the 4th department of the staff of the district from May 1929, in June 1931 <mask> became an officer for special assignments under Semyon Budyonny, who was then a member of the Revolutionary Military Council. In September 1932 he was appointed assistant inspector of cavalry with the Cavalry Inspectorate, before graduating from the Frunze Military Academy in 1933. <mask> was sent to the 7th Samara Cavalry Division, stationed in the Belorussian Military District, in January 1934, serving as assistant commander and later succeeding to the command of the division. Having received the rank of kombrig when the Red Army introduced personal military ranks in November 1935, he became chief of staff of the 5th Cavalry Corps in July 1937, and participated in the Soviet invasion of Poland in September 1939. Promoted to komdiv, <mask> became a major general in June 1940 when the army introduced general officer ranks, and in October of that year was appointed commander of the 96th Mountain Rifle Division of the Kiev Special Military District. In March 1941 he advanced to command the 2nd Cavalry Corps of the district.World War II
Operation Barbarossa
After Operation Barbarossa began, <mask> led the corps in fighting on the Southern Front, completing a number of combat missions to quickly cover the front of the 9th and 18th armies of the Southern Front and hold the line on the Dniester. He conducted a fighting retreat from Tiraspol to Kiev. During the Kiev operation, which ended in the defeat of Soviet troops in Ukraine, he waged successful defensive battles in the direction of Romny-Shtepovka, and even launched a strong counterattack in this area, which made it possible to save part of the encircled troops. During the summer-autumn battles of 1941, he was awarded the Order of Lenin. During the October 1941 German offensive towards Moscow, Army Group Center was stuck in the rasputitsa. These muddy periods are of particular interest because they enhanced the operations of the Belov's cavalry as it defeated the bogged down German 25th Motorized Division in September 1941. The mud-caused quagmire was also a factor in the Soviet Army's failure to support <mask>'s 1st Guards Cavalry Corps' return to friendly lines after its five-month raid behind enemy German lines in April 1942.Battle of Moscow
In September 1941, <mask>'s 2nd Cavalry Corps had been transferred to the Western Front to defend the approaches to Moscow. By late October, after fighting on the flanks of the German assault at Orel and Tula, the 2nd Cavalry Corps was withdrawn from the line and send into Stavka Reserve to be rebuilt. On 26 November, it was renamed the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps. The corps' divisions also received 'Guards' designations. The new honorific title did not come with new weapons. On the eve of the Moscow counter-offensive, <mask> made a personal appeal, with Marshal Zhukov's support, directly to Stalin for the rearmament of his corps. <mask>'s men were armed primarily with rifles, giving the German infantry a clear advantage.After <mask>'s meeting with Stalin, he was promised 1,500 automatic weapons and two new batteries of new 76mm guns to replace his worn-out guns. He played a key role in stopping Operation Typhoon, the German code-name for the assault on Moscow. Particularly in stopping Heinz Guderian's Panzers outside of Kashira on the southern flank of Moscow thus saving both Moscow and besieged Tula. Guderian's penetration had culminated by forming a salient north-east of Tula, threatening the towns of Kashira and Riazan. The 2nd Panzer Army was poised to enter Moscow from the south and south-west. Guderian had attempted to seize Tula from the rear and was strung out without reserves. The corps along with the 50th Army and 10th Army were to hold out at all costs, while the mobile group Belov with cavalry, tanks, katysha rockets, airborne units, and additional rifle troops began the offensive.By 5 December, Guderian's armored assault had ground to a halt against the stubborn defenses of <mask>'s 1st Guards Cavalry Corps outside of Kashira. The first stroke of the Western Front's counter-offensive on the outskirts of Moscow fell up Guderian's 2nd Panzer Army. The Germans in this sector had an advantage in men, equipment, and tanks where the average front line saw the disparity of 3-1 tanks in Guderian's favor. Not only did the guards' cavalry corps heroically hold its position after many German counter-attacks, but some units also managed to be the first to counter-attack on the night of 27–28 November, thus leading the Soviet forces as the vanguard of the Moscow counter-attack. On the eve of 5 December, the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps reinforced with the 9th Tank Brigade which at that moment was regarded to be the most elite and capable tank unit lead the attack along with the 173rd Rifle Division in the vicinity of Gritchino. On the Corps western flank was the 50th army that successfully defended Tula. The 50th Army attacked along with the 10th Army which covered <mask>'s eastern flank.The forces smashed against German 17th Panzer Division, 17th Motorized Division, and the 18th Panzer Division, which saw many towns and villages liberated. Many Soviet soldiers for the first time saw the horrors that were happening behind the rear; this motivated many to fight harder as many now understood that their relatives were suffering immensely under the occupation. The Guards then liberated the important industrial city of Stalinogorsk after coming to the help of the 330th Rifle Division of the 10th Army, which unsuccessfully was trying to take the city. The cavalry used outflanking maneuvers to take both parts I and II of the industrial city in four days of intense fighting. Some local citizens also actively participated in the battle. While the Corps was pushing further in the direction of the south-west, the German 17th Panzer Division, 167th Division, and parts of 29th Motorized Division blew up a dam. Hoping to stop or at least slow <mask>, however, due to the cold the water quickly froze and <mask>'s forces continued to pursue.Eventually, with the success of the 10th and 50th Armies the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps was able to drive the Germans the furthest from Moscow as far as 250 km, this event caused Hitler to sack Heinz Guderian on 25 December 1941. In the Documentary Moscow strikes back <mask> and the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps are given significant attention on their heroic actions. This demonstrated to the world that the proper and skillful use of cavalry can destroy even the best German armored units. The documentary became an instant hit showing the realities of war, winning Stalin Prize in addition internationally winning the 15th Academy Awards for Best Documentary in 1942. Battle of Rzhev and the Raid
The winter of 1941-1942 was extremely severe. Mean temperatures near Moscow during January 1942 were -32 °F or -35 °C with the lowest temperature recorded on 26 January 1941 -63 °F/-52 °C. In the counterattack and the general offensive of Soviet troops in the western direction, the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps under the command of <mask> distinguished himself more than once in battles: after the Rzhev-Vyazma operation (1942), being surrounded, he fought in the enemy's rear for more than five months.<mask>'s 1st Guards Cavalry Corps along with the 33rd Army controlled a pocket from south of Smolensk-Vyazma in size of 2 500 km2/1 553 mile² area. In his pocket, <mask> mustered 2000 men from the cavalry, partisans, paratroopers, and riflemen, supported by a battalion of eight tanks including one KV heavy and one T-34 medium tank. A certain recognition of <mask>'s merits at the initial stage of the war may be the fact that the chief of the General Staff of the Wehrmacht, Franz Halder, repeatedly mentions the general in his diaries (much more often than any of the Soviet commanders), giving his actions a positive characterization. On June 16, General Franz Halder, head of the OKH, wrote in his operations diary:
"Cav Corps Belov has again broken out and is moving in the direction of Kirov. Nothing we could brag about. Cav Corps Belov is now floating around the area west of Kirov. Quite a man, that we have to send no less than seven divisions after him."Halder also wrote "<mask> did it, after all, keeping seven German divisions on the jump." The former Chief of staff of the Fourth Army wrote an appropriate tribute to <mask>'s accomplishments. "The episode cause many humorous remarks at the time and the motorized troops which had taken part in the operations became the butt of those jokes. I admire General <mask> as a soldier and I was secretly glad he escaped. It was said he was received with all honors in Moscow and rightly so." The 1st Guards Cavalry Corps escaped the pocket, although the 11th Cavalry Corps did not. From Kursk to Berlin
From June 1942 until the end of the war, <mask> commanded the 61st Army.The army fought defensive and offensive battles south and south-west of Bely until mid-1943. As part of the Bryansk Front, they participated in the Oryol Operation in July and August 1943. Commanding the 61st Army, <mask> especially proved himself in the battle for the Dnieper: from September 26 to October 1, 1943, formations and units of the army crossed the Dnieper near the village of Lubech and captured the bridgehead on the right bank. For the successful crossing of the Dnieper, <mask> was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union. Subsequently, the army took part in the Gomel-Rechitsa, Kalinkovichi-Mozyr, Belorussian, Riga offensive operations, the blocking of the Courland group, in the Warsaw-Poznan, East Pomeranian and Berlin offensive operations. Postwar
After World War II, he commanded the South Ural Military District for ten years. He then chaired the Voluntary Association for Support of the Army, Air Force, and Navy (DOSAAF).<mask> retired from the military in 1960 and died on 3 December three years later. He was buried with military honors at the Novodevichy Cemetery. Awards and honors
USSR
Foreign Awards
See also
Georgy Zhukov
Vasily Chuikov
Ivan Konev
Konstantin Rokossovsky
Lev Dovator
Issa Pliyev
Viktor Kirillovich Baranov
References
Sources
Printed
Online
1897 births
1963 deaths
People from Shuya
People from Shuysky Uyezd
Bolsheviks
Second convocation members of the Soviet of the Union
Third convocation members of the Soviet of the Union
Fourth convocation members of the Soviet of the Union
Fifth convocation members of the Soviet of Nationalities
Soviet colonel generals
Frunze Military Academy alumni
Russian military personnel of World War I
People of the Soviet invasion of Poland
Soviet military personnel of World War II
Russian people of World War II
Heroes of the Soviet Union
Recipients of the Order of Lenin
Recipients of the Order of the Red Banner
Recipients of the Order of Suvorov, 1st class
Recipients of the Order of Kutuzov, 1st class
Knights of the Virtuti Militari
Recipients of the Order of the Cross of Grunwald, 3rd class
Burials at Novodevichy Cemetery | [
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] | The Hero of the Soviet Union was a Soviet Army colonel general. He personally led the longest successful raid of the war, lasting five months behind the German lines. The 2nd Cavalry Corps was commanded by <mask> led a raid with the 1st Guards. After returning from the raid in the summer of 1942, he was promoted and given command of the 61st Army, which he led for the rest of the war. The Battle of Kursk was included in <mask>'s command. His units helped liberate the Fortress of Brest. The defeat of the German Pomeranian offensive in early 1945 was followed by the participation of the units in the Riga offensive. The 61st Army and the 1st Polish Army were responsible for encircling the German capital from the north and the Americans on the Elbe in the Battle of Berlin.He was one of the most daring and talented generals of the Second World War. He could be considered one of the greatest cavalry generals. Considering his accomplishments through 1941-1945 his adaptation of combining horses, tanks, artillery, and aircraft on a modern battlefield resulted in the victory against a more technologically advanced enemy in most desperate parts of the Eastern Front. Despite having a Polish wife, <mask> was not affected by Stalin's military purges. He demonstrated effective tactics against the onslaught of Blitzkrieg and Dovator earned first tactical victories for the Red Army. During the Uman disaster, the unit played rear guard duties due to the constant retreats. Many troops were trapped in the Battle of Kyiv and the unit played a rescue role.Stalin's unit was called the "Fire Squad" because he was often thrown in the most difficult parts of the front to save the situation. The general was respected by his peers as he cared about his soldiers. He was awarded the gold star in 1944 because he refused to send his units into pointless attacks that his superiors often demanded. The Russian Civil War was born in Shuya on 18 February 1897, in to a working-class family. There was a railway station in Ivanovo-Voznsknese. <mask> joined the Imperial Russian Army in 1916 and became a private. He was sent to serve with the 7th Marching Squadron of the 17th Hussar Regiment after graduating from training.In September, <mask> was selected for a course at the 2nd Kyiv School of Praporshchiks due to his above average education. After the October Revolution, <mask> did not return to the army. During the Russian Civil War, <mask> was drafted into the Red Army and was assigned to the Yaroslavl Military District, where he provided military training for railway workers. He commanded a platoon of the Separate Cavalry Battalion in Tambov from July 1919 to February 1920. In May, <mask> became secretary of the party bureau, and in October he was transferred to the Caucasian Front, where he was a squadron commander of the 1st and 2nd Reserve Cavalry Regiments. In June 1921, <mask> was appointed assistant commander of the 1st Reserve Cavalry Regiment of the 2nd Don Rifle Division. In September of that year, he was transferred to the 14th Cavalry Division to serve as an assistant commander, and later was appointed commander of the 81st Cavalry Regiment.The commander of the 60th Separate Reserve Squadron of the 10th Cavalry Division is currently stationed in the Moscow Military District. After serving as assistant chief of the 4th department of the staff of the district from May 1929 to June 1931, <mask> became an officer for special assignments under Semyon Budyonny, who was a member of the Revolutionary Military Council. He graduated from the Frunze Military Academy in 1933 and was an assistant inspector of cavalry. In January 1934, <mask> was sent to the 7th Samara Cavalry Division, which later became the command of the division. When personal military ranks were introduced by the Red Army in 1935, he became the chief of staff of the 5th Cavalry Corps and participated in the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939. In October of 1940, <mask> was appointed commander of the 96th Mountain Rifle Division of the Kiev Special Military District after being promoted to major general. He commanded the 2nd Cavalry Corps of the district in March 1941.<mask> led the corps in fighting on the Southern Front, completing a number of combat missions to quickly cover the front of the 9th and 18th armies of the Southern Front and hold the line on the Dniester. He retreated from Tiraspol to Kiev. He waged successful defensive battles in the direction of Romny-Shtepovka, which made it possible to save part of the encircled troops. During the summer-autumn battles of 1941, he was awarded the Order of Lenin. The Army Group Center was stuck in the rasputitsa during the German offensive towards Moscow. The <mask>'s cavalry were able to defeat the bogged down German 25th Motorized Division in September 1941 because of these muddy periods. The mud-caused quagmire was a factor in the Soviet Army's failure to support <mask>'s 1st Guards Cavalry Corps' return to friendly lines after its five-month raid behind enemy German lines in April 1942.The 2nd Cavalry Corps was transferred to the Western Front to defend the approaches to Moscow. After fighting on the flanks of the German assault at Orel and Tula, the 2nd Cavalry Corps was withdrawn from the line and sent to rebuild. The 1st Guards Cavalry Corps was renamed on November 26. The 'Guards' designation was given to the corps' divisions. New weapons did not come with the new honorific title. On the eve of the Moscow counter-offensive, <mask> made a personal appeal to Stalin for the rearmament of his corps. The German infantry had a clear advantage because <mask>'s men were mostly armed with rifles.He was promised 1,500 automatic weapons and two new batteries of 76mm guns after his meeting with Stalin. He was involved in stopping the assault on Moscow. Moscow and Tula were saved by stopping the Panzers outside of Kashira on the southern flank of Moscow. The towns of Kashira and Riazan were threatened by the formation of a north- east of Tula. From the south and south-west, the 2nd Panzer Army was about to enter Moscow. Tula was strung out without reserves after being attempted to seize from the rear. The corps along with the 50th Army and 10th Army were to hold out at all costs, while the mobile group Belov with cavalry, tanks, katysha rockets, airborne units, and additional rifle troops began the offensive.Guderian's armored assault had stopped against the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps outside of Kashira by 5 December. On the outskirts of Moscow, the first stroke of the Western Front's counter-offensive fell on the 2nd Panzer Army. The Germans in this sector had an advantage in men, equipment, and tanks where the average front line saw the disparity of 3-1 tanks in Guderian's favor. The guards' cavalry corps heroically held its position after many German counter-attacks, and some units also managed to be the first to counter-attack on the night of 27–28 November. The 9th tank brigade was reinforced with the 1st Guards cavalry corps on the eve of 5 December, which was considered to be the most elite and capable tank unit in the area. The 50th army successfully defended Tula. The 50th Army attacked along with the 10th Army.Many towns and villages were liberated by the forces against the German 17th Panzer Division, 17th Motorized Division, and the 18th Panzer Division. Many Soviet soldiers saw the horrors behind the rear for the first time and this motivated them to fight harder. The 330th Rifle Division of the 10th Army tried to take the city but it was liberated by the Guards. In four days of intense fighting, the cavalry used outflanking maneuvers to take both parts of the industrial city. Local citizens were involved in the battle. The German 17th Panzer Division, 167th Division, and parts of 29th Motorized Division blew up a dam while the Corps was pushing further in the direction of the south-west. Due to the cold, the water quickly froze and <mask>'s forces continued to pursue.After the success of the 10th and 50th Armies, the 1st Guards Cavalry Corps was able to drive the Germans the furthest from Moscow as far as 250 km. The 1st Guards Cavalry Corps are given a lot of attention in the documentary. The use of cavalry can destroy even the best German armored units. The documentary won the 15th Academy Awards for Best Documentary in 1942 and became an instant hit showing the realities of war. The winter of 1941-1942 was extremely cold. The mean temperature in Moscow in January 1942 was -32 F or -35 C, with the lowest recorded temperature being -63 F/ 52 C. The 1st Guards Cavalry Corps under the command of <mask> distinguished himself more than once in battles, after the Rzhev-Vyazma operation, being surrounded, he fought in the enemy's rear.The 33rd Army and <mask>'s 1st Guards Cavalry Corps controlled a pocket from south of Smolensk-Vyazma in size of 2 500 km2. 2000 men from the cavalry, partisans, paratroopers, and riflemen were supported by a battalion of eight tanks. The chief of the General Staff of the Wehrmacht, Franz Halder, repeatedly mentions the general in his diaries, giving his actions more credence than any of the Soviet commanders. General Halder wrote in his diary on June 16 that theCav Corps Belov was moving in the direction of Kirov. We couldn't brag about anything. The area west of Kirov is now home to the Cav Corps Belov. We have to send seven divisions after him.Halder wrote "<mask> did it, after all, keeping seven German divisions on the jump." A tribute was written by the former Chief of staff of the Fourth Army. The motorized troops which had taken part in the operations became the butt of many jokes because of the episode. I was happy that General <mask> escaped. He was given all honors in Moscow. The 11th Cavalry Corps did not escape the pocket. From June 1942 until the end of the war, <mask> commanded the 61st Army.The army fought battles in the south and west of Bely. They were part of the Bryansk Front in the summer of 1943. During the battle for the Dnieper from September 26 to October 1, 1943, formations and units of the army crossed the Dnieper and captured the bridgehead on the right bank. The title of Hero of the Soviet Union was given to <mask> for crossing the Dnieper. The blocking of the Courland group was one of the offensive operations that the army took part in. He commanded the South Ural Military District for ten years after World War II. The Voluntary Association for Support of the Army, Air Force, and Navy was chaired by him.Three years after <mask> retired from the military, he died. He was buried with military honors. The Awards and honors of the USSR Foreign Awards can be found here. | [
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4736326 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terry%20Klassen | Terry Klassen | Terry Klassen is a Canadian voice actor, ADR director and writer. Before animation, Klassen worked in radio in Winnipeg (CITI-FM), Toronto (Q107), Calgary (CFAC), Portage la Prairie (CFRY) and part-time at CFOX and CFMI. In animation, he is best known for his work on My Little Pony being voice director of all episodes including the movie (Canadian talent) and the Equestria Girls series. Klassen has also voiced many characters including Baby Sylvester in Baby Looney Tunes, Tusky Husky in Krypto the Superdog and Tony and Seth Parsons in The Cramp Twins.
Career
Klassen co-created Yvon of the Yukon. He is the voice director for shows and films including Martha Speaks, Johnny Test, Max Steel, George of the Jungle, Ed, Edd n Eddy, several Barbie movies, Transformers, Cardcaptors, Salty's Lighthouse, G.I. Joe, Pucca, My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic, Littlest Pet Shop, and many more series. Klassen is also a writer and owned a production company with Ian James Corlett which helped with localizations, and also he was a story editor on the Bakugan series. He was nominated for a Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing in an Animated Program for Martha Speaks. Klassen was also a co-voice director on the 3D animated series Pac-Man (NerdCorp/Mattel). Klassen continues to work as a voice director on series such as Johnny Test, Polly Pocket, several different Marvel Webisodes series and also the voice of 'Gramps' on the Netflix series StarBeam.
Filmography
Anime
Ayakashi: Samurai Horror Tales - Kohei Kobotoke
Death Note - Coadjuvant Shinigami
Dragon Ball Z - Krillin, Master Roshi (ep. 108+), Babidi, Guldo, West Kai, Additional Voices (Ocean Group dub)
Escaflowne - Mole Man (Ocean Group dub)
Galaxy Express 999 - The Conductor
Hamtaro - Jingle
InuYasha - Hachi, Kotatsu the Hell Painter
Key the Metal Idol - Senichi Tamari
Maison Ikkoku - Sakamoto
Master Keaton - Colonel Foster
Mega Man: Upon a Star - Rush
MegaMan NT Warrior - JunkDataMan
Mobile Suit Gundam - Quaran, Fed Messenger
Monkey Magic - Wowzer, Lao Tzu, Minister Fuchin, Sonicmate
Monster Rancher - Most, Captain Evil Hare, Ed, Ducken, Color Pandora, Jill, Additional Voices
Powerpuff Girls Z - Mr. Looper (Fruit Shop Merchant)
Ranma ½ - Hiroshi, Chingensai, various others
Saber Marionette J - Pinsuke, Additional Voices
The SoulTaker - Henry
Transformers: Armada - High Wire, Shaun's Father
Transformers: Cybertron - Brimstone, Tim Hansen, Stanton
Transformers: Energon - Skyblast, Six Shot
The Vision of Escaflowne - Mole Man, Pyle, Teo, Additional Voices (Ocean Group dub)
Zoids - Billy, Dispatch, Fence
Zoids Fuzors - Billy, Dispatch, Fence
Yashahime: Princess Half-Demon - Hachi
Animation
Animated Classic Showcase - Several Characters
The Baby Huey Show - Additional Voices
Baby Looney Tunes - Baby Sylvester, Baby Pepé
Baby Looney Tunes' Eggs-traordinary Adventure - Baby Sylvester
Barbie and the Three Musketeers - Pig, Regent Guard #1, Henchman
Barbie as Rapunzel - Fat Swordsman / Baker
Barbie as the Island Princess - Butler, Guard, Horse
Barbie in a Christmas Carol - Hypnotist / Boz
Barbie: Mariposa and the Fairy Princess - Skeezite #1
Beat Bugs - Farmer
Being Ian - Wally / Nite Show Host / Ian's Report Voiceover / Elderly Tennis Player / Unibrowed Police Officer / Dr. Schmertz / Lonely Ranger
Billy the Cat - Moonie
Bob's Broken Sleigh - Puffin Minion 2
The Bots Master - D'Nerd
The Brothers Grunt - Additional Voices
Bucky O'Hare and the Toad Wars - Frix
The Cramp Twins - Tony Parsons / Seth Parsons
Camp Candy - Additional Voices
Casper's Haunted Christmas - Stinkie
A Christmas Adventure ...From a Book Called Wisely's Tales - Snow Mobile Rider #2, Bear
Class of the Titans - Eros / Polyphemus
Coconut Fred's Fruit Salad Island - Teddy the Bat
Cybersix - Von Reichter
Double Dragon - Trigger Happy / Ice Pick
Dragon Tales - The Fury
D'Myna Leagues - Abe the Ump, Old Gordo, Bicycle Bob, Flatt, Steve Mungo
Ed, Edd n Eddy's Big Picture Show - Eddy's brother
Extreme Dinosaurs - Spittor, Argor
Exosquad Fantastic Four: World's Greatest Heroes - Impossible Man
Fat Dog Mendoza - Texas Harry Longhorn, Precious, Monkey Selling Cookies, Company Employee 1, Swarmy Reporter, Pilot, Ambulance Medic, Mr. Omnipotent, Betting Spaniard, Lenny the Ham Man, Young Nerd
Firehouse Tales - Additional Voices
Gadget and the Gadgetinis - Additional Voices
G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero - Topside
G.I. Joe Extreme - Kang Chi 'Black Dragon' Lee (Season 2)
Happy, the Littlest Bunny - Unknown
Johnny Test - Additional Voices
Jungle Book - Kaa
Kid vs. Kat - Additional Voices
Krypto the Superdog - Waddles the Penguin and Tusky Husky
Lapitch the Little Shoemaker - Dirty Rat
LeapFrog - Additional Voices
Littlest Pet Shop (1995) - Additional Voices
Littlest Pet Shop (2012) - TV Studio tour guide, Princess Stori, Dr. Mooser, Passerby Chihuahua, Dr. Handsomeface
LoliRock - Stanley
Martha Speaks - O.G. Kennelly, various characters
Mega Man - Cut Man, Ice Man, Bomb Man, Elec Man, Hard Man, Shadow Man, Toad Man
Mummies Alive! - Mr. Huxley / Additional Voices
My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic - Young Hoops, Pinkie Pie's father, Carriage Stallions, Apple Split
My Little Pony: Rainbow Roadtrip - Moody Root, Trout pony
My Scene Goes Hollywood: The Movie - Jim
NASCAR Racers - Additional Voices
Pocket Dragon Adventures - Cuddles
PollyWorld - Tech Guy
The Puzzle Club Christmas Mystery RoboCop: Alpha Commando - Additional Voices
The Ripping Friends - Pooperman
Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer: The Movie - Dancer
Roary the Racing Car - Additional Voices
Sabrina: The Animated Series - Additional Voices
Santa's Christmas Snooze Sherlock Holmes in the 22nd Century - Additional Voices
SheZow - Fuji Kido
Skysurfer Strike Force - Zachariah Easel, Adam Hollister
Sleeping Beauty - Misc
Space Strikers - Malcolm
StarBeam - Gramps
Stone Protectors The Story of Christmas Street Sharks - Additional Voices
Stories From My Childhood - Various Characters
Timothy Tweedle the First Christmas Elf - Boo, Clyde
The Wacky World of Tex Avery - Maurice
What About Mimi? - Additional Voices
Video Power - Additional Voices
Voltron Force - Kloak
Yakkity Yak - Gary
Yvon of the Yukon - Hockey Dad, French Man, King Louis Actor, Dil, Private Fuji, Sweaty Guy, Guard, German Tourist, Beamish, The Duke, Guy Donnyette
Writer
Bakugan Battle Brawlers Billy the Cat Beyblade
Cybersix Dragon Ball Z Transformers Armada Weird-Oh's dragon ball
Casting director
A Christmas Adventure... From a Book Called Wisely's Tales Fat Dog Mendoza Ghost Patrol Johnny Test Krypto the Superdog Mama, Do You Love? Pocket Dragon Adventures Popeye's Voyage: The Quest for Pappy Project A-ko 2: Plot of the Daitokuji Financial Group Project A-ko 3: Cinderella Rhapsody Project A-Ko 4: Final Ranma ½ Rekkit Rabbit Salty's Lighthouse Scary Godmother: The Revenge of JimmyVoice director
Fat Dog Mendoza G.I. Joe: Valor vs. Venom Ed, Edd n Eddy Firehouse Tales Pucca Milo's Bug Quest My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic Class of the Titans George of the Jungle Johnny Test Mega Man Littlest Pet Shop (2012)
Kid vs Kat Martha Speaks Little Witch Cardcaptors Salty's Lighthouse Inhumans Jibber Jabber Pirate Express Zigby Yakkity Yak A Christmas Adventure... From a Book Called Wisely's Tales Mama, Do You Love Me? Scary Godmother: The Revenge of Jimmy Popeye's Voyage: The Quest for Pappy Voltron Force Zoids: Fuzors Santa Mouse and the Ratdeer Astonishing X-Men Pocket Dragon Adventures Nerds and Monsters Transformers Armada Transformers Cybertron Transformers Energon Max Steel vs. The Mutant Menace Ricky Sprocket, Showbiz Boy LoliRock D'Myna Leagues Polly and the Pockets Mosaic What About Mimi? Stories From My Childhood Krypto the Superdog Peanuts Webisodes The Barbie film trilogy (starting with Barbie: Fairytopia)
Being Ian Yvon of the Yukon Mega Babies Eternals Astonishing X-Men Peanuts Motion Comics Mega Man: Upon a Star Ed, Edd n Eddy's Big Picture Show Aaagh! It's the Mr. Hell Show! Rainbow Fish Packages from Planet X Pac-Man and the Ghostly Adventures Shelldon Maya the Bee SheZow Rekkit Rabbit Kelly's Dream Club Adventures of Mowgli Wolverine: Weapon X Wolverine vs. Sabretooth Wolverine: Origin Ultimate Wolverine vs. Hulk Inhumans Sausage Party Hot Wheels Battle Force 5 Dragons: Fire and Ice Max Steel Finley the Fire Engine Ghost Patrol Supernoobs The Nutty Professor PollyWorld HulkMiscellaneous crew
A-Ko The Versus - Dialogue Director
Bakugan Battle Brawlers - Story Editor
Billy the Cat - Dubbing Director
Dragon Ball Z - Producer (Ocean Dub)
Halloween: Resurgence - Boom Operator, Production Assistant
The Magic Backpack - Production Assistant
Max Steel Turbo Team: Fusion Tek - Recording Director
Mega Man - Dialogue Director
Mermaid's Scar - Dialogue Director
One Big Hapa Family - Voice Dialogue Director
Project A-ko 2: Plot of the Daitokuji Financial Group - Dialogue Director
Project A-ko 3: Cinderella Rhapsody - Dialogue Director
Project A-Ko 4: Final - Dialogue Director
Ranma ½ - Translator, Dialogue Director
Skysurfer Strike Force - Dialogue Editor
Yvon of the Yukon'' - Co-Creator, Associate Producer
References
External links
Living people
Canadian casting directors
Canadian impressionists (entertainers)
Canadian male television writers
Canadian male voice actors
Canadian screenwriters
Place of birth missing (living people)
Canadian television writers
Canadian television producers
Canadian translators
Canadian voice directors
Year of birth missing (living people) | [
"Terry Klassen is a Canadian voice actor, ADR director and writer.",
"Before animation, Klassen worked in radio in Winnipeg (CITI-FM), Toronto (Q107), Calgary (CFAC), Portage la Prairie (CFRY) and part-time at CFOX and CFMI.",
"In animation, he is best known for his work on My Little Pony being voice director of all episodes including the movie (Canadian talent) and the Equestria Girls series.",
"Klassen has also voiced many characters including Baby Sylvester in Baby Looney Tunes, Tusky Husky in Krypto the Superdog and Tony and Seth Parsons in The Cramp Twins.",
"Career\nKlassen co-created Yvon of the Yukon.",
"He is the voice director for shows and films including Martha Speaks, Johnny Test, Max Steel, George of the Jungle, Ed, Edd n Eddy, several Barbie movies, Transformers, Cardcaptors, Salty's Lighthouse, G.I.",
"Joe, Pucca, My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic, Littlest Pet Shop, and many more series.",
"Klassen is also a writer and owned a production company with Ian James Corlett which helped with localizations, and also he was a story editor on the Bakugan series.",
"He was nominated for a Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing in an Animated Program for Martha Speaks.",
"Klassen was also a co-voice director on the 3D animated series Pac-Man (NerdCorp/Mattel).",
"Klassen continues to work as a voice director on series such as Johnny Test, Polly Pocket, several different Marvel Webisodes series and also the voice of 'Gramps' on the Netflix series StarBeam.",
"Filmography\n\nAnime\n Ayakashi: Samurai Horror Tales - Kohei Kobotoke\n Death Note - Coadjuvant Shinigami\n Dragon Ball Z - Krillin, Master Roshi (ep.",
"Joe: A Real American Hero - Topside\n G.I.",
"Joe Extreme - Kang Chi 'Black Dragon' Lee (Season 2)\n Happy, the Littlest Bunny - Unknown\n Johnny Test - Additional Voices\n Jungle Book - Kaa\n Kid vs. Kat - Additional Voices\n Krypto the Superdog - Waddles the Penguin and Tusky Husky\n Lapitch the Little Shoemaker - Dirty Rat\n LeapFrog - Additional Voices\n Littlest Pet Shop (1995) - Additional Voices\n Littlest Pet Shop (2012) - TV Studio tour guide, Princess Stori, Dr. Mooser, Passerby Chihuahua, Dr. Handsomeface \n LoliRock - Stanley \n Martha Speaks - O.G.",
"Kennelly, various characters\n Mega Man - Cut Man, Ice Man, Bomb Man, Elec Man, Hard Man, Shadow Man, Toad Man\n\n Mummies Alive!",
"- Mr. Huxley / Additional Voices\n My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic - Young Hoops, Pinkie Pie's father, Carriage Stallions, Apple Split\n My Little Pony: Rainbow Roadtrip - Moody Root, Trout pony\n My Scene Goes Hollywood: The Movie - Jim\n NASCAR Racers - Additional Voices\n Pocket Dragon Adventures - Cuddles\n PollyWorld - Tech Guy\n The Puzzle Club Christmas Mystery RoboCop: Alpha Commando - Additional Voices\n The Ripping Friends - Pooperman\n Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer: The Movie - Dancer\n Roary the Racing Car - Additional Voices\n Sabrina: The Animated Series - Additional Voices\n Santa's Christmas Snooze Sherlock Holmes in the 22nd Century - Additional Voices\n SheZow - Fuji Kido\n Skysurfer Strike Force - Zachariah Easel, Adam Hollister\n Sleeping Beauty - Misc\n Space Strikers - Malcolm\n StarBeam - Gramps\n Stone Protectors The Story of Christmas Street Sharks - Additional Voices\n Stories From My Childhood - Various Characters\n Timothy Tweedle the First Christmas Elf - Boo, Clyde\n The Wacky World of Tex Avery - Maurice\n What About Mimi?",
"- Additional Voices\n Video Power - Additional Voices\n Voltron Force - Kloak\n Yakkity Yak - Gary\n Yvon of the Yukon - Hockey Dad, French Man, King Louis Actor, Dil, Private Fuji, Sweaty Guy, Guard, German Tourist, Beamish, The Duke, Guy Donnyette\n\nWriter\n Bakugan Battle Brawlers Billy the Cat Beyblade \n Cybersix Dragon Ball Z Transformers Armada Weird-Oh's dragon ball\n\nCasting director\n A Christmas Adventure... From a Book Called Wisely's Tales Fat Dog Mendoza Ghost Patrol Johnny Test Krypto the Superdog Mama, Do You Love?",
"Pocket Dragon Adventures Popeye's Voyage: The Quest for Pappy Project A-ko 2: Plot of the Daitokuji Financial Group Project A-ko 3: Cinderella Rhapsody Project A-Ko 4: Final Ranma ½ Rekkit Rabbit Salty's Lighthouse Scary Godmother: The Revenge of JimmyVoice director\n Fat Dog Mendoza G.I.",
"Joe: Valor vs. Venom Ed, Edd n Eddy Firehouse Tales Pucca Milo's Bug Quest My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic Class of the Titans George of the Jungle Johnny Test Mega Man Littlest Pet Shop (2012)\n Kid vs Kat Martha Speaks Little Witch Cardcaptors Salty's Lighthouse Inhumans Jibber Jabber Pirate Express Zigby Yakkity Yak A Christmas Adventure... From a Book Called Wisely's Tales Mama, Do You Love Me?",
"Scary Godmother: The Revenge of Jimmy Popeye's Voyage: The Quest for Pappy Voltron Force Zoids: Fuzors Santa Mouse and the Ratdeer Astonishing X-Men Pocket Dragon Adventures Nerds and Monsters Transformers Armada Transformers Cybertron Transformers Energon Max Steel vs.",
"The Mutant Menace Ricky Sprocket, Showbiz Boy LoliRock D'Myna Leagues Polly and the Pockets Mosaic What About Mimi?",
"Stories From My Childhood Krypto the Superdog Peanuts Webisodes The Barbie film trilogy (starting with Barbie: Fairytopia)\n Being Ian Yvon of the Yukon Mega Babies Eternals Astonishing X-Men Peanuts Motion Comics Mega Man: Upon a Star Ed, Edd n Eddy's Big Picture Show Aaagh!",
"It's the Mr. Hell Show!"
] | [
"Terry Klassen is a Canadian voice actor.",
"In the past, Klassen worked in radio in Toronto, and in part-time at CFOX and CFMI.",
"He is best known for his work on My Little Pony being the voice director of all episodes, as well as the movie and the series.",
"There are many characters that Klassen has voiced, including Baby Sylvester and Tony and the Cramp Twins.",
"Yvon was co-created by Career Klassen.",
"He is the voice director for many shows and films, including Martha Speaks, Johnny Test, Max Steel, George of the Jungle, Ed, and many Barbie movies.",
"There are many series about Joe, Pucca, and My Little Pony.",
"He was a story editor on the Bakugan series and also owned a production company with Ian James Corlett.",
"He was nominated for Outstanding Directing in an Animated Program.",
"The 3D animated series Pac-Man was directed by Klassen.",
"The voice of 'Gramps' on StarBeam is one of the many series that Klassen continues to work on as a voice director.",
"Shinigami Dragon Ball Z - Krillin, Master Roshi is a filmography.",
"Joe is a real American hero.",
"Happy, the Littlest Bunny - Unknown Johnny Test - Additional voices Jungle Book - Kaa Kid vs.Kat and Waddles the Penguin.",
"There are various characters of Mega Man - Cut Man, Ice Man, Bomb Man, Elec Man, Hard Man, Shadow Man, and Toad Man.",
"My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic - Young Hoops, Pinkie Pie's father, Carriage Stallions, Apple Split, My Scene Goes Hollywood: The Movie - Jim NASCAR Racers.",
"Gary Yvon of the Yukon is Hockey Dad, French Man, King Louis actor, Dil, Private Fuji, Sweaty Guy, Guard, German Tourist, Beamish, The Duke, and Guy Donnyette.",
"Popeye's Voyage: The quest for Pappy Project A-ko 2, Plot of the Daitokuji Financial Group Project A-ko 3, Cinderella Rhapsody Project A-ko 4, and Finalranma 12 Rekkit Rabbit's Lighthouse Scary Godmother: The Revenge of",
"Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Ed",
"Scary Godmother: The Revenge of Jimmy Popeye's Voyage: The quest for Pappy Voltron Force Zoids: Fuzors Santa Mouse and the Ratdeer.",
"The Mutant Menace Ricky Sprocket, Showbiz Boy LoliRock D'Myna Leagues Polly and the Pockets Mosaic",
"Being Ian Yvon of the Yukon Mega Babies Eternals and Mega Man: Upon a Star Ed are some of the stories from my childhood.",
"The show is called the Mr. Hell Show."
] | <mask> is a Canadian voice actor, ADR director and writer. Before animation, Klassen worked in radio in Winnipeg (CITI-FM), Toronto (Q107), Calgary (CFAC), Portage la Prairie (CFRY) and part-time at CFOX and CFMI. In animation, he is best known for his work on My Little Pony being voice director of all episodes including the movie (Canadian talent) and the Equestria Girls series. Klassen has also voiced many characters including Baby Sylvester in Baby Looney Tunes, Tusky Husky in Krypto the Superdog and Tony and Seth Parsons in The Cramp Twins. Career
Klassen co-created Yvon of the Yukon. He is the voice director for shows and films including Martha Speaks, Johnny Test, Max Steel, George of the Jungle, Ed, Edd n Eddy, several Barbie movies, Transformers, Cardcaptors, Salty's Lighthouse, G.I. Joe, Pucca, My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic, Littlest Pet Shop, and many more series.<mask> is also a writer and owned a production company with Ian James Corlett which helped with localizations, and also he was a story editor on the Bakugan series. He was nominated for a Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing in an Animated Program for Martha Speaks. <mask> was also a co-voice director on the 3D animated series Pac-Man (NerdCorp/Mattel). <mask> continues to work as a voice director on series such as Johnny Test, Polly Pocket, several different Marvel Webisodes series and also the voice of 'Gramps' on the Netflix series StarBeam. Filmography
Anime
Ayakashi: Samurai Horror Tales - Kohei Kobotoke
Death Note - Coadjuvant Shinigami
Dragon Ball Z - Krillin, Master Roshi (ep. Joe: A Real American Hero - Topside
G.I. Joe Extreme - Kang Chi 'Black Dragon' Lee (Season 2)
Happy, the Littlest Bunny - Unknown
Johnny Test - Additional Voices
Jungle Book - Kaa
Kid vs. Kat - Additional Voices
Krypto the Superdog - Waddles the Penguin and Tusky Husky
Lapitch the Little Shoemaker - Dirty Rat
LeapFrog - Additional Voices
Littlest Pet Shop (1995) - Additional Voices
Littlest Pet Shop (2012) - TV Studio tour guide, Princess Stori, Dr. Mooser, Passerby Chihuahua, Dr. Handsomeface
LoliRock - Stanley
Martha Speaks - O.G.Kennelly, various characters
Mega Man - Cut Man, Ice Man, Bomb Man, Elec Man, Hard Man, Shadow Man, Toad Man
Mummies Alive! - Mr. Huxley / Additional Voices
My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic - Young Hoops, Pinkie Pie's father, Carriage Stallions, Apple Split
My Little Pony: Rainbow Roadtrip - Moody Root, Trout pony
My Scene Goes Hollywood: The Movie - Jim
NASCAR Racers - Additional Voices
Pocket Dragon Adventures - Cuddles
PollyWorld - Tech Guy
The Puzzle Club Christmas Mystery RoboCop: Alpha Commando - Additional Voices
The Ripping Friends - Pooperman
Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer: The Movie - Dancer
Roary the Racing Car - Additional Voices
Sabrina: The Animated Series - Additional Voices
Santa's Christmas Snooze Sherlock Holmes in the 22nd Century - Additional Voices
SheZow - Fuji Kido
Skysurfer Strike Force - Zachariah Easel, Adam Hollister
Sleeping Beauty - Misc
Space Strikers - Malcolm
StarBeam - Gramps
Stone Protectors The Story of Christmas Street Sharks - Additional Voices
Stories From My Childhood - Various Characters
Timothy Tweedle the First Christmas Elf - Boo, Clyde
The Wacky World of Tex Avery - Maurice
What About Mimi? - Additional Voices
Video Power - Additional Voices
Voltron Force - Kloak
Yakkity Yak - Gary
Yvon of the Yukon - Hockey Dad, French Man, King Louis Actor, Dil, Private Fuji, Sweaty Guy, Guard, German Tourist, Beamish, The Duke, Guy Donnyette
Writer
Bakugan Battle Brawlers Billy the Cat Beyblade
Cybersix Dragon Ball Z Transformers Armada Weird-Oh's dragon ball
Casting director
A Christmas Adventure... From a Book Called Wisely's Tales Fat Dog Mendoza Ghost Patrol Johnny Test Krypto the Superdog Mama, Do You Love? Pocket Dragon Adventures Popeye's Voyage: The Quest for Pappy Project A-ko 2: Plot of the Daitokuji Financial Group Project A-ko 3: Cinderella Rhapsody Project A-Ko 4: Final Ranma ½ Rekkit Rabbit Salty's Lighthouse Scary Godmother: The Revenge of JimmyVoice director
Fat Dog Mendoza G.I. Joe: Valor vs. Venom Ed, Edd n Eddy Firehouse Tales Pucca Milo's Bug Quest My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic Class of the Titans George of the Jungle Johnny Test Mega Man Littlest Pet Shop (2012)
Kid vs Kat Martha Speaks Little Witch Cardcaptors Salty's Lighthouse Inhumans Jibber Jabber Pirate Express Zigby Yakkity Yak A Christmas Adventure... From a Book Called Wisely's Tales Mama, Do You Love Me? Scary Godmother: The Revenge of Jimmy Popeye's Voyage: The Quest for Pappy Voltron Force Zoids: Fuzors Santa Mouse and the Ratdeer Astonishing X-Men Pocket Dragon Adventures Nerds and Monsters Transformers Armada Transformers Cybertron Transformers Energon Max Steel vs. The Mutant Menace Ricky Sprocket, Showbiz Boy LoliRock D'Myna Leagues Polly and the Pockets Mosaic What About Mimi?Stories From My Childhood Krypto the Superdog Peanuts Webisodes The Barbie film trilogy (starting with Barbie: Fairytopia)
Being Ian Yvon of the Yukon Mega Babies Eternals Astonishing X-Men Peanuts Motion Comics Mega Man: Upon a Star Ed, Edd n Eddy's Big Picture Show Aaagh! It's the Mr. Hell Show! | [
"Terry Klassen",
"Klassen",
"Klassen",
"Klassen"
] | <mask> is a Canadian voice actor. In the past, Klassen worked in radio in Toronto, and in part-time at CFOX and CFMI. He is best known for his work on My Little Pony being the voice director of all episodes, as well as the movie and the series. There are many characters that Klassen has voiced, including Baby Sylvester and Tony and the Cramp Twins. Yvon was co-created by Career Klassen. He is the voice director for many shows and films, including Martha Speaks, Johnny Test, Max Steel, George of the Jungle, Ed, and many Barbie movies. There are many series about Joe, Pucca, and My Little Pony.He was a story editor on the Bakugan series and also owned a production company with Ian James Corlett. He was nominated for Outstanding Directing in an Animated Program. The 3D animated series Pac-Man was directed by Klassen. The voice of 'Gramps' on StarBeam is one of the many series that Klassen continues to work on as a voice director. Shinigami Dragon Ball Z - Krillin, Master Roshi is a filmography. Joe is a real American hero. Happy, the Littlest Bunny - Unknown Johnny Test - Additional voices Jungle Book - Kaa Kid vs.Kat and Waddles the Penguin.There are various characters of Mega Man - Cut Man, Ice Man, Bomb Man, Elec Man, Hard Man, Shadow Man, and Toad Man. My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic - Young Hoops, Pinkie Pie's father, Carriage Stallions, Apple Split, My Scene Goes Hollywood: The Movie - Jim NASCAR Racers. Gary Yvon of the Yukon is Hockey Dad, French Man, King Louis actor, Dil, Private Fuji, Sweaty Guy, Guard, German Tourist, Beamish, The Duke, and Guy Donnyette. Popeye's Voyage: The quest for Pappy Project A-ko 2, Plot of the Daitokuji Financial Group Project A-ko 3, Cinderella Rhapsody Project A-ko 4, and Finalranma 12 Rekkit Rabbit's Lighthouse Scary Godmother: The Revenge of Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Edd n Ed Scary Godmother: The Revenge of Jimmy Popeye's Voyage: The quest for Pappy Voltron Force Zoids: Fuzors Santa Mouse and the Ratdeer. The Mutant Menace Ricky Sprocket, Showbiz Boy LoliRock D'Myna Leagues Polly and the Pockets MosaicBeing Ian Yvon of the Yukon Mega Babies Eternals and Mega Man: Upon a Star Ed are some of the stories from my childhood. The show is called the Mr. Hell Show. | [
"Terry Klassen"
] |
51662260 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul%20Douglas%20%28musician%29 | Paul Douglas (musician) | Earl “Paul” Douglas (born c. 1950) is a Jamaican Grammy Award-winning drummer and percussionist, best known for his work as the drummer, percussionist and bandleader of Toots and the Maytals. His career spans more than five decades as one of reggae's most recorded drummers. Music journalist and reggae historian David Katz wrote, “dependable drummer Paul Douglas played on countless reggae hits."
Douglas has worked with artists including Bob Marley and the Wailers, Bonnie Raitt, and Eric Gale. Douglas has also toured with artists including The Rolling Stones, Willie Nelson, Dave Matthews Band, The Who, Eagles and Sheryl Crow.
Early life
Paul Douglas was born in St. Ann, Jamaica. His career as a professional musician began in 1965 at the age of 15.
Influences
Douglas’ musical influences include Lloyd Knibb, Steve Gadd, Harvey Mason, Sonny Emory, Elvin Jones, William Kennedy, Carlos Santana, Bob Marley, John Coltrane, Sam Cooke, George Duke, Boris Gardiner, The Skatalites, Eric Gale, Leslie Butler, George Benson, Marvin Gaye, David Garibaldi, and David Sanborn.
Affiliated groups
While Douglas has maintained an active career as a studio musician for reggae, jazz, and funk artists since 1965, he has also been a member of several notable musical groups.
Toots and the Maytals
In 1969 Douglas joined Toots and the Maytals as a founding member of the band as it is known today, which up to that time had consisted of a vocal trio. Douglas has been the group's drummer, percussionist and bandleader from 1985 to the present day.
Excerpt from "The Rise of Reggae and the influence of Toots and the Maytals" by Matthew Sherman:"...Reggae was born. Toots (Toots Hibbert) heralded the new sound with the seminal, complex groove monster "Do the Reggay"...Toots could do no wrong recording for Leslie Kong. With the consistent nucleus of musicians, the Beverley's All-Stars (Jackie Jackson, Winston Wright, Hux Brown, Rad Bryan, Paul Douglas and Winston Grennan) and the Maytals’ brilliant harmonizing..."Reggae is listed in the dictionary as:reggae [reg-ey] (noun) - a style of Jamaican popular music blending blues, calypso, and rock-'n'-roll, characterized by a strong syncopated rhythm and lyrics of social protest. Origin of reggae: Jamaican English, respelling of reggay (introduced in the song “Do the Reggay” (1968) by Frederick “Toots” Hibbert).Accompanied by Paul Douglas and Radcliffe "Dougie" Bryan in studio, Jackie Jackson explained the formation of the group in a radio interview for Kool 97 FM Jamaica:“We’re all original members of Toots and the Maytals band. First it was Toots and the Maytals, three guys: Toots, Raleigh, and Jerry. …And then they were signed to Island Records, Chris Blackwell. And we were their recording band. One day we were summoned to Chris’ house. And he says, “Alright gentleman, I think it’s time. Toots and the Maytals looks like it’s going to be a big thing”. By this time he had already signed Bob (Marley). So in his camp, Island Records, there was Toots and the Maytals / Bob Marley; we were talking about reggae is going international now. We kept on meeting and he (Blackwell) decided that the backing band that back all of the songs, the recording band, should be the Maytals band. So everything came under Toots and the Maytals. So we became Maytals also. And then we hit the road in 1975...we were the opening act for the Eagles, Linda Ronstadt, and Jackson Browne. We were the opening act for The Who for about two weeks.”
Paul Douglas, Jackie Jackson and Radcliffe ‘Dougie’ Bryan are recognized as founding members who, along with frontman Toots Hibbert, continue to perform in the group to the present day.
The first Toots and the Maytals album released and distributed by Chris Blackwell's Island Records was Funky Kingston. Music critic Lester Bangs described the album in Stereo Review as “perfection, the most exciting and diversified set of reggae tunes by a single artist yet released.” As Chris Blackwell says, “The Maytals were unlike anything else...sensational, raw and dynamic.” Blackwell had a strong commitment to Toots and the Maytals, saying “I’ve known Toots longer than anybody – much longer than Bob (Marley). Toots is one of the purest human beings I’ve met in my life, pure almost to a fault.”
On 1 October 1975, Toots and the Maytals were broadcast live on KMET-FM as they performed at The Roxy Theatre in Los Angeles. This broadcast was re-mastered and released as an album entitled “Sailin’ On” via Klondike Records.
President Donald Trump was quoted as appreciating the reggae music of Toots and the Maytals when he said, “I heard the guest band, Toots & The Maytals, practising out on the set [of Saturday Night Live; Trump co-hosted an episode in April 2004]. They sounded terrific, and I went out to listen to them for a while. My daughter Ivanka had told me how great they were, and she was right. The music relaxed me, and surprisingly, I was not nervous."
In 2015, Vogue magazine listed the song “54-46 Was My Number” by Toots and the Maytals as one of their “15 Roots Reggae Songs You Should Know”; and in an interview with Patricia Chin of VP Records, Vogue listed the group as part of an abbreviated list of early “reggae royalty” that recorded at Studio 17 in Kingston, which included Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, Gregory Isaacs, Dennis Brown, Burning Spear, Toots and the Maytals, The Heptones, and Bunny Wailer.
In 2017, Toots and the Maytals became the second reggae-based group to ever perform at the Coachella festival, after Chronixx in 2016.
Bob Marley and the Wailers
Douglas contributed to several of Bob Marley's albums, including Small Axe and Soul Shakedown Party which were released on the Beverley's label, and performed live with Bob Marley and the Wailers in the early 70s. The Wailers worked with reggae producer Leslie Kong, who used his studio musicians called Beverley's All-Stars (Jackie Jackson, Paul Douglas, Gladstone Anderson, Winston Wright, Rad Bryan, Hux Brown) to record the songs that would be released as an album entitled “The Best of The Wailers”. The tracks included “Soul Shakedown Party,” “Stop That Train,” “Caution,” “Go Tell It on the Mountain,” “Soon Come,” “Can’t You See,” “Soul Captives,” “Cheer Up,” “Back Out,” and “Do It Twice”.
Excerpt from an interview of Winston Grennan by Carter Van Pelt:"...Chris Blackwell say, 'Yeah, Yeah, Yeah. I give them the money to make this record.' But at that time they was forming the band. Bob (Marley]) came to me, figure it was me, Gladdy, Winston Wright, Jackie and Hux to be the band. That was the band that Bob did really want, but those guys didn't want to get involved. You know that the situation around Bob was pretty hectic...They turned it down. So right away, I couldn't get involved, because I didn't want to leave the guys. We was doing all the sessions.Robin Kenyatta came to Jamaica, we played for him. Garland Jeffreys, Paul Simon, Peter, Paul and Mary we play for them. The Rolling Stones came down we played for them. We were the guys... we could read music. If I leave, I feel it would be a bad vibes. When Hugh Malcolm joined the group, he couldn't keep up, so they got rid of him. A little later on a drummer came along name Paul Douglas, every so often we would bring him in, because I couldn't play on a session. Paul was about the only guy, that these other guys would trust to really come and play amongst them."
“The Perfect Beat" is a song on the album Eardrum from Talib Kweli that sampled a song from Bob Marley and the Wailers called, “Do It Twice”, which is a drum beat from Paul Douglas.
Lee "Scratch" Perry and Leslie Kong
Excerpt from the book “People Funny Boy - The Genius Of Lee "Scratch" Perry by David Katz:"On the instrumental front, Perry (Lee "Scratch" Perry) began more serious experimentation, exploring diverse influences and styles with a range of musicians. ...Perry also started working with Paul Douglas, an occasional Supersonics member and mainstay of Leslie Kong's productions."
Alton Ellis
Douglas is credited as the drummer on Alton Ellis' "Girl I've Got A Date". "Girl I've Got A Date" is recognized as one of the first songs to define the rocksteady genre.
Tommy McCook & The Supersonics
Douglas was a member of Tommy McCook & The Supersonics from 1968 - 1969, during which time the group released three LP's.
The Boris Gardiner Happening
Between 1970 - 1973 Douglas was the drummer for The Boris Gardiner Happening, completing five LP's with the group. The Boris Gardiner Happening recorded a version of "Ain't No Sunshine" in 1973 with Paul Douglas singing lead, and Boris Gardiner playing bass guitar, for the album Is What's Happening.
Leroy Sibbles
Douglas worked as a bandleader for the Leroy Sibbles band.
John Holt, The Pioneers, Eddy Grant
Douglas toured the UK with John Holt (singer) in 1974. This was the first major reggae tour that was accompanied by a major orchestra, a 15-piece orchestra out of England. The members of this tour included six veteran session musicians: Hux Brown (Guitar), Jackie Jackson (Bass), Paul Douglas (Drums), Rad Bryan (Guitar), Winston Wright (Organ), and Gladstone Anderson (Piano). Douglas also joined and played with The Pioneers band which featured Eddy Grant from The Equals that same year in England.
Byron Lee and the Dragonaires
In 1975 Douglas joined Byron Lee and the Dragonaires as a session musician, and later became a band member, as the group's drummer on the Sparrow Dragon Again LP.
Touring
Douglas has toured with many artists over the course of his career, including:
Toots and the Maytals
Jackson Browne
Linda Ronstadt
Eagles
The Who
The Rolling Stones
Dave Matthews Band
The J. Geils Band
Carlos Santana
The Roots
Sheryl Crow
James Blunt
On June 24, 2017 at the Glastonbury Festival, reggae group Toots and the Maytals were slotted for 17:30 with BBC Four scheduled to show highlights from their set. When they did not show it was suspected they missed their time slot, and BBC broadcaster Mark Radcliffe apologized on their behalf stating, "If you were expecting Toots and the Maytals – and, frankly, we all were – it seems like they were on Jamaican time or something because they didn't make it to the site on time." The group credited with coining the term "reggae" in song was subsequently rescheduled by the Glastonbury Festival organizers giving them the midnight slot, with all other acts being shifted by one hour.
On July 29, 2017 Toots and The Maytals headlined the 35th anniversary of the WOMAD UK festival.
Studio work
Douglas’ work as a session musician crosses several genres. His talent on the drums earned him recognition and respect from producers
Excerpt from an article on "Clancy Eccles":"In the U.K. Trojan Records released Clancy (Eccles)’s productions...The finest musicians available were used, with the core of his regular session crew, The Dynamites, featuring the talents of Hux Brown (guitar), Clifton "Jackie" Jackson (bass), Gladstone Anderson (piano), Winston Wright (organ) and Paul Douglas (drums)."
In addition to recordings completed as a member of affiliated acts, Douglas’ studio work includes sessions with:
Trojan Records (Chalk Farm Studios London England)
Beverley's All-Stars
Federal Allstars
Harry J Allstars
Joe Gibbs Allstars
The Upsetters
Randy's
Channel One Studios
Derrick Harriot's Chariot
Treasure Isle Records (Duke Reid)
Prince Buster Allstars
Bonnie Raitt
The MG's
Van McCoy
Eddie Floyd
Herbie Mann
Cat Stevens (Dynamic Sounds Studio)
In an interview with Mikey Thompson on November 27, 2016 for Kool 97 FM, Jackie Jackson along with Paul Douglas and Radcliffe "Dougie" Bryan were asked about the many recordings they did together as the rhythm section for Treasure Isle Records, Beverley's Records, Channel One Studios and Federal Records. In addition to work mentioned with Sonia Pottinger, Duke Reid, Lynn Taitt, Delroy Wilson, and Lee "Scratch" Perry, they were interviewed about working on the following songs:
Bob Marley and the Wailers - “Nice Time”, “Hypocrites”, “Thank You Lord”, “Bus Dam Shut”, “Can’t You See” and “Small Axe”
Phyllis Dillon - “Don’t Stay Away” and “Perfidia”
The Melodians - “Little Nut Tree”, “Swing and Dine”, “Sweet Sensation”, and “Rivers of Babylon”
U-Roy & The Melodians - “Version Galore”
Bob Andy - “Fire Burning”
Ken Boothe - “Everything I Own”, “Say You”, and “Freedom Street”
The Gaylads - “It’s Hard To Confess” and “There’s A Fire”
Hopeton Lewis - “Take It Easy”
Winston Wright - “Stealing Vol. II” from “Greater Jamaica (Moon Walk-Reggay)”
Ernie Smith - “Duppy or Gunman”
Desmond Dekker - “Israelites”
Desmond Dekker and the Aces - “Intensified”
Roy Shirley - “Hold Them”
Errol Dunkley - “You’re Gonna Need Me”
The Congos - “Fisherman”
John Holt & The Paragons - “Only A Smile”, “Wear You To The Ball”, “Ali Baba”, “I’ve Got To Get Away”, and “You Mean The World To Me”
Toots and the Maytals - “Monkey Man”, “Pomps & Pride”, “Scare Him” and “Pressure Drop”
Notable televised performances
1990 VH1 New Visions World Beat hosted by Nile Rodgers
2001 Late Night with Conan O'Brien
2004 The Tonight Show with Jay Leno featuring Bonnie Raitt & Toots and the Maytals
2004 Saturday Night Live
2004 Last Call with Carson Daly
2004 Later... with Jools Holland
2010 Late Night with Jimmy Fallon
2018 The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon
Film
In 2011, Douglas was part of the documentary released by Director George Scott and Producer Nick De Grunwald called Reggae Got Soul: The Story of Toots and the Maytals which was featured on BBC Television. Described as “The untold story of one of the most influential artists ever to come out of Jamaica”, it features appearances by Marcia Griffiths, Jimmy Cliff, Bonnie Raitt, Eric Clapton, Keith Richards, Willie Nelson, Anthony DeCurtis, Ziggy Marley, Chris Blackwell, Paolo Nutini, Sly Dunbar, and Robbie Shakespeare.
Awards and recognition
1981 Grammy Award Nomination for Toots Live!
1989 Grammy Award Nomination for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Toots in Memphis
1991 Grammy Award Nomination for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Toots & the Maytals – An Hour Live
1997 Canadian Reggae Music Awards
1998 Canadian Reggae Music Awards
1998 Grammy Award Nomination for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Toots & the Maytals – Ska Father
2004 Grammy Award Winner for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Toots & the Maytals - True Love
2008 Grammy Award Nomination for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Toots & the Maytals – Light Your Light
2013 Grammy Award Nomination for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Toots & The Maytals – Reggae Got Soul: Unplugged on Strawberry Hill
2020 Grammy Award Winner for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Got To Be Tough
2021 Named one of Drummerworld's 'Top 500 Drummers'
Interviews
In an interview with Batterie Magazine for their 2017 September/October edition, Douglas was asked about his work as the main drummer and musical director for Toots and the Maytals, in addition to being called upon by artists and producers such as Bob Marley, Lee Scratch Perry, Eric Gale, Ken Boothe, The Congos and Delroy Wilson. In the interview, Douglas explains one of his heroes to be Lloyd Knibb of The Skatalites, as well as being influenced my musicians such as George Benson, Carlos Santana, John Coltrane, Sam Cooke, and David Sanborn. On Sept. 10, 2021 Paul Douglas was featured on an episode of The 212 Podcast.
Museums and expositions
From April 2017 to August 2017, Douglas is part of the Exposition Jamaica Jamaica ! at the Philharmonie de Paris in France. Douglas is featured on the poster displayed at the exposition showing the early formation of Bob Marley & The Wailers on the Tuff Gong record label, and he is additionally part of the exposition as a member of Toots and the Maytals for their importance in the development of reggae music.
Discography
Paul Douglas is credited on over 250 works. In 2021 he released a full-length solo album titled "Jazz Mi Reggae".
Toots & The Maytals (1965) The Sensational Maytals
Toots & The Maytals & Prince Buster's All Stars (1965) Dog War / Little Flea (Prince Buster)
Toots & The Maytals (1966) Never Grow Old, (Studio One)
Toots & The Maytals (1966) Life Could Be A Dream
Toots & The Maytals (1968) Sweet and Dandy, (Beverley's Records)
Tommy McCook & The Supersonics (1968) Mary Poppins
King Stitt (1969) Herdsman Shuffle
King Stitt (1969) Lee Van Cleef
The Maytals (1969) Sweet And Dandy / Oh - Yea (7”) (Beverley's Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1969) Monkey Man
Tommy McCook & The Supersonics (1969) Red Ash
Tommy McCook & The Supersonics (1969) Tribute to Rameses
King Stitt & The Dynamites (1969) Vigorton 2
The Melodians (1970) Everybody Bawling
Ken Boothe (1970) Freedom Street
Clancy Eccles And The Dynamites (1970) Herbsman Reggae
Boris Gardiner (1970) Reggae Happening
Delano Stewart (1970) Stay A Little Bit Longer
The Melodians (1970) Sweet Sensation
Delano Stewart (1970) That's Life
The Gaylads (1970) There's A Fire
Bob and Marcia (1970) Young Gifted and Black
Toots & The Maytals (1970) Feel Alright (7") (Beverley's Records)
Bob Marley & The Wailers (1970) Baby Baby Come Home
Bob Marley & The Wailers (1970) Sophisticated Psychedelication
Bob Marley & The Wailers (1971) Soul Shakedown Party
Bob Marley & The Wailers (1971) The Best of the Wailers
Toots & The Maytals (1971) Bam-Bam / Pomps And Pride (7") (Dynamic Sounds)
Boris Gardiner (1971) Soulful Experience
Toots & The Maytals (1971) Greatest Hits (Beverley Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1972) The Harder They Come, (Island)
Toots & The Maytals (1972) Slatyam Stoot
Toots & The Maytals (1972) Daddy / It Was Written Down (Jaguar)
Toots & The Maytals (1972) Pomps And Pride (Jaguar)
Toots & The Maytals (1972) Country Road / Louie Louie (Jaguar)
Toots & The Maytals (1972) Louie Louie / Pressure Drop '72 (Trojan Records)
Boris Gardiner (1972) For All We Know
The Boris Gardiner Happening (1973) Is What's Happening
Toots & The Maytals (1973) Sit Right Down (Dragon)
Toots & The Maytals (1973) Country Road / Funky Kingston (Dragon)
Toots & The Maytals (1973) In The Dark / Sailing On (Jaguar)
Jimmy Cliff / Toots & The Maytals (1973) You Can Get It If You Really Want / Sweet & Dandy (Mango)
Toots & The Maytals (1973) Screwface Underground (Jaguar)
Toots & The Maytals (1973) Daddy (7”, Single) (Blue Mountain)
Toots & The Maytals (1973) Country Road (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1973) From the Roots, (Trojan)
Toots & The Maytals (1973) Funky Kingston, (Trojan)
Toots & The Maytals (1973) The Original Golden Oldies Vol.3
Vic Taylor (1973) Reflections
Ernie Smith (1974) Duppy Gunman
Ken Boothe (1974) Everything I Own
Toots & The Maytals (1974) In the Dark, (Dragon Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1974) Who Knows Better (Hot Shot!)
Toots & The Maytals (1974) Time Tough (Jaguar)
Toots & The Maytals (1974) I Can't Believe / 5446 Instrumental (Starapple)
Toots & The Maytals (1974) Sailing On / If You Act This Way (7") (Dragon)
Toots & The Maytals (1974) You Don't Love Me (So Bad) (7", Single) (Jaguar)
Bob Andy (1974) Fire Burning
Fr. Richard HoLung, Harrison & Friends (1974) Letters Job To John
Toots & The Maytals (1975) Reggae's Got Soul (Jaguar)
Susan Cadogan (1975) Hurts So Good
Horace Forbes (1975) Impossible<
Faith D'Aguilar (1975) Jamaica
Eric Gale (1975) Negril
Pluto Shervington (1975) Pluto
Byron Lee And The Dragonaires & Mighty Sparrow (1975) Sparrow Dragon Again
Johnny Nash (1975) Tears On My Pillow
Ken Boothe (1976) Blood Brothers
Pluto Shervington (1976) Dat
R.D. Livingstone (1976) Home From Home
Errol Brown (1976) Pleasure Dub
Pluto Shervington (1976) Ram Goat Liver
Toots & The Maytals (1976) Reggae Got Soul (Island)
King Tubby & Clancy Eccles All Stars (1976) Sound System International Dub LP
Funky Brown (1976) These Songs Will Last Forever
Bob Marley & The Wailers / Toots & The Maytals (1976) Trenchtown Rock / Reggae Got Soul (7”) (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1976) Image Get A Lick (7") (Warika)
The Congos & Friends (1977) Fisherman
The Congos (1977) Heart Of The Congos
The Mexicano (1977) Move Up Starsky
Musicism (1977) Swing Me Gentle
Musicism (1977) Riding In Rhythm
The Maytals (1977) Toots Presents The Maytals
Toots & The Maytals (1978) Famine / Pass The Pipe (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1978) Take It From Me (7") (Island Records)
Harold Butler (1978) Gold Connection
Ernie Smith (1978) I'll Sing For Jesus
Derrick Morgan (1978) Love City
Lovindeer (1978) Sexy Reggae
The Mexicano (1978) Goddess Of Love
Jackie Edwards (1978) Starlight
Dandy Livingstone (1978) The South African Experience
Toots & The Maytals (1979) Israel Children / Turn It Up (7") (Louv)
Multiple Artists (1979) Children Of Babylon (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)<
Nana McLean (1979) Dream Of Life
Danny Adams (1979) Summer In Montego Bay
Ojiji (1979) The Shadow
Toots & The Maytals (1979) Pressure Drop: Best of Toots & The Maytals (Trojan)
Toots & The Maytals (1979) Pass the Pipe, (Island)
Toots & The Maytals (1979) Just Like That, (Island)
Toots & The Maytals (1979) The Best Of Toots And The Maytals (Trojan Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1980) Just Like That / Gone With The Wind (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1980) Toots & The Maytals E.P. (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1980) Chatty, Chatty (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1980) Live: Monkey Man / Hallelujah (7") (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1980) Chatty, Chatty (7", Single) (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1980) Toots “Live,” (Island)
Hearbert Lee (1980) Love Songs Vol. 1
Bobby Stringer (1980) Reggae Love Songs
Ossie Scott (1980) Many Moods Of Ossie Scott
Toots & The Maytals (1981) I Can See Clearly Now (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1981) Beautiful Woman (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1981) Papa D / You Never Know (Louv)
Toots & The Maytals (1981) Beautiful Woman / Show Me The Way (12") (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1981) Papa Dee Mama Dear / Dilly Dally (7", Single) (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1981) His Songs Live On (7") (Louv)
Toots & the Maytals (1981) Knock Out!
Beres Hammond (1981) Let's Make A Song
Multiple Artists (1981) The King Kong Compilation: The Historic Reggae Recordings
Toots & The Maytals (1982) I Know We Can Make It / Spend A Weekend (7", Single) (Island Records)
Dennis Brown / Toots & The Maytals (1982) Sitting & Watching / Bam Bam (7", Single) (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1982) Knockout, (Island)
Live at Reggae Sunsplash: Best of the Festival r(1982) Day One<
Toots & the Maytals (1982) Hour Live
Pluto Shervington (1982) I Man Born Ya
Pioneers (1982) Reggae For Lovers
Pluto Shervington (1982) Your Honour
Lovindeer (1983) Man Shortage
Ochi Brown (1983) Danger Date
Boyo (1983) You're My World
George Pioneer & Jackie Pioneer (1983) Reggae For Lovers Volume 2
Toots & The Maytals (1984) Live At Reggae Sunsplash
Toots & The Maytals (1984) Reggae Greats (Island)
Owen Gray (1985) Watch This Sound
Lovindeer (1987) Caribbean Christmas Cheer
Lovindeer (1988) Octapussy
Toots & The Maytals (1988) Toots in Memphis, (Island)
Toots & The Maytals (1988) Do The Reggae 1966-1970 (Attack Records)
(1990) Clancy Eccles Presents His Reggae Revue>
Toots & The Maytals (1990) An Hour Live
Bob Marley & The Wailers (1992) Songs Of Freedom CD-01
Toots & The Maytals (1992) Knock Out!
The Maytals (1993) Bla. Bla. Bla.
Multiple Artists (1993) Kingston Town: 18 Reggae Hits
Multiple Artists (1993) The Story of Jamaican Music: Tougher Than Tough
Toots & The Maytals (1995) The Collection (Spectrum)
Clancy Eccles (1996) Joshua's Rod of Correction
King Stitt (1996) Reggae Fire Beat
The Dynamites (1996) The Wild Reggae Bunch
Toots & The Maytals (1996) Time Tough: The Anthology (Island)
Toots & The Maytals (1996) Monkey Man ((Compilation) (House Of Reggae)
Toots & The Maytals (1997) Recoup, (Alia Son)
Multiple Artists (1997) Fire On The Mountain: Reggae Celebrates The Grateful Dead Vol. 1 & 2
Clancy Eccles & The Dynamites (1997) Nyah Reggae Rock
Bob Marley & The Wailers (1998) The Complete Wailers CD-03
From Chapter To Version (1998) 20 Reggae DJ Classics
Multiple Artists (1998) From GG's Reggae Hit Stable Volume 1 & 2
Derrick Harriott (1998) Riding The Roots Chariot
Toots & The Maytals (1998) Live in London, (Trojan)
Toots & The Maytals (1998) The Very Best of Toots & The Maytals, (Music Club)
Toots & The Maytals (1998) Ska Father, (Artists Only)
Toots & The Maytals (1998) Jamaican Monkey Man (Recall 2 cd)
The Maytals / Toots & the Maytals (1999) Monkey Man & From The Roots
Toots & the Maytals (1999) That's My Number
The Maytals (1999) The Originals (Charly)
Morgan Heritage & Denroy Morgan / Toots & The Maytals (1999) Harvest Is Plenty / Lost Your Character (7") (HMG Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1999) Bam Bam / 54 - 46 (7") (Marvellous Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1999) Prayer of David (7", Single) (Treasure Chest)
Toots & The Maytals (2000) Live At Red Rocks (PRG Records, Allah Son Records)
Toots & The Maytals (2000) The Very Best Of Toots & The Maytals (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (2000) 20 Massive Hits (Compilation) (Metro)
The Maytals (2001) Fever
The Maytals (2001) Dressed to Kill
Toots & The Maytals (2001) 54-46 Was My Number - Anthology 1964 To 2000 (Trojan Records)
Toots & The Maytals (2001) Best Of Toots & The Maytals / Broadway Jungle (Trojan Records)
Toots & The Maytals (2001) The Best Of Toots & The Maytals (Island Records)
Clancy Eccles (2001) Reggae Revue at the VIP Club, Vol. 3
Clancy Eccles (2001) Reggae Revue at the Ward Theatre 1969-1970
(2001) The Reggae Box
Toots & The Maytals / L.M.S.* (2002) Humble / Respect All Woman (7") (71 Records)
Toots & The Maytals (2002) Sweet And Dandy: The Best of Toots and the Maytals (Trojan Records)
Toots & the Maytals (2003) World Is Turning
Toots & The Maytals (2003) 54 - 46 / Pressure Drop (7”) (Beverley's Records)
Toots & The Maytals (2003) Funky Kingston / In The Dark (Compilation) (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (2003) Jungle (Single) (XIII BIS Records)
Paul Douglas (2004) Eyes Down
Toots & the Maytals (2004) True Love
Toots & The Maytals (2004) This Is Crucial Reggae (Compilation) (Sanctuary Records)
Toots & The Maytals Featuring Shaggy And Rahzel (2004) Bam Bam (V2)
Toots & The Maytals (2005) Pressure Drop: The Definitive Collection (Trojan Records)
Toots & The Maytals (2005) Roots Reggae - The Classic Jamaican Albums (Trojan Records)
Toots & The Maytals (2005) Rhythm Kings (Compilation) (Xtra)
Toots & The Maytals (2005) Deep In My Soul / Daddy (Beverley's Records)
Toots & The Maytals (2005) Border Line (Single) (XIII Bis Records)
Toots & The Maytals (2006) The Essential Collection (Compilation) (Sanctuary Records)
The Congos & Friends (2006) Fisherman Style
Toots & The Maytals (2006) I’ve Got A Woman (A Tribute To Ray Charles) (7") (D&F Productions)
Toots & The Maytals (2006) Acoustically Live at Music Millennium (CD, EP) (Junketboy)
Toots & the Maytals (2007) Light Your Light
Ben Harper & The Skatalites / Toots & The Maytals (2007) Be My Guest / I Want You To Know (Imperial)
Toots & The Maytals (2008) Sweet And Dandy: The Best of Toots & The Maytals (Compilation) (Trojan Records)
Glen Ricketts (2008) Rise Up
Tommy McCook & The Supersonics (2009) Pleasure Dub
The Dynamites / King Tubby (2009) Sound System International
Eugene Grey (2010) Diversity
Toots & the Maytals (2010) Flip and Twist
Toots And The Maytals / Roland Alphonso (2010) Hold On / On The Move (7") (Pyramid)
Toots & The Maytals (2010) Pee Pee Cluck Cluck (7”) (Pyramid)
Toots & The Maytals / Don Drummond (2010) Alidina / Dragon Weapon (7") (Pyramid)
Toots & The Maytals (2011) Pressure Drop: The Golden Tracks (Cleopatra)
Toots & The Maytals (2012) Pressure Drop: The Best of Toots and The Maytals (Compilation) (Universal UMC, Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (2012) Live! (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (2012) 54 - 46 (Beverley's Records)
Delroy Wilson / Toots & The Maytals (2012) Gave You My Love / One Eye Enos (7”) (Beverley's Records)
Toots & The Maytals (2012) Unplugged On Strawberry Hill
Toots & The Maytals (2014) Sunny (7", Single) (Notable Records, Measurable Music)
Toots & The Maytals (2020) Got to Be Tough (Trojan Jamaica/BMG)
Paul Douglas (2021) Jazz Mi Reggae
Priscilla Rollins (197X) I Love You
Tito Simon (197X) The Heat Is On
Demo Cates (197X) Precious Love
Milton Douglas (198X) Can't Trust No One
George Allison (198X) Exclusive
Marie Bowie & K.C. White & Hortense Ellis (198X) More Reggae Love Songs
Bobby Davis (198X) Satisfaction
Toots & The Maytals - Reggae Live Sessions Volume 2 (Jahmin' Records)
Danny Ray - All The Best
Ossie Scott - The Great Pretender
Toots & The Maytals - Peeping Tom (7", Single) (Beverley's Records)
Toots & The Maytals - Sweet & Dandy (Single) (Beverley's Records)
Toots & The Maytals - Pain In My Belly / Treating Me Bad (7”) (Prince Buster)
Toots & The Maytals / Byron Lee - She Never Let Me Down / River To The Bank (Federal)
Toots & The Maytals / Desmond Dekker - Pressure Drop / Mother's Young Gal (7", Single) (Beverley's Records)
Toots & The Maytals - Never Go Down (7") (Warika)
Toots & The Maytals - Israel Children (7", Single) (Righteous)
Toots & The Maytals / Ansel Collins - Monkey Man / High Voltage (7") (Beverley's Records)
Tony Tribe / Eric Donaldson / The Upsetters / Toots & The Maytals - Classic Tracks (CD, EP) (Classic Tracks - CDEP4)
Toots & The Maytals - Scare Him (7") (Gorgon Records)
Toots & The Maytals - Careless Ethiopians (7") (Nyahman)
Toots & The Maytals - Do Good All The Time (7") (Nyahman)
Toots & The Maytals - Daddy (7") (Jaguar)
Desmond Dekker And The Aces, Toots And The Maytals - You Can Get It If You Really Want / Pressure Drop (7") (Beverley's Records)
Toots & The Maytals - Monkey Man / It Was Written (7") (D&F Records)
Toots & The Maytals - Prayer of David (7", Single) (Charm)
Toots & The Maytals - Happy Days (7", Single) (Righteous)
Toots & The Maytals - Happy Christmas / If You Act This Way (7", Single) (Jaguar)
Toots & The Maytals - One Family (7", Single) (Righteous)
Toots & The Maytals - Pressure Drop (7”) (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals - Have A Talk (7") (Black Noiz Music)
Toots & The Maytals / The Dynamic Sisters - We Are No Strangers (7") (Thunder Bolt)
Toots & The Maytals - Fool For You / Version (7", Single) (Allah Son Records)
Toots & The Maytals - More And More / Version (7", Single) (Allah Son Records)
Toots & The Maytals - Hard Road / Version (7", Single) (Allah Son Records)
Bob Marley / Toots & The Maytals - Classic Tracks (CD, EP) (Classic Tracks - CDEP 3C)
Toots & The Maytals - 54-46 Was My Number (Slow Cut) (7") (Beverley's Records)
Desmond Dekker & The Aces / Toots & The Maytals - You Can Get It If You Really Want / Sweet & Dandy (7") (Beverley's Records)
Instruments and sponsorships
Paul Douglas is an official artist of Sabian, one of the "big four" manufacturers of cymbals.
Favourite Sabian Cymbal: 16'' O Zone Evolution Crash, AAH 14'' Stage Hi Hats, HHX, 18'' HHX China
References
Jamaican drummers
1950 births
Living people
People from Saint Ann Parish
Toots and the Maytals members | [
"Earl “Paul” Douglas (born c. 1950) is a Jamaican Grammy Award-winning drummer and percussionist, best known for his work as the drummer, percussionist and bandleader of Toots and the Maytals.",
"His career spans more than five decades as one of reggae's most recorded drummers.",
"Music journalist and reggae historian David Katz wrote, “dependable drummer Paul Douglas played on countless reggae hits.\"",
"Douglas has worked with artists including Bob Marley and the Wailers, Bonnie Raitt, and Eric Gale.",
"Douglas has also toured with artists including The Rolling Stones, Willie Nelson, Dave Matthews Band, The Who, Eagles and Sheryl Crow.",
"Early life \nPaul Douglas was born in St. Ann, Jamaica.",
"His career as a professional musician began in 1965 at the age of 15.",
"Influences \nDouglas’ musical influences include Lloyd Knibb, Steve Gadd, Harvey Mason, Sonny Emory, Elvin Jones, William Kennedy, Carlos Santana, Bob Marley, John Coltrane, Sam Cooke, George Duke, Boris Gardiner, The Skatalites, Eric Gale, Leslie Butler, George Benson, Marvin Gaye, David Garibaldi, and David Sanborn.",
"Affiliated groups \n\nWhile Douglas has maintained an active career as a studio musician for reggae, jazz, and funk artists since 1965, he has also been a member of several notable musical groups.",
"Toots and the Maytals \n\nIn 1969 Douglas joined Toots and the Maytals as a founding member of the band as it is known today, which up to that time had consisted of a vocal trio.",
"Douglas has been the group's drummer, percussionist and bandleader from 1985 to the present day.",
"Excerpt from \"The Rise of Reggae and the influence of Toots and the Maytals\" by Matthew Sherman:\"...Reggae was born.",
"Toots (Toots Hibbert) heralded the new sound with the seminal, complex groove monster \"Do the Reggay\"...Toots could do no wrong recording for Leslie Kong.",
"With the consistent nucleus of musicians, the Beverley's All-Stars (Jackie Jackson, Winston Wright, Hux Brown, Rad Bryan, Paul Douglas and Winston Grennan) and the Maytals’ brilliant harmonizing...\"Reggae is listed in the dictionary as:reggae [reg-ey] (noun) - a style of Jamaican popular music blending blues, calypso, and rock-'n'-roll, characterized by a strong syncopated rhythm and lyrics of social protest.",
"Origin of reggae: Jamaican English, respelling of reggay (introduced in the song “Do the Reggay” (1968) by Frederick “Toots” Hibbert).Accompanied by Paul Douglas and Radcliffe \"Dougie\" Bryan in studio, Jackie Jackson explained the formation of the group in a radio interview for Kool 97 FM Jamaica:“We’re all original members of Toots and the Maytals band.",
"First it was Toots and the Maytals, three guys: Toots, Raleigh, and Jerry.",
"…And then they were signed to Island Records, Chris Blackwell.",
"And we were their recording band.",
"One day we were summoned to Chris’ house.",
"And he says, “Alright gentleman, I think it’s time.",
"Toots and the Maytals looks like it’s going to be a big thing”.",
"By this time he had already signed Bob (Marley).",
"So in his camp, Island Records, there was Toots and the Maytals / Bob Marley; we were talking about reggae is going international now.",
"We kept on meeting and he (Blackwell) decided that the backing band that back all of the songs, the recording band, should be the Maytals band.",
"So everything came under Toots and the Maytals.",
"So we became Maytals also.",
"And then we hit the road in 1975...we were the opening act for the Eagles, Linda Ronstadt, and Jackson Browne.",
"We were the opening act for The Who for about two weeks.”\n\nPaul Douglas, Jackie Jackson and Radcliffe ‘Dougie’ Bryan are recognized as founding members who, along with frontman Toots Hibbert, continue to perform in the group to the present day.",
"The first Toots and the Maytals album released and distributed by Chris Blackwell's Island Records was Funky Kingston.",
"Music critic Lester Bangs described the album in Stereo Review as “perfection, the most exciting and diversified set of reggae tunes by a single artist yet released.” As Chris Blackwell says, “The Maytals were unlike anything else...sensational, raw and dynamic.” Blackwell had a strong commitment to Toots and the Maytals, saying “I’ve known Toots longer than anybody – much longer than Bob (Marley).",
"Toots is one of the purest human beings I’ve met in my life, pure almost to a fault.”\n\nOn 1 October 1975, Toots and the Maytals were broadcast live on KMET-FM as they performed at The Roxy Theatre in Los Angeles.",
"This broadcast was re-mastered and released as an album entitled “Sailin’ On” via Klondike Records.",
"President Donald Trump was quoted as appreciating the reggae music of Toots and the Maytals when he said, “I heard the guest band, Toots & The Maytals, practising out on the set [of Saturday Night Live; Trump co-hosted an episode in April 2004].",
"They sounded terrific, and I went out to listen to them for a while.",
"My daughter Ivanka had told me how great they were, and she was right.",
"The music relaxed me, and surprisingly, I was not nervous.\"",
"In 2015, Vogue magazine listed the song “54-46 Was My Number” by Toots and the Maytals as one of their “15 Roots Reggae Songs You Should Know”; and in an interview with Patricia Chin of VP Records, Vogue listed the group as part of an abbreviated list of early “reggae royalty” that recorded at Studio 17 in Kingston, which included Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, Gregory Isaacs, Dennis Brown, Burning Spear, Toots and the Maytals, The Heptones, and Bunny Wailer.",
"In 2017, Toots and the Maytals became the second reggae-based group to ever perform at the Coachella festival, after Chronixx in 2016.",
"Bob Marley and the Wailers \n\nDouglas contributed to several of Bob Marley's albums, including Small Axe and Soul Shakedown Party which were released on the Beverley's label, and performed live with Bob Marley and the Wailers in the early 70s.",
"The Wailers worked with reggae producer Leslie Kong, who used his studio musicians called Beverley's All-Stars (Jackie Jackson, Paul Douglas, Gladstone Anderson, Winston Wright, Rad Bryan, Hux Brown) to record the songs that would be released as an album entitled “The Best of The Wailers”.",
"The tracks included “Soul Shakedown Party,” “Stop That Train,” “Caution,” “Go Tell It on the Mountain,” “Soon Come,” “Can’t You See,” “Soul Captives,” “Cheer Up,” “Back Out,” and “Do It Twice”.",
"Excerpt from an interview of Winston Grennan by Carter Van Pelt:\"...Chris Blackwell say, 'Yeah, Yeah, Yeah.",
"I give them the money to make this record.'",
"But at that time they was forming the band.",
"Bob (Marley]) came to me, figure it was me, Gladdy, Winston Wright, Jackie and Hux to be the band.",
"That was the band that Bob did really want, but those guys didn't want to get involved.",
"You know that the situation around Bob was pretty hectic...They turned it down.",
"So right away, I couldn't get involved, because I didn't want to leave the guys.",
"We was doing all the sessions.Robin Kenyatta came to Jamaica, we played for him.",
"Garland Jeffreys, Paul Simon, Peter, Paul and Mary we play for them.",
"The Rolling Stones came down we played for them.",
"We were the guys... we could read music.",
"If I leave, I feel it would be a bad vibes.",
"When Hugh Malcolm joined the group, he couldn't keep up, so they got rid of him.",
"A little later on a drummer came along name Paul Douglas, every so often we would bring him in, because I couldn't play on a session.",
"Paul was about the only guy, that these other guys would trust to really come and play amongst them.\"",
"“The Perfect Beat\" is a song on the album Eardrum from Talib Kweli that sampled a song from Bob Marley and the Wailers called, “Do It Twice”, which is a drum beat from Paul Douglas.",
"Lee \"Scratch\" Perry and Leslie Kong \nExcerpt from the book “People Funny Boy - The Genius Of Lee \"Scratch\" Perry by David Katz:\"On the instrumental front, Perry (Lee \"Scratch\" Perry) began more serious experimentation, exploring diverse influences and styles with a range of musicians.",
"...Perry also started working with Paul Douglas, an occasional Supersonics member and mainstay of Leslie Kong's productions.\"",
"Alton Ellis \nDouglas is credited as the drummer on Alton Ellis' \"Girl I've Got A Date\".",
"\"Girl I've Got A Date\" is recognized as one of the first songs to define the rocksteady genre.",
"Tommy McCook & The Supersonics \nDouglas was a member of Tommy McCook & The Supersonics from 1968 - 1969, during which time the group released three LP's.",
"The Boris Gardiner Happening \nBetween 1970 - 1973 Douglas was the drummer for The Boris Gardiner Happening, completing five LP's with the group.",
"The Boris Gardiner Happening recorded a version of \"Ain't No Sunshine\" in 1973 with Paul Douglas singing lead, and Boris Gardiner playing bass guitar, for the album Is What's Happening.",
"Leroy Sibbles \nDouglas worked as a bandleader for the Leroy Sibbles band.",
"John Holt, The Pioneers, Eddy Grant \nDouglas toured the UK with John Holt (singer) in 1974.",
"This was the first major reggae tour that was accompanied by a major orchestra, a 15-piece orchestra out of England.",
"The members of this tour included six veteran session musicians: Hux Brown (Guitar), Jackie Jackson (Bass), Paul Douglas (Drums), Rad Bryan (Guitar), Winston Wright (Organ), and Gladstone Anderson (Piano).",
"Douglas also joined and played with The Pioneers band which featured Eddy Grant from The Equals that same year in England.",
"Byron Lee and the Dragonaires \nIn 1975 Douglas joined Byron Lee and the Dragonaires as a session musician, and later became a band member, as the group's drummer on the Sparrow Dragon Again LP.",
"Touring \n\nDouglas has toured with many artists over the course of his career, including:\n Toots and the Maytals\n Jackson Browne\n Linda Ronstadt\n Eagles\n The Who\n The Rolling Stones\n Dave Matthews Band\n The J. Geils Band\n Carlos Santana\n The Roots\n Sheryl Crow\n James Blunt\n\nOn June 24, 2017 at the Glastonbury Festival, reggae group Toots and the Maytals were slotted for 17:30 with BBC Four scheduled to show highlights from their set.",
"When they did not show it was suspected they missed their time slot, and BBC broadcaster Mark Radcliffe apologized on their behalf stating, \"If you were expecting Toots and the Maytals – and, frankly, we all were – it seems like they were on Jamaican time or something because they didn't make it to the site on time.\"",
"The group credited with coining the term \"reggae\" in song was subsequently rescheduled by the Glastonbury Festival organizers giving them the midnight slot, with all other acts being shifted by one hour.",
"On July 29, 2017 Toots and The Maytals headlined the 35th anniversary of the WOMAD UK festival.",
"Studio work \n\nDouglas’ work as a session musician crosses several genres.",
"His talent on the drums earned him recognition and respect from producers\n\nExcerpt from an article on \"Clancy Eccles\":\"In the U.K. Trojan Records released Clancy (Eccles)’s productions...The finest musicians available were used, with the core of his regular session crew, The Dynamites, featuring the talents of Hux Brown (guitar), Clifton \"Jackie\" Jackson (bass), Gladstone Anderson (piano), Winston Wright (organ) and Paul Douglas (drums).\"",
"In addition to recordings completed as a member of affiliated acts, Douglas’ studio work includes sessions with:\n\n Trojan Records (Chalk Farm Studios London England)\n Beverley's All-Stars\n Federal Allstars\n Harry J Allstars\n Joe Gibbs Allstars\n The Upsetters\n Randy's\n Channel One Studios\n Derrick Harriot's Chariot\n Treasure Isle Records (Duke Reid)\n Prince Buster Allstars\n Bonnie Raitt\n The MG's\n Van McCoy\n Eddie Floyd\n Herbie Mann\n Cat Stevens (Dynamic Sounds Studio)\n\nIn an interview with Mikey Thompson on November 27, 2016 for Kool 97 FM, Jackie Jackson along with Paul Douglas and Radcliffe \"Dougie\" Bryan were asked about the many recordings they did together as the rhythm section for Treasure Isle Records, Beverley's Records, Channel One Studios and Federal Records.",
"In addition to work mentioned with Sonia Pottinger, Duke Reid, Lynn Taitt, Delroy Wilson, and Lee \"Scratch\" Perry, they were interviewed about working on the following songs:\n\n Bob Marley and the Wailers - “Nice Time”, “Hypocrites”, “Thank You Lord”, “Bus Dam Shut”, “Can’t You See” and “Small Axe”\n Phyllis Dillon - “Don’t Stay Away” and “Perfidia”\n The Melodians - “Little Nut Tree”, “Swing and Dine”, “Sweet Sensation”, and “Rivers of Babylon”\n U-Roy & The Melodians - “Version Galore”\n Bob Andy - “Fire Burning”\n Ken Boothe - “Everything I Own”, “Say You”, and “Freedom Street”\n The Gaylads - “It’s Hard To Confess” and “There’s A Fire”\n Hopeton Lewis - “Take It Easy”\n Winston Wright - “Stealing Vol.",
"II” from “Greater Jamaica (Moon Walk-Reggay)”\n Ernie Smith - “Duppy or Gunman”\n Desmond Dekker - “Israelites”\n Desmond Dekker and the Aces - “Intensified”\n Roy Shirley - “Hold Them”\n Errol Dunkley - “You’re Gonna Need Me”\n The Congos - “Fisherman”\n John Holt & The Paragons - “Only A Smile”, “Wear You To The Ball”, “Ali Baba”, “I’ve Got To Get Away”, and “You Mean The World To Me”\n Toots and the Maytals - “Monkey Man”, “Pomps & Pride”, “Scare Him” and “Pressure Drop”\n\nNotable televised performances \n\n 1990 VH1 New Visions World Beat hosted by Nile Rodgers \n 2001 Late Night with Conan O'Brien\n2004 The Tonight Show with Jay Leno featuring Bonnie Raitt & Toots and the Maytals\n2004 Saturday Night Live\n2004 Last Call with Carson Daly\n2004 Later... with Jools Holland\n2010 Late Night with Jimmy Fallon\n2018 The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon\n\nFilm \nIn 2011, Douglas was part of the documentary released by Director George Scott and Producer Nick De Grunwald called Reggae Got Soul: The Story of Toots and the Maytals which was featured on BBC Television.",
"Described as “The untold story of one of the most influential artists ever to come out of Jamaica”, it features appearances by Marcia Griffiths, Jimmy Cliff, Bonnie Raitt, Eric Clapton, Keith Richards, Willie Nelson, Anthony DeCurtis, Ziggy Marley, Chris Blackwell, Paolo Nutini, Sly Dunbar, and Robbie Shakespeare.",
"Awards and recognition \n\n1981 Grammy Award Nomination for Toots Live!",
"1989 Grammy Award Nomination for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Toots in Memphis\n1991 Grammy Award Nomination for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Toots & the Maytals – An Hour Live\n1997 Canadian Reggae Music Awards\n1998 Canadian Reggae Music Awards\n1998 Grammy Award Nomination for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Toots & the Maytals – Ska Father\n2004 Grammy Award Winner for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Toots & the Maytals - True Love\n2008 Grammy Award Nomination for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Toots & the Maytals – Light Your Light\n2013 Grammy Award Nomination for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Toots & The Maytals – Reggae Got Soul: Unplugged on Strawberry Hill\n 2020 Grammy Award Winner for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Got To Be Tough \n 2021 Named one of Drummerworld's 'Top 500 Drummers'\n\nInterviews \nIn an interview with Batterie Magazine for their 2017 September/October edition, Douglas was asked about his work as the main drummer and musical director for Toots and the Maytals, in addition to being called upon by artists and producers such as Bob Marley, Lee Scratch Perry, Eric Gale, Ken Boothe, The Congos and Delroy Wilson.",
"In the interview, Douglas explains one of his heroes to be Lloyd Knibb of The Skatalites, as well as being influenced my musicians such as George Benson, Carlos Santana, John Coltrane, Sam Cooke, and David Sanborn.",
"On Sept. 10, 2021 Paul Douglas was featured on an episode of The 212 Podcast.",
"Museums and expositions \nFrom April 2017 to August 2017, Douglas is part of the Exposition Jamaica Jamaica !",
"at the Philharmonie de Paris in France.",
"Douglas is featured on the poster displayed at the exposition showing the early formation of Bob Marley & The Wailers on the Tuff Gong record label, and he is additionally part of the exposition as a member of Toots and the Maytals for their importance in the development of reggae music.",
"Discography \nPaul Douglas is credited on over 250 works.",
"In 2021 he released a full-length solo album titled \"Jazz Mi Reggae\".",
"Toots & The Maytals (1974) Time Tough (Jaguar)\n Toots & The Maytals (1974) I Can't Believe / 5446 Instrumental (Starapple)\n Toots & The Maytals (1974) Sailing On / If You Act This Way (7\") (Dragon)\n Toots & The Maytals (1974) You Don't Love Me (So Bad) (7\", Single) (Jaguar)\n Bob Andy (1974) Fire Burning\n Fr.",
"Richard HoLung, Harrison & Friends (1974) Letters Job To John\n Toots & The Maytals (1975) Reggae's Got Soul (Jaguar)\n Susan Cadogan (1975) Hurts So Good\n Horace Forbes (1975) Impossible<\n Faith D'Aguilar (1975) Jamaica\n Eric Gale (1975) Negril\n Pluto Shervington (1975) Pluto\n Byron Lee And The Dragonaires & Mighty Sparrow (1975) Sparrow Dragon Again\n Johnny Nash (1975) Tears On My Pillow\n Ken Boothe (1976) Blood Brothers\n Pluto Shervington (1976) Dat\n R.D.",
"(Island Records)\n Toots & The Maytals (1980) Chatty, Chatty (Island Records)\n Toots & The Maytals (1980) Live: Monkey Man / Hallelujah (7\") (Island Records)\n Toots & The Maytals (1980) Chatty, Chatty (7\", Single) (Island Records)\n Toots & The Maytals (1980) Toots “Live,” (Island)\n Hearbert Lee (1980) Love Songs Vol.",
"1\n Bobby Stringer (1980) Reggae Love Songs\n Ossie Scott (1980) Many Moods Of Ossie Scott\n Toots & The Maytals (1981) I Can See Clearly Now (Island Records)\n Toots & The Maytals (1981) Beautiful Woman (Island Records)\n Toots & The Maytals (1981) Papa D / You Never Know (Louv)\n Toots & The Maytals (1981) Beautiful Woman / Show Me The Way (12\") (Island Records)\n Toots & The Maytals (1981) Papa Dee Mama Dear / Dilly Dally (7\", Single) (Island Records)\n Toots & The Maytals (1981) His Songs Live On (7\") (Louv)\n Toots & the Maytals (1981) Knock Out!",
"The Maytals (1993) Bla.",
"Bla.",
"Bla.",
"Multiple Artists (1993) Kingston Town: 18 Reggae Hits\n Multiple Artists (1993) The Story of Jamaican Music: Tougher Than Tough\n Toots & The Maytals (1995) The Collection (Spectrum)\n Clancy Eccles (1996) Joshua's Rod of Correction\n King Stitt (1996) Reggae Fire Beat\n The Dynamites (1996) The Wild Reggae Bunch\n Toots & The Maytals (1996) Time Tough: The Anthology (Island)\n Toots & The Maytals (1996) Monkey Man ((Compilation) (House Of Reggae)\n Toots & The Maytals (1997) Recoup, (Alia Son)\n Multiple Artists (1997) Fire On The Mountain: Reggae Celebrates The Grateful Dead Vol.",
"3\n Clancy Eccles (2001) Reggae Revue at the Ward Theatre 1969-1970\n (2001) The Reggae Box\n Toots & The Maytals / L.M.S.",
"(Island Records)\n Toots & The Maytals (2012) 54 - 46 (Beverley's Records)\n Delroy Wilson / Toots & The Maytals (2012) Gave You My Love / One Eye Enos (7”) (Beverley's Records)\n Toots & The Maytals (2012) Unplugged On Strawberry Hill\n Toots & The Maytals (2014) Sunny (7\", Single) (Notable Records, Measurable Music)\n Toots & The Maytals (2020) Got to Be Tough (Trojan Jamaica/BMG)\n Paul Douglas (2021) Jazz Mi Reggae\n Priscilla Rollins (197X) I Love You\n Tito Simon (197X) The Heat Is On\n Demo Cates (197X) Precious Love\n Milton Douglas (198X) Can't Trust No One\n George Allison (198X) Exclusive\n Marie Bowie & K.C.",
"Favourite Sabian Cymbal: 16'' O Zone Evolution Crash, AAH 14'' Stage Hi Hats, HHX, 18'' HHX China\n\nReferences \n\nJamaican drummers\n1950 births\nLiving people\nPeople from Saint Ann Parish\nToots and the Maytals members"
] | [
"Earl \"Paul\" Douglas is best known for his work as the drummer, percussionist and leader of the band Toots and the Maytals.",
"He is one of the most recorded drummers in the world.",
"Paul Douglas was a drummer who played on many reggae hits.",
"Bonnie Raitt is one of the artists Douglas has worked with.",
"The Rolling Stones, Willie Nelson, Dave Matthews Band, The Who, Eagles and Sheryl Crow have all toured with Douglas.",
"Paul Douglas was born in Jamaica.",
"He started playing music at the age of 15.",
"Some of the musical influences include Lloyd Knibb, Steve Gadd, Harvey Mason, Sonny Emory, Elvin Jones, William Kennedy, Carlos Santana, Bob Marley and George Duke.",
"Since 1965, Douglas has been a member of several notable musical groups.",
"In 1969 Douglas joined Toots and the Maytals as a founding member of the band, which up to that time had consisted of a vocal trio.",
"From 1985 to the present day, Douglas was the group's drummer, percussionist and bandleader.",
"Matthew Sherman wrote \"The Rise of Reggae and the Influence of Toots and the Maytals\".",
"The new sound was heralded by Toots with the seminal, complex grooves monster \"Do the Reggay\".",
"Reggae is listed in the dictionary as:reggae, with the consistent nucleus of musicians, the Beverley's All-Stars and the Maytals.",
"The origin of the group was explained in a radio by Paul Douglas and Dougie Bryan.",
"Toots, Raleigh, and Jerry were part of the Maytals.",
"They were signed to Island Records.",
"We were the recording band.",
"Chris summoned us to his house.",
"He said, \"Alright gentleman, I think it's time.\"",
"It looks like Toots and the Maytals will be a big thing.",
"He had already signed Bob.",
"In his camp, Island Records, there were Toots and the Maytals and Bob Marley.",
"Blackwell decided that the Maytals band should be the backing band for the recording band.",
"Everything came under Toots and the Maytals.",
"We became Maytals as well.",
"We were the opening act for the Eagles, Linda Ronstadt, and Jackson Browne.",
"We were the opening act for The Who for about two weeks.",
"Funky Kingston was the first Toots and the Maytals album to be released.",
"The Maytals were described as the most exciting and diversified set of reggae tunes by a single artist yet released.",
"On 1 October 1975, Toots and the Maytals were broadcast live on KMET-FM as they performed at The Roxy Theatre in Los Angeles.",
"This broadcast was re-mastered and released as an album.",
"Trump co-hosted an episode of Saturday Night Live with Toots and the Maytals in 2004, and was quoted as saying that he appreciated the band's music.",
"I listened to them for a while and they sounded great.",
"My daughter told me that they were great.",
"I was not nervous because of the music.",
"In 2015, Vogue magazine listed the song \"54-46 Was My Number\" by Toots and the Maytals as one of their \"15 Roots Reggae Songs You Should Know\", and in an interview with VP Records, Vogue listed the group as part of an abbreviated list of early \"",
"The second group to ever perform at the festival was Toots and the Maytals.",
"Small Axe and Soul Shakedown Party, which were released on the Beverley's label, were performed live with Bob Marley and the Wailers in the early 70s.",
"The songs that would be released as an album entitled \"The Best of The\" were recorded by the studio musicians called \"Beverley's All-Stars.\"",
"The tracks included \"Stop That Train\", \"Caution\", \"Go Tell It on the Mountain\", \"Soon Come\", \"Can't You See\", and \"Do It Twice\".",
"Chris Blackwell said, \"Yeah, Yeah, Yeah.\"",
"I give them money to make a record.",
"They were forming the band at that time.",
"I figured it was me, Gladdy,Winston Wright,Jackie and Hux in the band.",
"Bob wanted that band, but those guys didn't want to be involved.",
"The situation around Bob was very busy and they turned it down.",
"I couldn't get involved because I didn't want to leave the guys.",
"We played for him when he came to Jamaica.",
"Garland Jeffreys, Paul Simon, Peter, Paul and Mary play for them.",
"We played for the Rolling Stones.",
"We could listen to music.",
"I feel it would be bad if I left.",
"They got rid of Hugh Malcolm because he couldn't keep up.",
"Every so often we would bring Paul Douglas in, because I couldn't play on a session.",
"The other guys would trust Paul to come and play with them.",
"The song \"The Perfect Beat\" is a song on the album Eardrum that has a drum beat from Paul Douglas.",
"On the instrumental front, Lee \"Scratch\" Perry began more serious experimentation, exploring diverse influences and styles with a range of musicians.",
"Paul Douglas is an occasional member of the Supersonics and a mainstay of Leslie Kong's productions.",
"The drummer on \"Girl I've Got A Date\" is named Alton Ellis Douglas.",
"One of the first songs to define the rocksteady genre was \"Girl I've Got A Date\".",
"Tommy McCook was a member of Tommy McCook & The Supersonics from 1968 to 1969 and the group released threeLP's.",
"Douglas was the drummer for The Boris Gardiner Happening from 1970 to 1973.",
"The Boris Gardiner Happening recorded a version of \"Ain't No Sunshine\" in 1973, with Paul Douglas singing lead and Boris Gardiner playing bass.",
"The band was led by Leroy Sibbles Douglas.",
"John Holt and Eddy Grant Douglas toured the UK in 1974.",
"This was the first major tour that was accompanied by an orchestra.",
"Six veteran session musicians made up the members of this tour.",
"The Equals' Eddy Grant was a member of The Pioneers band that played in England.",
"Douglas joined the group as a session musician and later became the group's drummer on the Sparrow Dragon AgainLP.",
"Over the course of his career, Douglas has toured with many artists, including: Toots and the Maytals Jackson Browne Linda Ronstadt Eagles Dave Matthews Band The J. Geils Band Carlos Santana The Roots",
"If you were expecting Toots and the Maytals, it seems like they were on Jamaican time because they didn't show it.",
"The midnight slot at the festival was given to the group credited with coining the term \"reggae\" in song.",
"The 35th anniversary of the WOMAD UK festival was celebrated by Toots and The Maytals.",
"Douglas is a session musician and crosses several genres.",
"His talent on the drums earned him recognition and respect from producers.",
"In addition to recordings completed as a member of affiliated acts, Douglas' studio work includes sessions with:",
"They were interviewed about working on the following songs: \"Nice Time\", \"Hypocrites\", and \"Thank You Lord\".",
"I from \"Greater Jamaica (Moon Walk-Reggay)\" is \"Duppy or Gunman\" by Errol Dunkley.",
"It is described as the untold story of one of the most influential artists ever to come out of Jamaica.",
"There were awards and recognition for Toots Live!",
"The Toots and the Maytals album was nominated for aGrammy Award for Best Reggae Album of the Year.",
"In the interview, Douglas explains that Lloyd Knibb of The Skatalites is one of his heroes, as well as being influenced by other musicians such as George Benson, Carlos Santana, and David Sanborn.",
"Paul Douglas was featured on a show.",
"Douglas is part of the exposition Jamaica Jamaica from April to August.",
"The Philharmonie de Paris is in France.",
"At the exposition, Douglas is featured on a poster showing the early formation of Bob Marley & The Wailers on the Tuff Gong record label, and he is also part of the exposition as a member of Toots and the Maytals.",
"Discography Paul Douglas has over 250 works.",
"He released a full-length solo album in 2021.",
"If You Act This Way (7\") is a song by Toots & The Maytals.",
"Richard HoLung, Harrison & Friends wrote \"Letters Job To John Toots & The Maytals\".",
"Live: Monkey Man / Hallelujah (7\") (Island Records) Toots & The Maytals.",
"I Can See Clearly Now is a song by Ossie Scott and the Maytals.",
"The Maytals was a movie.",
"Bla.",
"Bla.",
"The Story of Jamaican Music: Tougher Than Tough Toots & The Maytals is a collection of multiple artists.",
"The Reggae Box Toots & The Maytals was written by Clancy Eccles.",
"Delroy Wilson / Toots & The Maytals had a song called Gave You My Love.",
"The best Sabian Cymbal is 16'' O Zone Evolution Crash, AAH 14'' Stage Hi Hats, HHX, and China References."
] | Earl “<mask><mask> (born c. 1950) is a Jamaican Grammy Award-winning drummer and percussionist, best known for his work as the drummer, percussionist and bandleader of Toots and the Maytals. His career spans more than five decades as one of reggae's most recorded drummers. Music journalist and reggae historian David Katz wrote, “dependable drummer <mask> played on countless reggae hits." <mask> has worked with artists including Bob Marley and the Wailers, Bonnie Raitt, and Eric Gale. <mask> has also toured with artists including The Rolling Stones, Willie Nelson, Dave Matthews Band, The Who, Eagles and Sheryl Crow. Early life
<mask> was born in St. Ann, Jamaica. His career as a professional musician began in 1965 at the age of 15.Influences
<mask>’ musical influences include Lloyd Knibb, Steve Gadd, Harvey Mason, Sonny Emory, Elvin Jones, William Kennedy, Carlos Santana, Bob Marley, John Coltrane, Sam Cooke, George Duke, Boris Gardiner, The Skatalites, Eric Gale, Leslie Butler, George Benson, Marvin Gaye, David Garibaldi, and David Sanborn. Affiliated groups
While <mask> has maintained an active career as a studio musician for reggae, jazz, and funk artists since 1965, he has also been a member of several notable musical groups. Toots and the Maytals
In 1969 <mask> joined Toots and the Maytals as a founding member of the band as it is known today, which up to that time had consisted of a vocal trio. <mask> has been the group's drummer, percussionist and bandleader from 1985 to the present day. Excerpt from "The Rise of Reggae and the influence of Toots and the Maytals" by Matthew Sherman:"...Reggae was born. Toots (Toots Hibbert) heralded the new sound with the seminal, complex groove monster "Do the Reggay"...Toots could do no wrong recording for Leslie Kong. With the consistent nucleus of musicians, the Beverley's All-Stars (Jackie Jackson, Winston Wright, Hux Brown, Rad Bryan, <mask> and Winston Grennan) and the Maytals’ brilliant harmonizing..."Reggae is listed in the dictionary as:reggae [reg-ey] (noun) - a style of Jamaican popular music blending blues, calypso, and rock-'n'-roll, characterized by a strong syncopated rhythm and lyrics of social protest.Origin of reggae: Jamaican English, respelling of reggay (introduced in the song “Do the Reggay” (1968) by Frederick “Toots” Hibbert).Accompanied by <mask> and Radcliffe "Dougie" Bryan in studio, Jackie Jackson explained the formation of the group in a radio interview for Kool 97 FM Jamaica:“We’re all original members of Toots and the Maytals band. First it was Toots and the Maytals, three guys: Toots, Raleigh, and Jerry. …And then they were signed to Island Records, Chris Blackwell. And we were their recording band. One day we were summoned to Chris’ house. And he says, “Alright gentleman, I think it’s time. Toots and the Maytals looks like it’s going to be a big thing”.By this time he had already signed Bob (Marley). So in his camp, Island Records, there was Toots and the Maytals / Bob Marley; we were talking about reggae is going international now. We kept on meeting and he (Blackwell) decided that the backing band that back all of the songs, the recording band, should be the Maytals band. So everything came under Toots and the Maytals. So we became Maytals also. And then we hit the road in 1975...we were the opening act for the Eagles, Linda Ronstadt, and Jackson Browne. We were the opening act for The Who for about two weeks.”
<mask>, Jackie Jackson and Radcliffe ‘Dougie’ Bryan are recognized as founding members who, along with frontman Toots Hibbert, continue to perform in the group to the present day.The first Toots and the Maytals album released and distributed by Chris Blackwell's Island Records was Funky Kingston. Music critic Lester Bangs described the album in Stereo Review as “perfection, the most exciting and diversified set of reggae tunes by a single artist yet released.” As Chris Blackwell says, “The Maytals were unlike anything else...sensational, raw and dynamic.” Blackwell had a strong commitment to Toots and the Maytals, saying “I’ve known Toots longer than anybody – much longer than Bob (Marley). Toots is one of the purest human beings I’ve met in my life, pure almost to a fault.”
On 1 October 1975, Toots and the Maytals were broadcast live on KMET-FM as they performed at The Roxy Theatre in Los Angeles. This broadcast was re-mastered and released as an album entitled “Sailin’ On” via Klondike Records. President Donald Trump was quoted as appreciating the reggae music of Toots and the Maytals when he said, “I heard the guest band, Toots & The Maytals, practising out on the set [of Saturday Night Live; Trump co-hosted an episode in April 2004]. They sounded terrific, and I went out to listen to them for a while. My daughter Ivanka had told me how great they were, and she was right.The music relaxed me, and surprisingly, I was not nervous." In 2015, Vogue magazine listed the song “54-46 Was My Number” by Toots and the Maytals as one of their “15 Roots Reggae Songs You Should Know”; and in an interview with Patricia Chin of VP Records, Vogue listed the group as part of an abbreviated list of early “reggae royalty” that recorded at Studio 17 in Kingston, which included Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, Gregory Isaacs, Dennis Brown, Burning Spear, Toots and the Maytals, The Heptones, and Bunny Wailer. In 2017, Toots and the Maytals became the second reggae-based group to ever perform at the Coachella festival, after Chronixx in 2016. Bob Marley and the Wailers
<mask> contributed to several of Bob Marley's albums, including Small Axe and Soul Shakedown Party which were released on the Beverley's label, and performed live with Bob Marley and the Wailers in the early 70s. The Wailers worked with reggae producer Leslie Kong, who used his studio musicians called Beverley's All-Stars (Jackie Jackson, <mask>, Gladstone Anderson, Winston Wright, Rad Bryan, Hux Brown) to record the songs that would be released as an album entitled “The Best of The Wailers”. The tracks included “Soul Shakedown Party,” “Stop That Train,” “Caution,” “Go Tell It on the Mountain,” “Soon Come,” “Can’t You See,” “Soul Captives,” “Cheer Up,” “Back Out,” and “Do It Twice”. Excerpt from an interview of Winston Grennan by Carter Van Pelt:"...Chris Blackwell say, 'Yeah, Yeah, Yeah.I give them the money to make this record.' But at that time they was forming the band. Bob (Marley]) came to me, figure it was me, Gladdy, Winston Wright, Jackie and Hux to be the band. That was the band that Bob did really want, but those guys didn't want to get involved. You know that the situation around Bob was pretty hectic...They turned it down. So right away, I couldn't get involved, because I didn't want to leave the guys. We was doing all the sessions.Robin Kenyatta came to Jamaica, we played for him.Garland Jeffreys, <mask>, Peter, <mask> and Mary we play for them. The Rolling Stones came down we played for them. We were the guys... we could read music. If I leave, I feel it would be a bad vibes. When Hugh Malcolm joined the group, he couldn't keep up, so they got rid of him. A little later on a drummer came along name <mask>, every so often we would bring him in, because I couldn't play on a session. <mask> was about the only guy, that these other guys would trust to really come and play amongst them."“The Perfect Beat" is a song on the album Eardrum from Talib Kweli that sampled a song from Bob Marley and the Wailers called, “Do It Twice”, which is a drum beat from <mask>. Lee "Scratch" Perry and Leslie Kong
Excerpt from the book “People Funny Boy - The Genius Of Lee "Scratch" Perry by David Katz:"On the instrumental front, Perry (Lee "Scratch" Perry) began more serious experimentation, exploring diverse influences and styles with a range of musicians. ...Perry also started working with <mask>, an occasional Supersonics member and mainstay of Leslie Kong's productions." Alton Ellis
<mask> is credited as the drummer on Alton Ellis' "Girl I've Got A Date". "Girl I've Got A Date" is recognized as one of the first songs to define the rocksteady genre. Tommy McCook & The Supersonics
<mask> was a member of Tommy McCook & The Supersonics from 1968 - 1969, during which time the group released three LP's. The Boris Gardiner Happening
Between 1970 - 1973 <mask> was the drummer for The Boris Gardiner Happening, completing five LP's with the group.The Boris Gardiner Happening recorded a version of "Ain't No Sunshine" in 1973 with <mask> singing lead, and Boris Gardiner playing bass guitar, for the album Is What's Happening. Leroy Sibbles
<mask> worked as a bandleader for the Leroy Sibbles band. John Holt, The Pioneers, Eddy Grant
<mask> toured the UK with John Holt (singer) in 1974. This was the first major reggae tour that was accompanied by a major orchestra, a 15-piece orchestra out of England. The members of this tour included six veteran session musicians: Hux Brown (Guitar), Jackie Jackson (Bass), <mask> (Drums), Rad Bryan (Guitar), Winston Wright (Organ), and Gladstone Anderson (Piano). <mask> also joined and played with The Pioneers band which featured Eddy Grant from The Equals that same year in England. Byron Lee and the Dragonaires
In 1975 <mask> joined Byron Lee and the Dragonaires as a session musician, and later became a band member, as the group's drummer on the Sparrow Dragon Again LP.Touring
<mask> has toured with many artists over the course of his career, including:
Toots and the Maytals
Jackson Browne
Linda Ronstadt
Eagles
The Who
The Rolling Stones
Dave Matthews Band
The J. Geils Band
Carlos Santana
The Roots
Sheryl Crow
James Blunt
On June 24, 2017 at the Glastonbury Festival, reggae group Toots and the Maytals were slotted for 17:30 with BBC Four scheduled to show highlights from their set. When they did not show it was suspected they missed their time slot, and BBC broadcaster Mark Radcliffe apologized on their behalf stating, "If you were expecting Toots and the Maytals – and, frankly, we all were – it seems like they were on Jamaican time or something because they didn't make it to the site on time." The group credited with coining the term "reggae" in song was subsequently rescheduled by the Glastonbury Festival organizers giving them the midnight slot, with all other acts being shifted by one hour. On July 29, 2017 Toots and The Maytals headlined the 35th anniversary of the WOMAD UK festival. Studio work
<mask>’ work as a session musician crosses several genres. His talent on the drums earned him recognition and respect from producers
Excerpt from an article on "Clancy Eccles":"In the U.K. Trojan Records released Clancy (Eccles)’s productions...The finest musicians available were used, with the core of his regular session crew, The Dynamites, featuring the talents of Hux Brown (guitar), Clifton "Jackie" Jackson (bass), Gladstone Anderson (piano), Winston Wright (organ) and <mask> (drums)." In addition to recordings completed as a member of affiliated acts, <mask>’ studio work includes sessions with:
Trojan Records (Chalk Farm Studios London England)
Beverley's All-Stars
Federal Allstars
Harry J Allstars
Joe Gibbs Allstars
The Upsetters
Randy's
Channel One Studios
Derrick Harriot's Chariot
Treasure Isle Records (Duke Reid)
Prince Buster Allstars
Bonnie Raitt
The MG's
Van McCoy
Eddie Floyd
Herbie Mann
Cat Stevens (Dynamic Sounds Studio)
In an interview with Mikey Thompson on November 27, 2016 for Kool 97 FM, Jackie Jackson along with <mask> Douglas and Radcliffe "Dougie" Bryan were asked about the many recordings they did together as the rhythm section for Treasure Isle Records, Beverley's Records, Channel One Studios and Federal Records.In addition to work mentioned with Sonia Pottinger, Duke Reid, Lynn Taitt, Delroy Wilson, and Lee "Scratch" Perry, they were interviewed about working on the following songs:
Bob Marley and the Wailers - “Nice Time”, “Hypocrites”, “Thank You Lord”, “Bus Dam Shut”, “Can’t You See” and “Small Axe”
Phyllis Dillon - “Don’t Stay Away” and “Perfidia”
The Melodians - “Little Nut Tree”, “Swing and Dine”, “Sweet Sensation”, and “Rivers of Babylon”
U-Roy & The Melodians - “Version Galore”
Bob Andy - “Fire Burning”
Ken Boothe - “Everything I Own”, “Say You”, and “Freedom Street”
The Gaylads - “It’s Hard To Confess” and “There’s A Fire”
Hopeton Lewis - “Take It Easy”
Winston Wright - “Stealing Vol. II” from “Greater Jamaica (Moon Walk-Reggay)”
Ernie Smith - “Duppy or Gunman”
Desmond Dekker - “Israelites”
Desmond Dekker and the Aces - “Intensified”
Roy Shirley - “Hold Them”
Errol Dunkley - “You’re Gonna Need Me”
The Congos - “Fisherman”
John Holt & The Paragons - “Only A Smile”, “Wear You To The Ball”, “Ali Baba”, “I’ve Got To Get Away”, and “You Mean The World To Me”
Toots and the Maytals - “Monkey Man”, “Pomps & Pride”, “Scare Him” and “Pressure Drop”
Notable televised performances
1990 VH1 New Visions World Beat hosted by Nile Rodgers
2001 Late Night with Conan O'Brien
2004 The Tonight Show with Jay Leno featuring Bonnie Raitt & Toots and the Maytals
2004 Saturday Night Live
2004 Last Call with Carson Daly
2004 Later... with Jools Holland
2010 Late Night with Jimmy Fallon
2018 The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon
Film
In 2011, <mask> was part of the documentary released by Director George Scott and Producer Nick De Grunwald called Reggae Got Soul: The Story of Toots and the Maytals which was featured on BBC Television. Described as “The untold story of one of the most influential artists ever to come out of Jamaica”, it features appearances by Marcia Griffiths, Jimmy Cliff, Bonnie Raitt, Eric Clapton, Keith Richards, Willie Nelson, Anthony DeCurtis, Ziggy Marley, Chris Blackwell, Paolo Nutini, Sly Dunbar, and Robbie Shakespeare. Awards and recognition
1981 Grammy Award Nomination for Toots Live! 1989 Grammy Award Nomination for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Toots in Memphis
1991 Grammy Award Nomination for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Toots & the Maytals – An Hour Live
1997 Canadian Reggae Music Awards
1998 Canadian Reggae Music Awards
1998 Grammy Award Nomination for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Toots & the Maytals – Ska Father
2004 Grammy Award Winner for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Toots & the Maytals - True Love
2008 Grammy Award Nomination for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Toots & the Maytals – Light Your Light
2013 Grammy Award Nomination for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Toots & The Maytals – Reggae Got Soul: Unplugged on Strawberry Hill
2020 Grammy Award Winner for Best Reggae Album of the Year: Got To Be Tough
2021 Named one of Drummerworld's 'Top 500 Drummers'
Interviews
In an interview with Batterie Magazine for their 2017 September/October edition, Douglas was asked about his work as the main drummer and musical director for Toots and the Maytals, in addition to being called upon by artists and producers such as Bob Marley, Lee Scratch Perry, Eric Gale, Ken Boothe, The Congos and Delroy Wilson. In the interview, Douglas explains one of his heroes to be Lloyd Knibb of The Skatalites, as well as being influenced my musicians such as George Benson, Carlos Santana, John Coltrane, Sam Cooke, and David Sanborn. On Sept. 10, 2021 Paul Douglas was featured on an episode of The 212 Podcast.Museums and expositions
From April 2017 to August 2017, <mask> is part of the Exposition Jamaica Jamaica ! at the Philharmonie de Paris in France. <mask> is featured on the poster displayed at the exposition showing the early formation of Bob Marley & The Wailers on the Tuff Gong record label, and he is additionally part of the exposition as a member of Toots and the Maytals for their importance in the development of reggae music. Discography
<mask> is credited on over 250 works. In 2021 he released a full-length solo album titled "Jazz Mi Reggae". Toots & The Maytals (1974) Time Tough (Jaguar)
Toots & The Maytals (1974) I Can't Believe / 5446 Instrumental (Starapple)
Toots & The Maytals (1974) Sailing On / If You Act This Way (7") (Dragon)
Toots & The Maytals (1974) You Don't Love Me (So Bad) (7", Single) (Jaguar)
Bob Andy (1974) Fire Burning
Fr. Richard HoLung, Harrison & Friends (1974) Letters Job To John
Toots & The Maytals (1975) Reggae's Got Soul (Jaguar)
Susan Cadogan (1975) Hurts So Good
Horace Forbes (1975) Impossible<
Faith D'Aguilar (1975) Jamaica
Eric Gale (1975) Negril
Pluto Shervington (1975) Pluto
Byron Lee And The Dragonaires & Mighty Sparrow (1975) Sparrow Dragon Again
Johnny Nash (1975) Tears On My Pillow
Ken Boothe (1976) Blood Brothers
Pluto Shervington (1976) Dat
R.D.(Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1980) Chatty, Chatty (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1980) Live: Monkey Man / Hallelujah (7") (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1980) Chatty, Chatty (7", Single) (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1980) Toots “Live,” (Island)
Hearbert Lee (1980) Love Songs Vol. 1
Bobby Stringer (1980) Reggae Love Songs
Ossie Scott (1980) Many Moods Of Ossie Scott
Toots & The Maytals (1981) I Can See Clearly Now (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1981) Beautiful Woman (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1981) Papa D / You Never Know (Louv)
Toots & The Maytals (1981) Beautiful Woman / Show Me The Way (12") (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1981) Papa Dee Mama Dear / Dilly Dally (7", Single) (Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (1981) His Songs Live On (7") (Louv)
Toots & the Maytals (1981) Knock Out! The Maytals (1993) Bla. Bla. Bla. Multiple Artists (1993) Kingston Town: 18 Reggae Hits
Multiple Artists (1993) The Story of Jamaican Music: Tougher Than Tough
Toots & The Maytals (1995) The Collection (Spectrum)
Clancy Eccles (1996) Joshua's Rod of Correction
King Stitt (1996) Reggae Fire Beat
The Dynamites (1996) The Wild Reggae Bunch
Toots & The Maytals (1996) Time Tough: The Anthology (Island)
Toots & The Maytals (1996) Monkey Man ((Compilation) (House Of Reggae)
Toots & The Maytals (1997) Recoup, (Alia Son)
Multiple Artists (1997) Fire On The Mountain: Reggae Celebrates The Grateful Dead Vol. 3
Clancy Eccles (2001) Reggae Revue at the Ward Theatre 1969-1970
(2001) The Reggae Box
Toots & The Maytals / L.M.S.(Island Records)
Toots & The Maytals (2012) 54 - 46 (Beverley's Records)
Delroy Wilson / Toots & The Maytals (2012) Gave You My Love / One Eye Enos (7”) (Beverley's Records)
Toots & The Maytals (2012) Unplugged On Strawberry Hill
Toots & The Maytals (2014) Sunny (7", Single) (Notable Records, Measurable Music)
Toots & The Maytals (2020) Got to Be Tough (Trojan Jamaica/BMG)
<mask> (2021) Jazz Mi Reggae
Priscilla Rollins (197X) I Love You
Tito Simon (197X) The Heat Is On
Demo Cates (197X) Precious Love
<mask> (198X) Can't Trust No One
George Allison (198X) Exclusive
Marie Bowie & K.C. Favourite Sabian Cymbal: 16'' O Zone Evolution Crash, AAH 14'' Stage Hi Hats, HHX, 18'' HHX China
References
Jamaican drummers
1950 births
Living people
People from Saint Ann Parish
Toots and the Maytals members | [
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] | Earl "<mask><mask> is best known for his work as the drummer, percussionist and leader of the band Toots and the Maytals. He is one of the most recorded drummers in the world. <mask> was a drummer who played on many reggae hits. Bonnie Raitt is one of the artists <mask> has worked with. The Rolling Stones, Willie Nelson, Dave Matthews Band, The Who, Eagles and Sheryl Crow have all toured with <mask>. <mask> was born in Jamaica. He started playing music at the age of 15.Some of the musical influences include Lloyd Knibb, Steve Gadd, Harvey Mason, Sonny Emory, Elvin Jones, William Kennedy, Carlos Santana, Bob Marley and George Duke. Since 1965, <mask> has been a member of several notable musical groups. In 1969 <mask> joined Toots and the Maytals as a founding member of the band, which up to that time had consisted of a vocal trio. From 1985 to the present day, <mask> was the group's drummer, percussionist and bandleader. Matthew Sherman wrote "The Rise of Reggae and the Influence of Toots and the Maytals". The new sound was heralded by Toots with the seminal, complex grooves monster "Do the Reggay". Reggae is listed in the dictionary as:reggae, with the consistent nucleus of musicians, the Beverley's All-Stars and the Maytals.The origin of the group was explained in a radio by <mask> and Dougie Bryan. Toots, Raleigh, and Jerry were part of the Maytals. They were signed to Island Records. We were the recording band. Chris summoned us to his house. He said, "Alright gentleman, I think it's time." It looks like Toots and the Maytals will be a big thing.He had already signed Bob. In his camp, Island Records, there were Toots and the Maytals and Bob Marley. Blackwell decided that the Maytals band should be the backing band for the recording band. Everything came under Toots and the Maytals. We became Maytals as well. We were the opening act for the Eagles, Linda Ronstadt, and Jackson Browne. We were the opening act for The Who for about two weeks.Funky Kingston was the first Toots and the Maytals album to be released. The Maytals were described as the most exciting and diversified set of reggae tunes by a single artist yet released. On 1 October 1975, Toots and the Maytals were broadcast live on KMET-FM as they performed at The Roxy Theatre in Los Angeles. This broadcast was re-mastered and released as an album. Trump co-hosted an episode of Saturday Night Live with Toots and the Maytals in 2004, and was quoted as saying that he appreciated the band's music. I listened to them for a while and they sounded great. My daughter told me that they were great.I was not nervous because of the music. In 2015, Vogue magazine listed the song "54-46 Was My Number" by Toots and the Maytals as one of their "15 Roots Reggae Songs You Should Know", and in an interview with VP Records, Vogue listed the group as part of an abbreviated list of early " The second group to ever perform at the festival was Toots and the Maytals. Small Axe and Soul Shakedown Party, which were released on the Beverley's label, were performed live with Bob Marley and the Wailers in the early 70s. The songs that would be released as an album entitled "The Best of The" were recorded by the studio musicians called "Beverley's All-Stars." The tracks included "Stop That Train", "Caution", "Go Tell It on the Mountain", "Soon Come", "Can't You See", and "Do It Twice". Chris Blackwell said, "Yeah, Yeah, Yeah."I give them money to make a record. They were forming the band at that time. I figured it was me, Gladdy,Winston Wright,Jackie and Hux in the band. Bob wanted that band, but those guys didn't want to be involved. The situation around Bob was very busy and they turned it down. I couldn't get involved because I didn't want to leave the guys. We played for him when he came to Jamaica.Garland Jeffreys, <mask>, Peter, <mask> and Mary play for them. We played for the Rolling Stones. We could listen to music. I feel it would be bad if I left. They got rid of Hugh Malcolm because he couldn't keep up. Every so often we would bring <mask> in, because I couldn't play on a session. The other guys would trust <mask> to come and play with them.The song "The Perfect Beat" is a song on the album Eardrum that has a drum beat from <mask>. On the instrumental front, Lee "Scratch" Perry began more serious experimentation, exploring diverse influences and styles with a range of musicians. <mask> is an occasional member of the Supersonics and a mainstay of Leslie Kong's productions. The drummer on "Girl I've Got A Date" is named Alton <mask>. One of the first songs to define the rocksteady genre was "Girl I've Got A Date". Tommy McCook was a member of Tommy McCook & The Supersonics from 1968 to 1969 and the group released threeLP's. <mask> was the drummer for The Boris Gardiner Happening from 1970 to 1973.The Boris Gardiner Happening recorded a version of "Ain't No Sunshine" in 1973, with <mask> singing lead and Boris Gardiner playing bass. The band was led by Leroy Sibbles <mask>. John Holt and Eddy Grant <mask> toured the UK in 1974. This was the first major tour that was accompanied by an orchestra. Six veteran session musicians made up the members of this tour. The Equals' Eddy Grant was a member of The Pioneers band that played in England. <mask> joined the group as a session musician and later became the group's drummer on the Sparrow Dragon AgainLP.Over the course of his career, <mask> has toured with many artists, including: Toots and the Maytals Jackson Browne Linda Ronstadt Eagles Dave Matthews Band The J. Geils Band Carlos Santana The Roots If you were expecting Toots and the Maytals, it seems like they were on Jamaican time because they didn't show it. The midnight slot at the festival was given to the group credited with coining the term "reggae" in song. The 35th anniversary of the WOMAD UK festival was celebrated by Toots and The Maytals. <mask> is a session musician and crosses several genres. His talent on the drums earned him recognition and respect from producers. In addition to recordings completed as a member of affiliated acts, <mask>' studio work includes sessions with:They were interviewed about working on the following songs: "Nice Time", "Hypocrites", and "Thank You Lord". I from "Greater Jamaica (Moon Walk-Reggay)" is "Duppy or Gunman" by Errol Dunkley. It is described as the untold story of one of the most influential artists ever to come out of Jamaica. There were awards and recognition for Toots Live! The Toots and the Maytals album was nominated for aGrammy Award for Best Reggae Album of the Year. In the interview, <mask> explains that Lloyd Knibb of The Skatalites is one of his heroes, as well as being influenced by other musicians such as George Benson, Carlos Santana, and David Sanborn. <mask> was featured on a show.<mask> is part of the exposition Jamaica Jamaica from April to August. The Philharmonie de Paris is in France. At the exposition, <mask> is featured on a poster showing the early formation of Bob Marley & The Wailers on the Tuff Gong record label, and he is also part of the exposition as a member of Toots and the Maytals. Discography <mask> has over 250 works. He released a full-length solo album in 2021. If You Act This Way (7") is a song by Toots & The Maytals. Richard HoLung, Harrison & Friends wrote "Letters Job To John Toots & The Maytals".Live: Monkey Man / Hallelujah (7") (Island Records) Toots & The Maytals. I Can See Clearly Now is a song by Ossie Scott and the Maytals. The Maytals was a movie. Bla. Bla. The Story of Jamaican Music: Tougher Than Tough Toots & The Maytals is a collection of multiple artists. The Reggae Box Toots & The Maytals was written by Clancy Eccles.Delroy Wilson / Toots & The Maytals had a song called Gave You My Love. The best Sabian Cymbal is 16'' O Zone Evolution Crash, AAH 14'' Stage Hi Hats, HHX, and China References. | [
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5978339 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khyan | Khyan | Seuserenre Khyan (also Khayan or Khian and Apachnan from the West Semitic Apaq-khyran) was an Hyksos king of the Fifteenth Dynasty of Egypt, ruling over Lower Egypt in the second half of the 17th century BCE. His royal name Seuserenre translates as "The one whom Re has caused to be strong." Khyan bears the titles of an Egyptian king, but also the title ruler of the foreign land (heqa-khaset). The later title is the typical designation of the Hyksos rulers.
Khyan is one of the better attested kings from the Hyksos period, known from many seals and seal impressions. Remarkable are objects with his name found at Knossos and Hattusha indicating diplomatic contacts with Crete and the Hittites. A sphinx with his name was bought on the art market at Baghdad and might demonstrate diplomatic contacts to Babylon, in an example of Egypt-Mesopotamia relations.
Hyksos Kingdom
Khyan's seat of power was located in Avaris, which hosted a strongly fortified palace. Seal impressions of Khyan and a stela of his eldest son, prince Yanassi, were found in two areas of the city during excavations, confirming his presence onsite. The palace, possibly destroyed during the later conquest of the Hyksos' kingdom by the Thebans under Ahmose I, comprised a high platform built on massive brick casemates surrounded by columned halls and monumental staircases leading to a still higher platform, on which the royal apartments probably stood. This palace seems to have been abandoned c. 1600 BC, at which point an enormous ritual feast was orchestrated, filling several wide pits with animal bones and thousands of pottery fragments in consequence. Some of these fragments came from an array of vessels produced by the Kerma culture, a Nubian kingdom and Hyksos' ally during the Second Intermediate Period.
The Egyptologist Manfred Bietak proposes that the ritual feast and abandonment of the palace were triggered by the death of its owner, most probably Khyan.
On the western edge of Avaris, another fortress was subsequently erected in the later Hyksos period c. 1560-1530 BC, likely under Khyan's successor Apepi.
East of Avaris, the Hyksos controlled the massive fortress of Tjaru on the road to Sinai and Canaan, where stelae of the Hyksos king Apepi were uncovered.
Accoding to Manfred Bietak, Khyan's rule marks the peak of the Hyksos kingdom power. In this view, Khyan directly ruled over Lower and Middle Egypt up to Cusae and indirectly dominated the Nile Valley as far south as Thebes, forcing native Egyptian kingdoms including those of the 16th and Abydos Dynasty into vassal states. At the time of Khyan, relations between the Hyksos and their Egyptian vassals were likely peaceful, centered on exchange and trade and possibly even including donations to Upper Egyptian sanctuaries, such as one in Gebelein, were blocks inscribed with Khyan's name were uncovered. All of this is contested however. For Alexander Ilin-Tomich, the territory directly ruled by the Hyksos kings of Avaris was likely confined to the eastern Delta and the nature and extent of their control over Middle Egypt remains unclear.
Khyan's position in the Hyksos dynasty
Khyan is identified with king Iannas in the works of Josephus whose knowledge of the Hyksos Pharaohs was derived from a history of Egypt written by Manetho. Josephus mentions him after Apophis when discussing the reign lengths of kings who ruled after Salitis. This led 18th century scholars such as Arthur Bedford to place Khyan after Apophis, towards the end of the Hyksos dynasty. However, in Sextus Julius Africanus' version of Manetho's Epitome, Khyan (whose name is transcribed there as Staan) is listed after a king Pachnan, perhaps Yaqub-Har. Nonetheless, the hypothesis of a temporal proximity between kings Khyan and Apepi is now commonly accepted though questionable and contested.
Stylistically Khyan's scarabs resemble closely those of Yaqub-Har, who might date rather to the beginning and not to the end of the Hyksos-period. This indicates that Khyan was one of the earlier rulers of the 15th dynasty.
The early position of Khyan within the 15th dynasty may be confirmed by new archaeological finds at Edfu. On this site were found seal impressions of Khyan in close connection with seal impressions of the 13th Dynasty king Sobekhotep IV, indicating that both kings could have reigned at about the same time. The scholars Moeller and Marouard discuss the discovery of an important early 12th dynasty Middle Kingdom administrative building in the eastern Tell Edfu area which was continuously employed into the early Second Intermediate Period before it fell out of use during the 17th dynasty when its remains were sealed by a large silo court. Fieldwork by Egyptologists in 2010 and 2011 into the remains of the former 12th dynasty building which was also used in the 13th dynasty led to the discovery of a large adjoining hall which proved to contain 41 sealings showing the cartouche of the Hyksos ruler Khyan together with 9 sealings naming the 13th dynasty king Sobekhotep IV. As Moeller and Marouard write: "These finds come from a secure and sealed archaeological context and open up new questions about the cultural and chronological evolution of the late Middle Kingdom and early Second Intermediate Period." These conclusions are rejected by Robert Porter who argues that Khyan ruled much later than Sobekhotep IV and that the seals of a pharaoh were used even long after his death. Another option he proposed is that Sobekhotep IV reigned much later than previously thought.
Nearly all carbon-14 analyses of materials related to the Second Intermediate Period yield dates on average 120 years earlier than was expected from the prevailing chronological reconstruction of the 15th Dynasty. While the debate is ongoing, Egyptologists have acknowledged the validity of these observations and that they indicate some major issue with the consensus reached hitherto. Khyan's rule is no longer dated with any accuracy. The Egyptologist David Aston has showed available evidence is compatible with Khyan ruling anywhere between 1700 BC and 1580 BC, with the former his preferred scenario. The possibility that one or more kings reigned between him and Apophis is now the dominant hypothesis.
A stela of Khyan mentioning a king's son was also discovered at Avaris. Manfred Bietak observed that:
"a stela set up in Avaris contains the nomen and prenomen of Khyan and a now lost dedication (presumably to Seth, Lord of Avaris) below which are inscribed the title and name of the Eldest King's Son Yanassi."
The Danish Egyptologist Kim Ryholt, who published an extensive catalogue of the monuments of all the numerous pharaohs of the Second Intermediate Period, notes an important personal detail regarding this king's family; Ryholt writes that the association of Khyan with those of his eldest son upon this stela suggests that Yanassi in fact was his designated successor, as also implied by his title." Ryholt speculates that Manetho might have mentioned Yanassi in a now lost passage and that one possible explanation of the name Iannas used by Josephus for Khyan is a misquotation of such a passage in which the son's name was extracted instead of the father's.
Origin of Khyan's name
Ryholt notes that the name, Khyan, generally has been "interpreted as Amorite Hayanu (reading h-ya-a-n) which the Egyptian form represents perfectly, and this is in all likelihood the correct interpretation." It should be stressed that Khyan's name was not original and had been in use for centuries before the fifteenth (Hyksos) Dynasty. The name Hayanu is recorded in the Assyrian king lists—see "Khorsabad List I, 17 and the SDAS List, I, 16"--"for a remote ancestor of Shamshi-Adad I (c.1800 BC)."
Notes
References
Bibliography
Further reading
Irene Forster-Müller, Nadine Moeller (eds.), The Hyksos Ruler Khyan and the Early Second Intermediate Period in Egypt: Problems and Priorities of Current Research. Proceedings of the Workshop of the Austrian Archaeological Institute and the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, Vienna, July 4–5, 2014.(online)
17th-century BC Pharaohs
16th-century BC Pharaohs
Pharaohs of the Fifteenth Dynasty of Egypt
Amorite kings
Year of birth unknown
Year of death unknown | [
"Seuserenre Khyan (also Khayan or Khian and Apachnan from the West Semitic Apaq-khyran) was an Hyksos king of the Fifteenth Dynasty of Egypt, ruling over Lower Egypt in the second half of the 17th century BCE.",
"His royal name Seuserenre translates as \"The one whom Re has caused to be strong.\"",
"Khyan bears the titles of an Egyptian king, but also the title ruler of the foreign land (heqa-khaset).",
"The later title is the typical designation of the Hyksos rulers.",
"Khyan is one of the better attested kings from the Hyksos period, known from many seals and seal impressions.",
"Remarkable are objects with his name found at Knossos and Hattusha indicating diplomatic contacts with Crete and the Hittites.",
"A sphinx with his name was bought on the art market at Baghdad and might demonstrate diplomatic contacts to Babylon, in an example of Egypt-Mesopotamia relations.",
"Hyksos Kingdom\nKhyan's seat of power was located in Avaris, which hosted a strongly fortified palace.",
"Seal impressions of Khyan and a stela of his eldest son, prince Yanassi, were found in two areas of the city during excavations, confirming his presence onsite.",
"The palace, possibly destroyed during the later conquest of the Hyksos' kingdom by the Thebans under Ahmose I, comprised a high platform built on massive brick casemates surrounded by columned halls and monumental staircases leading to a still higher platform, on which the royal apartments probably stood.",
"This palace seems to have been abandoned c. 1600 BC, at which point an enormous ritual feast was orchestrated, filling several wide pits with animal bones and thousands of pottery fragments in consequence.",
"Some of these fragments came from an array of vessels produced by the Kerma culture, a Nubian kingdom and Hyksos' ally during the Second Intermediate Period.",
"The Egyptologist Manfred Bietak proposes that the ritual feast and abandonment of the palace were triggered by the death of its owner, most probably Khyan.",
"On the western edge of Avaris, another fortress was subsequently erected in the later Hyksos period c. 1560-1530 BC, likely under Khyan's successor Apepi.",
"East of Avaris, the Hyksos controlled the massive fortress of Tjaru on the road to Sinai and Canaan, where stelae of the Hyksos king Apepi were uncovered.",
"Accoding to Manfred Bietak, Khyan's rule marks the peak of the Hyksos kingdom power.",
"In this view, Khyan directly ruled over Lower and Middle Egypt up to Cusae and indirectly dominated the Nile Valley as far south as Thebes, forcing native Egyptian kingdoms including those of the 16th and Abydos Dynasty into vassal states.",
"At the time of Khyan, relations between the Hyksos and their Egyptian vassals were likely peaceful, centered on exchange and trade and possibly even including donations to Upper Egyptian sanctuaries, such as one in Gebelein, were blocks inscribed with Khyan's name were uncovered.",
"All of this is contested however.",
"For Alexander Ilin-Tomich, the territory directly ruled by the Hyksos kings of Avaris was likely confined to the eastern Delta and the nature and extent of their control over Middle Egypt remains unclear.",
"Khyan's position in the Hyksos dynasty\n\nKhyan is identified with king Iannas in the works of Josephus whose knowledge of the Hyksos Pharaohs was derived from a history of Egypt written by Manetho.",
"Josephus mentions him after Apophis when discussing the reign lengths of kings who ruled after Salitis.",
"This led 18th century scholars such as Arthur Bedford to place Khyan after Apophis, towards the end of the Hyksos dynasty.",
"However, in Sextus Julius Africanus' version of Manetho's Epitome, Khyan (whose name is transcribed there as Staan) is listed after a king Pachnan, perhaps Yaqub-Har.",
"Nonetheless, the hypothesis of a temporal proximity between kings Khyan and Apepi is now commonly accepted though questionable and contested.",
"Stylistically Khyan's scarabs resemble closely those of Yaqub-Har, who might date rather to the beginning and not to the end of the Hyksos-period.",
"This indicates that Khyan was one of the earlier rulers of the 15th dynasty.",
"The early position of Khyan within the 15th dynasty may be confirmed by new archaeological finds at Edfu.",
"On this site were found seal impressions of Khyan in close connection with seal impressions of the 13th Dynasty king Sobekhotep IV, indicating that both kings could have reigned at about the same time.",
"The scholars Moeller and Marouard discuss the discovery of an important early 12th dynasty Middle Kingdom administrative building in the eastern Tell Edfu area which was continuously employed into the early Second Intermediate Period before it fell out of use during the 17th dynasty when its remains were sealed by a large silo court.",
"Fieldwork by Egyptologists in 2010 and 2011 into the remains of the former 12th dynasty building which was also used in the 13th dynasty led to the discovery of a large adjoining hall which proved to contain 41 sealings showing the cartouche of the Hyksos ruler Khyan together with 9 sealings naming the 13th dynasty king Sobekhotep IV.",
"As Moeller and Marouard write: \"These finds come from a secure and sealed archaeological context and open up new questions about the cultural and chronological evolution of the late Middle Kingdom and early Second Intermediate Period.\"",
"These conclusions are rejected by Robert Porter who argues that Khyan ruled much later than Sobekhotep IV and that the seals of a pharaoh were used even long after his death.",
"Another option he proposed is that Sobekhotep IV reigned much later than previously thought.",
"Nearly all carbon-14 analyses of materials related to the Second Intermediate Period yield dates on average 120 years earlier than was expected from the prevailing chronological reconstruction of the 15th Dynasty.",
"While the debate is ongoing, Egyptologists have acknowledged the validity of these observations and that they indicate some major issue with the consensus reached hitherto.",
"Khyan's rule is no longer dated with any accuracy.",
"The Egyptologist David Aston has showed available evidence is compatible with Khyan ruling anywhere between 1700 BC and 1580 BC, with the former his preferred scenario.",
"The possibility that one or more kings reigned between him and Apophis is now the dominant hypothesis.",
"A stela of Khyan mentioning a king's son was also discovered at Avaris.",
"Manfred Bietak observed that: \n\"a stela set up in Avaris contains the nomen and prenomen of Khyan and a now lost dedication (presumably to Seth, Lord of Avaris) below which are inscribed the title and name of the Eldest King's Son Yanassi.\"",
"The Danish Egyptologist Kim Ryholt, who published an extensive catalogue of the monuments of all the numerous pharaohs of the Second Intermediate Period, notes an important personal detail regarding this king's family; Ryholt writes that the association of Khyan with those of his eldest son upon this stela suggests that Yanassi in fact was his designated successor, as also implied by his title.\"",
"Ryholt speculates that Manetho might have mentioned Yanassi in a now lost passage and that one possible explanation of the name Iannas used by Josephus for Khyan is a misquotation of such a passage in which the son's name was extracted instead of the father's.",
"Origin of Khyan's name\nRyholt notes that the name, Khyan, generally has been \"interpreted as Amorite Hayanu (reading h-ya-a-n) which the Egyptian form represents perfectly, and this is in all likelihood the correct interpretation.\"",
"It should be stressed that Khyan's name was not original and had been in use for centuries before the fifteenth (Hyksos) Dynasty.",
"The name Hayanu is recorded in the Assyrian king lists—see \"Khorsabad List I, 17 and the SDAS List, I, 16\"--\"for a remote ancestor of Shamshi-Adad I (c.1800 BC).\"",
"Notes\n\nReferences\n\nBibliography\n\nFurther reading\nIrene Forster-Müller, Nadine Moeller (eds.",
"), The Hyksos Ruler Khyan and the Early Second Intermediate Period in Egypt: Problems and Priorities of Current Research.",
"Proceedings of the Workshop of the Austrian Archaeological Institute and the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, Vienna, July 4–5, 2014.",
"(online)\n\n17th-century BC Pharaohs\n16th-century BC Pharaohs\nPharaohs of the Fifteenth Dynasty of Egypt\nAmorite kings\nYear of birth unknown\nYear of death unknown"
] | [
"In the second half of the 17th century BCE, Seuserenre Khyan ruled over Lower Egypt.",
"His name is Seuserenre and it means \"The one whom Re has caused to be strong.\"",
"Khyan is also the ruler of the foreign land.",
"The typical designation of the rulers is the later title.",
"There are many seals and seal impressions of Khyan, one of the better kings from the hyksos period.",
"There are objects with his name on them indicating diplomatic contacts with Crete and the Hittites.",
"In an example of Egypt-Mesopotamia relations, a sphinx with his name on it was bought on the art market at Baghdad.",
"The seat of power was located in a palace.",
"Seal impressions of Khyan and a stela of his son, princeYanassi, were found in two areas of the city during excavations.",
"A high platform built on massive brick casemates surrounded by columned halls and monumental staircases led to the royal apartments on the other side of the platform.",
"An enormous ritual feast was held at this palace in 1600 BC, filling several wide pits with animal bones and thousands of pottery fragments.",
"The Kerma culture, a Nubian kingdom and ally of Hyksos during the Second Intermediate Period, produced some of these fragments.",
"The ritual feast and abandonment of the palace are thought to have been triggered by the death of the palace's owner.",
"The fortress on the western edge of Avaris was built under Khyan's successor, Apepi.",
"The fortress of Tjaru on the road to Sinai and Canaan was taken over by the Hyksos.",
"Khyan's rule marks the peak of the kingdom's power.",
"Khyan directly ruled over Lower and Middle Egypt up to Cusae and indirectly dominated the Nile Valley as far south as Thebes, forcing native Egyptian kingdoms into vassal states.",
"At the time of Khyan, relations between the Hyksos and their Egyptian vassals were likely peaceful, centered on exchange and trade and possibly even including donations to Upper Egyptian sanctuaries.",
"All of this is disputed.",
"The territory directly ruled by the Hyksos kings of Avaris was likely confined to the eastern Delta and the nature and extent of their control over Middle Egypt is unclear.",
"King Iannas is identified with Khyan in the works of Josephus because of a history of Egypt written by Manetho.",
"The lengths of the reign of kings who ruled after Salitis were discussed by Josephus.",
"Khyan was placed after Apophis by scholars in the 18th century.",
"Khyan is listed after a king Pachnan in Sextus Julius Africanus' version of the Epitome.",
"The hypothesis of a temporal proximity between Khyan and Apepi is questionable but accepted.",
"Khyan's scarabs are similar to those of Yaqub-Har, who might date rather to the beginning and not to the end.",
"This shows that Khyan was a ruler of the 15th dynasty.",
"New archaeological finds at Edfu may confirm the position of Khyan within the 15th dynasty.",
"Seal impressions of both Khyan and Sobekhotep IV were found on this site, indicating that both kings could have reigned at the same time.",
"The discovery of an important Middle Kingdom administrative building in the eastern Tell Edfu area which was continuously employed into the early Second Intermediate Period before it fell out of use during the 17th dynasty was discussed by the scholars Moeller and Marouard.",
"The remains of the former 12th dynasty building, which was also used in the 13th dynasty, were found by Egyptologists in 2010 and 2011.",
"\"These finds come from a secure and sealed archaeological context and open up new questions about the cultural and chronological evolution of the late Middle Kingdom and early Second Intermediate Period.\"",
"Robert Porter argues that Khyan ruled much later than Sobekhotep IV and that the seals of a pharaoh were used long after his death.",
"He proposed that Sobekhotep IV reigned later than previously thought.",
"The average yield dates for carbon-14 analyses of materials related to the Second Intermediate Period were 120 years earlier than expected.",
"Egyptologists acknowledge the validity of these observations and that they indicate a major issue with the consensus reached previously.",
"Khyan's rule is no longer valid.",
"The evidence is compatible with Khyan ruling anywhere between 1700 BC and 1580 BC, according to the Egyptologist.",
"There is a chance that one or more kings ruled between him and Apophis.",
"The king's son was mentioned in a stela of Khyan.",
"The nomen and prenomen of Khyan and a lost dedication to the Eldest King's Son are contained in a stela in Avaris.",
"An important personal detail regarding this king's family is noted by the author of an extensive catalogue of the monuments of the Second Intermediate Period.",
"One possible explanation of the name Iannas used by Josephus for Khyan is a misquote of a passage in which the son's name was taken instead of the father's.",
"According to the origin of Khyan's name, it's generally believed that the name is based on the Egyptian form of h-ya-a-n.",
"Khyan's name was not original and had been in use for hundreds of years.",
"The Assyrian king lists record the name Hayanu for a remote descendant of Shamshi-Adad I.",
"The following are references to further reading.",
"The Early Second Intermediate Period in Egypt: Problems and Priorities of Current Research is a book.",
"The workshop of the Austrian Archaeological Institute and the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago was held in Vienna.",
"17th-century BC Pharaohs 16th-century BC Pharaohs of the Fifteenth Dynasty of Egypt."
] | Seuserenre <mask> (also Khayan or Khian and Apachnan from the West Semitic Apaq-khyran) was an Hyksos king of the Fifteenth Dynasty of Egypt, ruling over Lower Egypt in the second half of the 17th century BCE. His royal name Seuserenre translates as "The one whom Re has caused to be strong." Khyan bears the titles of an Egyptian king, but also the title ruler of the foreign land (heqa-khaset). The later title is the typical designation of the Hyksos rulers. Khyan is one of the better attested kings from the Hyksos period, known from many seals and seal impressions. Remarkable are objects with his name found at Knossos and Hattusha indicating diplomatic contacts with Crete and the Hittites. A sphinx with his name was bought on the art market at Baghdad and might demonstrate diplomatic contacts to Babylon, in an example of Egypt-Mesopotamia relations.Hyksos Kingdom
Khyan's seat of power was located in Avaris, which hosted a strongly fortified palace. Seal impressions of Khyan and a stela of his eldest son, prince Yanassi, were found in two areas of the city during excavations, confirming his presence onsite. The palace, possibly destroyed during the later conquest of the Hyksos' kingdom by the Thebans under Ahmose I, comprised a high platform built on massive brick casemates surrounded by columned halls and monumental staircases leading to a still higher platform, on which the royal apartments probably stood. This palace seems to have been abandoned c. 1600 BC, at which point an enormous ritual feast was orchestrated, filling several wide pits with animal bones and thousands of pottery fragments in consequence. Some of these fragments came from an array of vessels produced by the Kerma culture, a Nubian kingdom and Hyksos' ally during the Second Intermediate Period. The Egyptologist Manfred Bietak proposes that the ritual feast and abandonment of the palace were triggered by the death of its owner, most probably Khyan. On the western edge of Avaris, another fortress was subsequently erected in the later Hyksos period c. 1560-1530 BC, likely under Khyan's successor Apepi.East of Avaris, the Hyksos controlled the massive fortress of Tjaru on the road to Sinai and Canaan, where stelae of the Hyksos king Apepi were uncovered. Accoding to Manfred Bietak, Khyan's rule marks the peak of the Hyksos kingdom power. In this view, Khyan directly ruled over Lower and Middle Egypt up to Cusae and indirectly dominated the Nile Valley as far south as Thebes, forcing native Egyptian kingdoms including those of the 16th and Abydos Dynasty into vassal states. At the time of Khyan, relations between the Hyksos and their Egyptian vassals were likely peaceful, centered on exchange and trade and possibly even including donations to Upper Egyptian sanctuaries, such as one in Gebelein, were blocks inscribed with Khyan's name were uncovered. All of this is contested however. For Alexander Ilin-Tomich, the territory directly ruled by the Hyksos kings of Avaris was likely confined to the eastern Delta and the nature and extent of their control over Middle Egypt remains unclear. Khyan's position in the Hyksos dynasty
Khyan is identified with king Iannas in the works of Josephus whose knowledge of the Hyksos Pharaohs was derived from a history of Egypt written by Manetho.Josephus mentions him after Apophis when discussing the reign lengths of kings who ruled after Salitis. This led 18th century scholars such as Arthur Bedford to place Khyan after Apophis, towards the end of the Hyksos dynasty. However, in Sextus Julius Africanus' version of Manetho's Epitome, Khyan (whose name is transcribed there as Staan) is listed after a king Pachnan, perhaps Yaqub-Har. Nonetheless, the hypothesis of a temporal proximity between kings Khyan and Apepi is now commonly accepted though questionable and contested. Stylistically Khyan's scarabs resemble closely those of Yaqub-Har, who might date rather to the beginning and not to the end of the Hyksos-period. This indicates that Khyan was one of the earlier rulers of the 15th dynasty. The early position of Khyan within the 15th dynasty may be confirmed by new archaeological finds at Edfu.On this site were found seal impressions of Khyan in close connection with seal impressions of the 13th Dynasty king Sobekhotep IV, indicating that both kings could have reigned at about the same time. The scholars Moeller and Marouard discuss the discovery of an important early 12th dynasty Middle Kingdom administrative building in the eastern Tell Edfu area which was continuously employed into the early Second Intermediate Period before it fell out of use during the 17th dynasty when its remains were sealed by a large silo court. Fieldwork by Egyptologists in 2010 and 2011 into the remains of the former 12th dynasty building which was also used in the 13th dynasty led to the discovery of a large adjoining hall which proved to contain 41 sealings showing the cartouche of the Hyksos ruler Khyan together with 9 sealings naming the 13th dynasty king Sobekhotep IV. As Moeller and Marouard write: "These finds come from a secure and sealed archaeological context and open up new questions about the cultural and chronological evolution of the late Middle Kingdom and early Second Intermediate Period." These conclusions are rejected by Robert Porter who argues that Khyan ruled much later than Sobekhotep IV and that the seals of a pharaoh were used even long after his death. Another option he proposed is that Sobekhotep IV reigned much later than previously thought. Nearly all carbon-14 analyses of materials related to the Second Intermediate Period yield dates on average 120 years earlier than was expected from the prevailing chronological reconstruction of the 15th Dynasty.While the debate is ongoing, Egyptologists have acknowledged the validity of these observations and that they indicate some major issue with the consensus reached hitherto. <mask>'s rule is no longer dated with any accuracy. The Egyptologist David Aston has showed available evidence is compatible with Khyan ruling anywhere between 1700 BC and 1580 BC, with the former his preferred scenario. The possibility that one or more kings reigned between him and Apophis is now the dominant hypothesis. A stela of Khyan mentioning a king's son was also discovered at Avaris. Manfred Bietak observed that:
"a stela set up in Avaris contains the nomen and prenomen of Khyan and a now lost dedication (presumably to Seth, Lord of Avaris) below which are inscribed the title and name of the Eldest King's Son Yanassi." The Danish Egyptologist Kim Ryholt, who published an extensive catalogue of the monuments of all the numerous pharaohs of the Second Intermediate Period, notes an important personal detail regarding this king's family; Ryholt writes that the association of Khyan with those of his eldest son upon this stela suggests that Yanassi in fact was his designated successor, as also implied by his title."Ryholt speculates that Manetho might have mentioned Yanassi in a now lost passage and that one possible explanation of the name Iannas used by Josephus for Khyan is a misquotation of such a passage in which the son's name was extracted instead of the father's. Origin of Khyan's name
Ryholt notes that the name, Khyan, generally has been "interpreted as Amorite Hayanu (reading h-ya-a-n) which the Egyptian form represents perfectly, and this is in all likelihood the correct interpretation." It should be stressed that Khyan's name was not original and had been in use for centuries before the fifteenth (Hyksos) Dynasty. The name Hayanu is recorded in the Assyrian king lists—see "Khorsabad List I, 17 and the SDAS List, I, 16"--"for a remote ancestor of Shamshi-Adad I (c.1800 BC)." Notes
References
Bibliography
Further reading
Irene Forster-Müller, Nadine Moeller (eds. ), The Hyksos Ruler Khyan and the Early Second Intermediate Period in Egypt: Problems and Priorities of Current Research. Proceedings of the Workshop of the Austrian Archaeological Institute and the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, Vienna, July 4–5, 2014.(online)
17th-century BC Pharaohs
16th-century BC Pharaohs
Pharaohs of the Fifteenth Dynasty of Egypt
Amorite kings
Year of birth unknown
Year of death unknown | [
"Khyan",
"Khyan"
] | In the second half of the 17th century BCE, Seuserenre Khyan ruled over Lower Egypt. His name is Seuserenre and it means "The one whom Re has caused to be strong." Khyan is also the ruler of the foreign land. The typical designation of the rulers is the later title. There are many seals and seal impressions of Khyan, one of the better kings from the hyksos period. There are objects with his name on them indicating diplomatic contacts with Crete and the Hittites. In an example of Egypt-Mesopotamia relations, a sphinx with his name on it was bought on the art market at Baghdad.The seat of power was located in a palace. Seal impressions of <mask>, were found in two areas of the city during excavations. A high platform built on massive brick casemates surrounded by columned halls and monumental staircases led to the royal apartments on the other side of the platform. An enormous ritual feast was held at this palace in 1600 BC, filling several wide pits with animal bones and thousands of pottery fragments. The Kerma culture, a Nubian kingdom and ally of Hyksos during the Second Intermediate Period, produced some of these fragments. The ritual feast and abandonment of the palace are thought to have been triggered by the death of the palace's owner. The fortress on the western edge of Avaris was built under Khyan's successor, Apepi.The fortress of Tjaru on the road to Sinai and Canaan was taken over by the Hyksos. Khyan's rule marks the peak of the kingdom's power. Khyan directly ruled over Lower and Middle Egypt up to Cusae and indirectly dominated the Nile Valley as far south as Thebes, forcing native Egyptian kingdoms into vassal states. At the time of Khyan, relations between the Hyksos and their Egyptian vassals were likely peaceful, centered on exchange and trade and possibly even including donations to Upper Egyptian sanctuaries. All of this is disputed. The territory directly ruled by the Hyksos kings of Avaris was likely confined to the eastern Delta and the nature and extent of their control over Middle Egypt is unclear. King Iannas is identified with Khyan in the works of Josephus because of a history of Egypt written by Manetho.The lengths of the reign of kings who ruled after Salitis were discussed by Josephus. Khyan was placed after Apophis by scholars in the 18th century. Khyan is listed after a king Pachnan in Sextus Julius Africanus' version of the Epitome. The hypothesis of a temporal proximity between Khyan and Apepi is questionable but accepted. Khyan's scarabs are similar to those of Yaqub-Har, who might date rather to the beginning and not to the end. This shows that Khyan was a ruler of the 15th dynasty. New archaeological finds at Edfu may confirm the position of Khyan within the 15th dynasty.Seal impressions of both Khyan and Sobekhotep IV were found on this site, indicating that both kings could have reigned at the same time. The discovery of an important Middle Kingdom administrative building in the eastern Tell Edfu area which was continuously employed into the early Second Intermediate Period before it fell out of use during the 17th dynasty was discussed by the scholars Moeller and Marouard. The remains of the former 12th dynasty building, which was also used in the 13th dynasty, were found by Egyptologists in 2010 and 2011. "These finds come from a secure and sealed archaeological context and open up new questions about the cultural and chronological evolution of the late Middle Kingdom and early Second Intermediate Period." Robert Porter argues that Khyan ruled much later than Sobekhotep IV and that the seals of a pharaoh were used long after his death. He proposed that Sobekhotep IV reigned later than previously thought. The average yield dates for carbon-14 analyses of materials related to the Second Intermediate Period were 120 years earlier than expected.Egyptologists acknowledge the validity of these observations and that they indicate a major issue with the consensus reached previously. Khyan's rule is no longer valid. The evidence is compatible with Khyan ruling anywhere between 1700 BC and 1580 BC, according to the Egyptologist. There is a chance that one or more kings ruled between him and Apophis. The king's son was mentioned in a stela of Khyan. The nomen and prenomen of Khyan and a lost dedication to the Eldest King's Son are contained in a stela in Avaris. An important personal detail regarding this king's family is noted by the author of an extensive catalogue of the monuments of the Second Intermediate Period.One possible explanation of the name Iannas used by Josephus for Khyan is a misquote of a passage in which the son's name was taken instead of the father's. According to the origin of Khyan's name, it's generally believed that the name is based on the Egyptian form of h-ya-a-n. <mask>'s name was not original and had been in use for hundreds of years. The Assyrian king lists record the name Hayanu for a remote descendant of Shamshi-Adad I. The following are references to further reading. The Early Second Intermediate Period in Egypt: Problems and Priorities of Current Research is a book. The workshop of the Austrian Archaeological Institute and the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago was held in Vienna.17th-century BC Pharaohs 16th-century BC Pharaohs of the Fifteenth Dynasty of Egypt. | [
"KhyanYanassi",
"Khyan"
] |
56918207 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andr%C3%A1s%20Kenessei | András Kenessei | András Kenessei (born Budapest, Hungary, 12 January 1942) is a Hungarian art historian, writer and journalist.
Career
András Kenessei graduated from Kölcsey Ferenc Secondary School [Kölcsey Ferenc Gimnázium] in 1960.
Initially not admitted to the university, two years later he applied to and got admitted to Eötvös Loránd University [ELTE], where he studied Hungarian language and literature as well as art history at the Faculty of Arts, completing his studies in 1967. He wrote his thesis on the construction of the Avenue [Sugárút], which is now called Andrássy Avenue [Andrássy út] – making him the first in his profession to write about this grandiose enterprise in Hungarian eclectic architecture which transformed the Budapest cityscape. He maintained his interest in Hungarian and international architecture later on in his career.
Kenessei's articles, papers on art, and reviews have been published in journals as well as culture columns in daily papers and weekly magazines (i.e., Budapester Rundschau, Élet és Irodalom, Művészet, Népszabadság, Ország-Világ, Rakéta Regényújság, Tükör, Új Tükör) since 1964. Since 1966, he has also written literary pieces, which have regularly appeared on the pages of leading literary journals, such as Kortárs and as well.
Having graduated from university, Kenessei made a living as a freelance writer for several years. During that time, he interned as an editor at the publishing house Magvető Könyvkiadó and worked as a journalist for various weeklies. He later worked for the Hungarian Record Company [Magyar Hanglemezgyártó Vállalat], compiling prose recordings and jazz albums released by the record company.
Between the summer of 1977 and May 1992, Kenessei worked for the daily newspaper Magyar Hírlap as a member of the editorial team responsible for culture and foreign affairs. Starting out as a correspondent, he was later appointed to be deputy column editor and, subsequently, senior newspaper contributor. Having written numerous highly professional reviews, characterized by both empathy and bold bluntness, he was commissioned by the ballet director and choreographer of the Hungarian State Opera House [Magyar Állami Operaház], László Seregi, to write papers to be published in the program booklet for all three of his Shakespeare ballet productions.
The pieces written by Kenessei for the daily Magyar Hírlap encompass several journalistic genres, ranging from articles, accounts, interviews, reports, and feature pieces, to reviews on films, theatre productions, radio and television shows, concerts, books, and recordings. In addition, over the course of the last third of his fifteen years as a member of the editorial staff, he found an increasing interest in the economic aspects of culture.
This interest was maintained even after he left the newspaper, and, for many years, he wrote weekly articles on aesthetically and economically relevant issues pertaining to the art-dealing scene in Hungary and abroad, with his pieces being published in the newspaper's business supplement, entitled Pénz Plusz Piac (Money Plus Market). It was around this time that he also took an interest in the stock market.
Starting in the early 1980s, Kenessei worked as a contributor on several cultural radio shows broadcast on Hungarian National Radio [Magyar Rádió], most notably contributing to the weekly cultural review show Láttuk, Halottuk [Seen and Heard], hosted by András Kepes. From 1986, he made numerous television news pieces as a correspondent for TV-híradó [TV News], interviewing nationally and internationally prominent figures in the world of culture and art for the daily news program produced by Endre Aczél for Hungarian National Television [Magyar Televízió].
Kenessei wrote a radio play, entitled Terézvárosi hazugság [The Lie in Terézváros District], which aired on Hungarian National Radio in 1979. In addition, the television adaptation of his family saga Százezer ős [Hundreds of Thousands of Ancestors], directed by Erika Szántó, was broadcast on Hungarian National Television in 1991.
In 1989, Kenessei took up art dealing and focused on art-dealing- related communication, writing numerous articles, essays, accounts, and reviews about art and art dealing for daily newspapers, such as Magyar Hírlap, Népszabadság, and the business daily Világgazdaság (Zöld Újság), and also for various weekly magazines, thereby establishing a new genre in Hungarian journalism. The Hungarian National Federation of Retailers [Kiskereskedők Országos Szervezete – KISOSZ] invited him to hold specialized lectures on art dealing as part of the federation's first training course on art dealing, also commissioning him to write the textbook used in the course.
In 1991, Kenessei founded the art-dealing journal Műtárgy – Régiség [Artefacts – Antiquities], working as its publisher and editor until 2009, when it ceased publication. The founding of the journal coincided with the one-day conference held by Sotheby's in Budapest, which Kenessei organized at Fészek Művészklub, a renowned club for artists, in cooperation with the head of the company's Budapest office, Soraya Gräfin von Stubenberg. The conference saw six of Sotheby's department heads give presentations to Hungarian art dealers.
From 1998, Kenessei produced and hosted a television show dedicated to art dealing, entitled Licit [The Bid]. Concurrently, from 2000, he was in charge of the regular art-dealing segment of the radio show Chaplin kalapja [Chaplin's Hat], produced by János Simkó, and he also worked on the weekly show Tőzsdevilág (Stock Market World).
Since 2000, Kenessei has been living in both Vienna and Budapest, organizing and managing exhibitions of the works of contemporary Hungarian painters with his common-law partner, the Austrian citizen Katalin Herscovici, showcasing Hungarian paintings in Austria and Hungary. He continues to write reviews in Hungarian, publishing his pieces on visual arts and dance primarily on online sites. Additionally, between 2005 and 2007, he was a senior correspondent for Gazdasági Rádio, a business radio station, which aired his daily reports on the stock exchange as well as his sixty-minute weekly interviews. Kenessei's main fields of interest are the visual arts, music, and literature, collectively, along with contemporary Hungarian visual and applied arts as well as 20th century architecture and urban architecture. He has authored approximately 1,500 articles, papers, essays, portrait pieces on artists, and interviews.
Family
Parents: Tibor Kenessei, Ilona Szűcs
Child: Dávid
Books
Esős szeptember [Rainy September] (crime story) (Albatrosz, Magvető Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 1969) – Published under the pen name Albert Harald
Történetek és kitalálások [Stories and Confabulations] (short stories) (Szépirodalmi Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 1972)
Szeretők ideje [A Time for Lovers] (novel) (Móra Kozmosz Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 1979)
A nyomozást abbahagyni! [Close the investigation!] (historical documentary novel) (Helikon, Budapest, 1981)
Szakíts, ha bírsz [Break up if you can!] (novel) (Móra Kozmosz Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 1986)
Lengőlábú Olivér [Oliver and his Swinging Legs] (children's tale) (Officina Nova, Budapest, 1988)
Százezer ős [Hundreds of Thousands of Ancestors] (family saga) (Szépirodalmi Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 1989)
Az átkozott lehetőség [The Damned Opportunity] (sci-fi novel) (Móra, Galaktika Könyvek, Budapest, 1989) – Published under the pen name Hank Jeff
Művészettörténet dióhéjban [Art History in a Nutshell] (textbook) (KISOSZ, Budapest, 1990)
Őszinte részvényem, avagy Hogyan tőzsdézzünk? [My Deepest Shares – How to Play the Stock Market] (essay) (PuttoPress, Budapest, 2004)
Miscellaneous writings and other works
Ötvenezer arany [Fifty Thousand Gold Coins] (play, published in the supplement of the theatrical magazine Színház, December 1986)
Terézvárosi hazugság [The Lie in Terézváros District] (radio play, broadcast on Hungarian National Radio, 1987)
Százezer ős [Hundreds of Thousands of Ancestors] (television film, broadcast on Hungarian National Television, Channel 1, 1991)
Raondaoh (sci-fi story published in the sci-fi magazine Galaktika, Volume XXVIII, December 2007)
Sötétben [In the Dark] (sci-fi story published in the sci-fi magazine Galaktika, Volume XXXVI, May 2015)
References
Kortárs magyar írók kislexikona 1959–1988 [Concise Encyclopedia of Contemporary Hungarian Writers 1959–1988]. Ed. Fazakas, István. (Magvető, Budapest, 1989)
Kortárs Magyar Művészeti Lexikon [Encyclopedia of Contemporary Hungarian Art]. Ed. Fitz, Péter. (Enciklopédia Kiadó, Budapest, 1999–2001)
Új magyar irodalmi lexikon [New Hungarian Literary Encyclopedia]. Ed. Péter, László. (Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1994)
Kortárs magyar írók 1945–1997. Bibliográfia és fotótár [Contemporary Hungarian Writers 1945–1997,
Bibliography and Photo Album]. Ed. F. Almási, Éva. (Enciklopédia Kiadó, Budapest, 1997, 2000)
Artportal
Magyar és nemzetközi ki kicsoda 1998 [Hungarian and International Who's Who 1998] (Biográf, Budapest, 1997)
Magyar Televízió Archívuma [Archives of the Hungarian National Television]
Magyar Rádió Archívuma – Hangtár [Archives of the Hungarian National Radio – Sound Archives]
MEK OSZK [Hungarian Electronic Library, National Széchenyi Library]
1942 births
Living people
Hungarian art historians | [
"András Kenessei (born Budapest, Hungary, 12 January 1942) is a Hungarian art historian, writer and journalist.",
"Career \nAndrás Kenessei graduated from Kölcsey Ferenc Secondary School [Kölcsey Ferenc Gimnázium] in 1960.",
"Initially not admitted to the university, two years later he applied to and got admitted to Eötvös Loránd University [ELTE], where he studied Hungarian language and literature as well as art history at the Faculty of Arts, completing his studies in 1967.",
"He wrote his thesis on the construction of the Avenue [Sugárút], which is now called Andrássy Avenue [Andrássy út] – making him the first in his profession to write about this grandiose enterprise in Hungarian eclectic architecture which transformed the Budapest cityscape.",
"He maintained his interest in Hungarian and international architecture later on in his career.",
"Kenessei's articles, papers on art, and reviews have been published in journals as well as culture columns in daily papers and weekly magazines (i.e., Budapester Rundschau, Élet és Irodalom, Művészet, Népszabadság, Ország-Világ, Rakéta Regényújság, Tükör, Új Tükör) since 1964.",
"Since 1966, he has also written literary pieces, which have regularly appeared on the pages of leading literary journals, such as Kortárs and as well.",
"Having graduated from university, Kenessei made a living as a freelance writer for several years.",
"During that time, he interned as an editor at the publishing house Magvető Könyvkiadó and worked as a journalist for various weeklies.",
"He later worked for the Hungarian Record Company [Magyar Hanglemezgyártó Vállalat], compiling prose recordings and jazz albums released by the record company.",
"Between the summer of 1977 and May 1992, Kenessei worked for the daily newspaper Magyar Hírlap as a member of the editorial team responsible for culture and foreign affairs.",
"Starting out as a correspondent, he was later appointed to be deputy column editor and, subsequently, senior newspaper contributor.",
"Having written numerous highly professional reviews, characterized by both empathy and bold bluntness, he was commissioned by the ballet director and choreographer of the Hungarian State Opera House [Magyar Állami Operaház], László Seregi, to write papers to be published in the program booklet for all three of his Shakespeare ballet productions.",
"The pieces written by Kenessei for the daily Magyar Hírlap encompass several journalistic genres, ranging from articles, accounts, interviews, reports, and feature pieces, to reviews on films, theatre productions, radio and television shows, concerts, books, and recordings.",
"In addition, over the course of the last third of his fifteen years as a member of the editorial staff, he found an increasing interest in the economic aspects of culture.",
"This interest was maintained even after he left the newspaper, and, for many years, he wrote weekly articles on aesthetically and economically relevant issues pertaining to the art-dealing scene in Hungary and abroad, with his pieces being published in the newspaper's business supplement, entitled Pénz Plusz Piac (Money Plus Market).",
"It was around this time that he also took an interest in the stock market.",
"Starting in the early 1980s, Kenessei worked as a contributor on several cultural radio shows broadcast on Hungarian National Radio [Magyar Rádió], most notably contributing to the weekly cultural review show Láttuk, Halottuk [Seen and Heard], hosted by András Kepes.",
"From 1986, he made numerous television news pieces as a correspondent for TV-híradó [TV News], interviewing nationally and internationally prominent figures in the world of culture and art for the daily news program produced by Endre Aczél for Hungarian National Television [Magyar Televízió].",
"Kenessei wrote a radio play, entitled Terézvárosi hazugság [The Lie in Terézváros District], which aired on Hungarian National Radio in 1979.",
"In addition, the television adaptation of his family saga Százezer ős [Hundreds of Thousands of Ancestors], directed by Erika Szántó, was broadcast on Hungarian National Television in 1991.",
"In 1989, Kenessei took up art dealing and focused on art-dealing- related communication, writing numerous articles, essays, accounts, and reviews about art and art dealing for daily newspapers, such as Magyar Hírlap, Népszabadság, and the business daily Világgazdaság (Zöld Újság), and also for various weekly magazines, thereby establishing a new genre in Hungarian journalism.",
"The Hungarian National Federation of Retailers [Kiskereskedők Országos Szervezete – KISOSZ] invited him to hold specialized lectures on art dealing as part of the federation's first training course on art dealing, also commissioning him to write the textbook used in the course.",
"In 1991, Kenessei founded the art-dealing journal Műtárgy – Régiség [Artefacts – Antiquities], working as its publisher and editor until 2009, when it ceased publication.",
"The founding of the journal coincided with the one-day conference held by Sotheby's in Budapest, which Kenessei organized at Fészek Művészklub, a renowned club for artists, in cooperation with the head of the company's Budapest office, Soraya Gräfin von Stubenberg.",
"The conference saw six of Sotheby's department heads give presentations to Hungarian art dealers.",
"From 1998, Kenessei produced and hosted a television show dedicated to art dealing, entitled Licit [The Bid].",
"Concurrently, from 2000, he was in charge of the regular art-dealing segment of the radio show Chaplin kalapja [Chaplin's Hat], produced by János Simkó, and he also worked on the weekly show Tőzsdevilág (Stock Market World).",
"Since 2000, Kenessei has been living in both Vienna and Budapest, organizing and managing exhibitions of the works of contemporary Hungarian painters with his common-law partner, the Austrian citizen Katalin Herscovici, showcasing Hungarian paintings in Austria and Hungary.",
"He continues to write reviews in Hungarian, publishing his pieces on visual arts and dance primarily on online sites.",
"Additionally, between 2005 and 2007, he was a senior correspondent for Gazdasági Rádio, a business radio station, which aired his daily reports on the stock exchange as well as his sixty-minute weekly interviews.",
"Kenessei's main fields of interest are the visual arts, music, and literature, collectively, along with contemporary Hungarian visual and applied arts as well as 20th century architecture and urban architecture.",
"He has authored approximately 1,500 articles, papers, essays, portrait pieces on artists, and interviews.",
"Family \nParents: Tibor Kenessei, Ilona Szűcs\nChild: Dávid\n\nBooks \n Esős szeptember [Rainy September] (crime story) (Albatrosz, Magvető Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 1969) – Published under the pen name Albert Harald\n Történetek és kitalálások [Stories and Confabulations] (short stories) (Szépirodalmi Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 1972)\n Szeretők ideje [A Time for Lovers] (novel) (Móra Kozmosz Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 1979)\n A nyomozást abbahagyni!",
"[Close the investigation!]",
"(historical documentary novel) (Helikon, Budapest, 1981)\n Szakíts, ha bírsz [Break up if you can!]",
"(novel) (Móra Kozmosz Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 1986)\n Lengőlábú Olivér [Oliver and his Swinging Legs] (children's tale) (Officina Nova, Budapest, 1988)\n Százezer ős [Hundreds of Thousands of Ancestors] (family saga) (Szépirodalmi Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 1989)\n Az átkozott lehetőség [The Damned Opportunity] (sci-fi novel) (Móra, Galaktika Könyvek, Budapest, 1989) – Published under the pen name Hank Jeff\n Művészettörténet dióhéjban [Art History in a Nutshell] (textbook) (KISOSZ, Budapest, 1990)\n Őszinte részvényem, avagy Hogyan tőzsdézzünk?",
"[My Deepest Shares – How to Play the Stock Market] (essay) (PuttoPress, Budapest, 2004)\n\nMiscellaneous writings and other works \n Ötvenezer arany [Fifty Thousand Gold Coins] (play, published in the supplement of the theatrical magazine Színház, December 1986)\n Terézvárosi hazugság [The Lie in Terézváros District] (radio play, broadcast on Hungarian National Radio, 1987)\n Százezer ős [Hundreds of Thousands of Ancestors] (television film, broadcast on Hungarian National Television, Channel 1, 1991)\n Raondaoh (sci-fi story published in the sci-fi magazine Galaktika, Volume XXVIII, December 2007)\n Sötétben [In the Dark] (sci-fi story published in the sci-fi magazine Galaktika, Volume XXXVI, May 2015)\n\nReferences \n Kortárs magyar írók kislexikona 1959–1988 [Concise Encyclopedia of Contemporary Hungarian Writers 1959–1988].",
"Ed.",
"Fazakas, István.",
"(Magvető, Budapest, 1989)\n Kortárs Magyar Művészeti Lexikon [Encyclopedia of Contemporary Hungarian Art].",
"Ed.",
"Fitz, Péter.",
"(Enciklopédia Kiadó, Budapest, 1999–2001)\n Új magyar irodalmi lexikon [New Hungarian Literary Encyclopedia].",
"Ed.",
"Péter, László.",
"(Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1994)\n Kortárs magyar írók 1945–1997.",
"Bibliográfia és fotótár [Contemporary Hungarian Writers 1945–1997,\n Bibliography and Photo Album].",
"Ed.",
"F. Almási, Éva.",
"(Enciklopédia Kiadó, Budapest, 1997, 2000)\n Artportal\n Magyar és nemzetközi ki kicsoda 1998 [Hungarian and International Who's Who 1998] (Biográf, Budapest, 1997)\n Magyar Televízió Archívuma [Archives of the Hungarian National Television]\n Magyar Rádió Archívuma – Hangtár [Archives of the Hungarian National Radio – Sound Archives]\n MEK OSZK [Hungarian Electronic Library, National Széchenyi Library]\n\n1942 births\nLiving people\nHungarian art historians"
] | [
"A Hungarian art historian, writer and journalist is Andrs Kenessei.",
"In 1960, Andrs Kenessei graduated from Klcsey Ferenc Secondary School.",
"After not being admitted to the university, he applied and got admitted to Etvs Lornd University, where he studied Hungarian language and literature as well as art history.",
"He wrote his thesis on the construction of the Avenue, which is now called Andrssy Avenue, making him the first in his profession to write about it.",
"He had an interest in Hungarian and international architecture.",
"Kenessei's articles, papers on art, and reviews have been published in journals as well as culture columns in daily papers and weekly magazines.",
"He has written literary pieces that have appeared on the pages of leading literary journals, such as Kortrs and as well.",
"Kenessei was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"He was an editor at the publishing house Magvet Knyvkiad and worked as a journalist.",
"He worked for the Hungarian Record Company, which produced prose recordings and jazz albums.",
"Kenessei worked for the daily newspaper Magyar Hrlap from 1977 to 1992 as a member of the editorial team responsible for culture and foreign affairs.",
"He was appointed to be deputy column editor and senior newspaper contributor after starting out as a correspondent.",
"He was commissioned by the ballet director and choreographer of the Hungarian State Opera House to write papers for publication.",
"The pieces written by Kenessei for the daily Magyar Hrlap encompass several journalistic genres, ranging from articles, accounts, interviews, reports, and feature pieces, to reviews on films, theatre productions, radio and television shows, concerts, books, and recordings.",
"He found an increasing interest in the economic aspects of culture over the course of his fifteen years as a member of the editorial staff.",
"For many years, he wrote weekly articles on aesthetically and economically relevant issues pertaining to the art-dealing scene in Hungary and abroad, with his pieces being published in the newspaper's business supplement, entitled Pénz Plusz Piac.",
"He had an interest in the stock market.",
"Kenessei was a contributor on the weekly cultural review show Lttuk, which was hosted by And Heard.",
"He was a correspondent for TV-hrad from 1986 to 1986 interviewing nationally and internationally prominent figures in the world of culture and art.",
"The Lie in Terzvros District was a radio play written by Kenessei.",
"Szzezer s was broadcast on Hungarian National Television in 1991.",
"Kenessei wrote numerous articles, essays, accounts, and reviews about art and art dealing for daily newspapers, such as Magyar Hrlap, Népszabadsg, and the business daily.",
"The Hungarian National Federation of Retailers invited him to hold specialized lectures on art dealing as part of the first training course on art dealing.",
"Kenessei was the publisher and editor of Mtrgy until 2009, when it ceased publication.",
"Kenessei and the head of the company's Budapest office, Soraya Gr, organized a one-day conference at Fészek Mvészklub, a renowned club for artists, to coincide with the founding of the journal.",
"The department heads gave presentations at the conference.",
"Kenessei hosted and produced a television show about art dealing.",
"In 2000, he was in charge of the regular art-dealing segment of the radio show, which was produced by Jnos Simk.",
"Kenessei and his common-law partner, the Austrian citizen Katalin Herscovici, have been showcasing Hungarian paintings in Austria and Hungary since 2000.",
"He continues to write reviews in Hungarian and publish them on online sites.",
"He was a senior correspondent for Gazdasgi Rdio, a business radio station, which aired his daily reports on the stock exchange as well as his sixty-minute weekly interviews.",
"Kenessei's main fields of interest are the visual arts, music, and literature, along with contemporary Hungarian visual and applied arts as well as 20th century architecture and urban architecture.",
"He has written over 1,500 articles, papers, essays, portrait pieces on artists and interviews.",
"The family parents are Tibor Kenessei and Ilona Szcs.",
"The investigation should be closed.",
"Szakts, ha brsz, if you can!",
"Lenglb Olivér is a children's tale.",
"The play Fifty Thousand Gold Coins was published in the supplement of the theatrical magazine Sznhz.",
"Ed.",
"Istvn is written by Fazakas.",
"Kortrs Magyar Mvészeti Lexikon is from the Encyclopedia of Contemporary Hungarian Art.",
"Ed.",
"Péter, Fitz.",
"j magyar irodalmi lexikon is in the New Hungarian Literary Encyclopedia.",
"Ed.",
"Péter and Lszl are related.",
"Kortrs magyar rk was founded in 1945 and ended in 1997.",
"The Bibliogrfia is a collection of information about contemporary Hungarian writers.",
"Ed.",
"F. Almsi.",
"Hungarian and International Who's Who 1998 [Hungarian and International Who's Who 1998] was published in 1997."
] | <mask> (born Budapest, Hungary, 12 January 1942) is a Hungarian art historian, writer and journalist. Career
<mask> graduated from Kölcsey Ferenc Secondary School [Kölcsey Ferenc Gimnázium] in 1960. Initially not admitted to the university, two years later he applied to and got admitted to Eötvös Loránd University [ELTE], where he studied Hungarian language and literature as well as art history at the Faculty of Arts, completing his studies in 1967. He wrote his thesis on the construction of the Avenue [Sugárút], which is now called Andrássy Avenue [Andrássy út] – making him the first in his profession to write about this grandiose enterprise in Hungarian eclectic architecture which transformed the Budapest cityscape. He maintained his interest in Hungarian and international architecture later on in his career. <mask>'s articles, papers on art, and reviews have been published in journals as well as culture columns in daily papers and weekly magazines (i.e., Budapester Rundschau, Élet és Irodalom, Művészet, Népszabadság, Ország-Világ, Rakéta Regényújság, Tükör, Új Tükör) since 1964. Since 1966, he has also written literary pieces, which have regularly appeared on the pages of leading literary journals, such as Kortárs and as well.Having graduated from university, <mask> made a living as a freelance writer for several years. During that time, he interned as an editor at the publishing house Magvető Könyvkiadó and worked as a journalist for various weeklies. He later worked for the Hungarian Record Company [Magyar Hanglemezgyártó Vállalat], compiling prose recordings and jazz albums released by the record company. Between the summer of 1977 and May 1992, <mask> Seregi, to write papers to be published in the program booklet for all three of his Shakespeare ballet productions. The pieces written by Kenessei for the daily Magyar Hírlap encompass several journalistic genres, ranging from articles, accounts, interviews, reports, and feature pieces, to reviews on films, theatre productions, radio and television shows, concerts, books, and recordings.In addition, over the course of the last third of his fifteen years as a member of the editorial staff, he found an increasing interest in the economic aspects of culture. This interest was maintained even after he left the newspaper, and, for many years, he wrote weekly articles on aesthetically and economically relevant issues pertaining to the art-dealing scene in Hungary and abroad, with his pieces being published in the newspaper's business supplement, entitled Pénz Plusz Piac (Money Plus Market). It was around this time that he also took an interest in the stock market. Starting in the early 1980s, <mask> worked as a contributor on several cultural radio shows broadcast on Hungarian National Radio [Magyar Rádió], most notably contributing to the weekly cultural review show Láttuk, Halottuk [Seen and Heard], hosted by András Kepes. From 1986, he made numerous television news pieces as a correspondent for TV-híradó [TV News], interviewing nationally and internationally prominent figures in the world of culture and art for the daily news program produced by Endre Aczél for Hungarian National Television [Magyar Televízió]. <mask> wrote a radio play, entitled Terézvárosi hazugság [The Lie in Terézváros District], which aired on Hungarian National Radio in 1979. In addition, the television adaptation of his family saga Százezer ős [Hundreds of Thousands of Ancestors], directed by Erika Szántó, was broadcast on Hungarian National Television in 1991.In 1989, <mask> took up art dealing and focused on art-dealing- related communication, writing numerous articles, essays, accounts, and reviews about art and art dealing for daily newspapers, such as Magyar Hírlap, Népszabadság, and the business daily Világgazdaság (Zöld Újság), and also for various weekly magazines, thereby establishing a new genre in Hungarian journalism. The Hungarian National Federation of Retailers [Kiskereskedők Országos Szervezete – KISOSZ] invited him to hold specialized lectures on art dealing as part of the federation's first training course on art dealing, also commissioning him to write the textbook used in the course. In 1991, <mask> founded the art-dealing journal Műtárgy – Régiség [Artefacts – Antiquities], working as its publisher and editor until 2009, when it ceased publication. The founding of the journal coincided with the one-day conference held by Sotheby's in Budapest, which <mask> organized at Fészek Művészklub, a renowned club for artists, in cooperation with the head of the company's Budapest office, Soraya Gräfin von Stubenberg. The conference saw six of Sotheby's department heads give presentations to Hungarian art dealers. From 1998, <mask> produced and hosted a television show dedicated to art dealing, entitled Licit [The Bid]. Concurrently, from 2000, he was in charge of the regular art-dealing segment of the radio show Chaplin kalapja [Chaplin's Hat], produced by János Simkó, and he also worked on the weekly show Tőzsdevilág (Stock Market World).Since 2000, <mask> has been living in both Vienna and Budapest, organizing and managing exhibitions of the works of contemporary Hungarian painters with his common-law partner, the Austrian citizen Katalin Herscovici, showcasing Hungarian paintings in Austria and Hungary. He continues to write reviews in Hungarian, publishing his pieces on visual arts and dance primarily on online sites. Additionally, between 2005 and 2007, he was a senior correspondent for Gazdasági Rádio, a business radio station, which aired his daily reports on the stock exchange as well as his sixty-minute weekly interviews. <mask>'s main fields of interest are the visual arts, music, and literature, collectively, along with contemporary Hungarian visual and applied arts as well as 20th century architecture and urban architecture. He has authored approximately 1,500 articles, papers, essays, portrait pieces on artists, and interviews. Family
Parents: Tibor <mask>, Ilona Szűcs
Child: Dávid
Books
Esős szeptember [Rainy September] (crime story) (Albatrosz, Magvető Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 1969) – Published under the pen name Albert Harald
Történetek és kitalálások [Stories and Confabulations] (short stories) (Szépirodalmi Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 1972)
Szeretők ideje [A Time for Lovers] (novel) (Móra Kozmosz Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 1979)
A nyomozást abbahagyni! [Close the investigation!](historical documentary novel) (Helikon, Budapest, 1981)
Szakíts, ha bírsz [Break up if you can!] (novel) (Móra Kozmosz Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 1986)
Lengőlábú Olivér [Oliver and his Swinging Legs] (children's tale) (Officina Nova, Budapest, 1988)
Százezer ős [Hundreds of Thousands of Ancestors] (family saga) (Szépirodalmi Könyvkiadó, Budapest, 1989)
Az átkozott lehetőség [The Damned Opportunity] (sci-fi novel) (Móra, Galaktika Könyvek, Budapest, 1989) – Published under the pen name Hank Jeff
Művészettörténet dióhéjban [Art History in a Nutshell] (textbook) (KISOSZ, Budapest, 1990)
Őszinte részvényem, avagy Hogyan tőzsdézzünk? [My Deepest Shares – How to Play the Stock Market] (essay) (PuttoPress, Budapest, 2004)
Miscellaneous writings and other works
Ötvenezer arany [Fifty Thousand Gold Coins] (play, published in the supplement of the theatrical magazine Színház, December 1986)
Terézvárosi hazugság [The Lie in Terézváros District] (radio play, broadcast on Hungarian National Radio, 1987)
Százezer ős [Hundreds of Thousands of Ancestors] (television film, broadcast on Hungarian National Television, Channel 1, 1991)
Raondaoh (sci-fi story published in the sci-fi magazine Galaktika, Volume XXVIII, December 2007)
Sötétben [In the Dark] (sci-fi story published in the sci-fi magazine Galaktika, Volume XXXVI, May 2015)
References
Kortárs magyar írók kislexikona 1959–1988 [Concise Encyclopedia of Contemporary Hungarian Writers 1959–1988]. Ed. Fazakas, István. (Magvető, Budapest, 1989)
Kortárs Magyar Művészeti Lexikon [Encyclopedia of Contemporary Hungarian Art]. Ed.Fitz, Péter. (Enciklopédia Kiadó, Budapest, 1999–2001)
Új magyar irodalmi lexikon [New Hungarian Literary Encyclopedia]. Ed. Péter, László. (Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1994)
Kortárs magyar írók 1945–1997. Bibliográfia és fotótár [Contemporary Hungarian Writers 1945–1997,
Bibliography and Photo Album]. Ed.F. Almási, Éva. (Enciklopédia Kiadó, Budapest, 1997, 2000)
Artportal
Magyar és nemzetközi ki kicsoda 1998 [Hungarian and International Who's Who 1998] (Biográf, Budapest, 1997)
Magyar Televízió Archívuma [Archives of the Hungarian National Television]
Magyar Rádió Archívuma – Hangtár [Archives of the Hungarian National Radio – Sound Archives]
MEK OSZK [Hungarian Electronic Library, National Széchenyi Library]
1942 births
Living people
Hungarian art historians | [
"András Kenessei",
"András Kenessei",
"Kenessei",
"Kenessei",
"Kenesseiló",
"Kenessei",
"Kenessei",
"Kenessei",
"Kenessei",
"Kenessei",
"Kenessei",
"Kenessei",
"Kenessei",
"Kenessei"
] | A Hungarian art historian, writer and journalist is <mask>. In 1960, <mask> graduated from Klcsey Ferenc Secondary School. After not being admitted to the university, he applied and got admitted to Etvs Lornd University, where he studied Hungarian language and literature as well as art history. He wrote his thesis on the construction of the Avenue, which is now called Andrssy Avenue, making him the first in his profession to write about it. He had an interest in Hungarian and international architecture. <mask>'s articles, papers on art, and reviews have been published in journals as well as culture columns in daily papers and weekly magazines. He has written literary pieces that have appeared on the pages of leading literary journals, such as Kortrs and as well.Kenessei was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 He was an editor at the publishing house Magvet Knyvkiad and worked as a journalist. He worked for the Hungarian Record Company, which produced prose recordings and jazz albums. Kenessei worked for the daily newspaper Magyar Hrlap from 1977 to 1992 as a member of the editorial team responsible for culture and foreign affairs. He was appointed to be deputy column editor and senior newspaper contributor after starting out as a correspondent. He was commissioned by the ballet director and choreographer of the Hungarian State Opera House to write papers for publication. The pieces written by Kenessei for the daily Magyar Hrlap encompass several journalistic genres, ranging from articles, accounts, interviews, reports, and feature pieces, to reviews on films, theatre productions, radio and television shows, concerts, books, and recordings.He found an increasing interest in the economic aspects of culture over the course of his fifteen years as a member of the editorial staff. For many years, he wrote weekly articles on aesthetically and economically relevant issues pertaining to the art-dealing scene in Hungary and abroad, with his pieces being published in the newspaper's business supplement, entitled Pénz Plusz Piac. He had an interest in the stock market. <mask> was a contributor on the weekly cultural review show Lttuk, which was hosted by And Heard. He was a correspondent for TV-hrad from 1986 to 1986 interviewing nationally and internationally prominent figures in the world of culture and art. The Lie in Terzvros District was a radio play written by <mask>. Szzezer s was broadcast on Hungarian National Television in 1991.<mask> wrote numerous articles, essays, accounts, and reviews about art and art dealing for daily newspapers, such as Magyar Hrlap, Népszabadsg, and the business daily. The Hungarian National Federation of Retailers invited him to hold specialized lectures on art dealing as part of the first training course on art dealing. <mask> was the publisher and editor of Mtrgy until 2009, when it ceased publication. <mask> and the head of the company's Budapest office, Soraya Gr, organized a one-day conference at Fészek Mvészklub, a renowned club for artists, to coincide with the founding of the journal. The department heads gave presentations at the conference. <mask> hosted and produced a television show about art dealing. In 2000, he was in charge of the regular art-dealing segment of the radio show, which was produced by Jnos Simk.<mask> and his common-law partner, the Austrian citizen Katalin Herscovici, have been showcasing Hungarian paintings in Austria and Hungary since 2000. He continues to write reviews in Hungarian and publish them on online sites. He was a senior correspondent for Gazdasgi Rdio, a business radio station, which aired his daily reports on the stock exchange as well as his sixty-minute weekly interviews. <mask>'s main fields of interest are the visual arts, music, and literature, along with contemporary Hungarian visual and applied arts as well as 20th century architecture and urban architecture. He has written over 1,500 articles, papers, essays, portrait pieces on artists and interviews. The family parents are Tibor <mask> and Ilona Szcs. The investigation should be closed.Szakts, ha brsz, if you can! Lenglb Olivér is a children's tale. The play Fifty Thousand Gold Coins was published in the supplement of the theatrical magazine Sznhz. Ed. Istvn is written by Fazakas. Kortrs Magyar Mvészeti Lexikon is from the Encyclopedia of Contemporary Hungarian Art. Ed.Péter, Fitz. j magyar irodalmi lexikon is in the New Hungarian Literary Encyclopedia. Ed. Péter and Lszl are related. Kortrs magyar rk was founded in 1945 and ended in 1997. The Bibliogrfia is a collection of information about contemporary Hungarian writers. Ed.F. Almsi. Hungarian and International Who's Who 1998 [Hungarian and International Who's Who 1998] was published in 1997. | [
"Andrs Kenessei",
"Andrs Kenessei",
"Kenessei",
"Kenessei",
"Kenessei",
"Kenessei",
"Kenessei",
"Kenessei",
"Kenessei",
"Kenessei",
"Kenessei",
"Kenessei"
] |
63118291 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lu%20Xiujing | Lu Xiujing | Lu Xiujing (; 406–477), known by the courtesy name Yuande (元德) and the posthumous name Jianji (簡寂), was a Taoist compiler and ritualist who lived under the Liu Song dynasty. His education was of Confucianist leaning. Nevertheless, he chose to study Taoism. Lu was devoted to his faith to the point of abandoning his family.
During his pilgrimages to the various mountains where eminent Taoists had lived, Lu had the chance to collect the scriptures of various currents. His most important accomplishments are his edition of the Lingbao texts and his compilation of the first Taoist Canon. The structure of the canon, called "Three Caverns", will be used from the Tang dynasty onward.
When he was working on the Lingbao compendium, Lu helped structure and expand the already complex set of rituals. Although Lu attributed a lot of importance to the rituals, he put them in second position in the Taoist Canon, that is in the second cavern.
Lu was eloquent and hard-working, and he played a key role in the promotion of the Lingbao school of thoughts, and of the Taoist school of thoughts at large. He was very highly regarded in his lifetime but, after his death, his attempt at unifying the Taoist practices into one canon encountered a lot of criticism. Eventually his reputation was restored under the Tang.
Biography
Lu Xiujing was born in 406 in Wuxing, a district of the historical Dongqian 東遷, modern Zhejiang province. He came from a family of literati and received a strong education including, as it should be, the Confucian classics. Nevertheless, he showed a clear preference for Taoism and the wandering hermit life, for which he renounced his family. The earliest biography of Lu Xiujing includes a passage where Lu is said to have declined to heal his gravely ill daughter, despite his family's laments and supplications. He was only passing by, and the story goes that his daughter had miraculously recovered the day after he had departed. Whether based on a true event or not, the story illustrates the detachment of Lu Xiujing from earthly concerns and the seriousness of his quest to find the Tao.
He was first a hermit on Mount Yunmeng in Henan province. Traveling from mountain to mountain, his name became more and more famous. Eventually, he settled in the Capital Jiankang and opened a trade in medicinal plants. Emperor Wendi, who had heard of Lu's growing influence, had him called to the palace, where he made an impression on the Dowager Empress Wang. She was already a follower of the Huang–Lao, a school of thought with both Legalist and Taoist affinities, and she became a follower of Lu Xiujing.
In 453, Wendi's death gave way to a period of political instability which forced Lu to flee south. This is how he arrived at Mount Lu where tradition makes him meet Huiyuan and Tao Yuanming, although their dates of birth refute the possibility of such a meeting. Mount Lu at the time was an active Buddhist center, which explains why Lu's practice often takes from Buddhism. Here Lu built an abbey and trained disciples. Summoned by the court, he eventually returned to the capital Jiankang in 467, where he brilliantly participated in many debates with Buddhist masters. Then, Emperor Mingdi had built in his honor the Temple for the Veneration of the Void (Chongxuguan 崇虛館), the construction of which required considerable efforts and the participation of many eminent Daoists. It is while living in the temple that Lu Xiujing compiled the first Taoist Canon.
In 471, Lu conducted a three-weeks retreat for emperor Mingdi who was sick. The emperor died the next year. Lu Xiujing died in the capital in 477, aged 71, and was buried at Mount Lu. Among his disciples, Sun Youyue 三会日 in turn became a teacher of the prominent Taoist scholar Tao Hongjing.
The Lingbao school
Lingbao scriptures
The Lingbao School, or "School of Luminous Treasures" Lingbaopai 灵宝派, started around 400 CE, at the end of the Jin dynasty. Together with the Shangqing school and several other schools, it claimed affinity to The Celestial Masters, a predecessor movement also called Way of the Five Pecks of Rice. The first Lingbao canon was composed of fifty-five scriptures. They were gathered by Ge Chaofu, nephew of the philosopher Ge Hong, in the Book of Lingbao (Lingbaojing 灵宝经). In 437, Lu Xiujing annotated and structured the book to produce the catalog of Lingbao Scriptures (Lingbaojingmu 灵宝经目). He kept only thirty-five of the fifty-five scriptures, three of which are now lost. Several modern scholars suspect Lu of having written part of the scriptures himself.
Codification of rituals
Rituals are the core Lu's practice of Taoism. He considered humans to be fundamentally sinful, thus he put a great emphasis on purification rituals. The Lingbao school's complex web of rituals consisted of three parts: bodily purification (through fasting, bathing and sexual abstinence), mental purification (through confession of sins and meditations) and a prayer ritual (usually involving the sharing of food). Lu Xiujing and other Celestial masters sharpened the code of rituals. Lu especially worked on liturgical programs (collective rituals attended to by the larger community). Among them, the most important one, at least in Lu's eyes, was zhai 齋 which means "fasting" (this ceremony is preceded by a collective fast). The version of the zhai ritual that is performed today is very similar to Lu's. He specified its details in numerous works describing "the nine observations and twelve rules" of the ceremonies (jiu zhai shi'er fa 九齋十二法). Lu's practice was inspired by other religious currents. He modeled part of his practice of Taoism after Confucian rites, and adopted the three main requirements inherent in the Buddhist Noble Eightfold Path: right thought, right speech and right action.
The rituals included music, songs and dances; there was an external aspect that could be perceived by the public, and an internal aspect which consisted of the mental reproduction of the gestures by the Taoist master as they were executed. Lu set the codes for the ritual music performed by the high priest gaogong and the chief cantor dujiang. He is also credited with the first Taoist clerical costume. When it comes to the oratory, the place of worship, Lu lamented the heavy ornamentation typical of “profane practices”, preaching for an unadorned oratory. On the other hand, he criticized the lack of separation between the oratories set by peasants and their daily activities.
School reforms
Lu wanted to bring the discipline and structure of the Way of the Five Pecks of Rice back to the Lingbao movement. He reinstated the three days of reunion (sanhuiri 三会日), during which the followers had to go to their libation masters to take stock of their past actions and review the rules. They could then benefit from divine protection against diseases and calamities. He reformed the school to make it more dynamic and meritocratic. In effect, the practitioners were ranked: novices were called "servants of the spirits", "spirit officials" were responsible for healing rituals and at the top of the hierarchy, the "libation masters" supervised the novices. But with time, the transmission of these functions became rather hereditary. Lu was one of the reformers who tried to establish a hierarchy in which promotion was based on merits.
The Three Caverns
Once settled in the Temple for the Veneration of the Void in 467, Lu was under the aegis of the emperor. He had in his possession the Shangqing texts that were kept in the imperial library as well as a number of other catalogs. He compiled the first comprehensive Daoist Canon, which he named "the Three Caverns" (Sandong jingshu mulu 三洞经书目录) in imitation of the Three Tripitaka baskets of the Buddhist canon. The Three Caverns contained a total of 1318 texts, talismans and pharmaceutical recipes. 138 of them were handed down to Lu from the heavenly palace. In other words, they were composed by him. His classification of the scriptures into three caverns, four auxiliaries and twelve categories (Sandong sifu shi'erlei 三洞四輔十二類), will be taken up by the Daozang (the later Daoist canons) from the Tang dynasty on. Lu presented the result of his work to Mingdi in 471.
The content of the three caverns was originally clearly defined, as well as their hierarchy. The first cavern contained the Shangqing texts which focused on meditation, and constituted, according to Lu, the ultimate level of Daoist masters' training. The second cavern, of intermediate level, contained the Lingbao texts devoted essentially to rituals. The third consisted of the Sanhuang texts, or "Texts of Three Sovereigns". These texts were addressed exorcism, alchemy, and talismans, and were reserved to the first stage of training.
Posterity
Critics and eulogies
Criticism of Lu's works began soon after his death. Not only Buddhists, but also Daoist polemicists accused him of plagiarism. Among his detractors was philosopher Tao Hongjing, the founder of the Shangqing school of thoughts. On top of that, he was criticized for incorporating earlier non-Daoist works into his catalog. They were also false accusations, for instance allegations were made that were logistically impossible. It took two centuries for Lu to get back in the Daoist community's favor (under the Tang), and several more to get back in the Buddhist scholars' good graces (under the Song). In the 12th century, Song emperor Huizong honored him with the title of danyuan zhenren 丹元真人, meaning "true being", a title reserved to deified Daoists
Three laughs at Tiger Brook
A legend born under the Song to promote the syncretism of the three main currents of thought, Confucianism, Daoism and Buddhism brought together on Mount Lu the Buddhist monk Huiyuan (334-416), who had established his residence there, the poet Tao Yuanming (365-427), and Lu Xiujing who visited frequently. Their dates of life show that it is clearly a fiction, which nevertheless inspired the painters. This is the legend known as the Three laughs at Tiger Brook.
It says that Huiyuan, who had not descended from Mount Lu for thirty years, decided to make an exception to accompany Lu Xiujing and Tao Yuanming. However, it was agreed that they would avoid passing through Tiger Brook, so named because of the wild beasts that haunted the place. Lost in their discussions, they did not realize that they were taking the forbidden direction and paid no attention to the roars. It was only at the edge of the torrent that they realized their unconsciousness and burst out laughing together.
References
Bibliography
Pregadio, Fabrizio (2008). The Encyclopedia of Taoism. London: Routledge.
Yamada, Toshiaki (2000). “The Lingbao School.” In Livia Kohn's Daoism Handbook, 225–55. Leiden: Brill.
Robinet, Isabelle (1997). Taoism: Growth of a religion. Stanford University Press.
Lagerwey, John, and Pengzhi Lü, eds. (2010). Early Chinese Religion, Part Two: The Period of Division (220-589 AD) (2 vols.). Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill.
Ren Jiyu (1990). Chinese History of Taoism, 143–168. Shanghai People's Publishing House.
Li Yangzheng (1989). Introduction to Taoism, 91–95. Zhonghua Book Company.
Kaltenmark, Max (1960). "Ling-pao: Note sur un terme du taoïsme religieux". Mélanges publiées par l'Institut des Hautes Études Chinoises, 2: 559–588.
Bokenkamp, Stephen R. (2011). "The Early Lingbao Scriptures and the Origins of Daoist Monasticism". Cahiers D'Extrême-Asie, 20: 95–124. École française d’Extrême-Orient.
Pimpaneau, Jacques (1989). Chine: Histoire de la littérature. Arles: Philippe Picquier, re-edited in 2004.
Yeh Chia-ying, translation Josey Shun and Bhikshuni Heng Yin (1998). "Lectures on Tao Yuanming's Poems", a series of lectures at Gold Buddha Monastery, Canada (lecture tapes were transcribed by Tu Xiaoli, An Yi, and Yang Aidi): "Vajra Bhodi Sea" No.338.
406 births
477 deaths
Liu Song dynasty people
Northern and Southern dynasties Taoists
Taoist religious leaders
People from Huzhou | [
"Lu Xiujing (; 406–477), known by the courtesy name Yuande (元德) and the posthumous name Jianji (簡寂), was a Taoist compiler and ritualist who lived under the Liu Song dynasty.",
"His education was of Confucianist leaning.",
"Nevertheless, he chose to study Taoism.",
"Lu was devoted to his faith to the point of abandoning his family.",
"During his pilgrimages to the various mountains where eminent Taoists had lived, Lu had the chance to collect the scriptures of various currents.",
"His most important accomplishments are his edition of the Lingbao texts and his compilation of the first Taoist Canon.",
"The structure of the canon, called \"Three Caverns\", will be used from the Tang dynasty onward.",
"When he was working on the Lingbao compendium, Lu helped structure and expand the already complex set of rituals.",
"Although Lu attributed a lot of importance to the rituals, he put them in second position in the Taoist Canon, that is in the second cavern.",
"Lu was eloquent and hard-working, and he played a key role in the promotion of the Lingbao school of thoughts, and of the Taoist school of thoughts at large.",
"He was very highly regarded in his lifetime but, after his death, his attempt at unifying the Taoist practices into one canon encountered a lot of criticism.",
"Eventually his reputation was restored under the Tang.",
"Biography \nLu Xiujing was born in 406 in Wuxing, a district of the historical Dongqian 東遷, modern Zhejiang province.",
"He came from a family of literati and received a strong education including, as it should be, the Confucian classics.",
"Nevertheless, he showed a clear preference for Taoism and the wandering hermit life, for which he renounced his family.",
"The earliest biography of Lu Xiujing includes a passage where Lu is said to have declined to heal his gravely ill daughter, despite his family's laments and supplications.",
"He was only passing by, and the story goes that his daughter had miraculously recovered the day after he had departed.",
"Whether based on a true event or not, the story illustrates the detachment of Lu Xiujing from earthly concerns and the seriousness of his quest to find the Tao.",
"He was first a hermit on Mount Yunmeng in Henan province.",
"Traveling from mountain to mountain, his name became more and more famous.",
"Eventually, he settled in the Capital Jiankang and opened a trade in medicinal plants.",
"Emperor Wendi, who had heard of Lu's growing influence, had him called to the palace, where he made an impression on the Dowager Empress Wang.",
"She was already a follower of the Huang–Lao, a school of thought with both Legalist and Taoist affinities, and she became a follower of Lu Xiujing.",
"In 453, Wendi's death gave way to a period of political instability which forced Lu to flee south.",
"This is how he arrived at Mount Lu where tradition makes him meet Huiyuan and Tao Yuanming, although their dates of birth refute the possibility of such a meeting.",
"Mount Lu at the time was an active Buddhist center, which explains why Lu's practice often takes from Buddhism.",
"Here Lu built an abbey and trained disciples.",
"Summoned by the court, he eventually returned to the capital Jiankang in 467, where he brilliantly participated in many debates with Buddhist masters.",
"Then, Emperor Mingdi had built in his honor the Temple for the Veneration of the Void (Chongxuguan 崇虛館), the construction of which required considerable efforts and the participation of many eminent Daoists.",
"It is while living in the temple that Lu Xiujing compiled the first Taoist Canon.",
"In 471, Lu conducted a three-weeks retreat for emperor Mingdi who was sick.",
"The emperor died the next year.",
"Lu Xiujing died in the capital in 477, aged 71, and was buried at Mount Lu.",
"Among his disciples, Sun Youyue 三会日 in turn became a teacher of the prominent Taoist scholar Tao Hongjing.",
"The Lingbao school\n\nLingbao scriptures \nThe Lingbao School, or \"School of Luminous Treasures\" Lingbaopai 灵宝派, started around 400 CE, at the end of the Jin dynasty.",
"Together with the Shangqing school and several other schools, it claimed affinity to The Celestial Masters, a predecessor movement also called Way of the Five Pecks of Rice.",
"The first Lingbao canon was composed of fifty-five scriptures.",
"They were gathered by Ge Chaofu, nephew of the philosopher Ge Hong, in the Book of Lingbao (Lingbaojing 灵宝经).",
"In 437, Lu Xiujing annotated and structured the book to produce the catalog of Lingbao Scriptures (Lingbaojingmu 灵宝经目).",
"He kept only thirty-five of the fifty-five scriptures, three of which are now lost.",
"Several modern scholars suspect Lu of having written part of the scriptures himself.",
"Codification of rituals \n\nRituals are the core Lu's practice of Taoism.",
"He considered humans to be fundamentally sinful, thus he put a great emphasis on purification rituals.",
"The Lingbao school's complex web of rituals consisted of three parts: bodily purification (through fasting, bathing and sexual abstinence), mental purification (through confession of sins and meditations) and a prayer ritual (usually involving the sharing of food).",
"Lu Xiujing and other Celestial masters sharpened the code of rituals.",
"Lu especially worked on liturgical programs (collective rituals attended to by the larger community).",
"Among them, the most important one, at least in Lu's eyes, was zhai 齋 which means \"fasting\" (this ceremony is preceded by a collective fast).",
"The version of the zhai ritual that is performed today is very similar to Lu's.",
"He specified its details in numerous works describing \"the nine observations and twelve rules\" of the ceremonies (jiu zhai shi'er fa 九齋十二法).",
"Lu's practice was inspired by other religious currents.",
"He modeled part of his practice of Taoism after Confucian rites, and adopted the three main requirements inherent in the Buddhist Noble Eightfold Path: right thought, right speech and right action.",
"The rituals included music, songs and dances; there was an external aspect that could be perceived by the public, and an internal aspect which consisted of the mental reproduction of the gestures by the Taoist master as they were executed.",
"Lu set the codes for the ritual music performed by the high priest gaogong and the chief cantor dujiang.",
"He is also credited with the first Taoist clerical costume.",
"When it comes to the oratory, the place of worship, Lu lamented the heavy ornamentation typical of “profane practices”, preaching for an unadorned oratory.",
"On the other hand, he criticized the lack of separation between the oratories set by peasants and their daily activities.",
"School reforms \nLu wanted to bring the discipline and structure of the Way of the Five Pecks of Rice back to the Lingbao movement.",
"He reinstated the three days of reunion (sanhuiri 三会日), during which the followers had to go to their libation masters to take stock of their past actions and review the rules.",
"They could then benefit from divine protection against diseases and calamities.",
"He reformed the school to make it more dynamic and meritocratic.",
"In effect, the practitioners were ranked: novices were called \"servants of the spirits\", \"spirit officials\" were responsible for healing rituals and at the top of the hierarchy, the \"libation masters\" supervised the novices.",
"But with time, the transmission of these functions became rather hereditary.",
"Lu was one of the reformers who tried to establish a hierarchy in which promotion was based on merits.",
"The Three Caverns \n\nOnce settled in the Temple for the Veneration of the Void in 467, Lu was under the aegis of the emperor.",
"He had in his possession the Shangqing texts that were kept in the imperial library as well as a number of other catalogs.",
"He compiled the first comprehensive Daoist Canon, which he named \"the Three Caverns\" (Sandong jingshu mulu 三洞经书目录) in imitation of the Three Tripitaka baskets of the Buddhist canon.",
"The Three Caverns contained a total of 1318 texts, talismans and pharmaceutical recipes.",
"138 of them were handed down to Lu from the heavenly palace.",
"In other words, they were composed by him.",
"His classification of the scriptures into three caverns, four auxiliaries and twelve categories (Sandong sifu shi'erlei 三洞四輔十二類), will be taken up by the Daozang (the later Daoist canons) from the Tang dynasty on.",
"Lu presented the result of his work to Mingdi in 471.",
"The content of the three caverns was originally clearly defined, as well as their hierarchy.",
"The first cavern contained the Shangqing texts which focused on meditation, and constituted, according to Lu, the ultimate level of Daoist masters' training.",
"The second cavern, of intermediate level, contained the Lingbao texts devoted essentially to rituals.",
"The third consisted of the Sanhuang texts, or \"Texts of Three Sovereigns\".",
"These texts were addressed exorcism, alchemy, and talismans, and were reserved to the first stage of training.",
"Posterity\n\nCritics and eulogies \nCriticism of Lu's works began soon after his death.",
"Not only Buddhists, but also Daoist polemicists accused him of plagiarism.",
"Among his detractors was philosopher Tao Hongjing, the founder of the Shangqing school of thoughts.",
"On top of that, he was criticized for incorporating earlier non-Daoist works into his catalog.",
"They were also false accusations, for instance allegations were made that were logistically impossible.",
"It took two centuries for Lu to get back in the Daoist community's favor (under the Tang), and several more to get back in the Buddhist scholars' good graces (under the Song).",
"In the 12th century, Song emperor Huizong honored him with the title of danyuan zhenren 丹元真人, meaning \"true being\", a title reserved to deified Daoists\n\nThree laughs at Tiger Brook \n\nA legend born under the Song to promote the syncretism of the three main currents of thought, Confucianism, Daoism and Buddhism brought together on Mount Lu the Buddhist monk Huiyuan (334-416), who had established his residence there, the poet Tao Yuanming (365-427), and Lu Xiujing who visited frequently.",
"Their dates of life show that it is clearly a fiction, which nevertheless inspired the painters.",
"This is the legend known as the Three laughs at Tiger Brook.",
"It says that Huiyuan, who had not descended from Mount Lu for thirty years, decided to make an exception to accompany Lu Xiujing and Tao Yuanming.",
"However, it was agreed that they would avoid passing through Tiger Brook, so named because of the wild beasts that haunted the place.",
"Lost in their discussions, they did not realize that they were taking the forbidden direction and paid no attention to the roars.",
"It was only at the edge of the torrent that they realized their unconsciousness and burst out laughing together.",
"References\n\nBibliography\n\n Pregadio, Fabrizio (2008).",
"The Encyclopedia of Taoism.",
"London: Routledge.",
"Yamada, Toshiaki (2000).",
"“The Lingbao School.” In Livia Kohn's Daoism Handbook, 225–55.",
"Leiden: Brill.",
"Robinet, Isabelle (1997).",
"Taoism: Growth of a religion.",
"Stanford University Press.",
"Lagerwey, John, and Pengzhi Lü, eds.",
"(2010).",
"Early Chinese Religion, Part Two: The Period of Division (220-589 AD) (2 vols.).",
"Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill.",
"Ren Jiyu (1990).",
"Chinese History of Taoism, 143–168.",
"Shanghai People's Publishing House.",
"Li Yangzheng (1989).",
"Introduction to Taoism, 91–95.",
"Zhonghua Book Company.",
"Kaltenmark, Max (1960).",
"\"Ling-pao: Note sur un terme du taoïsme religieux\".",
"Mélanges publiées par l'Institut des Hautes Études Chinoises, 2: 559–588.",
"Bokenkamp, Stephen R. (2011).",
"\"The Early Lingbao Scriptures and the Origins of Daoist Monasticism\".",
"Cahiers D'Extrême-Asie, 20: 95–124.",
"École française d’Extrême-Orient.",
"Pimpaneau, Jacques (1989).",
"Chine: Histoire de la littérature.",
"Arles: Philippe Picquier, re-edited in 2004.",
"Yeh Chia-ying, translation Josey Shun and Bhikshuni Heng Yin (1998).",
"\"Lectures on Tao Yuanming's Poems\", a series of lectures at Gold Buddha Monastery, Canada (lecture tapes were transcribed by Tu Xiaoli, An Yi, and Yang Aidi): \"Vajra Bhodi Sea\" No.338.",
"406 births\n477 deaths\nLiu Song dynasty people\nNorthern and Southern dynasties Taoists\nTaoist religious leaders\nPeople from Huzhou"
] | [
"Lu Xiujing was a Taoist who lived under theLiu Song dynasty.",
"His education was Confucianist.",
"He chose to study Taoists.",
"Lu abandoned his family because he was devoted to his faith.",
"The scriptures of various currents were collected by Lu during his pilgrimages to the various mountains where Taoists lived.",
"The first Taoist Canon and his edition of the Lingbao texts are his most important accomplishments.",
"The \"Three Caverns\" structure will be used from the Tang dynasty onward.",
"Lu helped structure and expand the already complex set of rituals when he was working on the Lingbao compendium.",
"Lu put the rituals in second place in the Taoist Canon, which is in the second cavern.",
"Lu played a key role in the promotion of the Lingbao school of thoughts and the Taoist school of thoughts at large.",
"After his death, his attempt at unifying the Taoist practices into one canon encountered a lot of criticism.",
"His reputation was restored under the Tang.",
"Lu was born in a district of the historicalDongqian in modern Zhejiang province.",
"He was raised in a literati family and received a strong education that included the Confucian classics.",
"He gave up his family for the sake of the wandering hermit life.",
"Lu is said to have refused to heal his gravely ill daughter despite his family's pleas.",
"The story goes that his daughter miraculously recovered the day after he left, because he was only passing by.",
"The story shows the seriousness of Lu's quest to find the Taoist and the fact that he is detached from his earthly concerns.",
"He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"His name became famous as he traveled from mountain to mountain.",
"He opened a trade in plants.",
"After hearing of Lu's influence, Emperor Wendi called him to the palace, where he made an impression on the emperor.",
"She was a follower of both the Legalist and Taoist school of thought, the Huang–Lao.",
"Political instability forced Lu to flee south after Wendi's death.",
"He arrived at Mount Lu in this way so that he could meet the two people who were born there.",
"Mount Lu was an active Buddhist center, which explains why Lu's practice often takes from Buddhism.",
"Lu built an abbey here.",
"He was summoned by the court and returned to the capital, where he participated in many debates with Buddhist masters.",
"The construction of the Temple for the Veneration of the Void required considerable efforts and the participation of many prominent Daoists.",
"The first Taoist Canon was compiled while Lu was living in the temple.",
"The emperor was sick and Lu conducted a three-week retreat for him.",
"The emperor died.",
"Lu was buried at Mount Lu after he died in the capital.",
"Sun Youyue became a teacher of the Taoist scholar Taoist Hongjing.",
"The Lingbao School started around 400CE at the end of the Jin dynasty.",
"The way of the five pecks of rice was a predecessor movement to the Shangqing school and several other schools.",
"Fifty-five scriptures were used in the first Lingbao canon.",
"They were gathered by the nephew of the philosopher Ge Hong.",
"The book was annotated and structured to produce the Lingbaojingmu catalog.",
"Three of the fifty-five scriptures are now lost.",
"Lu is thought to have written part of the scriptures himself.",
"The core of Lu's practice is codification of rituals.",
"He put a lot of emphasis on purification rituals because he considered humans to be fundamentally flawed.",
"The Lingbao school's complex web of rituals consisted of three parts: bodily purification, mental purification, and prayer.",
"The code of rituals was improved by Lu and other masters.",
"Collective rituals attended to by the larger community were worked on by Lu.",
"Lu thought that the most important one was Zhai which means \"fasting\", which is preceded by a collective fast.",
"The version of the ritual that is performed today is very similar to Lu's.",
"He described the nine observations and twelve rules of the ceremonies in numerous works.",
"Other religious currents inspired Lu's practice.",
"The Buddhist Noble Eightfold Path has three main requirements: right thought, right speech and right action.",
"There was a mental reproduction of the Taoist master's gestures as they were executed in the rituals, as well as an external aspect that could be perceived by the public.",
"The ritual music is performed by the high priest gaogong and the chief cantor dujiang.",
"The first Taoist costume was credited to him.",
"Lu decried the heavy ornamentation typical of \"profane practices\" when it came to the oratory.",
"The lack of separation between the oratories set by peasants and their daily activities was criticized by him.",
"Lu wanted the discipline and structure of the Way of the Five Pecks of Rice to be brought back to the Lingbao movement.",
"The three days of reunion had 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611",
"They could benefit from divine protection against diseases.",
"The school was reformed to make it more meritocratic.",
"At the top of the hierarchy, the \"libation masters\" supervised the novices, while \"spirit officials\" were responsible for healing rituals.",
"The transmission of these functions became hereditary.",
"Lu tried to establish a hierarchy in which promotion was based on merit.",
"The Temple for the Veneration of the Void was once home to the Three Caverns.",
"The imperial library contained a number of catalogs, as well as the Shangqing texts that he had in his possession.",
"The Three Caverns are an imitation of the Three Tripitaka baskets of the Buddhist canon.",
"1318 texts, talismans and pharmaceutical recipes were found in the Three Caverns.",
"Lu received 138 of them from the heavenly palace.",
"They were composed by him.",
"The Daozang from the Tang dynasty will take up his classification of the scriptures into three caverns, four auxiliaries and twelve categories.",
"The result of Lu's work was presented to Mingdi.",
"The hierarchy of the caverns was clearly defined.",
"According to Lu, the ultimate level of Daoist masters' training can be found in the first cavern.",
"The Lingbao texts were contained in the second cavern.",
"The Sanhuang texts were the third.",
"The first stage of training was reserved for these texts.",
"Critique of Lu's works began after his death.",
"He was accused of plagiarism by a number of people.",
"The founder of the Shangqing school of thoughts was one of his detractors.",
"He was criticized for including non- Daoist works in his catalog.",
"They were also false accusations.",
"It took two centuries for Lu to get back in the Daoist community's favor, and several more to get back in the Buddhist scholars' good graces.",
"In the 12th century, the Song emperor honored him with the title of \"danyuan zhenren\", meaning \"true being\", a title reserved to deified Daoists.",
"The dates of life show that it is a fiction, which inspired the painters.",
"The Three laughs at Tiger brook is a legend.",
"It is said that a person who had not descended from Mount Lu for thirty years decided to go with two other people.",
"Tiger brook is named after the wild beasts that haunted the place.",
"They didn't realize they were taking the forbidden direction and didn't pay attention to the roars.",
"At the edge of the torrent, they realized their unconsciousness and burst out laughing.",
"Pregadio has a References Bibliography.",
"There is an encyclopedia of taoism.",
"London: Routledge.",
"Toshiaki Yamada was born in 2000.",
"The Lingbao School is in Livia Kohn's handbook.",
"Brill.",
"Iselle Robinet was born in 1997.",
"Growth of a religion is called taoism.",
"The press of the university.",
"Lagerwey, John, and L are authors.",
"(2010).",
"The Period of Division is the second part of Early Chinese Religion.",
"The Netherlands: Brill.",
"Ren Jiyu was published in 1990.",
"The History of Taoists in China, 143–168.",
"The People's Publishing House is in China.",
"Li Yangzheng was born in 1989.",
"The introduction to taoism.",
"The company is called Zhonghua Book Company.",
"Max Kaltenmark was born in 1960.",
"\"Note sur un terme du taosme religieux\"",
"Mélanges publiées par l'Institut des Hautes tudes Chinoises.",
"Bokenkamp, Stephen R.",
"There is a book called \"The Early Lingbao and the Origin of Daoist Monasticism\".",
"Cahiers D'Extrme-Asie was published in 20.",
"cole Franais d'Extrme-Orient.",
"Jacques Pimpaneau was born in 1989.",
"Histoire de la littérature is called Chine.",
"Philippe Picquier was re-edited in 2004.",
"Josey Shun and Bhikshuni Yin were translated by Yeh Chia-ying.",
"A series of lectures at Gold Buddha Monastery, Canada were transcribed by Tu Xiaoli, An Yi, and Yang Aidi.",
"People from Huzhou are from the Northern and Southern dynasties."
] | <mask>jing (; 406–477), known by the courtesy name Yuande (元德) and the posthumous name Jianji (簡寂), was a Taoist compiler and ritualist who lived under the Liu Song dynasty. His education was of Confucianist leaning. Nevertheless, he chose to study Taoism. <mask> was devoted to his faith to the point of abandoning his family. During his pilgrimages to the various mountains where eminent Taoists had lived, <mask> had the chance to collect the scriptures of various currents. His most important accomplishments are his edition of the Lingbao texts and his compilation of the first Taoist Canon. The structure of the canon, called "Three Caverns", will be used from the Tang dynasty onward.When he was working on the Lingbao compendium, <mask> helped structure and expand the already complex set of rituals. Although <mask> attributed a lot of importance to the rituals, he put them in second position in the Taoist Canon, that is in the second cavern. <mask> was eloquent and hard-working, and he played a key role in the promotion of the Lingbao school of thoughts, and of the Taoist school of thoughts at large. He was very highly regarded in his lifetime but, after his death, his attempt at unifying the Taoist practices into one canon encountered a lot of criticism. Eventually his reputation was restored under the Tang. Biography
<mask>ujing was born in 406 in Wuxing, a district of the historical Dongqian 東遷, modern Zhejiang province. He came from a family of literati and received a strong education including, as it should be, the Confucian classics.Nevertheless, he showed a clear preference for Taoism and the wandering hermit life, for which he renounced his family. The earliest biography of <mask>jing includes a passage where <mask> is said to have declined to heal his gravely ill daughter, despite his family's laments and supplications. He was only passing by, and the story goes that his daughter had miraculously recovered the day after he had departed. Whether based on a true event or not, the story illustrates the detachment of <mask>jing from earthly concerns and the seriousness of his quest to find the Tao. He was first a hermit on Mount Yunmeng in Henan province. Traveling from mountain to mountain, his name became more and more famous. Eventually, he settled in the Capital Jiankang and opened a trade in medicinal plants.Emperor Wendi, who had heard of <mask>'s growing influence, had him called to the palace, where he made an impression on the Dowager Empress Wang. She was already a follower of the Huang–Lao, a school of thought with both Legalist and Taoist affinities, and she became a follower of <mask>ujing. In 453, Wendi's death gave way to a period of political instability which forced <mask> to flee south. This is how he arrived at Mount Lu where tradition makes him meet Huiyuan and Tao Yuanming, although their dates of birth refute the possibility of such a meeting. Mount Lu at the time was an active Buddhist center, which explains why <mask>'s practice often takes from Buddhism. Here <mask> built an abbey and trained disciples. Summoned by the court, he eventually returned to the capital Jiankang in 467, where he brilliantly participated in many debates with Buddhist masters.Then, Emperor Mingdi had built in his honor the Temple for the Veneration of the Void (Chongxuguan 崇虛館), the construction of which required considerable efforts and the participation of many eminent Daoists. It is while living in the temple that <mask>jing compiled the first Taoist Canon. In 471, <mask> conducted a three-weeks retreat for emperor Mingdi who was sick. The emperor died the next year. <mask>jing died in the capital in 477, aged 71, and was buried at Mount Lu. Among his disciples, Sun Youyue 三会日 in turn became a teacher of the prominent Taoist scholar Tao Hongjing. The Lingbao school
Lingbao scriptures
The Lingbao School, or "School of Luminous Treasures" Lingbaopai 灵宝派, started around 400 CE, at the end of the Jin dynasty.Together with the Shangqing school and several other schools, it claimed affinity to The Celestial Masters, a predecessor movement also called Way of the Five Pecks of Rice. The first Lingbao canon was composed of fifty-five scriptures. They were gathered by Ge Chaofu, nephew of the philosopher Ge Hong, in the Book of Lingbao (Lingbaojing 灵宝经). In 437, <mask>ujing annotated and structured the book to produce the catalog of Lingbao Scriptures (Lingbaojingmu 灵宝经目). He kept only thirty-five of the fifty-five scriptures, three of which are now lost. Several modern scholars suspect <mask> of having written part of the scriptures himself. Codification of rituals
Rituals are the core <mask>'s practice of Taoism.He considered humans to be fundamentally sinful, thus he put a great emphasis on purification rituals. The Lingbao school's complex web of rituals consisted of three parts: bodily purification (through fasting, bathing and sexual abstinence), mental purification (through confession of sins and meditations) and a prayer ritual (usually involving the sharing of food). <mask>ujing and other Celestial masters sharpened the code of rituals. <mask> especially worked on liturgical programs (collective rituals attended to by the larger community). Among them, the most important one, at least in <mask>'s eyes, was zhai 齋 which means "fasting" (this ceremony is preceded by a collective fast). The version of the zhai ritual that is performed today is very similar to <mask>'s. He specified its details in numerous works describing "the nine observations and twelve rules" of the ceremonies (jiu zhai shi'er fa 九齋十二法).<mask>'s practice was inspired by other religious currents. He modeled part of his practice of Taoism after Confucian rites, and adopted the three main requirements inherent in the Buddhist Noble Eightfold Path: right thought, right speech and right action. The rituals included music, songs and dances; there was an external aspect that could be perceived by the public, and an internal aspect which consisted of the mental reproduction of the gestures by the Taoist master as they were executed. <mask> set the codes for the ritual music performed by the high priest gaogong and the chief cantor dujiang. He is also credited with the first Taoist clerical costume. When it comes to the oratory, the place of worship, <mask> lamented the heavy ornamentation typical of “profane practices”, preaching for an unadorned oratory. On the other hand, he criticized the lack of separation between the oratories set by peasants and their daily activities.School reforms
<mask> wanted to bring the discipline and structure of the Way of the Five Pecks of Rice back to the Lingbao movement. He reinstated the three days of reunion (sanhuiri 三会日), during which the followers had to go to their libation masters to take stock of their past actions and review the rules. They could then benefit from divine protection against diseases and calamities. He reformed the school to make it more dynamic and meritocratic. In effect, the practitioners were ranked: novices were called "servants of the spirits", "spirit officials" were responsible for healing rituals and at the top of the hierarchy, the "libation masters" supervised the novices. But with time, the transmission of these functions became rather hereditary. <mask> was one of the reformers who tried to establish a hierarchy in which promotion was based on merits.The Three Caverns
Once settled in the Temple for the Veneration of the Void in 467, <mask> was under the aegis of the emperor. He had in his possession the Shangqing texts that were kept in the imperial library as well as a number of other catalogs. He compiled the first comprehensive Daoist Canon, which he named "the Three Caverns" (Sandong jingshu mulu 三洞经书目录) in imitation of the Three Tripitaka baskets of the Buddhist canon. The Three Caverns contained a total of 1318 texts, talismans and pharmaceutical recipes. 138 of them were handed down to <mask> from the heavenly palace. In other words, they were composed by him. His classification of the scriptures into three caverns, four auxiliaries and twelve categories (Sandong sifu shi'erlei 三洞四輔十二類), will be taken up by the Daozang (the later Daoist canons) from the Tang dynasty on.<mask> presented the result of his work to Mingdi in 471. The content of the three caverns was originally clearly defined, as well as their hierarchy. The first cavern contained the Shangqing texts which focused on meditation, and constituted, according to <mask>, the ultimate level of Daoist masters' training. The second cavern, of intermediate level, contained the Lingbao texts devoted essentially to rituals. The third consisted of the Sanhuang texts, or "Texts of Three Sovereigns". These texts were addressed exorcism, alchemy, and talismans, and were reserved to the first stage of training. Posterity
Critics and eulogies
Criticism of <mask>'s works began soon after his death.Not only Buddhists, but also Daoist polemicists accused him of plagiarism. Among his detractors was philosopher Tao Hongjing, the founder of the Shangqing school of thoughts. On top of that, he was criticized for incorporating earlier non-Daoist works into his catalog. They were also false accusations, for instance allegations were made that were logistically impossible. It took two centuries for <mask> to get back in the Daoist community's favor (under the Tang), and several more to get back in the Buddhist scholars' good graces (under the Song). In the 12th century, Song emperor Huizong honored him with the title of danyuan zhenren 丹元真人, meaning "true being", a title reserved to deified Daoists
Three laughs at Tiger Brook
A legend born under the Song to promote the syncretism of the three main currents of thought, Confucianism, Daoism and Buddhism brought together on Mount Lu the Buddhist monk Huiyuan (334-416), who had established his residence there, the poet Tao Yuanming (365-427), and <mask>ujing who visited frequently. Their dates of life show that it is clearly a fiction, which nevertheless inspired the painters.This is the legend known as the Three laughs at Tiger Brook. It says that Huiyuan, who had not descended from Mount Lu for thirty years, decided to make an exception to accompany <mask>ujing and Tao Yuanming. However, it was agreed that they would avoid passing through Tiger Brook, so named because of the wild beasts that haunted the place. Lost in their discussions, they did not realize that they were taking the forbidden direction and paid no attention to the roars. It was only at the edge of the torrent that they realized their unconsciousness and burst out laughing together. References
Bibliography
Pregadio, Fabrizio (2008). The Encyclopedia of Taoism.London: Routledge. Yamada, Toshiaki (2000). “The Lingbao School.” In Livia Kohn's Daoism Handbook, 225–55. Leiden: Brill. Robinet, Isabelle (1997). Taoism: Growth of a religion. Stanford University Press.Lagerwey, John, and Pengzhi Lü, eds. (2010). Early Chinese Religion, Part Two: The Period of Division (220-589 AD) (2 vols.). Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill. Ren Jiyu (1990). Chinese History of Taoism, 143–168. Shanghai People's Publishing House.Li Yangzheng (1989). Introduction to Taoism, 91–95. Zhonghua Book Company. Kaltenmark, Max (1960). "Ling-pao: Note sur un terme du taoïsme religieux". Mélanges publiées par l'Institut des Hautes Études Chinoises, 2: 559–588. Bokenkamp, Stephen R. (2011)."The Early Lingbao Scriptures and the Origins of Daoist Monasticism". Cahiers D'Extrême-Asie, 20: 95–124. École française d’Extrême-Orient. Pimpaneau, Jacques (1989). Chine: Histoire de la littérature. Arles: Philippe Picquier, re-edited in 2004. Yeh Chia-ying, translation Josey Shun and Bhikshuni Heng Yin (1998)."Lectures on Tao Yuanming's Poems", a series of lectures at Gold Buddha Monastery, Canada (lecture tapes were transcribed by Tu Xiaoli, An Yi, and Yang Aidi): "Vajra Bhodi Sea" No.338. 406 births
477 deaths
Liu Song dynasty people
Northern and Southern dynasties Taoists
Taoist religious leaders
People from Huzhou | [
"Lu Xiu",
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"Lu",
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"Lu Xi",
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"Lu Xi"
] | <mask>jing was a Taoist who lived under theLiu Song dynasty. His education was Confucianist. He chose to study Taoists. <mask> abandoned his family because he was devoted to his faith. The scriptures of various currents were collected by <mask> during his pilgrimages to the various mountains where Taoists lived. The first Taoist Canon and his edition of the Lingbao texts are his most important accomplishments. The "Three Caverns" structure will be used from the Tang dynasty onward.<mask> helped structure and expand the already complex set of rituals when he was working on the Lingbao compendium. <mask> put the rituals in second place in the Taoist Canon, which is in the second cavern. <mask> played a key role in the promotion of the Lingbao school of thoughts and the Taoist school of thoughts at large. After his death, his attempt at unifying the Taoist practices into one canon encountered a lot of criticism. His reputation was restored under the Tang. <mask> was born in a district of the historicalDongqian in modern Zhejiang province. He was raised in a literati family and received a strong education that included the Confucian classics.He gave up his family for the sake of the wandering hermit life. <mask> is said to have refused to heal his gravely ill daughter despite his family's pleas. The story goes that his daughter miraculously recovered the day after he left, because he was only passing by. The story shows the seriousness of <mask>'s quest to find the Taoist and the fact that he is detached from his earthly concerns. He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 His name became famous as he traveled from mountain to mountain. He opened a trade in plants.After hearing of <mask>'s influence, Emperor Wendi called him to the palace, where he made an impression on the emperor. She was a follower of both the Legalist and Taoist school of thought, the Huang–Lao. Political instability forced <mask> to flee south after Wendi's death. He arrived at Mount Lu in this way so that he could meet the two people who were born there. Mount Lu was an active Buddhist center, which explains why <mask>'s practice often takes from Buddhism. <mask> built an abbey here. He was summoned by the court and returned to the capital, where he participated in many debates with Buddhist masters.The construction of the Temple for the Veneration of the Void required considerable efforts and the participation of many prominent Daoists. The first Taoist Canon was compiled while <mask> was living in the temple. The emperor was sick and <mask> conducted a three-week retreat for him. The emperor died. <mask> was buried at Mount Lu after he died in the capital. Sun Youyue became a teacher of the Taoist scholar Taoist Hongjing. The Lingbao School started around 400CE at the end of the Jin dynasty.The way of the five pecks of rice was a predecessor movement to the Shangqing school and several other schools. Fifty-five scriptures were used in the first Lingbao canon. They were gathered by the nephew of the philosopher Ge Hong. The book was annotated and structured to produce the Lingbaojingmu catalog. Three of the fifty-five scriptures are now lost. <mask> is thought to have written part of the scriptures himself. The core of <mask>'s practice is codification of rituals.He put a lot of emphasis on purification rituals because he considered humans to be fundamentally flawed. The Lingbao school's complex web of rituals consisted of three parts: bodily purification, mental purification, and prayer. The code of rituals was improved by <mask> and other masters. Collective rituals attended to by the larger community were worked on by <mask>. <mask> thought that the most important one was Zhai which means "fasting", which is preceded by a collective fast. The version of the ritual that is performed today is very similar to <mask>'s. He described the nine observations and twelve rules of the ceremonies in numerous works.Other religious currents inspired <mask>'s practice. The Buddhist Noble Eightfold Path has three main requirements: right thought, right speech and right action. There was a mental reproduction of the Taoist master's gestures as they were executed in the rituals, as well as an external aspect that could be perceived by the public. The ritual music is performed by the high priest gaogong and the chief cantor dujiang. The first Taoist costume was credited to him. <mask> decried the heavy ornamentation typical of "profane practices" when it came to the oratory. The lack of separation between the oratories set by peasants and their daily activities was criticized by him.<mask> wanted the discipline and structure of the Way of the Five Pecks of Rice to be brought back to the Lingbao movement. The three days of reunion had 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 They could benefit from divine protection against diseases. The school was reformed to make it more meritocratic. At the top of the hierarchy, the "libation masters" supervised the novices, while "spirit officials" were responsible for healing rituals. The transmission of these functions became hereditary. <mask> tried to establish a hierarchy in which promotion was based on merit.The Temple for the Veneration of the Void was once home to the Three Caverns. The imperial library contained a number of catalogs, as well as the Shangqing texts that he had in his possession. The Three Caverns are an imitation of the Three Tripitaka baskets of the Buddhist canon. 1318 texts, talismans and pharmaceutical recipes were found in the Three Caverns. <mask> received 138 of them from the heavenly palace. They were composed by him. The Daozang from the Tang dynasty will take up his classification of the scriptures into three caverns, four auxiliaries and twelve categories.The result of <mask>'s work was presented to Mingdi. The hierarchy of the caverns was clearly defined. According to <mask>, the ultimate level of Daoist masters' training can be found in the first cavern. The Lingbao texts were contained in the second cavern. The Sanhuang texts were the third. The first stage of training was reserved for these texts. Critique of <mask>'s works began after his death.He was accused of plagiarism by a number of people. The founder of the Shangqing school of thoughts was one of his detractors. He was criticized for including non- Daoist works in his catalog. They were also false accusations. It took two centuries for <mask> to get back in the Daoist community's favor, and several more to get back in the Buddhist scholars' good graces. In the 12th century, the Song emperor honored him with the title of "danyuan zhenren", meaning "true being", a title reserved to deified Daoists. The dates of life show that it is a fiction, which inspired the painters.The Three laughs at Tiger brook is a legend. It is said that a person who had not descended from Mount Lu for thirty years decided to go with two other people. Tiger brook is named after the wild beasts that haunted the place. They didn't realize they were taking the forbidden direction and didn't pay attention to the roars. At the edge of the torrent, they realized their unconsciousness and burst out laughing. Pregadio has a References Bibliography. There is an encyclopedia of taoism.London: Routledge. Toshiaki Yamada was born in 2000. The Lingbao School is in Livia Kohn's handbook. Brill. Iselle Robinet was born in 1997. Growth of a religion is called taoism. The press of the university.Lagerwey, John, and L are authors. (2010). The Period of Division is the second part of Early Chinese Religion. The Netherlands: Brill. Ren Jiyu was published in 1990. The History of Taoists in China, 143–168. The People's Publishing House is in China.Li Yangzheng was born in 1989. The introduction to taoism. The company is called Zhonghua Book Company. Max Kaltenmark was born in 1960. "Note sur un terme du taosme religieux" Mélanges publiées par l'Institut des Hautes tudes Chinoises. Bokenkamp, Stephen R.There is a book called "The Early Lingbao and the Origin of Daoist Monasticism". Cahiers D'Extrme-Asie was published in 20. cole Franais d'Extrme-Orient. Jacques Pimpaneau was born in 1989. Histoire de la littérature is called Chine. Philippe Picquier was re-edited in 2004. Josey Shun and Bhikshuni Yin were translated by Yeh Chia-ying.A series of lectures at Gold Buddha Monastery, Canada were transcribed by Tu Xiaoli, An Yi, and Yang Aidi. People from Huzhou are from the Northern and Southern dynasties. | [
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13156 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George%20Fox | George Fox | George Fox (July 1624 – 13 January 1691) was an English Dissenter, who was a founder of the Religious Society of Friends, commonly known as the Quakers or Friends. The son of a Leicestershire weaver, he lived in times of social upheaval and war. He rebelled against the religious and political authorities by proposing an unusual, uncompromising approach to the Christian faith. He travelled throughout Britain as a dissenting preacher, performed hundreds of healings, and was often persecuted by the disapproving authorities. In 1669, he married Margaret Fell, widow of a wealthy supporter, Thomas Fell; she was a leading Friend. His ministry expanded and he made tours of North America and the Low Countries. He was arrested and jailed numerous times for his beliefs. He spent his final decade working in London to organise the expanding Quaker movement. Despite disdain from some Anglicans and Puritans, he was viewed with respect by the Quaker convert William Penn and the Lord Protector, Oliver Cromwell.
Early life
George Fox was born in the strongly Puritan village of Drayton-in-the-Clay, Leicestershire, England (now Fenny Drayton), 15 miles (24 km) west-south-west of Leicester, as the eldest of four children of Christopher Fox, a successful weaver, called "Righteous Christer" by his neighbours, and his wife, Mary née Lago. Christopher Fox was a churchwarden and relatively wealthy. He left his son a substantial legacy when he died in the late 1650s. Fox was of a serious, religious disposition from childhood. There is no record of any formal schooling but he learnt to read and write. "When I came to eleven years of age," he said, "I knew pureness and righteousness; for, while I was a child, I was taught how to walk to be kept pure. The Lord taught me to be faithful, in all things, and to act faithfully two ways; viz., inwardly to God, and outwardly to man." Known as an honest person, he also proclaimed, "The Lord taught me to be faithful in all things ... and to keep to Yea and Nay in all things."
As he grew up, Fox's relatives "thought to have made me a priest" but he was instead apprenticed to a local shoemaker and grazier, George Gee of Mancetter. This suited his contemplative temperament and he became well known for his diligence among the wool traders who had dealings with his master. A constant obsession for Fox was the pursuit of "simplicity" in life – humility and the abandonment of luxury. The short time he spent as a shepherd was important to the formation of this view. Toward the end of his life he wrote a letter for general circulation pointing out that Abel, Noah, Abraham, Jacob, Moses and David were all keepers of sheep or cattle and so a learned education should not be seen as a necessary qualification for ministry.
George Fox knew people who were "professors" (followers of the standard Church of England), but by the age of 19 he was looking down on their behaviour, in particular their consumption of alcohol. At prayer one night after leaving two acquaintances at a drinking session, Fox heard an inner voice saying, "Thou seest how young people go together into vanity, and old people into the earth; thou must forsake all, young and old, keep out of all, and be as a stranger unto all."
First travels
Driven by his "inner voice", Fox left Drayton-in-the-Clay in September 1643 and moved towards London in a state of mental torment and confusion. The English Civil War had begun and troops were stationed in many towns through which he passed. In Barnet, he was torn by depression (perhaps from the temptations of the resort town near London). He alternately shut himself in his room for days at a time or went out alone into the countryside. After almost a year he returned to Drayton, where he engaged Nathaniel Stephens, the clergyman of his home town, in long discussions on religious matters. Stephens considered Fox a gifted young man, but the two disagreed on so many issues that he later called Fox mad and spoke against him.
Over the next few years Fox continued to travel around the country, as his particular religious beliefs took shape. At times he actively sought the company of clergy, but found no comfort from them as they seemed unable to help with the matters troubling him. One, in Warwickshire, advised him to take tobacco (which Fox disliked) and sing psalms; another, in Coventry, lost his temper when Fox accidentally stood on a flower in his garden; a third suggested bloodletting. Fox became fascinated by the Bible, which he studied assiduously. He hoped to find among the "English Dissenters" a spiritual understanding absent from the established church, but he fell out with one group, for example, because he maintained that women had souls:
He thought intensely about the Temptation of Christ, which he compared to his own spiritual condition, but he drew strength from his conviction that God would support and preserve him. In prayer and meditation he came to a greater understanding of the nature of his faith and what it required from him; this process he called "opening". He also came to what he deemed a deep inner understanding of standard Christian beliefs. Among his ideas were:
Rituals can be safely ignored, as long as one experiences a true spiritual conversion.
The qualification for ministry is given by the Holy Spirit, not by ecclesiastical study. This implies that anyone has the right to minister, assuming the Spirit guides them, including women and children.
God "dwelleth in the hearts of his obedient people": religious experience is not confined to a church building. Indeed, Fox refused to apply the word "church" to a building, using instead the name "steeple-house", a usage maintained by many Quakers today. Fox would just as soon worship in fields and orchards, believing that God's presence could be felt anywhere.
Though Fox used the Bible to support his views, Fox reasoned that, because God was within the faithful, believers could follow their own inner guide rather than rely on a strict reading of Scripture or the word of clerics.
Fox also made no clear distinction between Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
Religious Society of Friends
In 1647 Fox began to preach publicly: in market-places, fields, appointed meetings of various kinds or even sometimes in "steeple-houses" (churches) after the service. His powerful preaching began to attract a small following. It is not clear at what point the Society of Friends was formed, but there was certainly a group of people who often travelled together. At first, they called themselves "Children of the Light" or "Friends of the Truth", and later simply "Friends". Fox seems initially to have had no desire to found a sect, but only to proclaim what he saw as the pure and genuine principles of Christianity in their original simplicity, though he afterward showed great prowess as a religious organiser in the structure he gave to the new society.
There were a great many rival Christian denominations holding very diverse opinions in that period; the atmosphere of dispute and confusion gave Fox an opportunity to put forward his own beliefs through his personal sermons. Fox's preaching was grounded in scripture but was mainly effective because of the intense personal experience he was able to project. He was scathing about immorality, deceit and the exacting of tithes and urged his listeners to lead lives without sin, avoiding the Ranter's antinomian view that a believer becomes automatically sinless. By 1651 he had gathered other talented preachers around him and continued to roam the country despite a harsh reception from some listeners, who would whip and beat them to drive them away. As his reputation spread, his words were not welcomed by all. As an uncompromising preacher, he hurled disputation and contradiction to the faces of his opponents. The worship of Friends in the form of silent waiting punctuated by individuals speaking as the Spirit moved them seems to have been well-established by this time, though it is not recorded how this came to be; Richard Bauman asserts that "speaking was an important feature of the meeting for worship from the earliest days of Quakerism."
Imprisonment
Fox complained to judges about decisions he considered morally wrong, as he did in a letter on the case of a woman due to be executed for theft. He campaigned against paying the tithes intended to fund the established church, which often went into the pockets of absentee landlords or religious colleges distant from the paying parishioners. In his view, as God was everywhere and anyone could preach, the established church was unnecessary and a university qualification irrelevant for a preacher. Conflict with civil authority was inevitable. Fox was imprisoned several times, the first at Nottingham in 1649. At Derby in 1650 he was imprisoned for blasphemy; a judge mocked Fox's exhortation to "tremble at the word of the Lord", calling him and his followers "Quakers". After he refused to fight against the return of the monarchy (or to take up arms for any reason), his sentence was doubled. The refusal to swear oaths or take up arms came to be much more important in his public statements. Refusal to take oaths meant that Quakers could be prosecuted under laws compelling subjects to pledge allegiance and made testifying in court problematic. In a letter of 1652 (That which is set up by the sword), he urged Friends not to use "carnal weapons" but "spiritual weapons", saying, "let the waves [the power of nations] break over your heads".
In 1652, Fox preached for several hours under a walnut tree at Balby, where his disciple Thomas Aldham was instrumental in setting up the first meeting in the Doncaster area. In the same year Fox felt that God led him to ascend Pendle Hill, where he had a vision of many souls coming to Christ. From there he travelled to Sedbergh, where he had heard a group of Seekers was meeting, and preached to over a thousand people on Firbank Fell, convincing many, including Francis Howgill, to accept that Christ might speak to people directly. At the end of the month he stayed at Swarthmoor Hall, near Ulverston, the home of Thomas Fell, vice-chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, and his wife, Margaret. Around that time, the ad hoc meetings of Friends began to be formalised and a monthly meeting was set up in County Durham. Margaret became a Quaker, and although Thomas did not convert, his familiarity with the Friends proved influential when Fox was arrested for blasphemy in October. Fell was one of three presiding judges, and the charges were dismissed on a technicality.
Fox remained at Swarthmoor until the summer of 1653, then left for Carlisle, where he was arrested again for blasphemy. It was even proposed to put him to death, but Parliament requested his release rather than have "a young man ... die for religion". Further imprisonments came in London in 1654, Launceston in 1656, Lancaster in 1660, Leicester in 1662, Lancaster again and Scarborough in 1664–1666 and Worcester in 1673–1675. Charges usually included causing a disturbance and travelling without a pass. Quakers fell foul of irregularly enforced laws forbidding unauthorised worship, while actions motivated by belief in social equality – refusing to use or acknowledge titles, take hats off in court or bow to those who considered themselves socially superior – were seen as disrespectful. While imprisoned at Launceston, Fox wrote, "Christ our Lord and master saith 'Swear not at all, but let your communications be yea, yea, and nay, nay, for whatsoever is more than these cometh of evil.' ... the Apostle James saith, 'My brethren, above all things swear not, neither by heaven, nor by earth, nor by any other oath. Lest ye fall into condemnation.'"
In prison George Fox continued writing and preaching, feeling that imprisonment brought him into contact with people who needed his help—the jailers as well as his fellow prisoners. In his journal, he told his magistrate, "God dwells not in temples made with hands." He also sought to set an example by his actions there, turning the other cheek when being beaten and refusing to show his captors any dejected feelings.
Encounters with Cromwell
Parliamentarians grew suspicious of monarchist plots and fearful that the group travelling with Fox aimed to overthrow the government: by this time his meetings were regularly attracting crowds of over a thousand. In early 1655 he was arrested at Whetstone, Leicestershire and taken to London under armed guard. In March he was brought before the Lord Protector, Oliver Cromwell. After affirming that he had no intention of taking up arms, Fox was able to speak to Cromwell for most of the morning about the Friends. He advised him to listen to God's voice and obey it, so that as Fox left, Cromwell "with tears in his eyes said, 'Come again to my house; for if thou and I were but an hour of a day together, we should be nearer one to the other'; adding that he wished [Fox] no more ill than he did to his own soul."
This episode was later recalled as an example of "speaking truth to power", a preaching technique by which subsequent Quakers hoped to influence the powerful. Although not used until the 20th century, the phrase is related to the ideas of plain speech and simplicity which Fox practised, but motivated by the more worldly goal of eradicating war, injustice and oppression.
Fox petitioned Cromwell over the course of 1656 to alleviate the persecution of Quakers. Later that year, they met for a second time at Whitehall. On a personal level, the meeting went well; despite disagreements between the two men, they had a certain rapport. Fox invited Cromwell to "lay down his crown at the feet of Jesus" – which Cromwell declined to do. Fox met Cromwell again twice in March 1657. Their last meeting was in 1658 at Hampton Court, though they could not speak for long or meet again because of the Protector's worsening illness – Fox even wrote that "he looked like a dead man". Cromwell died in September of that year.
James Nayler
One early Quaker convert, the Yorkshireman James Nayler, arose as a prominent preacher in London around 1655. A breach began to form between Fox's and Nayler's followers. As Fox was held prisoner at Launceston, Nayler moved south-westwards towards Launceston intending to meet Fox and heal any rift. On the way he was arrested himself and held at Exeter. After Fox was released from Launceston gaol in 1656, he preached throughout the West Country. Arriving at Exeter late in September, Fox was reunited with Nayler. Nayler and his followers refused to remove their hats while Fox prayed, which Fox took as both a personal slight and a bad example. When Nayler refused to kiss Fox's hand, Fox told Nayler to kiss his foot instead. Nayler was offended and the two parted acrimoniously. Fox wrote that "there was now a wicked spirit risen amongst Friends".
After Nayler's own release later the same year he rode into Bristol triumphantly playing the part of Jesus Christ in a re-enactment of Palm Sunday. He was arrested and taken to London, where Parliament defeated a motion to execute him by 96–82. Instead, they ordered that he be pilloried and whipped through both London and Bristol, branded on his forehead with the letter B (for blasphemer), bored through the tongue with a red-hot iron and imprisoned in solitary confinement with hard labour. Nayler was released in 1659, but he was a broken man. On meeting Fox in London, he fell to his knees and begged Fox's forgiveness. Shortly afterward, Nayler was attacked by thieves while travelling home to his family, and died.
Suffering and growth
The persecutions of these years – with about a thousand Friends in prison by 1657 – hardened Fox's opinions of traditional religious and social practices. In his preaching, he often emphasised the Quaker rejection of baptism by water; this was a useful way of highlighting how the focus of Friends on inward transformation differed from what he saw as the superstition of outward ritual. It was also a deliberate provocation of adherents of those practices, so providing opportunities for Fox to argue with them on matters of scripture. The same pattern appeared in his court appearances: when a judge challenged him to remove his hat, Fox replied by asking where in the Bible such an injunction could be found.
The Society of Friends became increasingly organised towards the end of the decade. Large meetings were held, including a three-day event in Bedfordshire, the precursor of the present Britain Yearly Meeting system. Fox commissioned two Friends to travel around the country collecting the testimonies of imprisoned Quakers, as evidence of their persecution; this led to the establishment in 1675 of Meeting for Sufferings, which has continued to the present day.
The 1650s, when the Friends were at their most confrontational, was one of the most creative periods of their history. Under the Commonwealth, Fox had hoped that the movement would become the major church in England. Disagreements, persecution and increasing social turmoil, however, led Fox to suffer from severe depression, which left him deeply troubled at Reading, Berkshire, for ten weeks in 1658 or 1659. In 1659, he sent parliament his most politically radical pamphlet, Fifty nine Particulars laid down for the Regulating things, but the year was so chaotic that it never considered these; the document was not reprinted until the 21st century.
The Restoration
With the restoration of the monarchy, Fox's dreams of establishing the Friends as the dominant religion seemed at an end. He was again accused of conspiracy, this time against Charles II, and fanaticism – a charge he resented. He was imprisoned in Lancaster for five months, during which he wrote to the king offering advice on governance: Charles should refrain from war and domestic religious persecution, and discourage oath-taking, plays, and maypole games. These last suggestions reveal Fox's Puritan leanings, which continued to influence Quakers for centuries after his death. Once again, Fox was released after demonstrating that he had no military ambitions.
At least on one point, Charles listened to Fox. The 700 Quakers who had been imprisoned under Richard Cromwell were released, though the government remained uncertain about the group's links with other, more violent, movements. A revolt by the Fifth Monarchists in January 1661 led to the suppression of that sect and the repression of other Nonconformists, including Quakers. In the aftermath of this attempted coup, Fox and eleven other Quakers issued a broadside proclaiming what became known among Friends in the 20th century as the "peace testimony", committing themselves to oppose all outward wars and strife as contrary to the will of God. Not all his followers accepted this commitment; Isaac Penington, for example, dissented for a time, arguing that the state had a duty to protect the innocent from evil, if necessary by using military force. Despite the testimony, persecution against Quakers and other dissenters continued.
Penington and others such as John Perrot and John Pennyman were uneasy at Fox's increasing power within the movement. Like Nayler before them, they saw no reason why men should remove their hats for prayer, arguing that men and women should be treated as equals, and if, as according to the apostle Paul, women should cover their heads, then so could men. Perrot and Penington lost the argument. Perrot emigrated to the New World, and Fox retained leadership of the movement.
Parliament enacted laws which forbade non-Anglican religious meetings of more than five people, essentially making Quaker meetings illegal. Fox counselled his followers to violate openly laws that attempted to suppress the movement, and many Friends, including women and children, were jailed over the next quarter-century. Meanwhile, Quakers in New England had been banished (and some executed), and Charles was advised by his councillors to issue a mandamus condemning this practice and allowing them to return. Fox was able to meet some of the New England Friends when they came to London, stimulating his interest in the colonies. Fox was unable to travel there immediately: he was imprisoned again in 1664 for his refusal to swear the oath of allegiance, and on his release in 1666 was preoccupied with organizational matters — he normalised the system of monthly and quarterly meetings throughout the country, and extended it to Ireland.
Visiting Ireland also gave him a chance to preach against what he saw as the excesses of the Roman Catholic Church, in particular the use of ritual. More recent Quaker commentators have noted points of contact between the denominations: both claim the actual presence of God in their meetings, and both allow the collective opinion of the church to augment Biblical teaching. Fox, however, did not perceive this, brought up as he had been in a wholly Protestant environment hostile to "Popery".
Fox married Margaret Fell of Swarthmoor Hall, a lady of high social position and one of his early converts, on 27 October 1669 at a meeting in Bristol. She was ten years his senior and had eight children (all but one of them Quakers) by her first husband, Thomas Fell, who had died in 1658. She was herself very active in the movement, and had campaigned for equality and the acceptance of women as preachers. As there were no priests at Quaker weddings to perform the ceremony, the union took the form of a civil marriage approved by the principals and the witnesses at a meeting. Ten days after the marriage, Margaret returned to Swarthmoor to continue her work there, while George went back to London. Their shared religious work was at the heart of their life together, and they later collaborated on much of the administration the Society required. Shortly after the marriage, Margaret was imprisoned in Lancaster; George remained in the south-east of England, becoming so ill and depressed that for a time he lost his sight.
Travels in North America and Europe
By 1671 Fox had recovered and Margaret had been released by order of the King. Fox resolved to visit the English settlements in North America and the West Indies, remaining there for two years, possibly to counter any remnants of Perrot's teaching there. After a voyage of seven weeks, during which dolphins were caught and eaten, the party arrived in Barbados on 3 October 1671. From there, Fox sent an epistle to Friends spelling out the role of women's meetings in the Quaker marriage ceremony, a point of controversy when he returned home. One of his proposals suggested that the prospective couple should be interviewed by an all-female meeting prior to the marriage to determine whether there were any financial or other impediments. Though women's meetings had been held in London for the last ten years, this was an innovation in Bristol and the north-west of England, which many there felt went too far.
Fox wrote a letter to the governor and assembly of the island in which he refuted charges that Quakers were stirring up the slaves to revolt and tried to affirm the orthodoxy of Quaker beliefs. After a stay in Jamaica, Fox's first landfall on the North American continent was at Maryland, where he participated in a four-day meeting of local Quakers. He remained there while various of his English companions travelled to the other colonies, because he wished to meet some Native Americans who were interested in Quaker ways—though he relates that they had "a great dispute" among themselves about whether to participate in the meeting. Fox was impressed by their general demeanour, which he saw as "courteous and loving". He resented the suggestion (from a man in North Carolina) that "the Light and Spirit of God ... was not in the Indians", a proposition which Fox rejected. Fox left no record of encountering slaves on the mainland.
Elsewhere in the colonies, Fox helped to establish organizational systems for the Friends, along the same lines as he had done in Britain. He also preached to many non-Quakers, some but not all of whom were converted.
After extensive travels round the various American colonies, George Fox returned to England in June 1673 confident that his movement was firmly established there. Back in England, however, he found his movement sharply divided among provincial Friends (such as William Rogers, John Wilkinson and John Story) who resisted establishment of women's meetings and the power of those who resided in or near London. With William Penn and Robert Barclay as allies of Fox, the challenge to Fox's leadership was eventually put down. But in the midst of the dispute, Fox was imprisoned again for refusing to swear oaths after being captured at Armscote, Worcestershire. His mother died shortly after hearing of his arrest and Fox's health began to suffer. Margaret Fell petitioned the king for his release, which was granted, but Fox felt too weak to take up his travels immediately. Recuperating at Swarthmoor, he began dictating what would be published after his death as his journal and devoted his time to his written output: letters, both public and private, as well as books and essays. Much of his energy was devoted to the topic of oaths, having become convinced of its importance to Quaker ideas. By refusing to swear, he felt that he could bear witness to the value of truth in everyday life, as well as to God, whom he associated with truth and the inner light.
For three months in 1677 and a month in 1684, Fox visited the Friends in the Netherlands, and organised their meetings for discipline. The first trip was the more extensive, taking him into what is now Germany, proceeding along the coast to Friedrichstadt and back again over several days. Meanwhile, Fox was participating in a dispute among Friends in Britain over the role of women in meetings, a struggle which took much of his energy and left him exhausted. Returning to England, he stayed in the south to try to end the dispute. He followed with interest the foundation of the colony of Pennsylvania, where Penn had given him over of land. Persecution continued, with Fox arrested briefly in October 1683. Fox's health was worsening, but he continued his activities – writing to leaders in Poland, Denmark, Germany and elsewhere about his beliefs and their treatment of Quakers.
Last years
In the last years of his life, Fox continued to participate in the London Meetings, and still made representations to Parliament about the sufferings of Friends. The new King, James II, pardoned religious dissenters jailed for failure to attend the established church, leading to the release of about 1,500 Friends. Though the Quakers lost influence after the Glorious Revolution, which deposed James II, the Act of Toleration 1689 put an end to the uniformity laws under which Quakers had been persecuted, permitting them to assemble freely.
Two days after preaching as usual at the Gracechurch Street Meeting House in London, George Fox died between 9 and 10 p.m. on 13 January 1690 O.S. (23 January 1691 N.S.). He was interred three days later in the Quaker Burying Ground, in the presence of thousands of mourners.
Book of Miracles
George Fox performed hundreds of healings throughout his preaching ministry, the records of which were collected in a notable but now lost book entitled Book of Miracles. This book was listed in the catalogue of George Fox’s work maintained by the Friends Library in Friends House, London. In 1932, Henry Cadbury found a reference to Book of Miracles in the catalogue, which included the beginning and ending of each account of a miraculous cure. The book was then reconstructed based on this resource and journal accounts. According to Rufus M. Jones, the Book of Miracles "makes it possible for us to follow George Fox as he went about his seventeenth-century world, not only preaching his fresh messages of life and power, but as a remarkable healer of disease with the undoubted reputation of miracle-worker." The Book of Miracles was deliberately suppressed in favour of printing Fox's Journal and other writings.
A sample from Book of Miracles: "And a young woman her mother ... had made her well. And another young woman was ... small pox ... of God was made well."
Journal and letters
Fox's journal was first published in 1694, after editing by Thomas Ellwood – a friend and associate of John Milton – with a preface by William Penn. Like most similar works of its time the journal was not written contemporaneously to the events it describes, but rather compiled many years later, much of it dictated. Parts of the journal were not in fact by Fox at all, but constructed by its editors from diverse sources and written as if by him. The dissent within the movement and the contributions of others to the development of Quakerism are largely excluded from the narrative. Fox portrays himself as always in the right and always vindicated by God's interventions on his behalf. As a religious autobiography, Rufus Jones compared it to such works as Augustine's Confessions and John Bunyan's Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners. It is, though, an intensely personal work with little dramatic power that only succeeds in appealing to readers after substantial editing. Historians have used it as a primary source because of its wealth of detail on ordinary life in the 17th century, and the many towns and villages which Fox visited.
Hundreds of Fox's letters – mostly intended for wide circulation, along with a few private communications – were also published. Written from the 1650s onwards, with such titles as Friends, seek the peace of all men or To Friends, to know one another in the light, they give enormous insight into the detail of Fox's beliefs and show his determination to spread them. These writings, in the words of Henry Cadbury, Professor of Divinity at Harvard University and a leading Quaker, "contain a few fresh phrases of his own, [but] are generally characterized by an excess of scriptural language and today they seem dull and repetitious". Others point out that "Fox's sermons, rich in biblical metaphor and common speech, brought hope in a dark time." Fox's aphorisms found an audience beyond the Quakers, with many other church groups using them to illustrate principles of Christianity.
Fox is described by Ellwood as "graceful in countenance, manly in personage, grave in gesture, courteous in conversation". Penn says he was "civil beyond all forms of breeding". We are told that he was "plain and powerful in preaching, fervent in prayer", "a discerner of other men's spirits, and very much master of his own", skilful to "speak a word in due season to the conditions and capacities of most, especially to them that were weary, and wanted soul's rest"; "valiant in asserting the truth, bold in defending it, patient in suffering for it, immovable as a rock".
Legacy
Fox had a tremendous influence on the Society of Friends and his beliefs have largely been carried forward. Perhaps his most significant achievement, other than his predominant influence in the early movement, was his leadership in overcoming the twin challenges of government prosecution after the Restoration and internal disputes that threatened its stability during the same period. Not all of his beliefs were welcome to all Quakers: his Puritan-like opposition to the arts and rejection of theological study, forestalled development of these practices among Quakers for some time.
Walt Whitman, who was raised by parents inspired by Quaker principles, later wrote: "George Fox stands for something too – a thought – the thought that wakes in silent hours – perhaps the deepest, most eternal thought latent in the human soul. This is the thought of God, merged in the thoughts of moral right and the immortality of identity. Great, great is this thought – aye, greater than all else."
George is remembered in the Church of England with a commemoration on 13 January.
See also
Christian anarchism
Christian mysticism
George Fox University
List of abolitionist forerunners
List of people on stamps of Ireland
Anthony Sharp (Quaker), Dublin Quaker and merchant
References
Primary sources
Various editions of Fox's journal have been published since the first printing in 1694:
Jones, Rufus M. (editor). 1908. George Fox – An Autobiography, an annotated and slightly abridged text, is also available in print (e. g. Friends United Press, 2006; ) and online ( ).
Nickalls, John L. (editor). 1952. The Journal of George Fox. Cambridge University Press. (Reprinted by the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting; )
Ross, Hugh McGregor (editor). 2008. George Fox: A Christian Mystic. Cathair na Mart: Evertype.
Secondary sources
Barclay, Robert (1678), An Apology for the True Christian Divinity. A systematic treatment of Quaker theology at the end of the seventeenth century; available online.
Bauman, Richard (1983), Let your words be few. (Cambridge: CUP). A survey of the role of words, language, silence and symbolism among seventeenth century Quakers.
Emerson, Wildes Harry (1965), Voice of the Lord: A Biography of George Fox (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press).
Ingle, H. Larry (1994, reprinted 1996), First Among Friends: George Fox and the Creation of Quakerism (Oxford University Press; ). First scholarly biography showing how Fox used his influence in the Society of Friends to ensure conformity to his views and survival of the group.
Ingle, H. Larry (2004), "Fox, George (1624–1691)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press). Retrieved 13 May 2008. (Subscription required)
Marsh, Josiah (1847), A Popular Life of George Fox (London: Charles Gilpin). Somewhat biased but thorough biography of Fox.
Mullett, Michael (1994), New Light on George Fox, 1624-91: A Collection of Essays (York: Ebor Press/Hyperion Books) (). Collection of essays.
Quaker Faith and Practice, Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) in Britain. ( [1999 revision]). Shows a modern Quaker view of Fox and much historical information about Friends and their institutions.
External links
The life's work of George Fox @ Ward's Book of Days
The Writings and Life of George Fox. The Journal and the Epistles, edited and with commentary by Hall Worthington and Joan Worthington
The Lamb's Officer is Gone Forth with the Lamb's Message by George Fox at the Ex-Classics Web Site
House of Commons Journal Volume 8, 21 May 1660, see entry under Geo. Fox, &c., Order by the House that George Fox & Rob. Gressingham who "made a great Disturbance at Harwich" and are to be handed over to the Serjeant-at-Arms.
1624 births
1691 deaths
17th-century Christian clergy
17th-century English writers
17th-century English male writers
17th-century Christian mystics
Burials at Bunhill Fields
English Dissenters
English evangelicals
English Christian pacifists
English Christian religious leaders
English Christian theologians
English religious leaders
English religious writers
English Quakers
Quaker writers
Lay theologians
People convicted of blasphemy
People from Hinckley and Bosworth (district)
Protestant mystics
Quaker ministers
Quaker theologians
17th-century English theologians
17th-century Quakers
Christian radicals
Shoemakers
Founders of religions
Anglican saints | [
"George Fox (July 1624 – 13 January 1691) was an English Dissenter, who was a founder of the Religious Society of Friends, commonly known as the Quakers or Friends.",
"The son of a Leicestershire weaver, he lived in times of social upheaval and war.",
"He rebelled against the religious and political authorities by proposing an unusual, uncompromising approach to the Christian faith.",
"He travelled throughout Britain as a dissenting preacher, performed hundreds of healings, and was often persecuted by the disapproving authorities.",
"In 1669, he married Margaret Fell, widow of a wealthy supporter, Thomas Fell; she was a leading Friend.",
"His ministry expanded and he made tours of North America and the Low Countries.",
"He was arrested and jailed numerous times for his beliefs.",
"He spent his final decade working in London to organise the expanding Quaker movement.",
"Despite disdain from some Anglicans and Puritans, he was viewed with respect by the Quaker convert William Penn and the Lord Protector, Oliver Cromwell.",
"Early life\n\nGeorge Fox was born in the strongly Puritan village of Drayton-in-the-Clay, Leicestershire, England (now Fenny Drayton), 15 miles (24 km) west-south-west of Leicester, as the eldest of four children of Christopher Fox, a successful weaver, called \"Righteous Christer\" by his neighbours, and his wife, Mary née Lago.",
"Christopher Fox was a churchwarden and relatively wealthy.",
"He left his son a substantial legacy when he died in the late 1650s.",
"Fox was of a serious, religious disposition from childhood.",
"There is no record of any formal schooling but he learnt to read and write.",
"\"When I came to eleven years of age,\" he said, \"I knew pureness and righteousness; for, while I was a child, I was taught how to walk to be kept pure.",
"The Lord taught me to be faithful, in all things, and to act faithfully two ways; viz., inwardly to God, and outwardly to man.\"",
"Known as an honest person, he also proclaimed, \"The Lord taught me to be faithful in all things ... and to keep to Yea and Nay in all things.\"",
"As he grew up, Fox's relatives \"thought to have made me a priest\" but he was instead apprenticed to a local shoemaker and grazier, George Gee of Mancetter.",
"This suited his contemplative temperament and he became well known for his diligence among the wool traders who had dealings with his master.",
"A constant obsession for Fox was the pursuit of \"simplicity\" in life – humility and the abandonment of luxury.",
"The short time he spent as a shepherd was important to the formation of this view.",
"Toward the end of his life he wrote a letter for general circulation pointing out that Abel, Noah, Abraham, Jacob, Moses and David were all keepers of sheep or cattle and so a learned education should not be seen as a necessary qualification for ministry.",
"George Fox knew people who were \"professors\" (followers of the standard Church of England), but by the age of 19 he was looking down on their behaviour, in particular their consumption of alcohol.",
"At prayer one night after leaving two acquaintances at a drinking session, Fox heard an inner voice saying, \"Thou seest how young people go together into vanity, and old people into the earth; thou must forsake all, young and old, keep out of all, and be as a stranger unto all.\"",
"First travels\nDriven by his \"inner voice\", Fox left Drayton-in-the-Clay in September 1643 and moved towards London in a state of mental torment and confusion.",
"The English Civil War had begun and troops were stationed in many towns through which he passed.",
"In Barnet, he was torn by depression (perhaps from the temptations of the resort town near London).",
"He alternately shut himself in his room for days at a time or went out alone into the countryside.",
"After almost a year he returned to Drayton, where he engaged Nathaniel Stephens, the clergyman of his home town, in long discussions on religious matters.",
"Stephens considered Fox a gifted young man, but the two disagreed on so many issues that he later called Fox mad and spoke against him.",
"Over the next few years Fox continued to travel around the country, as his particular religious beliefs took shape.",
"At times he actively sought the company of clergy, but found no comfort from them as they seemed unable to help with the matters troubling him.",
"One, in Warwickshire, advised him to take tobacco (which Fox disliked) and sing psalms; another, in Coventry, lost his temper when Fox accidentally stood on a flower in his garden; a third suggested bloodletting.",
"Fox became fascinated by the Bible, which he studied assiduously.",
"He hoped to find among the \"English Dissenters\" a spiritual understanding absent from the established church, but he fell out with one group, for example, because he maintained that women had souls:\n\nHe thought intensely about the Temptation of Christ, which he compared to his own spiritual condition, but he drew strength from his conviction that God would support and preserve him.",
"In prayer and meditation he came to a greater understanding of the nature of his faith and what it required from him; this process he called \"opening\".",
"He also came to what he deemed a deep inner understanding of standard Christian beliefs.",
"Among his ideas were:\nRituals can be safely ignored, as long as one experiences a true spiritual conversion.",
"The qualification for ministry is given by the Holy Spirit, not by ecclesiastical study.",
"This implies that anyone has the right to minister, assuming the Spirit guides them, including women and children.",
"God \"dwelleth in the hearts of his obedient people\": religious experience is not confined to a church building.",
"Indeed, Fox refused to apply the word \"church\" to a building, using instead the name \"steeple-house\", a usage maintained by many Quakers today.",
"Fox would just as soon worship in fields and orchards, believing that God's presence could be felt anywhere.",
"Though Fox used the Bible to support his views, Fox reasoned that, because God was within the faithful, believers could follow their own inner guide rather than rely on a strict reading of Scripture or the word of clerics.",
"Fox also made no clear distinction between Father, Son and Holy Spirit.",
"Religious Society of Friends\nIn 1647 Fox began to preach publicly: in market-places, fields, appointed meetings of various kinds or even sometimes in \"steeple-houses\" (churches) after the service.",
"His powerful preaching began to attract a small following.",
"It is not clear at what point the Society of Friends was formed, but there was certainly a group of people who often travelled together.",
"At first, they called themselves \"Children of the Light\" or \"Friends of the Truth\", and later simply \"Friends\".",
"Fox seems initially to have had no desire to found a sect, but only to proclaim what he saw as the pure and genuine principles of Christianity in their original simplicity, though he afterward showed great prowess as a religious organiser in the structure he gave to the new society.",
"There were a great many rival Christian denominations holding very diverse opinions in that period; the atmosphere of dispute and confusion gave Fox an opportunity to put forward his own beliefs through his personal sermons.",
"Fox's preaching was grounded in scripture but was mainly effective because of the intense personal experience he was able to project.",
"He was scathing about immorality, deceit and the exacting of tithes and urged his listeners to lead lives without sin, avoiding the Ranter's antinomian view that a believer becomes automatically sinless.",
"By 1651 he had gathered other talented preachers around him and continued to roam the country despite a harsh reception from some listeners, who would whip and beat them to drive them away.",
"As his reputation spread, his words were not welcomed by all.",
"As an uncompromising preacher, he hurled disputation and contradiction to the faces of his opponents.",
"The worship of Friends in the form of silent waiting punctuated by individuals speaking as the Spirit moved them seems to have been well-established by this time, though it is not recorded how this came to be; Richard Bauman asserts that \"speaking was an important feature of the meeting for worship from the earliest days of Quakerism.\"",
"Imprisonment\nFox complained to judges about decisions he considered morally wrong, as he did in a letter on the case of a woman due to be executed for theft.",
"He campaigned against paying the tithes intended to fund the established church, which often went into the pockets of absentee landlords or religious colleges distant from the paying parishioners.",
"In his view, as God was everywhere and anyone could preach, the established church was unnecessary and a university qualification irrelevant for a preacher.",
"Conflict with civil authority was inevitable.",
"Fox was imprisoned several times, the first at Nottingham in 1649.",
"At Derby in 1650 he was imprisoned for blasphemy; a judge mocked Fox's exhortation to \"tremble at the word of the Lord\", calling him and his followers \"Quakers\".",
"After he refused to fight against the return of the monarchy (or to take up arms for any reason), his sentence was doubled.",
"The refusal to swear oaths or take up arms came to be much more important in his public statements.",
"Refusal to take oaths meant that Quakers could be prosecuted under laws compelling subjects to pledge allegiance and made testifying in court problematic.",
"In a letter of 1652 (That which is set up by the sword), he urged Friends not to use \"carnal weapons\" but \"spiritual weapons\", saying, \"let the waves [the power of nations] break over your heads\".",
"In 1652, Fox preached for several hours under a walnut tree at Balby, where his disciple Thomas Aldham was instrumental in setting up the first meeting in the Doncaster area.",
"In the same year Fox felt that God led him to ascend Pendle Hill, where he had a vision of many souls coming to Christ.",
"From there he travelled to Sedbergh, where he had heard a group of Seekers was meeting, and preached to over a thousand people on Firbank Fell, convincing many, including Francis Howgill, to accept that Christ might speak to people directly.",
"At the end of the month he stayed at Swarthmoor Hall, near Ulverston, the home of Thomas Fell, vice-chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, and his wife, Margaret.",
"Around that time, the ad hoc meetings of Friends began to be formalised and a monthly meeting was set up in County Durham.",
"Margaret became a Quaker, and although Thomas did not convert, his familiarity with the Friends proved influential when Fox was arrested for blasphemy in October.",
"Fell was one of three presiding judges, and the charges were dismissed on a technicality.",
"Fox remained at Swarthmoor until the summer of 1653, then left for Carlisle, where he was arrested again for blasphemy.",
"It was even proposed to put him to death, but Parliament requested his release rather than have \"a young man ... die for religion\".",
"Further imprisonments came in London in 1654, Launceston in 1656, Lancaster in 1660, Leicester in 1662, Lancaster again and Scarborough in 1664–1666 and Worcester in 1673–1675.",
"Charges usually included causing a disturbance and travelling without a pass.",
"Quakers fell foul of irregularly enforced laws forbidding unauthorised worship, while actions motivated by belief in social equality – refusing to use or acknowledge titles, take hats off in court or bow to those who considered themselves socially superior – were seen as disrespectful.",
"While imprisoned at Launceston, Fox wrote, \"Christ our Lord and master saith 'Swear not at all, but let your communications be yea, yea, and nay, nay, for whatsoever is more than these cometh of evil.'",
"... the Apostle James saith, 'My brethren, above all things swear not, neither by heaven, nor by earth, nor by any other oath.",
"Lest ye fall into condemnation.'\"",
"In prison George Fox continued writing and preaching, feeling that imprisonment brought him into contact with people who needed his help—the jailers as well as his fellow prisoners.",
"In his journal, he told his magistrate, \"God dwells not in temples made with hands.\"",
"He also sought to set an example by his actions there, turning the other cheek when being beaten and refusing to show his captors any dejected feelings.",
"Encounters with Cromwell\n\nParliamentarians grew suspicious of monarchist plots and fearful that the group travelling with Fox aimed to overthrow the government: by this time his meetings were regularly attracting crowds of over a thousand.",
"In early 1655 he was arrested at Whetstone, Leicestershire and taken to London under armed guard.",
"In March he was brought before the Lord Protector, Oliver Cromwell.",
"After affirming that he had no intention of taking up arms, Fox was able to speak to Cromwell for most of the morning about the Friends.",
"He advised him to listen to God's voice and obey it, so that as Fox left, Cromwell \"with tears in his eyes said, 'Come again to my house; for if thou and I were but an hour of a day together, we should be nearer one to the other'; adding that he wished [Fox] no more ill than he did to his own soul.\"",
"This episode was later recalled as an example of \"speaking truth to power\", a preaching technique by which subsequent Quakers hoped to influence the powerful.",
"Although not used until the 20th century, the phrase is related to the ideas of plain speech and simplicity which Fox practised, but motivated by the more worldly goal of eradicating war, injustice and oppression.",
"Fox petitioned Cromwell over the course of 1656 to alleviate the persecution of Quakers.",
"Later that year, they met for a second time at Whitehall.",
"On a personal level, the meeting went well; despite disagreements between the two men, they had a certain rapport.",
"Fox invited Cromwell to \"lay down his crown at the feet of Jesus\" – which Cromwell declined to do.",
"Fox met Cromwell again twice in March 1657.",
"Their last meeting was in 1658 at Hampton Court, though they could not speak for long or meet again because of the Protector's worsening illness – Fox even wrote that \"he looked like a dead man\".",
"Cromwell died in September of that year.",
"James Nayler\nOne early Quaker convert, the Yorkshireman James Nayler, arose as a prominent preacher in London around 1655.",
"A breach began to form between Fox's and Nayler's followers.",
"As Fox was held prisoner at Launceston, Nayler moved south-westwards towards Launceston intending to meet Fox and heal any rift.",
"On the way he was arrested himself and held at Exeter.",
"After Fox was released from Launceston gaol in 1656, he preached throughout the West Country.",
"Arriving at Exeter late in September, Fox was reunited with Nayler.",
"Nayler and his followers refused to remove their hats while Fox prayed, which Fox took as both a personal slight and a bad example.",
"When Nayler refused to kiss Fox's hand, Fox told Nayler to kiss his foot instead.",
"Nayler was offended and the two parted acrimoniously.",
"Fox wrote that \"there was now a wicked spirit risen amongst Friends\".",
"After Nayler's own release later the same year he rode into Bristol triumphantly playing the part of Jesus Christ in a re-enactment of Palm Sunday.",
"He was arrested and taken to London, where Parliament defeated a motion to execute him by 96–82.",
"Instead, they ordered that he be pilloried and whipped through both London and Bristol, branded on his forehead with the letter B (for blasphemer), bored through the tongue with a red-hot iron and imprisoned in solitary confinement with hard labour.",
"Nayler was released in 1659, but he was a broken man.",
"On meeting Fox in London, he fell to his knees and begged Fox's forgiveness.",
"Shortly afterward, Nayler was attacked by thieves while travelling home to his family, and died.",
"Suffering and growth\n\nThe persecutions of these years – with about a thousand Friends in prison by 1657 – hardened Fox's opinions of traditional religious and social practices.",
"In his preaching, he often emphasised the Quaker rejection of baptism by water; this was a useful way of highlighting how the focus of Friends on inward transformation differed from what he saw as the superstition of outward ritual.",
"It was also a deliberate provocation of adherents of those practices, so providing opportunities for Fox to argue with them on matters of scripture.",
"The same pattern appeared in his court appearances: when a judge challenged him to remove his hat, Fox replied by asking where in the Bible such an injunction could be found.",
"The Society of Friends became increasingly organised towards the end of the decade.",
"Large meetings were held, including a three-day event in Bedfordshire, the precursor of the present Britain Yearly Meeting system.",
"Fox commissioned two Friends to travel around the country collecting the testimonies of imprisoned Quakers, as evidence of their persecution; this led to the establishment in 1675 of Meeting for Sufferings, which has continued to the present day.",
"The 1650s, when the Friends were at their most confrontational, was one of the most creative periods of their history.",
"Under the Commonwealth, Fox had hoped that the movement would become the major church in England.",
"Disagreements, persecution and increasing social turmoil, however, led Fox to suffer from severe depression, which left him deeply troubled at Reading, Berkshire, for ten weeks in 1658 or 1659.",
"In 1659, he sent parliament his most politically radical pamphlet, Fifty nine Particulars laid down for the Regulating things, but the year was so chaotic that it never considered these; the document was not reprinted until the 21st century.",
"The Restoration\nWith the restoration of the monarchy, Fox's dreams of establishing the Friends as the dominant religion seemed at an end.",
"He was again accused of conspiracy, this time against Charles II, and fanaticism – a charge he resented.",
"He was imprisoned in Lancaster for five months, during which he wrote to the king offering advice on governance: Charles should refrain from war and domestic religious persecution, and discourage oath-taking, plays, and maypole games.",
"These last suggestions reveal Fox's Puritan leanings, which continued to influence Quakers for centuries after his death.",
"Once again, Fox was released after demonstrating that he had no military ambitions.",
"At least on one point, Charles listened to Fox.",
"The 700 Quakers who had been imprisoned under Richard Cromwell were released, though the government remained uncertain about the group's links with other, more violent, movements.",
"A revolt by the Fifth Monarchists in January 1661 led to the suppression of that sect and the repression of other Nonconformists, including Quakers.",
"In the aftermath of this attempted coup, Fox and eleven other Quakers issued a broadside proclaiming what became known among Friends in the 20th century as the \"peace testimony\", committing themselves to oppose all outward wars and strife as contrary to the will of God.",
"Not all his followers accepted this commitment; Isaac Penington, for example, dissented for a time, arguing that the state had a duty to protect the innocent from evil, if necessary by using military force.",
"Despite the testimony, persecution against Quakers and other dissenters continued.",
"Penington and others such as John Perrot and John Pennyman were uneasy at Fox's increasing power within the movement.",
"Like Nayler before them, they saw no reason why men should remove their hats for prayer, arguing that men and women should be treated as equals, and if, as according to the apostle Paul, women should cover their heads, then so could men.",
"Perrot and Penington lost the argument.",
"Perrot emigrated to the New World, and Fox retained leadership of the movement.",
"Parliament enacted laws which forbade non-Anglican religious meetings of more than five people, essentially making Quaker meetings illegal.",
"Fox counselled his followers to violate openly laws that attempted to suppress the movement, and many Friends, including women and children, were jailed over the next quarter-century.",
"Meanwhile, Quakers in New England had been banished (and some executed), and Charles was advised by his councillors to issue a mandamus condemning this practice and allowing them to return.",
"Fox was able to meet some of the New England Friends when they came to London, stimulating his interest in the colonies.",
"Fox was unable to travel there immediately: he was imprisoned again in 1664 for his refusal to swear the oath of allegiance, and on his release in 1666 was preoccupied with organizational matters — he normalised the system of monthly and quarterly meetings throughout the country, and extended it to Ireland.",
"Visiting Ireland also gave him a chance to preach against what he saw as the excesses of the Roman Catholic Church, in particular the use of ritual.",
"More recent Quaker commentators have noted points of contact between the denominations: both claim the actual presence of God in their meetings, and both allow the collective opinion of the church to augment Biblical teaching.",
"Fox, however, did not perceive this, brought up as he had been in a wholly Protestant environment hostile to \"Popery\".",
"Fox married Margaret Fell of Swarthmoor Hall, a lady of high social position and one of his early converts, on 27 October 1669 at a meeting in Bristol.",
"She was ten years his senior and had eight children (all but one of them Quakers) by her first husband, Thomas Fell, who had died in 1658.",
"She was herself very active in the movement, and had campaigned for equality and the acceptance of women as preachers.",
"As there were no priests at Quaker weddings to perform the ceremony, the union took the form of a civil marriage approved by the principals and the witnesses at a meeting.",
"Ten days after the marriage, Margaret returned to Swarthmoor to continue her work there, while George went back to London.",
"Their shared religious work was at the heart of their life together, and they later collaborated on much of the administration the Society required.",
"Shortly after the marriage, Margaret was imprisoned in Lancaster; George remained in the south-east of England, becoming so ill and depressed that for a time he lost his sight.",
"Travels in North America and Europe\n\nBy 1671 Fox had recovered and Margaret had been released by order of the King.",
"Fox resolved to visit the English settlements in North America and the West Indies, remaining there for two years, possibly to counter any remnants of Perrot's teaching there.",
"After a voyage of seven weeks, during which dolphins were caught and eaten, the party arrived in Barbados on 3 October 1671.",
"From there, Fox sent an epistle to Friends spelling out the role of women's meetings in the Quaker marriage ceremony, a point of controversy when he returned home.",
"One of his proposals suggested that the prospective couple should be interviewed by an all-female meeting prior to the marriage to determine whether there were any financial or other impediments.",
"Though women's meetings had been held in London for the last ten years, this was an innovation in Bristol and the north-west of England, which many there felt went too far.",
"Fox wrote a letter to the governor and assembly of the island in which he refuted charges that Quakers were stirring up the slaves to revolt and tried to affirm the orthodoxy of Quaker beliefs.",
"After a stay in Jamaica, Fox's first landfall on the North American continent was at Maryland, where he participated in a four-day meeting of local Quakers.",
"He remained there while various of his English companions travelled to the other colonies, because he wished to meet some Native Americans who were interested in Quaker ways—though he relates that they had \"a great dispute\" among themselves about whether to participate in the meeting.",
"Fox was impressed by their general demeanour, which he saw as \"courteous and loving\".",
"He resented the suggestion (from a man in North Carolina) that \"the Light and Spirit of God ... was not in the Indians\", a proposition which Fox rejected.",
"Fox left no record of encountering slaves on the mainland.",
"Elsewhere in the colonies, Fox helped to establish organizational systems for the Friends, along the same lines as he had done in Britain.",
"He also preached to many non-Quakers, some but not all of whom were converted.",
"After extensive travels round the various American colonies, George Fox returned to England in June 1673 confident that his movement was firmly established there.",
"Back in England, however, he found his movement sharply divided among provincial Friends (such as William Rogers, John Wilkinson and John Story) who resisted establishment of women's meetings and the power of those who resided in or near London.",
"With William Penn and Robert Barclay as allies of Fox, the challenge to Fox's leadership was eventually put down.",
"But in the midst of the dispute, Fox was imprisoned again for refusing to swear oaths after being captured at Armscote, Worcestershire.",
"His mother died shortly after hearing of his arrest and Fox's health began to suffer.",
"Margaret Fell petitioned the king for his release, which was granted, but Fox felt too weak to take up his travels immediately.",
"Recuperating at Swarthmoor, he began dictating what would be published after his death as his journal and devoted his time to his written output: letters, both public and private, as well as books and essays.",
"Much of his energy was devoted to the topic of oaths, having become convinced of its importance to Quaker ideas.",
"By refusing to swear, he felt that he could bear witness to the value of truth in everyday life, as well as to God, whom he associated with truth and the inner light.",
"For three months in 1677 and a month in 1684, Fox visited the Friends in the Netherlands, and organised their meetings for discipline.",
"The first trip was the more extensive, taking him into what is now Germany, proceeding along the coast to Friedrichstadt and back again over several days.",
"Meanwhile, Fox was participating in a dispute among Friends in Britain over the role of women in meetings, a struggle which took much of his energy and left him exhausted.",
"Returning to England, he stayed in the south to try to end the dispute.",
"He followed with interest the foundation of the colony of Pennsylvania, where Penn had given him over of land.",
"Persecution continued, with Fox arrested briefly in October 1683.",
"Fox's health was worsening, but he continued his activities – writing to leaders in Poland, Denmark, Germany and elsewhere about his beliefs and their treatment of Quakers.",
"Last years\n\nIn the last years of his life, Fox continued to participate in the London Meetings, and still made representations to Parliament about the sufferings of Friends.",
"The new King, James II, pardoned religious dissenters jailed for failure to attend the established church, leading to the release of about 1,500 Friends.",
"Though the Quakers lost influence after the Glorious Revolution, which deposed James II, the Act of Toleration 1689 put an end to the uniformity laws under which Quakers had been persecuted, permitting them to assemble freely.",
"Two days after preaching as usual at the Gracechurch Street Meeting House in London, George Fox died between 9 and 10 p.m. on 13 January 1690 O.S.",
"(23 January 1691 N.S.).",
"He was interred three days later in the Quaker Burying Ground, in the presence of thousands of mourners.",
"Book of Miracles\nGeorge Fox performed hundreds of healings throughout his preaching ministry, the records of which were collected in a notable but now lost book entitled Book of Miracles.",
"This book was listed in the catalogue of George Fox’s work maintained by the Friends Library in Friends House, London.",
"In 1932, Henry Cadbury found a reference to Book of Miracles in the catalogue, which included the beginning and ending of each account of a miraculous cure.",
"The book was then reconstructed based on this resource and journal accounts.",
"According to Rufus M. Jones, the Book of Miracles \"makes it possible for us to follow George Fox as he went about his seventeenth-century world, not only preaching his fresh messages of life and power, but as a remarkable healer of disease with the undoubted reputation of miracle-worker.\"",
"The Book of Miracles was deliberately suppressed in favour of printing Fox's Journal and other writings.",
"A sample from Book of Miracles: \"And a young woman her mother ... had made her well.",
"And another young woman was ... small pox ... of God was made well.\"",
"Journal and letters\nFox's journal was first published in 1694, after editing by Thomas Ellwood – a friend and associate of John Milton – with a preface by William Penn.",
"Like most similar works of its time the journal was not written contemporaneously to the events it describes, but rather compiled many years later, much of it dictated.",
"Parts of the journal were not in fact by Fox at all, but constructed by its editors from diverse sources and written as if by him.",
"The dissent within the movement and the contributions of others to the development of Quakerism are largely excluded from the narrative.",
"Fox portrays himself as always in the right and always vindicated by God's interventions on his behalf.",
"As a religious autobiography, Rufus Jones compared it to such works as Augustine's Confessions and John Bunyan's Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners.",
"It is, though, an intensely personal work with little dramatic power that only succeeds in appealing to readers after substantial editing.",
"Historians have used it as a primary source because of its wealth of detail on ordinary life in the 17th century, and the many towns and villages which Fox visited.",
"Hundreds of Fox's letters – mostly intended for wide circulation, along with a few private communications – were also published.",
"Written from the 1650s onwards, with such titles as Friends, seek the peace of all men or To Friends, to know one another in the light, they give enormous insight into the detail of Fox's beliefs and show his determination to spread them.",
"These writings, in the words of Henry Cadbury, Professor of Divinity at Harvard University and a leading Quaker, \"contain a few fresh phrases of his own, [but] are generally characterized by an excess of scriptural language and today they seem dull and repetitious\".",
"Others point out that \"Fox's sermons, rich in biblical metaphor and common speech, brought hope in a dark time.\"",
"Fox's aphorisms found an audience beyond the Quakers, with many other church groups using them to illustrate principles of Christianity.",
"Fox is described by Ellwood as \"graceful in countenance, manly in personage, grave in gesture, courteous in conversation\".",
"Penn says he was \"civil beyond all forms of breeding\".",
"We are told that he was \"plain and powerful in preaching, fervent in prayer\", \"a discerner of other men's spirits, and very much master of his own\", skilful to \"speak a word in due season to the conditions and capacities of most, especially to them that were weary, and wanted soul's rest\"; \"valiant in asserting the truth, bold in defending it, patient in suffering for it, immovable as a rock\".",
"Legacy\nFox had a tremendous influence on the Society of Friends and his beliefs have largely been carried forward.",
"Perhaps his most significant achievement, other than his predominant influence in the early movement, was his leadership in overcoming the twin challenges of government prosecution after the Restoration and internal disputes that threatened its stability during the same period.",
"Not all of his beliefs were welcome to all Quakers: his Puritan-like opposition to the arts and rejection of theological study, forestalled development of these practices among Quakers for some time.",
"Walt Whitman, who was raised by parents inspired by Quaker principles, later wrote: \"George Fox stands for something too – a thought – the thought that wakes in silent hours – perhaps the deepest, most eternal thought latent in the human soul.",
"This is the thought of God, merged in the thoughts of moral right and the immortality of identity.",
"Great, great is this thought – aye, greater than all else.\"",
"George is remembered in the Church of England with a commemoration on 13 January.",
"See also\nChristian anarchism\nChristian mysticism\nGeorge Fox University\nList of abolitionist forerunners\nList of people on stamps of Ireland\nAnthony Sharp (Quaker), Dublin Quaker and merchant\n\nReferences\n\nPrimary sources\n\nVarious editions of Fox's journal have been published since the first printing in 1694:\n\nJones, Rufus M. (editor).",
"1908.",
"George Fox – An Autobiography, an annotated and slightly abridged text, is also available in print (e. g. Friends United Press, 2006; ) and online ( ).",
"Nickalls, John L. (editor).",
"1952.",
"The Journal of George Fox.",
"Cambridge University Press.",
"(Reprinted by the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting; )\nRoss, Hugh McGregor (editor).",
"2008.",
"George Fox: A Christian Mystic.",
"Cathair na Mart: Evertype.",
"Secondary sources\n\nBarclay, Robert (1678), An Apology for the True Christian Divinity.",
"A systematic treatment of Quaker theology at the end of the seventeenth century; available online.",
"Bauman, Richard (1983), Let your words be few.",
"(Cambridge: CUP).",
"A survey of the role of words, language, silence and symbolism among seventeenth century Quakers.",
"Emerson, Wildes Harry (1965), Voice of the Lord: A Biography of George Fox (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press).",
"Ingle, H. Larry (1994, reprinted 1996), First Among Friends: George Fox and the Creation of Quakerism (Oxford University Press; ).",
"First scholarly biography showing how Fox used his influence in the Society of Friends to ensure conformity to his views and survival of the group.",
"Ingle, H. Larry (2004), \"Fox, George (1624–1691)\".",
"Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press).",
"Retrieved 13 May 2008.",
"(Subscription required)\nMarsh, Josiah (1847), A Popular Life of George Fox (London: Charles Gilpin).",
"Somewhat biased but thorough biography of Fox.",
"Mullett, Michael (1994), New Light on George Fox, 1624-91: A Collection of Essays (York: Ebor Press/Hyperion Books) ().",
"Collection of essays.",
"Quaker Faith and Practice, Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) in Britain.",
"( [1999 revision]).",
"Shows a modern Quaker view of Fox and much historical information about Friends and their institutions.",
"External links\n\nThe life's work of George Fox @ Ward's Book of Days\nThe Writings and Life of George Fox.",
"The Journal and the Epistles, edited and with commentary by Hall Worthington and Joan Worthington\nThe Lamb's Officer is Gone Forth with the Lamb's Message by George Fox at the Ex-Classics Web Site\nHouse of Commons Journal Volume 8, 21 May 1660, see entry under Geo.",
"Fox, &c., Order by the House that George Fox & Rob.",
"Gressingham who \"made a great Disturbance at Harwich\" and are to be handed over to the Serjeant-at-Arms.",
"1624 births\n1691 deaths\n17th-century Christian clergy\n17th-century English writers\n17th-century English male writers\n17th-century Christian mystics\nBurials at Bunhill Fields\nEnglish Dissenters\nEnglish evangelicals\nEnglish Christian pacifists\nEnglish Christian religious leaders\nEnglish Christian theologians\nEnglish religious leaders\nEnglish religious writers\nEnglish Quakers\nQuaker writers\nLay theologians\nPeople convicted of blasphemy\nPeople from Hinckley and Bosworth (district)\nProtestant mystics\nQuaker ministers\nQuaker theologians\n17th-century English theologians\n17th-century Quakers\nChristian radicals\nShoemakers\nFounders of religions\nAnglican saints"
] | [
"George Fox was an English Dissenter who founded the Religious Society of Friends.",
"During times of social upheaval and war, he was the son of a weaver.",
"He rebelled against the religious and political authorities by proposing an uncompromising approach to the Christian faith.",
"He traveled throughout Britain as a preacher, performed hundreds of healings, and was often harassed by the authorities.",
"He married Margaret Fell, widow of a wealthy supporter, in 1669.",
"He made tours of North America and the Low Countries.",
"He was jailed many times for his beliefs.",
"He spent his final 10 years working in London.",
"William Penn and the Lord Protector, Oliver Cromwell, viewed him with respect despite their disdain for him.",
"George Fox was the eldest of four children of Christopher Fox, a successful weaver, who was born in the Puritan village of Drayton-in-the-Clay, England.",
"Christopher Fox had a lot of money.",
"He left his son a lot of legacy when he died.",
"Fox was religious from a young age.",
"He learned to read and write at an early age.",
"He said that when he was a child, he was taught how to walk to be kept pure.",
"I was taught by the Lord to be faithful in all things and to act faithfully in both ways.",
"He said the Lord told him to be faithful in all things and to keep to his word.",
"As a child, Fox's relatives thought to have made him a priest, but he was instead apprenticed to a local shoemaker and grazier.",
"He was known for his diligence among the wool traders who had dealings with his master.",
"The pursuit of \"simplicity\" in life was a constant obsession for Fox.",
"The formation of this view was made possible by the short time he spent as a shepherd.",
"He wrote a letter at the end of his life saying that a learned education shouldn't be seen as a qualification for ministry since all of them were keepers of sheep or cattle.",
"George Fox was aware of people who were \"professors\", but by the age of 19 he 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110",
"At prayer one night after leaving two acquaintances at a drinking session, Fox heard an inner voice saying, \"Thou must abandon all, young and old, keep out of all, and be as a stranger unto us.\"",
"Fox left Drayton-in-the-Clay in September 1643 and moved towards London in a state of mental torment and confusion.",
"The English Civil War had begun and troops were stationed in many towns.",
"He might have been torn by the temptations of the resort town near London.",
"He went out alone or shut himself in his room for days at a time.",
"After almost a year, he returned to his hometown of Drayton, where he engaged the reverend of his home town in long discussions on religious matters.",
"Fox was considered a gifted young man by Stephens, but the two disagreed on so many issues that he called Fox mad and spoke against him.",
"As his religious beliefs took shape, Fox continued to travel around the country.",
"At times he sought the company of clergy, but found no comfort from them as they seemed unable to help with the matters troubling him.",
"One advised him to take tobacco and sing psalms, another lost his temper when Fox accidentally stood on a flower in his garden, and a third suggested bloodletting.",
"Fox was fascinated by the Bible.",
"He thought about the Temptation of Christ, which he compared to his own spiritual condition, but he fell out with one group because he maintained that women had souls.",
"He came to a greater understanding of the nature of his faith through prayer and meditation.",
"He came to what he thought was a deep understanding of Christian beliefs.",
"If one experiences a true spiritual conversion, rituals can be safely ignored.",
"The qualification for ministry is given by the Holy Spirit.",
"Assuming the spirit guides them, anyone has the right to minister.",
"Religious experience is not limited to a church building.",
"Fox refused to use the word \"church\" to a building, instead using the name \"steeple-house\".",
"Fox believed that God's presence could be felt in fields and orchards.",
"Fox believed that because God was within the faithful, believers could follow their own inner guide rather than rely on a strict reading of Scripture or the word of clerics.",
"Fox didn't make a distinction between Father, Son and Holy Spirit.",
"In 1647, the Religious Society of Friends began to preach publicly: in market-places, fields, appointed meetings of various kinds or even in \"steeple-houses\" after the service.",
"A small group of people began to listen to his preaching.",
"There was a group of people who traveled together, but it is not clear when the Society of Friends was formed.",
"They first called themselves \" Children of the Light\" and then \" Friends of the Truth\".",
"Fox initially had no desire to found a sect, but only to proclaim what he saw as the pure and genuine principles of Christianity in their original simplicity, and he afterwards showed great prowess as a religious organiser in the structure he gave to the new society.",
"The atmosphere of dispute and confusion gave Fox an opportunity to put forward his own beliefs through his personal sermons.",
"Fox's preaching was mostly effective because of the intense personal experience he was able to project.",
"He urged his audience to lead lives without sin and 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780",
"By 1651 he had gathered other talented preachers around him and continued to roam the country despite a harsh reception from some listeners who would whip and beat them to drive them away.",
"His words were not welcomed by everyone.",
"He preached disputation and contradiction to his opponents.",
"Richard Bauman asserts that speaking was an important feature of the meeting for worship from this time, though it is not recorded how this came to be.",
"Imprisonment Fox complained to judges about decisions he considered morally wrong, as he did in a letter on the case of a woman due to be executed for theft.",
"He wanted to stop the established church from going into the pockets of landlords or religious colleges away from the paying parishioners.",
"He believed that a university qualification was irrelevant for a preacher as God was everywhere and anyone could preach.",
"Conflict with civil authority was inevitable.",
"The first time Fox was imprisoned was in 1649.",
"Fox and his followers were called \"Quakers\" by a judge at Derby in 1650 after he was imprisoned for blaspheming.",
"His sentence was doubled after he refused to fight against the return of the monarchy.",
"In his public statements, the refusal to swear oaths or take up arms was more important.",
"The refusal to take oaths made testifying in court problematic.",
"\"Let the waves of the power of nations break over your heads\", he said in a letter that was set up by the sword.",
"Fox preached for several hours under a tree at Balby, where Thomas Aldham helped set up the first meeting in the Doncaster area.",
"Fox had a vision of many souls coming to Christ when he ascended Pendle Hill.",
"He preached to over a thousand people on Firbank Fell, convincing them that Christ could speak to them directly.",
"He stayed at the home of the vice-chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster and his wife at the end of the month.",
"The monthly meeting of Friends was set up in County Durham around that time.",
"Although Thomas did not convert, his familiarity with the Friends was influential when Fox was arrested.",
"The charges were dismissed because of a technicality.",
"In the summer of 1653 Fox left for Carlisle, where he was arrested again for blaspheming.",
"Parliament requested his release rather than having a young man die for religion.",
"There were further imprisonments in London in 1654 and in 1656 and in Lancaster in 1660 and again in 1662.",
"The charges included causing a commotion and travelling without a pass.",
"Unauthorised worship, and actions motivated by belief in social equality, such as taking hats off in court, were seen as disrespectful.",
"Fox wrote \"Christ our Lord and master 'Swear not at all, but let your communications be more than these cometh of evil'.\"",
"The Apostle James said, \"My brethren, above all things, not swear by heaven, nor by earth, nor by any other oath.\"",
"Lest you fall into condemnation.",
"George Fox felt that imprisonment brought him into contact with people who needed his help, the jailers as well as his fellow prisoners.",
"He said in his journal that God doesn't dwell in temples made with hands.",
"He tried to set an example by his actions there, turning the other cheek when being beaten and refusing to show his feelings.",
"Cromwell Parliamentarians became suspicious of monarchist plots and were afraid that the group travelling with Fox would overthrow the government.",
"He was taken to London under armed guard after he was arrested at Whetstone.",
"He was brought to Oliver Cromwell.",
"Fox spoke to Cromwell for most of the morning after affirming that he had no intention of taking up arms.",
"Cromwell was told to listen to God's voice and obey it so that he and Fox could be closer to each other.",
"The episode was recalled as an example of \"speaking truth to power\", a technique used by the Quakers to influence the powerful.",
"Although not used until the 20th century, the phrase is related to the ideas of plain speech and simplicity which Fox practised.",
"Over the course of 1656, Fox petitioned Cromwell.",
"They met again at Whitehall later that year.",
"Despite disagreements between the two men, the meeting went well on a personal level.",
"Fox invited Cromwell to \"lay down his crown at the feet of Jesus\", but Cromwell declined.",
"Fox and Cromwell met again in March 1657.",
"Fox wrote that the Protector looked like a dead man because they couldn't speak for long or meet again because of his worsening illness.",
"Cromwell died in September of that year.",
"The Yorkshireman James Nayler became a prominent preacher in London around 1655.",
"There was a break between Fox's and Nayler's followers.",
"As Fox was held at Launceston, Nayler moved to meet him and heal the rift.",
"He was arrested on the way and held.",
"Fox preached throughout the West Country after he was released from jail.",
"Fox arrived at Exeter late in September.",
"Fox took as both a personal slight and a bad example the fact that Nayler and his followers refused to remove their hats while Fox prayed.",
"When Nayler refused to kiss Fox's hand, Fox told him to kiss his foot.",
"The two parted acrimoniously after Nayler was offended.",
"Fox wrote that there was a \"wicked spirit\" among Friends.",
"He rode into Bristol triumphantly playing the part of Jesus Christ in a re-enactment of Palm Sunday after his own release.",
"Parliament defeated a motion to execute him after he was arrested.",
"Instead, they ordered that he be pilloried and whipped through both London and Bristol, branded on his forehead with the letter B, bored through the tongue with a red-hot iron and imprisoned in solitary confinement with hard labour.",
"He was a broken man when he was released in 1659.",
"He begged Fox's forgiveness after meeting him in London.",
"While travelling home to his family, Nayler was attacked by thieves and died.",
"The persecutions of these years hardened Fox's opinions of traditional religious and social practices.",
"The focus of Friends on inward transformation differed from what he saw as the superstition of outward ritual, so he emphasized the rejection of baptism by water in his preaching.",
"It was a deliberate provocation of those practices so that Fox could argue with them on matters of scripture.",
"When a judge challenged him to remove his hat, Fox replied by asking where in the Bible such an injunction could be found.",
"Towards the end of the decade, the Society of Friends became more organised.",
"The precursor to the present Britain Yearly Meeting system was a three-day event in Bedfordshire.",
"Meeting for Sufferings was established in 1675 after Fox commissioned two Friends to travel around the country collecting testimonies of imprisoned Quakers as evidence of their persecution.",
"The Friends had one of the most creative periods of their history in the 1650s.",
"Fox wanted the movement to become the major church in England.",
"Fox was depressed for ten weeks in 1658 or 1659 because of disagreements, persecution and increasing social turmoil.",
"In 1659, he sent parliament his most politically radical pamphlet, Fifty nine Particulars, but the year was so chaotic that it never considered these; the document was not reprinted until the 21st century.",
"The restoration of the monarchy seemed to end Fox's dreams of establishing the Friends as the dominant religion.",
"He was accused of conspiracy again, this time against Charles II.",
"He was imprisoned in Lancaster for five months, during which he wrote to the king, offering advice on governance: Charles should refrain from war and domestic religious persecution, and discourage oath-taking, plays, and maypole games.",
"Fox's Puritan leanings continued to influence Quakers for centuries after his death.",
"After demonstrating that he had no military ambitions, Fox was released again.",
"On one occasion, Charles listened to Fox.",
"The 700 people who had been imprisoned under Richard Cromwell were released.",
"The suppression of the Fifth Monarchists and other Nonconformists was caused by a revolt in January 1661.",
"In the aftermath of this attempted coup, Fox and eleven other Quakers issued a broadside proclaiming what became known among Friends in the 20th century as the \"peace testimony\", committing themselves to oppose all outward wars and strife as contrary to the will of God.",
"The state had a duty to protect the innocent from evil if necessary by using military force, but not all of his followers accepted this commitment.",
"The persecution continued despite the testimony.",
"Penington was uneasy about Fox's increasing power within the movement.",
"They saw no reason why men should remove their hats for prayer if women should cover their heads according to the apostle Paul.",
"The argument was lost by Perrot and Penington.",
"Fox retained leadership of the movement after Perrot left for the New World.",
"Parliament made non-Anglican religious meetings of more than five people illegal.",
"Many Friends, including women and children, were jailed over the next quarter-century after Fox counselled his followers to violate openly laws that attempted to suppress the movement.",
"Charles was told by his councillors to issue a mandamus condemning this practice and allow the Quakers to return.",
"The New England Friends came to London and stimulated Fox's interest in the colonies.",
"Fox was imprisoned again in 1664 for his refusal to swear the oath of allegiance, and on his release in 1666 he normalised the system of monthly and quarterly meetings throughout the country, and extended it to Ireland.",
"He traveled to Ireland to preach against the use of ritual in the Roman Catholic Church.",
"Both denominations claim the presence of God in their meetings, and both allow the collective opinion of the church to enhance biblical teaching.",
"Fox had been in a Protestant environment hostile to \"Popery\".",
"Margaret was one of Fox's early converts and he married her at a meeting in Bristol.",
"She had eight children by her first husband, Thomas Fell, who died in 1658.",
"She was very active in the movement, campaigning for equality and acceptance of women as preachers.",
"The civil marriage was approved by the principals and witnesses at a meeting as there were no priests at the weddings.",
"George went back to London after the marriage, while Margaret went back to Swarthmoor to continue her work.",
"Their shared religious work was at the heart of their life, and they collaborated on much of the administration the Society required.",
"After the marriage, Margaret was imprisoned in Lancaster and George was so depressed he lost his sight.",
"Fox and Margaret were released by the King after their travels in North America and Europe.",
"Fox decided to visit the English settlements in North America and the West Indies for two years in order to counter any remnants of Perrot's teaching there.",
"The party arrived in Barbados on 3 October 1671, after a seven week voyage in which dolphins were caught and eaten.",
"Fox sent an email to Friends spelling out the role of women's meetings in the marriage ceremony, a point of controversy when he returned home.",
"One of his ideas was for the prospective couple to be interviewed by a group of women before the wedding to find out if there were any financial or other obstacles.",
"Women's meetings have been held in London for the last ten years, but many felt they went too far in Bristol and the north-west of England.",
"Fox wrote a letter to the governor and assembly of the island in which he denied that the slaves were being stirred up to revolt.",
"Fox's first landfall on the North American continent was at Maryland, where he participated in a four-day meeting of local Quakers.",
"He stayed there because he wanted to meet some Native Americans who were interested in Quaker ways, but they had a dispute about whether to participate in the meeting.",
"Fox was impressed by their demeanor.",
"Fox rejected the idea that the Light and Spirit of God was not in the Indians.",
"There was no record of slaves on the mainland.",
"In the colonies, Fox helped to establish organizational systems similar to what he had done in Britain.",
"Some non-Quakers were preached to, but not all of them were converted.",
"George Fox returned to England in June 16 73 confident that his movement was firmly established there.",
"He found that his movement was divided among provincial Friends who were against the establishment of women's meetings and the power of those who resided in or near London.",
"The challenge to Fox's leadership was put down with the help of William Penn and Robert Barclay.",
"Fox was imprisoned again for refusing to swear oaths after being captured at Armscote.",
"His mother died after he was arrested.",
"The king granted Fox's release, but he was too weak to travel immediately.",
"After his death, he devoted his time to writing books and essays, as well as writing letters, both public and private.",
"He became convinced of the importance of oaths to the ideas of theQuaker.",
"He felt that he could witness the value of truth in everyday life, as well as to God, by not swearing.",
"Fox organised the meetings of the Friends in the Netherlands for three months in 1677.",
"He traveled along the coast to Friedrichstadt and back again over the course of several days.",
"Fox was involved in a dispute with Friends in Britain over the role of women in meetings which took a lot of his energy and left him exhausted.",
"He stayed in the south to try to end the dispute.",
"The foundation of the colony of Pennsylvania was given to him by Penn.",
"Fox was briefly arrested in October 1683.",
"Fox continued to write to leaders in Poland,Denmark, Germany and other countries about his beliefs despite his health being worse.",
"In the last years of his life, Fox continued to participate in the London Meetings, and made representations to Parliament about the sufferings of Friends.",
"The new King, James II, pardoned religious dissenters who were jailed for failing to attend the established church.",
"After the fall of James II, the Act of Toleration 1689 put an end to the uniformity laws that had been in place for many years, allowing the Quakers to assemble freely.",
"George Fox died two days after preaching at the Gracechurch Street Meeting House in London.",
"On January 23, 1691 N.S.",
"He was laid to rest in the presence of thousands of mourners.",
"The records of George Fox's healings were collected in a lost book called Book of Miracles.",
"The Friends Library in Friends House, London has a catalogue of George Fox's work.",
"The beginning and end of each miracle cure was included in the Book of Miracles reference in the catalogue.",
"This resource and journal accounts were used to reconstruct the book.",
"The Book of Miracles makes it possible for us to follow George Fox as he went about his seventeenth-century world, not only preaching his fresh messages of life and power, but as a remarkable healer of disease with the reputation of miracle-worker.",
"Fox's Journal and other writings were printed despite the suppressed Book of Miracles.",
"A young woman's mother made her well, according to a sample from Book of Miracles.",
"The small pox of God was made well by another young woman.",
"Fox's journal was first published in 1694 after being edited by Thomas Ellwood and William Penn.",
"Unlike most similar works of its time, the journal was not written immediately to the events it describes, but rather compiled many years later.",
"The journal's editors wrote parts of it as if they were written by Fox.",
"Dissent within the movement is not included in the narrative.",
"Fox is always vindicated by God's interventions on his behalf, and he portrays himself as always in the right.",
"As a religious book, it was compared to works such as John Bunyan's Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners.",
"It is an intensely personal work with little dramatic power that only succeeds in appealing to readers after substantial editing.",
"Historians have used it as a primary source because of its wealth of detail on ordinary life in the 17th century.",
"Fox's letters were published along with a few private communications.",
"From the 1650s onwards, with titles such as Friends, seek the peace of all men or To Friends, to know one another in the light, they give enormous insight into the detail of Fox's beliefs and show his determination to spread them.",
"\"These writings contain a few fresh phrases of his own, but are generally characterized by an excess of scriptural language and today they seem dull and repetitious\", said Henry Cadbury, Professor of Divinity at Harvard University.",
"Fox's sermons were rich in biblical metaphor and common speech and brought hope in a dark time.",
"Fox's aphorisms were used by many church groups to show the principles of Christianity.",
"Ellwood described Fox as \"graceful in countenance, manly in personage, grave in gesture, courteous in conversation\".",
"Penn said he was \"civil beyond all forms of breeding\".",
"He was skillful in speaking a word in due season to the conditions and capacities of most, and he was a discerner of other men's spirits.",
"The Society of Friends has largely followed Legacy Fox's beliefs.",
"His most significant achievement, other than his influence in the early movement, was his leadership in overcoming the twin challenges of government prosecution after the Restoration and internal disputes that threatened its stability during the same period.",
"His Puritan-like opposition to the arts and rejection of theological study prevented the development of practices that were more in line with his beliefs.",
"The deepest, most eternal thought in the human soul is what George Fox stands for.",
"The immortality of identity and moral right are merged into the thought of God.",
"Great, great is this thought, greater than all else.",
"On 13 January, George will be remembered in the Church of England.",
"The first edition of George Fox University's journal was published in 1694.",
"In 1908.",
"George Fox is available in print and online.",
"John L. Nickalls was the editor.",
"The year 1952.",
"George Fox had a journal.",
"Cambridge University Press.",
"The Philadelphia Yearly Meeting printed it.",
"The year 2008.",
"George Fox is a Christian.",
"The cathair is Evertype.",
"An Apology for the True Christian Divinity is a secondary source.",
"A treatment of theology at the end of the 17th century is available online.",
"Richard Bauman said let your words be few.",
"The name of the city is Cambridge: CUP.",
"There is a survey of the role of words, language, silence and symbolism.",
"Voice of the Lord: A Biography of George Fox was written by Wildes Harry.",
"H. Larry Ingle wrote First Among Friends: George Fox and the Creation of Quakerism.",
"Fox used his influence in the Society of Friends to ensure that his views were in line with the group.",
"\"Fox, George\" was written by Ingle.",
"The Oxford University Press has a Dictionary of National Biography.",
"13 May 2008.",
"A Popular Life of George Fox is required for subscription.",
"Somewhat biased biography of Fox.",
"New Light on George Fox is a collection of essays.",
"There is a collection of essays.",
"Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends in Britain.",
"1999 revision",
"A modern view of Fox and Friends is shown.",
"There are external links to the life's work of George Fox.",
"George Fox wrote The Lamb's Officer is Gone Forth with the Lamb's Message in the House of Commons Journal Volume 8.",
"George Fox and Rob were ordered by the House.",
"Gressingham will be handed over to the Serjeant-at-Arms.",
"17th-century Christian clergy, 17th-century English writers, and 17th-century Christian mystics are all buried at Bunhill Fields."
] | <mask> (July 1624 – 13 January 1691) was an English Dissenter, who was a founder of the Religious Society of Friends, commonly known as the Quakers or Friends. The son of a Leicestershire weaver, he lived in times of social upheaval and war. He rebelled against the religious and political authorities by proposing an unusual, uncompromising approach to the Christian faith. He travelled throughout Britain as a dissenting preacher, performed hundreds of healings, and was often persecuted by the disapproving authorities. In 1669, he married Margaret Fell, widow of a wealthy supporter, Thomas Fell; she was a leading Friend. His ministry expanded and he made tours of North America and the Low Countries. He was arrested and jailed numerous times for his beliefs.He spent his final decade working in London to organise the expanding Quaker movement. Despite disdain from some Anglicans and Puritans, he was viewed with respect by the Quaker convert William Penn and the Lord Protector, Oliver Cromwell. Early life
<mask> was born in the strongly Puritan village of Drayton-in-the-Clay, Leicestershire, England (now Fenny Drayton), 15 miles (24 km) west-south-west of Leicester, as the eldest of four children of <mask>, a successful weaver, called "Righteous Christer" by his neighbours, and his wife, Mary née Lago. <mask> was a churchwarden and relatively wealthy. He left his son a substantial legacy when he died in the late 1650s. <mask> was of a serious, religious disposition from childhood. There is no record of any formal schooling but he learnt to read and write."When I came to eleven years of age," he said, "I knew pureness and righteousness; for, while I was a child, I was taught how to walk to be kept pure. The Lord taught me to be faithful, in all things, and to act faithfully two ways; viz., inwardly to God, and outwardly to man." Known as an honest person, he also proclaimed, "The Lord taught me to be faithful in all things ... and to keep to Yea and Nay in all things." As he grew up, <mask>'s relatives "thought to have made me a priest" but he was instead apprenticed to a local shoemaker and grazier, <mask> of Mancetter. This suited his contemplative temperament and he became well known for his diligence among the wool traders who had dealings with his master. A constant obsession for <mask> was the pursuit of "simplicity" in life – humility and the abandonment of luxury. The short time he spent as a shepherd was important to the formation of this view.Toward the end of his life he wrote a letter for general circulation pointing out that Abel, Noah, Abraham, Jacob, Moses and David were all keepers of sheep or cattle and so a learned education should not be seen as a necessary qualification for ministry. <mask> knew people who were "professors" (followers of the standard Church of England), but by the age of 19 he was looking down on their behaviour, in particular their consumption of alcohol. At prayer one night after leaving two acquaintances at a drinking session, <mask> heard an inner voice saying, "Thou seest how young people go together into vanity, and old people into the earth; thou must forsake all, young and old, keep out of all, and be as a stranger unto all." First travels
Driven by his "inner voice", <mask> left Drayton-in-the-Clay in September 1643 and moved towards London in a state of mental torment and confusion. The English Civil War had begun and troops were stationed in many towns through which he passed. In Barnet, he was torn by depression (perhaps from the temptations of the resort town near London). He alternately shut himself in his room for days at a time or went out alone into the countryside.After almost a year he returned to Drayton, where he engaged Nathaniel Stephens, the clergyman of his home town, in long discussions on religious matters. Stephens considered <mask> a gifted young man, but the two disagreed on so many issues that he later called <mask> mad and spoke against him. Over the next few years <mask> continued to travel around the country, as his particular religious beliefs took shape. At times he actively sought the company of clergy, but found no comfort from them as they seemed unable to help with the matters troubling him. One, in Warwickshire, advised him to take tobacco (which <mask> disliked) and sing psalms; another, in Coventry, lost his temper when <mask> accidentally stood on a flower in his garden; a third suggested bloodletting. <mask> became fascinated by the Bible, which he studied assiduously. He hoped to find among the "English Dissenters" a spiritual understanding absent from the established church, but he fell out with one group, for example, because he maintained that women had souls:
He thought intensely about the Temptation of Christ, which he compared to his own spiritual condition, but he drew strength from his conviction that God would support and preserve him.In prayer and meditation he came to a greater understanding of the nature of his faith and what it required from him; this process he called "opening". He also came to what he deemed a deep inner understanding of standard Christian beliefs. Among his ideas were:
Rituals can be safely ignored, as long as one experiences a true spiritual conversion. The qualification for ministry is given by the Holy Spirit, not by ecclesiastical study. This implies that anyone has the right to minister, assuming the Spirit guides them, including women and children. God "dwelleth in the hearts of his obedient people": religious experience is not confined to a church building. Indeed, <mask> refused to apply the word "church" to a building, using instead the name "steeple-house", a usage maintained by many Quakers today.<mask> would just as soon worship in fields and orchards, believing that God's presence could be felt anywhere. Though <mask> used the Bible to support his views, <mask> reasoned that, because God was within the faithful, believers could follow their own inner guide rather than rely on a strict reading of Scripture or the word of clerics. <mask> also made no clear distinction between Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Religious Society of Friends
In 1647 <mask> began to preach publicly: in market-places, fields, appointed meetings of various kinds or even sometimes in "steeple-houses" (churches) after the service. His powerful preaching began to attract a small following. It is not clear at what point the Society of Friends was formed, but there was certainly a group of people who often travelled together. At first, they called themselves "Children of the Light" or "Friends of the Truth", and later simply "Friends".<mask> seems initially to have had no desire to found a sect, but only to proclaim what he saw as the pure and genuine principles of Christianity in their original simplicity, though he afterward showed great prowess as a religious organiser in the structure he gave to the new society. There were a great many rival Christian denominations holding very diverse opinions in that period; the atmosphere of dispute and confusion gave <mask> an opportunity to put forward his own beliefs through his personal sermons. <mask>'s preaching was grounded in scripture but was mainly effective because of the intense personal experience he was able to project. He was scathing about immorality, deceit and the exacting of tithes and urged his listeners to lead lives without sin, avoiding the Ranter's antinomian view that a believer becomes automatically sinless. By 1651 he had gathered other talented preachers around him and continued to roam the country despite a harsh reception from some listeners, who would whip and beat them to drive them away. As his reputation spread, his words were not welcomed by all. As an uncompromising preacher, he hurled disputation and contradiction to the faces of his opponents.The worship of Friends in the form of silent waiting punctuated by individuals speaking as the Spirit moved them seems to have been well-established by this time, though it is not recorded how this came to be; Richard Bauman asserts that "speaking was an important feature of the meeting for worship from the earliest days of Quakerism." Imprisonment
<mask> complained to judges about decisions he considered morally wrong, as he did in a letter on the case of a woman due to be executed for theft. He campaigned against paying the tithes intended to fund the established church, which often went into the pockets of absentee landlords or religious colleges distant from the paying parishioners. In his view, as God was everywhere and anyone could preach, the established church was unnecessary and a university qualification irrelevant for a preacher. Conflict with civil authority was inevitable. <mask> was imprisoned several times, the first at Nottingham in 1649. At Derby in 1650 he was imprisoned for blasphemy; a judge mocked <mask>'s exhortation to "tremble at the word of the Lord", calling him and his followers "Quakers".After he refused to fight against the return of the monarchy (or to take up arms for any reason), his sentence was doubled. The refusal to swear oaths or take up arms came to be much more important in his public statements. Refusal to take oaths meant that Quakers could be prosecuted under laws compelling subjects to pledge allegiance and made testifying in court problematic. In a letter of 1652 (That which is set up by the sword), he urged Friends not to use "carnal weapons" but "spiritual weapons", saying, "let the waves [the power of nations] break over your heads". In 1652, <mask> preached for several hours under a walnut tree at Balby, where his disciple Thomas Aldham was instrumental in setting up the first meeting in the Doncaster area. In the same year <mask> felt that God led him to ascend Pendle Hill, where he had a vision of many souls coming to Christ. From there he travelled to Sedbergh, where he had heard a group of Seekers was meeting, and preached to over a thousand people on Firbank Fell, convincing many, including Francis Howgill, to accept that Christ might speak to people directly.At the end of the month he stayed at Swarthmoor Hall, near Ulverston, the home of Thomas Fell, vice-chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, and his wife, Margaret. Around that time, the ad hoc meetings of Friends began to be formalised and a monthly meeting was set up in County Durham. Margaret became a Quaker, and although Thomas did not convert, his familiarity with the Friends proved influential when <mask> was arrested for blasphemy in October. Fell was one of three presiding judges, and the charges were dismissed on a technicality. <mask> remained at Swarthmoor until the summer of 1653, then left for Carlisle, where he was arrested again for blasphemy. It was even proposed to put him to death, but Parliament requested his release rather than have "a young man ... die for religion". Further imprisonments came in London in 1654, Launceston in 1656, Lancaster in 1660, Leicester in 1662, Lancaster again and Scarborough in 1664–1666 and Worcester in 1673–1675.Charges usually included causing a disturbance and travelling without a pass. Quakers fell foul of irregularly enforced laws forbidding unauthorised worship, while actions motivated by belief in social equality – refusing to use or acknowledge titles, take hats off in court or bow to those who considered themselves socially superior – were seen as disrespectful. While imprisoned at Launceston, <mask> wrote, "Christ our Lord and master saith 'Swear not at all, but let your communications be yea, yea, and nay, nay, for whatsoever is more than these cometh of evil.' ... the Apostle James saith, 'My brethren, above all things swear not, neither by heaven, nor by earth, nor by any other oath. Lest ye fall into condemnation.'" In prison <mask> continued writing and preaching, feeling that imprisonment brought him into contact with people who needed his help—the jailers as well as his fellow prisoners. In his journal, he told his magistrate, "God dwells not in temples made with hands."He also sought to set an example by his actions there, turning the other cheek when being beaten and refusing to show his captors any dejected feelings. Encounters with Cromwell
Parliamentarians grew suspicious of monarchist plots and fearful that the group travelling with <mask> aimed to overthrow the government: by this time his meetings were regularly attracting crowds of over a thousand. In early 1655 he was arrested at Whetstone, Leicestershire and taken to London under armed guard. In March he was brought before the Lord Protector, Oliver Cromwell. After affirming that he had no intention of taking up arms, <mask> was able to speak to Cromwell for most of the morning about the Friends. He advised him to listen to God's voice and obey it, so that as <mask> left, Cromwell "with tears in his eyes said, 'Come again to my house; for if thou and I were but an hour of a day together, we should be nearer one to the other'; adding that he wished [<mask>] no more ill than he did to his own soul." This episode was later recalled as an example of "speaking truth to power", a preaching technique by which subsequent Quakers hoped to influence the powerful.Although not used until the 20th century, the phrase is related to the ideas of plain speech and simplicity which <mask> practised, but motivated by the more worldly goal of eradicating war, injustice and oppression. <mask> petitioned Cromwell over the course of 1656 to alleviate the persecution of Quakers. Later that year, they met for a second time at Whitehall. On a personal level, the meeting went well; despite disagreements between the two men, they had a certain rapport. <mask> invited Cromwell to "lay down his crown at the feet of Jesus" – which Cromwell declined to do. <mask> met Cromwell again twice in March 1657. Their last meeting was in 1658 at Hampton Court, though they could not speak for long or meet again because of the Protector's worsening illness – <mask> even wrote that "he looked like a dead man".Cromwell died in September of that year. James Nayler
One early Quaker convert, the Yorkshireman James Nayler, arose as a prominent preacher in London around 1655. A breach began to form between <mask>'s and Nayler's followers. As <mask> was held prisoner at Launceston, Nayler moved south-westwards towards Launceston intending to meet <mask> and heal any rift. On the way he was arrested himself and held at Exeter. After <mask> was released from Launceston gaol in 1656, he preached throughout the West Country. Arriving at Exeter late in September, <mask> was reunited with Nayler.Nayler and his followers refused to remove their hats while <mask> prayed, which <mask> took as both a personal slight and a bad example. When Nayler refused to kiss <mask>'s hand, <mask> told Nayler to kiss his foot instead. Nayler was offended and the two parted acrimoniously. <mask> wrote that "there was now a wicked spirit risen amongst Friends". After Nayler's own release later the same year he rode into Bristol triumphantly playing the part of Jesus Christ in a re-enactment of Palm Sunday. He was arrested and taken to London, where Parliament defeated a motion to execute him by 96–82. Instead, they ordered that he be pilloried and whipped through both London and Bristol, branded on his forehead with the letter B (for blasphemer), bored through the tongue with a red-hot iron and imprisoned in solitary confinement with hard labour.Nayler was released in 1659, but he was a broken man. On meeting <mask> in London, he fell to his knees and begged <mask>'s forgiveness. Shortly afterward, Nayler was attacked by thieves while travelling home to his family, and died. Suffering and growth
The persecutions of these years – with about a thousand Friends in prison by 1657 – hardened <mask>'s opinions of traditional religious and social practices. In his preaching, he often emphasised the Quaker rejection of baptism by water; this was a useful way of highlighting how the focus of Friends on inward transformation differed from what he saw as the superstition of outward ritual. It was also a deliberate provocation of adherents of those practices, so providing opportunities for <mask> to argue with them on matters of scripture. The same pattern appeared in his court appearances: when a judge challenged him to remove his hat, <mask> replied by asking where in the Bible such an injunction could be found.The Society of Friends became increasingly organised towards the end of the decade. Large meetings were held, including a three-day event in Bedfordshire, the precursor of the present Britain Yearly Meeting system. <mask> commissioned two Friends to travel around the country collecting the testimonies of imprisoned Quakers, as evidence of their persecution; this led to the establishment in 1675 of Meeting for Sufferings, which has continued to the present day. The 1650s, when the Friends were at their most confrontational, was one of the most creative periods of their history. Under the Commonwealth, <mask> had hoped that the movement would become the major church in England. Disagreements, persecution and increasing social turmoil, however, led <mask> to suffer from severe depression, which left him deeply troubled at Reading, Berkshire, for ten weeks in 1658 or 1659. In 1659, he sent parliament his most politically radical pamphlet, Fifty nine Particulars laid down for the Regulating things, but the year was so chaotic that it never considered these; the document was not reprinted until the 21st century.The Restoration
With the restoration of the monarchy, <mask>'s dreams of establishing the Friends as the dominant religion seemed at an end. He was again accused of conspiracy, this time against Charles II, and fanaticism – a charge he resented. He was imprisoned in Lancaster for five months, during which he wrote to the king offering advice on governance: Charles should refrain from war and domestic religious persecution, and discourage oath-taking, plays, and maypole games. These last suggestions reveal <mask>'s Puritan leanings, which continued to influence Quakers for centuries after his death. Once again, <mask> was released after demonstrating that he had no military ambitions. At least on one point, Charles listened to <mask>. The 700 Quakers who had been imprisoned under Richard Cromwell were released, though the government remained uncertain about the group's links with other, more violent, movements.A revolt by the Fifth Monarchists in January 1661 led to the suppression of that sect and the repression of other Nonconformists, including Quakers. In the aftermath of this attempted coup, <mask> and eleven other Quakers issued a broadside proclaiming what became known among Friends in the 20th century as the "peace testimony", committing themselves to oppose all outward wars and strife as contrary to the will of God. Not all his followers accepted this commitment; Isaac Penington, for example, dissented for a time, arguing that the state had a duty to protect the innocent from evil, if necessary by using military force. Despite the testimony, persecution against Quakers and other dissenters continued. Penington and others such as John Perrot and John Pennyman were uneasy at <mask>'s increasing power within the movement. Like Nayler before them, they saw no reason why men should remove their hats for prayer, arguing that men and women should be treated as equals, and if, as according to the apostle Paul, women should cover their heads, then so could men. Perrot and Penington lost the argument.Perrot emigrated to the New World, and <mask> retained leadership of the movement. Parliament enacted laws which forbade non-Anglican religious meetings of more than five people, essentially making Quaker meetings illegal. <mask> counselled his followers to violate openly laws that attempted to suppress the movement, and many Friends, including women and children, were jailed over the next quarter-century. Meanwhile, Quakers in New England had been banished (and some executed), and Charles was advised by his councillors to issue a mandamus condemning this practice and allowing them to return. <mask> was able to meet some of the New England Friends when they came to London, stimulating his interest in the colonies. <mask> was unable to travel there immediately: he was imprisoned again in 1664 for his refusal to swear the oath of allegiance, and on his release in 1666 was preoccupied with organizational matters — he normalised the system of monthly and quarterly meetings throughout the country, and extended it to Ireland. Visiting Ireland also gave him a chance to preach against what he saw as the excesses of the Roman Catholic Church, in particular the use of ritual.More recent Quaker commentators have noted points of contact between the denominations: both claim the actual presence of God in their meetings, and both allow the collective opinion of the church to augment Biblical teaching. <mask>, however, did not perceive this, brought up as he had been in a wholly Protestant environment hostile to "Popery". <mask> married Margaret Fell of Swarthmoor Hall, a lady of high social position and one of his early converts, on 27 October 1669 at a meeting in Bristol. She was ten years his senior and had eight children (all but one of them Quakers) by her first husband, Thomas Fell, who had died in 1658. She was herself very active in the movement, and had campaigned for equality and the acceptance of women as preachers. As there were no priests at Quaker weddings to perform the ceremony, the union took the form of a civil marriage approved by the principals and the witnesses at a meeting. Ten days after the marriage, Margaret returned to Swarthmoor to continue her work there, while <mask> went back to London.Their shared religious work was at the heart of their life together, and they later collaborated on much of the administration the Society required. Shortly after the marriage, Margaret was imprisoned in Lancaster; <mask> remained in the south-east of England, becoming so ill and depressed that for a time he lost his sight. Travels in North America and Europe
By 1671 <mask> had recovered and Margaret had been released by order of the King. <mask> resolved to visit the English settlements in North America and the West Indies, remaining there for two years, possibly to counter any remnants of Perrot's teaching there. After a voyage of seven weeks, during which dolphins were caught and eaten, the party arrived in Barbados on 3 October 1671. From there, <mask> sent an epistle to Friends spelling out the role of women's meetings in the Quaker marriage ceremony, a point of controversy when he returned home. One of his proposals suggested that the prospective couple should be interviewed by an all-female meeting prior to the marriage to determine whether there were any financial or other impediments.Though women's meetings had been held in London for the last ten years, this was an innovation in Bristol and the north-west of England, which many there felt went too far. <mask> wrote a letter to the governor and assembly of the island in which he refuted charges that Quakers were stirring up the slaves to revolt and tried to affirm the orthodoxy of Quaker beliefs. After a stay in Jamaica, <mask>'s first landfall on the North American continent was at Maryland, where he participated in a four-day meeting of local Quakers. He remained there while various of his English companions travelled to the other colonies, because he wished to meet some Native Americans who were interested in Quaker ways—though he relates that they had "a great dispute" among themselves about whether to participate in the meeting. <mask> was impressed by their general demeanour, which he saw as "courteous and loving". He resented the suggestion (from a man in North Carolina) that "the Light and Spirit of God ... was not in the Indians", a proposition which <mask> rejected. <mask> left no record of encountering slaves on the mainland.Elsewhere in the colonies, <mask> helped to establish organizational systems for the Friends, along the same lines as he had done in Britain. He also preached to many non-Quakers, some but not all of whom were converted. After extensive travels round the various American colonies, <mask> returned to England in June 1673 confident that his movement was firmly established there. Back in England, however, he found his movement sharply divided among provincial Friends (such as William Rogers, John Wilkinson and John Story) who resisted establishment of women's meetings and the power of those who resided in or near London. With William Penn and Robert Barclay as allies of <mask>, the challenge to <mask>'s leadership was eventually put down. But in the midst of the dispute, <mask> was imprisoned again for refusing to swear oaths after being captured at Armscote, Worcestershire. His mother died shortly after hearing of his arrest and <mask>'s health began to suffer.Margaret Fell petitioned the king for his release, which was granted, but <mask> felt too weak to take up his travels immediately. Recuperating at Swarthmoor, he began dictating what would be published after his death as his journal and devoted his time to his written output: letters, both public and private, as well as books and essays. Much of his energy was devoted to the topic of oaths, having become convinced of its importance to Quaker ideas. By refusing to swear, he felt that he could bear witness to the value of truth in everyday life, as well as to God, whom he associated with truth and the inner light. For three months in 1677 and a month in 1684, <mask> visited the Friends in the Netherlands, and organised their meetings for discipline. The first trip was the more extensive, taking him into what is now Germany, proceeding along the coast to Friedrichstadt and back again over several days. Meanwhile, <mask> was participating in a dispute among Friends in Britain over the role of women in meetings, a struggle which took much of his energy and left him exhausted.Returning to England, he stayed in the south to try to end the dispute. He followed with interest the foundation of the colony of Pennsylvania, where Penn had given him over of land. Persecution continued, with <mask> arrested briefly in October 1683. <mask>'s health was worsening, but he continued his activities – writing to leaders in Poland, Denmark, Germany and elsewhere about his beliefs and their treatment of Quakers. Last years
In the last years of his life, <mask> continued to participate in the London Meetings, and still made representations to Parliament about the sufferings of Friends. The new King, James II, pardoned religious dissenters jailed for failure to attend the established church, leading to the release of about 1,500 Friends. Though the Quakers lost influence after the Glorious Revolution, which deposed James II, the Act of Toleration 1689 put an end to the uniformity laws under which Quakers had been persecuted, permitting them to assemble freely.Two days after preaching as usual at the Gracechurch Street Meeting House in London, <mask> died between 9 and 10 p.m. on 13 January 1690 O.S. (23 January 1691 N.S.). He was interred three days later in the Quaker Burying Ground, in the presence of thousands of mourners. Book of Miracles
<mask> performed hundreds of healings throughout his preaching ministry, the records of which were collected in a notable but now lost book entitled Book of Miracles. This book was listed in the catalogue of <mask>’s work maintained by the Friends Library in Friends House, London. In 1932, Henry Cadbury found a reference to Book of Miracles in the catalogue, which included the beginning and ending of each account of a miraculous cure. The book was then reconstructed based on this resource and journal accounts.According to Rufus M. Jones, the Book of Miracles "makes it possible for us to follow <mask> as he went about his seventeenth-century world, not only preaching his fresh messages of life and power, but as a remarkable healer of disease with the undoubted reputation of miracle-worker." The Book of Miracles was deliberately suppressed in favour of printing <mask>'s Journal and other writings. A sample from Book of Miracles: "And a young woman her mother ... had made her well. And another young woman was ... small pox ... of God was made well." Journal and letters
<mask>'s journal was first published in 1694, after editing by Thomas Ellwood – a friend and associate of John Milton – with a preface by William Penn. Like most similar works of its time the journal was not written contemporaneously to the events it describes, but rather compiled many years later, much of it dictated. Parts of the journal were not in fact by <mask> at all, but constructed by its editors from diverse sources and written as if by him.The dissent within the movement and the contributions of others to the development of Quakerism are largely excluded from the narrative. <mask> portrays himself as always in the right and always vindicated by God's interventions on his behalf. As a religious autobiography, Rufus Jones compared it to such works as Augustine's Confessions and John Bunyan's Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners. It is, though, an intensely personal work with little dramatic power that only succeeds in appealing to readers after substantial editing. Historians have used it as a primary source because of its wealth of detail on ordinary life in the 17th century, and the many towns and villages which <mask> visited. Hundreds of <mask>'s letters – mostly intended for wide circulation, along with a few private communications – were also published. Written from the 1650s onwards, with such titles as Friends, seek the peace of all men or To Friends, to know one another in the light, they give enormous insight into the detail of <mask>'s beliefs and show his determination to spread them.These writings, in the words of Henry Cadbury, Professor of Divinity at Harvard University and a leading Quaker, "contain a few fresh phrases of his own, [but] are generally characterized by an excess of scriptural language and today they seem dull and repetitious". Others point out that "<mask>'s sermons, rich in biblical metaphor and common speech, brought hope in a dark time." <mask>'s aphorisms found an audience beyond the Quakers, with many other church groups using them to illustrate principles of Christianity. <mask> is described by Ellwood as "graceful in countenance, manly in personage, grave in gesture, courteous in conversation". Penn says he was "civil beyond all forms of breeding". We are told that he was "plain and powerful in preaching, fervent in prayer", "a discerner of other men's spirits, and very much master of his own", skilful to "speak a word in due season to the conditions and capacities of most, especially to them that were weary, and wanted soul's rest"; "valiant in asserting the truth, bold in defending it, patient in suffering for it, immovable as a rock". Legacy
<mask> had a tremendous influence on the Society of Friends and his beliefs have largely been carried forward.Perhaps his most significant achievement, other than his predominant influence in the early movement, was his leadership in overcoming the twin challenges of government prosecution after the Restoration and internal disputes that threatened its stability during the same period. Not all of his beliefs were welcome to all Quakers: his Puritan-like opposition to the arts and rejection of theological study, forestalled development of these practices among Quakers for some time. Walt Whitman, who was raised by parents inspired by Quaker principles, later wrote: "<mask> stands for something too – a thought – the thought that wakes in silent hours – perhaps the deepest, most eternal thought latent in the human soul. This is the thought of God, merged in the thoughts of moral right and the immortality of identity. Great, great is this thought – aye, greater than all else." <mask> is remembered in the Church of England with a commemoration on 13 January. See also
Christian anarchism
Christian mysticism
<mask> University
List of abolitionist forerunners
List of people on stamps of Ireland
Anthony Sharp (Quaker), Dublin Quaker and merchant
References
Primary sources
Various editions of <mask>'s journal have been published since the first printing in 1694:
Jones, Rufus M. (editor).1908. <mask> – An Autobiography, an annotated and slightly abridged text, is also available in print (e. g. Friends United Press, 2006; ) and online ( ). Nickalls, John L. (editor). 1952. The Journal of George Fox. Cambridge University Press. (Reprinted by the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting; )
Ross, Hugh McGregor (editor).2008. <mask>: A Christian Mystic. Cathair na Mart: Evertype. Secondary sources
Barclay, Robert (1678), An Apology for the True Christian Divinity. A systematic treatment of Quaker theology at the end of the seventeenth century; available online. Bauman, Richard (1983), Let your words be few. (Cambridge: CUP).A survey of the role of words, language, silence and symbolism among seventeenth century Quakers. Emerson, Wildes Harry (1965), Voice of the Lord: A Biography of <mask> (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press). Ingle, H. Larry (1994, reprinted 1996), First Among Friends: <mask> and the Creation of Quakerism (Oxford University Press; ). First scholarly biography showing how <mask> used his influence in the Society of Friends to ensure conformity to his views and survival of the group. Ingle, H. Larry (2004), "<mask>, <mask> (1624–1691)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press). Retrieved 13 May 2008.(Subscription required)
Marsh, Josiah (1847), A Popular Life of <mask> (London: Charles Gilpin). Somewhat biased but thorough biography of <mask>. Mullett, Michael (1994), New Light on <mask>, 1624-91: A Collection of Essays (York: Ebor Press/Hyperion Books) (). Collection of essays. Quaker Faith and Practice, Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) in Britain. ( [1999 revision]). Shows a modern Quaker view of <mask> and much historical information about Friends and their institutions.External links
The life's work of <mask> @ Ward's Book of Days
The Writings and Life of <mask>. The Journal and the Epistles, edited and with commentary by Hall Worthington and Joan Worthington
The Lamb's Officer is Gone Forth with the Lamb's Message by <mask> at the Ex-Classics Web Site
House of Commons Journal Volume 8, 21 May 1660, see entry under Geo. <mask>, &c., Order by the House that <mask> & Rob. Gressingham who "made a great Disturbance at Harwich" and are to be handed over to the Serjeant-at-Arms. 1624 births
1691 deaths
17th-century Christian clergy
17th-century English writers
17th-century English male writers
17th-century Christian mystics
Burials at Bunhill Fields
English Dissenters
English evangelicals
English Christian pacifists
English Christian religious leaders
English Christian theologians
English religious leaders
English religious writers
English Quakers
Quaker writers
Lay theologians
People convicted of blasphemy
People from Hinckley and Bosworth (district)
Protestant mystics
Quaker ministers
Quaker theologians
17th-century English theologians
17th-century Quakers
Christian radicals
Shoemakers
Founders of religions
Anglican saints | [
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] | <mask> was an English Dissenter who founded the Religious Society of Friends. During times of social upheaval and war, he was the son of a weaver. He rebelled against the religious and political authorities by proposing an uncompromising approach to the Christian faith. He traveled throughout Britain as a preacher, performed hundreds of healings, and was often harassed by the authorities. He married Margaret Fell, widow of a wealthy supporter, in 1669. He made tours of North America and the Low Countries. He was jailed many times for his beliefs.He spent his final 10 years working in London. William Penn and the Lord Protector, Oliver Cromwell, viewed him with respect despite their disdain for him. <mask> was the eldest of four children of <mask>, a successful weaver, who was born in the Puritan village of Drayton-in-the-Clay, England. <mask> had a lot of money. He left his son a lot of legacy when he died. <mask> was religious from a young age. He learned to read and write at an early age.He said that when he was a child, he was taught how to walk to be kept pure. I was taught by the Lord to be faithful in all things and to act faithfully in both ways. He said the Lord told him to be faithful in all things and to keep to his word. As a child, <mask>'s relatives thought to have made him a priest, but he was instead apprenticed to a local shoemaker and grazier. He was known for his diligence among the wool traders who had dealings with his master. The pursuit of "simplicity" in life was a constant obsession for <mask>. The formation of this view was made possible by the short time he spent as a shepherd.He wrote a letter at the end of his life saying that a learned education shouldn't be seen as a qualification for ministry since all of them were keepers of sheep or cattle. <mask> was aware of people who were "professors", but by the age of 19 he 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 At prayer one night after leaving two acquaintances at a drinking session, <mask> heard an inner voice saying, "Thou must abandon all, young and old, keep out of all, and be as a stranger unto us." <mask> left Drayton-in-the-Clay in September 1643 and moved towards London in a state of mental torment and confusion. The English Civil War had begun and troops were stationed in many towns. He might have been torn by the temptations of the resort town near London. He went out alone or shut himself in his room for days at a time.After almost a year, he returned to his hometown of Drayton, where he engaged the reverend of his home town in long discussions on religious matters. <mask> was considered a gifted young man by Stephens, but the two disagreed on so many issues that he called <mask> mad and spoke against him. As his religious beliefs took shape, <mask> continued to travel around the country. At times he sought the company of clergy, but found no comfort from them as they seemed unable to help with the matters troubling him. One advised him to take tobacco and sing psalms, another lost his temper when <mask> accidentally stood on a flower in his garden, and a third suggested bloodletting. <mask> was fascinated by the Bible. He thought about the Temptation of Christ, which he compared to his own spiritual condition, but he fell out with one group because he maintained that women had souls.He came to a greater understanding of the nature of his faith through prayer and meditation. He came to what he thought was a deep understanding of Christian beliefs. If one experiences a true spiritual conversion, rituals can be safely ignored. The qualification for ministry is given by the Holy Spirit. Assuming the spirit guides them, anyone has the right to minister. Religious experience is not limited to a church building. <mask> refused to use the word "church" to a building, instead using the name "steeple-house".<mask> believed that God's presence could be felt in fields and orchards. <mask> believed that because God was within the faithful, believers could follow their own inner guide rather than rely on a strict reading of Scripture or the word of clerics. <mask> didn't make a distinction between Father, Son and Holy Spirit. In 1647, the Religious Society of Friends began to preach publicly: in market-places, fields, appointed meetings of various kinds or even in "steeple-houses" after the service. A small group of people began to listen to his preaching. There was a group of people who traveled together, but it is not clear when the Society of Friends was formed. They first called themselves " Children of the Light" and then " Friends of the Truth".<mask> initially had no desire to found a sect, but only to proclaim what he saw as the pure and genuine principles of Christianity in their original simplicity, and he afterwards showed great prowess as a religious organiser in the structure he gave to the new society. The atmosphere of dispute and confusion gave <mask> an opportunity to put forward his own beliefs through his personal sermons. <mask>'s preaching was mostly effective because of the intense personal experience he was able to project. He urged his audience to lead lives without sin and 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 800-313-5780 By 1651 he had gathered other talented preachers around him and continued to roam the country despite a harsh reception from some listeners who would whip and beat them to drive them away. His words were not welcomed by everyone. He preached disputation and contradiction to his opponents.Richard Bauman asserts that speaking was an important feature of the meeting for worship from this time, though it is not recorded how this came to be. Imprisonment <mask> complained to judges about decisions he considered morally wrong, as he did in a letter on the case of a woman due to be executed for theft. He wanted to stop the established church from going into the pockets of landlords or religious colleges away from the paying parishioners. He believed that a university qualification was irrelevant for a preacher as God was everywhere and anyone could preach. Conflict with civil authority was inevitable. The first time <mask> was imprisoned was in 1649. <mask> and his followers were called "Quakers" by a judge at Derby in 1650 after he was imprisoned for blaspheming.His sentence was doubled after he refused to fight against the return of the monarchy. In his public statements, the refusal to swear oaths or take up arms was more important. The refusal to take oaths made testifying in court problematic. "Let the waves of the power of nations break over your heads", he said in a letter that was set up by the sword. <mask> preached for several hours under a tree at Balby, where Thomas Aldham helped set up the first meeting in the Doncaster area. <mask> had a vision of many souls coming to Christ when he ascended Pendle Hill. He preached to over a thousand people on Firbank Fell, convincing them that Christ could speak to them directly.He stayed at the home of the vice-chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster and his wife at the end of the month. The monthly meeting of Friends was set up in County Durham around that time. Although Thomas did not convert, his familiarity with the Friends was influential when <mask> was arrested. The charges were dismissed because of a technicality. In the summer of 1653 <mask> left for Carlisle, where he was arrested again for blaspheming. Parliament requested his release rather than having a young man die for religion. There were further imprisonments in London in 1654 and in 1656 and in Lancaster in 1660 and again in 1662.The charges included causing a commotion and travelling without a pass. Unauthorised worship, and actions motivated by belief in social equality, such as taking hats off in court, were seen as disrespectful. <mask> wrote "Christ our Lord and master 'Swear not at all, but let your communications be more than these cometh of evil'." The Apostle James said, "My brethren, above all things, not swear by heaven, nor by earth, nor by any other oath." Lest you fall into condemnation. <mask> felt that imprisonment brought him into contact with people who needed his help, the jailers as well as his fellow prisoners. He said in his journal that God doesn't dwell in temples made with hands.He tried to set an example by his actions there, turning the other cheek when being beaten and refusing to show his feelings. Cromwell Parliamentarians became suspicious of monarchist plots and were afraid that the group travelling with <mask> would overthrow the government. He was taken to London under armed guard after he was arrested at Whetstone. He was brought to Oliver Cromwell. <mask> spoke to Cromwell for most of the morning after affirming that he had no intention of taking up arms. Cromwell was told to listen to God's voice and obey it so that he and <mask> could be closer to each other. The episode was recalled as an example of "speaking truth to power", a technique used by the Quakers to influence the powerful.Although not used until the 20th century, the phrase is related to the ideas of plain speech and simplicity which <mask> practised. Over the course of 1656, <mask> petitioned Cromwell. They met again at Whitehall later that year. Despite disagreements between the two men, the meeting went well on a personal level. <mask> invited Cromwell to "lay down his crown at the feet of Jesus", but Cromwell declined. <mask> and Cromwell met again in March 1657. <mask> wrote that the Protector looked like a dead man because they couldn't speak for long or meet again because of his worsening illness.Cromwell died in September of that year. The Yorkshireman James Nayler became a prominent preacher in London around 1655. There was a break between <mask>'s and Nayler's followers. As <mask> was held at Launceston, Nayler moved to meet him and heal the rift. He was arrested on the way and held. <mask> preached throughout the West Country after he was released from jail. <mask> arrived at Exeter late in September.<mask> took as both a personal slight and a bad example the fact that Nayler and his followers refused to remove their hats while <mask> prayed. When Nayler refused to kiss <mask>'s hand, <mask> told him to kiss his foot. The two parted acrimoniously after Nayler was offended. <mask> wrote that there was a "wicked spirit" among Friends. He rode into Bristol triumphantly playing the part of Jesus Christ in a re-enactment of Palm Sunday after his own release. Parliament defeated a motion to execute him after he was arrested. Instead, they ordered that he be pilloried and whipped through both London and Bristol, branded on his forehead with the letter B, bored through the tongue with a red-hot iron and imprisoned in solitary confinement with hard labour.He was a broken man when he was released in 1659. He begged <mask>'s forgiveness after meeting him in London. While travelling home to his family, Nayler was attacked by thieves and died. The persecutions of these years hardened <mask>'s opinions of traditional religious and social practices. The focus of Friends on inward transformation differed from what he saw as the superstition of outward ritual, so he emphasized the rejection of baptism by water in his preaching. It was a deliberate provocation of those practices so that <mask> could argue with them on matters of scripture. When a judge challenged him to remove his hat, <mask> replied by asking where in the Bible such an injunction could be found.Towards the end of the decade, the Society of Friends became more organised. The precursor to the present Britain Yearly Meeting system was a three-day event in Bedfordshire. Meeting for Sufferings was established in 1675 after <mask> commissioned two Friends to travel around the country collecting testimonies of imprisoned Quakers as evidence of their persecution. The Friends had one of the most creative periods of their history in the 1650s. <mask> wanted the movement to become the major church in England. <mask> was depressed for ten weeks in 1658 or 1659 because of disagreements, persecution and increasing social turmoil. In 1659, he sent parliament his most politically radical pamphlet, Fifty nine Particulars, but the year was so chaotic that it never considered these; the document was not reprinted until the 21st century.The restoration of the monarchy seemed to end <mask>'s dreams of establishing the Friends as the dominant religion. He was accused of conspiracy again, this time against Charles II. He was imprisoned in Lancaster for five months, during which he wrote to the king, offering advice on governance: Charles should refrain from war and domestic religious persecution, and discourage oath-taking, plays, and maypole games. <mask>'s Puritan leanings continued to influence Quakers for centuries after his death. After demonstrating that he had no military ambitions, <mask> was released again. On one occasion, Charles listened to <mask>. The 700 people who had been imprisoned under Richard Cromwell were released.The suppression of the Fifth Monarchists and other Nonconformists was caused by a revolt in January 1661. In the aftermath of this attempted coup, <mask> and eleven other Quakers issued a broadside proclaiming what became known among Friends in the 20th century as the "peace testimony", committing themselves to oppose all outward wars and strife as contrary to the will of God. The state had a duty to protect the innocent from evil if necessary by using military force, but not all of his followers accepted this commitment. The persecution continued despite the testimony. Penington was uneasy about <mask>'s increasing power within the movement. They saw no reason why men should remove their hats for prayer if women should cover their heads according to the apostle Paul. The argument was lost by Perrot and Penington.<mask> retained leadership of the movement after Perrot left for the New World. Parliament made non-Anglican religious meetings of more than five people illegal. Many Friends, including women and children, were jailed over the next quarter-century after <mask> counselled his followers to violate openly laws that attempted to suppress the movement. Charles was told by his councillors to issue a mandamus condemning this practice and allow the Quakers to return. The New England Friends came to London and stimulated <mask>'s interest in the colonies. <mask> was imprisoned again in 1664 for his refusal to swear the oath of allegiance, and on his release in 1666 he normalised the system of monthly and quarterly meetings throughout the country, and extended it to Ireland. He traveled to Ireland to preach against the use of ritual in the Roman Catholic Church.Both denominations claim the presence of God in their meetings, and both allow the collective opinion of the church to enhance biblical teaching. <mask> had been in a Protestant environment hostile to "Popery". Margaret was one of <mask>'s early converts and he married her at a meeting in Bristol. She had eight children by her first husband, Thomas Fell, who died in 1658. She was very active in the movement, campaigning for equality and acceptance of women as preachers. The civil marriage was approved by the principals and witnesses at a meeting as there were no priests at the weddings. <mask> went back to London after the marriage, while Margaret went back to Swarthmoor to continue her work.Their shared religious work was at the heart of their life, and they collaborated on much of the administration the Society required. After the marriage, Margaret was imprisoned in Lancaster and <mask> was so depressed he lost his sight. <mask> and Margaret were released by the King after their travels in North America and Europe. <mask> decided to visit the English settlements in North America and the West Indies for two years in order to counter any remnants of Perrot's teaching there. The party arrived in Barbados on 3 October 1671, after a seven week voyage in which dolphins were caught and eaten. <mask> sent an email to Friends spelling out the role of women's meetings in the marriage ceremony, a point of controversy when he returned home. One of his ideas was for the prospective couple to be interviewed by a group of women before the wedding to find out if there were any financial or other obstacles.Women's meetings have been held in London for the last ten years, but many felt they went too far in Bristol and the north-west of England. <mask> wrote a letter to the governor and assembly of the island in which he denied that the slaves were being stirred up to revolt. <mask>'s first landfall on the North American continent was at Maryland, where he participated in a four-day meeting of local Quakers. He stayed there because he wanted to meet some Native Americans who were interested in Quaker ways, but they had a dispute about whether to participate in the meeting. <mask> was impressed by their demeanor. <mask> rejected the idea that the Light and Spirit of God was not in the Indians. There was no record of slaves on the mainland.In the colonies, <mask> helped to establish organizational systems similar to what he had done in Britain. Some non-Quakers were preached to, but not all of them were converted. <mask> returned to England in June 16 73 confident that his movement was firmly established there. He found that his movement was divided among provincial Friends who were against the establishment of women's meetings and the power of those who resided in or near London. The challenge to <mask>'s leadership was put down with the help of William Penn and Robert Barclay. <mask> was imprisoned again for refusing to swear oaths after being captured at Armscote. His mother died after he was arrested.The king granted <mask>'s release, but he was too weak to travel immediately. After his death, he devoted his time to writing books and essays, as well as writing letters, both public and private. He became convinced of the importance of oaths to the ideas of theQuaker. He felt that he could witness the value of truth in everyday life, as well as to God, by not swearing. <mask> organised the meetings of the Friends in the Netherlands for three months in 1677. He traveled along the coast to Friedrichstadt and back again over the course of several days. <mask> was involved in a dispute with Friends in Britain over the role of women in meetings which took a lot of his energy and left him exhausted.He stayed in the south to try to end the dispute. The foundation of the colony of Pennsylvania was given to him by Penn. <mask> was briefly arrested in October 1683. <mask> continued to write to leaders in Poland,Denmark, Germany and other countries about his beliefs despite his health being worse. In the last years of his life, <mask> continued to participate in the London Meetings, and made representations to Parliament about the sufferings of Friends. The new King, James II, pardoned religious dissenters who were jailed for failing to attend the established church. After the fall of James II, the Act of Toleration 1689 put an end to the uniformity laws that had been in place for many years, allowing the Quakers to assemble freely.<mask> died two days after preaching at the Gracechurch Street Meeting House in London. On January 23, 1691 N.S. He was laid to rest in the presence of thousands of mourners. The records of <mask>'s healings were collected in a lost book called Book of Miracles. The Friends Library in Friends House, London has a catalogue of <mask>'s work. The beginning and end of each miracle cure was included in the Book of Miracles reference in the catalogue. This resource and journal accounts were used to reconstruct the book.The Book of Miracles makes it possible for us to follow <mask> as he went about his seventeenth-century world, not only preaching his fresh messages of life and power, but as a remarkable healer of disease with the reputation of miracle-worker. <mask>'s Journal and other writings were printed despite the suppressed Book of Miracles. A young woman's mother made her well, according to a sample from Book of Miracles. The small pox of God was made well by another young woman. <mask>'s journal was first published in 1694 after being edited by Thomas Ellwood and William Penn. Unlike most similar works of its time, the journal was not written immediately to the events it describes, but rather compiled many years later. The journal's editors wrote parts of it as if they were written by <mask>.Dissent within the movement is not included in the narrative. <mask> is always vindicated by God's interventions on his behalf, and he portrays himself as always in the right. As a religious book, it was compared to works such as John Bunyan's Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners. It is an intensely personal work with little dramatic power that only succeeds in appealing to readers after substantial editing. Historians have used it as a primary source because of its wealth of detail on ordinary life in the 17th century. <mask>'s letters were published along with a few private communications. From the 1650s onwards, with titles such as Friends, seek the peace of all men or To Friends, to know one another in the light, they give enormous insight into the detail of <mask>'s beliefs and show his determination to spread them."These writings contain a few fresh phrases of his own, but are generally characterized by an excess of scriptural language and today they seem dull and repetitious", said Henry Cadbury, Professor of Divinity at Harvard University. <mask>'s sermons were rich in biblical metaphor and common speech and brought hope in a dark time. <mask>'s aphorisms were used by many church groups to show the principles of Christianity. Ellwood described <mask> as "graceful in countenance, manly in personage, grave in gesture, courteous in conversation". Penn said he was "civil beyond all forms of breeding". He was skillful in speaking a word in due season to the conditions and capacities of most, and he was a discerner of other men's spirits. The Society of Friends has largely followed <mask>'s beliefs.His most significant achievement, other than his influence in the early movement, was his leadership in overcoming the twin challenges of government prosecution after the Restoration and internal disputes that threatened its stability during the same period. His Puritan-like opposition to the arts and rejection of theological study prevented the development of practices that were more in line with his beliefs. The deepest, most eternal thought in the human soul is what <mask> stands for. The immortality of identity and moral right are merged into the thought of God. Great, great is this thought, greater than all else. On 13 January, <mask> will be remembered in the Church of England. The first edition of George Fox University's journal was published in 1694.In 1908. <mask> is available in print and online. John L. Nickalls was the editor. The year 1952. <mask> had a journal. Cambridge University Press. The Philadelphia Yearly Meeting printed it.The year 2008. <mask> is a Christian. The cathair is Evertype. An Apology for the True Christian Divinity is a secondary source. A treatment of theology at the end of the 17th century is available online. Richard Bauman said let your words be few. The name of the city is Cambridge: CUP.There is a survey of the role of words, language, silence and symbolism. Voice of the Lord: A Biography of <mask> was written by Wildes Harry. H. Larry Ingle wrote First Among Friends: <mask> and the Creation of Quakerism. <mask> used his influence in the Society of Friends to ensure that his views were in line with the group. "<mask>, <mask>" was written by Ingle. The Oxford University Press has a Dictionary of National Biography. 13 May 2008.A Popular Life of <mask> is required for subscription. Somewhat biased biography of <mask>. New Light on <mask> is a collection of essays. There is a collection of essays. Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends in Britain. 1999 revision A modern view of Fox and Friends is shown.There are external links to the life's work of <mask>. <mask> wrote The Lamb's Officer is Gone Forth with the Lamb's Message in the House of Commons Journal Volume 8. <mask> and Rob were ordered by the House. Gressingham will be handed over to the Serjeant-at-Arms. 17th-century Christian clergy, 17th-century English writers, and 17th-century Christian mystics are all buried at Bunhill Fields. | [
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12956732 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arif%20Heydarov | Arif Heydarov | Arif Nazar oglu Heydarov (Azeri: Arif Nəzər oğlu Heydərov, June 28, 1926, Agdash region,Azerbaijan — June 29, 1978, Baku was Azerbaijan SSR|Soviet Azerbaijan outstanding public personality and law enforcement officer. Military rank - Lieutenant-General. He headed the Ministry for Internal Affairs of Azerbaijan from March 19, 1970 until his assassination on June 29, 1978. He started the service in the Intelligence Unit of the People's Commissariat for State Security of Soviet Union (predecessor of KGB) in 1944 at the age of 18. After he completed the training in the Special Tasks State Security School in Moscow he volunteered to the World War II combat operations. He was assigned to the field intelligence units in Poland and Germany. According to some unconfirmed data he was nominated for the Soviet Union's highest military decoration - Hero of the Soviet Union for the unprecedented bravery during the Vistula-Oder offensive operation by the Soviet Army in January 1945. However, this nomination was replaced by Combat Red Banner Order decoration. Heydarov served in the KGB Intelligence Department (First Chief Department, now SVR) and the intelligence units of Azerbaijan from 1944 up to 1970. His last intelligence position was deputy chief of station in Turkey allegedly in charge of foreign counter intelligence.
In March 1970 he was appointed Minister for Internal Affairs of Azerbaijan by then Leader of Communist Party of Azerbaijan and subsequently President of the Republic of Azerbaijan Heydar Aliyev. During the term of his mandate as Interior Minister Arif Heydarov implemented urgent reforms aimed to improve the quality of service by the law enforcement, enhanced the crime prevention and rapid response capabilities to incidents of criminal nature, optimized the governance and allocated additional resources to ensure better professional education and specialized training for the police personnel.
He was shot to death by a prison officer Zia Muradov in his office in Baku on June 29, 1978, along with his Deputy Salahaddin Kazimov. The investigation concluded that the murderer originally targeted Kazimov for alleged delay of addressing Muradov's promotion request. Kazimov coincidentally was present in the office of Heydarov for an internal meeting when Muradov after murdering Minister's assistant Safikhanov broke through the office of the Minister and started shooting to Kazimov. One of the meeting's participants, Colonel Ibrahimov, did not try to defend his high rank colleagues but instead managed to escape. He confirmed during the investigation that the murderer fired initially three shots to Kazimov but was unable to share any other details as he fled away the accident scene. Some data suggest that Muradov fired one shot to Arif Heydarov as the latter being an experienced special tasks force operative attempted to neutralize the murderer. The latter then shot himself to death. Heavily wounded Arif Heydarov passed away later on the same day in a hospital.
Arif Heydarov had a long history of personal friendship relationship with Heydar Aliyev. They used to collaborate during their service in KGB in 1950-1970 and classes in Azerbaijan State University in 1951-1957 and their initial contacts elevated to a strong personal affiliation. The promotion of Arif Heydarov to the Minister position was driven by Heydar Aliyev who wished to have a trustworthy and impeccable person in this strategically important state agency. While speaking at the ceremony devoted to the 70th birthday anniversary of Arif Heydarov on June 28, 1996 Heydar Aliyev called him "the General of the people of Azerbaijan" and emphasized that "his death became a big loss for our people, our republic and my personal loss. On the day of his death entire Azerbaijan was on a deep mourning".
Arif Heydarov's father - Nazar Heydar oglu Heydarov (Azeri language: Nəzər Heydər oğlı Heydərov) - was one of the prominent politicians in Azerbaijan, Head of the Azerbaijan SSR Parliament in 1949 - 1953.
In 1963 Arif Heydarov married Adila Heydarova who died in 2015. He had one daughter Leyla and two sons Murad and Maqsud.
Arif Heydarov was fluent in German, Russian, Turkish and Persian languages with decent English language skills.
Arif Heydarov was twice champion of Azerbaijan in rowing in 1950s.
General Arif Heydarov was buried at the Alley of Honor cemetery in Baku in front of the grave of his father.
A street in Baku, the Hospital under the Azerbaijan's Ministry for Internal Affairs, the Police School under the Azerbaijan's Ministry for Internal Affairs and the frontier post in Astara region under the Azerbaijan's State Border Service are named after Arif Heydarov.
Almost all data related to his assignment to KGB Intelligence service still remains classified top secret.
https://www.azerbaijan-news.az/posts/detail/general-deyaneti-1624655279
http://www.anl.az/down/meqale/azerbaycan/2016/iyun/497256.htm
https://modern.az/az/news/37506/azerbaycanin-daxili-isler-naziri-anasinin-qatilini-niye-bagisladi-gizli-tarix
https://hafta.az/xalqin-qelbinde-yasayan-arif-heyderov-238344-xeber.html
https://azertag.az/xeber/ARIF_HEYDAROV_ADINA_SIRAVI_VA_KICHIK_RAIS_HEYATI_HAZIRLAYAN_MAKTABIN_HAZIRLIQ_KURSUNU_BITIRMIS_DINLAYICILARIN_ANDICHMA_MARASIMI_KECHIRILMISDIR-472434
http://old.xalqqazeti.com/az/news/health/87624
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J5xTiou_k4M
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xm1F1AXVYcc
https://generaltsvigun.ru/2018/06/29/%D0%B0%D1%80%D0%B8%D1%84-%D0%B3%D0%B5%D0%B9%D0%B4%D0%B0%D1%80%D0%BE%D0%B2-%D0%B7%D0%B0-4-%D0%B3%D0%BE%D0%B4%D0%B0-%D0%B4%D0%BE-%D1%83%D0%B1%D0%B8%D0%B9%D1%81%D1%82%D0%B2%D0%B0/
https://1news.az/society/20160628030341187.html
https://m.navigator.az/news/4/214210.html
https://www.azpress.az/index.php?lang=ru§ionid=news&id=81668
https://lib.aliyev-heritage.org/ru/4806394.html
https://haqqin.az/comics/213599
See also
Minister of Internal Affairs of Azerbaijan
References
[1] https://www.azerbaijan-news.az/posts/detail/general-deyaneti-1624655279
http://www.anl.az/down/meqale/azerbaycan/2016/iyun/497256.htm
https://modern.az/az/news/37506/azerbaycanin-daxili-isler-naziri-anasinin-qatilini-niye-bagisladi-gizli-tarix
https://hafta.az/xalqin-qelbinde-yasayan-arif-heyderov-238344-xeber.html https://azertag.az/xeber/ARIF_HEYDAROV_ADINA_SIRAVI_VA_KICHIK_RAIS_HEYATI_HAZIRLAYAN_MAKTABIN_HAZIRLIQ_KURSUNU_BITIRMIS_DINLAYICILARIN_ANDICHMA_MARASIMI_KECHIRILMISDIR-472434 http://old.xalqqazeti.com/az/news/health/87624
http://www.azerbaijan-news.az/view-99914/kesfiyyatci-diplomat-nazir
https://lib.aliyevheritage.org/az/4806394.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J5xTiou_k4M
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xm1F1AXVYcc
https://generaltsvigun.ru/2018/06/29/%D0%B0%D1%80%D0%B8%D1%84-%D0%B3%D0%B5%D0%B9%D0%B4%D0%B0%D1%80%D0%BE%D0%B2-%D0%B7%D0%B0-4-%D0%B3%D0%BE%D0%B4%D0%B0-%D0%B4%D0%BE-%D1%83%D0%B1%D0%B8%D0%B9%D1%81%D1%82%D0%B2%D0%B0/ https://1news.az/society/20160628030341187.html
https://kaspiy.az/news.php?id=28561#.YNrdsGgzaUk
https://m.navigator.az/news/4/214210.html
https://www.azpress.az/index.php?lang=ru§ionid=news&id=81668
https://lib.aliyev-heritage.org/ru/4806394.html
https://haqqin.az/comics/213599
Sources
Azerbaijani Soviet Encyclopedia
MIA.gov.az
Azerbaijani communists
Soviet Azerbaijani people
1926 births
1978 deaths
Soviet lieutenant generals | [
"Arif Nazar oglu Heydarov (Azeri: Arif Nəzər oğlu Heydərov, June 28, 1926, Agdash region,Azerbaijan — June 29, 1978, Baku was Azerbaijan SSR|Soviet Azerbaijan outstanding public personality and law enforcement officer.",
"Military rank - Lieutenant-General.",
"He headed the Ministry for Internal Affairs of Azerbaijan from March 19, 1970 until his assassination on June 29, 1978.",
"He started the service in the Intelligence Unit of the People's Commissariat for State Security of Soviet Union (predecessor of KGB) in 1944 at the age of 18.",
"After he completed the training in the Special Tasks State Security School in Moscow he volunteered to the World War II combat operations.",
"He was assigned to the field intelligence units in Poland and Germany.",
"According to some unconfirmed data he was nominated for the Soviet Union's highest military decoration - Hero of the Soviet Union for the unprecedented bravery during the Vistula-Oder offensive operation by the Soviet Army in January 1945.",
"However, this nomination was replaced by Combat Red Banner Order decoration.",
"Heydarov served in the KGB Intelligence Department (First Chief Department, now SVR) and the intelligence units of Azerbaijan from 1944 up to 1970.",
"His last intelligence position was deputy chief of station in Turkey allegedly in charge of foreign counter intelligence.",
"In March 1970 he was appointed Minister for Internal Affairs of Azerbaijan by then Leader of Communist Party of Azerbaijan and subsequently President of the Republic of Azerbaijan Heydar Aliyev.",
"During the term of his mandate as Interior Minister Arif Heydarov implemented urgent reforms aimed to improve the quality of service by the law enforcement, enhanced the crime prevention and rapid response capabilities to incidents of criminal nature, optimized the governance and allocated additional resources to ensure better professional education and specialized training for the police personnel.",
"He was shot to death by a prison officer Zia Muradov in his office in Baku on June 29, 1978, along with his Deputy Salahaddin Kazimov.",
"The investigation concluded that the murderer originally targeted Kazimov for alleged delay of addressing Muradov's promotion request.",
"Kazimov coincidentally was present in the office of Heydarov for an internal meeting when Muradov after murdering Minister's assistant Safikhanov broke through the office of the Minister and started shooting to Kazimov.",
"One of the meeting's participants, Colonel Ibrahimov, did not try to defend his high rank colleagues but instead managed to escape.",
"He confirmed during the investigation that the murderer fired initially three shots to Kazimov but was unable to share any other details as he fled away the accident scene.",
"Some data suggest that Muradov fired one shot to Arif Heydarov as the latter being an experienced special tasks force operative attempted to neutralize the murderer.",
"The latter then shot himself to death.",
"Heavily wounded Arif Heydarov passed away later on the same day in a hospital.",
"Arif Heydarov had a long history of personal friendship relationship with Heydar Aliyev.",
"They used to collaborate during their service in KGB in 1950-1970 and classes in Azerbaijan State University in 1951-1957 and their initial contacts elevated to a strong personal affiliation.",
"The promotion of Arif Heydarov to the Minister position was driven by Heydar Aliyev who wished to have a trustworthy and impeccable person in this strategically important state agency.",
"While speaking at the ceremony devoted to the 70th birthday anniversary of Arif Heydarov on June 28, 1996 Heydar Aliyev called him \"the General of the people of Azerbaijan\" and emphasized that \"his death became a big loss for our people, our republic and my personal loss.",
"On the day of his death entire Azerbaijan was on a deep mourning\".",
"Arif Heydarov's father - Nazar Heydar oglu Heydarov (Azeri language: Nəzər Heydər oğlı Heydərov) - was one of the prominent politicians in Azerbaijan, Head of the Azerbaijan SSR Parliament in 1949 - 1953.",
"In 1963 Arif Heydarov married Adila Heydarova who died in 2015.",
"He had one daughter Leyla and two sons Murad and Maqsud.",
"Arif Heydarov was fluent in German, Russian, Turkish and Persian languages with decent English language skills.",
"Arif Heydarov was twice champion of Azerbaijan in rowing in 1950s.",
"General Arif Heydarov was buried at the Alley of Honor cemetery in Baku in front of the grave of his father.",
"A street in Baku, the Hospital under the Azerbaijan's Ministry for Internal Affairs, the Police School under the Azerbaijan's Ministry for Internal Affairs and the frontier post in Astara region under the Azerbaijan's State Border Service are named after Arif Heydarov.",
"Almost all data related to his assignment to KGB Intelligence service still remains classified top secret."
] | [
"Arif Nzr olu Heydrov was an outstanding public personality and law enforcement officer.",
"Lieutenant-General is a military rank.",
"He was the head of the Ministry for Internal Affairs of Azerbaijan from 1970 to 1978.",
"He joined the Intelligence Unit of the People's Commissariat for State Security of the Soviet Union at the age of 18.",
"He volunteered to fight in the World War II combat operations after completing the training at the Special Tasks State Security School in Moscow.",
"He was assigned to intelligence units in Poland and Germany.",
"He was nominated for the Soviet Union's highest military decoration, the Hero of the Soviet Union, for his bravery during the Vistula-Oder offensive operation.",
"The Combat Red Banner Order decoration replaced this nomination.",
"From 1944 to 1970, Heydarov worked in the KGB Intelligence Department and the intelligence units of Azerbaijan.",
"The deputy chief of station in Turkey was in charge of foreign counter intelligence.",
"He was appointed Minister for Internal Affairs of Azerbaijan in 1970 by Heydar Aliyev, the leader of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan.",
"During his term as Interior Minister, Arif Heydarov implemented urgent reforms to improve the quality of service by the law enforcement, enhanced the crime prevention and rapid response capabilities to incidents of criminal nature, and allocated additional resources to ensure better professional education and specialized training.",
"He was shot to death in his office by a prison officer on June 29, 1978, along with his deputy.",
"According to the investigation, Kazimov was targeted by the murderer for the delay in addressing Muradov's promotion request.",
"Kazimov was present in the office of Heydarov for an internal meeting when Muradov broke through the office of the Minister and started shooting to Kazimov.",
"Colonel Ibrahimov, one of the meeting's participants, was able to escape because he did not try to defend his high rank colleagues.",
"He confirmed that the murderer fired three shots at Kazimov but was unable to give any other details as he fled the scene.",
"According to some data, Arif Heydarov was an experienced special tasks force operatives who tried to kill the murderer.",
"The latter shot himself to death.",
"Arif Heydarov died in the hospital.",
"Arif Heydarov had a friendship with Heydar Aliyev.",
"During their service in the KGB, they collaborated with each other and their initial contacts were elevated to a strong personal affiliation.",
"The promotion of Arif Heydarov to the Minister position was driven by Heydar Aliyev who wanted to have a trustworthy person in this important state agency.",
"While speaking at the 70th birthday anniversary of Arif Heydarov, Heydar Aliyev said that his death became a big loss for the people and the republic.",
"On the day of his death, everyone in the country was mourning.",
"Arif Heydarov's father was the Head of the Azerbaijan SSR Parliament in 1949.",
"Adila Heydarova married Arif Heydarov in 1963.",
"Leyla was his daughter and he had two sons.",
"Arif Heydarov had good English language skills.",
"Arif Heydarov was a champion in rowing.",
"General Arif Heydarov was buried in front of his father's grave.",
"The hospital, police school, and frontier post in Astara region are named after Arif Heydarov.",
"Data related to his assignment to the KGB Intelligence service is classified top secret."
] | <mask>ov (Azeri: Arif Nəzər oğlu Heydərov, June 28, 1926, Agdash region,Azerbaijan — June 29, 1978, Baku was Azerbaijan SSR|Soviet Azerbaijan outstanding public personality and law enforcement officer. Military rank - Lieutenant-General. He headed the Ministry for Internal Affairs of Azerbaijan from March 19, 1970 until his assassination on June 29, 1978. He started the service in the Intelligence Unit of the People's Commissariat for State Security of Soviet Union (predecessor of KGB) in 1944 at the age of 18. After he completed the training in the Special Tasks State Security School in Moscow he volunteered to the World War II combat operations. He was assigned to the field intelligence units in Poland and Germany. According to some unconfirmed data he was nominated for the Soviet Union's highest military decoration - Hero of the Soviet Union for the unprecedented bravery during the Vistula-Oder offensive operation by the Soviet Army in January 1945.However, this nomination was replaced by Combat Red Banner Order decoration. <mask> served in the KGB Intelligence Department (First Chief Department, now SVR) and the intelligence units of Azerbaijan from 1944 up to 1970. His last intelligence position was deputy chief of station in Turkey allegedly in charge of foreign counter intelligence. In March 1970 he was appointed Minister for Internal Affairs of Azerbaijan by then Leader of Communist Party of Azerbaijan and subsequently President of the Republic of Azerbaijan Heydar Aliyev. During the term of his mandate as Interior Minister <mask> <mask> implemented urgent reforms aimed to improve the quality of service by the law enforcement, enhanced the crime prevention and rapid response capabilities to incidents of criminal nature, optimized the governance and allocated additional resources to ensure better professional education and specialized training for the police personnel. He was shot to death by a prison officer Zia Muradov in his office in Baku on June 29, 1978, along with his Deputy Salahaddin Kazimov. The investigation concluded that the murderer originally targeted Kazimov for alleged delay of addressing Muradov's promotion request.Kazimov coincidentally was present in the office of <mask> for an internal meeting when Muradov after murdering Minister's assistant Safikhanov broke through the office of the Minister and started shooting to Kazimov. One of the meeting's participants, Colonel Ibrahimov, did not try to defend his high rank colleagues but instead managed to escape. He confirmed during the investigation that the murderer fired initially three shots to Kazimov but was unable to share any other details as he fled away the accident scene. Some data suggest that Muradov fired one shot to <mask> <mask> as the latter being an experienced special tasks force operative attempted to neutralize the murderer. The latter then shot himself to death. Heavily wounded <mask> <mask> passed away later on the same day in a hospital. <mask> <mask> had a long history of personal friendship relationship with Heydar Aliyev.They used to collaborate during their service in KGB in 1950-1970 and classes in Azerbaijan State University in 1951-1957 and their initial contacts elevated to a strong personal affiliation. The promotion of <mask> <mask> to the Minister position was driven by Heydar Aliyev who wished to have a trustworthy and impeccable person in this strategically important state agency. While speaking at the ceremony devoted to the 70th birthday anniversary of <mask> <mask> on June 28, 1996 Heydar Aliyev called him "the General of the people of Azerbaijan" and emphasized that "his death became a big loss for our people, our republic and my personal loss. On the day of his death entire Azerbaijan was on a deep mourning". <mask> <mask>'s father - Nazar Heydar oglu <mask> (Azeri language: Nəzər Heydər oğlı Heydərov) - was one of the prominent politicians in Azerbaijan, Head of the Azerbaijan SSR Parliament in 1949 - 1953. In 1963 <mask> <mask> married Adila <mask> who died in 2015. He had one daughter Leyla and two sons Murad and Maqsud.<mask> <mask> was fluent in German, Russian, Turkish and Persian languages with decent English language skills. <mask> <mask> was twice champion of Azerbaijan in rowing in 1950s. General <mask> <mask> was buried at the Alley of Honor cemetery in Baku in front of the grave of his father. A street in Baku, the Hospital under the Azerbaijan's Ministry for Internal Affairs, the Police School under the Azerbaijan's Ministry for Internal Affairs and the frontier post in Astara region under the Azerbaijan's State Border Service are named after <mask> <mask>. Almost all data related to his assignment to KGB Intelligence service still remains classified top secret. | [
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] | <mask> was an outstanding public personality and law enforcement officer. Lieutenant-General is a military rank. He was the head of the Ministry for Internal Affairs of Azerbaijan from 1970 to 1978. He joined the Intelligence Unit of the People's Commissariat for State Security of the Soviet Union at the age of 18. He volunteered to fight in the World War II combat operations after completing the training at the Special Tasks State Security School in Moscow. He was assigned to intelligence units in Poland and Germany. He was nominated for the Soviet Union's highest military decoration, the Hero of the Soviet Union, for his bravery during the Vistula-Oder offensive operation.The Combat Red Banner Order decoration replaced this nomination. From 1944 to 1970, <mask> worked in the KGB Intelligence Department and the intelligence units of Azerbaijan. The deputy chief of station in Turkey was in charge of foreign counter intelligence. He was appointed Minister for Internal Affairs of Azerbaijan in 1970 by Heydar Aliyev, the leader of the Communist Party of Azerbaijan. During his term as Interior Minister, <mask> <mask> implemented urgent reforms to improve the quality of service by the law enforcement, enhanced the crime prevention and rapid response capabilities to incidents of criminal nature, and allocated additional resources to ensure better professional education and specialized training. He was shot to death in his office by a prison officer on June 29, 1978, along with his deputy. According to the investigation, Kazimov was targeted by the murderer for the delay in addressing Muradov's promotion request.Kazimov was present in the office of <mask> for an internal meeting when Muradov broke through the office of the Minister and started shooting to Kazimov. Colonel Ibrahimov, one of the meeting's participants, was able to escape because he did not try to defend his high rank colleagues. He confirmed that the murderer fired three shots at Kazimov but was unable to give any other details as he fled the scene. According to some data, <mask> <mask> was an experienced special tasks force operatives who tried to kill the murderer. The latter shot himself to death. <mask> <mask> died in the hospital. <mask> <mask> had a friendship with Heydar Aliyev.During their service in the KGB, they collaborated with each other and their initial contacts were elevated to a strong personal affiliation. The promotion of <mask> <mask> to the Minister position was driven by Heydar Aliyev who wanted to have a trustworthy person in this important state agency. While speaking at the 70th birthday anniversary of <mask> <mask>, Heydar Aliyev said that his death became a big loss for the people and the republic. On the day of his death, everyone in the country was mourning. <mask> <mask>'s father was the Head of the Azerbaijan SSR Parliament in 1949. Adila <mask> married <mask> <mask> in 1963. Leyla was his daughter and he had two sons.<mask> <mask> had good English language skills. <mask> <mask> was a champion in rowing. General <mask> <mask> was buried in front of his father's grave. The hospital, police school, and frontier post in Astara region are named after <mask> <mask>. Data related to his assignment to the KGB Intelligence service is classified top secret. | [
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] |
217513 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suharto | Suharto | Suharto (; ; 8 June 1921 – 27 January 2008) was an Indonesian army officer and politician, who served as the second and the longest serving President of Indonesia. Widely regarded as a dictator by international observers, Suharto was president for 31 years from the fall of Sukarno in 1967 until his resignation in 1998. The legacy of his 31-year rule, and his US$38 billion net worth, is still debated at home and abroad.
Suharto was born in the small village of Kemusuk, in the Godean area near the city of Yogyakarta, during the Dutch colonial era. He grew up in humble circumstances. His Javanese Muslim parents divorced not long after his birth, and he lived with foster parents for much of his childhood. During the Japanese occupation of the country, Suharto served in the Japanese-organized Indonesian security forces. During Indonesia's independence struggle, he joined the newly formed Indonesian Army. There, Suharto rose to the rank of Major general by the time full Indonesian independence was achieved.
An attempted coup on 30 September and 1 October 1965 was "countered" by Suharto-led troops. According to the official history made by the army, this attempt was backed by the Communist Party of Indonesia. The army subsequently led an anti-communist purge and Suharto wrested power from Indonesia's founding president, Sukarno. He was appointed acting president in 1967 and elected president the following year. He then mounted a social campaign known as "de-Sukarnoization" to reduce the former president's influence. Support for Suharto's presidency was active throughout the 1970s and 1980s. By the 1990s, the New Order's authoritarianism and widespread corruption were a source of discontent and, following the 1997 Asian financial crisis which led to widespread unrest, he resigned in May 1998. Suharto died in January 2008 and was given a state funeral.
Under his "New Order" administration, Suharto constructed a strong, centralised and military-dominated government. An ability to maintain stability over a sprawling and diverse Indonesia and an avowedly anti-communist stance won him the economic and diplomatic support of the West during the Cold War. For most of his presidency, Indonesia experienced significant industrialisation, economic growth, and improved levels of educational attainment. Plans to award the status of National Hero to Suharto are being considered by the Indonesian government and have been debated vigorously in Indonesia. According to Transparency International, Suharto is the most corrupt leader in modern history, having embezzled an alleged US$15–35 billion during his rule.
Name
Like many Javanese, Suharto had only one name. Religious contexts in recent years has sometimes called him as "Haji" or "el-Haj Mohammed Suharto", but these names were not part of his formal name nor generally used. The spelling "Suharto" reflects modern Indonesian orthography, although the general approach in Indonesia is to rely on the spelling preferred by the person concerned. At the time of his birth, the standard transcription was "Soeharto", and he used the original spelling throughout his life. The international English-language press generally uses the spelling 'Suharto' while the Indonesian government and media use 'Soeharto'.
Early life
Suharto was born on 8 June 1921 in a plaited-bamboo-walled house in the hamlet of Kemusuk, a part of the larger village of Godean, then part of the Dutch East Indies. The village is west of Yogyakarta, the cultural heartland of the Javanese. Born to ethnic Javanese parents, he was the only child of his father's second marriage. His father, Kertosudiro, had two children from his previous marriage and was a village irrigation official. His mother, Sukirah, a local woman, was distantly related to Hamengkubuwono V by his first concubine.
Five weeks after Suharto's birth, his mother suffered a nervous breakdown; he was placed in the care of his paternal great-aunt, Kromodirjo as a result. Kertosudiro and Sukirah divorced early in Suharto's life and both later remarried. At the age of three, Suharto was returned to his mother, who had married a local farmer whom Suharto helped in the rice paddies. In 1929, Suharto's father took him to live with his sister, who was married to an agricultural supervisor, Prawirowihardjo, in the town of Wuryantoro in a poor and low-yielding farming area near Wonogiri. Over the following two years, he was taken back to his mother in Kemusuk by his stepfather and then back again to Wuryantoro by his father.
Prawirowihardjo took to raising the boy as his own, which provided Suharto with a father-figure and a stable home in Wuryantoro. In 1931, he moved to the town of Wonogiri to attend the primary school, living first with Prawirohardjo's son Sulardi, and later with his father's relative Hardjowijono. While living with Hardjowijono, Suharto became acquainted with Darjatmo, a dukun ("shaman") of Javanese mystical arts and faith healing. The experience deeply affected him and later, as president, Suharto surrounded himself with powerful symbolic language. Difficulties in paying the fees for his education in Wonogiri resulted in another move back to his father in Kemusuk, where he continued studying at a lower-fee Muhammadiyah middle school in the city of Yogyakarta until 1939.
Suharto's upbringing contrasts with that of leading Indonesian nationalists such as Sukarno in that he is believed to have had little interest in anti-colonialism, or political concerns beyond his immediate surroundings. Unlike Sukarno and his circle, Suharto had little or no contact with European colonisers. Consequently, he did not learn to speak Dutch or other European languages in his youth. He learned to speak Dutch after his induction into the Dutch military in 1940.
Military career
World War II and Japanese occupation
Suharto finished middle school at the age of 18 and took a clerical job at a bank in Wuryantaro. He was forced to resign after a bicycle mishap tore his only working clothes. Following a spell of unemployment, he joined the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army (KNIL) in June 1940 and undertook basic training in Gombong near Yogyakarta. With the Netherlands under German occupation and the Japanese pressing for access to Indonesian oil supplies, the Dutch had opened up the KNIL to large intakes of previously excluded Javanese. Suharto was assigned to Battalion XIII at Rampal, graduated from a short training course at KNIL Kaderschool in Gombong to become a sergeant, and was posted to a KNIL reserve battalion in Cisarua.
Following the Dutch surrender to the invading Japanese forces in March 1942, Suharto abandoned his KNIL uniform and went back to Wurjantoro. After months of unemployment, he then became one of the thousands of Indonesians who took the opportunity to join Japanese-organised security forces by joining the Yogyakarta police force. In October 1943, Suharto was transferred from the police force to the newly formed Japanese-sponsored militia, the PETA (Defenders of the Fatherland) in which Indonesians served as officers. In his training to serve with the rank of shodancho (platoon commander) he encountered a localised version of the Japanese bushido, or "way of the warrior", used to indoctrinate troops. This training encouraged an anti-Dutch and pro-nationalist thought, although toward the aims of the Imperial Japanese militarists. The encounter with a nationalistic and militarist ideology is believed to have profoundly influenced Suharto's own way of thinking.
Suharto was posted to a PETA coastal defence battalion at Wates, south of Yogyakarta until he was admitted for training for company commander (chudancho) in Bogor from April to August 1944. As company commander, he conducted training for new PETA recruits in Surakarta, Jakarta, and Madiun. The Japanese surrender and Proclamation of Indonesian Independence in August 1945 occurred while Suharto was posted to the remote Brebeg area (on the slopes of Mount Wilis) to train new NCOs to replace those executed by the Japanese in the aftermath of the failed February 1945 PETA Revolt in Blitar, led by Supriyadi.
Indonesian National Revolution
Two days after the Japanese surrender in the Pacific, independence leaders Sukarno and Hatta declared Indonesian independence and were appointed president and vice-president respectively of the new Republic. Suharto disbanded his regiment under orders from the Japanese command and returned to Yogyakarta. As republican groups rose to assert Indonesian independence, Suharto joined a new unit of the newly formed Indonesian army. Based on his PETA experience, he was appointed deputy commander, and subsequently, a battalion commander when the republican forces were formally organised in October 1945. Suharto was involved in fighting against Allied troops around Magelang and Semarang and was subsequently appointed the head of a brigade as lieutenant-colonel, having earned respect as a field commander. In the early years of the war, he organised local armed forces into Battalion X of Regiment I; Suharto was promoted to Major and became Battalion X's leader.
The arrival of the Allies, under a mandate to return the situation to the status quo ante bellum, quickly led to clashes between Indonesian republicans and Allied forces, i.e. returning Dutch and assisting British forces. Suharto led his Division X troops to halt an advance by the Dutch T ("Tiger") Brigade on 17 May 1946. It earned him the respect of Lieutenant-Colonel Sunarto Kusumodirjo, who invited him to draft the working guidelines for the Battle Leadership Headquarters (MPP), a body created to organise and unify the command structure of the Indonesian Nationalist forces. The military forces of the still infant Republic of Indonesia were constantly restructuring. By August 1946, Suharto was head of the 22nd Regiment of Division III (the "Diponegoro Division") stationed in Yogyakarta. In late 1946, the Diponegoro Division assumed responsibility for the defence of the west and southwest of Yogyakarta from Dutch forces. Conditions at the time are reported by Dutch sources as miserable; Suharto himself is reported as assisting smuggling syndicates in the transport of opium through the territory he controlled, to generate income. In September 1948, Suharto was dispatched to meet Musso, chairman of the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) in an unsuccessful attempt at a peaceful reconciliation of the communist uprising in Madiun.
In December 1948, the Dutch launched "Operation Crow", which resulted in the capture of Sukarno and Hatta and the capital Yogyakarta. Suharto was appointed to lead the Wehrkreise III, consisting of two battalions, which waged guerrilla warfare against the Dutch from the hills south of Yogyakarta. In dawn raids on 1 March 1949, Suharto's forces and local militia recaptured the city, holding it until noon. Suharto's later accounts had him as the lone plotter, although other sources say Sultan Hamengkubuwono IX of Yogyakarta, and the Panglima of the Third Division ordered the attack. However, General Abdul Nasution said that Suharto took great care in preparing the "General Offensive" (Indonesian Serangan Umum). Civilians sympathetic to the Republican cause within the city had been galvanised by the show of force which proved that the Dutch had failed to win the guerrilla war. Internationally, the United Nations Security Council pressured the Dutch to cease the military offensive and to recommence negotiations, which eventually led to the Dutch withdrawal from the Yogyakarta area in June 1949 and to complete transfer of sovereignty in December 1949. Suharto was responsible for the takeover of Yogyakarta city from the withdrawing Dutch in June 1949.
During the Revolution, Suharto married Siti Hartinah (known as Madam Tien), the daughter of a minor noble in the Mangkunegaran royal house of Solo. The arranged marriage was enduring and supportive, lasting until Tien's death in 1996. The couple had six children: Siti Hardiyanti Rukmana (Tutut, born 1949), Sigit Harjojudanto (born 1951), Bambang Trihatmodjo (born 1953), Siti Hediati ("Titiek Suharto", born 1959), Hutomo Mandala Putra (Tommy, born 1962), and Siti Hutami Endang Adiningish (Mamiek, born 1964). Within the Javanese upper class, it was considered acceptable for the wife to pursue genteel commerce to supplement the family budget, allowing her husband to keep his dignity in his official role. The commercial dealings of Tien, her children and grandchildren became extensive and ultimately undermined Suharto's presidency.
Post-Independence military career
In the years following Indonesian independence, Suharto served in the Indonesian National Army, primarily in Java. In 1950, as a colonel, he led the Garuda Brigade in suppressing the Makassar Uprising, a rebellion of former colonial soldiers who supported the Dutch-established State of East Indonesia and its federal entity, the United States of Indonesia. During his year in Makassar, Suharto became acquainted with his neighbours, the Habibie family, whose eldest son BJ Habibie was later Suharto's vice-president, and went on to succeed him as president. In 1951–1952, Suharto led his troops in defeating the Islamic-inspired rebellion of Battalion 426 in the Klaten area of Central Java. Appointed to lead four battalions in early 1953, he organised their participation in battling Darul Islam insurgents in northwestern Central Java and anti-bandit operations in the Mount Merapi area. He also sought to stem leftist sympathies amongst his troops. His experience in this period left Suharto with a deep distaste for both Islamic and communist radicalism.
Between 1956 and 1959, he served in the important position of commander of Diponegoro Division based in Semarang, responsible for Central Java and Yogyakarta provinces. His relationship with prominent businessmen Liem Sioe Liong and Bob Hasan, which extended throughout his presidency, began in Central Java, where he was involved in a series of "profit-generating" enterprises conducted primarily to keep the poorly funded military unit functioning. Army anti-corruption investigations implicated Suharto in a 1959 smuggling scandal. Relieved of his position, he was transferred to the army's Staff and Command School (Seskoad) in the city of Bandung. While in Bandung, he was promoted to brigadier-general, and in late 1960, promoted to army deputy chief of staff. On 6 March 1961, he was given an additional command, as head of the army's new Strategic Reserve (Korps Tentara I Cadangan Umum AD, later KOSTRAD), a ready-reaction air-mobile force based in Jakarta.
In January 1962, Suharto was promoted to the rank of major general and appointed to lead Operation Mandala, a joint army-navy-air force command based in Makassar. This formed the military side of the campaign to win western New Guinea from the Dutch, who were preparing it for its own independence, separate from Indonesia. In 1965, Suharto was assigned operational command of Sukarno's Konfrontasi, against the newly formed Malaysia. Fearful that Konfrontasi would leave Java thinly covered by the army, and hand control to the 2 million-strong Indonesian Communist Party (PKI), he authorised a Kostrad intelligence officer, Ali Murtopo, to open secret contacts with the British and Malaysians.
Overthrow of Sukarno (1965)
Background
Tensions between the military and communists increased in April 1965, when Sukarno endorsed the immediate implementation of the PKI's proposal for a "fifth armed force" consisting of armed peasants and workers. However, this idea was rejected by the army's leadership as being tantamount to the PKI establishing its own armed forces. In May, the "Gilchrist Document" aroused Sukarno's fear of a military plot to overthrow him, a fear which he repeatedly mentioned during the next few months. On his independence day speech in August, Sukarno declared his intention to commit Indonesia to an anti-imperialist alliance with China and other communist regimes and warned the army not to interfere.
While Sukarno devoted his energy for domestic and international politics, the economy of Indonesia deteriorated rapidly with worsening widespread poverty and hunger, while foreign debt obligations became unmanageable and infrastructure crumbled. Sukarno's Guided Democracy stood on fragile grounds due to the inherent conflict between its two underlying support pillars, the military and the communists. The military, nationalists, and the Islamic groups were shocked by the rapid growth of the communist party under Sukarno's protection. They feared the imminent establishment of a communist state in Indonesia. By 1965, the PKI had three million members and was particularly strong in Central Java and Bali. The party had become the most potent political party in Indonesia.
Abortive coup and anti-communist purge
Before dawn on 1 October 1965, six army generals were kidnapped and executed in Jakarta by soldiers from the Presidential Guard, Diponegoro Division, and Brawidjaja Division. Soldiers occupied Merdeka Square including the areas in front of the Presidential Palace, the national radio station, and telecommunications centre. At 7:10 am Untung bin Syamsuri announced on the radio that the "30 September Movement" had forestalled a coup attempt on Sukarno by "CIA-backed power-mad generals", and that it was "an internal army affair". The movement never made any attempt on Suharto's life. Suharto had been in Jakarta army hospital that evening with his three-year-old son Tommy who had a scalding injury. It was here that he was visited by Colonel Abdul Latief, a key member of the Movement and close family friend of Suharto. According to Latief's later testimony, the conspirators assumed Suharto to be a Sukarno-loyalist; hence Latief went to inform him of the impending kidnapping plan to save Sukarno from treacherous generals, upon which Suharto seemed to offer his neutrality.
Upon being told of the killings, Suharto went to KOSTRAD headquarters just before dawn from where he could see soldiers occupying Merdeka Square. He mobilised KOSTRAD and RPKAD (now Kopassus) special forces to seize control of the centre of Jakarta, capturing key strategic sites including the radio station without resistance. Suharto announced over the radio at 9:00 pm that six generals had been kidnapped by "counter-revolutionaries" and that the 30 September Movement actually intended to overthrow Sukarno. He said he was in control of the army, and that he would crush the Movement and safeguard Sukarno. Suharto issued an ultimatum to Halim Air Force Base, where the G30S had based themselves and where Sukarno, air force commander Omar Dhani and PKI chairman Dipa Nusantara Aidit had gathered, causing them to disperse before Suhartoist soldiers occupied the airbase on 2 October after short fighting. With the failure of the poorly organised coup, and having secured authority from the president to restore order and security, Suharto's faction was firmly in control of the army by 2 October (he was officially appointed army commander on 14 October). On 5 October, Suharto led a dramatic public ceremony to bury the generals' bodies.
Complicated and partisan theories continue to this day over the identity of the attempted coup's organisers and their aims. The army's version, and subsequently that of the "New Order", was that the PKI was solely responsible. A propaganda campaign by the army and Islamic and Catholic student groups convinced both Indonesian and international audiences that it was a communist coup attempt, and that the killings were cowardly atrocities against Indonesian heroes. The army in alliance with civilian religious groups, and backed by the United States and other Western powers, led a campaign of mass killings to purge Indonesian society, government, and armed forces of the Communist Party of Indonesia and other leftist organisations. The purge spread from Jakarta to much of the rest of the country. The most widely accepted estimates are that at least 500,000 to over 1 million were killed. As many as 1.5 million were imprisoned at one stage or another. As a result of the purge, one of Sukarno's three pillars of support, the Indonesian Communist Party, was effectively eliminated by the other two, the military and political Islam. The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency described the purge as "one of the worst mass murders of the 20th century".
Power struggle
Sukarno continued to command loyalty from large sections of the armed forces as well as the general population, and Suharto was careful not to be seen to be seizing power in his own coup. For eighteen months following the quashing of the 30 September Movement, there was a complicated process of political manoeuvres against Sukarno, including student agitation, stacking of parliament, media propaganda and military threats.
In January 1966, university students under the banner of KAMI, begin demonstrations against the Sukarno government voicing demands for the disbandment of PKI and control of hyperinflation. The students received support and protection from the army. Street fights broke out between the students and pro-Sukarno loyalists with the pro-Suharto students prevailing due to army protection.
In February 1966, Sukarno promoted Suharto to lieutenant-general (and to full general in July 1966). The killing of a student demonstrator and Sukarno's order for the disbandment of KAMI in February 1966 further galvanised public opinion against the president. On 11 March 1966, the appearance of unidentified troops around Merdeka Palace during a cabinet meeting (which Suharto had not attended) forced Sukarno to flee to Bogor Palace (60 km away) by helicopter. Three pro-Suharto generals, Major-General Basuki Rahmat, Brigadier-General M Jusuf, and Brigadier-General Amirmachmud went to Bogor to meet Sukarno. There, they persuaded and secured a presidential decree from Sukarno (see Supersemar) that gave Suharto authority to take any action necessary to maintain security.
Using the Supersemar letter, Suharto ordered the banning of PKI the following day and proceeded to purge pro-Sukarno elements from the parliament, the government and military, accusing them of being communist sympathisers. The army arrested 15 cabinet ministers and forced Sukarno to appoint a new cabinet consisting of Suharto supporters. The army arrested pro-Sukarno and pro-communist members of the MPRS (parliament), and Suharto replaced chiefs of the navy, air force, and the police force with his supporters, who then began an extensive purge within each service.
In June 1966, the now-purged parliament passed 24 resolutions including the banning of Marxism–Leninism, ratifying the Supersemar, and stripping Sukarno of his title of President for Life. Against the wishes of Sukarno, the government ended the Konfrontasi with Malaysia and rejoined the United Nations (Sukarno had removed Indonesia from the UN in the previous year). Suharto did not seek Sukarno's outright removal at this MPRS session due to the remaining support for the president among some elements of the armed forces.
By January 1967, Suharto felt confident that he had removed all significant support for Sukarno within the armed forces, and the MPRS decided to hold another session to impeach Sukarno. On 22 February 1967, Sukarno announced he would resign from the presidency, and on 12 March, the MPRS session stripped him of his remaining power and named Suharto acting president. Sukarno was placed under house arrest in Bogor Palace; little more was heard from him, and he died in June 1970. On 27 March 1968, the MPRS appointed Suharto for the first of his five-year terms as president.
"New Order" (1967–1998)
Ideology
Suharto promoted his "New Order", as opposed to Sukarno's "Old Order", as a society based on the Pancasila ideology. After initially being careful not to offend sensitivities of Islamic scholars who feared Pancasila might develop into a quasi-religious cult, Suharto secured a parliamentary resolution in 1983 which obliged all organisations in Indonesia to adhere to Pancasila as a fundamental principle. He also instituted mandatory Pancasila training programs for all Indonesians, from primary school students to office workers. In practice, however, the vagueness of Pancasila was exploited by Suharto's government to justify their actions and to condemn their opponents as "anti-Pancasila".
The New Order also implemented the Dwifungsi ("Dual Function") policy which enabled the military to have an active role in all levels of the Indonesian government, economy, and society.
Consolidation of power
Neutralisation of internal dissent
Having been appointed president, Suharto still needed to share power with various elements including Indonesian generals who considered Suharto as mere primus inter pares, and Islamic and student groups who participated in the anti-Communist purge. Suharto, aided by his "Office of Personal Assistants" (Aspri) clique of military officers from his days as commander of Diponegoro Division, particularly Ali Murtopo, began to systematically cement his hold on power by subtly sidelining potential rivals while rewarding loyalists with political position and monetary incentives.
Having successfully stood-down MPRS chairman General Abdul Haris Nasution's 1968 attempt to introduce a bill which would have severely curtailed presidential authority, Suharto had him removed from his position as MPRS chairman in 1969 and forced his early retirement from the military in 1972. In 1967, generals Hartono Rekso Dharsono, Kemal Idris, and Sarwo Edhie Wibowo (dubbed "New Order Radicals") opposed Suharto's decision to allow participation of existing political parties in elections in favour of a non-ideological two-party system similar to those found in many Western countries. Suharto sent Dharsono overseas as an ambassador, while Idris and Wibowo were sent to distant North Sumatra and South Sulawesi as regional commanders.
Suharto's previously strong relationship with the student movement soured over the increasing authoritarianism and corruption of his regime. While many original leaders of the 1966 student movement (Angkatan '66) were successfully co-opted into the regime, Suharto was faced with large student demonstrations challenging the legitimacy of 1971 elections ("Golput" movement), the costly construction of the Taman Mini Indonesia Indah theme park (1972), the domination of foreign capitalists (Malari Incident of 1974), and the lack of term limits of Suharto's presidency (1978). The regime responded by imprisoning many student activists (such as future national figures Dorodjatun Kuntjoro-Jakti, Adnan Buyung Nasution, Hariman Siregar, and Syahrir), and even sending troops to occupy the campus of ITB (Bandung Institute of Technology) from January–March 1978. In April 1978, Suharto moved decisively by issuing a decree on "Normalisation of Campus Life" (NKK) which prohibited political activities on-campus not related to academic pursuits.
On 15–16 January 1974, Suharto faced a significant challenge when violent riots broke out in Jakarta during a visit by the Japanese prime minister Kakuei Tanaka. Students demonstrating against increasing dominance of Japanese investors were encouraged by General Sumitro, deputy commander of the armed forces. Sumitro was an ambitious general who disliked the strong influence of Suharto's Aspri inner circle. Suharto learned that the riots were engineered by Sumitro to destabilise the regime, resulting in Sumitro's dismissal and forced retirement. This incident is referred to as the Malari Incident (Malapetaka Lima Belas Januari / Disaster of 15 January). However, Suharto also disbanded Aspri to appease popular dissent.
In 1980, fifty prominent political figures signed the Petition of Fifty, which criticised Suharto's use of Pancasila to silence his critics. Suharto refused to address the petitioners' concerns, and some of them were imprisoned with others having restrictions imposed on their movements.
Domestic politics and security
Depoliticization
To placate demands from civilian politicians for the holding of elections, as manifested in MPRS resolutions of 1966 and 1967, Suharto government formulated a series of laws regarding elections as well as the structure and duties of parliament which were passed by MPRS in November 1969 after protracted negotiations. The law provided for a parliament (Madjelis Permusjawaratan Rakjat/MPR) with the power to elect presidents, consisting of a house of representatives (Dewan Perwakilan Rakjat/DPR) and regional representatives. 100 of the 460 members of DPR would be directly appointed by the government, while the remaining seats were allocated to political organizations based on results of the general election. This mechanism ensures significant government control over legislative affairs, particularly the appointment of presidents.
To participate in the elections, Suharto realised the need to align himself with a political party. After initially considering alignment with Sukarno's old party the PNI, in 1969 Suharto decided to take over control of an obscure military-run federation of NGOs called Golkar ("Functional Groups") and transform it into his electoral vehicle under the coordination of his right-hand man Ali Murtopo. The first general election was held on 3 July 1971 with ten participants; consisting of Golkar, four Islamic parties, as well as five nationalist and Christian parties. Campaigning on a non-ideological platform of "development", and aided by official government support and subtle intimidation tactics, Golkar managed to secure 62.8% of the popular vote. The March 1973 general session of newly elected MPR promptly appointed Suharto to second-term in office with Sultan Hamengkubuwono IX as vice-president.
On 5 January 1973, to allow better control, the government forced the four Islamic parties to merge into PPP (Partai Persatuan Pembangunan/United Development Party) while the five non-Islamic parties were fused into PDI (Partai Demokrasi Indonesia/Indonesian Democratic Party). The government ensured that these parties never developed effective opposition by controlling their leadership while establishing the "re-call" system to remove any outspoken legislators from their positions. Using this system dubbed the "Pancasila Democracy", Suharto was re-elected unopposed by the MPR in 1978, 1983, 1988, 1993, and 1998. Golkar won landslide majorities in the MPR at every election, ensuring that Suharto would be able to pass his agenda with virtually no opposition. Ultimately, he held all governing power in the country.
Establishment of corporative groups
Suharto proceeded with various social engineering projects designed to transform Indonesian society into a de-politicised "floating mass" supportive of the national mission of "development", a concept similar to corporatism. The government formed various civil society groups to unite the populace in support of government programs. For instance, the government created the Indonesian Civil Servants Corps (Korps Pegawai Republik Indonesia or KORPRI) in November 1971 as union of civil servants to ensure their loyalty, organised the FBSI (Federasi Buruh Seluruh Indonesia) as the only legal labour union in February 1973, and established the MUI in 1975 to control Islamic clerics. In 1968, Suharto commenced the highly successful family-planning program (Keluarga Berentjana / KB) to stem the high population growth rate and hence increasing per-capita income. A lasting legacy from this period is the spelling reform of Indonesian language decreed by Suharto on 17 August 1972.
Discrimination against Chinese Indonesians
Early into his regime, to promote assimilation of the influential Chinese-Indonesians, the Suharto government passed several laws as part of the so-called "Basic Policy for the Solution of Chinese Problem", whereby only one Chinese-language publication (controlled by the Army) was allowed to continue, all Chinese cultural and religious expressions (including the display of Chinese characters) were prohibited from public space, Chinese schools were seized and turned into Indonesian-language public schools, and the ethnic-Chinese were forced to take-up Indonesian-sounding names; creating a systematic cultural genocide.
In 1978, the government began requiring a Letter of Proof of Citizenship of the Republic of Indonesia (, or SBKRI). Although the SBKRI was legally required for all citizens of foreign descent, in practice it was generally applied only to Chinese descent. This led to difficulties for Chinese Indonesians when enrolling in state universities, applying to be civil servants, or joining the military or police.
Political stability
Suharto relied on the military to ruthlessly maintain domestic security, organised by the Kopkamtib (Operation Command for the Restoration of Security and Order) and BAKIN (State Intelligence Coordination Agency). To maintain strict control over the country, Suharto expanded the army's territorial system down to village-level, while military officers were appointed as regional heads under the rubric of the Dwifungsi ("Dual Function") of the military. By 1969, 70% of Indonesia's provincial governors and more than half of its district chiefs were active military officers. Suharto authorised Operasi Trisula which destroyed PKI-remnants trying to organise a guerrilla base in the Blitar area in 1968 and ordered several military operations that ended the communist PGRS-Paraku insurgency in West Kalimantan (1967–1972). Attacks on oil workers by the first incarnation of Free Aceh Movement separatists under Hasan di Tiro in 1977 led to the dispatch of small special forces detachments who quickly either killed or forced the movement's members to flee abroad. Notably, in March 1981, Suharto authorised a successful special forces mission to end hijacking of a Garuda Indonesia flight by Islamic extremists at Don Mueang International Airport in Bangkok.
Economy
To stabilize the economy and to ensure long-term support for the New Order, Suharto's administration enlisted a group of mostly US-educated Indonesian economists, dubbed the "Berkeley Mafia", to formulate significant changes in economic policy. By cutting subsidies, decreasing government debt, and reforming the exchange rate mechanism, inflation was lowered from 660% in 1966 to 19% in 1969. The threat of famine was alleviated by the influx of USAID rice aid shipments from 1967 to 1968.
With a lack of domestic capital that was required for economic growth, the New Order reversed Sukarno's economic self-sufficiency policies and opened selected economic sectors of the country to foreign investment through the 1967 Foreign Investment Law. Suharto travelled to Western Europe and Japan to promote investment in Indonesia. The first foreign investors to re-enter Indonesia included mining companies Freeport Sulphur Company / International Nickel Company. Following government regulatory frameworks, domestic entrepreneurs (mostly Chinese-Indonesians) emerged in the late 1960s and early 1970s in the import-substitution light-manufacturing sector such as Astra Group and Salim Group.
From 1967, the government secured low-interest foreign aid from ten countries grouped under the Inter-Governmental Group on Indonesia (IGGI) to cover its budget deficit. With the IGGI funds and the later jump in oil export revenue from the 1973 oil crisis, the government invested in infrastructure under a series of five-year plans, dubbed REPELITA (Rencana Pembangunan Lima Tahun) I to VI from 1969 to 1998.
Outside the formal economy, Suharto created a network of charitable organisations ("yayasan") run by the military and his family members, which extracted "donations" from domestic and foreign enterprises in exchange for necessary government support and permits. While some proceeds were used for charitable purposes, much of the money was recycled as a slush fund to reward political allies and to maintain support for the New Order.
In 1975, the state-owned oil company, Pertamina, defaulted on its foreign loans as a result of mismanagement and corruption under the leadership of Suharto's close ally, Ibnu Sutowo. The government bail-out of the company nearly doubled the national debt.
Foreign policy
Cold War
Upon assuming power, Suharto government adopted a policy of neutrality in the Cold War but was nevertheless quietly aligned with the Western bloc (including Japan and South Korea) to secure support for Indonesia's economic recovery. Western countries, impressed by Suharto's strong anti-communist credentials, were quick to offer their support. Diplomatic relations with China were suspended in October 1967 due to suspicion of Chinese involvement in the 30 September Movement (diplomatic relations was only restored in 1990). Due to Suharto's destruction of PKI, the Soviet Union embargoed military sales to Indonesia. However, from 1967 to 1970 foreign minister Adam Malik managed to secure several agreements to restructure massive debts incurred by Sukarno from the Soviet Union and other Eastern European communist states. Regionally, having ended confrontation with Malaysia in August 1966, Indonesia became a founding member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in August 1967. This organisation is designed to establish a peaceful relationship between Southeast Asian countries free from conflicts such as the ongoing Vietnam War.
East Timor
In 1974, the neighbouring colony of Portuguese Timor descended into civil war after the withdrawal of Portuguese authority following the Carnation Revolution, whereby the left-wing populist Fretilin (Portuguese: Frente Revolucionária de Timor-Leste Independente) emerged triumphant. With approval from Western countries (including from U.S. president Gerald Ford and Australian prime minister Gough Whitlam during their visits to Indonesia), Suharto decided to intervene claiming to prevent the establishment of a communist state. After an unsuccessful attempt of covert support to Timorese groups UDT and APODETI, Suharto authorised a full-scale invasion of the colony on 7 December 1975 followed with its official annexation as Indonesia's 27th province of East Timor in July 1976. The "encirclement and annihilation" campaigns of 1977–1979 broke the back of Fretilin control over the hinterlands, although continuing guerrilla resistance caused the government to maintain a strong military force in the half-island until 1999. An estimated minimum of 90,800 and maximum of 213,600 conflict-related deaths occurred in East Timor during Indonesian rule (1974–1999); namely, 17,600–19,600 killings and 73,200 to 194,000 'excess' deaths from hunger and illness, although Indonesian forces were responsible for about 70% of the violent killings. Indonesia's invasion and occupation of East Timor during Suharto's presidency resulted in at least 100,000 deaths.
Papua conflict
To comply with New York Agreement of 1962 which required a plebiscite on the integration of West Irian into Indonesia before the end of 1969, the Suharto government begin organising for a so-called "Act of Free Choice" scheduled for July–August 1969. The government sent RPKAD special forces under Sarwo Edhie Wibowo which secured the surrender of several bands of former Dutch-organised militia (Papoea Vrijwilligers Korps / PVK) at large in the jungles since the Indonesian takeover in 1963 while sending Catholic volunteers under Jusuf Wanandi to distribute consumer goods to promote pro-Indonesian sentiments. In March 1969, it was agreed that the plebiscite would be channelled via 1,025 tribal chiefs, citing the logistical challenge and political ignorance of the population. Using the above strategy, the plebiscite produced a unanimous decision for integration with Indonesia, which was duly noted by the United Nations General Assembly in November 1969.
Socio-economic progress and growing corruption
Economic progress
Real socio-economic progress sustained support for Suharto's regime across three decades. By 1996, Indonesia's poverty rate has dropped to around 11% compared with 45% in 1970. From 1966 to 1997, Indonesia recorded real GDP growth of 5.03% pa, pushing real GDP per capita upwards from US$806 to US$4,114. In 1966, the manufacturing sector made up less than 10% of GDP (mostly industries related to oil and agriculture). By 1997, manufacturing had risen to 25% of GDP, and 53% of exports consisted of manufactured products. The government invested in massive infrastructure development (notably the launching of a series of Palapa telecommunication satellites); consequently, Indonesian infrastructure in the mid-1990s was considered at par with China. Suharto was keen to capitalize on such achievements to justify his regime, and the parliament (MPR) on 9 March 1983 granted him the title of "Father of Development".
Healthcare reform
Suharto government's health-care programs (such as the Puskesmas program) increased life expectancy from 47 years (1966) to 67 years (1997) while cutting infant mortality rate by more than 60%. The government's Inpres program launched in 1973 resulted in primary school enrolment ratio reaching 90% by 1983 while almost eliminating the education gap between boys and girls. Sustained support for agriculture resulted in Indonesia achieving rice self-sufficiency by 1984, an unprecedented achievement which earned Suharto a gold medal from the FAO in November 1985.
Oil and conglomerates
In the early 1980s, Suharto government responded to the fall in oil exports due to the 1980s oil glut by successfully shifting the basis of the economy to export-oriented labour-intensive manufacturing, made globally competitive by Indonesia's low wages and a series of currency devaluations. Industrialisation was mostly undertaken by Chinese-Indonesian companies which evolved into large conglomerates dominating the nation's economy. The largest of these conglomerates were the Salim Group led by Liem Sioe Liong (Sudono Salim), Sinar Mas Group led by Oei Ek Tjong (Eka Tjipta Widjaja), Astra Group led by Tjia Han Poen (William Soeryadjaya), Lippo Group led by Lie Mo Tie (Mochtar Riady), Barito Pacific Group led by Pang Djun Phen (Prajogo Pangestu), and Nusamba Group led by Bob Hasan. Suharto decided to support the growth of a small number of Chinese-Indonesian conglomerates since they would not pose a political challenge due to their ethnic-minority status, but from his experience, he deemed them to possess the skills and capital needed to create real growth for the country. In exchange for Suharto's patronage, the conglomerates provided vital financing for his "regime maintenance" activities.
Deregulation
In the late 1980s, the Suharto government decided to de-regulate the banking sector to encourage savings and providing a domestic source of financing required for growth. Suharto decreed the "October Package of 1988" (PAKTO 88) which eased requirements for establishing banks and extending credit; resulting in a 50% increase in the number of banks from 1989 to 1991. To promote savings, the government introduced the TABANAS program to the populace. The Jakarta Stock Exchange, re-opened in 1977, recorded a "bull run", due to a spree of domestic IPOs and an influx of foreign funds after the deregulation in 1990. The sudden availability of credit fuelled robust economic growth in the early 1990s, but the weak regulatory environment of the financial sector sowed the seeds of the catastrophic crisis in 1997, which eventually destroyed Suharto's regime.
Corruption
The growth of the economy coincided with the rapid expansion of corruption, collusion, and nepotism (Korupsi, Kolusi, dan Nepotisme / KKN). In the early 1980s, Suharto's children, particularly Siti Hardiyanti Rukmana ("Tutut"), Hutomo Mandala Putra ("Tommy"), and Bambang Trihatmodjo, had grown into greedy adults. Their companies were given lucrative government contracts and protected from market competition by monopolies. Examples include the toll-expressway market which was monopolised by Tutut, the national car project monopolised by Bambang and Tommy, and even the cinema market, monopolised by 21 Cineplex (owned by Suharto's cousin Sudwikatmono). The family is said to control about 36,000 km2 of real estate in Indonesia, including 100,000 m2 of prime office space in Jakarta and nearly 40% of the land in East Timor. Additionally, Suharto's family members received free shares in 1,251 of Indonesia's most lucrative domestic companies (mostly run by Suharto's ethnic-Chinese cronies), while foreign-owned companies were encouraged to establish "strategic partnerships" with Suharto family companies. Meanwhile, the myriad of yayasans run by the Suharto family grew even larger, levying millions of dollars in "donations" from the public and private sectors each year.
In early 2004, the German anti-corruption NGO Transparency International released a list of what it believed to be the ten most self-enriching leaders in the previous two decades; in order of amount allegedly stolen in USD, the highest-ranking of these was Suharto and his family who are alleged to have embezzled $15 billion – $35 billion.
Grip on power
By the 1980s, Suharto's grip on power was maintained by the emasculation of civil society, engineered elections, and use of the military's coercive powers. Upon his retirement from the military in June 1976, Suharto undertook a re-organisation of the armed forces that concentrated power away from commanders to the president. In March 1983, he appointed General Leonardus Benjamin Moerdani as head of the armed forces who adopted a hard-line approach on elements who challenged the administration. As a Roman Catholic, he was not a political threat to Suharto.
Killings and Aceh independence
From 1983 to 1985, army squads killed up to 10,000 suspected criminals in response to a spike in the crime rate (see "Petrus Killings"). Suharto's imposition of Pancasila as the sole ideology caused protests from conservative Islamic groups who considered Islamic law to be above all other conceptions. The Tanjung Priok massacre saw the army kill up to 100 conservative Muslim protesters in September 1984. A retaliatory series of small bombings, including the bombing of Borobudur, led to arrests of hundreds of conservative Islamic activists, including future parliamentary leader AM Fatwa and Abu Bakar Bashir (later leader of Jemaah Islamiyah). Attacks on police by a resurgent Free Aceh Movement in 1989 led to a military operation which killed 2,000 people and ended the insurgency by 1992. In 1984, the Suharto government sought increased control over the press by issuing a law requiring all media to possess a press operating license (Surat Izin Usaha Penerbitan Pers, SIUPP) which could be revoked at any time by Ministry of Information.
With the end of communism and the Cold War, Suharto's human rights record came under greater international scrutiny, particularly following the 1991 Santa Cruz Massacre in East Timor. Suharto was elected as head of the Non-Aligned Movement in 1992, while Indonesia became a founding member of APEC in 1989 and host to the Bogor APEC Summit in 1994.
Discontent among the military
Domestically, the business dealings of Suharto's family created discontent amongst the military who lost access to power and lucrative rent-seeking opportunities. The March 1988 MPR session, military legislators attempted to pressure Suharto by unsuccessfully seeking to block the nomination of Sudharmono, a Suharto-loyalist, as vice-president. Moerdani's criticism of the Suharto family's corruption saw the president dismiss him from the position of military chief. Suharto proceeded to slowly "de-militarise" his regime; he dissolved the powerful Kopkamtib in September 1988 and ensured key military positions were held by loyalists.
In an attempt to diversify his power base away from the military, Suharto began courting support from Islamic elements. He undertook a much-publicised hajj pilgrimage in 1991, took up the name of Haji Mohammad Suharto, and promoted Islamic values and the careers of Islamic-oriented generals. To win support from the nascent Muslim business community who resented the dominance of Chinese-Indonesian conglomerates, Suharto formed the ICMI (Indonesian Islamic Intellectuals' Association) in November 1990, which was led by his protégé BJ Habibie, the Minister for Research and Technology since 1978. During this period, race riots against ethnic-Chinese begin to occur quite regularly, beginning with April 1994 riot in Medan.
By the 1990s, Suharto's government came to be dominated by civilian politicians such as Habibie, Harmoko, Ginandjar Kartasasmita, and Akbar Tanjung, who owed their position solely to Suharto. As a sign of Habibie's growing clout, when two prominent Indonesian magazines and a tabloid newspaper reported on criticism over Habibie's purchase of almost the entire fleet of the disbanded East German Navy in 1993 (most of the vessels were of scrap-value), the Ministry of Information ordered the offending publications be closed down on 21 June 1994.
Last years of rule
In the 1990s, elements within the growing Indonesian middle class created by Suharto's economic development were becoming restless with his autocracy and the corruption of his children, fuelling demands for "Reformasi" (reform) of the almost 30-year-old New Order government. By 1996, Megawati Sukarnoputri, the daughter of Sukarno and chairwoman of the normally compliant PDI, was becoming a opposition figure for this growing discontent. In response, Suharto backed a co-opted faction of PDI led by Suryadi, which removed Megawati from the chair. On 27 July 1996, an attack by soldiers and hired thugs led by Lieutenant-General Sutiyoso on demonstrating Megawati supporters in Jakarta resulted in fatal riots and looting. This incident was followed by the arrest of 200 democracy activists, 23 of whom were kidnapped, and some killed, by army squads led by Suharto's son-in-law, Major-General Prabowo Subianto. In 1995, Suharto released a special 1,54 troy ounce gold coin worth of 850,000 rupiah with his face on one side of the coin in the celebration of 50th anniversary of Indonesian Independence.
On 5 October 1997, he awarded himself and generals Sudirman and Abdul Haris Nasution the honorary rank of five-star "General of the Army".
Economic crisis and downfall
1997 Asian financial crisis
Indonesia was the country hardest hit by the 1997 Asian financial crisis. From mid-1997 there were large capital outflows and against the US dollar. Due to poor bank lending practices, many Indonesian companies borrowed cheaper US dollar loans while their income is mainly in Indonesian rupiah. The weakening rupiah spurred panic buying of US dollar by these companies, causing the Indonesian rupiah to drop in value from a pre-crisis level of Rp. 2,600 to a low point in early 1998 of around Rp. 17,000. Consequently, many companies were bankrupted and the economy shrank by 13.7%, leading to sharp increases in unemployment and poverty across the country. Efforts by the central bank to defend the rupiah proved futile and only drained the country's dollar reserves. In exchange for US$43 billion in liquidity aid, between October 1997 and the following April, Suharto signed three letters of intent with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for an economic reform process. In January 1998, the government was forced to provide emergency liquidity assistance (BLBI), issue blanket guarantees for bank deposits and set-up the Indonesian Bank Restructuring Agency to take over management of troubled banks in order to prevent the collapse of the financial system. Among the steps taken on IMF recommendation, the government raised an interest rate up to 70% pa in February 1998, which further worsened the contraction of the economy.
In December 1997, Suharto did not attend an ASEAN presidents' summit for the first time, which was later revealed to be due to a minor stroke, creating speculation about his health and the immediate future of his presidency. In mid-December, as the crisis swept through Indonesia and an estimated $150 billion of capital was being withdrawn from the country, he appeared at a press conference to re-assert his authority and to urge people to trust the government and the collapsing rupiah. However, his attempts to re-instil confidence had little effect. Evidence suggested that his family and associates were being spared the most stringent requirements of the IMF reform process, further undermining confidence in the economy and his leadership.
The economic meltdown was accompanied by increasing political tension. Anti-Chinese riots occurred in Situbondo (1996), Tasikmalaya (1996), Banjarmasin (1997), and Makassar (1997); violent ethnic clashes broke out between the Dayak and Madurese settlers in Central Kalimantan in 1997. Golkar won the rigged 1997 election, and in March 1998, Suharto was voted unanimously to another five-year term. He nominated his protégé B. J. Habibie as vice president then stacking the cabinet with his own family and business associates, including his eldest daughter Tutut as Minister of Social Affairs. The appointments and the government's unrealistic 1998 budget created further currency instability, rumours and panic led to a run on stores and pushed up prices. The government increased the fuel prices further by 70% in May 1998, which triggered another wave of riots in Medan.
Fall and resignation
With Suharto increasingly seen as the source of the country's mounting economic and political crises, prominent political figures, including Muslim politician Amien Rais, spoke out against his presidency, and in January 1998 university students began organising nationwide demonstrations. The crisis climaxed while Suharto was on a state visit to Egypt on 12 May 1998, when security forces killed four demonstrators from Jakarta's Trisakti University. Rioting and looting across Jakarta and other cities over the following days destroyed thousands of buildings and killed over 1,000 people. Ethnic Chinese and their businesses were particular targets in the violence. Theories on the origin of the violence include rivalry between military chief General Wiranto and Army Strategic Commander Lt. Gen. Prabowo Subianto, and the suggestion of deliberate provocation by Suharto to divert blame for the crisis to the ethnic-Chinese and discredit the student movement.
On 16 May, tens of thousands of university students demanded Suharto's resignation, and occupied the grounds and roof of the parliament building. Upon Suharto's return to Jakarta, he offered to resign in 2003 and to reshuffle his cabinet. These efforts failed when his political allies deserted him by refusing to join the proposed new cabinet. According to Wiranto, on 18 May, Suharto issued a decree which provided authority to him to take any measures to restore security; however, Wiranto decided not to enforce the decree to prevent conflict with the population. On 21 May 1998, Suharto announced his resignation, upon which vice-president Habibie assumed the presidency in accordance with the constitution.
Recently released documents from the United States Department of State indicate that the Clinton Administration sought to maintain close ties with the Indonesian military in the aftermath of Suharto's fall from power.
Post-presidency (1998-2008)
Corruption charges
After resigning from the presidency, Suharto became a recluse in his family's compound in the Menteng area of Jakarta, protected by soldiers and rarely making public appearances. Suharto's family spent much of their time fending-off corruption investigations. However, Suharto himself was protected from grave prosecution by politicians who owed their positions to the former president, as indicated in the leaked telephone conversation between President Habibie and attorney-general Andi Muhammad Ghalib in February 1999.
In May 1999, Time Asia estimated Suharto's family fortune at US$15 billion in cash, shares, corporate assets, real estate, jewellery and fine art. Suharto sued the magazine seeking more than $US 27 billion in damages for libel over the article. On 10 September 2007, Indonesia's Supreme Court awarded Suharto damages against Time Asia magazine, ordering it to pay him one trillion rupiah ($128.59 million). The High Court reversed the judgement of an appellate court and Central Jakarta district court (made in 2000 and 2001).
Suharto was placed highest on Transparency International's list of corrupt leaders with alleged misappropriation of between US$15–35 billion during his 32-year presidency.
On 29 May 2000, Suharto was placed under house arrest when Indonesian authorities began to investigate the corruption during his presidency. In July 2000, it was announced that he was to be accused of embezzling US$571 million of government donations to one of several foundations under his control and then using the money to finance family investments. However, in September court-appointed doctors announced that he could not stand trial because of his declining health. State prosecutors tried again in 2002, but then doctors cited an unspecified brain disease. On 26 March 2008, a civil court judge acquitted Suharto of corruption but ordered his charitable foundation, Supersemar, to pay US$110 m (£55 m).
In 2002, Suharto's son Tommy was sentenced to 15 years' jail for ordering the killing of a judge (who had previously convicted him of corruption), illegal weapons possession and fleeing justice. In 2006, he was freed on "conditional release".
In 2003, Suharto's half-brother Probosutedjo was tried and convicted for corruption and the loss of $10 million from the Indonesian state. He was sentenced to four years in jail. He later won a reduction of his sentence to two years, initiating a probe by the Corruption Eradication Commission into the alleged scandal of the "judicial mafia" which uncovered offers of $600,000 to various judges. Probosutedjo confessed to the scheme in October 2005, leading to the arrest of his lawyers. His full four-year term was reinstated. After a brief standoff at a hospital, in which he was reportedly protected by a group of police officers, he was arrested on 30 November 2005.
On 9 July 2007, Indonesian prosecutors filed a civil lawsuit against Suharto, to recover state funds ($440 m or £219 m, which allegedly disappeared from a scholarship fund, and a further $1.1 billion in damages).
Illness and death
Health
After resigning from the presidency, Suharto was hospitalised repeatedly for stroke, heart, and intestinal problems. His declining health hindered attempts to prosecute him as his lawyers successfully claimed that his condition rendered him unfit for trial. Moreover, there was little support within Indonesia for any attempts to prosecute him. In 2006, Attorney General Abdurrahman announced that a team of twenty doctors would be asked to evaluate Suharto's health and fitness for trial. One physician, Brigadier-General Dr Marjo Subiandono, stated his doubts about by noting that "[Suharto] has two permanent cerebral defects." In a later Financial Times report, Attorney General Abdurrahman discussed the re-examination, and called it part of a "last opportunity" to prosecute Suharto criminally. Attorney General Abdurrahman left open the possibility of filing suit against the Suharto estate.
Death
On 4 January 2008, Suharto was taken to the Pertamina Central Hospital, Jakarta with complications arising from poor health, swelling of limbs and stomach, and partial renal failure. His health fluctuated for several weeks but progressively worsened with anaemia and low blood pressure due to heart and kidney complications, internal bleeding, fluid on his lungs, and blood in his faeces and urine which caused a haemoglobin drop. On 23 January, Suharto's health worsened further, as a sepsis infection spread through his body. His family consented to the removal of life support machines if his condition did not improve and he died on 27 January at 1:09 pm.
Minutes after his death, then-Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono held a news conference declaring Suharto as one of Indonesia's "best sons" and invited the country to give the highest respect and honour to the ex-president.
Funeral
Suharto's body was taken from Jakarta to the Giri Bangun mausoleum complex near the Central Java city of Solo. He was buried alongside his late wife in a state military funeral with full honours, with the Kopassus elite forces and KOSTRAD commandos as the honour guard and pallbearers and Commander of Group II Kopassus Surakarta Lt. Colonel Asep Subarkah. In attendance were President Yudhoyono, who presided the ceremony, and vice-president, government ministers, and armed forces chiefs of staff. Tens of thousands of people lined the streets to see the convoy. Condolences were offered by many regional heads of state. President Yudhoyono that afternoon declared a week of official mourning starting from Suharto's day of death. During this period, all flags of Indonesia were flown at half-mast.
Honours
:
Star of the Republic of Indonesia, 1st Class ()
Star of Mahaputera, 1st Class ()
The Sacred Star ()
Military Distinguished Service Star ()
Guerrilla Star ()
Star of Merit, 1st Class ()
Star of Culture Parama Dharma ()
Star of Yudha Dharma, 1st Class ()
Star of Kartika Eka Paksi, 1st Class ()
Star of Jalasena, 1st Class ()
Star of Swa Bhuwana Paksa, 1st Class ()
Star of Bhayangkara, 1st Class ()
Star of Kartika Eka Paksi, 2st Class ()
Star of Kartika Eka Paksi, 3st Class ()
Indonesian Armed Forces "8 Years" Service Star ()
Garuda Star ()
Military Campaign Medal ()
Military Long Service Medal, 16 Years Service ()
1st Independence War Medal ()
2nd Independence War Medal ()
Military Operational Service Medal for Madiun 1947 ()
Military Operational Service Medal for Angkatan Ratu Adil 1947 ()
Military Operational Service Medal for Republik Malaku Selatan 1950 ()
Military Operational Service Medal for Sulawesi 1958 ()
Military Service Medal for Irian Jaya 1962 ()
Northern Borneo Military Campaign Medal ()
Medal for Combat Against Communists ()
Foreign honours
:
Recipient of the Royal Family Order of the Crown of Brunei (1988)
Recipient of the Most Esteemed Family Order of Laila Utama (1988)
:
Grand Collar (Raja) of the Order of Sikatuna (1968)
:
Honorary Recipient of the Most Exalted Order of the Crown of the Realm (1988)
: Recipient Member of the Most Esteemed Royal Family Order of Perak (1988)
: Grand Commander (D.K. I) of the Most Esteemed Royal Family Order of Johor (1990)
:
Recipient of the Most Auspicious Order of the Rajamitrabhorn (1970)
:
Recipient of the Order of Temasek (1974)
:
The Grand Collar of the National Order of Independence (1968)
:
Grand Cordon of the Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum (1968)
:
Recipient of the Grand Order of Mugunghwa (1981)
:
Recipient of the Nishan-e-Pakistan (1982)
:
Grand Cross of the Order of Good Hope (1997)
:
Grand Star (Groß-Stern) of the Decoration of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria (1973)
:
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Netherlands Lion (1970)
:
Grand Cordon of the Order of Leopold (1973)
:
Grand Cordon and Collar of the Order of the Queen of Sheba (1968)
:
Knight Grand Cross (Military Division) of the Order of the Bath (1974)
:
The First Class of the Order of Pahlavi
:
Knight Grand Cross with Collar of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic (1972)
:
Grand Cross Special Class of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
:
The Collar of the Order of Mubarak the Great (1977)
:
Grand Collar of the Order of the Nile (1977)
:
Grand Cross of the National Order
of the Legion of Honour
:
Collar of the Order of the Independence
:
The First Class of the Order of the Star of the Romanian Socialist Republic (1982)
:
Badr Chain (1977)
:
Grand Cross with Collar of the Order of Isabella the Catholic (1980)
:
Member 1st Class of the Order of the Umayyads (1977)
:
First Class of the Order of Prince Yaroslav the Wise (1997)
:
Grand Cordon with Collar of the Order of the Liberator (1988)
:
Grand Cordon with Collar of the Order of Al-Hussein bin Ali (1986)
:
Yugoslav Star with Sash of the Order of the Yugoslav Star (1975)
Others
Suharto's childhood house in Kemusuk is currently a memorial museum, called Memorial Jenderal Besar HM Soeharto. A statue of him stand in the front of the museum. It was built by Probosutedjo and was inaugurated in 2013.
FELDA Soeharto, a village in Selangor, Malaysia, is named in 1977 after him – previously in 1970 he paid a visit to the village as a part of momentous visit to normalize Indonesia-Malaysia relations.
See also
Corruption charges against Suharto
History of Indonesia
List of high-ranking commanders of the Indonesian War of Independence
Purna Bhakti Pertiwi Museum
Timeline of Indonesian history
Notes
References
Sources
Camdessus Commends Indonesian Actions. Press Release. International Monetary Fund. (31 October 1997)
Robert Cribb, "Genocide in Indonesia,1965–1966". Journal of Genocide Research no.2:219–239, 2001.
John Roosa, Pretext for Mass Murder: 30 September Movement & Suharto's Coup D'état. The University of Wisconsin Press, 2006. .
Bibliography
Elson, R.E. (2001). Suharto: A Political Biography, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001.
McGlynn, John H. et al. (2007). Indonesia in the Soeharto years. Issue, incidents and images, Jakarta, KITLV
Siti Hardiyanti Rukmana (2011). Pak Harto: The Untold Stories, Jakarta: PT Gramedia Pustaka Utama.
External links
"Life in pictures: Indonesia's Suharto" BBC News
"Suharto, Inc." May 1999 Time magazine exposé on Suharto's regime and family, published on the first anniversary of Suharto's resignation
Shadow Play – Website accompanying a 2002 PBS documentary on Indonesia, with emphasis on the Suharto-era and the transition from New Order to Reformation
"We need to be told" – Article by Australian journalist and Suharto critic John Pilger on the fortieth anniversary of the Transition to the New Order, New Statesman, 17 October 2005.
Tiger Tales: Indonesia — Website accompanying a 2002 BBC World Service radio documentary on Indonesia, focusing on early Suharto era. Features interviews with Indonesian generals and victims of the regime. Program is available in streaming RealAudio format.
"Vengeance with a Smile", Time magazine, 15 July 1966
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1921 births
2008 deaths
Cendana family
Chiefs of Staff of the Indonesian Army
Collars of the Order of Isabella the Catholic
Commanders of the Indonesian National Armed Forces
Deaths from kidney failure
Deaths from lung disease
Defense ministers of Indonesia
Genocide perpetrators
Golkar politicians
Honorary Knights Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath
Grand Crosses Special Class of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
Indonesian Sunni Muslims
Indonesian anti-communists
Indonesian generals
Javanese people
Leaders who took power by coup
Members of Pembela Tanah Air
New Order (Indonesia)
People from Yogyakarta
People of the Cold War
People of the Indonesian National Revolution
Politicide perpetrators
Political corruption
Presidents of Indonesia
Secretaries-General of the Non-Aligned Movement
Indonesian nationalists
Sunni Muslims
Recipients of the Order of Prince Yaroslav the Wise, 1st class | [
"Suharto (; ; 8 June 1921 – 27 January 2008) was an Indonesian army officer and politician, who served as the second and the longest serving President of Indonesia.",
"Widely regarded as a dictator by international observers, Suharto was president for 31 years from the fall of Sukarno in 1967 until his resignation in 1998.",
"The legacy of his 31-year rule, and his US$38 billion net worth, is still debated at home and abroad.",
"Suharto was born in the small village of Kemusuk, in the Godean area near the city of Yogyakarta, during the Dutch colonial era.",
"He grew up in humble circumstances.",
"His Javanese Muslim parents divorced not long after his birth, and he lived with foster parents for much of his childhood.",
"During the Japanese occupation of the country, Suharto served in the Japanese-organized Indonesian security forces.",
"During Indonesia's independence struggle, he joined the newly formed Indonesian Army.",
"There, Suharto rose to the rank of Major general by the time full Indonesian independence was achieved.",
"An attempted coup on 30 September and 1 October 1965 was \"countered\" by Suharto-led troops.",
"According to the official history made by the army, this attempt was backed by the Communist Party of Indonesia.",
"The army subsequently led an anti-communist purge and Suharto wrested power from Indonesia's founding president, Sukarno.",
"He was appointed acting president in 1967 and elected president the following year.",
"He then mounted a social campaign known as \"de-Sukarnoization\" to reduce the former president's influence.",
"Support for Suharto's presidency was active throughout the 1970s and 1980s.",
"By the 1990s, the New Order's authoritarianism and widespread corruption were a source of discontent and, following the 1997 Asian financial crisis which led to widespread unrest, he resigned in May 1998.",
"Suharto died in January 2008 and was given a state funeral.",
"Under his \"New Order\" administration, Suharto constructed a strong, centralised and military-dominated government.",
"An ability to maintain stability over a sprawling and diverse Indonesia and an avowedly anti-communist stance won him the economic and diplomatic support of the West during the Cold War.",
"For most of his presidency, Indonesia experienced significant industrialisation, economic growth, and improved levels of educational attainment.",
"Plans to award the status of National Hero to Suharto are being considered by the Indonesian government and have been debated vigorously in Indonesia.",
"According to Transparency International, Suharto is the most corrupt leader in modern history, having embezzled an alleged US$15–35 billion during his rule.",
"Name\nLike many Javanese, Suharto had only one name.",
"Religious contexts in recent years has sometimes called him as \"Haji\" or \"el-Haj Mohammed Suharto\", but these names were not part of his formal name nor generally used.",
"The spelling \"Suharto\" reflects modern Indonesian orthography, although the general approach in Indonesia is to rely on the spelling preferred by the person concerned.",
"At the time of his birth, the standard transcription was \"Soeharto\", and he used the original spelling throughout his life.",
"The international English-language press generally uses the spelling 'Suharto' while the Indonesian government and media use 'Soeharto'.",
"Early life\n\nSuharto was born on 8 June 1921 in a plaited-bamboo-walled house in the hamlet of Kemusuk, a part of the larger village of Godean, then part of the Dutch East Indies.",
"The village is west of Yogyakarta, the cultural heartland of the Javanese.",
"Born to ethnic Javanese parents, he was the only child of his father's second marriage.",
"His father, Kertosudiro, had two children from his previous marriage and was a village irrigation official.",
"His mother, Sukirah, a local woman, was distantly related to Hamengkubuwono V by his first concubine.",
"Five weeks after Suharto's birth, his mother suffered a nervous breakdown; he was placed in the care of his paternal great-aunt, Kromodirjo as a result.",
"Kertosudiro and Sukirah divorced early in Suharto's life and both later remarried.",
"At the age of three, Suharto was returned to his mother, who had married a local farmer whom Suharto helped in the rice paddies.",
"In 1929, Suharto's father took him to live with his sister, who was married to an agricultural supervisor, Prawirowihardjo, in the town of Wuryantoro in a poor and low-yielding farming area near Wonogiri.",
"Over the following two years, he was taken back to his mother in Kemusuk by his stepfather and then back again to Wuryantoro by his father.",
"Prawirowihardjo took to raising the boy as his own, which provided Suharto with a father-figure and a stable home in Wuryantoro.",
"In 1931, he moved to the town of Wonogiri to attend the primary school, living first with Prawirohardjo's son Sulardi, and later with his father's relative Hardjowijono.",
"While living with Hardjowijono, Suharto became acquainted with Darjatmo, a dukun (\"shaman\") of Javanese mystical arts and faith healing.",
"The experience deeply affected him and later, as president, Suharto surrounded himself with powerful symbolic language.",
"Difficulties in paying the fees for his education in Wonogiri resulted in another move back to his father in Kemusuk, where he continued studying at a lower-fee Muhammadiyah middle school in the city of Yogyakarta until 1939.",
"Suharto's upbringing contrasts with that of leading Indonesian nationalists such as Sukarno in that he is believed to have had little interest in anti-colonialism, or political concerns beyond his immediate surroundings.",
"Unlike Sukarno and his circle, Suharto had little or no contact with European colonisers.",
"Consequently, he did not learn to speak Dutch or other European languages in his youth.",
"He learned to speak Dutch after his induction into the Dutch military in 1940.",
"Military career\n\nWorld War II and Japanese occupation\n\nSuharto finished middle school at the age of 18 and took a clerical job at a bank in Wuryantaro.",
"He was forced to resign after a bicycle mishap tore his only working clothes.",
"Following a spell of unemployment, he joined the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army (KNIL) in June 1940 and undertook basic training in Gombong near Yogyakarta.",
"With the Netherlands under German occupation and the Japanese pressing for access to Indonesian oil supplies, the Dutch had opened up the KNIL to large intakes of previously excluded Javanese.",
"Suharto was assigned to Battalion XIII at Rampal, graduated from a short training course at KNIL Kaderschool in Gombong to become a sergeant, and was posted to a KNIL reserve battalion in Cisarua.",
"Following the Dutch surrender to the invading Japanese forces in March 1942, Suharto abandoned his KNIL uniform and went back to Wurjantoro.",
"After months of unemployment, he then became one of the thousands of Indonesians who took the opportunity to join Japanese-organised security forces by joining the Yogyakarta police force.",
"In October 1943, Suharto was transferred from the police force to the newly formed Japanese-sponsored militia, the PETA (Defenders of the Fatherland) in which Indonesians served as officers.",
"In his training to serve with the rank of shodancho (platoon commander) he encountered a localised version of the Japanese bushido, or \"way of the warrior\", used to indoctrinate troops.",
"This training encouraged an anti-Dutch and pro-nationalist thought, although toward the aims of the Imperial Japanese militarists.",
"The encounter with a nationalistic and militarist ideology is believed to have profoundly influenced Suharto's own way of thinking.",
"Suharto was posted to a PETA coastal defence battalion at Wates, south of Yogyakarta until he was admitted for training for company commander (chudancho) in Bogor from April to August 1944.",
"As company commander, he conducted training for new PETA recruits in Surakarta, Jakarta, and Madiun.",
"The Japanese surrender and Proclamation of Indonesian Independence in August 1945 occurred while Suharto was posted to the remote Brebeg area (on the slopes of Mount Wilis) to train new NCOs to replace those executed by the Japanese in the aftermath of the failed February 1945 PETA Revolt in Blitar, led by Supriyadi.",
"Indonesian National Revolution\n\nTwo days after the Japanese surrender in the Pacific, independence leaders Sukarno and Hatta declared Indonesian independence and were appointed president and vice-president respectively of the new Republic.",
"Suharto disbanded his regiment under orders from the Japanese command and returned to Yogyakarta.",
"As republican groups rose to assert Indonesian independence, Suharto joined a new unit of the newly formed Indonesian army.",
"Based on his PETA experience, he was appointed deputy commander, and subsequently, a battalion commander when the republican forces were formally organised in October 1945.",
"Suharto was involved in fighting against Allied troops around Magelang and Semarang and was subsequently appointed the head of a brigade as lieutenant-colonel, having earned respect as a field commander.",
"In the early years of the war, he organised local armed forces into Battalion X of Regiment I; Suharto was promoted to Major and became Battalion X's leader.",
"The arrival of the Allies, under a mandate to return the situation to the status quo ante bellum, quickly led to clashes between Indonesian republicans and Allied forces, i.e.",
"returning Dutch and assisting British forces.",
"Suharto led his Division X troops to halt an advance by the Dutch T (\"Tiger\") Brigade on 17 May 1946.",
"It earned him the respect of Lieutenant-Colonel Sunarto Kusumodirjo, who invited him to draft the working guidelines for the Battle Leadership Headquarters (MPP), a body created to organise and unify the command structure of the Indonesian Nationalist forces.",
"The military forces of the still infant Republic of Indonesia were constantly restructuring.",
"By August 1946, Suharto was head of the 22nd Regiment of Division III (the \"Diponegoro Division\") stationed in Yogyakarta.",
"In late 1946, the Diponegoro Division assumed responsibility for the defence of the west and southwest of Yogyakarta from Dutch forces.",
"Conditions at the time are reported by Dutch sources as miserable; Suharto himself is reported as assisting smuggling syndicates in the transport of opium through the territory he controlled, to generate income.",
"In September 1948, Suharto was dispatched to meet Musso, chairman of the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) in an unsuccessful attempt at a peaceful reconciliation of the communist uprising in Madiun.",
"In December 1948, the Dutch launched \"Operation Crow\", which resulted in the capture of Sukarno and Hatta and the capital Yogyakarta.",
"Suharto was appointed to lead the Wehrkreise III, consisting of two battalions, which waged guerrilla warfare against the Dutch from the hills south of Yogyakarta.",
"In dawn raids on 1 March 1949, Suharto's forces and local militia recaptured the city, holding it until noon.",
"Suharto's later accounts had him as the lone plotter, although other sources say Sultan Hamengkubuwono IX of Yogyakarta, and the Panglima of the Third Division ordered the attack.",
"However, General Abdul Nasution said that Suharto took great care in preparing the \"General Offensive\" (Indonesian Serangan Umum).",
"Civilians sympathetic to the Republican cause within the city had been galvanised by the show of force which proved that the Dutch had failed to win the guerrilla war.",
"Internationally, the United Nations Security Council pressured the Dutch to cease the military offensive and to recommence negotiations, which eventually led to the Dutch withdrawal from the Yogyakarta area in June 1949 and to complete transfer of sovereignty in December 1949.",
"Suharto was responsible for the takeover of Yogyakarta city from the withdrawing Dutch in June 1949.",
"During the Revolution, Suharto married Siti Hartinah (known as Madam Tien), the daughter of a minor noble in the Mangkunegaran royal house of Solo.",
"The arranged marriage was enduring and supportive, lasting until Tien's death in 1996.",
"The couple had six children: Siti Hardiyanti Rukmana (Tutut, born 1949), Sigit Harjojudanto (born 1951), Bambang Trihatmodjo (born 1953), Siti Hediati (\"Titiek Suharto\", born 1959), Hutomo Mandala Putra (Tommy, born 1962), and Siti Hutami Endang Adiningish (Mamiek, born 1964).",
"Within the Javanese upper class, it was considered acceptable for the wife to pursue genteel commerce to supplement the family budget, allowing her husband to keep his dignity in his official role.",
"The commercial dealings of Tien, her children and grandchildren became extensive and ultimately undermined Suharto's presidency.",
"Post-Independence military career\n\nIn the years following Indonesian independence, Suharto served in the Indonesian National Army, primarily in Java.",
"In 1950, as a colonel, he led the Garuda Brigade in suppressing the Makassar Uprising, a rebellion of former colonial soldiers who supported the Dutch-established State of East Indonesia and its federal entity, the United States of Indonesia.",
"During his year in Makassar, Suharto became acquainted with his neighbours, the Habibie family, whose eldest son BJ Habibie was later Suharto's vice-president, and went on to succeed him as president.",
"In 1951–1952, Suharto led his troops in defeating the Islamic-inspired rebellion of Battalion 426 in the Klaten area of Central Java.",
"Appointed to lead four battalions in early 1953, he organised their participation in battling Darul Islam insurgents in northwestern Central Java and anti-bandit operations in the Mount Merapi area.",
"He also sought to stem leftist sympathies amongst his troops.",
"His experience in this period left Suharto with a deep distaste for both Islamic and communist radicalism.",
"Between 1956 and 1959, he served in the important position of commander of Diponegoro Division based in Semarang, responsible for Central Java and Yogyakarta provinces.",
"His relationship with prominent businessmen Liem Sioe Liong and Bob Hasan, which extended throughout his presidency, began in Central Java, where he was involved in a series of \"profit-generating\" enterprises conducted primarily to keep the poorly funded military unit functioning.",
"Army anti-corruption investigations implicated Suharto in a 1959 smuggling scandal.",
"Relieved of his position, he was transferred to the army's Staff and Command School (Seskoad) in the city of Bandung.",
"While in Bandung, he was promoted to brigadier-general, and in late 1960, promoted to army deputy chief of staff.",
"On 6 March 1961, he was given an additional command, as head of the army's new Strategic Reserve (Korps Tentara I Cadangan Umum AD, later KOSTRAD), a ready-reaction air-mobile force based in Jakarta.",
"In January 1962, Suharto was promoted to the rank of major general and appointed to lead Operation Mandala, a joint army-navy-air force command based in Makassar.",
"This formed the military side of the campaign to win western New Guinea from the Dutch, who were preparing it for its own independence, separate from Indonesia.",
"In 1965, Suharto was assigned operational command of Sukarno's Konfrontasi, against the newly formed Malaysia.",
"Fearful that Konfrontasi would leave Java thinly covered by the army, and hand control to the 2 million-strong Indonesian Communist Party (PKI), he authorised a Kostrad intelligence officer, Ali Murtopo, to open secret contacts with the British and Malaysians.",
"Overthrow of Sukarno (1965)\n\nBackground\n\nTensions between the military and communists increased in April 1965, when Sukarno endorsed the immediate implementation of the PKI's proposal for a \"fifth armed force\" consisting of armed peasants and workers.",
"However, this idea was rejected by the army's leadership as being tantamount to the PKI establishing its own armed forces.",
"In May, the \"Gilchrist Document\" aroused Sukarno's fear of a military plot to overthrow him, a fear which he repeatedly mentioned during the next few months.",
"On his independence day speech in August, Sukarno declared his intention to commit Indonesia to an anti-imperialist alliance with China and other communist regimes and warned the army not to interfere.",
"While Sukarno devoted his energy for domestic and international politics, the economy of Indonesia deteriorated rapidly with worsening widespread poverty and hunger, while foreign debt obligations became unmanageable and infrastructure crumbled.",
"Sukarno's Guided Democracy stood on fragile grounds due to the inherent conflict between its two underlying support pillars, the military and the communists.",
"The military, nationalists, and the Islamic groups were shocked by the rapid growth of the communist party under Sukarno's protection.",
"They feared the imminent establishment of a communist state in Indonesia.",
"By 1965, the PKI had three million members and was particularly strong in Central Java and Bali.",
"The party had become the most potent political party in Indonesia.",
"Abortive coup and anti-communist purge\n\nBefore dawn on 1 October 1965, six army generals were kidnapped and executed in Jakarta by soldiers from the Presidential Guard, Diponegoro Division, and Brawidjaja Division.",
"Soldiers occupied Merdeka Square including the areas in front of the Presidential Palace, the national radio station, and telecommunications centre.",
"At 7:10 am Untung bin Syamsuri announced on the radio that the \"30 September Movement\" had forestalled a coup attempt on Sukarno by \"CIA-backed power-mad generals\", and that it was \"an internal army affair\".",
"The movement never made any attempt on Suharto's life.",
"Suharto had been in Jakarta army hospital that evening with his three-year-old son Tommy who had a scalding injury.",
"It was here that he was visited by Colonel Abdul Latief, a key member of the Movement and close family friend of Suharto.",
"According to Latief's later testimony, the conspirators assumed Suharto to be a Sukarno-loyalist; hence Latief went to inform him of the impending kidnapping plan to save Sukarno from treacherous generals, upon which Suharto seemed to offer his neutrality.",
"Upon being told of the killings, Suharto went to KOSTRAD headquarters just before dawn from where he could see soldiers occupying Merdeka Square.",
"He mobilised KOSTRAD and RPKAD (now Kopassus) special forces to seize control of the centre of Jakarta, capturing key strategic sites including the radio station without resistance.",
"Suharto announced over the radio at 9:00 pm that six generals had been kidnapped by \"counter-revolutionaries\" and that the 30 September Movement actually intended to overthrow Sukarno.",
"He said he was in control of the army, and that he would crush the Movement and safeguard Sukarno.",
"Suharto issued an ultimatum to Halim Air Force Base, where the G30S had based themselves and where Sukarno, air force commander Omar Dhani and PKI chairman Dipa Nusantara Aidit had gathered, causing them to disperse before Suhartoist soldiers occupied the airbase on 2 October after short fighting.",
"With the failure of the poorly organised coup, and having secured authority from the president to restore order and security, Suharto's faction was firmly in control of the army by 2 October (he was officially appointed army commander on 14 October).",
"On 5 October, Suharto led a dramatic public ceremony to bury the generals' bodies.",
"Complicated and partisan theories continue to this day over the identity of the attempted coup's organisers and their aims.",
"The army's version, and subsequently that of the \"New Order\", was that the PKI was solely responsible.",
"A propaganda campaign by the army and Islamic and Catholic student groups convinced both Indonesian and international audiences that it was a communist coup attempt, and that the killings were cowardly atrocities against Indonesian heroes.",
"The army in alliance with civilian religious groups, and backed by the United States and other Western powers, led a campaign of mass killings to purge Indonesian society, government, and armed forces of the Communist Party of Indonesia and other leftist organisations.",
"The purge spread from Jakarta to much of the rest of the country.",
"The most widely accepted estimates are that at least 500,000 to over 1 million were killed.",
"As many as 1.5 million were imprisoned at one stage or another.",
"As a result of the purge, one of Sukarno's three pillars of support, the Indonesian Communist Party, was effectively eliminated by the other two, the military and political Islam.",
"The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency described the purge as \"one of the worst mass murders of the 20th century\".",
"Power struggle\n\nSukarno continued to command loyalty from large sections of the armed forces as well as the general population, and Suharto was careful not to be seen to be seizing power in his own coup.",
"For eighteen months following the quashing of the 30 September Movement, there was a complicated process of political manoeuvres against Sukarno, including student agitation, stacking of parliament, media propaganda and military threats.",
"In January 1966, university students under the banner of KAMI, begin demonstrations against the Sukarno government voicing demands for the disbandment of PKI and control of hyperinflation.",
"The students received support and protection from the army.",
"Street fights broke out between the students and pro-Sukarno loyalists with the pro-Suharto students prevailing due to army protection.",
"In February 1966, Sukarno promoted Suharto to lieutenant-general (and to full general in July 1966).",
"The killing of a student demonstrator and Sukarno's order for the disbandment of KAMI in February 1966 further galvanised public opinion against the president.",
"On 11 March 1966, the appearance of unidentified troops around Merdeka Palace during a cabinet meeting (which Suharto had not attended) forced Sukarno to flee to Bogor Palace (60 km away) by helicopter.",
"Three pro-Suharto generals, Major-General Basuki Rahmat, Brigadier-General M Jusuf, and Brigadier-General Amirmachmud went to Bogor to meet Sukarno.",
"There, they persuaded and secured a presidential decree from Sukarno (see Supersemar) that gave Suharto authority to take any action necessary to maintain security.",
"Using the Supersemar letter, Suharto ordered the banning of PKI the following day and proceeded to purge pro-Sukarno elements from the parliament, the government and military, accusing them of being communist sympathisers.",
"The army arrested 15 cabinet ministers and forced Sukarno to appoint a new cabinet consisting of Suharto supporters.",
"The army arrested pro-Sukarno and pro-communist members of the MPRS (parliament), and Suharto replaced chiefs of the navy, air force, and the police force with his supporters, who then began an extensive purge within each service.",
"In June 1966, the now-purged parliament passed 24 resolutions including the banning of Marxism–Leninism, ratifying the Supersemar, and stripping Sukarno of his title of President for Life.",
"Against the wishes of Sukarno, the government ended the Konfrontasi with Malaysia and rejoined the United Nations (Sukarno had removed Indonesia from the UN in the previous year).",
"Suharto did not seek Sukarno's outright removal at this MPRS session due to the remaining support for the president among some elements of the armed forces.",
"By January 1967, Suharto felt confident that he had removed all significant support for Sukarno within the armed forces, and the MPRS decided to hold another session to impeach Sukarno.",
"On 22 February 1967, Sukarno announced he would resign from the presidency, and on 12 March, the MPRS session stripped him of his remaining power and named Suharto acting president.",
"Sukarno was placed under house arrest in Bogor Palace; little more was heard from him, and he died in June 1970.",
"On 27 March 1968, the MPRS appointed Suharto for the first of his five-year terms as president.",
"\"New Order\" (1967–1998)\n\nIdeology\nSuharto promoted his \"New Order\", as opposed to Sukarno's \"Old Order\", as a society based on the Pancasila ideology.",
"After initially being careful not to offend sensitivities of Islamic scholars who feared Pancasila might develop into a quasi-religious cult, Suharto secured a parliamentary resolution in 1983 which obliged all organisations in Indonesia to adhere to Pancasila as a fundamental principle.",
"He also instituted mandatory Pancasila training programs for all Indonesians, from primary school students to office workers.",
"In practice, however, the vagueness of Pancasila was exploited by Suharto's government to justify their actions and to condemn their opponents as \"anti-Pancasila\".",
"The New Order also implemented the Dwifungsi (\"Dual Function\") policy which enabled the military to have an active role in all levels of the Indonesian government, economy, and society.",
"Consolidation of power\n\nNeutralisation of internal dissent \n\nHaving been appointed president, Suharto still needed to share power with various elements including Indonesian generals who considered Suharto as mere primus inter pares, and Islamic and student groups who participated in the anti-Communist purge.",
"Suharto, aided by his \"Office of Personal Assistants\" (Aspri) clique of military officers from his days as commander of Diponegoro Division, particularly Ali Murtopo, began to systematically cement his hold on power by subtly sidelining potential rivals while rewarding loyalists with political position and monetary incentives.",
"Having successfully stood-down MPRS chairman General Abdul Haris Nasution's 1968 attempt to introduce a bill which would have severely curtailed presidential authority, Suharto had him removed from his position as MPRS chairman in 1969 and forced his early retirement from the military in 1972.",
"In 1967, generals Hartono Rekso Dharsono, Kemal Idris, and Sarwo Edhie Wibowo (dubbed \"New Order Radicals\") opposed Suharto's decision to allow participation of existing political parties in elections in favour of a non-ideological two-party system similar to those found in many Western countries.",
"Suharto sent Dharsono overseas as an ambassador, while Idris and Wibowo were sent to distant North Sumatra and South Sulawesi as regional commanders.",
"Suharto's previously strong relationship with the student movement soured over the increasing authoritarianism and corruption of his regime.",
"While many original leaders of the 1966 student movement (Angkatan '66) were successfully co-opted into the regime, Suharto was faced with large student demonstrations challenging the legitimacy of 1971 elections (\"Golput\" movement), the costly construction of the Taman Mini Indonesia Indah theme park (1972), the domination of foreign capitalists (Malari Incident of 1974), and the lack of term limits of Suharto's presidency (1978).",
"The regime responded by imprisoning many student activists (such as future national figures Dorodjatun Kuntjoro-Jakti, Adnan Buyung Nasution, Hariman Siregar, and Syahrir), and even sending troops to occupy the campus of ITB (Bandung Institute of Technology) from January–March 1978.",
"In April 1978, Suharto moved decisively by issuing a decree on \"Normalisation of Campus Life\" (NKK) which prohibited political activities on-campus not related to academic pursuits.",
"On 15–16 January 1974, Suharto faced a significant challenge when violent riots broke out in Jakarta during a visit by the Japanese prime minister Kakuei Tanaka.",
"Students demonstrating against increasing dominance of Japanese investors were encouraged by General Sumitro, deputy commander of the armed forces.",
"Sumitro was an ambitious general who disliked the strong influence of Suharto's Aspri inner circle.",
"Suharto learned that the riots were engineered by Sumitro to destabilise the regime, resulting in Sumitro's dismissal and forced retirement.",
"This incident is referred to as the Malari Incident (Malapetaka Lima Belas Januari / Disaster of 15 January).",
"However, Suharto also disbanded Aspri to appease popular dissent.",
"In 1980, fifty prominent political figures signed the Petition of Fifty, which criticised Suharto's use of Pancasila to silence his critics.",
"Suharto refused to address the petitioners' concerns, and some of them were imprisoned with others having restrictions imposed on their movements.",
"Domestic politics and security\n\nDepoliticization \nTo placate demands from civilian politicians for the holding of elections, as manifested in MPRS resolutions of 1966 and 1967, Suharto government formulated a series of laws regarding elections as well as the structure and duties of parliament which were passed by MPRS in November 1969 after protracted negotiations.",
"The law provided for a parliament (Madjelis Permusjawaratan Rakjat/MPR) with the power to elect presidents, consisting of a house of representatives (Dewan Perwakilan Rakjat/DPR) and regional representatives.",
"100 of the 460 members of DPR would be directly appointed by the government, while the remaining seats were allocated to political organizations based on results of the general election.",
"This mechanism ensures significant government control over legislative affairs, particularly the appointment of presidents.",
"To participate in the elections, Suharto realised the need to align himself with a political party.",
"After initially considering alignment with Sukarno's old party the PNI, in 1969 Suharto decided to take over control of an obscure military-run federation of NGOs called Golkar (\"Functional Groups\") and transform it into his electoral vehicle under the coordination of his right-hand man Ali Murtopo.",
"The first general election was held on 3 July 1971 with ten participants; consisting of Golkar, four Islamic parties, as well as five nationalist and Christian parties.",
"Campaigning on a non-ideological platform of \"development\", and aided by official government support and subtle intimidation tactics, Golkar managed to secure 62.8% of the popular vote.",
"The March 1973 general session of newly elected MPR promptly appointed Suharto to second-term in office with Sultan Hamengkubuwono IX as vice-president.",
"On 5 January 1973, to allow better control, the government forced the four Islamic parties to merge into PPP (Partai Persatuan Pembangunan/United Development Party) while the five non-Islamic parties were fused into PDI (Partai Demokrasi Indonesia/Indonesian Democratic Party).",
"The government ensured that these parties never developed effective opposition by controlling their leadership while establishing the \"re-call\" system to remove any outspoken legislators from their positions.",
"Using this system dubbed the \"Pancasila Democracy\", Suharto was re-elected unopposed by the MPR in 1978, 1983, 1988, 1993, and 1998.",
"Golkar won landslide majorities in the MPR at every election, ensuring that Suharto would be able to pass his agenda with virtually no opposition.",
"Ultimately, he held all governing power in the country.",
"Establishment of corporative groups \nSuharto proceeded with various social engineering projects designed to transform Indonesian society into a de-politicised \"floating mass\" supportive of the national mission of \"development\", a concept similar to corporatism.",
"The government formed various civil society groups to unite the populace in support of government programs.",
"For instance, the government created the Indonesian Civil Servants Corps (Korps Pegawai Republik Indonesia or KORPRI) in November 1971 as union of civil servants to ensure their loyalty, organised the FBSI (Federasi Buruh Seluruh Indonesia) as the only legal labour union in February 1973, and established the MUI in 1975 to control Islamic clerics.",
"In 1968, Suharto commenced the highly successful family-planning program (Keluarga Berentjana / KB) to stem the high population growth rate and hence increasing per-capita income.",
"A lasting legacy from this period is the spelling reform of Indonesian language decreed by Suharto on 17 August 1972.",
"Discrimination against Chinese Indonesians \n\nEarly into his regime, to promote assimilation of the influential Chinese-Indonesians, the Suharto government passed several laws as part of the so-called \"Basic Policy for the Solution of Chinese Problem\", whereby only one Chinese-language publication (controlled by the Army) was allowed to continue, all Chinese cultural and religious expressions (including the display of Chinese characters) were prohibited from public space, Chinese schools were seized and turned into Indonesian-language public schools, and the ethnic-Chinese were forced to take-up Indonesian-sounding names; creating a systematic cultural genocide.",
"In 1978, the government began requiring a Letter of Proof of Citizenship of the Republic of Indonesia (, or SBKRI).",
"Although the SBKRI was legally required for all citizens of foreign descent, in practice it was generally applied only to Chinese descent.",
"This led to difficulties for Chinese Indonesians when enrolling in state universities, applying to be civil servants, or joining the military or police.",
"Political stability \n \nSuharto relied on the military to ruthlessly maintain domestic security, organised by the Kopkamtib (Operation Command for the Restoration of Security and Order) and BAKIN (State Intelligence Coordination Agency).",
"To maintain strict control over the country, Suharto expanded the army's territorial system down to village-level, while military officers were appointed as regional heads under the rubric of the Dwifungsi (\"Dual Function\") of the military.",
"By 1969, 70% of Indonesia's provincial governors and more than half of its district chiefs were active military officers.",
"Suharto authorised Operasi Trisula which destroyed PKI-remnants trying to organise a guerrilla base in the Blitar area in 1968 and ordered several military operations that ended the communist PGRS-Paraku insurgency in West Kalimantan (1967–1972).",
"Attacks on oil workers by the first incarnation of Free Aceh Movement separatists under Hasan di Tiro in 1977 led to the dispatch of small special forces detachments who quickly either killed or forced the movement's members to flee abroad.",
"Notably, in March 1981, Suharto authorised a successful special forces mission to end hijacking of a Garuda Indonesia flight by Islamic extremists at Don Mueang International Airport in Bangkok.",
"Economy\n\nTo stabilize the economy and to ensure long-term support for the New Order, Suharto's administration enlisted a group of mostly US-educated Indonesian economists, dubbed the \"Berkeley Mafia\", to formulate significant changes in economic policy.",
"By cutting subsidies, decreasing government debt, and reforming the exchange rate mechanism, inflation was lowered from 660% in 1966 to 19% in 1969.",
"The threat of famine was alleviated by the influx of USAID rice aid shipments from 1967 to 1968.",
"With a lack of domestic capital that was required for economic growth, the New Order reversed Sukarno's economic self-sufficiency policies and opened selected economic sectors of the country to foreign investment through the 1967 Foreign Investment Law.",
"Suharto travelled to Western Europe and Japan to promote investment in Indonesia.",
"The first foreign investors to re-enter Indonesia included mining companies Freeport Sulphur Company / International Nickel Company.",
"Following government regulatory frameworks, domestic entrepreneurs (mostly Chinese-Indonesians) emerged in the late 1960s and early 1970s in the import-substitution light-manufacturing sector such as Astra Group and Salim Group.",
"From 1967, the government secured low-interest foreign aid from ten countries grouped under the Inter-Governmental Group on Indonesia (IGGI) to cover its budget deficit.",
"With the IGGI funds and the later jump in oil export revenue from the 1973 oil crisis, the government invested in infrastructure under a series of five-year plans, dubbed REPELITA (Rencana Pembangunan Lima Tahun) I to VI from 1969 to 1998.",
"Outside the formal economy, Suharto created a network of charitable organisations (\"yayasan\") run by the military and his family members, which extracted \"donations\" from domestic and foreign enterprises in exchange for necessary government support and permits.",
"While some proceeds were used for charitable purposes, much of the money was recycled as a slush fund to reward political allies and to maintain support for the New Order.",
"In 1975, the state-owned oil company, Pertamina, defaulted on its foreign loans as a result of mismanagement and corruption under the leadership of Suharto's close ally, Ibnu Sutowo.",
"The government bail-out of the company nearly doubled the national debt.",
"Foreign policy\n\nCold War \nUpon assuming power, Suharto government adopted a policy of neutrality in the Cold War but was nevertheless quietly aligned with the Western bloc (including Japan and South Korea) to secure support for Indonesia's economic recovery.",
"Western countries, impressed by Suharto's strong anti-communist credentials, were quick to offer their support.",
"Diplomatic relations with China were suspended in October 1967 due to suspicion of Chinese involvement in the 30 September Movement (diplomatic relations was only restored in 1990).",
"Due to Suharto's destruction of PKI, the Soviet Union embargoed military sales to Indonesia.",
"However, from 1967 to 1970 foreign minister Adam Malik managed to secure several agreements to restructure massive debts incurred by Sukarno from the Soviet Union and other Eastern European communist states.",
"Regionally, having ended confrontation with Malaysia in August 1966, Indonesia became a founding member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in August 1967.",
"This organisation is designed to establish a peaceful relationship between Southeast Asian countries free from conflicts such as the ongoing Vietnam War.",
"East Timor \n\nIn 1974, the neighbouring colony of Portuguese Timor descended into civil war after the withdrawal of Portuguese authority following the Carnation Revolution, whereby the left-wing populist Fretilin (Portuguese: Frente Revolucionária de Timor-Leste Independente) emerged triumphant.",
"With approval from Western countries (including from U.S. president Gerald Ford and Australian prime minister Gough Whitlam during their visits to Indonesia), Suharto decided to intervene claiming to prevent the establishment of a communist state.",
"After an unsuccessful attempt of covert support to Timorese groups UDT and APODETI, Suharto authorised a full-scale invasion of the colony on 7 December 1975 followed with its official annexation as Indonesia's 27th province of East Timor in July 1976.",
"The \"encirclement and annihilation\" campaigns of 1977–1979 broke the back of Fretilin control over the hinterlands, although continuing guerrilla resistance caused the government to maintain a strong military force in the half-island until 1999.",
"An estimated minimum of 90,800 and maximum of 213,600 conflict-related deaths occurred in East Timor during Indonesian rule (1974–1999); namely, 17,600–19,600 killings and 73,200 to 194,000 'excess' deaths from hunger and illness, although Indonesian forces were responsible for about 70% of the violent killings.",
"Indonesia's invasion and occupation of East Timor during Suharto's presidency resulted in at least 100,000 deaths.",
"Papua conflict \nTo comply with New York Agreement of 1962 which required a plebiscite on the integration of West Irian into Indonesia before the end of 1969, the Suharto government begin organising for a so-called \"Act of Free Choice\" scheduled for July–August 1969.",
"The government sent RPKAD special forces under Sarwo Edhie Wibowo which secured the surrender of several bands of former Dutch-organised militia (Papoea Vrijwilligers Korps / PVK) at large in the jungles since the Indonesian takeover in 1963 while sending Catholic volunteers under Jusuf Wanandi to distribute consumer goods to promote pro-Indonesian sentiments.",
"In March 1969, it was agreed that the plebiscite would be channelled via 1,025 tribal chiefs, citing the logistical challenge and political ignorance of the population.",
"Using the above strategy, the plebiscite produced a unanimous decision for integration with Indonesia, which was duly noted by the United Nations General Assembly in November 1969.",
"Socio-economic progress and growing corruption\n\nEconomic progress \n\nReal socio-economic progress sustained support for Suharto's regime across three decades.",
"By 1996, Indonesia's poverty rate has dropped to around 11% compared with 45% in 1970.",
"From 1966 to 1997, Indonesia recorded real GDP growth of 5.03% pa, pushing real GDP per capita upwards from US$806 to US$4,114.",
"In 1966, the manufacturing sector made up less than 10% of GDP (mostly industries related to oil and agriculture).",
"By 1997, manufacturing had risen to 25% of GDP, and 53% of exports consisted of manufactured products.",
"The government invested in massive infrastructure development (notably the launching of a series of Palapa telecommunication satellites); consequently, Indonesian infrastructure in the mid-1990s was considered at par with China.",
"Suharto was keen to capitalize on such achievements to justify his regime, and the parliament (MPR) on 9 March 1983 granted him the title of \"Father of Development\".",
"Healthcare reform \nSuharto government's health-care programs (such as the Puskesmas program) increased life expectancy from 47 years (1966) to 67 years (1997) while cutting infant mortality rate by more than 60%.",
"The government's Inpres program launched in 1973 resulted in primary school enrolment ratio reaching 90% by 1983 while almost eliminating the education gap between boys and girls.",
"Sustained support for agriculture resulted in Indonesia achieving rice self-sufficiency by 1984, an unprecedented achievement which earned Suharto a gold medal from the FAO in November 1985.",
"Oil and conglomerates \nIn the early 1980s, Suharto government responded to the fall in oil exports due to the 1980s oil glut by successfully shifting the basis of the economy to export-oriented labour-intensive manufacturing, made globally competitive by Indonesia's low wages and a series of currency devaluations.",
"Industrialisation was mostly undertaken by Chinese-Indonesian companies which evolved into large conglomerates dominating the nation's economy.",
"The largest of these conglomerates were the Salim Group led by Liem Sioe Liong (Sudono Salim), Sinar Mas Group led by Oei Ek Tjong (Eka Tjipta Widjaja), Astra Group led by Tjia Han Poen (William Soeryadjaya), Lippo Group led by Lie Mo Tie (Mochtar Riady), Barito Pacific Group led by Pang Djun Phen (Prajogo Pangestu), and Nusamba Group led by Bob Hasan.",
"Suharto decided to support the growth of a small number of Chinese-Indonesian conglomerates since they would not pose a political challenge due to their ethnic-minority status, but from his experience, he deemed them to possess the skills and capital needed to create real growth for the country.",
"In exchange for Suharto's patronage, the conglomerates provided vital financing for his \"regime maintenance\" activities.",
"Deregulation \nIn the late 1980s, the Suharto government decided to de-regulate the banking sector to encourage savings and providing a domestic source of financing required for growth.",
"Suharto decreed the \"October Package of 1988\" (PAKTO 88) which eased requirements for establishing banks and extending credit; resulting in a 50% increase in the number of banks from 1989 to 1991.",
"To promote savings, the government introduced the TABANAS program to the populace.",
"The Jakarta Stock Exchange, re-opened in 1977, recorded a \"bull run\", due to a spree of domestic IPOs and an influx of foreign funds after the deregulation in 1990.",
"The sudden availability of credit fuelled robust economic growth in the early 1990s, but the weak regulatory environment of the financial sector sowed the seeds of the catastrophic crisis in 1997, which eventually destroyed Suharto's regime.",
"Corruption \n\nThe growth of the economy coincided with the rapid expansion of corruption, collusion, and nepotism (Korupsi, Kolusi, dan Nepotisme / KKN).",
"In the early 1980s, Suharto's children, particularly Siti Hardiyanti Rukmana (\"Tutut\"), Hutomo Mandala Putra (\"Tommy\"), and Bambang Trihatmodjo, had grown into greedy adults.",
"Their companies were given lucrative government contracts and protected from market competition by monopolies.",
"Examples include the toll-expressway market which was monopolised by Tutut, the national car project monopolised by Bambang and Tommy, and even the cinema market, monopolised by 21 Cineplex (owned by Suharto's cousin Sudwikatmono).",
"The family is said to control about 36,000 km2 of real estate in Indonesia, including 100,000 m2 of prime office space in Jakarta and nearly 40% of the land in East Timor.",
"Additionally, Suharto's family members received free shares in 1,251 of Indonesia's most lucrative domestic companies (mostly run by Suharto's ethnic-Chinese cronies), while foreign-owned companies were encouraged to establish \"strategic partnerships\" with Suharto family companies.",
"Meanwhile, the myriad of yayasans run by the Suharto family grew even larger, levying millions of dollars in \"donations\" from the public and private sectors each year.",
"In early 2004, the German anti-corruption NGO Transparency International released a list of what it believed to be the ten most self-enriching leaders in the previous two decades; in order of amount allegedly stolen in USD, the highest-ranking of these was Suharto and his family who are alleged to have embezzled $15 billion – $35 billion.",
"Grip on power\n\nBy the 1980s, Suharto's grip on power was maintained by the emasculation of civil society, engineered elections, and use of the military's coercive powers.",
"Upon his retirement from the military in June 1976, Suharto undertook a re-organisation of the armed forces that concentrated power away from commanders to the president.",
"In March 1983, he appointed General Leonardus Benjamin Moerdani as head of the armed forces who adopted a hard-line approach on elements who challenged the administration.",
"As a Roman Catholic, he was not a political threat to Suharto.",
"Killings and Aceh independence \nFrom 1983 to 1985, army squads killed up to 10,000 suspected criminals in response to a spike in the crime rate (see \"Petrus Killings\").",
"Suharto's imposition of Pancasila as the sole ideology caused protests from conservative Islamic groups who considered Islamic law to be above all other conceptions.",
"The Tanjung Priok massacre saw the army kill up to 100 conservative Muslim protesters in September 1984.",
"A retaliatory series of small bombings, including the bombing of Borobudur, led to arrests of hundreds of conservative Islamic activists, including future parliamentary leader AM Fatwa and Abu Bakar Bashir (later leader of Jemaah Islamiyah).",
"Attacks on police by a resurgent Free Aceh Movement in 1989 led to a military operation which killed 2,000 people and ended the insurgency by 1992.",
"In 1984, the Suharto government sought increased control over the press by issuing a law requiring all media to possess a press operating license (Surat Izin Usaha Penerbitan Pers, SIUPP) which could be revoked at any time by Ministry of Information.",
"With the end of communism and the Cold War, Suharto's human rights record came under greater international scrutiny, particularly following the 1991 Santa Cruz Massacre in East Timor.",
"Suharto was elected as head of the Non-Aligned Movement in 1992, while Indonesia became a founding member of APEC in 1989 and host to the Bogor APEC Summit in 1994.",
"Discontent among the military \n\nDomestically, the business dealings of Suharto's family created discontent amongst the military who lost access to power and lucrative rent-seeking opportunities.",
"The March 1988 MPR session, military legislators attempted to pressure Suharto by unsuccessfully seeking to block the nomination of Sudharmono, a Suharto-loyalist, as vice-president.",
"Moerdani's criticism of the Suharto family's corruption saw the president dismiss him from the position of military chief.",
"Suharto proceeded to slowly \"de-militarise\" his regime; he dissolved the powerful Kopkamtib in September 1988 and ensured key military positions were held by loyalists.",
"In an attempt to diversify his power base away from the military, Suharto began courting support from Islamic elements.",
"He undertook a much-publicised hajj pilgrimage in 1991, took up the name of Haji Mohammad Suharto, and promoted Islamic values and the careers of Islamic-oriented generals.",
"To win support from the nascent Muslim business community who resented the dominance of Chinese-Indonesian conglomerates, Suharto formed the ICMI (Indonesian Islamic Intellectuals' Association) in November 1990, which was led by his protégé BJ Habibie, the Minister for Research and Technology since 1978.",
"During this period, race riots against ethnic-Chinese begin to occur quite regularly, beginning with April 1994 riot in Medan.",
"By the 1990s, Suharto's government came to be dominated by civilian politicians such as Habibie, Harmoko, Ginandjar Kartasasmita, and Akbar Tanjung, who owed their position solely to Suharto.",
"As a sign of Habibie's growing clout, when two prominent Indonesian magazines and a tabloid newspaper reported on criticism over Habibie's purchase of almost the entire fleet of the disbanded East German Navy in 1993 (most of the vessels were of scrap-value), the Ministry of Information ordered the offending publications be closed down on 21 June 1994.",
"Last years of rule \n\nIn the 1990s, elements within the growing Indonesian middle class created by Suharto's economic development were becoming restless with his autocracy and the corruption of his children, fuelling demands for \"Reformasi\" (reform) of the almost 30-year-old New Order government.",
"By 1996, Megawati Sukarnoputri, the daughter of Sukarno and chairwoman of the normally compliant PDI, was becoming a opposition figure for this growing discontent.",
"In response, Suharto backed a co-opted faction of PDI led by Suryadi, which removed Megawati from the chair.",
"On 27 July 1996, an attack by soldiers and hired thugs led by Lieutenant-General Sutiyoso on demonstrating Megawati supporters in Jakarta resulted in fatal riots and looting.",
"This incident was followed by the arrest of 200 democracy activists, 23 of whom were kidnapped, and some killed, by army squads led by Suharto's son-in-law, Major-General Prabowo Subianto.",
"In 1995, Suharto released a special 1,54 troy ounce gold coin worth of 850,000 rupiah with his face on one side of the coin in the celebration of 50th anniversary of Indonesian Independence.",
"On 5 October 1997, he awarded himself and generals Sudirman and Abdul Haris Nasution the honorary rank of five-star \"General of the Army\".",
"Economic crisis and downfall\n\n1997 Asian financial crisis \nIndonesia was the country hardest hit by the 1997 Asian financial crisis.",
"From mid-1997 there were large capital outflows and against the US dollar.",
"Due to poor bank lending practices, many Indonesian companies borrowed cheaper US dollar loans while their income is mainly in Indonesian rupiah.",
"The weakening rupiah spurred panic buying of US dollar by these companies, causing the Indonesian rupiah to drop in value from a pre-crisis level of Rp.",
"2,600 to a low point in early 1998 of around Rp.",
"17,000.",
"Consequently, many companies were bankrupted and the economy shrank by 13.7%, leading to sharp increases in unemployment and poverty across the country.",
"Efforts by the central bank to defend the rupiah proved futile and only drained the country's dollar reserves.",
"In exchange for US$43 billion in liquidity aid, between October 1997 and the following April, Suharto signed three letters of intent with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for an economic reform process.",
"In January 1998, the government was forced to provide emergency liquidity assistance (BLBI), issue blanket guarantees for bank deposits and set-up the Indonesian Bank Restructuring Agency to take over management of troubled banks in order to prevent the collapse of the financial system.",
"Among the steps taken on IMF recommendation, the government raised an interest rate up to 70% pa in February 1998, which further worsened the contraction of the economy.",
"In December 1997, Suharto did not attend an ASEAN presidents' summit for the first time, which was later revealed to be due to a minor stroke, creating speculation about his health and the immediate future of his presidency.",
"In mid-December, as the crisis swept through Indonesia and an estimated $150 billion of capital was being withdrawn from the country, he appeared at a press conference to re-assert his authority and to urge people to trust the government and the collapsing rupiah.",
"However, his attempts to re-instil confidence had little effect.",
"Evidence suggested that his family and associates were being spared the most stringent requirements of the IMF reform process, further undermining confidence in the economy and his leadership.",
"The economic meltdown was accompanied by increasing political tension.",
"Anti-Chinese riots occurred in Situbondo (1996), Tasikmalaya (1996), Banjarmasin (1997), and Makassar (1997); violent ethnic clashes broke out between the Dayak and Madurese settlers in Central Kalimantan in 1997.",
"Golkar won the rigged 1997 election, and in March 1998, Suharto was voted unanimously to another five-year term.",
"He nominated his protégé B. J. Habibie as vice president then stacking the cabinet with his own family and business associates, including his eldest daughter Tutut as Minister of Social Affairs.",
"The appointments and the government's unrealistic 1998 budget created further currency instability, rumours and panic led to a run on stores and pushed up prices.",
"The government increased the fuel prices further by 70% in May 1998, which triggered another wave of riots in Medan.",
"Fall and resignation \nWith Suharto increasingly seen as the source of the country's mounting economic and political crises, prominent political figures, including Muslim politician Amien Rais, spoke out against his presidency, and in January 1998 university students began organising nationwide demonstrations.",
"The crisis climaxed while Suharto was on a state visit to Egypt on 12 May 1998, when security forces killed four demonstrators from Jakarta's Trisakti University.",
"Rioting and looting across Jakarta and other cities over the following days destroyed thousands of buildings and killed over 1,000 people.",
"Ethnic Chinese and their businesses were particular targets in the violence.",
"Theories on the origin of the violence include rivalry between military chief General Wiranto and Army Strategic Commander Lt. Gen. Prabowo Subianto, and the suggestion of deliberate provocation by Suharto to divert blame for the crisis to the ethnic-Chinese and discredit the student movement.",
"On 16 May, tens of thousands of university students demanded Suharto's resignation, and occupied the grounds and roof of the parliament building.",
"Upon Suharto's return to Jakarta, he offered to resign in 2003 and to reshuffle his cabinet.",
"These efforts failed when his political allies deserted him by refusing to join the proposed new cabinet.",
"According to Wiranto, on 18 May, Suharto issued a decree which provided authority to him to take any measures to restore security; however, Wiranto decided not to enforce the decree to prevent conflict with the population.",
"On 21 May 1998, Suharto announced his resignation, upon which vice-president Habibie assumed the presidency in accordance with the constitution.",
"Recently released documents from the United States Department of State indicate that the Clinton Administration sought to maintain close ties with the Indonesian military in the aftermath of Suharto's fall from power.",
"Post-presidency (1998-2008)\n\nCorruption charges \n\nAfter resigning from the presidency, Suharto became a recluse in his family's compound in the Menteng area of Jakarta, protected by soldiers and rarely making public appearances.",
"Suharto's family spent much of their time fending-off corruption investigations.",
"However, Suharto himself was protected from grave prosecution by politicians who owed their positions to the former president, as indicated in the leaked telephone conversation between President Habibie and attorney-general Andi Muhammad Ghalib in February 1999.",
"In May 1999, Time Asia estimated Suharto's family fortune at US$15 billion in cash, shares, corporate assets, real estate, jewellery and fine art.",
"Suharto sued the magazine seeking more than $US 27 billion in damages for libel over the article.",
"On 10 September 2007, Indonesia's Supreme Court awarded Suharto damages against Time Asia magazine, ordering it to pay him one trillion rupiah ($128.59 million).",
"The High Court reversed the judgement of an appellate court and Central Jakarta district court (made in 2000 and 2001).",
"Suharto was placed highest on Transparency International's list of corrupt leaders with alleged misappropriation of between US$15–35 billion during his 32-year presidency.",
"On 29 May 2000, Suharto was placed under house arrest when Indonesian authorities began to investigate the corruption during his presidency.",
"In July 2000, it was announced that he was to be accused of embezzling US$571 million of government donations to one of several foundations under his control and then using the money to finance family investments.",
"However, in September court-appointed doctors announced that he could not stand trial because of his declining health.",
"State prosecutors tried again in 2002, but then doctors cited an unspecified brain disease.",
"On 26 March 2008, a civil court judge acquitted Suharto of corruption but ordered his charitable foundation, Supersemar, to pay US$110 m (£55 m).",
"In 2002, Suharto's son Tommy was sentenced to 15 years' jail for ordering the killing of a judge (who had previously convicted him of corruption), illegal weapons possession and fleeing justice.",
"In 2006, he was freed on \"conditional release\".",
"In 2003, Suharto's half-brother Probosutedjo was tried and convicted for corruption and the loss of $10 million from the Indonesian state.",
"He was sentenced to four years in jail.",
"He later won a reduction of his sentence to two years, initiating a probe by the Corruption Eradication Commission into the alleged scandal of the \"judicial mafia\" which uncovered offers of $600,000 to various judges.",
"Probosutedjo confessed to the scheme in October 2005, leading to the arrest of his lawyers.",
"His full four-year term was reinstated.",
"After a brief standoff at a hospital, in which he was reportedly protected by a group of police officers, he was arrested on 30 November 2005.",
"On 9 July 2007, Indonesian prosecutors filed a civil lawsuit against Suharto, to recover state funds ($440 m or £219 m, which allegedly disappeared from a scholarship fund, and a further $1.1 billion in damages).",
"Illness and death\n\nHealth \nAfter resigning from the presidency, Suharto was hospitalised repeatedly for stroke, heart, and intestinal problems.",
"His declining health hindered attempts to prosecute him as his lawyers successfully claimed that his condition rendered him unfit for trial.",
"Moreover, there was little support within Indonesia for any attempts to prosecute him.",
"In 2006, Attorney General Abdurrahman announced that a team of twenty doctors would be asked to evaluate Suharto's health and fitness for trial.",
"One physician, Brigadier-General Dr Marjo Subiandono, stated his doubts about by noting that \"[Suharto] has two permanent cerebral defects.\"",
"In a later Financial Times report, Attorney General Abdurrahman discussed the re-examination, and called it part of a \"last opportunity\" to prosecute Suharto criminally.",
"Attorney General Abdurrahman left open the possibility of filing suit against the Suharto estate.",
"Death\nOn 4 January 2008, Suharto was taken to the Pertamina Central Hospital, Jakarta with complications arising from poor health, swelling of limbs and stomach, and partial renal failure.",
"His health fluctuated for several weeks but progressively worsened with anaemia and low blood pressure due to heart and kidney complications, internal bleeding, fluid on his lungs, and blood in his faeces and urine which caused a haemoglobin drop.",
"On 23 January, Suharto's health worsened further, as a sepsis infection spread through his body.",
"His family consented to the removal of life support machines if his condition did not improve and he died on 27 January at 1:09 pm.",
"Minutes after his death, then-Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono held a news conference declaring Suharto as one of Indonesia's \"best sons\" and invited the country to give the highest respect and honour to the ex-president.",
"Funeral \nSuharto's body was taken from Jakarta to the Giri Bangun mausoleum complex near the Central Java city of Solo.",
"He was buried alongside his late wife in a state military funeral with full honours, with the Kopassus elite forces and KOSTRAD commandos as the honour guard and pallbearers and Commander of Group II Kopassus Surakarta Lt.",
"Colonel Asep Subarkah.",
"In attendance were President Yudhoyono, who presided the ceremony, and vice-president, government ministers, and armed forces chiefs of staff.",
"Tens of thousands of people lined the streets to see the convoy.",
"Condolences were offered by many regional heads of state.",
"President Yudhoyono that afternoon declared a week of official mourning starting from Suharto's day of death.",
"During this period, all flags of Indonesia were flown at half-mast.",
"A statue of him stand in the front of the museum.",
"It was built by Probosutedjo and was inaugurated in 2013.",
"FELDA Soeharto, a village in Selangor, Malaysia, is named in 1977 after him – previously in 1970 he paid a visit to the village as a part of momentous visit to normalize Indonesia-Malaysia relations.",
"See also\n\n Corruption charges against Suharto \n History of Indonesia\n List of high-ranking commanders of the Indonesian War of Independence\n Purna Bhakti Pertiwi Museum\n Timeline of Indonesian history\n\nNotes\n\nReferences\n\nSources\n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n\n \n \n Camdessus Commends Indonesian Actions.",
"Press Release.",
"International Monetary Fund.",
"(31 October 1997)\n \n \n \n Robert Cribb, \"Genocide in Indonesia,1965–1966\".",
"Journal of Genocide Research no.2:219–239, 2001.",
"John Roosa, Pretext for Mass Murder: 30 September Movement & Suharto's Coup D'état.",
"The University of Wisconsin Press, 2006. .\n\nBibliography\n\n Elson, R.E.",
"(2001).",
"Suharto: A Political Biography, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001.",
"McGlynn, John H. et al.",
"(2007).",
"Indonesia in the Soeharto years.",
"Issue, incidents and images, Jakarta, KITLV\n \n Siti Hardiyanti Rukmana (2011).",
"Pak Harto: The Untold Stories, Jakarta: PT Gramedia Pustaka Utama.",
"External links\n\n \"Life in pictures: Indonesia's Suharto\" BBC News\n \"Suharto, Inc.\" May 1999 Time magazine exposé on Suharto's regime and family, published on the first anniversary of Suharto's resignation\n Shadow Play – Website accompanying a 2002 PBS documentary on Indonesia, with emphasis on the Suharto-era and the transition from New Order to Reformation\n \"We need to be told\" – Article by Australian journalist and Suharto critic John Pilger on the fortieth anniversary of the Transition to the New Order, New Statesman, 17 October 2005.",
"Tiger Tales: Indonesia — Website accompanying a 2002 BBC World Service radio documentary on Indonesia, focusing on early Suharto era.",
"Features interviews with Indonesian generals and victims of the regime.",
"Program is available in streaming RealAudio format.",
"\"Vengeance with a Smile\", Time magazine, 15 July 1966\n\n|-\n\n|-\n\n|-\n\n|-\n\n|-\n\n|-\n\n|-\n\n|-\n\n|-\n\n \n1921 births\n2008 deaths\nCendana family\nChiefs of Staff of the Indonesian Army\nCollars of the Order of Isabella the Catholic\nCommanders of the Indonesian National Armed Forces\nDeaths from kidney failure\nDeaths from lung disease\nDefense ministers of Indonesia\nGenocide perpetrators\nGolkar politicians\nHonorary Knights Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath\nGrand Crosses Special Class of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany\nIndonesian Sunni Muslims\nIndonesian anti-communists\nIndonesian generals\nJavanese people\nLeaders who took power by coup\nMembers of Pembela Tanah Air\nNew Order (Indonesia)\nPeople from Yogyakarta\nPeople of the Cold War\nPeople of the Indonesian National Revolution\nPoliticide perpetrators\nPolitical corruption\nPresidents of Indonesia\nSecretaries-General of the Non-Aligned Movement\nIndonesian nationalists\nSunni Muslims\nRecipients of the Order of Prince Yaroslav the Wise, 1st class"
] | [
"The second and longest serving President of Indonesia was Suharto, who was an army officer and politician.",
"Suharto was president for 31 years from the fall of Sukarno in 1967, until his resignation in 1998.",
"His US$38 billion net worth is still debated at home and abroad.",
"During the Dutch colonial era, Suharto was born in a small village in the Godean area near the city of Yogyakarta.",
"He was raised in humble circumstances.",
"He lived with foster parents for most of his childhood after his parents divorced.",
"Suharto served in the Indonesian security forces during the Japanese occupation.",
"He joined the Indonesian Army during the independence struggle.",
"When full Indonesian independence was achieved, Suharto rose to the rank of Major general.",
"On 30 September and 1 October 1965, Suharto-led troops \"countered\" an attempted coup.",
"This attempt was supported by the Communist Party of Indonesia according to the official history of the army.",
"Suharto wrested power from Indonesia's founding president, Sukarno, after the army led an anti-communist purge.",
"He was elected president the year after he was appointed acting president.",
"The \"de-Sukarnoization\" campaign was mounted to reduce the former president's influence.",
"Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, support for Suharto's presidency was active.",
"The New Order's authoritarianism and widespread corruption were a source of discontent and he resigned after the 1997 Asian financial crisis.",
"The state funeral for Suharto was held in January of 2008.",
"Suharto built a strong, centralised and military-dominated government.",
"During the Cold War, his anti-communist stance won him the economic and diplomatic support of the West.",
"Indonesia experienced significant industrialisation, economic growth, and improved levels of educational attainment for most of his presidency.",
"The Indonesian government is considering awarding the status of National Hero to Suharto.",
"The most corrupt leader in modern history is Suharto, who is accused of stealing up to 35 billion dollars during his rule.",
"Suharto had only one name.",
"He was sometimes called \"Haji\" or \"el-Haj Mohammed Suharto\", but these names were not part of his formal name.",
"The spelling \"Suharto\" reflects modern Indonesian orthography, although the general approach in Indonesia is to rely on the spelling preferred by the person concerned.",
"He used the original spelling throughout his life, and at the time of his birth, the standard transcription was \"Soeharto\".",
"The Indonesian government and media use a different spelling than the international English-language press.",
"On June 8, 1921, Suharto was born in a plaited-bamboo-walled house in the hamlet of Kemusuk, a part of the larger village of Godean.",
"The cultural heartland of the Javanese is west of the village.",
"He was the only child of his father's second marriage.",
"His father was an irrigation official and had two children from his previous marriage.",
"His mother was related to Hamengkubuwono V by his first concubine.",
"Suharto was placed in the care of his paternal great-aunt after his mother suffered a nervous breakdown five weeks after his birth.",
"Kertosudiro and Sukirah divorced early in Suharto's life.",
"At the age of three, Suharto was returned to his mother, who had married a local farmer.",
"In 1929, Suharto's father took him to live with his sister, who was married to an agricultural supervisor, in a poor and low-yielding farming area near Wonogiri.",
"After two years, he was taken back to his mother in Kemusuk by his father.",
"Suharto had a father-figure and a stable home when he was raised by Prawirowihardjo.",
"In 1931, he moved to the town of Wonogiri to attend the primary school, living first with Prawirohardjo's son and later with his father's relative.",
"Suharto was acquainted with Darjatmo, a dukun of Javanese mystical arts and faith healing.",
"Suharto surrounded himself with symbolic language after the experience deeply affected him.",
"Difficulties in paying the fees for his education in Wonogiri resulted in another move back to his father in Kemusuk, where he continued studying at a lower-fee Muhammad middleiyah school until 1939.",
"Suharto's upbringing is thought to have given him little interest in anti-colonialism or political concerns beyond his immediate surroundings.",
"Suharto had no contact with European colonisers.",
"He didn't learn to speak Dutch or other European languages in his youth.",
"He was in the Dutch military when he learned to speak Dutch.",
"Suharto took a clerical job at a bank at the age of 18 after finishing middle school.",
"He was forced to resign after his clothes were destroyed by a bicycle accident.",
"He joined the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army in June 1940 after a spell of unemployment.",
"With the Dutch under German occupation and the Japanese pressing for access to Indonesian oil supplies, the Dutch opened up the KNIL to large intakes of previously excluded Javanese.",
"Suharto was assigned to Battalion XIII at Rampal, graduated from a short training course atKNIL Kaderschool in Gombong to become a sergeant, and was posted to aKNIL reserve battalion in Cisarua.",
"Suharto abandoned his uniform after the Dutch surrendered to the Japanese in 1942.",
"He was one of thousands of Indonesians who took the opportunity to join Japanese-organised security forces by joining the Yogyakarta police force.",
"In October 1943, Suharto was transferred from the police force to the newly formed Japanese-sponsored militia.",
"A local version of the Japanese bushido, or \"way of the warrior\", was encountered during his training to serve with the rank of shodancho.",
"The training encouraged an anti-Dutch and pro-nationalist thought.",
"Suharto's way of thinking is believed to have been influenced by the encounter with a militarist ideology.",
"After being posted to the coastal defence battalion at Wates south of Yogyakarta, Suharto was admitted for training for company commander in Bogor from April to August 1944.",
"He was the company commander and conducted training for new recruits.",
"The Japanese surrender and Proclamation of Indonesian Independence in August 1945 occurred while Suharto was posted to the remote Brebeg area on the slopes of Mount Wilis to train new NCOs to replace those executed by the Japanese.",
"Two days after the Japanese surrender in the Pacific, the independence leaders of Indonesia, Hatta and Sukarno, were appointed president and vice-president of the new Republic.",
"The Japanese command ordered Suharto to return to Yogyakarta.",
"As republican groups rose to assert Indonesian independence, Suharto joined a new unit.",
"When the republican forces were formally organised in October 1945, he was appointed deputy commander and battalion commander.",
"Suharto earned respect as a field commander and was appointed the head of a brigade after he was involved in fighting against Allied troops.",
"In the early years of the war, Suharto was promoted to Major and became the leader of Battalion X.",
"The arrival of the Allies, under a mandate to return the situation to the status quo ante bellum, led to clashes between Indonesian republicans and Allied forces.",
"The Dutch are helping British forces.",
"On 17 May 1946, Suharto's Division X troops halted an advance by the Dutch T \"Tiger\" brigade.",
"He was invited to draft the guidelines for the Battle Leadership Headquarters by Lieutenant-Colonel Sunarto Kusumodirjo.",
"The Republic of Indonesia's military forces were constantly restructured.",
"The \"Diponegoro Division\" was headed by Suharto by August 1946.",
"The defence of the west and southwest of Yogyakarta was taken over by the Diponegoro Division.",
"Dutch sources reported that Suharto was assisting opium traffickers in the transport of opium through the territory he controlled to generate income.",
"In September 1948, Suharto was dispatched to meet Musso, chairman of the Indonesian Communist Party, in an unsuccessful attempt at a peaceful reconciliation of the communist uprising.",
"The Dutch launched \"Operation Crow\" in December 1948, which resulted in the capture of Sukarno and Hatta.",
"The Wehrkreise III, consisting of two battalions, waged guerrilla warfare against the Dutch from the hills south of Yogyakarta.",
"On 1 March 1949, Suharto's forces and local militia regained control of the city.",
"Other sources say Sultan Hamengkubuwono IX of Yogyakarta and the Panglima of the Third Division ordered the attack on Suharto.",
"General Abdul Nasution said that Suharto took great care in preparing the \"General offensive\".",
"The show of force which proved that the Dutch had failed to win the guerrilla war galvanised civilians sympathetic to the Republican cause.",
"The Dutch withdrew from the Yogyakarta area in June 1949 after the UN Security Council pressured them to stop the military offensive.",
"The city of Yogyakarta was taken over by Suharto in June 1949.",
"The daughter of a minor noble was married to Suharto during the Revolution.",
"The marriage lasted until Tien's death in 1996.",
"The couple had six children.",
"It was considered acceptable for the wife to pursue genteel commerce to supplement the family budget, allowing her husband to keep his dignity in his official role.",
"Suharto's presidency was undermined by the commercial dealings of Tien, her children and grandchildren.",
"Suharto served in the Indonesian National Army after Indonesian independence.",
"The Makassar Uprising was a rebellion of former colonial soldiers who supported the Dutch-established State of East Indonesia and its federal entity, the United States of Indonesia.",
"During his year in Makassar, Suharto became acquainted with his neighbours, the Habibie family, whose eldest son was later Suharto's vice-president, and went on to succeed him as president.",
"In 1951–1952, Suharto led his troops in defeating the Islamic-inspired rebellion of Battalion .",
"Appointed to lead four battalions in early 1953, he organised their participation in battling Darul Islam in northwestern Central Java and anti-bandit operations in the Mount Merapi area.",
"He wanted to stem the sympathies of his troops.",
"Suharto disliked Islamic and communist radicalism because of his experience in this period.",
"He was the commander of the Diponegoro Division from 1956 to 1959 and was responsible for Central Java and Yogyakarta provinces.",
"His relationship with prominent businessmen Liem Sioe Liong and Bob Hasan, which extended throughout his presidency, began in Central Java, where he was involved in a series of \"profit-generating\" enterprises conducted primarily to keep the poorly funded military unit functioning.",
"Suharto was implicated in a 1959 smuggling scandal.",
"He was relieved of his position and transferred to the army's Staff and Command School in Bandung.",
"He was promoted to brigadier-general and army deputy chief of staff in the late 1960s.",
"He was given the additional command of the army's new Strategic Reserve on March 6, 1961.",
"In January 1962, Suharto was promoted to the rank of major general and was appointed to lead a joint army-navy-air force command.",
"This formed the military side of the campaign to win western New Guinea from the Dutch, who were preparing it for its own independence.",
"In 1965, Suharto was given operational command of Konfrontasi against Malaysia.",
"Fearing that Konfrontasi would leave Java thinly covered by the army and hand control to the 2 million strong Indonesian Communist Party (PKI), he decided to open secret contacts with the British and Malaysians.",
"Tensions between the military and communists increased in April 1965, when Sukarno endorsed the immediate implementation of the PKI's proposal for a \"fifth armed force\" consisting of armed peasants and workers.",
"The idea of the army establishing its own armed forces was rejected by the leadership.",
"In May, the \"Gilchrist Document\" aroused Sukarno's fear of a military plot to overthrow him, a fear which he repeatedly mentioned during the next few months.",
"In his independence day speech in August, Sukarno promised to commit Indonesia to an anti-imperialist alliance with China and other communist regimes and warned the army not to interfere.",
"The economy of Indonesia deteriorated rapidly with worsening poverty and hunger while foreign debt obligations became unmanageable and infrastructure crumbled as a result of Sukarno's devoted energy for domestic and international politics.",
"The inherent conflict between the military and the communists made Guided Democracy fragile.",
"The military, nationalists, and Islamic groups were shocked by the rapid growth of the communist party.",
"They were worried about the establishment of a communist state in Indonesia.",
"The PKI had three million members by 1965, and was particularly strong in Central Java.",
"The party was the most powerful in Indonesia.",
"On 1 October 1965, six army generals were kidnapped and executed in Jakarta by soldiers from the Presidential Guard, Diponegoro Division, and Brawidjaja Division.",
"The areas in front of the Presidential Palace, the national radio station, and the telecommunications centre were occupied by soldiers.",
"Untung bin Syamsuri said on the radio that the \"30 September Movement\" had prevented a coup attempt on Sukarno and that it was an internal army affair.",
"No attempt was made on Suharto's life.",
"Suharto and his son Tommy were in the army hospital in Jakarta.",
"He was visited by Colonel Abdul Latief, a key member of the Movement and a close family friend of Suharto.",
"Latief testified that the conspirators assumed Suharto to be a Sukarno-loyalist and went to inform him of the kidnapping plan.",
"After being told of the killings, Suharto went to the headquarters of the military.",
"The Kopassus special forces captured control of the centre of Jakarta, including the radio station, without resistance.",
"Suharto said over the radio that six generals had been kidnapped by \"counter-revolutionaries\" and that the 30 September movement intended to overthrow Sukarno.",
"He said he was in control of the army and would crush the movement.",
"Suharto gave an ultimatum to Halim Air Force Base, where the G30S had based themselves and where the air force commander had gathered, causing them to scatter before Suhartoist soldiers occupied the air.",
"Suharto's group was firmly in control of the army by 2 October, thanks to the failed coup and the president's authority to restore order and security.",
"Suharto led a ceremony to bury the generals' bodies.",
"Complicated and partisan theories persist over the identity of the attempted coup's organizers and their aims.",
"The army's version was that the PKI was solely to blame.",
"A propaganda campaign by the army and Islamic and Catholic student groups convinced both Indonesian and international audiences that it was a communist coup attempt.",
"The army in alliance with civilian religious groups, and backed by the United States and other Western powers, led a campaign of mass killings to purge Indonesian society, government, and armed forces of the Communist Party of Indonesia.",
"The purge spread from Jakarta to the rest of the country.",
"At least 500,000 to over 1 million were killed according to the most widely accepted estimates.",
"1.5 million people were imprisoned at one time or another.",
"The Indonesian Communist Party was eliminated by the military and political Islam as a result of the purge.",
"The purge was described as one of the worst mass murders of the 20th century by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency.",
"Suharto was careful not to be seen to be seizing power in his own coup as he continued to command loyalty from large sections of the armed forces.",
"After the quashing of the 30 September movement, there was a complicated process of political manoeuvres against Sukarno.",
"In January 1966 university students under the banner of KAMI began demonstrations against the Sukarno government, calling for the abolition of PKI and control of hyperinflation.",
"The students were protected by the army.",
"Street fights broke out between the students and pro-Sukarno loyalists with the pro-Suharto students prevailing due to army protection.",
"In July 1966 Suharto was promoted to full general.",
"The killing of a student demonstrator and the order for the disbandment of KAMI galvanized public opinion against the president.",
"The appearance of troops around Merdeka Palace during a cabinet meeting forced Sukarno to flee by helicopter.",
"Three pro-Suharto generals went to meet Sukarno.",
"They secured a presidential decree that gave Suharto authority to take any action necessary to maintain security.",
"Suharto used the Supersemar letter to purge pro-Sukarno elements from the parliament, the government and the military, accusing them of being communist sympathizers.",
"The army forced the appointment of a new cabinet consisting of Suharto supporters.",
"Suharto replaced chiefs of the navy, air force, and police force with his supporters after the army arrested pro-Sukarno and pro-communist members of the MPRS.",
"In June 1966 the parliament passed a number of resolutions, including the banning of Marxism–Leninism and stripping Sukarno of his title of President for Life.",
"After removing Indonesia from the UN in the previous year, the government ended the Konfrontasi with Malaysia.",
"The remaining support for the president among some elements of the armed forces made Suharto not want to remove him.",
"By January 1967, Suharto felt confident that he had removed all support for Sukarno within the armed forces, and the MPRS decided to hold another session to impeach him.",
"Suharto was named acting president on 12 March 1967, after the MPRS session stripped him of his remaining power.",
"He died in June 1970 after being placed under house arrest.",
"Suharto was appointed president by the MPRS on 27 March 1968.",
"\"New Order\" was promoted by Suharto as a society based on the Pancasila ideology.",
"After initially being careful not to offend sensitivities of Islamic scholars who feared Pancasila might develop into a quasi-religious cult, Suharto secured a parliamentary resolution in 1983 which obliged all organisation in Indonesia to adhere to Pancasila as a fundamental principle.",
"There were mandatory Pancasila training programs for all Indonesians.",
"The vagueness of Pancasila was used by Suharto's government to justify their actions.",
"The dual function policy enabled the military to have an active role in all levels of the Indonesian government, economy, and society.",
"Suharto needed to share power with Indonesian generals who considered him to be primus inter pares, as well as Islamic and student groups who participated in the anti-Communist purge.",
"Suharto, aided by his \"Office of Personal Assistants\" (Aspri) group of military officers from his days as commander of Diponegoro Division, began to systematically cement his hold on power by sidelining potential rivals while rewarding loyalists with political power.",
"Suharto had General Abdul Haris Nasution removed from his position as MPRS chairman in 1969 and forced him to retire from the military in 1972 because of his successful fight against the bill.",
"In 1967, Suharto's decision to allow participation of existing political parties in elections was opposed by three generals.",
"Suharto sent Dharsono overseas as an ambassador, while the other two commanders were sent to distant North Sumatra and South Sulawesi.",
"Suharto's relationship with the student movement soured due to the increasing authoritarianism and corruption of his regime.",
"While many original leaders of the 1966 student movement were successfully co-opted into the regime, Suharto was faced with large student demonstrations challenging the legitimacy of 1971 elections, as well as the costly construction of the Taman Mini Indonesia Indah theme park.",
"Future national figures Dorodjatun Kuntjoro-Jakti, Adnan Buyung Nasution, Hariman Siregar, and Syahrir were imprisoned by the regime.",
"The decree on \"Normalisation of Campus Life\" (NKK) was issued by Suharto in April 1978.",
"Riots broke out in Jakarta during a visit by the Japanese prime minister, posing a significant challenge to Suharto.",
"Students demonstrating against Japanese investors were encouraged by the deputy commander of the armed forces.",
"The general disliked the influence of Suharto's inner circle.",
"According to Suharto, the riots were engineered by Sumitro to destabilise the regime and resulted in his dismissal and forced retirement.",
"The Disaster of 15 January is referred to as the Malari incident.",
"In order to appease popular dissent, Suharto dissolved Aspri.",
"In 1980, fifty prominent political figures signed the Petition of Fifty, which criticized Suharto's use of Pancasila to silence his critics.",
"Some of them were imprisoned with others having restrictions imposed on their movements because Suharto refused to address their concerns.",
"In order to appease demands from civilian politicians for the holding of elections, the Suharto government formulated a series of laws regarding elections and the structure and duties of parliament.",
"A house of representatives and regional representatives are included in the law that gives for a parliament.",
"100 of the members of DPR would be directly appointed by the government, while the remaining seats would be allocated to political organizations based on the results of the general election.",
"Government control over legislative affairs, particularly the appointment of presidents, is ensured by this mechanism.",
"Suharto realized that he needed to align himself with a political party.",
"In 1969 Suharto decided to take over control of an obscure military-run federation of NGOs called Golkar and transform it into his electoral vehicle under the coordination of his right-hand man Ali Mur.",
"The first general election was held on July 3, 1971 and had ten participants, including Golkar, four Islamic parties, as well as five nationalist and Christian parties.",
"Golkar secured 62.8% of the popular vote by campaigning on a non-ideological platform, aided by official government support and subtle intimidation tactics.",
"The general session of the newly elected MPR appointed Suharto to second-term in office with Sultan Hamengkubuwono IX as vice-president.",
"The four Islamic parties merged into the United Development Party on January 5, 1973, in order for the government to have better control.",
"The \"re-call\" system to remove outspoken legislators from their positions was established by the government to ensure that these parties never developed effective opposition.",
"Suharto was re-elected by the MPR five times using the \"Pancasila Democracy\" system.",
"Suharto would be able to pass his agenda with virtually no opposition as a result of Golkar's dominance in the MPR.",
"He held all the power in the country.",
"Various social engineering projects designed to transform Indonesian society into a de-politicised \"floating mass\" supportive of the national mission of \"development\" were started by Suharto.",
"Civil society groups were formed by the government to support government programs.",
"The Indonesian Civil Servants Corps was created in 1971 as a union of civil servants to ensure their loyalty.",
"In 1968, Suharto started the family-planning program to stem the high population growth rate and increase per-capita income.",
"The spelling reform of the Indonesian language was done on 17 August 1972 by Suharto.",
"The Suharto government passed several laws as part of the so-called \"Basic Policy for the Solution of Chinese Problem\", where only one Chinese-language publication was controlled by the Army.",
"The government began requiring a Letter of Proof of Citizenship of the Republic of Indonesia in 1978.",
"Although the law required all citizens of foreign descent, the law only applied to Chinese descent.",
"This made it difficult for Chinese Indonesians to join the military or police.",
"Political stability Suharto relied on the military to maintain domestic security.",
"To maintain strict control over the country, Suharto expanded the army's territorial system and appointed military officers as regional heads.",
"By 1969 70% of Indonesia's provincial governors and more than half of its district chiefs were active military officers.",
"Operasi Trisula was given the green light by Suharto, who ordered several military operations to end the communist PGRS-Paraku insurgency in West Kalimantan.",
"Attacks on oil workers by the first incarnation of the Free Aceh Movement under Hasan di Tiro in 1977 led to the dispatch of small special forces who quickly killed or forced the movement's members to flee abroad.",
"In March 1981 Suharto authorized a successful special forces mission to end the hijacking of a Garuda Indonesia flight at Don Mueang International Airport in Thailand.",
"To ensure long-term support for the New Order, Suharto's administration enlisted a group of mostly US-educated Indonesian economists, dubbed the \"Berkeley Mafia\", to formulate significant changes in economic policy.",
"Inflation was lowered from 660% in 1966 to 19% in 1969 by cutting subsidies, decreasing government debt, and changing the exchange rate mechanism.",
"The threat of famine was alleviated by the influx of rice aid from the US.",
"With a lack of domestic capital that was required for economic growth, the New Order reversed Sukarno's economic self-sufficiency policies and opened selected economic sectors of the country to foreign investment through the 1967 Foreign Investment Law.",
"Suharto traveled to Europe and Japan to promote Indonesia.",
"The first foreign investors to return to Indonesia were mining companies.",
"Chinese-Indonesian entrepreneurs emerged in the late 1960s and early 1970s in the import-substitution light-manufacturing sector thanks to government regulatory frameworks.",
"The Inter-Governmental Group on Indonesia (IGGI) gave the government low-interest foreign aid to cover its budget deficit.",
"The government invested in infrastructure under a series of five-year plans from 1969 to 1998 after the jump in oil export revenue from the 1973 oil crisis.",
"Outside the formal economy, Suharto created a network of charities run by the military and his family in exchange for government support and permits.",
"Much of the money was recycled as a slush fund to reward political allies and to maintain support for the New Order.",
"The mismanagement and corruption under the leadership of Suharto's close ally, Ibnu Sutowo, caused Pertamina to default on its foreign loans in 1975.",
"The national debt was nearly doubled by the government bail-out of the company.",
"The Suharto government adopted a policy of neutrality in the Cold War but was quietly aligned with the Western bloc to secure support for Indonesia's economic recovery.",
"Western countries were impressed by Suharto's anti-communist credentials.",
"Diplomatic relations with China were suspended in October of 1967, due to suspicion of Chinese involvement in the 30 September movement.",
"The Soviet Union embargoed military sales to Indonesia because of Suharto.",
"Several agreements to restructure huge debts incurred by the Soviet Union and other Eastern European communist states were secured by the foreign minister.",
"Indonesia became a founding member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in August 1967.",
"The goal of this organisation is to establish a peaceful relationship between Southeast Asian countries.",
"The left-wing Fretilin emerged victorious in the civil war of 1974 after the withdrawal of Portuguese authority.",
"With the approval of Western countries, Suharto decided to prevent the establishment of a communist state.",
"Suharto authorized a full-scale invasion of the colony on December 7, 1975, followed by its official annexation as Indonesia's 27th province of East Timor in July 1976.",
"The government maintained a strong military force in the half-island until 1999 after the \"encirclement and annihilation\" campaigns broke the back of Fretilin control over the hinterlands.",
"There was an estimated minimum of 90,800 and maximum of 213,600 conflict-related deaths in East Timor during Indonesian rule.",
"At least 100,000 deaths were caused by Indonesia's invasion and occupation of East Timor.",
"The New York Agreement of 1962 requires a referendum on the integration of West Irian into Indonesia before the end of 1969 in order to comply.",
"Since the Indonesian takeover in 1963, several bands of former Dutch-organised militia have been at large in the jungles.",
"The logistical challenge and politicalIgnorance of the population were cited as reasons why the referendum would be sent via tribal chiefs.",
"The United Nations General Assembly noted in 1969 that the unanimous decision for integration with Indonesia was produced using the above strategy.",
"Support for Suharto's regime was sustained over the course of three decades.",
"In 1970, 45% of Indonesia's population was living in poverty.",
"From 1966 to 1997, Indonesia's real GDP per capita increased from US$806 to US$4,114.",
"The manufacturing sector made up less than 10% of GDP in 1966.",
"By 1997 manufacturing had risen to 25% of GDP and 53% of exports were manufactured products.",
"The launching of a series of Palapa telecommunication satellites was one of the major infrastructure developments of the government.",
"The parliament granted Suharto the title of \"Father of Development\" on 9 March 1983 in order to justify his regime.",
"Life expectancy increased from 47 years in 1966 to 67 years in 1997 as a result of healthcare reform Suharto government's health-care programs.",
"The education gap between boys and girls was almost eliminated by 1983 thanks to the government's Inpres program.",
"Suharto received a gold medal from the Food and Agriculture Organization in November 1985 for achieving rice self-sufficiency in Indonesia.",
"In the early 1980s, Suharto government responded to the fall in oil exports by shifting the basis of the economy to export-oriented labour-intensive manufacturing, made globally competitive by Indonesia's low wages and a series of currency devaluation.",
"Chinese-Indonesian companies evolved into large conglomerates which dominated the nation's economy.",
"The largest conglomerates were led by Liem Sioe Liong, Oei Ek Tjong, and Tjia Han Poen.",
"Suharto decided to support the growth of a small number of Chinese-Indonesian conglomerates since they would not pose a political challenge due to their ethnic-minority status, but from his experience, he deemed them to possess the skills and capital needed to create real growth for the country.",
"The conglomerates provided vital financing for Suharto's \"regime maintenance\" activities.",
"In the late 1980s, the Suharto government decided to de-regulate the banking sector to encourage savings and provide a domestic source of financing needed for growth.",
"There was a 50% increase in the number of banks from 1989 to 1991 as a result of the October Package of 1988.",
"The government introduced a program to promote savings.",
"The Jakarta Stock Exchange recorded a \"bull run\" due to a flurry of domestic IPOs and an influx of foreign funds after the deregulation in 1990.",
"The collapse of Suharto's regime was caused by the weak regulatory environment of the financial sector and the sudden availability of credit.",
"The rapid expansion of corruption coincides with the growth of the economy.",
"Suharto's children grew into greedy adults in the early 1980s.",
"Their companies were protected from competition by monopolies.",
"The toll-expressway market was monopolised by Tutut, the national car project was monopolised by Tommy, and the cinema market was monopolised by 21 Cineplex.",
"In Indonesia, the family controls about 36,000 km2 of real estate, including 100,000 m2 of prime office space in Jakarta and 40% of the land.",
"Suharto's family members received free shares in 1,251 of Indonesia's most lucrative domestic companies, while foreign-owned companies were encouraged to establish \"strategic partnerships\" with Suharto family companies.",
"The public and private sectors gave millions of dollars to the Suharto family's yayasans.",
"The highest-ranking of the ten most self-enriching leaders in the previous two decades was Suharto and his family, according to a list released in 2004.",
"Suharto's grip on power was maintained by emasculation of civil society, engineered elections, and use of the military's coercive powers.",
"After retiring from the military in 1976, Suharto reorganized the armed forces to concentrate power in the hands of the president.",
"General Leonardus Benjamin Moerdani was appointed head of the armed forces who adopted a hard-line approach to elements who challenged the administration.",
"He was not a threat to Suharto.",
"The army killed up to 10,000 suspected criminals in response to a spike in the crime rate.",
"Pancasila was the sole ideology that caused protests from conservative Islamic groups who considered Islamic law to be above all other conceptions.",
"The army killed up to 100 Muslim protesters in 1984.",
"Hundreds of conservative Islamic activists, including future parliamentary leader AM Fatwa, were arrested after a series of small bombings.",
"The Free Aceh Movement launched attacks on police in 1989 which led to a military operation which killed 2,000 people.",
"In 1984 the Suharto government issued a law requiring all media to have a press operating license, which could be revoked at any time.",
"Suharto's human rights record came under scrutiny after the 1991 Santa Cruz massacre.",
"The non-aligned movement was headed by Suharto in 1992 and Indonesia became a founding member in 1989.",
"The military lost access to power and lucrative rent-seeking opportunities because of the business dealings of Suharto's family.",
"Military legislators tried to block the nomination of a Suharto-loyalist as vice-president during the March 1988 MPR session.",
"The president dismissed Moerdani from the position of military chief after he criticized the Suharto family's corruption.",
"Key military positions were held by loyalists as Suharto slowly \"de-militarise\" his regime.",
"Suharto began courting support from Islamic elements in order to shift his power base away from the military.",
"He promoted Islamic values and careers of Islamic-oriented generals after taking up the name Haji Mohammad Suharto.",
"In order to win support from the Muslim business community who resented the dominance of Chinese-Indonesian conglomerates, Suharto formed the ICMI in 1990.",
"The first race riots against ethnic- Chinese began in Medan in April 1994.",
"By the 1990s, Suharto's government was dominated by civilian politicians who owed their positions to Suharto.",
"When two prominent Indonesian magazines and a tabloid newspaper reported on criticism over the purchase of almost the entire fleet of the East German Navy in 1993, the Ministry of Information ordered them to stop.",
"The Indonesian middle class became restless with Suharto's autocracy and the corruption of his children in the 1990s, leading to demands for reform of the New Order government.",
"By 1996, the daughter of Sukarno was becoming an opposition figure for this growing discontent.",
"In response, Suharto backed a co-opted group of PDI led by Suryadi.",
"There were fatal riots and loot in Jakarta on July 27, 1996, when Lieutenant-General Sutiyoso led an attack on soldiers and hired criminals.",
"The army squad led by Suharto's son-in-law, Major-General Prabowo Subianto, arrested 200 democracy activists and kidnapped 23 of them.",
"A special 1,54 troy ounce gold coin with Suharto's face on one side was released in 1995 for the 50th anniversary of Indonesian Independence.",
"The rank of five-star \"General of the Army\" was awarded to Sudirman and Abdul Haris Nasution.",
"Indonesia was hardest hit by the 1997 Asian financial crisis.",
"There were large capital outflows against the US dollar.",
"Many Indonesian companies borrowed cheaper US dollar loans due to poor bank lending practices.",
"The Indonesian rupiah dropped in value due to panic buying of US dollar by these companies.",
"In early 1998 it was around 2,600 to a low point.",
"17,000.",
"Unemployment and poverty increased across the country as a result of companies being bankrupted and the economy being shrank.",
"The country's dollar reserves were drained by the central bank's futile attempts to defend the rupiah.",
"Between October 1997 and the following April, Suharto signed three letters of intent with the International Monetary Fund for an economic reform process.",
"The Indonesian Bank Restructuring Agency was set up in January 1998 to take over management of troubled banks in order to prevent the collapse of the financial system.",
"In February 1998 the government raised the interest rate up to 70%, which worsened the contraction of the economy.",
"In December 1997, Suharto did not attend the first summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations due to a minor stroke, creating speculation about his health and the future of his presidency.",
"In mid-December, as the crisis swept through Indonesia and an estimated $150 billion of capital was being withdrawn from the country, he appeared at a press conference to re-assert his authority and to urge people to trust the government and the collapsing rupiah.",
"His attempts to re-inspire had little effect.",
"His family and associates were spared the most stringent requirements of the reform process, which undermined confidence in the economy and his leadership.",
"The political tension increased after the economic crisis.",
"The 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"Suharto was re-elected in March 1998 after the 1997 election was rigged.",
"He put his own family and business associates in the cabinet, including his daughter, who was Minister of Social Affairs.",
"There was a run on stores and pushed up prices because of currency instability caused by the appointments and budget.",
"Riots broke out in Medan in May 1998 after the government increased fuel prices by 70%.",
"Amien Rais, a Muslim politician, spoke out against Suharto's presidency in January 1998 after the country's mounting economic and political crises.",
"Suharto was on a state visit to Egypt when security forces killed four demonstrators.",
"Over 1,000 people were killed and thousands of buildings were destroyed during the riots in Jakarta and other cities.",
"Ethnic Chinese businesses were targets in the violence.",
"There is a suggestion that Suharto tried to divert blame for the crisis from the ethnic- Chinese and the student movement.",
"The grounds and roof of the parliament building were occupied by tens of thousands of university students.",
"In 2003 Suharto offered to resign and reorganize his cabinet.",
"His political allies abandoned him when they refused to join the new cabinet.",
"On 18 May, Suharto issued a decree which gave him authority to take any measures to restore security, however, he decided not to enforce the decree to prevent conflict with the population.",
"In accordance with the constitution, vice-president Habibie assumed the presidency after Suharto resigned.",
"According to recently released documents from the United States Department of State, the Clinton Administration sought to maintain close ties with the Indonesian military in the aftermath of Suharto's fall from power.",
"Suharto became a recluse in his family's compound in the Menteng area of Jakarta after he resigned from the presidency.",
"Suharto's family spent a lot of time fighting corruption investigations.",
"According to a leaked telephone conversation between the president and the attorney-general in 1999, politicians who owed their positions to Suharto were protected from prosecution.",
"Time Asia estimated Suharto's family fortune to be US$15 billion in cash, shares, corporate assets, real estate, jewellery and fine art.",
"The magazine was sued by Suharto for defamation.",
"Indonesia's Supreme Court ordered Time Asia magazine to pay damages to Suharto.",
"The Central Jakarta district court judgement was reversed by the High Court.",
"During his 32-year presidency, Suharto was accused of misappropriation of between US$15–35 billion.",
"When Indonesian authorities began to investigate the corruption during Suharto's presidency, he was placed under house arrest.",
"In July 2000 it was announced that he was to be accused of swindling US$571 million of government donations to one of several foundations and then using the money to finance family investments.",
"He was not able to stand trial because of his declining health.",
"State prosecutors tried again in 2002, but doctors said they had a brain disease.",
"On March 26, 2008, a civil court judge acquitted Suharto of corruption, but ordered his charitable foundation to pay over a hundred million dollars.",
"In 2002, Suharto's son Tommy was sentenced to 15 years' jail for ordering the killing of a judge, illegal weapons possession, and fleeing justice.",
"He was freed on a \"conditional release\".",
"Probosutedjo, Suharto's half-brother, was tried and convicted for corruption and the loss of $10 million from the Indonesian state.",
"He was sentenced to four years in jail.",
"The Corruption Eradication Commission launched a probe into the alleged scandal of the \"judicial mafia\" which uncovered offers of $600,000 to various judges.",
"In October 2005, Probosutedjo confessed to the scheme and his lawyers were arrested.",
"The full four-year term was restored.",
"He was arrested on 30 November 2005 after a brief standoff at a hospital in which he was protected by a group of police officers.",
"On July 9, 2007, Indonesian prosecutors filed a civil lawsuit against Suharto, in order to recover state funds which allegedly disappeared from a scholarship fund.",
"Suharto was hospitalized many times for health problems after he resigned from the presidency.",
"His declining health made it difficult for prosecutors to prosecute him.",
"Indonesia did not support attempts to prosecute him.",
"Suharto's health and fitness for trial will be evaluated by a team of twenty doctors.",
"Dr Marjo Subiandono stated that Suharto has two permanent cerebral defects.",
"The re-examination is part of a \"last opportunity\" to prosecute Suharto, according to the Attorney General.",
"There is a chance of a suit being filed against the Suharto estate.",
"Suharto died on January 4, 2008 at the Pertamina Central Hospital, Jakarta, due to poor health, swelling of limbs and stomach, and partialrenal failure.",
"His health deteriorated over the course of several weeks due to a number of factors, including anaemia and low blood pressure, as well as internal bleeding, fluid on his lungs, and blood in his faeces and urine.",
"Suharto's health deteriorated further as a sepsis infection spread through his body.",
"His family consented to the removal of life support machines if his condition did not improve.",
"Suharto was declared one of Indonesia's \"best sons\" by the president minutes after his death.",
"Suharto's body was taken from Jakarta to a mausoleum in Central Java.",
"He was buried alongside his wife in a state military funeral with full honours, with the Kopassus elite forces and KOSTRAD commandos as the honour guard and pallbearers.",
"The Colonel is Asep Subarkah.",
"The president, vice-president, government ministers, and armed forces chiefs of staff were in attendance.",
"Tens of thousands of people lined the streets to see the convoy.",
"Regional heads of state offered their sympathies.",
"The President declared a week of official mourning after Suharto's death.",
"The flags of Indonesia were flown at half-mast.",
"There is a statue in front of the museum.",
"It was built by Probosutedjo.",
"FELDA Soeharto, a village in Selangor, Malaysia, was named after him in 1977 after he paid a visit to the village in 1970.",
"There are corruption charges against Suharto History of Indonesia, as well as a list of high-ranking commanders of the Indonesian War of Independence.",
"There is a press release.",
"There is an international monetary fund.",
"Robert Cribb wrote about genocide in Indonesia.",
"The Journal of Genocide Research was published in 2001.",
"The Pretext for Mass Murder: 30 September Movement and Suharto's Coup D'état was written by John Roosa.",
"The University of Wisconsin Press.",
"The year 2001.",
"Cambridge University Press published Suharto: A Political Biography in 2001.",
"McGlynn, John H.",
"The year 2007.",
"Indonesia during the Soeharto years.",
"There is an issue, incidents and images in Jakarta.",
"In Jakarta, there is a book called pak harto: the untold stories.",
"Time magazine published a story on Suharto's regime and family on the first anniversary of his resignation.",
"The website Tiger Tales: Indonesia focuses on the early Suharto era.",
"Interviews with Indonesian generals and victims of the regime.",
"The program can be streamed in RealAudio format.",
"\"Vengeance with a smile\", Time magazine, 15 July 1966"
] | <mask> (; ; 8 June 1921 – 27 January 2008) was an Indonesian army officer and politician, who served as the second and the longest serving President of Indonesia. Widely regarded as a dictator by international observers, <mask> was president for 31 years from the fall of Sukarno in 1967 until his resignation in 1998. The legacy of his 31-year rule, and his US$38 billion net worth, is still debated at home and abroad. <mask> was born in the small village of Kemusuk, in the Godean area near the city of Yogyakarta, during the Dutch colonial era. He grew up in humble circumstances. His Javanese Muslim parents divorced not long after his birth, and he lived with foster parents for much of his childhood. During the Japanese occupation of the country, Suharto served in the Japanese-organized Indonesian security forces.During Indonesia's independence struggle, he joined the newly formed Indonesian Army. There, <mask> rose to the rank of Major general by the time full Indonesian independence was achieved. An attempted coup on 30 September and 1 October 1965 was "countered" by Suharto-led troops. According to the official history made by the army, this attempt was backed by the Communist Party of Indonesia. The army subsequently led an anti-communist purge and <mask> wrested power from Indonesia's founding president, Sukarno. He was appointed acting president in 1967 and elected president the following year. He then mounted a social campaign known as "de-Sukarnoization" to reduce the former president's influence.Support for <mask>'s presidency was active throughout the 1970s and 1980s. By the 1990s, the New Order's authoritarianism and widespread corruption were a source of discontent and, following the 1997 Asian financial crisis which led to widespread unrest, he resigned in May 1998. <mask> died in January 2008 and was given a state funeral. Under his "New Order" administration, <mask> constructed a strong, centralised and military-dominated government. An ability to maintain stability over a sprawling and diverse Indonesia and an avowedly anti-communist stance won him the economic and diplomatic support of the West during the Cold War. For most of his presidency, Indonesia experienced significant industrialisation, economic growth, and improved levels of educational attainment. Plans to award the status of National Hero to Suharto are being considered by the Indonesian government and have been debated vigorously in Indonesia.According to Transparency International, <mask> is the most corrupt leader in modern history, having embezzled an alleged US$15–35 billion during his rule. Name
Like many Javanese, <mask> had only one name. Religious contexts in recent years has sometimes called him as "Haji" or "el-Haj <mask>", but these names were not part of his formal name nor generally used. The spelling "Suharto" reflects modern Indonesian orthography, although the general approach in Indonesia is to rely on the spelling preferred by the person concerned. At the time of his birth, the standard transcription was "Soeharto", and he used the original spelling throughout his life. The international English-language press generally uses the spelling 'Suharto' while the Indonesian government and media use 'Soeharto'. Early life
<mask> was born on 8 June 1921 in a plaited-bamboo-walled house in the hamlet of Kemusuk, a part of the larger village of Godean, then part of the Dutch East Indies.The village is west of Yogyakarta, the cultural heartland of the Javanese. Born to ethnic Javanese parents, he was the only child of his father's second marriage. His father, Kertosudiro, had two children from his previous marriage and was a village irrigation official. His mother, Sukirah, a local woman, was distantly related to Hamengkubuwono V by his first concubine. Five weeks after <mask>'s birth, his mother suffered a nervous breakdown; he was placed in the care of his paternal great-aunt, Kromodirjo as a result. Kertosudiro and Sukirah divorced early in Suharto's life and both later remarried. At the age of three, <mask> was returned to his mother, who had married a local farmer whom Suharto helped in the rice paddies.In 1929, <mask>'s father took him to live with his sister, who was married to an agricultural supervisor, Prawirowihardjo, in the town of Wuryantoro in a poor and low-yielding farming area near Wonogiri. Over the following two years, he was taken back to his mother in Kemusuk by his stepfather and then back again to Wuryantoro by his father. Prawirowihardjo took to raising the boy as his own, which provided Suharto with a father-figure and a stable home in Wuryantoro. In 1931, he moved to the town of Wonogiri to attend the primary school, living first with Prawirohardjo's son Sulardi, and later with his father's relative Hardjowijono. While living with Hardjowijono, <mask> became acquainted with Darjatmo, a dukun ("shaman") of Javanese mystical arts and faith healing. The experience deeply affected him and later, as president, <mask> surrounded himself with powerful symbolic language. Difficulties in paying the fees for his education in Wonogiri resulted in another move back to his father in Kemusuk, where he continued studying at a lower-fee Muhammadiyah middle school in the city of Yogyakarta until 1939.<mask>'s upbringing contrasts with that of leading Indonesian nationalists such as Sukarno in that he is believed to have had little interest in anti-colonialism, or political concerns beyond his immediate surroundings. Unlike Sukarno and his circle, <mask> had little or no contact with European colonisers. Consequently, he did not learn to speak Dutch or other European languages in his youth. He learned to speak Dutch after his induction into the Dutch military in 1940. Military career
World War II and Japanese occupation
<mask> finished middle school at the age of 18 and took a clerical job at a bank in Wuryantaro. He was forced to resign after a bicycle mishap tore his only working clothes. Following a spell of unemployment, he joined the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army (KNIL) in June 1940 and undertook basic training in Gombong near Yogyakarta.With the Netherlands under German occupation and the Japanese pressing for access to Indonesian oil supplies, the Dutch had opened up the KNIL to large intakes of previously excluded Javanese. <mask> was assigned to Battalion XIII at Rampal, graduated from a short training course at KNIL Kaderschool in Gombong to become a sergeant, and was posted to a KNIL reserve battalion in Cisarua. Following the Dutch surrender to the invading Japanese forces in March 1942, <mask> abandoned his KNIL uniform and went back to Wurjantoro. After months of unemployment, he then became one of the thousands of Indonesians who took the opportunity to join Japanese-organised security forces by joining the Yogyakarta police force. In October 1943, <mask> was transferred from the police force to the newly formed Japanese-sponsored militia, the PETA (Defenders of the Fatherland) in which Indonesians served as officers. In his training to serve with the rank of shodancho (platoon commander) he encountered a localised version of the Japanese bushido, or "way of the warrior", used to indoctrinate troops. This training encouraged an anti-Dutch and pro-nationalist thought, although toward the aims of the Imperial Japanese militarists.The encounter with a nationalistic and militarist ideology is believed to have profoundly influenced <mask>'s own way of thinking. <mask> was posted to a PETA coastal defence battalion at Wates, south of Yogyakarta until he was admitted for training for company commander (chudancho) in Bogor from April to August 1944. As company commander, he conducted training for new PETA recruits in Surakarta, Jakarta, and Madiun. The Japanese surrender and Proclamation of Indonesian Independence in August 1945 occurred while <mask> was posted to the remote Brebeg area (on the slopes of Mount Wilis) to train new NCOs to replace those executed by the Japanese in the aftermath of the failed February 1945 PETA Revolt in Blitar, led by Supriyadi. Indonesian National Revolution
Two days after the Japanese surrender in the Pacific, independence leaders Sukarno and Hatta declared Indonesian independence and were appointed president and vice-president respectively of the new Republic. <mask> disbanded his regiment under orders from the Japanese command and returned to Yogyakarta. As republican groups rose to assert Indonesian independence, <mask> joined a new unit of the newly formed Indonesian army.Based on his PETA experience, he was appointed deputy commander, and subsequently, a battalion commander when the republican forces were formally organised in October 1945. <mask> was involved in fighting against Allied troops around Magelang and Semarang and was subsequently appointed the head of a brigade as lieutenant-colonel, having earned respect as a field commander. In the early years of the war, he organised local armed forces into Battalion X of Regiment I; <mask> was promoted to Major and became Battalion X's leader. The arrival of the Allies, under a mandate to return the situation to the status quo ante bellum, quickly led to clashes between Indonesian republicans and Allied forces, i.e. returning Dutch and assisting British forces. <mask> led his Division X troops to halt an advance by the Dutch T ("Tiger") Brigade on 17 May 1946. It earned him the respect of Lieutenant-Colonel Sunarto Kusumodirjo, who invited him to draft the working guidelines for the Battle Leadership Headquarters (MPP), a body created to organise and unify the command structure of the Indonesian Nationalist forces.The military forces of the still infant Republic of Indonesia were constantly restructuring. By August 1946, <mask> was head of the 22nd Regiment of Division III (the "Diponegoro Division") stationed in Yogyakarta. In late 1946, the Diponegoro Division assumed responsibility for the defence of the west and southwest of Yogyakarta from Dutch forces. Conditions at the time are reported by Dutch sources as miserable; <mask> himself is reported as assisting smuggling syndicates in the transport of opium through the territory he controlled, to generate income. In September 1948, <mask> was dispatched to meet Musso, chairman of the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) in an unsuccessful attempt at a peaceful reconciliation of the communist uprising in Madiun. In December 1948, the Dutch launched "Operation Crow", which resulted in the capture of Sukarno and Hatta and the capital Yogyakarta. <mask> was appointed to lead the Wehrkreise III, consisting of two battalions, which waged guerrilla warfare against the Dutch from the hills south of Yogyakarta.In dawn raids on 1 March 1949, Suharto's forces and local militia recaptured the city, holding it until noon. Suharto's later accounts had him as the lone plotter, although other sources say Sultan Hamengkubuwono IX of Yogyakarta, and the Panglima of the Third Division ordered the attack. However, General Abdul Nasution said that Suharto took great care in preparing the "General Offensive" (Indonesian Serangan Umum). Civilians sympathetic to the Republican cause within the city had been galvanised by the show of force which proved that the Dutch had failed to win the guerrilla war. Internationally, the United Nations Security Council pressured the Dutch to cease the military offensive and to recommence negotiations, which eventually led to the Dutch withdrawal from the Yogyakarta area in June 1949 and to complete transfer of sovereignty in December 1949. Suharto was responsible for the takeover of Yogyakarta city from the withdrawing Dutch in June 1949. During the Revolution, Suharto married Siti Hartinah (known as Madam Tien), the daughter of a minor noble in the Mangkunegaran royal house of Solo.The arranged marriage was enduring and supportive, lasting until Tien's death in 1996. The couple had six children: Siti Hardiyanti Rukmana (Tutut, born 1949), Sigit Harjojudanto (born 1951), Bambang Trihatmodjo (born 1953), Siti Hediati ("Titiek Suharto", born 1959), Hutomo Mandala Putra (Tommy, born 1962), and Siti Hutami Endang Adiningish (Mamiek, born 1964). Within the Javanese upper class, it was considered acceptable for the wife to pursue genteel commerce to supplement the family budget, allowing her husband to keep his dignity in his official role. The commercial dealings of Tien, her children and grandchildren became extensive and ultimately undermined Suharto's presidency. Post-Independence military career
In the years following Indonesian independence, Suharto served in the Indonesian National Army, primarily in Java. In 1950, as a colonel, he led the Garuda Brigade in suppressing the Makassar Uprising, a rebellion of former colonial soldiers who supported the Dutch-established State of East Indonesia and its federal entity, the United States of Indonesia. During his year in Makassar, Suharto became acquainted with his neighbours, the Habibie family, whose eldest son BJ Habibie was later Suharto's vice-president, and went on to succeed him as president.In 1951–1952, <mask> led his troops in defeating the Islamic-inspired rebellion of Battalion 426 in the Klaten area of Central Java. Appointed to lead four battalions in early 1953, he organised their participation in battling Darul Islam insurgents in northwestern Central Java and anti-bandit operations in the Mount Merapi area. He also sought to stem leftist sympathies amongst his troops. His experience in this period left Suharto with a deep distaste for both Islamic and communist radicalism. Between 1956 and 1959, he served in the important position of commander of Diponegoro Division based in Semarang, responsible for Central Java and Yogyakarta provinces. His relationship with prominent businessmen Liem Sioe Liong and Bob Hasan, which extended throughout his presidency, began in Central Java, where he was involved in a series of "profit-generating" enterprises conducted primarily to keep the poorly funded military unit functioning. Army anti-corruption investigations implicated Suharto in a 1959 smuggling scandal.Relieved of his position, he was transferred to the army's Staff and Command School (Seskoad) in the city of Bandung. While in Bandung, he was promoted to brigadier-general, and in late 1960, promoted to army deputy chief of staff. On 6 March 1961, he was given an additional command, as head of the army's new Strategic Reserve (Korps Tentara I Cadangan Umum AD, later KOSTRAD), a ready-reaction air-mobile force based in Jakarta. In January 1962, <mask> was promoted to the rank of major general and appointed to lead Operation Mandala, a joint army-navy-air force command based in Makassar. This formed the military side of the campaign to win western New Guinea from the Dutch, who were preparing it for its own independence, separate from Indonesia. In 1965, <mask> was assigned operational command of Sukarno's Konfrontasi, against the newly formed Malaysia. Fearful that Konfrontasi would leave Java thinly covered by the army, and hand control to the 2 million-strong Indonesian Communist Party (PKI), he authorised a Kostrad intelligence officer, Ali Murtopo, to open secret contacts with the British and Malaysians.Overthrow of Sukarno (1965)
Background
Tensions between the military and communists increased in April 1965, when Sukarno endorsed the immediate implementation of the PKI's proposal for a "fifth armed force" consisting of armed peasants and workers. However, this idea was rejected by the army's leadership as being tantamount to the PKI establishing its own armed forces. In May, the "Gilchrist Document" aroused Sukarno's fear of a military plot to overthrow him, a fear which he repeatedly mentioned during the next few months. On his independence day speech in August, Sukarno declared his intention to commit Indonesia to an anti-imperialist alliance with China and other communist regimes and warned the army not to interfere. While Sukarno devoted his energy for domestic and international politics, the economy of Indonesia deteriorated rapidly with worsening widespread poverty and hunger, while foreign debt obligations became unmanageable and infrastructure crumbled. Sukarno's Guided Democracy stood on fragile grounds due to the inherent conflict between its two underlying support pillars, the military and the communists. The military, nationalists, and the Islamic groups were shocked by the rapid growth of the communist party under Sukarno's protection.They feared the imminent establishment of a communist state in Indonesia. By 1965, the PKI had three million members and was particularly strong in Central Java and Bali. The party had become the most potent political party in Indonesia. Abortive coup and anti-communist purge
Before dawn on 1 October 1965, six army generals were kidnapped and executed in Jakarta by soldiers from the Presidential Guard, Diponegoro Division, and Brawidjaja Division. Soldiers occupied Merdeka Square including the areas in front of the Presidential Palace, the national radio station, and telecommunications centre. At 7:10 am Untung bin Syamsuri announced on the radio that the "30 September Movement" had forestalled a coup attempt on Sukarno by "CIA-backed power-mad generals", and that it was "an internal army affair". The movement never made any attempt on <mask>'s life.<mask> had been in Jakarta army hospital that evening with his three-year-old son Tommy who had a scalding injury. It was here that he was visited by Colonel Abdul Latief, a key member of the Movement and close family friend of Suharto. According to Latief's later testimony, the conspirators assumed Suharto to be a Sukarno-loyalist; hence Latief went to inform him of the impending kidnapping plan to save Sukarno from treacherous generals, upon which <mask> seemed to offer his neutrality. Upon being told of the killings, <mask> went to KOSTRAD headquarters just before dawn from where he could see soldiers occupying Merdeka Square. He mobilised KOSTRAD and RPKAD (now Kopassus) special forces to seize control of the centre of Jakarta, capturing key strategic sites including the radio station without resistance. Suharto announced over the radio at 9:00 pm that six generals had been kidnapped by "counter-revolutionaries" and that the 30 September Movement actually intended to overthrow Sukarno. He said he was in control of the army, and that he would crush the Movement and safeguard Sukarno.<mask> issued an ultimatum to Halim Air Force Base, where the G30S had based themselves and where Sukarno, air force commander Omar Dhani and PKI chairman Dipa Nusantara Aidit had gathered, causing them to disperse before Suhartoist soldiers occupied the airbase on 2 October after short fighting. With the failure of the poorly organised coup, and having secured authority from the president to restore order and security, <mask>'s faction was firmly in control of the army by 2 October (he was officially appointed army commander on 14 October). On 5 October, <mask> led a dramatic public ceremony to bury the generals' bodies. Complicated and partisan theories continue to this day over the identity of the attempted coup's organisers and their aims. The army's version, and subsequently that of the "New Order", was that the PKI was solely responsible. A propaganda campaign by the army and Islamic and Catholic student groups convinced both Indonesian and international audiences that it was a communist coup attempt, and that the killings were cowardly atrocities against Indonesian heroes. The army in alliance with civilian religious groups, and backed by the United States and other Western powers, led a campaign of mass killings to purge Indonesian society, government, and armed forces of the Communist Party of Indonesia and other leftist organisations.The purge spread from Jakarta to much of the rest of the country. The most widely accepted estimates are that at least 500,000 to over 1 million were killed. As many as 1.5 million were imprisoned at one stage or another. As a result of the purge, one of Sukarno's three pillars of support, the Indonesian Communist Party, was effectively eliminated by the other two, the military and political Islam. The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency described the purge as "one of the worst mass murders of the 20th century". Power struggle
Sukarno continued to command loyalty from large sections of the armed forces as well as the general population, and <mask> was careful not to be seen to be seizing power in his own coup. For eighteen months following the quashing of the 30 September Movement, there was a complicated process of political manoeuvres against Sukarno, including student agitation, stacking of parliament, media propaganda and military threats.In January 1966, university students under the banner of KAMI, begin demonstrations against the Sukarno government voicing demands for the disbandment of PKI and control of hyperinflation. The students received support and protection from the army. Street fights broke out between the students and pro-Sukarno loyalists with the pro-Suharto students prevailing due to army protection. In February 1966, Sukarno promoted <mask> to lieutenant-general (and to full general in July 1966). The killing of a student demonstrator and Sukarno's order for the disbandment of KAMI in February 1966 further galvanised public opinion against the president. On 11 March 1966, the appearance of unidentified troops around Merdeka Palace during a cabinet meeting (which Suharto had not attended) forced Sukarno to flee to Bogor Palace (60 km away) by helicopter. Three pro-Suharto generals, Major-General Basuki Rahmat, Brigadier-General M Jusuf, and Brigadier-General Amirmachmud went to Bogor to meet Sukarno.There, they persuaded and secured a presidential decree from Sukarno (see Supersemar) that gave Suharto authority to take any action necessary to maintain security. Using the Supersemar letter, <mask> ordered the banning of PKI the following day and proceeded to purge pro-Sukarno elements from the parliament, the government and military, accusing them of being communist sympathisers. The army arrested 15 cabinet ministers and forced Sukarno to appoint a new cabinet consisting of Suharto supporters. The army arrested pro-Sukarno and pro-communist members of the MPRS (parliament), and <mask> replaced chiefs of the navy, air force, and the police force with his supporters, who then began an extensive purge within each service. In June 1966, the now-purged parliament passed 24 resolutions including the banning of Marxism–Leninism, ratifying the Supersemar, and stripping Sukarno of his title of President for Life. Against the wishes of Sukarno, the government ended the Konfrontasi with Malaysia and rejoined the United Nations (Sukarno had removed Indonesia from the UN in the previous year). <mask> did not seek Sukarno's outright removal at this MPRS session due to the remaining support for the president among some elements of the armed forces.By January 1967, <mask> felt confident that he had removed all significant support for Sukarno within the armed forces, and the MPRS decided to hold another session to impeach Sukarno. On 22 February 1967, Sukarno announced he would resign from the presidency, and on 12 March, the MPRS session stripped him of his remaining power and named Suharto acting president. Sukarno was placed under house arrest in Bogor Palace; little more was heard from him, and he died in June 1970. On 27 March 1968, the MPRS appointed <mask> for the first of his five-year terms as president. "New Order" (1967–1998)
Ideology
Suharto promoted his "New Order", as opposed to Sukarno's "Old Order", as a society based on the Pancasila ideology. After initially being careful not to offend sensitivities of Islamic scholars who feared Pancasila might develop into a quasi-religious cult, <mask> secured a parliamentary resolution in 1983 which obliged all organisations in Indonesia to adhere to Pancasila as a fundamental principle. He also instituted mandatory Pancasila training programs for all Indonesians, from primary school students to office workers.In practice, however, the vagueness of Pancasila was exploited by Suharto's government to justify their actions and to condemn their opponents as "anti-Pancasila". The New Order also implemented the Dwifungsi ("Dual Function") policy which enabled the military to have an active role in all levels of the Indonesian government, economy, and society. Consolidation of power
Neutralisation of internal dissent
Having been appointed president, Suharto still needed to share power with various elements including Indonesian generals who considered Suharto as mere primus inter pares, and Islamic and student groups who participated in the anti-Communist purge. <mask>, aided by his "Office of Personal Assistants" (Aspri) clique of military officers from his days as commander of Diponegoro Division, particularly Ali Murtopo, began to systematically cement his hold on power by subtly sidelining potential rivals while rewarding loyalists with political position and monetary incentives. Having successfully stood-down MPRS chairman General Abdul Haris Nasution's 1968 attempt to introduce a bill which would have severely curtailed presidential authority, Suharto had him removed from his position as MPRS chairman in 1969 and forced his early retirement from the military in 1972. In 1967, generals Hartono Rekso Dharsono, Kemal Idris, and Sarwo Edhie Wibowo (dubbed "New Order Radicals") opposed Suharto's decision to allow participation of existing political parties in elections in favour of a non-ideological two-party system similar to those found in many Western countries. Suharto sent Dharsono overseas as an ambassador, while Idris and Wibowo were sent to distant North Sumatra and South Sulawesi as regional commanders.<mask>'s previously strong relationship with the student movement soured over the increasing authoritarianism and corruption of his regime. While many original leaders of the 1966 student movement (Angkatan '66) were successfully co-opted into the regime, Suharto was faced with large student demonstrations challenging the legitimacy of 1971 elections ("Golput" movement), the costly construction of the Taman Mini Indonesia Indah theme park (1972), the domination of foreign capitalists (Malari Incident of 1974), and the lack of term limits of <mask>'s presidency (1978). The regime responded by imprisoning many student activists (such as future national figures Dorodjatun Kuntjoro-Jakti, Adnan Buyung Nasution, Hariman Siregar, and Syahrir), and even sending troops to occupy the campus of ITB (Bandung Institute of Technology) from January–March 1978. In April 1978, Suharto moved decisively by issuing a decree on "Normalisation of Campus Life" (NKK) which prohibited political activities on-campus not related to academic pursuits. On 15–16 January 1974, Suharto faced a significant challenge when violent riots broke out in Jakarta during a visit by the Japanese prime minister Kakuei Tanaka. Students demonstrating against increasing dominance of Japanese investors were encouraged by General Sumitro, deputy commander of the armed forces. Sumitro was an ambitious general who disliked the strong influence of Suharto's Aspri inner circle.Suharto learned that the riots were engineered by Sumitro to destabilise the regime, resulting in Sumitro's dismissal and forced retirement. This incident is referred to as the Malari Incident (Malapetaka Lima Belas Januari / Disaster of 15 January). However, Suharto also disbanded Aspri to appease popular dissent. In 1980, fifty prominent political figures signed the Petition of Fifty, which criticised <mask>'s use of Pancasila to silence his critics. <mask> refused to address the petitioners' concerns, and some of them were imprisoned with others having restrictions imposed on their movements. Domestic politics and security
Depoliticization
To placate demands from civilian politicians for the holding of elections, as manifested in MPRS resolutions of 1966 and 1967, Suharto government formulated a series of laws regarding elections as well as the structure and duties of parliament which were passed by MPRS in November 1969 after protracted negotiations. The law provided for a parliament (Madjelis Permusjawaratan Rakjat/MPR) with the power to elect presidents, consisting of a house of representatives (Dewan Perwakilan Rakjat/DPR) and regional representatives.100 of the 460 members of DPR would be directly appointed by the government, while the remaining seats were allocated to political organizations based on results of the general election. This mechanism ensures significant government control over legislative affairs, particularly the appointment of presidents. To participate in the elections, <mask> realised the need to align himself with a political party. After initially considering alignment with Sukarno's old party the PNI, in 1969 <mask> decided to take over control of an obscure military-run federation of NGOs called Golkar ("Functional Groups") and transform it into his electoral vehicle under the coordination of his right-hand man Ali Murtopo. The first general election was held on 3 July 1971 with ten participants; consisting of Golkar, four Islamic parties, as well as five nationalist and Christian parties. Campaigning on a non-ideological platform of "development", and aided by official government support and subtle intimidation tactics, Golkar managed to secure 62.8% of the popular vote. The March 1973 general session of newly elected MPR promptly appointed <mask> to second-term in office with Sultan Hamengkubuwono IX as vice-president.On 5 January 1973, to allow better control, the government forced the four Islamic parties to merge into PPP (Partai Persatuan Pembangunan/United Development Party) while the five non-Islamic parties were fused into PDI (Partai Demokrasi Indonesia/Indonesian Democratic Party). The government ensured that these parties never developed effective opposition by controlling their leadership while establishing the "re-call" system to remove any outspoken legislators from their positions. Using this system dubbed the "Pancasila Democracy", <mask> was re-elected unopposed by the MPR in 1978, 1983, 1988, 1993, and 1998. Golkar won landslide majorities in the MPR at every election, ensuring that Suharto would be able to pass his agenda with virtually no opposition. Ultimately, he held all governing power in the country. Establishment of corporative groups
Suharto proceeded with various social engineering projects designed to transform Indonesian society into a de-politicised "floating mass" supportive of the national mission of "development", a concept similar to corporatism. The government formed various civil society groups to unite the populace in support of government programs.For instance, the government created the Indonesian Civil Servants Corps (Korps Pegawai Republik Indonesia or KORPRI) in November 1971 as union of civil servants to ensure their loyalty, organised the FBSI (Federasi Buruh Seluruh Indonesia) as the only legal labour union in February 1973, and established the MUI in 1975 to control Islamic clerics. In 1968, Suharto commenced the highly successful family-planning program (Keluarga Berentjana / KB) to stem the high population growth rate and hence increasing per-capita income. A lasting legacy from this period is the spelling reform of Indonesian language decreed by Suharto on 17 August 1972. Discrimination against Chinese Indonesians
Early into his regime, to promote assimilation of the influential Chinese-Indonesians, the Suharto government passed several laws as part of the so-called "Basic Policy for the Solution of Chinese Problem", whereby only one Chinese-language publication (controlled by the Army) was allowed to continue, all Chinese cultural and religious expressions (including the display of Chinese characters) were prohibited from public space, Chinese schools were seized and turned into Indonesian-language public schools, and the ethnic-Chinese were forced to take-up Indonesian-sounding names; creating a systematic cultural genocide. In 1978, the government began requiring a Letter of Proof of Citizenship of the Republic of Indonesia (, or SBKRI). Although the SBKRI was legally required for all citizens of foreign descent, in practice it was generally applied only to Chinese descent. This led to difficulties for Chinese Indonesians when enrolling in state universities, applying to be civil servants, or joining the military or police.Political stability
Suharto relied on the military to ruthlessly maintain domestic security, organised by the Kopkamtib (Operation Command for the Restoration of Security and Order) and BAKIN (State Intelligence Coordination Agency). To maintain strict control over the country, Suharto expanded the army's territorial system down to village-level, while military officers were appointed as regional heads under the rubric of the Dwifungsi ("Dual Function") of the military. By 1969, 70% of Indonesia's provincial governors and more than half of its district chiefs were active military officers. Suharto authorised Operasi Trisula which destroyed PKI-remnants trying to organise a guerrilla base in the Blitar area in 1968 and ordered several military operations that ended the communist PGRS-Paraku insurgency in West Kalimantan (1967–1972). Attacks on oil workers by the first incarnation of Free Aceh Movement separatists under Hasan di Tiro in 1977 led to the dispatch of small special forces detachments who quickly either killed or forced the movement's members to flee abroad. Notably, in March 1981, Suharto authorised a successful special forces mission to end hijacking of a Garuda Indonesia flight by Islamic extremists at Don Mueang International Airport in Bangkok. Economy
To stabilize the economy and to ensure long-term support for the New Order, Suharto's administration enlisted a group of mostly US-educated Indonesian economists, dubbed the "Berkeley Mafia", to formulate significant changes in economic policy.By cutting subsidies, decreasing government debt, and reforming the exchange rate mechanism, inflation was lowered from 660% in 1966 to 19% in 1969. The threat of famine was alleviated by the influx of USAID rice aid shipments from 1967 to 1968. With a lack of domestic capital that was required for economic growth, the New Order reversed Sukarno's economic self-sufficiency policies and opened selected economic sectors of the country to foreign investment through the 1967 Foreign Investment Law. <mask> travelled to Western Europe and Japan to promote investment in Indonesia. The first foreign investors to re-enter Indonesia included mining companies Freeport Sulphur Company / International Nickel Company. Following government regulatory frameworks, domestic entrepreneurs (mostly Chinese-Indonesians) emerged in the late 1960s and early 1970s in the import-substitution light-manufacturing sector such as Astra Group and Salim Group. From 1967, the government secured low-interest foreign aid from ten countries grouped under the Inter-Governmental Group on Indonesia (IGGI) to cover its budget deficit.With the IGGI funds and the later jump in oil export revenue from the 1973 oil crisis, the government invested in infrastructure under a series of five-year plans, dubbed REPELITA (Rencana Pembangunan Lima Tahun) I to VI from 1969 to 1998. Outside the formal economy, Suharto created a network of charitable organisations ("yayasan") run by the military and his family members, which extracted "donations" from domestic and foreign enterprises in exchange for necessary government support and permits. While some proceeds were used for charitable purposes, much of the money was recycled as a slush fund to reward political allies and to maintain support for the New Order. In 1975, the state-owned oil company, Pertamina, defaulted on its foreign loans as a result of mismanagement and corruption under the leadership of Suharto's close ally, Ibnu Sutowo. The government bail-out of the company nearly doubled the national debt. Foreign policy
Cold War
Upon assuming power, Suharto government adopted a policy of neutrality in the Cold War but was nevertheless quietly aligned with the Western bloc (including Japan and South Korea) to secure support for Indonesia's economic recovery. Western countries, impressed by Suharto's strong anti-communist credentials, were quick to offer their support.Diplomatic relations with China were suspended in October 1967 due to suspicion of Chinese involvement in the 30 September Movement (diplomatic relations was only restored in 1990). Due to Suharto's destruction of PKI, the Soviet Union embargoed military sales to Indonesia. However, from 1967 to 1970 foreign minister Adam Malik managed to secure several agreements to restructure massive debts incurred by Sukarno from the Soviet Union and other Eastern European communist states. Regionally, having ended confrontation with Malaysia in August 1966, Indonesia became a founding member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in August 1967. This organisation is designed to establish a peaceful relationship between Southeast Asian countries free from conflicts such as the ongoing Vietnam War. East Timor
In 1974, the neighbouring colony of Portuguese Timor descended into civil war after the withdrawal of Portuguese authority following the Carnation Revolution, whereby the left-wing populist Fretilin (Portuguese: Frente Revolucionária de Timor-Leste Independente) emerged triumphant. With approval from Western countries (including from U.S. president Gerald Ford and Australian prime minister Gough Whitlam during their visits to Indonesia), Suharto decided to intervene claiming to prevent the establishment of a communist state.After an unsuccessful attempt of covert support to Timorese groups UDT and APODETI, Suharto authorised a full-scale invasion of the colony on 7 December 1975 followed with its official annexation as Indonesia's 27th province of East Timor in July 1976. The "encirclement and annihilation" campaigns of 1977–1979 broke the back of Fretilin control over the hinterlands, although continuing guerrilla resistance caused the government to maintain a strong military force in the half-island until 1999. An estimated minimum of 90,800 and maximum of 213,600 conflict-related deaths occurred in East Timor during Indonesian rule (1974–1999); namely, 17,600–19,600 killings and 73,200 to 194,000 'excess' deaths from hunger and illness, although Indonesian forces were responsible for about 70% of the violent killings. Indonesia's invasion and occupation of East Timor during Suharto's presidency resulted in at least 100,000 deaths. Papua conflict
To comply with New York Agreement of 1962 which required a plebiscite on the integration of West Irian into Indonesia before the end of 1969, the Suharto government begin organising for a so-called "Act of Free Choice" scheduled for July–August 1969. The government sent RPKAD special forces under Sarwo Edhie Wibowo which secured the surrender of several bands of former Dutch-organised militia (Papoea Vrijwilligers Korps / PVK) at large in the jungles since the Indonesian takeover in 1963 while sending Catholic volunteers under Jusuf Wanandi to distribute consumer goods to promote pro-Indonesian sentiments. In March 1969, it was agreed that the plebiscite would be channelled via 1,025 tribal chiefs, citing the logistical challenge and political ignorance of the population.Using the above strategy, the plebiscite produced a unanimous decision for integration with Indonesia, which was duly noted by the United Nations General Assembly in November 1969. Socio-economic progress and growing corruption
Economic progress
Real socio-economic progress sustained support for Suharto's regime across three decades. By 1996, Indonesia's poverty rate has dropped to around 11% compared with 45% in 1970. From 1966 to 1997, Indonesia recorded real GDP growth of 5.03% pa, pushing real GDP per capita upwards from US$806 to US$4,114. In 1966, the manufacturing sector made up less than 10% of GDP (mostly industries related to oil and agriculture). By 1997, manufacturing had risen to 25% of GDP, and 53% of exports consisted of manufactured products. The government invested in massive infrastructure development (notably the launching of a series of Palapa telecommunication satellites); consequently, Indonesian infrastructure in the mid-1990s was considered at par with China.Suharto was keen to capitalize on such achievements to justify his regime, and the parliament (MPR) on 9 March 1983 granted him the title of "Father of Development". Healthcare reform
Suharto government's health-care programs (such as the Puskesmas program) increased life expectancy from 47 years (1966) to 67 years (1997) while cutting infant mortality rate by more than 60%. The government's Inpres program launched in 1973 resulted in primary school enrolment ratio reaching 90% by 1983 while almost eliminating the education gap between boys and girls. Sustained support for agriculture resulted in Indonesia achieving rice self-sufficiency by 1984, an unprecedented achievement which earned Suharto a gold medal from the FAO in November 1985. Oil and conglomerates
In the early 1980s, Suharto government responded to the fall in oil exports due to the 1980s oil glut by successfully shifting the basis of the economy to export-oriented labour-intensive manufacturing, made globally competitive by Indonesia's low wages and a series of currency devaluations. Industrialisation was mostly undertaken by Chinese-Indonesian companies which evolved into large conglomerates dominating the nation's economy. The largest of these conglomerates were the Salim Group led by Liem Sioe Liong (Sudono Salim), Sinar Mas Group led by Oei Ek Tjong (Eka Tjipta Widjaja), Astra Group led by Tjia Han Poen (William Soeryadjaya), Lippo Group led by Lie Mo Tie (Mochtar Riady), Barito Pacific Group led by Pang Djun Phen (Prajogo Pangestu), and Nusamba Group led by Bob Hasan.Suharto decided to support the growth of a small number of Chinese-Indonesian conglomerates since they would not pose a political challenge due to their ethnic-minority status, but from his experience, he deemed them to possess the skills and capital needed to create real growth for the country. In exchange for Suharto's patronage, the conglomerates provided vital financing for his "regime maintenance" activities. Deregulation
In the late 1980s, the Suharto government decided to de-regulate the banking sector to encourage savings and providing a domestic source of financing required for growth. Suharto decreed the "October Package of 1988" (PAKTO 88) which eased requirements for establishing banks and extending credit; resulting in a 50% increase in the number of banks from 1989 to 1991. To promote savings, the government introduced the TABANAS program to the populace. The Jakarta Stock Exchange, re-opened in 1977, recorded a "bull run", due to a spree of domestic IPOs and an influx of foreign funds after the deregulation in 1990. The sudden availability of credit fuelled robust economic growth in the early 1990s, but the weak regulatory environment of the financial sector sowed the seeds of the catastrophic crisis in 1997, which eventually destroyed Suharto's regime.Corruption
The growth of the economy coincided with the rapid expansion of corruption, collusion, and nepotism (Korupsi, Kolusi, dan Nepotisme / KKN). In the early 1980s, Suharto's children, particularly Siti Hardiyanti Rukmana ("Tutut"), Hutomo Mandala Putra ("Tommy"), and Bambang Trihatmodjo, had grown into greedy adults. Their companies were given lucrative government contracts and protected from market competition by monopolies. Examples include the toll-expressway market which was monopolised by Tutut, the national car project monopolised by Bambang and Tommy, and even the cinema market, monopolised by 21 Cineplex (owned by Suharto's cousin Sudwikatmono). The family is said to control about 36,000 km2 of real estate in Indonesia, including 100,000 m2 of prime office space in Jakarta and nearly 40% of the land in East Timor. Additionally, Suharto's family members received free shares in 1,251 of Indonesia's most lucrative domestic companies (mostly run by Suharto's ethnic-Chinese cronies), while foreign-owned companies were encouraged to establish "strategic partnerships" with Suharto family companies. Meanwhile, the myriad of yayasans run by the Suharto family grew even larger, levying millions of dollars in "donations" from the public and private sectors each year.In early 2004, the German anti-corruption NGO Transparency International released a list of what it believed to be the ten most self-enriching leaders in the previous two decades; in order of amount allegedly stolen in USD, the highest-ranking of these was <mask> and his family who are alleged to have embezzled $15 billion – $35 billion. Grip on power
By the 1980s, Suharto's grip on power was maintained by the emasculation of civil society, engineered elections, and use of the military's coercive powers. Upon his retirement from the military in June 1976, <mask> undertook a re-organisation of the armed forces that concentrated power away from commanders to the president. In March 1983, he appointed General Leonardus Benjamin Moerdani as head of the armed forces who adopted a hard-line approach on elements who challenged the administration. As a Roman Catholic, he was not a political threat to Suharto. Killings and Aceh independence
From 1983 to 1985, army squads killed up to 10,000 suspected criminals in response to a spike in the crime rate (see "Petrus Killings"). Suharto's imposition of Pancasila as the sole ideology caused protests from conservative Islamic groups who considered Islamic law to be above all other conceptions.The Tanjung Priok massacre saw the army kill up to 100 conservative Muslim protesters in September 1984. A retaliatory series of small bombings, including the bombing of Borobudur, led to arrests of hundreds of conservative Islamic activists, including future parliamentary leader AM Fatwa and Abu Bakar Bashir (later leader of Jemaah Islamiyah). Attacks on police by a resurgent Free Aceh Movement in 1989 led to a military operation which killed 2,000 people and ended the insurgency by 1992. In 1984, the Suharto government sought increased control over the press by issuing a law requiring all media to possess a press operating license (Surat Izin Usaha Penerbitan Pers, SIUPP) which could be revoked at any time by Ministry of Information. With the end of communism and the Cold War, Suharto's human rights record came under greater international scrutiny, particularly following the 1991 Santa Cruz Massacre in East Timor. Suharto was elected as head of the Non-Aligned Movement in 1992, while Indonesia became a founding member of APEC in 1989 and host to the Bogor APEC Summit in 1994. Discontent among the military
Domestically, the business dealings of <mask>'s family created discontent amongst the military who lost access to power and lucrative rent-seeking opportunities.The March 1988 MPR session, military legislators attempted to pressure <mask> by unsuccessfully seeking to block the nomination of Sudharmono, a Suharto-loyalist, as vice-president. Moerdani's criticism of the Suharto family's corruption saw the president dismiss him from the position of military chief. Suharto proceeded to slowly "de-militarise" his regime; he dissolved the powerful Kopkamtib in September 1988 and ensured key military positions were held by loyalists. In an attempt to diversify his power base away from the military, Suharto began courting support from Islamic elements. He undertook a much-publicised hajj pilgrimage in 1991, took up the name of Haji <mask>, and promoted Islamic values and the careers of Islamic-oriented generals. To win support from the nascent Muslim business community who resented the dominance of Chinese-Indonesian conglomerates, Suharto formed the ICMI (Indonesian Islamic Intellectuals' Association) in November 1990, which was led by his protégé BJ Habibie, the Minister for Research and Technology since 1978. During this period, race riots against ethnic-Chinese begin to occur quite regularly, beginning with April 1994 riot in Medan.By the 1990s, Suharto's government came to be dominated by civilian politicians such as Habibie, Harmoko, Ginandjar Kartasasmita, and Akbar Tanjung, who owed their position solely to Suharto. As a sign of Habibie's growing clout, when two prominent Indonesian magazines and a tabloid newspaper reported on criticism over Habibie's purchase of almost the entire fleet of the disbanded East German Navy in 1993 (most of the vessels were of scrap-value), the Ministry of Information ordered the offending publications be closed down on 21 June 1994. Last years of rule
In the 1990s, elements within the growing Indonesian middle class created by Suharto's economic development were becoming restless with his autocracy and the corruption of his children, fuelling demands for "Reformasi" (reform) of the almost 30-year-old New Order government. By 1996, Megawati Sukarnoputri, the daughter of Sukarno and chairwoman of the normally compliant PDI, was becoming a opposition figure for this growing discontent. In response, Suharto backed a co-opted faction of PDI led by Suryadi, which removed Megawati from the chair. On 27 July 1996, an attack by soldiers and hired thugs led by Lieutenant-General Sutiyoso on demonstrating Megawati supporters in Jakarta resulted in fatal riots and looting. This incident was followed by the arrest of 200 democracy activists, 23 of whom were kidnapped, and some killed, by army squads led by <mask>'s son-in-law, Major-General Prabowo Subianto.In 1995, Suharto released a special 1,54 troy ounce gold coin worth of 850,000 rupiah with his face on one side of the coin in the celebration of 50th anniversary of Indonesian Independence. On 5 October 1997, he awarded himself and generals Sudirman and Abdul Haris Nasution the honorary rank of five-star "General of the Army". Economic crisis and downfall
1997 Asian financial crisis
Indonesia was the country hardest hit by the 1997 Asian financial crisis. From mid-1997 there were large capital outflows and against the US dollar. Due to poor bank lending practices, many Indonesian companies borrowed cheaper US dollar loans while their income is mainly in Indonesian rupiah. The weakening rupiah spurred panic buying of US dollar by these companies, causing the Indonesian rupiah to drop in value from a pre-crisis level of Rp. 2,600 to a low point in early 1998 of around Rp.17,000. Consequently, many companies were bankrupted and the economy shrank by 13.7%, leading to sharp increases in unemployment and poverty across the country. Efforts by the central bank to defend the rupiah proved futile and only drained the country's dollar reserves. In exchange for US$43 billion in liquidity aid, between October 1997 and the following April, Suharto signed three letters of intent with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for an economic reform process. In January 1998, the government was forced to provide emergency liquidity assistance (BLBI), issue blanket guarantees for bank deposits and set-up the Indonesian Bank Restructuring Agency to take over management of troubled banks in order to prevent the collapse of the financial system. Among the steps taken on IMF recommendation, the government raised an interest rate up to 70% pa in February 1998, which further worsened the contraction of the economy. In December 1997, Suharto did not attend an ASEAN presidents' summit for the first time, which was later revealed to be due to a minor stroke, creating speculation about his health and the immediate future of his presidency.In mid-December, as the crisis swept through Indonesia and an estimated $150 billion of capital was being withdrawn from the country, he appeared at a press conference to re-assert his authority and to urge people to trust the government and the collapsing rupiah. However, his attempts to re-instil confidence had little effect. Evidence suggested that his family and associates were being spared the most stringent requirements of the IMF reform process, further undermining confidence in the economy and his leadership. The economic meltdown was accompanied by increasing political tension. Anti-Chinese riots occurred in Situbondo (1996), Tasikmalaya (1996), Banjarmasin (1997), and Makassar (1997); violent ethnic clashes broke out between the Dayak and Madurese settlers in Central Kalimantan in 1997. Golkar won the rigged 1997 election, and in March 1998, Suharto was voted unanimously to another five-year term. He nominated his protégé B. J. Habibie as vice president then stacking the cabinet with his own family and business associates, including his eldest daughter Tutut as Minister of Social Affairs.The appointments and the government's unrealistic 1998 budget created further currency instability, rumours and panic led to a run on stores and pushed up prices. The government increased the fuel prices further by 70% in May 1998, which triggered another wave of riots in Medan. Fall and resignation
With Suharto increasingly seen as the source of the country's mounting economic and political crises, prominent political figures, including Muslim politician Amien Rais, spoke out against his presidency, and in January 1998 university students began organising nationwide demonstrations. The crisis climaxed while Suharto was on a state visit to Egypt on 12 May 1998, when security forces killed four demonstrators from Jakarta's Trisakti University. Rioting and looting across Jakarta and other cities over the following days destroyed thousands of buildings and killed over 1,000 people. Ethnic Chinese and their businesses were particular targets in the violence. Theories on the origin of the violence include rivalry between military chief General Wiranto and Army Strategic Commander Lt. Gen. Prabowo Subianto, and the suggestion of deliberate provocation by Suharto to divert blame for the crisis to the ethnic-Chinese and discredit the student movement.On 16 May, tens of thousands of university students demanded <mask>'s resignation, and occupied the grounds and roof of the parliament building. Upon <mask>'s return to Jakarta, he offered to resign in 2003 and to reshuffle his cabinet. These efforts failed when his political allies deserted him by refusing to join the proposed new cabinet. According to Wiranto, on 18 May, Suharto issued a decree which provided authority to him to take any measures to restore security; however, Wiranto decided not to enforce the decree to prevent conflict with the population. On 21 May 1998, <mask> announced his resignation, upon which vice-president Habibie assumed the presidency in accordance with the constitution. Recently released documents from the United States Department of State indicate that the Clinton Administration sought to maintain close ties with the Indonesian military in the aftermath of Suharto's fall from power. Post-presidency (1998-2008)
Corruption charges
After resigning from the presidency, <mask> became a recluse in his family's compound in the Menteng area of Jakarta, protected by soldiers and rarely making public appearances.<mask>'s family spent much of their time fending-off corruption investigations. However, <mask> himself was protected from grave prosecution by politicians who owed their positions to the former president, as indicated in the leaked telephone conversation between President Habibie and attorney-general Andi Muhammad Ghalib in February 1999. In May 1999, Time Asia estimated Suharto's family fortune at US$15 billion in cash, shares, corporate assets, real estate, jewellery and fine art. Suharto sued the magazine seeking more than $US 27 billion in damages for libel over the article. On 10 September 2007, Indonesia's Supreme Court awarded <mask> damages against Time Asia magazine, ordering it to pay him one trillion rupiah ($128.59 million). The High Court reversed the judgement of an appellate court and Central Jakarta district court (made in 2000 and 2001). <mask> was placed highest on Transparency International's list of corrupt leaders with alleged misappropriation of between US$15–35 billion during his 32-year presidency.On 29 May 2000, <mask> was placed under house arrest when Indonesian authorities began to investigate the corruption during his presidency. In July 2000, it was announced that he was to be accused of embezzling US$571 million of government donations to one of several foundations under his control and then using the money to finance family investments. However, in September court-appointed doctors announced that he could not stand trial because of his declining health. State prosecutors tried again in 2002, but then doctors cited an unspecified brain disease. On 26 March 2008, a civil court judge acquitted <mask> of corruption but ordered his charitable foundation, Supersemar, to pay US$110 m (£55 m). In 2002, <mask>'s son Tommy was sentenced to 15 years' jail for ordering the killing of a judge (who had previously convicted him of corruption), illegal weapons possession and fleeing justice. In 2006, he was freed on "conditional release".In 2003, Suharto's half-brother Probosutedjo was tried and convicted for corruption and the loss of $10 million from the Indonesian state. He was sentenced to four years in jail. He later won a reduction of his sentence to two years, initiating a probe by the Corruption Eradication Commission into the alleged scandal of the "judicial mafia" which uncovered offers of $600,000 to various judges. Probosutedjo confessed to the scheme in October 2005, leading to the arrest of his lawyers. His full four-year term was reinstated. After a brief standoff at a hospital, in which he was reportedly protected by a group of police officers, he was arrested on 30 November 2005. On 9 July 2007, Indonesian prosecutors filed a civil lawsuit against Suharto, to recover state funds ($440 m or £219 m, which allegedly disappeared from a scholarship fund, and a further $1.1 billion in damages).Illness and death
Health
After resigning from the presidency, <mask> was hospitalised repeatedly for stroke, heart, and intestinal problems. His declining health hindered attempts to prosecute him as his lawyers successfully claimed that his condition rendered him unfit for trial. Moreover, there was little support within Indonesia for any attempts to prosecute him. In 2006, Attorney General Abdurrahman announced that a team of twenty doctors would be asked to evaluate <mask>'s health and fitness for trial. One physician, Brigadier-General Dr Marjo Subiandono, stated his doubts about by noting that "[<mask>] has two permanent cerebral defects." In a later Financial Times report, Attorney General Abdurrahman discussed the re-examination, and called it part of a "last opportunity" to prosecute Suharto criminally. Attorney General Abdurrahman left open the possibility of filing suit against the Suharto estate.Death
On 4 January 2008, <mask> was taken to the Pertamina Central Hospital, Jakarta with complications arising from poor health, swelling of limbs and stomach, and partial renal failure. His health fluctuated for several weeks but progressively worsened with anaemia and low blood pressure due to heart and kidney complications, internal bleeding, fluid on his lungs, and blood in his faeces and urine which caused a haemoglobin drop. On 23 January, <mask>'s health worsened further, as a sepsis infection spread through his body. His family consented to the removal of life support machines if his condition did not improve and he died on 27 January at 1:09 pm. Minutes after his death, then-Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono held a news conference declaring <mask> as one of Indonesia's "best sons" and invited the country to give the highest respect and honour to the ex-president. Funeral
<mask>'s body was taken from Jakarta to the Giri Bangun mausoleum complex near the Central Java city of Solo. He was buried alongside his late wife in a state military funeral with full honours, with the Kopassus elite forces and KOSTRAD commandos as the honour guard and pallbearers and Commander of Group II Kopassus Surakarta Lt.Colonel Asep Subarkah. In attendance were President Yudhoyono, who presided the ceremony, and vice-president, government ministers, and armed forces chiefs of staff. Tens of thousands of people lined the streets to see the convoy. Condolences were offered by many regional heads of state. President Yudhoyono that afternoon declared a week of official mourning starting from Suharto's day of death. During this period, all flags of Indonesia were flown at half-mast. A statue of him stand in the front of the museum.It was built by Probosutedjo and was inaugurated in 2013. FELDA Soeharto, a village in Selangor, Malaysia, is named in 1977 after him – previously in 1970 he paid a visit to the village as a part of momentous visit to normalize Indonesia-Malaysia relations. See also
Corruption charges against Suharto
History of Indonesia
List of high-ranking commanders of the Indonesian War of Independence
Purna Bhakti Pertiwi Museum
Timeline of Indonesian history
Notes
References
Sources
Camdessus Commends Indonesian Actions. Press Release. International Monetary Fund. (31 October 1997)
Robert Cribb, "Genocide in Indonesia,1965–1966". Journal of Genocide Research no.2:219–239, 2001.John Roosa, Pretext for Mass Murder: 30 September Movement & <mask>'s Coup D'état. The University of Wisconsin Press, 2006. .
Bibliography
Elson, R.E. (2001). Suharto: A Political Biography, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001. McGlynn, John H. et al. (2007). Indonesia in the Soeharto years.Issue, incidents and images, Jakarta, KITLV
Siti Hardiyanti Rukmana (2011). Pak Harto: The Untold Stories, Jakarta: PT Gramedia Pustaka Utama. External links
"Life in pictures: Indonesia's Suharto" BBC News
"Suharto, Inc." May 1999 Time magazine exposé on <mask>'s regime and family, published on the first anniversary of <mask>'s resignation
Shadow Play – Website accompanying a 2002 PBS documentary on Indonesia, with emphasis on the Suharto-era and the transition from New Order to Reformation
"We need to be told" – Article by Australian journalist and Suharto critic John Pilger on the fortieth anniversary of the Transition to the New Order, New Statesman, 17 October 2005. Tiger Tales: Indonesia — Website accompanying a 2002 BBC World Service radio documentary on Indonesia, focusing on early Suharto era. Features interviews with Indonesian generals and victims of the regime. Program is available in streaming RealAudio format. "Vengeance with a Smile", Time magazine, 15 July 1966
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1921 births
2008 deaths
Cendana family
Chiefs of Staff of the Indonesian Army
Collars of the Order of Isabella the Catholic
Commanders of the Indonesian National Armed Forces
Deaths from kidney failure
Deaths from lung disease
Defense ministers of Indonesia
Genocide perpetrators
Golkar politicians
Honorary Knights Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath
Grand Crosses Special Class of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
Indonesian Sunni Muslims
Indonesian anti-communists
Indonesian generals
Javanese people
Leaders who took power by coup
Members of Pembela Tanah Air
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People of the Cold War
People of the Indonesian National Revolution
Politicide perpetrators
Political corruption
Presidents of Indonesia
Secretaries-General of the Non-Aligned Movement
Indonesian nationalists
Sunni Muslims
Recipients of the Order of Prince Yaroslav the Wise, 1st class | [
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] | The second and longest serving President of Indonesia was <mask>, who was an army officer and politician. <mask> was president for 31 years from the fall of Sukarno in 1967, until his resignation in 1998. His US$38 billion net worth is still debated at home and abroad. During the Dutch colonial era, <mask> was born in a small village in the Godean area near the city of Yogyakarta. He was raised in humble circumstances. He lived with foster parents for most of his childhood after his parents divorced. <mask> served in the Indonesian security forces during the Japanese occupation.He joined the Indonesian Army during the independence struggle. When full Indonesian independence was achieved, <mask> rose to the rank of Major general. On 30 September and 1 October 1965, Suharto-led troops "countered" an attempted coup. This attempt was supported by the Communist Party of Indonesia according to the official history of the army. <mask> wrested power from Indonesia's founding president, Sukarno, after the army led an anti-communist purge. He was elected president the year after he was appointed acting president. The "de-Sukarnoization" campaign was mounted to reduce the former president's influence.Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, support for <mask>'s presidency was active. The New Order's authoritarianism and widespread corruption were a source of discontent and he resigned after the 1997 Asian financial crisis. The state funeral for Suharto was held in January of 2008. <mask> built a strong, centralised and military-dominated government. During the Cold War, his anti-communist stance won him the economic and diplomatic support of the West. Indonesia experienced significant industrialisation, economic growth, and improved levels of educational attainment for most of his presidency. The Indonesian government is considering awarding the status of National Hero to <mask>.The most corrupt leader in modern history is <mask>, who is accused of stealing up to 35 billion dollars during his rule. <mask> had only one name. He was sometimes called "Haji" or "el-Haj <mask>", but these names were not part of his formal name. The spelling "Suharto" reflects modern Indonesian orthography, although the general approach in Indonesia is to rely on the spelling preferred by the person concerned. He used the original spelling throughout his life, and at the time of his birth, the standard transcription was "Soeharto". The Indonesian government and media use a different spelling than the international English-language press. On June 8, 1921, <mask> was born in a plaited-bamboo-walled house in the hamlet of Kemusuk, a part of the larger village of Godean.The cultural heartland of the Javanese is west of the village. He was the only child of his father's second marriage. His father was an irrigation official and had two children from his previous marriage. His mother was related to Hamengkubuwono V by his first concubine. <mask> was placed in the care of his paternal great-aunt after his mother suffered a nervous breakdown five weeks after his birth. Kertosudiro and Sukirah divorced early in <mask>'s life. At the age of three, <mask> was returned to his mother, who had married a local farmer.In 1929, <mask>'s father took him to live with his sister, who was married to an agricultural supervisor, in a poor and low-yielding farming area near Wonogiri. After two years, he was taken back to his mother in Kemusuk by his father. <mask> had a father-figure and a stable home when he was raised by Prawirowihardjo. In 1931, he moved to the town of Wonogiri to attend the primary school, living first with Prawirohardjo's son and later with his father's relative. <mask> was acquainted with Darjatmo, a dukun of Javanese mystical arts and faith healing. <mask> surrounded himself with symbolic language after the experience deeply affected him. Difficulties in paying the fees for his education in Wonogiri resulted in another move back to his father in Kemusuk, where he continued studying at a lower-fee Muhammad middleiyah school until 1939.<mask>'s upbringing is thought to have given him little interest in anti-colonialism or political concerns beyond his immediate surroundings. <mask> had no contact with European colonisers. He didn't learn to speak Dutch or other European languages in his youth. He was in the Dutch military when he learned to speak Dutch. <mask> took a clerical job at a bank at the age of 18 after finishing middle school. He was forced to resign after his clothes were destroyed by a bicycle accident. He joined the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army in June 1940 after a spell of unemployment.With the Dutch under German occupation and the Japanese pressing for access to Indonesian oil supplies, the Dutch opened up the KNIL to large intakes of previously excluded Javanese. <mask> was assigned to Battalion XIII at Rampal, graduated from a short training course atKNIL Kaderschool in Gombong to become a sergeant, and was posted to aKNIL reserve battalion in Cisarua. <mask> abandoned his uniform after the Dutch surrendered to the Japanese in 1942. He was one of thousands of Indonesians who took the opportunity to join Japanese-organised security forces by joining the Yogyakarta police force. In October 1943, <mask> was transferred from the police force to the newly formed Japanese-sponsored militia. A local version of the Japanese bushido, or "way of the warrior", was encountered during his training to serve with the rank of shodancho. The training encouraged an anti-Dutch and pro-nationalist thought.<mask>'s way of thinking is believed to have been influenced by the encounter with a militarist ideology. After being posted to the coastal defence battalion at Wates south of Yogyakarta, <mask> was admitted for training for company commander in Bogor from April to August 1944. He was the company commander and conducted training for new recruits. The Japanese surrender and Proclamation of Indonesian Independence in August 1945 occurred while <mask> was posted to the remote Brebeg area on the slopes of Mount Wilis to train new NCOs to replace those executed by the Japanese. Two days after the Japanese surrender in the Pacific, the independence leaders of Indonesia, Hatta and Sukarno, were appointed president and vice-president of the new Republic. The Japanese command ordered Suharto to return to Yogyakarta. As republican groups rose to assert Indonesian independence, <mask> joined a new unit.When the republican forces were formally organised in October 1945, he was appointed deputy commander and battalion commander. <mask> earned respect as a field commander and was appointed the head of a brigade after he was involved in fighting against Allied troops. In the early years of the war, <mask> was promoted to Major and became the leader of Battalion X. The arrival of the Allies, under a mandate to return the situation to the status quo ante bellum, led to clashes between Indonesian republicans and Allied forces. The Dutch are helping British forces. On 17 May 1946, Suharto's Division X troops halted an advance by the Dutch T "Tiger" brigade. He was invited to draft the guidelines for the Battle Leadership Headquarters by Lieutenant-Colonel Sunarto Kusumodirjo.The Republic of Indonesia's military forces were constantly restructured. The "Diponegoro Division" was headed by <mask> by August 1946. The defence of the west and southwest of Yogyakarta was taken over by the Diponegoro Division. Dutch sources reported that Suharto was assisting opium traffickers in the transport of opium through the territory he controlled to generate income. In September 1948, <mask> was dispatched to meet Musso, chairman of the Indonesian Communist Party, in an unsuccessful attempt at a peaceful reconciliation of the communist uprising. The Dutch launched "Operation Crow" in December 1948, which resulted in the capture of Sukarno and Hatta. The Wehrkreise III, consisting of two battalions, waged guerrilla warfare against the Dutch from the hills south of Yogyakarta.On 1 March 1949, Suharto's forces and local militia regained control of the city. Other sources say Sultan Hamengkubuwono IX of Yogyakarta and the Panglima of the Third Division ordered the attack on Suharto. General Abdul Nasution said that Suharto took great care in preparing the "General offensive". The show of force which proved that the Dutch had failed to win the guerrilla war galvanised civilians sympathetic to the Republican cause. The Dutch withdrew from the Yogyakarta area in June 1949 after the UN Security Council pressured them to stop the military offensive. The city of Yogyakarta was taken over by Suharto in June 1949. The daughter of a minor noble was married to Suharto during the Revolution.The marriage lasted until Tien's death in 1996. The couple had six children. It was considered acceptable for the wife to pursue genteel commerce to supplement the family budget, allowing her husband to keep his dignity in his official role. Suharto's presidency was undermined by the commercial dealings of Tien, her children and grandchildren. <mask> served in the Indonesian National Army after Indonesian independence. The Makassar Uprising was a rebellion of former colonial soldiers who supported the Dutch-established State of East Indonesia and its federal entity, the United States of Indonesia. During his year in Makassar, <mask> became acquainted with his neighbours, the Habibie family, whose eldest son was later Suharto's vice-president, and went on to succeed him as president.In 1951–1952, <mask> led his troops in defeating the Islamic-inspired rebellion of Battalion . Appointed to lead four battalions in early 1953, he organised their participation in battling Darul Islam in northwestern Central Java and anti-bandit operations in the Mount Merapi area. He wanted to stem the sympathies of his troops. <mask> disliked Islamic and communist radicalism because of his experience in this period. He was the commander of the Diponegoro Division from 1956 to 1959 and was responsible for Central Java and Yogyakarta provinces. His relationship with prominent businessmen Liem Sioe Liong and Bob Hasan, which extended throughout his presidency, began in Central Java, where he was involved in a series of "profit-generating" enterprises conducted primarily to keep the poorly funded military unit functioning. Suharto was implicated in a 1959 smuggling scandal.He was relieved of his position and transferred to the army's Staff and Command School in Bandung. He was promoted to brigadier-general and army deputy chief of staff in the late 1960s. He was given the additional command of the army's new Strategic Reserve on March 6, 1961. In January 1962, <mask> was promoted to the rank of major general and was appointed to lead a joint army-navy-air force command. This formed the military side of the campaign to win western New Guinea from the Dutch, who were preparing it for its own independence. In 1965, <mask> was given operational command of Konfrontasi against Malaysia. Fearing that Konfrontasi would leave Java thinly covered by the army and hand control to the 2 million strong Indonesian Communist Party (PKI), he decided to open secret contacts with the British and Malaysians.Tensions between the military and communists increased in April 1965, when Sukarno endorsed the immediate implementation of the PKI's proposal for a "fifth armed force" consisting of armed peasants and workers. The idea of the army establishing its own armed forces was rejected by the leadership. In May, the "Gilchrist Document" aroused Sukarno's fear of a military plot to overthrow him, a fear which he repeatedly mentioned during the next few months. In his independence day speech in August, Sukarno promised to commit Indonesia to an anti-imperialist alliance with China and other communist regimes and warned the army not to interfere. The economy of Indonesia deteriorated rapidly with worsening poverty and hunger while foreign debt obligations became unmanageable and infrastructure crumbled as a result of Sukarno's devoted energy for domestic and international politics. The inherent conflict between the military and the communists made Guided Democracy fragile. The military, nationalists, and Islamic groups were shocked by the rapid growth of the communist party.They were worried about the establishment of a communist state in Indonesia. The PKI had three million members by 1965, and was particularly strong in Central Java. The party was the most powerful in Indonesia. On 1 October 1965, six army generals were kidnapped and executed in Jakarta by soldiers from the Presidential Guard, Diponegoro Division, and Brawidjaja Division. The areas in front of the Presidential Palace, the national radio station, and the telecommunications centre were occupied by soldiers. Untung bin Syamsuri said on the radio that the "30 September Movement" had prevented a coup attempt on Sukarno and that it was an internal army affair. No attempt was made on <mask>'s life.<mask> and his son Tommy were in the army hospital in Jakarta. He was visited by Colonel Abdul Latief, a key member of the Movement and a close family friend of <mask>. Latief testified that the conspirators assumed Suharto to be a Sukarno-loyalist and went to inform him of the kidnapping plan. After being told of the killings, <mask> went to the headquarters of the military. The Kopassus special forces captured control of the centre of Jakarta, including the radio station, without resistance. <mask> said over the radio that six generals had been kidnapped by "counter-revolutionaries" and that the 30 September movement intended to overthrow Sukarno. He said he was in control of the army and would crush the movement.Suharto gave an ultimatum to Halim Air Force Base, where the G30S had based themselves and where the air force commander had gathered, causing them to scatter before Suhartoist soldiers occupied the air. Suharto's group was firmly in control of the army by 2 October, thanks to the failed coup and the president's authority to restore order and security. Suharto led a ceremony to bury the generals' bodies. Complicated and partisan theories persist over the identity of the attempted coup's organizers and their aims. The army's version was that the PKI was solely to blame. A propaganda campaign by the army and Islamic and Catholic student groups convinced both Indonesian and international audiences that it was a communist coup attempt. The army in alliance with civilian religious groups, and backed by the United States and other Western powers, led a campaign of mass killings to purge Indonesian society, government, and armed forces of the Communist Party of Indonesia.The purge spread from Jakarta to the rest of the country. At least 500,000 to over 1 million were killed according to the most widely accepted estimates. 1.5 million people were imprisoned at one time or another. The Indonesian Communist Party was eliminated by the military and political Islam as a result of the purge. The purge was described as one of the worst mass murders of the 20th century by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. <mask> was careful not to be seen to be seizing power in his own coup as he continued to command loyalty from large sections of the armed forces. After the quashing of the 30 September movement, there was a complicated process of political manoeuvres against Sukarno.In January 1966 university students under the banner of KAMI began demonstrations against the Sukarno government, calling for the abolition of PKI and control of hyperinflation. The students were protected by the army. Street fights broke out between the students and pro-Sukarno loyalists with the pro-Suharto students prevailing due to army protection. In July 1966 <mask> was promoted to full general. The killing of a student demonstrator and the order for the disbandment of KAMI galvanized public opinion against the president. The appearance of troops around Merdeka Palace during a cabinet meeting forced Sukarno to flee by helicopter. Three pro-Suharto generals went to meet Sukarno.They secured a presidential decree that gave Suharto authority to take any action necessary to maintain security. Suharto used the Supersemar letter to purge pro-Sukarno elements from the parliament, the government and the military, accusing them of being communist sympathizers. The army forced the appointment of a new cabinet consisting of Suharto supporters. <mask> replaced chiefs of the navy, air force, and police force with his supporters after the army arrested pro-Sukarno and pro-communist members of the MPRS. In June 1966 the parliament passed a number of resolutions, including the banning of Marxism–Leninism and stripping Sukarno of his title of President for Life. After removing Indonesia from the UN in the previous year, the government ended the Konfrontasi with Malaysia. The remaining support for the president among some elements of the armed forces made <mask> not want to remove him.By January 1967, <mask> felt confident that he had removed all support for Sukarno within the armed forces, and the MPRS decided to hold another session to impeach him. <mask> was named acting president on 12 March 1967, after the MPRS session stripped him of his remaining power. He died in June 1970 after being placed under house arrest. <mask> was appointed president by the MPRS on 27 March 1968. "New Order" was promoted by Suharto as a society based on the Pancasila ideology. After initially being careful not to offend sensitivities of Islamic scholars who feared Pancasila might develop into a quasi-religious cult, <mask> secured a parliamentary resolution in 1983 which obliged all organisation in Indonesia to adhere to Pancasila as a fundamental principle. There were mandatory Pancasila training programs for all Indonesians.The vagueness of Pancasila was used by <mask>'s government to justify their actions. The dual function policy enabled the military to have an active role in all levels of the Indonesian government, economy, and society. Suharto needed to share power with Indonesian generals who considered him to be primus inter pares, as well as Islamic and student groups who participated in the anti-Communist purge. <mask>, aided by his "Office of Personal Assistants" (Aspri) group of military officers from his days as commander of Diponegoro Division, began to systematically cement his hold on power by sidelining potential rivals while rewarding loyalists with political power. Suharto had General Abdul Haris Nasution removed from his position as MPRS chairman in 1969 and forced him to retire from the military in 1972 because of his successful fight against the bill. In 1967, Suharto's decision to allow participation of existing political parties in elections was opposed by three generals. Suharto sent Dharsono overseas as an ambassador, while the other two commanders were sent to distant North Sumatra and South Sulawesi.Suharto's relationship with the student movement soured due to the increasing authoritarianism and corruption of his regime. While many original leaders of the 1966 student movement were successfully co-opted into the regime, Suharto was faced with large student demonstrations challenging the legitimacy of 1971 elections, as well as the costly construction of the Taman Mini Indonesia Indah theme park. Future national figures Dorodjatun Kuntjoro-Jakti, Adnan Buyung Nasution, Hariman Siregar, and Syahrir were imprisoned by the regime. The decree on "Normalisation of Campus Life" (NKK) was issued by Suharto in April 1978. Riots broke out in Jakarta during a visit by the Japanese prime minister, posing a significant challenge to Suharto. Students demonstrating against Japanese investors were encouraged by the deputy commander of the armed forces. The general disliked the influence of Suharto's inner circle.According to Suharto, the riots were engineered by Sumitro to destabilise the regime and resulted in his dismissal and forced retirement. The Disaster of 15 January is referred to as the Malari incident. In order to appease popular dissent, Suharto dissolved Aspri. In 1980, fifty prominent political figures signed the Petition of Fifty, which criticized Suharto's use of Pancasila to silence his critics. Some of them were imprisoned with others having restrictions imposed on their movements because Suharto refused to address their concerns. In order to appease demands from civilian politicians for the holding of elections, the Suharto government formulated a series of laws regarding elections and the structure and duties of parliament. A house of representatives and regional representatives are included in the law that gives for a parliament.100 of the members of DPR would be directly appointed by the government, while the remaining seats would be allocated to political organizations based on the results of the general election. Government control over legislative affairs, particularly the appointment of presidents, is ensured by this mechanism. Suharto realized that he needed to align himself with a political party. In 1969 Suharto decided to take over control of an obscure military-run federation of NGOs called Golkar and transform it into his electoral vehicle under the coordination of his right-hand man Ali Mur. The first general election was held on July 3, 1971 and had ten participants, including Golkar, four Islamic parties, as well as five nationalist and Christian parties. Golkar secured 62.8% of the popular vote by campaigning on a non-ideological platform, aided by official government support and subtle intimidation tactics. The general session of the newly elected MPR appointed <mask> to second-term in office with Sultan Hamengkubuwono IX as vice-president.The four Islamic parties merged into the United Development Party on January 5, 1973, in order for the government to have better control. The "re-call" system to remove outspoken legislators from their positions was established by the government to ensure that these parties never developed effective opposition. <mask> was re-elected by the MPR five times using the "Pancasila Democracy" system. <mask> would be able to pass his agenda with virtually no opposition as a result of Golkar's dominance in the MPR. He held all the power in the country. Various social engineering projects designed to transform Indonesian society into a de-politicised "floating mass" supportive of the national mission of "development" were started by Suharto. Civil society groups were formed by the government to support government programs.The Indonesian Civil Servants Corps was created in 1971 as a union of civil servants to ensure their loyalty. In 1968, Suharto started the family-planning program to stem the high population growth rate and increase per-capita income. The spelling reform of the Indonesian language was done on 17 August 1972 by Suharto. The Suharto government passed several laws as part of the so-called "Basic Policy for the Solution of Chinese Problem", where only one Chinese-language publication was controlled by the Army. The government began requiring a Letter of Proof of Citizenship of the Republic of Indonesia in 1978. Although the law required all citizens of foreign descent, the law only applied to Chinese descent. This made it difficult for Chinese Indonesians to join the military or police.Political stability Suharto relied on the military to maintain domestic security. To maintain strict control over the country, Suharto expanded the army's territorial system and appointed military officers as regional heads. By 1969 70% of Indonesia's provincial governors and more than half of its district chiefs were active military officers. Operasi Trisula was given the green light by Suharto, who ordered several military operations to end the communist PGRS-Paraku insurgency in West Kalimantan. Attacks on oil workers by the first incarnation of the Free Aceh Movement under Hasan di Tiro in 1977 led to the dispatch of small special forces who quickly killed or forced the movement's members to flee abroad. In March 1981 Suharto authorized a successful special forces mission to end the hijacking of a Garuda Indonesia flight at Don Mueang International Airport in Thailand. To ensure long-term support for the New Order, Suharto's administration enlisted a group of mostly US-educated Indonesian economists, dubbed the "Berkeley Mafia", to formulate significant changes in economic policy.Inflation was lowered from 660% in 1966 to 19% in 1969 by cutting subsidies, decreasing government debt, and changing the exchange rate mechanism. The threat of famine was alleviated by the influx of rice aid from the US. With a lack of domestic capital that was required for economic growth, the New Order reversed Sukarno's economic self-sufficiency policies and opened selected economic sectors of the country to foreign investment through the 1967 Foreign Investment Law. <mask> traveled to Europe and Japan to promote Indonesia. The first foreign investors to return to Indonesia were mining companies. Chinese-Indonesian entrepreneurs emerged in the late 1960s and early 1970s in the import-substitution light-manufacturing sector thanks to government regulatory frameworks. The Inter-Governmental Group on Indonesia (IGGI) gave the government low-interest foreign aid to cover its budget deficit.The government invested in infrastructure under a series of five-year plans from 1969 to 1998 after the jump in oil export revenue from the 1973 oil crisis. Outside the formal economy, Suharto created a network of charities run by the military and his family in exchange for government support and permits. Much of the money was recycled as a slush fund to reward political allies and to maintain support for the New Order. The mismanagement and corruption under the leadership of Suharto's close ally, Ibnu Sutowo, caused Pertamina to default on its foreign loans in 1975. The national debt was nearly doubled by the government bail-out of the company. The Suharto government adopted a policy of neutrality in the Cold War but was quietly aligned with the Western bloc to secure support for Indonesia's economic recovery. Western countries were impressed by Suharto's anti-communist credentials.Diplomatic relations with China were suspended in October of 1967, due to suspicion of Chinese involvement in the 30 September movement. The Soviet Union embargoed military sales to Indonesia because of Suharto. Several agreements to restructure huge debts incurred by the Soviet Union and other Eastern European communist states were secured by the foreign minister. Indonesia became a founding member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in August 1967. The goal of this organisation is to establish a peaceful relationship between Southeast Asian countries. The left-wing Fretilin emerged victorious in the civil war of 1974 after the withdrawal of Portuguese authority. With the approval of Western countries, Suharto decided to prevent the establishment of a communist state.Suharto authorized a full-scale invasion of the colony on December 7, 1975, followed by its official annexation as Indonesia's 27th province of East Timor in July 1976. The government maintained a strong military force in the half-island until 1999 after the "encirclement and annihilation" campaigns broke the back of Fretilin control over the hinterlands. There was an estimated minimum of 90,800 and maximum of 213,600 conflict-related deaths in East Timor during Indonesian rule. At least 100,000 deaths were caused by Indonesia's invasion and occupation of East Timor. The New York Agreement of 1962 requires a referendum on the integration of West Irian into Indonesia before the end of 1969 in order to comply. Since the Indonesian takeover in 1963, several bands of former Dutch-organised militia have been at large in the jungles. The logistical challenge and politicalIgnorance of the population were cited as reasons why the referendum would be sent via tribal chiefs.The United Nations General Assembly noted in 1969 that the unanimous decision for integration with Indonesia was produced using the above strategy. Support for <mask>'s regime was sustained over the course of three decades. In 1970, 45% of Indonesia's population was living in poverty. From 1966 to 1997, Indonesia's real GDP per capita increased from US$806 to US$4,114. The manufacturing sector made up less than 10% of GDP in 1966. By 1997 manufacturing had risen to 25% of GDP and 53% of exports were manufactured products. The launching of a series of Palapa telecommunication satellites was one of the major infrastructure developments of the government.The parliament granted <mask> the title of "Father of Development" on 9 March 1983 in order to justify his regime. Life expectancy increased from 47 years in 1966 to 67 years in 1997 as a result of healthcare reform Suharto government's health-care programs. The education gap between boys and girls was almost eliminated by 1983 thanks to the government's Inpres program. Suharto received a gold medal from the Food and Agriculture Organization in November 1985 for achieving rice self-sufficiency in Indonesia. In the early 1980s, Suharto government responded to the fall in oil exports by shifting the basis of the economy to export-oriented labour-intensive manufacturing, made globally competitive by Indonesia's low wages and a series of currency devaluation. Chinese-Indonesian companies evolved into large conglomerates which dominated the nation's economy. The largest conglomerates were led by Liem Sioe Liong, Oei Ek Tjong, and Tjia Han Poen.Suharto decided to support the growth of a small number of Chinese-Indonesian conglomerates since they would not pose a political challenge due to their ethnic-minority status, but from his experience, he deemed them to possess the skills and capital needed to create real growth for the country. The conglomerates provided vital financing for Suharto's "regime maintenance" activities. In the late 1980s, the Suharto government decided to de-regulate the banking sector to encourage savings and provide a domestic source of financing needed for growth. There was a 50% increase in the number of banks from 1989 to 1991 as a result of the October Package of 1988. The government introduced a program to promote savings. The Jakarta Stock Exchange recorded a "bull run" due to a flurry of domestic IPOs and an influx of foreign funds after the deregulation in 1990. The collapse of Suharto's regime was caused by the weak regulatory environment of the financial sector and the sudden availability of credit.The rapid expansion of corruption coincides with the growth of the economy. Suharto's children grew into greedy adults in the early 1980s. Their companies were protected from competition by monopolies. The toll-expressway market was monopolised by Tutut, the national car project was monopolised by Tommy, and the cinema market was monopolised by 21 Cineplex. In Indonesia, the family controls about 36,000 km2 of real estate, including 100,000 m2 of prime office space in Jakarta and 40% of the land. <mask>'s family members received free shares in 1,251 of Indonesia's most lucrative domestic companies, while foreign-owned companies were encouraged to establish "strategic partnerships" with Suharto family companies. The public and private sectors gave millions of dollars to the <mask> family's yayasans.The highest-ranking of the ten most self-enriching leaders in the previous two decades was <mask> and his family, according to a list released in 2004. Suharto's grip on power was maintained by emasculation of civil society, engineered elections, and use of the military's coercive powers. After retiring from the military in 1976, Suharto reorganized the armed forces to concentrate power in the hands of the president. General Leonardus Benjamin Moerdani was appointed head of the armed forces who adopted a hard-line approach to elements who challenged the administration. He was not a threat to Suharto. The army killed up to 10,000 suspected criminals in response to a spike in the crime rate. Pancasila was the sole ideology that caused protests from conservative Islamic groups who considered Islamic law to be above all other conceptions.The army killed up to 100 Muslim protesters in 1984. Hundreds of conservative Islamic activists, including future parliamentary leader AM Fatwa, were arrested after a series of small bombings. The Free Aceh Movement launched attacks on police in 1989 which led to a military operation which killed 2,000 people. In 1984 the Suharto government issued a law requiring all media to have a press operating license, which could be revoked at any time. Suharto's human rights record came under scrutiny after the 1991 Santa Cruz massacre. The non-aligned movement was headed by <mask> in 1992 and Indonesia became a founding member in 1989. The military lost access to power and lucrative rent-seeking opportunities because of the business dealings of <mask>'s family.Military legislators tried to block the nomination of a Suharto-loyalist as vice-president during the March 1988 MPR session. The president dismissed Moerdani from the position of military chief after he criticized the Suharto family's corruption. Key military positions were held by loyalists as Suharto slowly "de-militarise" his regime. Suharto began courting support from Islamic elements in order to shift his power base away from the military. He promoted Islamic values and careers of Islamic-oriented generals after taking up the name Haji <mask>. In order to win support from the Muslim business community who resented the dominance of Chinese-Indonesian conglomerates, Suharto formed the ICMI in 1990. The first race riots against ethnic- Chinese began in Medan in April 1994.By the 1990s, <mask>'s government was dominated by civilian politicians who owed their positions to Suharto. When two prominent Indonesian magazines and a tabloid newspaper reported on criticism over the purchase of almost the entire fleet of the East German Navy in 1993, the Ministry of Information ordered them to stop. The Indonesian middle class became restless with Suharto's autocracy and the corruption of his children in the 1990s, leading to demands for reform of the New Order government. By 1996, the daughter of Sukarno was becoming an opposition figure for this growing discontent. In response, <mask> backed a co-opted group of PDI led by Suryadi. There were fatal riots and loot in Jakarta on July 27, 1996, when Lieutenant-General Sutiyoso led an attack on soldiers and hired criminals. The army squad led by Suharto's son-in-law, Major-General Prabowo Subianto, arrested 200 democracy activists and kidnapped 23 of them.A special 1,54 troy ounce gold coin with <mask>'s face on one side was released in 1995 for the 50th anniversary of Indonesian Independence. The rank of five-star "General of the Army" was awarded to Sudirman and Abdul Haris Nasution. Indonesia was hardest hit by the 1997 Asian financial crisis. There were large capital outflows against the US dollar. Many Indonesian companies borrowed cheaper US dollar loans due to poor bank lending practices. The Indonesian rupiah dropped in value due to panic buying of US dollar by these companies. In early 1998 it was around 2,600 to a low point.17,000. Unemployment and poverty increased across the country as a result of companies being bankrupted and the economy being shrank. The country's dollar reserves were drained by the central bank's futile attempts to defend the rupiah. Between October 1997 and the following April, Suharto signed three letters of intent with the International Monetary Fund for an economic reform process. The Indonesian Bank Restructuring Agency was set up in January 1998 to take over management of troubled banks in order to prevent the collapse of the financial system. In February 1998 the government raised the interest rate up to 70%, which worsened the contraction of the economy. In December 1997, <mask> did not attend the first summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations due to a minor stroke, creating speculation about his health and the future of his presidency.In mid-December, as the crisis swept through Indonesia and an estimated $150 billion of capital was being withdrawn from the country, he appeared at a press conference to re-assert his authority and to urge people to trust the government and the collapsing rupiah. His attempts to re-inspire had little effect. His family and associates were spared the most stringent requirements of the reform process, which undermined confidence in the economy and his leadership. The political tension increased after the economic crisis. The 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 Suharto was re-elected in March 1998 after the 1997 election was rigged. He put his own family and business associates in the cabinet, including his daughter, who was Minister of Social Affairs.There was a run on stores and pushed up prices because of currency instability caused by the appointments and budget. Riots broke out in Medan in May 1998 after the government increased fuel prices by 70%. Amien Rais, a Muslim politician, spoke out against Suharto's presidency in January 1998 after the country's mounting economic and political crises. Suharto was on a state visit to Egypt when security forces killed four demonstrators. Over 1,000 people were killed and thousands of buildings were destroyed during the riots in Jakarta and other cities. Ethnic Chinese businesses were targets in the violence. There is a suggestion that Suharto tried to divert blame for the crisis from the ethnic- Chinese and the student movement.The grounds and roof of the parliament building were occupied by tens of thousands of university students. In 2003 <mask> offered to resign and reorganize his cabinet. His political allies abandoned him when they refused to join the new cabinet. On 18 May, Suharto issued a decree which gave him authority to take any measures to restore security, however, he decided not to enforce the decree to prevent conflict with the population. In accordance with the constitution, vice-president Habibie assumed the presidency after <mask> resigned. According to recently released documents from the United States Department of State, the Clinton Administration sought to maintain close ties with the Indonesian military in the aftermath of Suharto's fall from power. <mask> became a recluse in his family's compound in the Menteng area of Jakarta after he resigned from the presidency.<mask>'s family spent a lot of time fighting corruption investigations. According to a leaked telephone conversation between the president and the attorney-general in 1999, politicians who owed their positions to Suharto were protected from prosecution. Time Asia estimated Suharto's family fortune to be US$15 billion in cash, shares, corporate assets, real estate, jewellery and fine art. The magazine was sued by Suharto for defamation. Indonesia's Supreme Court ordered Time Asia magazine to pay damages to <mask>. The Central Jakarta district court judgement was reversed by the High Court. During his 32-year presidency, <mask> was accused of misappropriation of between US$15–35 billion.When Indonesian authorities began to investigate the corruption during <mask>'s presidency, he was placed under house arrest. In July 2000 it was announced that he was to be accused of swindling US$571 million of government donations to one of several foundations and then using the money to finance family investments. He was not able to stand trial because of his declining health. State prosecutors tried again in 2002, but doctors said they had a brain disease. On March 26, 2008, a civil court judge acquitted <mask> of corruption, but ordered his charitable foundation to pay over a hundred million dollars. In 2002, <mask>'s son Tommy was sentenced to 15 years' jail for ordering the killing of a judge, illegal weapons possession, and fleeing justice. He was freed on a "conditional release".Probosutedjo, Suharto's half-brother, was tried and convicted for corruption and the loss of $10 million from the Indonesian state. He was sentenced to four years in jail. The Corruption Eradication Commission launched a probe into the alleged scandal of the "judicial mafia" which uncovered offers of $600,000 to various judges. In October 2005, Probosutedjo confessed to the scheme and his lawyers were arrested. The full four-year term was restored. He was arrested on 30 November 2005 after a brief standoff at a hospital in which he was protected by a group of police officers. On July 9, 2007, Indonesian prosecutors filed a civil lawsuit against Suharto, in order to recover state funds which allegedly disappeared from a scholarship fund.<mask> was hospitalized many times for health problems after he resigned from the presidency. His declining health made it difficult for prosecutors to prosecute him. Indonesia did not support attempts to prosecute him. <mask>'s health and fitness for trial will be evaluated by a team of twenty doctors. Dr Marjo Subiandono stated that Suharto has two permanent cerebral defects. The re-examination is part of a "last opportunity" to prosecute <mask>, according to the Attorney General. There is a chance of a suit being filed against the Suharto estate.<mask> died on January 4, 2008 at the Pertamina Central Hospital, Jakarta, due to poor health, swelling of limbs and stomach, and partialrenal failure. His health deteriorated over the course of several weeks due to a number of factors, including anaemia and low blood pressure, as well as internal bleeding, fluid on his lungs, and blood in his faeces and urine. <mask>'s health deteriorated further as a sepsis infection spread through his body. His family consented to the removal of life support machines if his condition did not improve. <mask> was declared one of Indonesia's "best sons" by the president minutes after his death. <mask>'s body was taken from Jakarta to a mausoleum in Central Java. He was buried alongside his wife in a state military funeral with full honours, with the Kopassus elite forces and KOSTRAD commandos as the honour guard and pallbearers.The Colonel is Asep Subarkah. The president, vice-president, government ministers, and armed forces chiefs of staff were in attendance. Tens of thousands of people lined the streets to see the convoy. Regional heads of state offered their sympathies. The President declared a week of official mourning after <mask>'s death. The flags of Indonesia were flown at half-mast. There is a statue in front of the museum.It was built by Probosutedjo. FELDA Soeharto, a village in Selangor, Malaysia, was named after him in 1977 after he paid a visit to the village in 1970. There are corruption charges against Suharto History of Indonesia, as well as a list of high-ranking commanders of the Indonesian War of Independence. There is a press release. There is an international monetary fund. Robert Cribb wrote about genocide in Indonesia. The Journal of Genocide Research was published in 2001.The Pretext for Mass Murder: 30 September Movement and <mask>'s Coup D'état was written by John Roosa. The University of Wisconsin Press. The year 2001. Cambridge University Press published Suharto: A Political Biography in 2001. McGlynn, John H. The year 2007. Indonesia during the Soeharto years.There is an issue, incidents and images in Jakarta. In Jakarta, there is a book called pak harto: the untold stories. Time magazine published a story on <mask>'s regime and family on the first anniversary of his resignation. The website Tiger Tales: Indonesia focuses on the early Suharto era. Interviews with Indonesian generals and victims of the regime. The program can be streamed in RealAudio format. "Vengeance with a smile", Time magazine, 15 July 1966 | [
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15558340 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karen%20Middleton%20%28politician%29 | Karen Middleton (politician) | Karen Middleton (born February 24, 1966) is an American politician who served as a member of the Colorado House of Representatives from 2004 to 2008 and 2008 to 2011.
Background
Karen Middleton was born on February 24, 1966.
After a career as a development officer and project manager in the field of education, Middleton was appointed to the Colorado State Board of Education in 2004 and in 2006 won election to a two-year term.
In February 2008, Middleton was appointed as a state representative to fill the vacancy in Aurora, Colorado's District 42 left by the resignation of Rep. Michael Garcia from the Colorado House of Representatives. Middleton was elected to a full term in 2008. In the 2010 election, Middleton withdrew her candidacy to accept a position in San Francisco, CA as president of Emerge America, and was succeeded in office by Rhonda Fields.
In 2013, Middleton left her Emerge America position to accept an offer to become Executive Director of NARAL Pro-Choice Colorado, and state affiliate of NARAL Pro-Choice America.
Education
B.A. in political science and women's studies, Mount Holyoke College (1988)
M.A. in political science, University of Colorado at Denver (1996)
M.A. in higher education, University of Denver (2007)
Professional career
1980s
Middleton earned her undergraduate degree from Mount Holyoke College in 1988, graduating with a B.A. in political science and women's studies. While in college, she served as president and vice-president of Mount Holyoke's Student Government Association and was elected baccalaureate speaker. After graduation, she worked for a year as the coordinator of regional activities at Dana Hall School, an all-girls school in Massachusetts, where she organized alumni events and groups. Afterwards, she joined the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs in Washington DC, as manager of development programs, raising funds for international programs.
1990s
In 1992, Middleton enrolled in the graduate program at the University of Colorado at Denver. There, she co-created and co-chaired the political science graduate student association and served on the campus-wide steering committee for the Auraria Women’s Network. Middleton graduated with an M.A. in political science in 1996, with a thesis titled An Analysis of State Campaign Finance Reform. While in graduate school, she also worked as director of development for the Montessori School of Denver (from 1992 to 1994), and then as director of operations for alumni and development at the University of Denver College of Law (from 1994 to 1996), developing and managing capital and giving campaigns.
Middleton joined the staff of the University of Denver's Graduate School of International Studies in April 1996, first as Director of Admissions and Student Affairs and rising to the post of Assistant Dean for Admissions and Student Affairs, overseeing graduate student recruitment, enrollment, and management. While working in higher education administration, Middleton co-chaired the Association of Professional Schools for International Affairs Admissions Officers, attended the National Association for Women in Education's Academy of Leadership in Higher Education, and received the Woman Leader of Excellence Award from the Colorado Women’s Leadership Coalition in 1997 and the University of Denver Excellence in Education Award in 1998.
In 1997, Middleton entered the graduate program in higher education policy at the University of Denver. She spent 10 years pursuing a doctoral degree, was ABD (all but dissertation), but ultimately took a second master's and ended her graduate career.
While Middleton served in her first legislative session, she was pregnant with her first child, Zoe Grace Middleton, who was born in August 2008.
2000s
Middleton worked full-time while pursuing her doctorate. While a graduate student, she chaired the University of Denver's Graduate Women's Council from 2000 to 2002 and was a board member of the university's alumni association from 2003 to 2004. While in the School of Education, she received its Publication Award in 2003 and Service Award in 2006.
She was also hired as manager of program consulting at eCollege in 2000, and quickly promoted to director of the Center for Internet Technology in Education. At eCollege, an online learning company specializing in online course development, she managed public affairs, online learning conferences, and consulting operations. In 2000, Middleton graduated from the Colorado Institute for Leadership Training and earned certification from the Institute for Management of Distance Education.
In 2001, Middleton joined the Western Cooperative for Educational Telecommunications, a project of the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education, as a senior project coordinator, where she developed resources for online teaching and learning for use by K-12 schools and higher education institutions. While there, she helped create the North American Council for Online Learning.
From 2003 to 2004, Middleton was vice president for enrollment at Up with People, managing global recruitment and instigating partnerships with the University of Colorado at Denver, as well as communications and marketing for the WorldSmart Leadership Program.
In 2004, she spent several months in an interim position as policy director for the House Minority Office at the Colorado General Assembly, where she was involved in setting policy direction for the Democratic caucus.
In addition to her professional activities, Middleton was a board member of Colorado Women's Agenda from 1994 to 2004, serving as its president from 1995 to 1999, and was a member of the DU International Human Rights Institute/Advocacy Center Advisory Board from 1998 to 2003. She has also served on the boards of the Aurora Education Foundation (from 2003 to 2006) and the Adams 14 Education Foundation (from 2004 to 2006), on the State of Colorado's Consumer Insurance Council (from 2001 to 2003) and on the Citizen’s Advisory Committee on Housing and Community Development (in 2003).
While on the state board of education, from 2004 to 2007, Middleton ran a non-profit management firm, Karen Middleton & Associates, working with clients including the Institute of International Education, the Colorado Children’s Campaign and Up with People, focusing on education-related projects. She also taught political science part-time at Community College of Aurora, and completed a second master's degree, in higher education policy, from the University of Denver, in 2007.
In March 2007, Middleton joined ScholarCentric, an educational publishing company, as Vice President of Development. In June 2007, she was promoted to Vice President of Sales and Development.
State Board of Education
Middleton first sought elected office in 2002, campaigning for an elected post on the University of Colorado Board of Regents. She lost the race to represent Colorado's 7th Congressional district to Republican Patricia Hayes, earning 49% of the popular vote.
In November 2004, following the resignation of Colorado State Board of Education member Christine Baca, a Democratic Party vacancy committee appointed Middleton to the board's 7th district seat
She was elected to serve for the final two years of the unexpired term in November 2006, defeating Republican Lee Kunz with 55 percent of the popular vote.
After having criticized Colorado Education Commissioner William Moloney, chastising him as "ineffective," and calling for his resignation, in 2006, Middleton was involved in the selection of his replacement, Fountain, Colorado School Superintendent Dwight Jones, in 2007. While on the board, she also cast votes against the use of quotas as a means of fostering diversity in charter schools, advocated for the creation of a state online education coordinator, and proposed a motion to allow state funding for "fifth year" high school programs designed to help students earn associate's degrees.
In 2005, Middleton was appointed to the board of the Alliance for Quality Teaching, the advisory board of the Campaign for the Civic Mission of Schools, and the Colorado General Assembly's Interim School Finance Task Force. In 2006, she was named to the State Advisory Committee for Gifted and Talented Education. Middleton also served on the Government Affairs Committee for the National Association for State Boards of Education in 2007.
Increasingly prominent in Democratic Party circles, Middleton received the "Rising Star" Award from the Colorado Democratic Party in 2006 and was named one of The Colorado Statesman's "Movers and Shakers" in 2007.
Legislative career
2008 appointment and election
In October 2007, Middleton launched her campaign for the Colorado State House of Representatives seat being vacated by term-limited Representative Michael Garcia, centering her campaign on her experience in education issues. Following the resignation of Rep. Michael Garcia in February 2008, v Middleton announced her intention to seek a Democratic Party vacancy committee's nomination for the open seat, and was quickly viewed as the leading contender for the appointment. On February 10, the vacancy committee voted 24-3 to name Middleton to replace Garcia in the state house. She was sworn into the legislature on the morning of February 13, after having submitted her resignation from the Colorado State Board of Education, effective that same day.
Middleton stood for a full term in November 2008; she faced opposition from Libertarian Jim Frye and Republican George Carouthers. Middleton's re-election bid was endorsed by the Denver Post and the Aurora Sentinel. She ultimately won with 68% of the popular vote.
After winning a full term in November 2008, Middleton was elected Majority Caucus Chair by state house Democrats.
2008 legislative session
After joining the Colorado General Assembly in the midst of the 2008 legislative session, Middleton was named to seats on the House Education Committee and the House State, Veterans, & Military Affairs Committee.
She has named economic growth, education, and health care as her top legislative priorities for the legislative session.
She has sponsored legislation to increase training standards for Colorado's Witness Protection Program and legislation signed into law to provide $5 million in funding in "Colorado Counselor Corps" funding for additional guidance counselors in struggling public schools.
Middleton has also supported renaming the University of Colorado Denver Anschutz Medical Campus to add "in Aurora," reflecting the campus's physical location. After unsuccessfully lobbying the University of Colorado Board of Regents to change the name, Middleton plans to offer a bill to change the name legislatively during the 2009 session.
In September 2008, following an Aurora murder, Middleton joined with other Aurora legislators in September to call for a state investigation into how the accused perpetrator, suspected of being an illegal immigrant, was allowed to remain in the United States under current law, with an eye toward revising state laws that may have contributed to the situation.
In November 2008, Middleton received the Charter Friends Award from the Colorado League of Charter Schools.
2009 legislative session
For the 2009 legislative session, Middleton was named to seats on the House Education Committee and the House Transportation and Energy Committee. She planned on sponsoring legislation to create a state investment fund to support services for people with developmental disabilities, a move prompted by the failure of a statewide ballot measure to raise sales taxes to fund the same services; however, Middleton later announced that she would not pursue the measure because of poor state revenue projections.
2010 withdrawal from reelection campaign
In August 2010, Middleton withdrew from her campaign for reelection to accept a position in San Francisco, CA leading Emerge America, an organization whose mission is to recruit and train female Democratic political candidates. Because Colorado's 2010 Democratic primary already occurred, a Democratic vacancy committee met and nominated Rhonda Fields to take Middleton's place on the November ballot.
Post-Legislature activity
While continuing to lead Emerge America, Middleton moved back from California to Colorado, returning to Aurora, Colorado. In January 2013, Middleton considered challenging Andrew Romanoff for the Democratic nomination for Colorado's 6th congressional district, but ultimately demurred.
In May 2013, Middleton left Emerge America to accept the Executive Director position for NARAL Pro-Choice Colorado.
See also
NARAL Pro-Choice America
References
External links
Karen Middleton for Colorado State House District 42 - campaign site
Colorado State Board of Education Member Karen Middleton - SBOE profile
Emerge America
NARAL Pro-Choice Colorado
Living people
Members of the Colorado House of Representatives
Mount Holyoke College alumni
Women state legislators in Colorado
Colorado city council members
University of Colorado Denver alumni
1966 births
University of Denver alumni
Colorado Democrats
American abortion-rights activists
Women city councillors in Colorado
21st-century American women | [
"Karen Middleton (born February 24, 1966) is an American politician who served as a member of the Colorado House of Representatives from 2004 to 2008 and 2008 to 2011.",
"Background\nKaren Middleton was born on February 24, 1966.",
"After a career as a development officer and project manager in the field of education, Middleton was appointed to the Colorado State Board of Education in 2004 and in 2006 won election to a two-year term.",
"In February 2008, Middleton was appointed as a state representative to fill the vacancy in Aurora, Colorado's District 42 left by the resignation of Rep. Michael Garcia from the Colorado House of Representatives.",
"Middleton was elected to a full term in 2008.",
"In the 2010 election, Middleton withdrew her candidacy to accept a position in San Francisco, CA as president of Emerge America, and was succeeded in office by Rhonda Fields.",
"In 2013, Middleton left her Emerge America position to accept an offer to become Executive Director of NARAL Pro-Choice Colorado, and state affiliate of NARAL Pro-Choice America.",
"Education\nB.A.",
"in political science and women's studies, Mount Holyoke College (1988)\nM.A.",
"in political science, University of Colorado at Denver (1996)\nM.A.",
"in higher education, University of Denver (2007)\n\nProfessional career\n\n1980s\nMiddleton earned her undergraduate degree from Mount Holyoke College in 1988, graduating with a B.A.",
"in political science and women's studies.",
"While in college, she served as president and vice-president of Mount Holyoke's Student Government Association and was elected baccalaureate speaker.",
"After graduation, she worked for a year as the coordinator of regional activities at Dana Hall School, an all-girls school in Massachusetts, where she organized alumni events and groups.",
"Afterwards, she joined the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs in Washington DC, as manager of development programs, raising funds for international programs.",
"1990s\nIn 1992, Middleton enrolled in the graduate program at the University of Colorado at Denver.",
"There, she co-created and co-chaired the political science graduate student association and served on the campus-wide steering committee for the Auraria Women’s Network.",
"Middleton graduated with an M.A.",
"in political science in 1996, with a thesis titled An Analysis of State Campaign Finance Reform.",
"While in graduate school, she also worked as director of development for the Montessori School of Denver (from 1992 to 1994), and then as director of operations for alumni and development at the University of Denver College of Law (from 1994 to 1996), developing and managing capital and giving campaigns.",
"Middleton joined the staff of the University of Denver's Graduate School of International Studies in April 1996, first as Director of Admissions and Student Affairs and rising to the post of Assistant Dean for Admissions and Student Affairs, overseeing graduate student recruitment, enrollment, and management.",
"While working in higher education administration, Middleton co-chaired the Association of Professional Schools for International Affairs Admissions Officers, attended the National Association for Women in Education's Academy of Leadership in Higher Education, and received the Woman Leader of Excellence Award from the Colorado Women’s Leadership Coalition in 1997 and the University of Denver Excellence in Education Award in 1998.",
"In 1997, Middleton entered the graduate program in higher education policy at the University of Denver.",
"She spent 10 years pursuing a doctoral degree, was ABD (all but dissertation), but ultimately took a second master's and ended her graduate career.",
"While Middleton served in her first legislative session, she was pregnant with her first child, Zoe Grace Middleton, who was born in August 2008.",
"2000s\n\nMiddleton worked full-time while pursuing her doctorate.",
"While a graduate student, she chaired the University of Denver's Graduate Women's Council from 2000 to 2002 and was a board member of the university's alumni association from 2003 to 2004.",
"While in the School of Education, she received its Publication Award in 2003 and Service Award in 2006.",
"She was also hired as manager of program consulting at eCollege in 2000, and quickly promoted to director of the Center for Internet Technology in Education.",
"At eCollege, an online learning company specializing in online course development, she managed public affairs, online learning conferences, and consulting operations.",
"In 2000, Middleton graduated from the Colorado Institute for Leadership Training and earned certification from the Institute for Management of Distance Education.",
"In 2001, Middleton joined the Western Cooperative for Educational Telecommunications, a project of the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education, as a senior project coordinator, where she developed resources for online teaching and learning for use by K-12 schools and higher education institutions.",
"While there, she helped create the North American Council for Online Learning.",
"From 2003 to 2004, Middleton was vice president for enrollment at Up with People, managing global recruitment and instigating partnerships with the University of Colorado at Denver, as well as communications and marketing for the WorldSmart Leadership Program.",
"In 2004, she spent several months in an interim position as policy director for the House Minority Office at the Colorado General Assembly, where she was involved in setting policy direction for the Democratic caucus.",
"In addition to her professional activities, Middleton was a board member of Colorado Women's Agenda from 1994 to 2004, serving as its president from 1995 to 1999, and was a member of the DU International Human Rights Institute/Advocacy Center Advisory Board from 1998 to 2003.",
"She has also served on the boards of the Aurora Education Foundation (from 2003 to 2006) and the Adams 14 Education Foundation (from 2004 to 2006), on the State of Colorado's Consumer Insurance Council (from 2001 to 2003) and on the Citizen’s Advisory Committee on Housing and Community Development (in 2003).",
"While on the state board of education, from 2004 to 2007, Middleton ran a non-profit management firm, Karen Middleton & Associates, working with clients including the Institute of International Education, the Colorado Children’s Campaign and Up with People, focusing on education-related projects.",
"She also taught political science part-time at Community College of Aurora, and completed a second master's degree, in higher education policy, from the University of Denver, in 2007.",
"In March 2007, Middleton joined ScholarCentric, an educational publishing company, as Vice President of Development.",
"In June 2007, she was promoted to Vice President of Sales and Development.",
"State Board of Education\nMiddleton first sought elected office in 2002, campaigning for an elected post on the University of Colorado Board of Regents.",
"She lost the race to represent Colorado's 7th Congressional district to Republican Patricia Hayes, earning 49% of the popular vote.",
"In November 2004, following the resignation of Colorado State Board of Education member Christine Baca, a Democratic Party vacancy committee appointed Middleton to the board's 7th district seat\nShe was elected to serve for the final two years of the unexpired term in November 2006, defeating Republican Lee Kunz with 55 percent of the popular vote.",
"After having criticized Colorado Education Commissioner William Moloney, chastising him as \"ineffective,\" and calling for his resignation, in 2006, Middleton was involved in the selection of his replacement, Fountain, Colorado School Superintendent Dwight Jones, in 2007.",
"While on the board, she also cast votes against the use of quotas as a means of fostering diversity in charter schools, advocated for the creation of a state online education coordinator, and proposed a motion to allow state funding for \"fifth year\" high school programs designed to help students earn associate's degrees.",
"In 2005, Middleton was appointed to the board of the Alliance for Quality Teaching, the advisory board of the Campaign for the Civic Mission of Schools, and the Colorado General Assembly's Interim School Finance Task Force.",
"In 2006, she was named to the State Advisory Committee for Gifted and Talented Education.",
"Middleton also served on the Government Affairs Committee for the National Association for State Boards of Education in 2007.",
"Increasingly prominent in Democratic Party circles, Middleton received the \"Rising Star\" Award from the Colorado Democratic Party in 2006 and was named one of The Colorado Statesman's \"Movers and Shakers\" in 2007.",
"Legislative career\n\n2008 appointment and election\n\nIn October 2007, Middleton launched her campaign for the Colorado State House of Representatives seat being vacated by term-limited Representative Michael Garcia, centering her campaign on her experience in education issues.",
"Following the resignation of Rep. Michael Garcia in February 2008, v Middleton announced her intention to seek a Democratic Party vacancy committee's nomination for the open seat, and was quickly viewed as the leading contender for the appointment.",
"On February 10, the vacancy committee voted 24-3 to name Middleton to replace Garcia in the state house.",
"She was sworn into the legislature on the morning of February 13, after having submitted her resignation from the Colorado State Board of Education, effective that same day.",
"Middleton stood for a full term in November 2008; she faced opposition from Libertarian Jim Frye and Republican George Carouthers.",
"Middleton's re-election bid was endorsed by the Denver Post and the Aurora Sentinel.",
"She ultimately won with 68% of the popular vote.",
"After winning a full term in November 2008, Middleton was elected Majority Caucus Chair by state house Democrats.",
"2008 legislative session\n\nAfter joining the Colorado General Assembly in the midst of the 2008 legislative session, Middleton was named to seats on the House Education Committee and the House State, Veterans, & Military Affairs Committee.",
"She has named economic growth, education, and health care as her top legislative priorities for the legislative session.",
"She has sponsored legislation to increase training standards for Colorado's Witness Protection Program and legislation signed into law to provide $5 million in funding in \"Colorado Counselor Corps\" funding for additional guidance counselors in struggling public schools.",
"Middleton has also supported renaming the University of Colorado Denver Anschutz Medical Campus to add \"in Aurora,\" reflecting the campus's physical location.",
"After unsuccessfully lobbying the University of Colorado Board of Regents to change the name, Middleton plans to offer a bill to change the name legislatively during the 2009 session.",
"In September 2008, following an Aurora murder, Middleton joined with other Aurora legislators in September to call for a state investigation into how the accused perpetrator, suspected of being an illegal immigrant, was allowed to remain in the United States under current law, with an eye toward revising state laws that may have contributed to the situation.",
"In November 2008, Middleton received the Charter Friends Award from the Colorado League of Charter Schools.",
"2009 legislative session\n\nFor the 2009 legislative session, Middleton was named to seats on the House Education Committee and the House Transportation and Energy Committee.",
"She planned on sponsoring legislation to create a state investment fund to support services for people with developmental disabilities, a move prompted by the failure of a statewide ballot measure to raise sales taxes to fund the same services; however, Middleton later announced that she would not pursue the measure because of poor state revenue projections.",
"2010 withdrawal from reelection campaign\nIn August 2010, Middleton withdrew from her campaign for reelection to accept a position in San Francisco, CA leading Emerge America, an organization whose mission is to recruit and train female Democratic political candidates.",
"Because Colorado's 2010 Democratic primary already occurred, a Democratic vacancy committee met and nominated Rhonda Fields to take Middleton's place on the November ballot.",
"Post-Legislature activity\nWhile continuing to lead Emerge America, Middleton moved back from California to Colorado, returning to Aurora, Colorado.",
"In January 2013, Middleton considered challenging Andrew Romanoff for the Democratic nomination for Colorado's 6th congressional district, but ultimately demurred.",
"In May 2013, Middleton left Emerge America to accept the Executive Director position for NARAL Pro-Choice Colorado.",
"See also\n NARAL Pro-Choice America\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links\n Karen Middleton for Colorado State House District 42 - campaign site\n Colorado State Board of Education Member Karen Middleton - SBOE profile\n Emerge America\n NARAL Pro-Choice Colorado\n\nLiving people\nMembers of the Colorado House of Representatives\nMount Holyoke College alumni\nWomen state legislators in Colorado\nColorado city council members\nUniversity of Colorado Denver alumni\n1966 births\nUniversity of Denver alumni\nColorado Democrats\nAmerican abortion-rights activists\nWomen city councillors in Colorado\n21st-century American women"
] | [
"Karen Middleton was an American politician who served as a member of the Colorado House of Representatives from 2004 to 2008 and 2011.",
"Karen was born on February 24, 1966.",
"In 2004, he was appointed to the Colorado State Board of Education and in 2006 he was elected to a two-year term.",
"In February 2008, Middleton was appointed as a state representative to fill the seat in Aurora, Colorado's District 42 that was left by the resignation of Rep. Michael Garcia from the Colorado House of Representatives.",
"In 2008 he was elected to a full term.",
"In the 2010 election, Rhonda Fields was elected president of Emerge America, despite the fact that Kate Middleton withdrew her candidacy to take the position in San Francisco.",
"She became the Executive Director of NARAL Pro-Choice Colorado and the state affiliate of NARAL Pro-Choice America after leaving Emerge America.",
"A degree in education.",
"The M.A. is in political science and women's studies.",
"The University of Colorado at Denver has a political science degree.",
"In higher education, University of Denver in 2007, Middleton graduated with a B.A.",
"Women's studies and political science are included.",
"She served as president and vice-president of Mount Holyoke's Student Government Association while in college.",
"She worked for a year at Dana Hall School in Massachusetts, where she organized alumni events and groups.",
"She became the manager of development programs at the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs in Washington DC.",
"The graduate program at the University of Colorado at Denver was started in 1992.",
"She was on the steering committee for the Auraria Women's Network and co-chaired the political science graduate student association.",
"He graduated with an M.A.",
"The thesis was titled An Analysis of State Campaign Finance Reform.",
"She was the director of development for the Montessori School of Denver from 1992 to 1994 and the director of operations for alumni and development at the University of Denver College of Law from 1994 to 1996.",
"In 1996 he joined the staff of the University of Denver's Graduate School of International Studies as Director of Admissions and Student Affairs and rose to the post of assistant dean for admissions and student affairs.",
"While working in higher education administration, she co-chaired the Association of Professional Schools for International Affairs Admissions Officers, attended the National Association for Women in Education's Academy of Leadership in Higher Education, and received the Woman Leader ofExcellence Award from the Colorado Women's Leadership Coalition.",
"The University of Denver has a graduate program in higher education policy.",
"She took a second master's degree and ended her graduate career after 10 years of pursuing a PhD.",
"While serving in her first legislative session, she gave birth to her first child, a baby girl.",
"She pursued her doctorate while working full-time.",
"She chaired the University of Denver's Graduate Women's Council from 2000 to 2002 and was a board member of the university's alumni association from 2003 to 2004.",
"She received two awards while in the School of Education.",
"She was promoted to director of the Center for Internet Technology in Education after she was hired as manager of program consulting at eCollege.",
"She managed public affairs, online learning conferences, and consulting operations at eCollege, an online learning company.",
"The Institute for Management of Distance Education and the Colorado Institute for Leadership Training both gave certifications to Middleton in 2000.",
"She developed resources for online teaching and learning for use by K-12 schools and higher education institutions when she joined the Western Cooperative for Educational Telecommunications in 2001.",
"She was involved in the creation of the North American Council for Online Learning.",
"From 2003 to 2004, he was the vice president forEnrollment at Up with People, managing global recruitment and partnerships with the University of Colorado at Denver, as well as communications and marketing for the WorldSmart Leadership Program.",
"She spent several months in an interim position as policy director for the House Minority Office at the Colorado General Assembly, where she was involved in setting policy direction for the Democratic caucus.",
"From 1995 to 1999 she was the president of Colorado Women's Agenda and from 1998 to 2003 she was a member of the DU International Human Rights Institute/Advocacy Center Advisory Board.",
"She served on the boards of the Aurora Education Foundation, the Adams 14 Education Foundation, and the State of Colorado's Consumer Insurance Council.",
"During her time on the state board of education, she ran a non-profit management firm that worked with clients such as the Institute of International Education, the Colorado Children's Campaign and Up with People.",
"She earned a second master's degree in higher education policy from the University of Denver in 2007, after teaching political science part-time at Community College of Aurora.",
"In March 2007, he joined ScholarCentric as Vice President of Development.",
"She was promoted to Vice President of Sales and Development in June of 2007.",
"The University of Colorado Board of regents has an elected post for the State Board of Education.",
"She lost the race to represent Colorado's 7th Congressional district to a Republican.",
"She was elected to serve for the final two years of the unexpired term in November 2006 after being appointed to the Colorado State Board of Education by the Democratic Party.",
"After calling for the resignation of Colorado Education Commissioner William Moloney in 2006 and chastising him for being \"ineffective\", Middleton was involved in the selection of his replacement.",
"While on the board, she cast votes against the use of quota as a means of fostering diversity in charter schools, advocated for the creation of a state online educationordinator, and proposed a motion to allow state funding for \"fifth year\" high school programs designed to help students earn associate's",
"The Alliance for Quality Teaching, the advisory board of the Campaign for the Civic Mission of Schools, and the Colorado General Assembly's Interim School Finance Task Force were some of the organizations that Middleton was appointed to in 2005.",
"She was a member of the State Advisory Committee for Gifted and Talented Education.",
"The National Association for State Boards of Education had a Government Affairs Committee.",
"In 2006 she received the \"Rising Star\" Award from the Colorado Democratic Party and in 2007, she was named one of The Colorado Statesman's \"Movers and Shakers\".",
"In October 2007, she launched her campaign for the Colorado State House of Representatives seat being left by term-limited Representative Michael Garcia, centering her campaign on her experience in education issues.",
"v Middleton was seen as the leading contender for the open seat after she announced her intention to seek the Democratic Party's nomination.",
"On February 10, the committee voted to name Middleton to the state house.",
"She was sworn into the legislature on the morning of February 13 after she resigned from the Colorado State Board of Education.",
"In November of 2008, she stood for a full term.",
"The Denver Post endorsed Middleton's re- election bid.",
"She got the majority of the popular vote.",
"The Majority Caucus Chair is elected by the state house Democrats.",
"After joining the Colorado General Assembly in the midst of the 2008 legislative session, he was named to seats on the House Education Committee and the House State, Veterans, and Military Affairs Committee.",
"Economic growth, education, and health care are her top legislative priorities.",
"She has sponsored legislation to increase training standards for Colorado's Witness Protection Program and legislation signed into law to provide $5 million in funding for additional guidance counselors in struggling public schools.",
"The University of Colorado Denver Anschutz Medical Campus should be renamed to reflect its location.",
"A bill to change the name of the University of Colorado will be offered during the next legislative session.",
"In September 2008, following an Aurora murder, Middleton joined with other Aurora legislators to call for a state investigation into how the accused perpetrator, suspected of being an illegal immigrant, was allowed to remain in the United States under current law, with an eye toward revising state laws that may have contributed to the",
"The Charter Friends Award was given by the Colorado League of Charter Schools.",
"The House Education Committee and the House Transportation and Energy Committee were both created during the 2009 legislative session.",
"She planned on sponsoring legislation to create a state investment fund to support services for people with developmental disabilities, a move prompted by the failure of a statewide ballot measure to raise sales taxes to fund the same services; however, she later announced that she would not pursue the measure because of poor state revenue",
"In August 2010 she withdrew from her reelection campaign to accept a position with Emerge America, an organization that recruits and trains female Democratic political candidates.",
"Because Colorado's 2010 Democratic primary already happened, Rhonda Fields was nominated by the Democrats to take the place on the November ballot.",
"While continuing to lead Emerge America, Middleton moved back to Colorado from California.",
"In January of last year, Middleton considered challenging Andrew Romanoff for the Democratic nomination for Colorado's 6th congressional district.",
"The Executive Director position for NARAL Pro-Choice Colorado was accepted by Middleton in May.",
"Colorado State Board of Education Member Karen Middleton is a member of the Colorado House of Representatives."
] | <mask> (born February 24, 1966) is an American politician who served as a member of the Colorado House of Representatives from 2004 to 2008 and 2008 to 2011. Background
<mask> was born on February 24, 1966. After a career as a development officer and project manager in the field of education, <mask> was appointed to the Colorado State Board of Education in 2004 and in 2006 won election to a two-year term. In February 2008, <mask> was appointed as a state representative to fill the vacancy in Aurora, Colorado's District 42 left by the resignation of Rep. Michael Garcia from the Colorado House of Representatives. <mask> was elected to a full term in 2008. In the 2010 election, <mask> withdrew her candidacy to accept a position in San Francisco, CA as president of Emerge America, and was succeeded in office by Rhonda Fields. In 2013, <mask> left her Emerge America position to accept an offer to become Executive Director of NARAL Pro-Choice Colorado, and state affiliate of NARAL Pro-Choice America.Education
B.A. in political science and women's studies, Mount Holyoke College (1988)
M.A. in political science, University of Colorado at Denver (1996)
M.A. in higher education, University of Denver (2007)
Professional career
1980s
<mask> earned her undergraduate degree from Mount Holyoke College in 1988, graduating with a B.A. in political science and women's studies. While in college, she served as president and vice-president of Mount Holyoke's Student Government Association and was elected baccalaureate speaker. After graduation, she worked for a year as the coordinator of regional activities at Dana Hall School, an all-girls school in Massachusetts, where she organized alumni events and groups.Afterwards, she joined the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs in Washington DC, as manager of development programs, raising funds for international programs. 1990s
In 1992, <mask> enrolled in the graduate program at the University of Colorado at Denver. There, she co-created and co-chaired the political science graduate student association and served on the campus-wide steering committee for the Auraria Women’s Network. <mask> graduated with an M.A. in political science in 1996, with a thesis titled An Analysis of State Campaign Finance Reform. While in graduate school, she also worked as director of development for the Montessori School of Denver (from 1992 to 1994), and then as director of operations for alumni and development at the University of Denver College of Law (from 1994 to 1996), developing and managing capital and giving campaigns. <mask> joined the staff of the University of Denver's Graduate School of International Studies in April 1996, first as Director of Admissions and Student Affairs and rising to the post of Assistant Dean for Admissions and Student Affairs, overseeing graduate student recruitment, enrollment, and management.While working in higher education administration, <mask> co-chaired the Association of Professional Schools for International Affairs Admissions Officers, attended the National Association for Women in Education's Academy of Leadership in Higher Education, and received the Woman Leader of Excellence Award from the Colorado Women’s Leadership Coalition in 1997 and the University of Denver Excellence in Education Award in 1998. In 1997, <mask> entered the graduate program in higher education policy at the University of Denver. She spent 10 years pursuing a doctoral degree, was ABD (all but dissertation), but ultimately took a second master's and ended her graduate career. While <mask> served in her first legislative session, she was pregnant with her first child, Zoe Grace <mask>, who was born in August 2008. 2000s
<mask> worked full-time while pursuing her doctorate. While a graduate student, she chaired the University of Denver's Graduate Women's Council from 2000 to 2002 and was a board member of the university's alumni association from 2003 to 2004. While in the School of Education, she received its Publication Award in 2003 and Service Award in 2006.She was also hired as manager of program consulting at eCollege in 2000, and quickly promoted to director of the Center for Internet Technology in Education. At eCollege, an online learning company specializing in online course development, she managed public affairs, online learning conferences, and consulting operations. In 2000, <mask> graduated from the Colorado Institute for Leadership Training and earned certification from the Institute for Management of Distance Education. In 2001, <mask> joined the Western Cooperative for Educational Telecommunications, a project of the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education, as a senior project coordinator, where she developed resources for online teaching and learning for use by K-12 schools and higher education institutions. While there, she helped create the North American Council for Online Learning. From 2003 to 2004, <mask> was vice president for enrollment at Up with People, managing global recruitment and instigating partnerships with the University of Colorado at Denver, as well as communications and marketing for the WorldSmart Leadership Program. In 2004, she spent several months in an interim position as policy director for the House Minority Office at the Colorado General Assembly, where she was involved in setting policy direction for the Democratic caucus.In addition to her professional activities, <mask> was a board member of Colorado Women's Agenda from 1994 to 2004, serving as its president from 1995 to 1999, and was a member of the DU International Human Rights Institute/Advocacy Center Advisory Board from 1998 to 2003. She has also served on the boards of the Aurora Education Foundation (from 2003 to 2006) and the Adams 14 Education Foundation (from 2004 to 2006), on the State of Colorado's Consumer Insurance Council (from 2001 to 2003) and on the Citizen’s Advisory Committee on Housing and Community Development (in 2003). While on the state board of education, from 2004 to 2007, <mask> ran a non-profit management firm, Karen Middleton & Associates, working with clients including the Institute of International Education, the Colorado Children’s Campaign and Up with People, focusing on education-related projects. She also taught political science part-time at Community College of Aurora, and completed a second master's degree, in higher education policy, from the University of Denver, in 2007. In March 2007, <mask> joined ScholarCentric, an educational publishing company, as Vice President of Development. In June 2007, she was promoted to Vice President of Sales and Development. State Board of Education
<mask> first sought elected office in 2002, campaigning for an elected post on the University of Colorado Board of Regents.She lost the race to represent Colorado's 7th Congressional district to Republican Patricia Hayes, earning 49% of the popular vote. In November 2004, following the resignation of Colorado State Board of Education member Christine Baca, a Democratic Party vacancy committee appointed <mask> to the board's 7th district seat
She was elected to serve for the final two years of the unexpired term in November 2006, defeating Republican Lee Kunz with 55 percent of the popular vote. After having criticized Colorado Education Commissioner William Moloney, chastising him as "ineffective," and calling for his resignation, in 2006, <mask> was involved in the selection of his replacement, Fountain, Colorado School Superintendent Dwight Jones, in 2007. While on the board, she also cast votes against the use of quotas as a means of fostering diversity in charter schools, advocated for the creation of a state online education coordinator, and proposed a motion to allow state funding for "fifth year" high school programs designed to help students earn associate's degrees. In 2005, <mask> was appointed to the board of the Alliance for Quality Teaching, the advisory board of the Campaign for the Civic Mission of Schools, and the Colorado General Assembly's Interim School Finance Task Force. In 2006, she was named to the State Advisory Committee for Gifted and Talented Education. <mask> also served on the Government Affairs Committee for the National Association for State Boards of Education in 2007.Increasingly prominent in Democratic Party circles, <mask> received the "Rising Star" Award from the Colorado Democratic Party in 2006 and was named one of The Colorado Statesman's "Movers and Shakers" in 2007. Legislative career
2008 appointment and election
In October 2007, <mask> launched her campaign for the Colorado State House of Representatives seat being vacated by term-limited Representative Michael Garcia, centering her campaign on her experience in education issues. Following the resignation of Rep. Michael Garcia in February 2008, v <mask> announced her intention to seek a Democratic Party vacancy committee's nomination for the open seat, and was quickly viewed as the leading contender for the appointment. On February 10, the vacancy committee voted 24-3 to name <mask> to replace Garcia in the state house. She was sworn into the legislature on the morning of February 13, after having submitted her resignation from the Colorado State Board of Education, effective that same day. <mask> stood for a full term in November 2008; she faced opposition from Libertarian Jim Frye and Republican George Carouthers. <mask>'s re-election bid was endorsed by the Denver Post and the Aurora Sentinel.She ultimately won with 68% of the popular vote. After winning a full term in November 2008, <mask> was elected Majority Caucus Chair by state house Democrats. 2008 legislative session
After joining the Colorado General Assembly in the midst of the 2008 legislative session, <mask> was named to seats on the House Education Committee and the House State, Veterans, & Military Affairs Committee. She has named economic growth, education, and health care as her top legislative priorities for the legislative session. She has sponsored legislation to increase training standards for Colorado's Witness Protection Program and legislation signed into law to provide $5 million in funding in "Colorado Counselor Corps" funding for additional guidance counselors in struggling public schools. <mask> has also supported renaming the University of Colorado Denver Anschutz Medical Campus to add "in Aurora," reflecting the campus's physical location. After unsuccessfully lobbying the University of Colorado Board of Regents to change the name, <mask> plans to offer a bill to change the name legislatively during the 2009 session.In September 2008, following an Aurora murder, <mask> joined with other Aurora legislators in September to call for a state investigation into how the accused perpetrator, suspected of being an illegal immigrant, was allowed to remain in the United States under current law, with an eye toward revising state laws that may have contributed to the situation. In November 2008, <mask> received the Charter Friends Award from the Colorado League of Charter Schools. 2009 legislative session
For the 2009 legislative session, <mask> was named to seats on the House Education Committee and the House Transportation and Energy Committee. She planned on sponsoring legislation to create a state investment fund to support services for people with developmental disabilities, a move prompted by the failure of a statewide ballot measure to raise sales taxes to fund the same services; however, <mask> later announced that she would not pursue the measure because of poor state revenue projections. 2010 withdrawal from reelection campaign
In August 2010, <mask> withdrew from her campaign for reelection to accept a position in San Francisco, CA leading Emerge America, an organization whose mission is to recruit and train female Democratic political candidates. Because Colorado's 2010 Democratic primary already occurred, a Democratic vacancy committee met and nominated Rhonda Fields to take <mask>'s place on the November ballot. Post-Legislature activity
While continuing to lead Emerge America, <mask> moved back from California to Colorado, returning to Aurora, Colorado.In January 2013, <mask> considered challenging Andrew Romanoff for the Democratic nomination for Colorado's 6th congressional district, but ultimately demurred. In May 2013, <mask> left Emerge America to accept the Executive Director position for NARAL Pro-Choice Colorado. See also
NARAL Pro-Choice America
References
External links
<mask> for Colorado State House District 42 - campaign site
Colorado State Board of Education Member <mask> - SBOE profile
Emerge America
NARAL Pro-Choice Colorado
Living people
Members of the Colorado House of Representatives
Mount Holyoke College alumni
Women state legislators in Colorado
Colorado city council members
University of Colorado Denver alumni
1966 births
University of Denver alumni
Colorado Democrats
American abortion-rights activists
Women city councillors in Colorado
21st-century American women | [
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] | <mask> was an American politician who served as a member of the Colorado House of Representatives from 2004 to 2008 and 2011. <mask> was born on February 24, 1966. In 2004, he was appointed to the Colorado State Board of Education and in 2006 he was elected to a two-year term. In February 2008, <mask> was appointed as a state representative to fill the seat in Aurora, Colorado's District 42 that was left by the resignation of Rep. Michael Garcia from the Colorado House of Representatives. In 2008 he was elected to a full term. In the 2010 election, Rhonda Fields was elected president of Emerge America, despite the fact that <mask> withdrew her candidacy to take the position in San Francisco. She became the Executive Director of NARAL Pro-Choice Colorado and the state affiliate of NARAL Pro-Choice America after leaving Emerge America.A degree in education. The M.A. is in political science and women's studies. The University of Colorado at Denver has a political science degree. In higher education, University of Denver in 2007, <mask> graduated with a B.A. Women's studies and political science are included. She served as president and vice-president of Mount Holyoke's Student Government Association while in college. She worked for a year at Dana Hall School in Massachusetts, where she organized alumni events and groups.She became the manager of development programs at the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs in Washington DC. The graduate program at the University of Colorado at Denver was started in 1992. She was on the steering committee for the Auraria Women's Network and co-chaired the political science graduate student association. He graduated with an M.A. The thesis was titled An Analysis of State Campaign Finance Reform. She was the director of development for the Montessori School of Denver from 1992 to 1994 and the director of operations for alumni and development at the University of Denver College of Law from 1994 to 1996. In 1996 he joined the staff of the University of Denver's Graduate School of International Studies as Director of Admissions and Student Affairs and rose to the post of assistant dean for admissions and student affairs.While working in higher education administration, she co-chaired the Association of Professional Schools for International Affairs Admissions Officers, attended the National Association for Women in Education's Academy of Leadership in Higher Education, and received the Woman Leader ofExcellence Award from the Colorado Women's Leadership Coalition. The University of Denver has a graduate program in higher education policy. She took a second master's degree and ended her graduate career after 10 years of pursuing a PhD. While serving in her first legislative session, she gave birth to her first child, a baby girl. She pursued her doctorate while working full-time. She chaired the University of Denver's Graduate Women's Council from 2000 to 2002 and was a board member of the university's alumni association from 2003 to 2004. She received two awards while in the School of Education.She was promoted to director of the Center for Internet Technology in Education after she was hired as manager of program consulting at eCollege. She managed public affairs, online learning conferences, and consulting operations at eCollege, an online learning company. The Institute for Management of Distance Education and the Colorado Institute for Leadership Training both gave certifications to <mask> in 2000. She developed resources for online teaching and learning for use by K-12 schools and higher education institutions when she joined the Western Cooperative for Educational Telecommunications in 2001. She was involved in the creation of the North American Council for Online Learning. From 2003 to 2004, he was the vice president forEnrollment at Up with People, managing global recruitment and partnerships with the University of Colorado at Denver, as well as communications and marketing for the WorldSmart Leadership Program. She spent several months in an interim position as policy director for the House Minority Office at the Colorado General Assembly, where she was involved in setting policy direction for the Democratic caucus.From 1995 to 1999 she was the president of Colorado Women's Agenda and from 1998 to 2003 she was a member of the DU International Human Rights Institute/Advocacy Center Advisory Board. She served on the boards of the Aurora Education Foundation, the Adams 14 Education Foundation, and the State of Colorado's Consumer Insurance Council. During her time on the state board of education, she ran a non-profit management firm that worked with clients such as the Institute of International Education, the Colorado Children's Campaign and Up with People. She earned a second master's degree in higher education policy from the University of Denver in 2007, after teaching political science part-time at Community College of Aurora. In March 2007, he joined ScholarCentric as Vice President of Development. She was promoted to Vice President of Sales and Development in June of 2007. The University of Colorado Board of regents has an elected post for the State Board of Education.She lost the race to represent Colorado's 7th Congressional district to a Republican. She was elected to serve for the final two years of the unexpired term in November 2006 after being appointed to the Colorado State Board of Education by the Democratic Party. After calling for the resignation of Colorado Education Commissioner William Moloney in 2006 and chastising him for being "ineffective", <mask> was involved in the selection of his replacement. While on the board, she cast votes against the use of quota as a means of fostering diversity in charter schools, advocated for the creation of a state online educationordinator, and proposed a motion to allow state funding for "fifth year" high school programs designed to help students earn associate's The Alliance for Quality Teaching, the advisory board of the Campaign for the Civic Mission of Schools, and the Colorado General Assembly's Interim School Finance Task Force were some of the organizations that <mask> was appointed to in 2005. She was a member of the State Advisory Committee for Gifted and Talented Education. The National Association for State Boards of Education had a Government Affairs Committee.In 2006 she received the "Rising Star" Award from the Colorado Democratic Party and in 2007, she was named one of The Colorado Statesman's "Movers and Shakers". In October 2007, she launched her campaign for the Colorado State House of Representatives seat being left by term-limited Representative Michael Garcia, centering her campaign on her experience in education issues. v <mask> was seen as the leading contender for the open seat after she announced her intention to seek the Democratic Party's nomination. On February 10, the committee voted to name <mask> to the state house. She was sworn into the legislature on the morning of February 13 after she resigned from the Colorado State Board of Education. In November of 2008, she stood for a full term. The Denver Post endorsed <mask>'s re- election bid.She got the majority of the popular vote. The Majority Caucus Chair is elected by the state house Democrats. After joining the Colorado General Assembly in the midst of the 2008 legislative session, he was named to seats on the House Education Committee and the House State, Veterans, and Military Affairs Committee. Economic growth, education, and health care are her top legislative priorities. She has sponsored legislation to increase training standards for Colorado's Witness Protection Program and legislation signed into law to provide $5 million in funding for additional guidance counselors in struggling public schools. The University of Colorado Denver Anschutz Medical Campus should be renamed to reflect its location. A bill to change the name of the University of Colorado will be offered during the next legislative session.In September 2008, following an Aurora murder, <mask> joined with other Aurora legislators to call for a state investigation into how the accused perpetrator, suspected of being an illegal immigrant, was allowed to remain in the United States under current law, with an eye toward revising state laws that may have contributed to the The Charter Friends Award was given by the Colorado League of Charter Schools. The House Education Committee and the House Transportation and Energy Committee were both created during the 2009 legislative session. She planned on sponsoring legislation to create a state investment fund to support services for people with developmental disabilities, a move prompted by the failure of a statewide ballot measure to raise sales taxes to fund the same services; however, she later announced that she would not pursue the measure because of poor state revenue In August 2010 she withdrew from her reelection campaign to accept a position with Emerge America, an organization that recruits and trains female Democratic political candidates. Because Colorado's 2010 Democratic primary already happened, Rhonda Fields was nominated by the Democrats to take the place on the November ballot. While continuing to lead Emerge America, <mask> moved back to Colorado from California.In January of last year, <mask> considered challenging Andrew Romanoff for the Democratic nomination for Colorado's 6th congressional district. The Executive Director position for NARAL Pro-Choice Colorado was accepted by <mask> in May. Colorado State Board of Education Member <mask> is a member of the Colorado House of Representatives. | [
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368431 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victor%20Rothschild%2C%203rd%20Baron%20Rothschild | Victor Rothschild, 3rd Baron Rothschild | Nathaniel Mayer Victor Rothschild, 3rd Baron Rothschild (31 October 1910 – 20 March 1990) was a British banker, scientist, intelligence officer during World War II, and later a senior executive with Royal Dutch Shell and N M Rothschild & Sons, and an advisor to the Edward Heath and Margaret Thatcher governments of the UK. He was a member of the prominent Rothschild family.
Biography
Early life
Rothschild was the only son of Charles Rothschild and Rózsika Rothschild (née Baroness Edle von Wertheimstein). Both parents were Jewish, his father a member of the Rothschild banking family and his mother the daughter of the first titled Jew in Austria. He grew up in Waddesdon Manor and Tring Park Mansion, among other family homes. He had three sisters, including Pannonica de Koenigswarter (who would become known as the "Jazz Baroness") and Dame Miriam Louisa Rothschild. Rothschild suffered the suicide of his father when he was 13 years old. He was educated at Harrow School.
Cambridge and London
At Trinity College, Cambridge, he read physiology, French, and English. Later he worked in the Zoology Department before gaining a PhD in 1935. He played first-class cricket for the University and Northamptonshire. At Cambridge he was known for his playboy lifestyle, driving a Bugatti and collecting art and rare books.
Rothschild joined the Cambridge Apostles, a secret society, which at that time was predominantly Marxist, though he stated himself that he "was mildly left-wing but never a Marxist". He became friends with Guy Burgess, Anthony Blunt and Kim Philby; members of the Cambridge Spy Ring.
In 1933, Rothschild gave Blunt £100 to purchase "Eliezer and Rebecca" by Nicolas Poussin. The painting was sold by Blunt's executors in 1985 for £100,000 and is now in the Fitzwilliam Museum.
His flat in London was shared with Burgess and Blunt. This later aroused suspicion that he was the so-called Fifth Man in the Cambridge Spy Ring.
Rothschild inherited his title at the age of 26 following the death of his uncle Walter Rothschild, 2nd Baron Rothschild on 27 August 1937. He sat as a Labour Party peer in the House of Lords, but spoke only twice there during his life (both speeches were in 1946, one about the pasteurization of milk, and another about the situation in Palestine).
World War II
Rothschild was recruited to work for MI5 during World War II in roles including bomb disposal, disinformation and espionage, winning the George Medal for "dangerous work in hazardous circumstances". He was the head of B1C, the "explosives and sabotage section", and worked on identifying where Britain's war effort was vulnerable to sabotage and counter German sabotage attempts. This included personally dismantling examples of German booby traps and disguised explosives.
With his assistant Theresa Clay, he ran the "Fifth Column" operation, that saw MI5 officer Eric Roberts masquerade as the Gestapo's man in London in order to identify hundreds of Nazi sympathizers.
Cold War, Shell and Think Tank
In Who Paid the Piper? (1999), an account of CIA propaganda during the Cold War, author Frances Stonor Saunders alleges that Rothschild channelled funds to Encounter, an intellectual magazine founded in 1953 to support the "non-Stalinist left" in advance of US foreign policy goals.
After the war, he joined the zoology department at Cambridge University from 1950 to 1970. He served as chairman of the Agricultural Research Council from 1948 to 1958 and as worldwide head of research at Royal Dutch/Shell from 1963 to 1970.
Flora Solomon claims in her autobiography that in August 1962, during a reception at the Weizmann Institute, she told Rothschild that she thought that Tomás Harris and Kim Philby were Soviet spies.
When Anthony Blunt was unmasked as a member of the Cambridge Spy ring in 1964, Rothschild was questioned by Special Branch (though Blunt was not publicly identified as a Soviet agent until 1979 in the House of Commons by Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher). Rothschild was cleared, and continued working on projects for the British government.
Rothschild was head of the Central Policy Review Staff from 1971 to 1974 (known popularly as "The Think Tank") a staff which researched policy specifically for the Government until Margaret Thatcher abolished it.
In 1971 Rothschild was awarded an honorary degree from Tel Aviv University for ''the advancement of science, education and the economy of Israel''. It was followed in 1975 by an honorary degree from Jerusalem's Hebrew University. The annual "Victor Rothschild Memorial Symposia" is named after Rothschild.
Thatcher years and Spycatcher
In the 1980s, Rothschild joined the family bank as chairman in an effort to quell the feuding between factions led by Evelyn Rothschild and Victor's son, Jacob Rothschild. In this he was unsuccessful as Jacob resigned from the bank to found J. Rothschild Assurance Group (a separate entity, now St. James's Place plc).
In 1982 he published An Enquiry into the Social Science Research Council at the behest of Sir Keith Joseph, a Conservative minister and mentor of Margaret Thatcher.
He continued to work in security as an adviser to Margaret Thatcher.
He appears several times in the book Spycatcher, which he hoped would clear the air over suspicions about his wartime role and the possibility he was involved in the Cambridge spy ring. In early 1987 Tam Dalyell MP used parliamentary privilege to suggest Rothschild should be prosecuted for a chain of events he had "set in train, with Peter Wright and Harry Chapman Pincher" which had led to a "breach of confidence in relation to information on matters of state security given to authors".
He was still able to enter the premises of MI5 as a former employee and was aware of suspicions there was a "mole" in MI5, but felt himself above suspicion. While Edward Heath was Prime Minister, Rothschild was a frequent visitor to Chequers, the Prime Minister's country residence. Throughout Rothschild's life, he was a valued adviser on intelligence and science to both Conservative and Labour Governments.
In his 1994 book The Fifth Man, Australian author Roland Perry asserted that in 1993, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, six retired KGB colonels, including Yuri Modin, the spy ring's handler, alleged Rothschild was the so-called "Fifth Man": "Rothschild was the key to most of the Cambridge ring's penetration of British intelligence. "He had the contacts", Modin noted. "He was able to introduce Burgess, Blunt and others to important figures in Intelligence such as Stewart Menzies, Dick White and Robert Vansittart in the Foreign Office ... who controlled MI6." However this suggestion is rebutted by other researchers; commentator Sheila Kerr pointed out that as soon as the book came out, Modin denied Perry's version of their discussions (having already stated that the fifth man was Cairncross), and concluded that "Perry's case against Rothschild is unconvincing because of dubious sources and slack methods". Noel Annan, who was criticised by the author Perry for a negative view of the latter's book and claims, writes: "Amid clouds of misstatements he [Perry] relies almost wholly on insinuation and bluster. ... when Andrew Boyle published his book and exposed Blunt, why did Margaret Thatcher acknowledge in the House of Commons the truth about Blunt, but later, in the case of Rothschild, clear him? Mr. Perry is saying she lied to the House. He tries to make much of her curt statement, "I am advised that we have no evidence that he was ever a Soviet spy." It is the only official reply she could have made. In MI5 jargon there was "No Trace" against his name". Christopher Andrew and Vasili Mitrokhin, in The Mitrokhin Archives, make no mention of Rothschild as a Soviet agent and instead identify John Cairncross as the Fifth Man.
Former KGB controller Yuri Modin denied ever having named Rothschild as "any kind of Soviet agent". "Because he was in MI5 they learned things from him. This doesn't make him the fifth man, and he wasn't," Modin wrote. His own book's title clarifies the name of all five of the Cambridge spy group: My Five Cambridge Friends: Burgess, Maclean, Philby, Blunt, and Cairncross by Their KGB Controller. Since Rothschild had died prior to publication of the Perry book, the family was unable to start a libel action.
Rothschild published an autobiography, Random Variables in 1984.
Despite being an opposition Labour party peer, in 1987, during the Thatcher Government, Victor played a role in the sacking of Director-General of the BBC Alasdair Milne, who had backed the programmes Secret Society, Real Lives, and Panorama: 'Maggie's Militant Tendency' which had angered the Thatcher government. Marmaduke Hussey, who was Chairman of the BBC Board of Governors at the time, implied Rothschild initiated the Milne sacking in his autobiography Chance Governs All.
Rothschild took the step of publishing a letter in British newspapers on 3 December 1986 to state "I am not, and never have been, a Soviet agent".
He was an advisor to William Waldegrave during the design of the Community Charge, which led to the Poll Tax Riots.
Family
In 1933, he married Barbara Judith Hutchinson (1911-1989). They had three children.
Sarah Rothschild (born 1934)
Nathaniel Charles Jacob Rothschild (born 1936) (later Jacob Rothschild) 4th Baron Rothschild
Miranda Rothschild (born 1940)
In 1946, he married Teresa Georgina Mayor (1915–1996), who had worked as his assistant at MI5. Mayor's maternal grandfather was Robert John Grote Mayor, the brother of English novelist F. M. Mayor and a greatnephew of philosopher and clergyman John Grote. Her maternal grandmother, Katherine Beatrice Meinertzhagen, was the sister of soldier Richard Meinertzhagen and the niece of author Beatrice Webb. They had four children:
Emma Georgina Rothschild (born 1948), married the Bengali Hindu economist Amartya Kumar Sen (b. 1933) in 1991.
Benjamin Mayer Rothschild (born and died 1952).
Victoria Katherine Rothschild (born 1953) is an academic lecturer at Queen Mary, University of London and the second wife and widow of English writer Simon Gray (1936–2008).
Amschel Mayor James Rothschild (1955–1996), married to Anita Patience Guinness of the Anglo-Irish Protestant Guinness family. Amschel committed suicide in 1996. They had three children; Kate Emma Rothschild Goldsmith (b. 1982), Alice Miranda Rothschild (b. 1983) and James Amschel Victor Rothschild (b. 1985)
Born into a nominally Jewish family, in adult life Rothschild declared himself to be an atheist. However, his body was interred in the historic Jewish Brady Street Cemetery, which remarkably saved that cemetery from proposed redevelopment for 100 years. His sister Miriam Louisa Rothschild was a distinguished entomologist, and his sister Nica de Koenigswarter was a bebop jazz enthusiast and patron of Thelonious Monk and Charlie Parker.
Honours and awards
Titles
3rd Baron Rothschild, of Tring, co. Hertford [U.K., 1885], 27 August 1937.
4th Baronet Rothschild [U.K., 1847], 27 August 1937.
Knight Grand Cross, Order of the British Empire (G.B.E.), 1975.
Knight, Most Venerable Order of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem (K.St.J.).
Fellow, Royal Society (F.R.S.), 1953.
Major, Intelligence Corps.
Decorations
George Medal (G.M.) (United Kingdom), 1944.
Legion of Merit (United States), 1946.
Bronze Star Medal (United States), 1948.
Notes
References
See also the list of references at Rothschild banking family of England
External links
1910 births
1990 deaths
3
Labour Party (UK) hereditary peers
MI5 personnel
Cambridge University cricketers
English cricketers
English Jews
English atheists
Jewish American atheists
Jewish scientists
Jewish British politicians
Northamptonshire cricketers
People educated at Harrow School
Fellows of the Royal Society
Knights Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire
Recipients of the George Medal
Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge
20th-century British zoologists
Burials at Brady Street Cemetery | [
"Nathaniel Mayer Victor Rothschild, 3rd Baron Rothschild (31 October 1910 – 20 March 1990) was a British banker, scientist, intelligence officer during World War II, and later a senior executive with Royal Dutch Shell and N M Rothschild & Sons, and an advisor to the Edward Heath and Margaret Thatcher governments of the UK.",
"He was a member of the prominent Rothschild family.",
"Biography\n\nEarly life \nRothschild was the only son of Charles Rothschild and Rózsika Rothschild (née Baroness Edle von Wertheimstein).",
"Both parents were Jewish, his father a member of the Rothschild banking family and his mother the daughter of the first titled Jew in Austria.",
"He grew up in Waddesdon Manor and Tring Park Mansion, among other family homes.",
"He had three sisters, including Pannonica de Koenigswarter (who would become known as the \"Jazz Baroness\") and Dame Miriam Louisa Rothschild.",
"Rothschild suffered the suicide of his father when he was 13 years old.",
"He was educated at Harrow School.",
"Cambridge and London \nAt Trinity College, Cambridge, he read physiology, French, and English.",
"Later he worked in the Zoology Department before gaining a PhD in 1935.",
"He played first-class cricket for the University and Northamptonshire.",
"At Cambridge he was known for his playboy lifestyle, driving a Bugatti and collecting art and rare books.",
"Rothschild joined the Cambridge Apostles, a secret society, which at that time was predominantly Marxist, though he stated himself that he \"was mildly left-wing but never a Marxist\".",
"He became friends with Guy Burgess, Anthony Blunt and Kim Philby; members of the Cambridge Spy Ring.",
"In 1933, Rothschild gave Blunt £100 to purchase \"Eliezer and Rebecca\" by Nicolas Poussin.",
"The painting was sold by Blunt's executors in 1985 for £100,000 and is now in the Fitzwilliam Museum.",
"His flat in London was shared with Burgess and Blunt.",
"This later aroused suspicion that he was the so-called Fifth Man in the Cambridge Spy Ring.",
"Rothschild inherited his title at the age of 26 following the death of his uncle Walter Rothschild, 2nd Baron Rothschild on 27 August 1937.",
"He sat as a Labour Party peer in the House of Lords, but spoke only twice there during his life (both speeches were in 1946, one about the pasteurization of milk, and another about the situation in Palestine).",
"World War II\nRothschild was recruited to work for MI5 during World War II in roles including bomb disposal, disinformation and espionage, winning the George Medal for \"dangerous work in hazardous circumstances\".",
"He was the head of B1C, the \"explosives and sabotage section\", and worked on identifying where Britain's war effort was vulnerable to sabotage and counter German sabotage attempts.",
"This included personally dismantling examples of German booby traps and disguised explosives.",
"With his assistant Theresa Clay, he ran the \"Fifth Column\" operation, that saw MI5 officer Eric Roberts masquerade as the Gestapo's man in London in order to identify hundreds of Nazi sympathizers.",
"Cold War, Shell and Think Tank\nIn Who Paid the Piper?",
"(1999), an account of CIA propaganda during the Cold War, author Frances Stonor Saunders alleges that Rothschild channelled funds to Encounter, an intellectual magazine founded in 1953 to support the \"non-Stalinist left\" in advance of US foreign policy goals.",
"After the war, he joined the zoology department at Cambridge University from 1950 to 1970.",
"He served as chairman of the Agricultural Research Council from 1948 to 1958 and as worldwide head of research at Royal Dutch/Shell from 1963 to 1970.",
"Flora Solomon claims in her autobiography that in August 1962, during a reception at the Weizmann Institute, she told Rothschild that she thought that Tomás Harris and Kim Philby were Soviet spies.",
"When Anthony Blunt was unmasked as a member of the Cambridge Spy ring in 1964, Rothschild was questioned by Special Branch (though Blunt was not publicly identified as a Soviet agent until 1979 in the House of Commons by Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher).",
"Rothschild was cleared, and continued working on projects for the British government.",
"Rothschild was head of the Central Policy Review Staff from 1971 to 1974 (known popularly as \"The Think Tank\") a staff which researched policy specifically for the Government until Margaret Thatcher abolished it.",
"In 1971 Rothschild was awarded an honorary degree from Tel Aviv University for ''the advancement of science, education and the economy of Israel''.",
"It was followed in 1975 by an honorary degree from Jerusalem's Hebrew University.",
"The annual \"Victor Rothschild Memorial Symposia\" is named after Rothschild.",
"Thatcher years and Spycatcher \nIn the 1980s, Rothschild joined the family bank as chairman in an effort to quell the feuding between factions led by Evelyn Rothschild and Victor's son, Jacob Rothschild.",
"In this he was unsuccessful as Jacob resigned from the bank to found J. Rothschild Assurance Group (a separate entity, now St. James's Place plc).",
"In 1982 he published An Enquiry into the Social Science Research Council at the behest of Sir Keith Joseph, a Conservative minister and mentor of Margaret Thatcher.",
"He continued to work in security as an adviser to Margaret Thatcher.",
"He appears several times in the book Spycatcher, which he hoped would clear the air over suspicions about his wartime role and the possibility he was involved in the Cambridge spy ring.",
"In early 1987 Tam Dalyell MP used parliamentary privilege to suggest Rothschild should be prosecuted for a chain of events he had \"set in train, with Peter Wright and Harry Chapman Pincher\" which had led to a \"breach of confidence in relation to information on matters of state security given to authors\".",
"He was still able to enter the premises of MI5 as a former employee and was aware of suspicions there was a \"mole\" in MI5, but felt himself above suspicion.",
"While Edward Heath was Prime Minister, Rothschild was a frequent visitor to Chequers, the Prime Minister's country residence.",
"Throughout Rothschild's life, he was a valued adviser on intelligence and science to both Conservative and Labour Governments.",
"In his 1994 book The Fifth Man, Australian author Roland Perry asserted that in 1993, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, six retired KGB colonels, including Yuri Modin, the spy ring's handler, alleged Rothschild was the so-called \"Fifth Man\": \"Rothschild was the key to most of the Cambridge ring's penetration of British intelligence.",
"\"He had the contacts\", Modin noted.",
"\"He was able to introduce Burgess, Blunt and others to important figures in Intelligence such as Stewart Menzies, Dick White and Robert Vansittart in the Foreign Office ... who controlled MI6.\"",
"However this suggestion is rebutted by other researchers; commentator Sheila Kerr pointed out that as soon as the book came out, Modin denied Perry's version of their discussions (having already stated that the fifth man was Cairncross), and concluded that \"Perry's case against Rothschild is unconvincing because of dubious sources and slack methods\".",
"Noel Annan, who was criticised by the author Perry for a negative view of the latter's book and claims, writes: \"Amid clouds of misstatements he [Perry] relies almost wholly on insinuation and bluster.",
"... when Andrew Boyle published his book and exposed Blunt, why did Margaret Thatcher acknowledge in the House of Commons the truth about Blunt, but later, in the case of Rothschild, clear him?",
"Mr. Perry is saying she lied to the House.",
"He tries to make much of her curt statement, \"I am advised that we have no evidence that he was ever a Soviet spy.\"",
"It is the only official reply she could have made.",
"In MI5 jargon there was \"No Trace\" against his name\".",
"Christopher Andrew and Vasili Mitrokhin, in The Mitrokhin Archives, make no mention of Rothschild as a Soviet agent and instead identify John Cairncross as the Fifth Man.",
"Former KGB controller Yuri Modin denied ever having named Rothschild as \"any kind of Soviet agent\".",
"\"Because he was in MI5 they learned things from him.",
"This doesn't make him the fifth man, and he wasn't,\" Modin wrote.",
"His own book's title clarifies the name of all five of the Cambridge spy group: My Five Cambridge Friends: Burgess, Maclean, Philby, Blunt, and Cairncross by Their KGB Controller.",
"Since Rothschild had died prior to publication of the Perry book, the family was unable to start a libel action.",
"Rothschild published an autobiography, Random Variables in 1984.",
"Despite being an opposition Labour party peer, in 1987, during the Thatcher Government, Victor played a role in the sacking of Director-General of the BBC Alasdair Milne, who had backed the programmes Secret Society, Real Lives, and Panorama: 'Maggie's Militant Tendency' which had angered the Thatcher government.",
"Marmaduke Hussey, who was Chairman of the BBC Board of Governors at the time, implied Rothschild initiated the Milne sacking in his autobiography Chance Governs All.",
"Rothschild took the step of publishing a letter in British newspapers on 3 December 1986 to state \"I am not, and never have been, a Soviet agent\".",
"He was an advisor to William Waldegrave during the design of the Community Charge, which led to the Poll Tax Riots.",
"Family\nIn 1933, he married Barbara Judith Hutchinson (1911-1989).",
"They had three children.",
"Sarah Rothschild (born 1934)\nNathaniel Charles Jacob Rothschild (born 1936) (later Jacob Rothschild) 4th Baron Rothschild\nMiranda Rothschild (born 1940)\n\nIn 1946, he married Teresa Georgina Mayor (1915–1996), who had worked as his assistant at MI5.",
"Mayor's maternal grandfather was Robert John Grote Mayor, the brother of English novelist F. M. Mayor and a greatnephew of philosopher and clergyman John Grote.",
"Her maternal grandmother, Katherine Beatrice Meinertzhagen, was the sister of soldier Richard Meinertzhagen and the niece of author Beatrice Webb.",
"They had four children:\nEmma Georgina Rothschild (born 1948), married the Bengali Hindu economist Amartya Kumar Sen (b.",
"1933) in 1991.",
"Benjamin Mayer Rothschild (born and died 1952).",
"Victoria Katherine Rothschild (born 1953) is an academic lecturer at Queen Mary, University of London and the second wife and widow of English writer Simon Gray (1936–2008).",
"Amschel Mayor James Rothschild (1955–1996), married to Anita Patience Guinness of the Anglo-Irish Protestant Guinness family.",
"Amschel committed suicide in 1996.",
"They had three children; Kate Emma Rothschild Goldsmith (b.",
"1982), Alice Miranda Rothschild (b.",
"1983) and James Amschel Victor Rothschild (b.",
"1985)\n\nBorn into a nominally Jewish family, in adult life Rothschild declared himself to be an atheist.",
"However, his body was interred in the historic Jewish Brady Street Cemetery, which remarkably saved that cemetery from proposed redevelopment for 100 years.",
"His sister Miriam Louisa Rothschild was a distinguished entomologist, and his sister Nica de Koenigswarter was a bebop jazz enthusiast and patron of Thelonious Monk and Charlie Parker.",
"Honours and awards\n\nTitles\n 3rd Baron Rothschild, of Tring, co. Hertford [U.K., 1885], 27 August 1937.",
"4th Baronet Rothschild [U.K., 1847], 27 August 1937.",
"Knight Grand Cross, Order of the British Empire (G.B.E.",
"), 1975.",
"Knight, Most Venerable Order of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem (K.St.J.).",
"Fellow, Royal Society (F.R.S.",
"), 1953.",
"Major, Intelligence Corps.",
"Decorations\n George Medal (G.M.)",
"(United Kingdom), 1944.",
"Legion of Merit (United States), 1946.",
"Bronze Star Medal (United States), 1948.",
"Notes\n\nReferences\n\n See also the list of references at Rothschild banking family of England\n\nExternal links\n\n1910 births\n1990 deaths\n3\nLabour Party (UK) hereditary peers\nMI5 personnel\nCambridge University cricketers\nEnglish cricketers\nEnglish Jews\nEnglish atheists\nJewish American atheists\nJewish scientists\nJewish British politicians\nNorthamptonshire cricketers\nPeople educated at Harrow School\nFellows of the Royal Society\nKnights Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire\nRecipients of the George Medal\nAlumni of Trinity College, Cambridge\n20th-century British zoologists\nBurials at Brady Street Cemetery"
] | [
"DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch",
"He was a member of the Rothschild family.",
"The only son of Charles Rothschild and Rzsika Rothschild was Rothschild.",
"His mother was the daughter of the first Jew in Austria and his father was a member of the Rothschild banking family.",
"He grew up in a number of family homes.",
"He had three sisters, one of which became known as the \"Jazz Baroness\".",
"Rothschild's father took his own life when Rothschild was 13 years old.",
"He was educated at a school.",
"He read French and English at Trinity College in Cambridge.",
"He got a PhD in 1935 after working in the Zoology Department.",
"He played cricket for both the University and Northamptonshire.",
"He collected art and rare books while at Cambridge and was known for his playboy lifestyle.",
"Rothschild was a member of the Cambridge Apostles, a secret society that 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110",
"He became friends with several people, including members of the Cambridge Spy Ring.",
"\"Eliezer and Rebecca\" was given to Blunt by Rothschild in 1933.",
"The painting is in the Fitzwilliam Museum and was sold in 1985 for $100,000.",
"His flat in London was shared by two other people.",
"He was thought to be the fifth man in the Cambridge spy ring.",
"The death of Rothschild's uncle, Walter Rothschild, 2nd Baron Rothschild, on August 27, 1937, gave Rothschild the title of Baron Rothschild at the age of 26.",
"He spoke about the pasteurization of milk and the situation in Palestine while he was a peer in the House of Lords.",
"Rothschild won the George Medal for \"dangerous work in hazardous circumstances\" after being recruited to work for MI5 during World War II.",
"He was the head of B1C, the \"explosives and sabotage section\", and worked on identifying where Britain's war effort was vulnerable to sabotage and counter German sabotage attempts.",
"This included dismantling examples of German booby traps.",
"MI5 officer Eric Roberts masqueraded as the Gestapo's man in London in order to identify hundreds of Nazi sympathizers, and he ran the \"Fifth Column\" operation with his assistant Theresa Clay.",
"Cold War, Shell and Think Tank were involved in who paid thepiper.",
"According to an account of CIA propaganda during the Cold War, Rothschild funneled funds to a magazine to support the \"non-Stalinist left\" in the US.",
"He joined the zoology department at Cambridge University after the war.",
"He was head of research at Royal Dutch/Shell from 1963 to 1970 and chairman of the Agricultural Research Council from 1948 to 1958.",
"In August 1962, during a reception at the Weizmann Institute, she told Rothschild that she thought Tom's Harris and Kim Philby were Soviet spies.",
"Rothschild was questioned by the Special Branch when Anthony Blunt was identified as a member of the Cambridge Spy ring in 1964, but he was not publicly identified as a Soviet agent until 1979.",
"Rothschild worked on projects for the British government.",
"Rothschild was head of the Central Policy Review Staff from 1971 to 1974 and was responsible for researching policy for the Government until Margaret Thatcher abolished it.",
"Rothschild received a degree from Tel Aviv University in 1971 for ''the advancement of science, education and the economy of Israel''.",
"It was followed by a degree from Jerusalem's Hebrew University in 1975.",
"The Symposia is named after Rothschild.",
"In the 1980s, Rothschild joined the family bank as chairman in an effort to quell the feuding between Evelyn Rothschild and Jacob Rothschild.",
"Jacob left the bank to found J. Rothschild Assurance Group.",
"An Enquiry into the Social Science Research Council was published by him in 1982.",
"He was an adviser to Margaret Thatcher.",
"He wanted the book to clear the air about his wartime role and the possibility he was involved in the Cambridge spy ring.",
"Rothschild should be prosecuted for a chain of events he had \"set in train, with Peter Wright and Harry Chapman Pincher\" which had led to a \"breach of confidence in relation to information on matters of state security given to authors\" according to a report in 1987.",
"He was aware that there was a \"mole\" in MI5 but he didn't feel like he was being watched.",
"Rothschild was a frequent visitor to the country residence of the Prime Minister.",
"Rothschild was an adviser to both Conservative and Labour Governments on intelligence and science.",
"In 1993, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, six retired KGB colonels, including Yuri Modin, the spy ring's handler, claimed that Rothschild was the so-called \"Fifth Man\".",
"Modin said that he had the contacts.",
"He was able to introduce important figures in Intelligence such as Stewart Menzies, Dick White and Robert Vansittart in the Foreign Office.",
"As soon as the book came out, Modin denied Perry's version of their discussions (having already stated that the fifth man was Cairncross), and concluded that \"Perry's case against Rothschild is unconvincing.\"",
"\"Amid clouds of misstatements he relies almost wholly on insinuation and bluster,\" writes Noel Annan, who was criticized by the author for a negative view of the latter's book and claims.",
"Why did Margaret Thatcher acknowledge the truth about Blunt in the House of Commons but not in the case of Rothschild?",
"She lied to the House.",
"He tried to make a statement, \"I am advised that we have no evidence that he was a Soviet spy.\"",
"She could have made an official reply.",
"\"No trace\" was against his name in MI5 jargon.",
"There is no mention of Rothschild as a Soviet agent or John Cairncross as the Fifth Man in the archives.",
"The former KGB controller denied naming Rothschild as a Soviet agent.",
"He was in MI5 and they learned from him.",
"Modin wrote that this doesn't make him the fifth man.",
"The name of the Cambridge spy group was changed to My Five Cambridge Friends by Their KGB Controller.",
"The family couldn't start a libel action because Rothschild died before the book was published.",
"Random Variables was published by Rothschild in 1984.",
"Despite being an opposition Labour party peer, Victor Thatcher played a role in the ousting of the Director-General of the BBC, Alasdair Milne, who had supported the programmes Secret Society, Real Lives, and Panorama.",
"Marmaduke Hussey, who was the Chairman of the Board of Governors at the time, implied in his book that Rothschild initiated the dismissal of Milne.",
"Rothschild published a letter in British newspapers in December of 1986 stating that he was not a Soviet agent.",
"He was an advisor to William Waldegrave during the design of the Community Charge.",
"He married Barbara Judith Hutchinson in 1919.",
"They had three children.",
"The 4th Baron Rothschild Miranda Rothschild was born in 1940.",
"Robert John Grote Mayor was the brother of F. M. Mayor.",
"Her maternal grandmother was the sister of a soldier and the niece of an author.",
"They had four children, one of which was married to a Bengali Hindu economist.",
"In 1991.",
"Benjamin Rothschild died in 1952.",
"The second wife and widow of English writer Simon Gray is an academic lecturer at Queen Mary, University of London.",
"Amschel Mayor James Rothschild was married to a member of the Guinness family.",
"Amschel took his own life in 1996.",
"They had three children.",
"Alice Miranda Rothschild was born in 1982.",
"James Amschel Victor Rothschild was born in 1983.",
"Rothschild declared himself to be an unbeliever when he was a child.",
"The Brady Street Cemetery was saved from being redeveloped for 100 years because his body was buried there.",
"His sister was an entomologist and his sister was a bebop jazz enthusiast.",
"The 3rd Baron Rothschild, of Tring, was honoured and awarded in 1937.",
"27 August 1937 is the date of the 4th Baronet Rothschild.",
"The Order of the British Empire is also known as the Knight Grand Cross.",
"), 1975.",
"The Most Venerable Order of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem is called the Knight.",
"A fellow of the Royal Society.",
"The year was 1953.",
"Major, Intelligence Corps.",
"The George medal is a decorations.",
"In 1944, the United Kingdom.",
"The Legion of Merit was established in the United States.",
"The Bronze Star medal was given to the United States in 1948.",
"The Rothschild banking family of England External links 1910 births 1990 deaths 3 Labour Party (UK) hereditary peers"
] | <mask>, 3rd <mask> (31 October 1910 – 20 March 1990) was a British banker, scientist, intelligence officer during World War II, and later a senior executive with Royal Dutch Shell and N M Rothschild & Sons, and an advisor to the Edward Heath and Margaret Thatcher governments of the UK. He was a member of the prominent <mask> family. Biography
Early life
<mask> was the only son of <mask> and <mask> (née Baroness Edle von Wertheimstein). Both parents were Jewish, his father a member of the <mask> banking family and his mother the daughter of the first titled Jew in Austria. He grew up in Waddesdon Manor and Tring Park Mansion, among other family homes. He had three sisters, including Pannonica de Koenigswarter (who would become known as the "Jazz Baroness") and Dame <mask>. <mask> suffered the suicide of his father when he was 13 years old.He was educated at Harrow School. Cambridge and London
At Trinity College, Cambridge, he read physiology, French, and English. Later he worked in the Zoology Department before gaining a PhD in 1935. He played first-class cricket for the University and Northamptonshire. At Cambridge he was known for his playboy lifestyle, driving a Bugatti and collecting art and rare books. <mask> joined the Cambridge Apostles, a secret society, which at that time was predominantly Marxist, though he stated himself that he "was mildly left-wing but never a Marxist". He became friends with Guy Burgess, Anthony Blunt and Kim Philby; members of the Cambridge Spy Ring.In 1933, <mask> gave Blunt £100 to purchase "Eliezer and Rebecca" by Nicolas Poussin. The painting was sold by Blunt's executors in 1985 for £100,000 and is now in the Fitzwilliam Museum. His flat in London was shared with Burgess and Blunt. This later aroused suspicion that he was the so-called Fifth Man in the Cambridge Spy Ring. <mask> inherited his title at the age of 26 following the death of his uncle <mask>, 2nd Baron <mask> on 27 August 1937. He sat as a Labour Party peer in the House of Lords, but spoke only twice there during his life (both speeches were in 1946, one about the pasteurization of milk, and another about the situation in Palestine). World War II
<mask> was recruited to work for MI5 during World War II in roles including bomb disposal, disinformation and espionage, winning the George Medal for "dangerous work in hazardous circumstances".He was the head of B1C, the "explosives and sabotage section", and worked on identifying where Britain's war effort was vulnerable to sabotage and counter German sabotage attempts. This included personally dismantling examples of German booby traps and disguised explosives. With his assistant Theresa Clay, he ran the "Fifth Column" operation, that saw MI5 officer Eric Roberts masquerade as the Gestapo's man in London in order to identify hundreds of Nazi sympathizers. Cold War, Shell and Think Tank
In Who Paid the Piper? (1999), an account of CIA propaganda during the Cold War, author Frances Stonor Saunders alleges that <mask> channelled funds to Encounter, an intellectual magazine founded in 1953 to support the "non-Stalinist left" in advance of US foreign policy goals. After the war, he joined the zoology department at Cambridge University from 1950 to 1970. He served as chairman of the Agricultural Research Council from 1948 to 1958 and as worldwide head of research at Royal Dutch/Shell from 1963 to 1970.Flora Solomon claims in her autobiography that in August 1962, during a reception at the Weizmann Institute, she told <mask> that she thought that Tomás Harris and Kim Philby were Soviet spies. When Anthony Blunt was unmasked as a member of the Cambridge Spy ring in 1964, <mask> was questioned by Special Branch (though Blunt was not publicly identified as a Soviet agent until 1979 in the House of Commons by Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher). <mask> was cleared, and continued working on projects for the British government. <mask> was head of the Central Policy Review Staff from 1971 to 1974 (known popularly as "The Think Tank") a staff which researched policy specifically for the Government until Margaret Thatcher abolished it. In 1971 <mask> was awarded an honorary degree from Tel Aviv University for ''the advancement of science, education and the economy of Israel''. It was followed in 1975 by an honorary degree from Jerusalem's Hebrew University. The annual "<mask> Memorial Symposia" is named after <mask>.Thatcher years and Spycatcher
In the 1980s, <mask> joined the family bank as chairman in an effort to quell the feuding between factions led by <mask> and <mask>'s son, <mask>. In this he was unsuccessful as Jacob resigned from the bank to found J. Rothschild Assurance Group (a separate entity, now St. James's Place plc). In 1982 he published An Enquiry into the Social Science Research Council at the behest of Sir Keith Joseph, a Conservative minister and mentor of Margaret Thatcher. He continued to work in security as an adviser to Margaret Thatcher. He appears several times in the book Spycatcher, which he hoped would clear the air over suspicions about his wartime role and the possibility he was involved in the Cambridge spy ring. In early 1987 Tam Dalyell MP used parliamentary privilege to suggest <mask> should be prosecuted for a chain of events he had "set in train, with Peter Wright and Harry Chapman Pincher" which had led to a "breach of confidence in relation to information on matters of state security given to authors". He was still able to enter the premises of MI5 as a former employee and was aware of suspicions there was a "mole" in MI5, but felt himself above suspicion.While Edward Heath was Prime Minister, <mask> was a frequent visitor to Chequers, the Prime Minister's country residence. Throughout <mask>'s life, he was a valued adviser on intelligence and science to both Conservative and Labour Governments. In his 1994 book The Fifth Man, Australian author Roland Perry asserted that in 1993, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, six retired KGB colonels, including Yuri Modin, the spy ring's handler, alleged <mask> was the so-called "Fifth Man": "<mask> was the key to most of the Cambridge ring's penetration of British intelligence. "He had the contacts", Modin noted. "He was able to introduce Burgess, Blunt and others to important figures in Intelligence such as Stewart Menzies, Dick White and Robert Vansittart in the Foreign Office ... who controlled MI6." However this suggestion is rebutted by other researchers; commentator Sheila Kerr pointed out that as soon as the book came out, Modin denied Perry's version of their discussions (having already stated that the fifth man was Cairncross), and concluded that "Perry's case against <mask> is unconvincing because of dubious sources and slack methods". Noel Annan, who was criticised by the author Perry for a negative view of the latter's book and claims, writes: "Amid clouds of misstatements he [Perry] relies almost wholly on insinuation and bluster.... when Andrew Boyle published his book and exposed Blunt, why did Margaret Thatcher acknowledge in the House of Commons the truth about Blunt, but later, in the case of <mask>, clear him? Mr. Perry is saying she lied to the House. He tries to make much of her curt statement, "I am advised that we have no evidence that he was ever a Soviet spy." It is the only official reply she could have made. In MI5 jargon there was "No Trace" against his name". Christopher Andrew and Vasili Mitrokhin, in The Mitrokhin Archives, make no mention of <mask> as a Soviet agent and instead identify John Cairncross as the Fifth Man. Former KGB controller Yuri Modin denied ever having named <mask> as "any kind of Soviet agent"."Because he was in MI5 they learned things from him. This doesn't make him the fifth man, and he wasn't," Modin wrote. His own book's title clarifies the name of all five of the Cambridge spy group: My Five Cambridge Friends: Burgess, Maclean, Philby, Blunt, and Cairncross by Their KGB Controller. Since <mask> had died prior to publication of the Perry book, the family was unable to start a libel action. <mask> published an autobiography, Random Variables in 1984. Despite being an opposition Labour party peer, in 1987, during the Thatcher Government, <mask> played a role in the sacking of Director-General of the BBC Alasdair Milne, who had backed the programmes Secret Society, Real Lives, and Panorama: 'Maggie's Militant Tendency' which had angered the Thatcher government. Marmaduke Hussey, who was Chairman of the BBC Board of Governors at the time, implied <mask> initiated the Milne sacking in his autobiography Chance Governs All.<mask> took the step of publishing a letter in British newspapers on 3 December 1986 to state "I am not, and never have been, a Soviet agent". He was an advisor to William Waldegrave during the design of the Community Charge, which led to the Poll Tax Riots. Family
In 1933, he married Barbara Judith Hutchinson (1911-1989). They had three children. <mask> (born 1934)
Nathaniel Charles <mask> (born 1936) (later <mask>) 4th Baron <mask> <mask> (born 1940)
In 1946, he married Teresa Georgina Mayor (1915–1996), who had worked as his assistant at MI5. Mayor's maternal grandfather was Robert John Grote Mayor, the brother of English novelist F. M. Mayor and a greatnephew of philosopher and clergyman John Grote. Her maternal grandmother, Katherine Beatrice Meinertzhagen, was the sister of soldier Richard Meinertzhagen and the niece of author Beatrice Webb.They had four children:
Emma Georgina <mask> (born 1948), married the Bengali Hindu economist Amartya Kumar Sen (b. 1933) in 1991. Benjamin Mayer <mask> (born and died 1952). <mask> <mask> (born 1953) is an academic lecturer at Queen Mary, University of London and the second wife and widow of English writer Simon Gray (1936–2008). Amschel Mayor <mask> (1955–1996), married to Anita Patience Guinness of the Anglo-Irish Protestant Guinness family. Amschel committed suicide in 1996. They had three children; Kate Emma <mask> (b.1982), Alice Miranda <mask> (b. 1983) and James Amschel <mask> (b. 1985)
Born into a nominally Jewish family, in adult life <mask> declared himself to be an atheist. However, his body was interred in the historic Jewish Brady Street Cemetery, which remarkably saved that cemetery from proposed redevelopment for 100 years. His sister Miriam Louisa <mask> was a distinguished entomologist, and his sister Nica de Koenigswarter was a bebop jazz enthusiast and patron of Thelonious Monk and Charlie Parker. Honours and awards
Titles
3rd Baron <mask>, of Tring, co. Hertford [U.K., 1885], 27 August 1937. 4th Baronet <mask> [U.K., 1847], 27 August 1937.Knight Grand Cross, Order of the British Empire (G.B.E. ), 1975. Knight, Most Venerable Order of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem (K.St.J.). Fellow, Royal Society (F.R.S. ), 1953. Major, Intelligence Corps. Decorations
George Medal (G.M.)(United Kingdom), 1944. Legion of Merit (United States), 1946. Bronze Star Medal (United States), 1948. Notes
References
See also the list of references at <mask> banking family of England
External links
1910 births
1990 deaths
3
Labour Party (UK) hereditary peers
MI5 personnel
Cambridge University cricketers
English cricketers
English Jews
English atheists
Jewish American atheists
Jewish scientists
Jewish British politicians
Northamptonshire cricketers
People educated at Harrow School
Fellows of the Royal Society
Knights Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire
Recipients of the George Medal
Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge
20th-century British zoologists
Burials at Brady Street Cemetery | [
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] | DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch DropCatch He was a member of the <mask> family. The only son of <mask> and <mask> was <mask>. His mother was the daughter of the first Jew in Austria and his father was a member of the <mask> banking family. He grew up in a number of family homes. He had three sisters, one of which became known as the "Jazz Baroness". <mask>'s father took his own life when <mask> was 13 years old.He was educated at a school. He read French and English at Trinity College in Cambridge. He got a PhD in 1935 after working in the Zoology Department. He played cricket for both the University and Northamptonshire. He collected art and rare books while at Cambridge and was known for his playboy lifestyle. <mask> was a member of the Cambridge Apostles, a secret society that 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 888-739-5110 He became friends with several people, including members of the Cambridge Spy Ring."Eliezer and Rebecca" was given to Blunt by <mask> in 1933. The painting is in the Fitzwilliam Museum and was sold in 1985 for $100,000. His flat in London was shared by two other people. He was thought to be the fifth man in the Cambridge spy ring. The death of <mask>'s uncle, <mask>, 2nd <mask>, on August 27, 1937, gave <mask> the title of <mask> at the age of 26. He spoke about the pasteurization of milk and the situation in Palestine while he was a peer in the House of Lords. <mask> won the George Medal for "dangerous work in hazardous circumstances" after being recruited to work for MI5 during World War II.He was the head of B1C, the "explosives and sabotage section", and worked on identifying where Britain's war effort was vulnerable to sabotage and counter German sabotage attempts. This included dismantling examples of German booby traps. MI5 officer Eric Roberts masqueraded as the Gestapo's man in London in order to identify hundreds of Nazi sympathizers, and he ran the "Fifth Column" operation with his assistant Theresa Clay. Cold War, Shell and Think Tank were involved in who paid thepiper. According to an account of CIA propaganda during the Cold War, <mask> funneled funds to a magazine to support the "non-Stalinist left" in the US. He joined the zoology department at Cambridge University after the war. He was head of research at Royal Dutch/Shell from 1963 to 1970 and chairman of the Agricultural Research Council from 1948 to 1958.In August 1962, during a reception at the Weizmann Institute, she told <mask> that she thought Tom's Harris and Kim Philby were Soviet spies. <mask> was questioned by the Special Branch when Anthony Blunt was identified as a member of the Cambridge Spy ring in 1964, but he was not publicly identified as a Soviet agent until 1979. <mask> worked on projects for the British government. <mask> was head of the Central Policy Review Staff from 1971 to 1974 and was responsible for researching policy for the Government until Margaret Thatcher abolished it. <mask> received a degree from Tel Aviv University in 1971 for ''the advancement of science, education and the economy of Israel''. It was followed by a degree from Jerusalem's Hebrew University in 1975. The Symposia is named after <mask>.In the 1980s, <mask> joined the family bank as chairman in an effort to quell the feuding between <mask> and <mask>. Jacob left the bank to found J. Rothschild Assurance Group. An Enquiry into the Social Science Research Council was published by him in 1982. He was an adviser to Margaret Thatcher. He wanted the book to clear the air about his wartime role and the possibility he was involved in the Cambridge spy ring. <mask> should be prosecuted for a chain of events he had "set in train, with Peter Wright and Harry Chapman Pincher" which had led to a "breach of confidence in relation to information on matters of state security given to authors" according to a report in 1987. He was aware that there was a "mole" in MI5 but he didn't feel like he was being watched.<mask> was a frequent visitor to the country residence of the Prime Minister. <mask> was an adviser to both Conservative and Labour Governments on intelligence and science. In 1993, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, six retired KGB colonels, including Yuri Modin, the spy ring's handler, claimed that <mask> was the so-called "Fifth Man". Modin said that he had the contacts. He was able to introduce important figures in Intelligence such as Stewart Menzies, Dick White and Robert Vansittart in the Foreign Office. As soon as the book came out, Modin denied Perry's version of their discussions (having already stated that the fifth man was Cairncross), and concluded that "Perry's case against <mask> is unconvincing." "Amid clouds of misstatements he relies almost wholly on insinuation and bluster," writes Noel Annan, who was criticized by the author for a negative view of the latter's book and claims.Why did Margaret Thatcher acknowledge the truth about Blunt in the House of Commons but not in the case of <mask>? She lied to the House. He tried to make a statement, "I am advised that we have no evidence that he was a Soviet spy." She could have made an official reply. "No trace" was against his name in MI5 jargon. There is no mention of <mask> as a Soviet agent or John Cairncross as the Fifth Man in the archives. The former KGB controller denied naming <mask> as a Soviet agent.He was in MI5 and they learned from him. Modin wrote that this doesn't make him the fifth man. The name of the Cambridge spy group was changed to My Five Cambridge Friends by Their KGB Controller. The family couldn't start a libel action because <mask> died before the book was published. Random Variables was published by Rothschild in 1984. Despite being an opposition Labour party peer, <mask> played a role in the ousting of the Director-General of the BBC, Alasdair Milne, who had supported the programmes Secret Society, Real Lives, and Panorama. Marmaduke Hussey, who was the Chairman of the Board of Governors at the time, implied in his book that <mask> initiated the dismissal of Milne.<mask> published a letter in British newspapers in December of 1986 stating that he was not a Soviet agent. He was an advisor to William Waldegrave during the design of the Community Charge. He married Barbara Judith Hutchinson in 1919. They had three children. The 4th <mask> <mask> was born in 1940. Robert John Grote Mayor was the brother of F. M. Mayor. Her maternal grandmother was the sister of a soldier and the niece of an author.They had four children, one of which was married to a Bengali Hindu economist. In 1991. <mask> died in 1952. The second wife and widow of English writer Simon Gray is an academic lecturer at Queen Mary, University of London. Amschel Mayor <mask> was married to a member of the Guinness family. Amschel took his own life in 1996. They had three children.Alice Miranda <mask> was born in 1982. James Amschel <mask> was born in 1983. <mask> declared himself to be an unbeliever when he was a child. The Brady Street Cemetery was saved from being redeveloped for 100 years because his body was buried there. His sister was an entomologist and his sister was a bebop jazz enthusiast. The 3rd <mask>, of Tring, was honoured and awarded in 1937. 27 August 1937 is the date of the 4th <mask>.The Order of the British Empire is also known as the Knight Grand Cross. ), 1975. The Most Venerable Order of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem is called the Knight. A fellow of the Royal Society. The year was 1953. Major, Intelligence Corps. The George medal is a decorations.In 1944, the United Kingdom. The Legion of Merit was established in the United States. The Bronze Star medal was given to the United States in 1948. The <mask> banking family of England External links 1910 births 1990 deaths 3 Labour Party (UK) hereditary peers | [
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18594576 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashley%20Vincent | Ashley Vincent | Ashley Derek Vincent (born 26 May 1985) is an English former football player and manager.
He played on the wing or as a striker, and was renowned for his pace. He graduated through the Wolverhampton Wanderers youth system to win a contract with Cheltenham Town in May 2004. He spent the next five years at the club, playing in the 2006 League Two play-off final victory. He was loaned out to Aldershot Town in November 2005 and to Colchester United in March 2009, before he joined Colchester permanently in May 2009. He spent three years with the club, before he moved on to Port Vale in July 2012. He helped the "Valiants" to secure promotion out of League Two in 2012–13, before he re-joined Cheltenham Town in July 2013. He signed with Shrewsbury Town in May 2014, and played a minor role as the club won promotion out of League Two in 2014–15. He later played non-league football for Worcester City, Stourbridge and Sutton Coldfield Town.
He was appointed Worcester City manager in May 2019 and stayed in the post until resigning in December 2020.
Playing career
Oldbury, West Midlands-born Vincent started his career at Wolverhampton Wanderers, spending three years at Molineux and playing in the youth and reserve teams.
Cheltenham Town
In May 2004, Vincent joined League Two side Cheltenham Town on a two-year deal; manager John Ward had previously worked on the coaching staff at Wolves. He made his first team debut on 7 August 2004, replacing John Melligan 68 minutes into a 2–0 win over Southend United at Roots Hall. He won his first start three days later, in a 2–0 home defeat to Scunthorpe United. He scored his first goals on 28 September, bagging a brace in a 5–1 victory over Dagenham & Redbridge in the Football League Trophy. He finished the 2004–05 season with three goals in 30 games.
On 18 November 2005, he joined Conference side Aldershot Town on a one-month loan. He played three games for Terry Brown's "Shots" in an uneventful stay at the Recreation Ground. Back with Cheltenham, he scored two goals late into the 2005–06 season to put himself back into first team contention. He played 77 minutes of the play-off final at the Millennium Stadium, before he was taken off for Damian Spencer; Cheltenham held on to their 1–0 lead over Grimsby Town to win promotion into League One. Days before the game he signed a new two-year contract with the club.
Vincent picked up a serious knee injury during a reserve team match in August 2006. After missing the rest of the 2006–07 season due to the injury, he marked his return to full fitness on 15 August 2007 with a "stunning" equalizing goal against Swindon Town. He played a total of 40 games in 2007–08, finding the net twice. In July 2008, he signed a new contract with the club; manager Keith Downing stated that "The boy's had a cruciate injury and he's a young one as well. He's still growing, getting bigger, better and stronger." Vincent had explained to Downing that he wanted to play as a striker, rather than his previous position on the right side of midfield. On 26 August 2008, Vincent scored against Premier League side Stoke City in a League Cup encounter. Two months later he was sidelined for six weeks after fracturing his wrist in two places. In February 2009, he rejected manager Martin Allen's offer of a new contract and was linked with a loan move to Bradford City. However, he suffered a medial knee ligament injury the following month, which prevented the deal from going ahead. Despite this setback he remained insistent on a move away from Whaddon Road.
Colchester United
In March 2009, Vincent joined Colchester United on loan until the end of the 2008–09 season. Manager Paul Lambert said that "He's got the enthusiasm and hunger and he'll be a big player for us next season. He's got pace, and when you've got that you've always got a chance." In May 2009, Lambert signed Vincent to a three-year contract for an undisclosed fee. However Lambert left the club after the first game of the season – a 7–1 win over Norwich City – and was replaced by new boss Aidy Boothroyd. Vincent featured just 21 times in 2009–10, scoring three goals. He went on to feature 42 times in 2010–11, scoring a total of five goals.
Vincent missed six weeks at the start of the 2011–12 season with a knee ligament injury. In an interview given after his recovery, he admitted that he had feared the injury could have ended his career, and also hinted at a move to a Midlands club in the summer so as to be closer to his family. In December, he was struck down by a hamstring injury, which kept him out of action for several weeks. His injuries limited him to just 12 appearances in the campaign, as well as an appearance in the final of the Essex Senior Cup (which ended in a shock defeat to Canvey Island). At the end of the season, manager John Ward confirmed that he had played his last game for the club.
Port Vale
In July 2012, Vincent signed a one-year deal with League Two side Port Vale. He started the 2012–13 season on the wing, opposite Jennison Myrie-Williams, and scored twice in the opening six league games to fire the "Valiants" into second place. After claiming goals against Oxford United and Wycombe Wanderers, he was named as League Two Player of the Month in October 2012, but credited his teammates, saying "this award is as much for them as it is for me".
He went 12 weeks without a goal before he netted twice in a 3–0 victory over AFC Wimbledon at Vale Park on 5 February 2013. On 12 March, he picked up an ankle injury that kept him out of action until the last day of the season. Vale secured promotion with a third-place finish at the end of the season, with Vincent scoring eight goals in 40 appearances. He was offered a new two-year contract, but chose to reject the offer and to search for a new club.
Return to Cheltenham Town
Vincent was linked with a move to Notts County, and also had a trial with Scottish Premier League side Motherwell. He re-signed with Cheltenham Town – now in League Two and managed by Mark Yates – on a one-year deal in July 2013. He said the move was a 'homecoming' for him. He was not in the first team for the first half of the 2013–14 season, and had to wait until February before winning his first start in the league. He was soon frozen out of the first team picture once again and was released in May 2014.
Shrewsbury Town
Vincent joined Shrewsbury Town in May 2014, becoming new manager Micky Mellon's first signing. In mid September he stated that the New Meadow was "the best dressing room I have been in" in terms of team spirit, however he played only a fringe role at the club and failed to make a first-team appearance after a 1−0 defeat at Plymouth Argyle in October 2014. Shrewsbury won promotion at the end of the 2014–15 season as runners-up in League Two, with Vincent leaving the club by mutual consent on 2 June 2015.
Non-league
Vincent signed for National League North side Worcester City in August 2015 following a successful trial spell. However, he left the club after five months when Tristian Dunkley took his place in the first team whilst Vincent was sidelined with illness. Vincent signed for Northern Premier League club Stourbridge in January 2016. Gary Hackett's "Glassboys" went on to finish the 2015–16 season in sixth place, two points outside of the play-offs. He signed for Northern Premier League Premier Division rivals Sutton Coldfield Town on 6 July 2016. He helped the "Royals" to a 20th-place finish at the end of the 2016–17 season, one point above the relegation zone. He extended his contract with the club in June 2017. However they were relegated in last place at the end of the 2017–18 campaign.
Coaching career
Vincent returned to former club Cheltenham Town as an academy coach in November 2017, combining the role with his job as a football coach at Halesowen College.
Worcester City
Vincent was appointed as assistant manager to John Snape at former club, Midland League side Worcester City, in May 2018. He had previously agreed to take up the management post at Cradley Town, but backed away from the offer after feeling he would be "fighting against a tide" at the club. On 16 May 2019, he was appointed manager of Worcester City. He was given a vote of confidence by chairman Steve Goode in November. As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic in England, the 2019–20 season was formally abandoned on 26 March, with all results from the season being expunged. He resigned on 6 December 2020, the day after the club's FA Vase defeat at Shepshed Dynamo.
Style of play
Vincent could play as a winger, but preferred a more central attacking role. In either position he liked to exploit his pace to run at defenders. As a striker he was often used alongside a target man.
Statistics
Honours
Individual
League Two Player of the Month: October 2012
Cheltenham Town
League Two play-offs: 2006
Colchester United
Essex Senior Cup runner-up: 2012
Port Vale
League Two third-place promotion: 2012–13
References
1985 births
Living people
People from Oldbury, West Midlands
English footballers
Black British sportspeople
Association football wingers
Association football forwards
Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. players
Cheltenham Town F.C. players
Aldershot Town F.C. players
Colchester United F.C. players
Port Vale F.C. players
Shrewsbury Town F.C. players
Worcester City F.C. players
Stourbridge F.C. players
Sutton Coldfield Town F.C. players
English Football League players
National League (English football) players
Northern Premier League players
Association football coaches
Cheltenham Town F.C. non-playing staff
English football managers
Worcester City F.C. managers | [
"Ashley Derek Vincent (born 26 May 1985) is an English former football player and manager.",
"He played on the wing or as a striker, and was renowned for his pace.",
"He graduated through the Wolverhampton Wanderers youth system to win a contract with Cheltenham Town in May 2004.",
"He spent the next five years at the club, playing in the 2006 League Two play-off final victory.",
"He was loaned out to Aldershot Town in November 2005 and to Colchester United in March 2009, before he joined Colchester permanently in May 2009.",
"He spent three years with the club, before he moved on to Port Vale in July 2012.",
"He helped the \"Valiants\" to secure promotion out of League Two in 2012–13, before he re-joined Cheltenham Town in July 2013.",
"He signed with Shrewsbury Town in May 2014, and played a minor role as the club won promotion out of League Two in 2014–15.",
"He later played non-league football for Worcester City, Stourbridge and Sutton Coldfield Town.",
"He was appointed Worcester City manager in May 2019 and stayed in the post until resigning in December 2020.",
"Playing career\nOldbury, West Midlands-born Vincent started his career at Wolverhampton Wanderers, spending three years at Molineux and playing in the youth and reserve teams.",
"Cheltenham Town\nIn May 2004, Vincent joined League Two side Cheltenham Town on a two-year deal; manager John Ward had previously worked on the coaching staff at Wolves.",
"He made his first team debut on 7 August 2004, replacing John Melligan 68 minutes into a 2–0 win over Southend United at Roots Hall.",
"He won his first start three days later, in a 2–0 home defeat to Scunthorpe United.",
"He scored his first goals on 28 September, bagging a brace in a 5–1 victory over Dagenham & Redbridge in the Football League Trophy.",
"He finished the 2004–05 season with three goals in 30 games.",
"On 18 November 2005, he joined Conference side Aldershot Town on a one-month loan.",
"He played three games for Terry Brown's \"Shots\" in an uneventful stay at the Recreation Ground.",
"Back with Cheltenham, he scored two goals late into the 2005–06 season to put himself back into first team contention.",
"He played 77 minutes of the play-off final at the Millennium Stadium, before he was taken off for Damian Spencer; Cheltenham held on to their 1–0 lead over Grimsby Town to win promotion into League One.",
"Days before the game he signed a new two-year contract with the club.",
"Vincent picked up a serious knee injury during a reserve team match in August 2006.",
"After missing the rest of the 2006–07 season due to the injury, he marked his return to full fitness on 15 August 2007 with a \"stunning\" equalizing goal against Swindon Town.",
"He played a total of 40 games in 2007–08, finding the net twice.",
"In July 2008, he signed a new contract with the club; manager Keith Downing stated that \"The boy's had a cruciate injury and he's a young one as well.",
"He's still growing, getting bigger, better and stronger.\"",
"Vincent had explained to Downing that he wanted to play as a striker, rather than his previous position on the right side of midfield.",
"On 26 August 2008, Vincent scored against Premier League side Stoke City in a League Cup encounter.",
"Two months later he was sidelined for six weeks after fracturing his wrist in two places.",
"In February 2009, he rejected manager Martin Allen's offer of a new contract and was linked with a loan move to Bradford City.",
"However, he suffered a medial knee ligament injury the following month, which prevented the deal from going ahead.",
"Despite this setback he remained insistent on a move away from Whaddon Road.",
"Colchester United\nIn March 2009, Vincent joined Colchester United on loan until the end of the 2008–09 season.",
"Manager Paul Lambert said that \"He's got the enthusiasm and hunger and he'll be a big player for us next season.",
"He's got pace, and when you've got that you've always got a chance.\"",
"In May 2009, Lambert signed Vincent to a three-year contract for an undisclosed fee.",
"However Lambert left the club after the first game of the season – a 7–1 win over Norwich City – and was replaced by new boss Aidy Boothroyd.",
"Vincent featured just 21 times in 2009–10, scoring three goals.",
"He went on to feature 42 times in 2010–11, scoring a total of five goals.",
"Vincent missed six weeks at the start of the 2011–12 season with a knee ligament injury.",
"In an interview given after his recovery, he admitted that he had feared the injury could have ended his career, and also hinted at a move to a Midlands club in the summer so as to be closer to his family.",
"In December, he was struck down by a hamstring injury, which kept him out of action for several weeks.",
"His injuries limited him to just 12 appearances in the campaign, as well as an appearance in the final of the Essex Senior Cup (which ended in a shock defeat to Canvey Island).",
"At the end of the season, manager John Ward confirmed that he had played his last game for the club.",
"Port Vale\nIn July 2012, Vincent signed a one-year deal with League Two side Port Vale.",
"He started the 2012–13 season on the wing, opposite Jennison Myrie-Williams, and scored twice in the opening six league games to fire the \"Valiants\" into second place.",
"After claiming goals against Oxford United and Wycombe Wanderers, he was named as League Two Player of the Month in October 2012, but credited his teammates, saying \"this award is as much for them as it is for me\".",
"He went 12 weeks without a goal before he netted twice in a 3–0 victory over AFC Wimbledon at Vale Park on 5 February 2013.",
"On 12 March, he picked up an ankle injury that kept him out of action until the last day of the season.",
"Vale secured promotion with a third-place finish at the end of the season, with Vincent scoring eight goals in 40 appearances.",
"He was offered a new two-year contract, but chose to reject the offer and to search for a new club.",
"Return to Cheltenham Town\nVincent was linked with a move to Notts County, and also had a trial with Scottish Premier League side Motherwell.",
"He re-signed with Cheltenham Town – now in League Two and managed by Mark Yates – on a one-year deal in July 2013.",
"He said the move was a 'homecoming' for him.",
"He was not in the first team for the first half of the 2013–14 season, and had to wait until February before winning his first start in the league.",
"He was soon frozen out of the first team picture once again and was released in May 2014.",
"Shrewsbury Town\nVincent joined Shrewsbury Town in May 2014, becoming new manager Micky Mellon's first signing.",
"In mid September he stated that the New Meadow was \"the best dressing room I have been in\" in terms of team spirit, however he played only a fringe role at the club and failed to make a first-team appearance after a 1−0 defeat at Plymouth Argyle in October 2014.",
"Shrewsbury won promotion at the end of the 2014–15 season as runners-up in League Two, with Vincent leaving the club by mutual consent on 2 June 2015.",
"Non-league\nVincent signed for National League North side Worcester City in August 2015 following a successful trial spell.",
"However, he left the club after five months when Tristian Dunkley took his place in the first team whilst Vincent was sidelined with illness.",
"Vincent signed for Northern Premier League club Stourbridge in January 2016.",
"Gary Hackett's \"Glassboys\" went on to finish the 2015–16 season in sixth place, two points outside of the play-offs.",
"He signed for Northern Premier League Premier Division rivals Sutton Coldfield Town on 6 July 2016.",
"He helped the \"Royals\" to a 20th-place finish at the end of the 2016–17 season, one point above the relegation zone.",
"He extended his contract with the club in June 2017.",
"However they were relegated in last place at the end of the 2017–18 campaign.",
"Coaching career\nVincent returned to former club Cheltenham Town as an academy coach in November 2017, combining the role with his job as a football coach at Halesowen College.",
"Worcester City\nVincent was appointed as assistant manager to John Snape at former club, Midland League side Worcester City, in May 2018.",
"He had previously agreed to take up the management post at Cradley Town, but backed away from the offer after feeling he would be \"fighting against a tide\" at the club.",
"On 16 May 2019, he was appointed manager of Worcester City.",
"He was given a vote of confidence by chairman Steve Goode in November.",
"As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic in England, the 2019–20 season was formally abandoned on 26 March, with all results from the season being expunged.",
"He resigned on 6 December 2020, the day after the club's FA Vase defeat at Shepshed Dynamo.",
"Style of play\nVincent could play as a winger, but preferred a more central attacking role.",
"In either position he liked to exploit his pace to run at defenders.",
"As a striker he was often used alongside a target man.",
"Statistics\n\nHonours\nIndividual\nLeague Two Player of the Month: October 2012\n\nCheltenham Town\nLeague Two play-offs: 2006\n\nColchester United\nEssex Senior Cup runner-up: 2012\n\nPort Vale\nLeague Two third-place promotion: 2012–13\n\nReferences\n\n1985 births\nLiving people\nPeople from Oldbury, West Midlands\nEnglish footballers\nBlack British sportspeople\nAssociation football wingers\nAssociation football forwards\nWolverhampton Wanderers F.C.",
"players\nCheltenham Town F.C.",
"players\nAldershot Town F.C.",
"players\nColchester United F.C.",
"players\nPort Vale F.C.",
"players\nShrewsbury Town F.C.",
"players\nWorcester City F.C.",
"players\nStourbridge F.C.",
"players\nSutton Coldfield Town F.C.",
"players\nEnglish Football League players\nNational League (English football) players\nNorthern Premier League players\nAssociation football coaches\nCheltenham Town F.C.",
"non-playing staff\nEnglish football managers\nWorcester City F.C.",
"managers"
] | [
"He is a former football player and manager.",
"He was known for his pace and played on the wing or as a forward.",
"He signed a contract with Cheltenham Town in 2004.",
"He played in the 2006 League Two play-off final victory.",
"He joined Colchester permanently in May 2009, after he had been with the club for two years.",
"He was with the club for three years before moving to Port Vale.",
"He helped the \"Valiants\" to get promoted out of League Two in 2012–13.",
"He played a small role as the club won promotion out of League Two.",
"He played for a number of non-league football teams.",
"He stayed in the post until he resigned in December 2020.",
"He started his career at Wolves and played for three years in the youth and reserve teams.",
"John Ward had previously worked for the coaching staff at Wolves when he was the manager of Cheltenham Town.",
"On August 7, 2004, he made his first team debut, replacing John Melligan in a 2–0 win over Southend United at Roots Hall.",
"He won his first start three days later.",
"He scored his first two goals on September 28th in a 5–1 victory over Daggers in the Football League Trophy.",
"He had three goals in 30 games in 2004.",
"He joined Aldershot Town on a one-month loan.",
"He played three games for Terry Brown's \"Shots\" at the Recreation Ground.",
"He scored two goals late in the 2005–06 season to get himself back into first team contention.",
"He played 77 minutes of the play-off final at the Millennium Stadium, before he was taken off for Damian Spencer.",
"He signed a new two-year contract days before the game.",
"The reserve team player picked up a serious knee injury.",
"After missing the rest of the 2006–07 season due to the injury, he marked his return to full fitness on August 15, 2007, with a \"stunning\" equalizing goal.",
"He played 40 games in 2007, finding the net twice.",
"He signed a new contract with the club in July of 2008 and his manager stated that he had a knee injury as well.",
"He's getting bigger and stronger.",
"He told Downing that he wanted to play as a forward, rather than on the right side of the middle.",
"The League Cup match was played on August 26, 2008.",
"He was out for six weeks after breaking his wrist.",
"He turned down Martin Allen's offer of a new contract and was linked with a loan move toBradford City.",
"He had a knee injury that prevented the deal from going ahead.",
"He continued to insist on moving away from Whaddon Road.",
"At the end of the 2008–09 season,Vincent joined Colchester United on a loan.",
"He will be a big player for us next season according to the manager.",
"When you have pace, you've always got a chance.",
"In May 2009, he was signed to a three-year contract.",
"Aidy Boothroyd replaced him after the first game of the season, a 7–1 win over Norwich City.",
"In 2009–10, he scored three goals.",
"He scored a total of five goals in 2010 and 2011.",
"He missed six weeks with a knee injury.",
"In an interview given after his recovery, he admitted that he had feared the injury could have ended his career, and that he might move to a club closer to his family in the summer.",
"He was out of action for several weeks in December due to a injury.",
"His injuries limited him to just 12 appearances in the campaign, as well as an appearance in the final of the Essex Senior Cup, which ended in a shock defeat to Canvey Island.",
"John Ward confirmed at the end of the season that he had played his last game for the club.",
"In July of 2012Vincent signed a one-year deal with Port Vale.",
"In the first six league games of the 2012–13 season, he scored twice and helped the \"Valiants\" into second place.",
"He was named League Two Player of the Month in October 2012 but credited his teammates, saying \"this award is as much for them as it is for me\".",
"He scored twice in a 3–0 victory over Wimbledon at Vale Park in February of last year.",
"He had an ankle injury that kept him out of action until the last day of the season.",
"Vale secured promotion with a third-place finish at the end of the season, withVincent scoring eight goals in 40 appearances.",
"He was offered a new two-year contract, but chose to look for a new club.",
"He had a trial with Motherwell and was linked with a move to Notts County.",
"He re-signed with the club on a one-year deal.",
"He said the move would be a homecoming for him.",
"He didn't play in the first half of the season and had to wait until February to get his first start in the league.",
"He was frozen out of the first team picture again and was released in May.",
"Micky Mellon was the first signing of the new manager.",
"He stated in September that the New Meadow was the best dressing room he had been in, however he failed to make a first-team appearance after a 10 defeat at Argyle.",
"After finishing runners-up in League Two, the club won promotion to the Championship in the summer of 2015.",
"In August of 2015,Vincent signed for National League North side Worcester City after a successful trial spell.",
"He left the club after five months when Tristian Dunkley took his place in the first team.",
"He joined the club in January 2016",
"The \"Glassboys\" went on to finish in sixth place, two points outside of the play-offs.",
"He joined the other team in the Northern Premier League's premier division on July 6th.",
"He helped the \"Royals\" to a 20th-place finish at the end of the 2016–17 season.",
"He extended his contract with the club.",
"They were demoted to last place at the end of the campaign.",
"The football coach at Halesowen College was also the academy coach for the football team at Cheltenham Town.",
"In May of last year, he was appointed as assistant manager to John Snape.",
"He had previously agreed to take up the management post at Cradley Town, but backed away after feeling he would be fighting against a tide at the club.",
"He was appointed manager of the city on May 16.",
"The chairman gave him a vote of confidence.",
"The season was officially abandoned on 26 March due to the COVID-19 Pandemic in England.",
"The day after the club's FA Vase defeat, he resigned.",
"The style of play thatVincent preferred was a more central attacking role.",
"He liked to run at defenders.",
"He was often used with a target man.",
"League Two player of the month for October 2012 is: 2006 Colchester United Essex Senior Cup runner-up, 2012 Port Vale League Two third-place promotion.",
"The players are from Cheltenham Town F.C.",
"The players are from Aldershot Town F.C.",
"The players are from Colchester United F.C.",
"The players are from Port Vale F.C.",
"The players are from Shrewsbury Town F.C.",
"The players are from Worcester City F.C.",
"The players are from Stourbridge.",
"The players are from Sutton Coldfield Town F.C.",
"Football players from the English Football League and the Northern Premier League.",
"Non-playing staff English football managers.",
"Managers."
] | <mask> (born 26 May 1985) is an English former football player and manager. He played on the wing or as a striker, and was renowned for his pace. He graduated through the Wolverhampton Wanderers youth system to win a contract with Cheltenham Town in May 2004. He spent the next five years at the club, playing in the 2006 League Two play-off final victory. He was loaned out to Aldershot Town in November 2005 and to Colchester United in March 2009, before he joined Colchester permanently in May 2009. He spent three years with the club, before he moved on to Port Vale in July 2012. He helped the "Valiants" to secure promotion out of League Two in 2012–13, before he re-joined Cheltenham Town in July 2013.He signed with Shrewsbury Town in May 2014, and played a minor role as the club won promotion out of League Two in 2014–15. He later played non-league football for Worcester City, Stourbridge and Sutton Coldfield Town. He was appointed Worcester City manager in May 2019 and stayed in the post until resigning in December 2020. Playing career
Oldbury, West Midlands-born <mask> started his career at Wolverhampton Wanderers, spending three years at Molineux and playing in the youth and reserve teams. Cheltenham Town
In May 2004, <mask> joined League Two side Cheltenham Town on a two-year deal; manager John Ward had previously worked on the coaching staff at Wolves. He made his first team debut on 7 August 2004, replacing John Melligan 68 minutes into a 2–0 win over Southend United at Roots Hall. He won his first start three days later, in a 2–0 home defeat to Scunthorpe United.He scored his first goals on 28 September, bagging a brace in a 5–1 victory over Dagenham & Redbridge in the Football League Trophy. He finished the 2004–05 season with three goals in 30 games. On 18 November 2005, he joined Conference side Aldershot Town on a one-month loan. He played three games for Terry Brown's "Shots" in an uneventful stay at the Recreation Ground. Back with Cheltenham, he scored two goals late into the 2005–06 season to put himself back into first team contention. He played 77 minutes of the play-off final at the Millennium Stadium, before he was taken off for Damian Spencer; Cheltenham held on to their 1–0 lead over Grimsby Town to win promotion into League One. Days before the game he signed a new two-year contract with the club.<mask> picked up a serious knee injury during a reserve team match in August 2006. After missing the rest of the 2006–07 season due to the injury, he marked his return to full fitness on 15 August 2007 with a "stunning" equalizing goal against Swindon Town. He played a total of 40 games in 2007–08, finding the net twice. In July 2008, he signed a new contract with the club; manager Keith Downing stated that "The boy's had a cruciate injury and he's a young one as well. He's still growing, getting bigger, better and stronger." <mask> had explained to Downing that he wanted to play as a striker, rather than his previous position on the right side of midfield. On 26 August 2008, <mask> scored against Premier League side Stoke City in a League Cup encounter.Two months later he was sidelined for six weeks after fracturing his wrist in two places. In February 2009, he rejected manager Martin Allen's offer of a new contract and was linked with a loan move to Bradford City. However, he suffered a medial knee ligament injury the following month, which prevented the deal from going ahead. Despite this setback he remained insistent on a move away from Whaddon Road. Colchester United
In March 2009, <mask> joined Colchester United on loan until the end of the 2008–09 season. Manager Paul Lambert said that "He's got the enthusiasm and hunger and he'll be a big player for us next season. He's got pace, and when you've got that you've always got a chance."In May 2009, Lambert signed <mask> to a three-year contract for an undisclosed fee. However Lambert left the club after the first game of the season – a 7–1 win over Norwich City – and was replaced by new boss Aidy Boothroyd. <mask> featured just 21 times in 2009–10, scoring three goals. He went on to feature 42 times in 2010–11, scoring a total of five goals. <mask> missed six weeks at the start of the 2011–12 season with a knee ligament injury. In an interview given after his recovery, he admitted that he had feared the injury could have ended his career, and also hinted at a move to a Midlands club in the summer so as to be closer to his family. In December, he was struck down by a hamstring injury, which kept him out of action for several weeks.His injuries limited him to just 12 appearances in the campaign, as well as an appearance in the final of the Essex Senior Cup (which ended in a shock defeat to Canvey Island). At the end of the season, manager John Ward confirmed that he had played his last game for the club. Port Vale
In July 2012, <mask> signed a one-year deal with League Two side Port Vale. He started the 2012–13 season on the wing, opposite Jennison Myrie-Williams, and scored twice in the opening six league games to fire the "Valiants" into second place. After claiming goals against Oxford United and Wycombe Wanderers, he was named as League Two Player of the Month in October 2012, but credited his teammates, saying "this award is as much for them as it is for me". He went 12 weeks without a goal before he netted twice in a 3–0 victory over AFC Wimbledon at Vale Park on 5 February 2013. On 12 March, he picked up an ankle injury that kept him out of action until the last day of the season.Vale secured promotion with a third-place finish at the end of the season, with <mask> scoring eight goals in 40 appearances. He was offered a new two-year contract, but chose to reject the offer and to search for a new club. Return to Cheltenham Town
<mask> was linked with a move to Notts County, and also had a trial with Scottish Premier League side Motherwell. He re-signed with Cheltenham Town – now in League Two and managed by Mark Yates – on a one-year deal in July 2013. He said the move was a 'homecoming' for him. He was not in the first team for the first half of the 2013–14 season, and had to wait until February before winning his first start in the league. He was soon frozen out of the first team picture once again and was released in May 2014.Shrewsbury Town
<mask> joined Shrewsbury Town in May 2014, becoming new manager Micky Mellon's first signing. In mid September he stated that the New Meadow was "the best dressing room I have been in" in terms of team spirit, however he played only a fringe role at the club and failed to make a first-team appearance after a 1−0 defeat at Plymouth Argyle in October 2014. Shrewsbury won promotion at the end of the 2014–15 season as runners-up in League Two, with <mask> leaving the club by mutual consent on 2 June 2015. Non-league
<mask> signed for National League North side Worcester City in August 2015 following a successful trial spell. However, he left the club after five months when Tristian Dunkley took his place in the first team whilst <mask> was sidelined with illness. <mask> signed for Northern Premier League club Stourbridge in January 2016. Gary Hackett's "Glassboys" went on to finish the 2015–16 season in sixth place, two points outside of the play-offs.He signed for Northern Premier League Premier Division rivals Sutton Coldfield Town on 6 July 2016. He helped the "Royals" to a 20th-place finish at the end of the 2016–17 season, one point above the relegation zone. He extended his contract with the club in June 2017. However they were relegated in last place at the end of the 2017–18 campaign. Coaching career
<mask> returned to former club Cheltenham Town as an academy coach in November 2017, combining the role with his job as a football coach at Halesowen College. Worcester City
<mask> was appointed as assistant manager to John Snape at former club, Midland League side Worcester City, in May 2018. He had previously agreed to take up the management post at Cradley Town, but backed away from the offer after feeling he would be "fighting against a tide" at the club.On 16 May 2019, he was appointed manager of Worcester City. He was given a vote of confidence by chairman Steve Goode in November. As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic in England, the 2019–20 season was formally abandoned on 26 March, with all results from the season being expunged. He resigned on 6 December 2020, the day after the club's FA Vase defeat at Shepshed Dynamo. Style of play
<mask> could play as a winger, but preferred a more central attacking role. In either position he liked to exploit his pace to run at defenders. As a striker he was often used alongside a target man.Statistics
Honours
Individual
League Two Player of the Month: October 2012
Cheltenham Town
League Two play-offs: 2006
Colchester United
Essex Senior Cup runner-up: 2012
Port Vale
League Two third-place promotion: 2012–13
References
1985 births
Living people
People from Oldbury, West Midlands
English footballers
Black British sportspeople
Association football wingers
Association football forwards
Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. players
Cheltenham Town F.C. players
Aldershot Town F.C. players
Colchester United F.C. players
Port Vale F.C. players
Shrewsbury Town F.C. players
Worcester City F.C.players
Stourbridge F.C. players
Sutton Coldfield Town F.C. players
English Football League players
National League (English football) players
Northern Premier League players
Association football coaches
Cheltenham Town F.C. non-playing staff
English football managers
Worcester City F.C. managers | [
"Ashley Derek Vincent",
"Vincent",
"Vincent",
"Vincent",
"Vincent",
"Vincent",
"Vincent",
"Vincent",
"Vincent",
"Vincent",
"Vincent",
"Vincent",
"Vincent",
"Vincent",
"Vincent",
"Vincent",
"Vincent",
"Vincent",
"Vincent",
"Vincent",
"Vincent"
] | He is a former football player and manager. He was known for his pace and played on the wing or as a forward. He signed a contract with Cheltenham Town in 2004. He played in the 2006 League Two play-off final victory. He joined Colchester permanently in May 2009, after he had been with the club for two years. He was with the club for three years before moving to Port Vale. He helped the "Valiants" to get promoted out of League Two in 2012–13.He played a small role as the club won promotion out of League Two. He played for a number of non-league football teams. He stayed in the post until he resigned in December 2020. He started his career at Wolves and played for three years in the youth and reserve teams. John Ward had previously worked for the coaching staff at Wolves when he was the manager of Cheltenham Town. On August 7, 2004, he made his first team debut, replacing John Melligan in a 2–0 win over Southend United at Roots Hall. He won his first start three days later.He scored his first two goals on September 28th in a 5–1 victory over Daggers in the Football League Trophy. He had three goals in 30 games in 2004. He joined Aldershot Town on a one-month loan. He played three games for Terry Brown's "Shots" at the Recreation Ground. He scored two goals late in the 2005–06 season to get himself back into first team contention. He played 77 minutes of the play-off final at the Millennium Stadium, before he was taken off for Damian Spencer. He signed a new two-year contract days before the game.The reserve team player picked up a serious knee injury. After missing the rest of the 2006–07 season due to the injury, he marked his return to full fitness on August 15, 2007, with a "stunning" equalizing goal. He played 40 games in 2007, finding the net twice. He signed a new contract with the club in July of 2008 and his manager stated that he had a knee injury as well. He's getting bigger and stronger. He told Downing that he wanted to play as a forward, rather than on the right side of the middle. The League Cup match was played on August 26, 2008.He was out for six weeks after breaking his wrist. He turned down Martin Allen's offer of a new contract and was linked with a loan move toBradford City. He had a knee injury that prevented the deal from going ahead. He continued to insist on moving away from Whaddon Road. At the end of the 2008–09 season,<mask> joined Colchester United on a loan. He will be a big player for us next season according to the manager. When you have pace, you've always got a chance.In May 2009, he was signed to a three-year contract. Aidy Boothroyd replaced him after the first game of the season, a 7–1 win over Norwich City. In 2009–10, he scored three goals. He scored a total of five goals in 2010 and 2011. He missed six weeks with a knee injury. In an interview given after his recovery, he admitted that he had feared the injury could have ended his career, and that he might move to a club closer to his family in the summer. He was out of action for several weeks in December due to a injury.His injuries limited him to just 12 appearances in the campaign, as well as an appearance in the final of the Essex Senior Cup, which ended in a shock defeat to Canvey Island. <mask> scoring eight goals in 40 appearances. He was offered a new two-year contract, but chose to look for a new club. He had a trial with Motherwell and was linked with a move to Notts County. He re-signed with the club on a one-year deal. He said the move would be a homecoming for him. He didn't play in the first half of the season and had to wait until February to get his first start in the league. He was frozen out of the first team picture again and was released in May.Micky Mellon was the first signing of the new manager. He stated in September that the New Meadow was the best dressing room he had been in, however he failed to make a first-team appearance after a 10 defeat at Argyle. After finishing runners-up in League Two, the club won promotion to the Championship in the summer of 2015. In August of 2015,<mask> signed for National League North side Worcester City after a successful trial spell. He left the club after five months when Tristian Dunkley took his place in the first team. He joined the club in January 2016 The "Glassboys" went on to finish in sixth place, two points outside of the play-offs.He joined the other team in the Northern Premier League's premier division on July 6th. He helped the "Royals" to a 20th-place finish at the end of the 2016–17 season. He extended his contract with the club. They were demoted to last place at the end of the campaign. The football coach at Halesowen College was also the academy coach for the football team at Cheltenham Town. In May of last year, he was appointed as assistant manager to John Snape. He had previously agreed to take up the management post at Cradley Town, but backed away after feeling he would be fighting against a tide at the club.He was appointed manager of the city on May 16. The chairman gave him a vote of confidence. The season was officially abandoned on 26 March due to the COVID-19 Pandemic in England. The day after the club's FA Vase defeat, he resigned. The style of play thatVincent preferred was a more central attacking role. He liked to run at defenders. He was often used with a target man.League Two player of the month for October 2012 is: 2006 Colchester United Essex Senior Cup runner-up, 2012 Port Vale League Two third-place promotion. The players are from Cheltenham Town F.C. The players are from Aldershot Town F.C. The players are from Colchester United F.C. The players are from Port Vale F.C. The players are from Shrewsbury Town F.C. The players are from Worcester City F.C.The players are from Stourbridge. The players are from Sutton Coldfield Town F.C. Football players from the English Football League and the Northern Premier League. Non-playing staff English football managers. Managers. | [
"Vincent",
"John WardVinVincent",
"Vincent"
] |
552505 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles%20Atlas | Charles Atlas | Charles Atlas (born Angelo Siciliano; October 30, 1892 – December 24, 1972) was an Italian-born American bodybuilder best remembered as the developer of a bodybuilding method and its associated exercise program which spawned a landmark advertising campaign featuring his name and likeness; it has been described as one of the longest-lasting and most memorable ad campaigns of all time.
Atlas trained himself to develop his body from that of a "scrawny weakling", eventually becoming the most popular bodybuilder of his day. He took the name "Charles Atlas" after a friend told him that he resembled the statue of Atlas on top of a hotel in Coney Island and legally changed his name in 1922. He marketed his first bodybuilding course with health and fitness writer Dr. Frederick Tilney in November 1922. The duo ran the company out of Tilney's home for the first six months. In 1929, Tilney sold his half of the business to advertising man Charles P. Roman and moved to Florida. Charles Atlas Ltd. was founded in 1929 and, as of 2020, continues to market a fitness program for the "97-pound weakling" (44 kg). The company is now owned by Jeffrey C. Hogue.
History
Angelo Siciliano was born in Acri, Cosenza, on October 30, 1892. Angelino, as he was also called, moved to Brooklyn, New York, in 1904, and eventually became a leather worker. He tried many forms of exercise initially, using weights, pulley-style resistance, and gymnastic-style calisthenics. Atlas claimed that they did not build his body. He was inspired by other fitness and health advocates who preceded him, including world-renowned strongman Eugen Sandow and Bernarr MacFadden (a major proponent of "physical culture"). He was too poor to join the local YMCA, so he watched how exercises were performed, then performed them at home. He attended the strongman shows at Coney Island, and would question the strongmen about their diets and exercise regimens after the show. He would read Physical Culture magazine for further information on health, strength, and physical development, and finally developed his own system of exercises that was later called "Dynamic Tension", a phrase coined by Charles Roman.
A bully kicked sand into Siciliano's face at a beach when he was a youth, according to the story that he always told. At this time in his life, also according to the story, he weighed only . According to several stories and claims, he was at the zoo watching a lion stretch when he thought to himself, "Does this old gentleman have any barbells, any exercisers? ... And it came over me. ... He's been pitting one muscle against another!" None of the exercises in the Dynamic Tension course could be attributed to how lions use their bodies. Other exercise courses of the time contained exercises similar to Atlas's course, particularly those marketed by Bernarr McFadden and Earle E. Liederman.
Bernarr MacFadden, publisher of the magazine Physical Culture, dubbed Siciliano "America's Most Handsome Man" in 1921, and "Americas Most Perfectly Developed Man" in a 1922 contest held in Madison Square Garden He soon took the role of strongman in the Coney Island Circus Side Show. Atlas never actually won a title anywhere proclaiming him to be the 'world's most perfectly developed man'.
In 1922, 30-year-old Siciliano officially changed his name to Charles Atlas, as it sounded much more American. He met Dr. Frederick Tilney, a British homeopathic physician and course writer who was employed as publisher Bernarr MacFadden's "ideas man". Atlas and Tilney met through MacFadden, who was using Atlas as a model for a short movie titled "The Road to Health". Atlas wrote a fitness course and then asked Tilney to edit it. Tilney agreed and Atlas went into business in 1922.
Dynamic Tension
Atlas' "Dynamic Tension" program consists of twelve lessons and one final perpetual lesson. Each lesson is supplemented with photos of Atlas demonstrating the exercises. Atlas' lesson booklets added commentary that referred to the readers as his friends and gave them an open invitation to write him letters to update him on their progress and stories. Among the people who took Atlas' course were Max Baer, heavyweight boxing champion from 1934 to 1935; Rocky Marciano, heavyweight boxing champion from 1952 to 1956; Joe Louis, heavyweight boxing champion from 1937 to 1949; British heavyweight weightlifting champion and Darth Vader actor David Prowse; and Allan Wells, the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games 100 meter champion.
Artists' model
Besides photographs, Atlas posed for many statues throughout his life. These included Alexander Stirling Calder's Washington at Peace (1917–18) on the Washington Square Arch, Manhattan; Pietro Montana's Dawn of Glory (1924) in Highland Park, Brooklyn (sometimes misreported as Prospect Park); and James Earle Frazer's Alexander Hamilton (1923) at the U.S. Treasury Building in Washington, D.C.
Death
Atlas began to experience chest pains after exercising during his final years, resulting in his hospitalization in December 1972. He died from a heart attack in the hospital on December 24, 1972 in Long Beach, New York at age 80. He left behind a son, Charles Jr., and a daughter, Diana. His wife, Margaret, had died seven years before. Nunziato Siciliano, Atlas' father, who had returned to Italy shortly after arriving in the US in 1903, lived into his 90s. Atlas' son, Charles Jr., died in August 2008 at the age of 89.
The print advertisements
The famous Charles Atlas print advertisements became iconic mostly because they were printed in cartoon form from the 1930s on, and in many comic books from the 1940s onwards – in fact continuing long after Atlas' death. The typical scenario, usually expressed in comic strip form, presented a skinny young man (usually accompanied by a female companion) being threatened by a bully. The bully pushes down the "97-pound weakling" and the girlfriend joins in the derision. The young man goes home, gets angry (usually demonstrated by his kicking a chair), and sends away for the free Atlas book. Shortly thereafter, the newly muscled hero returns to the place of his original victimization, seeks out the bully, and beats him up. He is rewarded by the swift return of his girlfriend and the admiration of onlookers.
The ad was said to be based on an experience the real Atlas had as a boy. With variations, it was a mainstay of comic books and boys' magazines for decades. The ads usually conclude with the words "As is true of all the exercises in Atlas's course, you can do these exercises almost anywhere."
Charles Atlas slogans used in advertising copyrighted in 1932 included "Battle Fought in Bed that made Fred a He-Man!", "Insult that Made a Man out of Mac", and "Let Me Give You a Body that Men Respect and Women Admire!". Slogans copyrighted the following year included "97 pound weakling... Who became the World's Most Perfectly Developed Man", and "Just Seven Days that's All I Need".
"The Insult that Made a Man out of Mac"
In this, the full-length version, the protagonist, "Mac," is accosted on the beach by a sand-kicking bully while his date watches. Humiliated, the young man goes home and, after kicking a chair and gambling a three-cent stamp, subscribes to Atlas's "Dynamic-Tension" program. Later, the now muscular protagonist goes back to the beach and beats up the bully, becoming the "hero of the beach." His girl returns while other women marvel at how big his muscles are. (An earlier but otherwise almost identical version, "How Joe's Body Brought Him Fame Instead of Shame," debuted in the 1940s.)
"The Insult That Turned a 'Chump' Into a Champ"
In this version, which debuted in 1941, "Joe" is at a fair with his girl when the bully (who has just shown his strength with the "Ring-the-Bell" game) insults and pushes him. Joe goes home, slams his fist on the table, and orders the free Atlas book. Joe then returns to the fair, rings the bell, and pushes down the bully while his girlfriend reappears to compliment him on his new, powerful physique.
"Hey, Skinny! Yer Ribs Are Showing!"
The condensed, four-panel version stars "Joe," though it is otherwise identical to Mac's story. Instead of "Hero of the beach," the words floating above Joe's head are "What a man!"
"How Jack the Weakling Slaughtered the Dance-Floor Hog"
Another version of the ad presents a scenario in which "Jack" is dancing with his girl, Helen. They are bumped into by a bully, who comments on how puny Jack is, not even worth beating up. Jack goes home, kicks a chair, and sends away for Atlas's "free book." Later, the muscular Jack finds the bully, punches him, and wins back the admiration of Helen. This time, the words "Hit of the party" float over his head as he basks in the admiration of the other dancers.
In popular culture
Literature
In the 1966 postmodern novel Beautiful Losers, written by Leonard Cohen, Charles Atlas is parodied as "Charles Axis."
The short story "Charles Atlas Also Dies" by Sergio Ramírez centers on the main character, a follower of Atlas's exercise program, and his trip to the United States to meet Charles Atlas himself; written from an ironic and dark-humored perspective. Among the numerous references to Atlas's program/story/advertisements, the main character describes having sand kicked in his face by "two big hefty guys" in front of his girlfriend and later being compared to the mythological god Atlas after undergoing the program. The story juxtaposes the superhuman strength and notoriety of Charles Atlas—the symbol, with the fragile and mortal aspects of Charles Atlas—the man. The story begins with the quote: "Charles Atlas swears that sand story is true. – Edwin Pope, The Miami Herald".
In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Cat's Cradle, Charles Atlas is mentioned. When the narrator comes across the term "Dynamic Tension" in a book about the mysterious cult leader Bokonon, he laughs because he imagines the author does not know "that the term was one vulgarised by Charles Atlas, a mail-order muscle-builder." However, as he reads on he finds that Bokonon is an alumnus of Atlas's training program, which has inspired his idea that "good societies could be built only by pitting good against evil, and by keeping the tension between the two high at all times."
In Charles Bukowski's short story "Bop Bop Against That Curtain", part of the 1973 volume South of No North, the main characters, a bunch of kids, tried Charles Atlas' Dynamic Tension program to look tough, but they prefer lifting weights as it seems to them "the more rugged and obvious way".
In Michael Connelly's early Harry Bosch books (The Black Echo, The Black Ice, The Concrete Blonde, The Last Coyote), Bosch's Commanding Officer, Lieutenant Harvey Pounds, is nicknamed "98" as a reference probably both to Charles Atlas's "97 pound weakling" and The Rocky Horror Picture Show.
A Spitting Image annual parodies the Charles Atlas advertisement as "Charles Einstein", with the two protagonists competing not on muscular physique, but with their rhetorical skills and grasp of postmodernism.
Film and TV
In the 1978 Vietnam war film The Boys in Company C, Marine Vinnie Fazio complains during a force march that he is carrying too much ammunition and gear for the platoon, shouting out "What am I? Charles Atlas?".
In the Futurama episode "When Aliens Attack," Fry gets sand kicked in his face by a "professional beach bully" who asks for payment for his services after Fry has won the girl, Leela. Leela hits on the bully, but the bully claims to be gay.
In an episode of Johnny Bravo, Johnny explains that he achieved his muscular physique through the "Flex Bigarms" course, a parody of Atlas.
The title song of the 1964 film Muscle Beach Party features the lyric "Cherry little woodies are the center of attention / Til the muscle men start the dynamic tension"
In the 1985 film Pee-wee's Big Adventure, Pee-wee steps on a "Guess Your Weight and Fortune" arcade scale at home, where he weighs in at 98 lbs (and receives a fortune warning him not to leave the house). In the DVD commentary, star Paul Reubens and director Tim Burton point out during the scene that Pee-wee truly is a "98-lb. weakling."
In the Ren and Stimpy episode "Ren's Pecs," Ren seeks counsel from the bodybuilder "Charles Globe", who inspires him to get plastic surgery. Charles Globe and the entire episode are obvious spoofs of the Charles Atlas story.
In the Seinfeld episode "The English Patient", the character of Izzy Mandelbaum is said to have worked out with Charles Atlas in the '50s to which Jerry wryly replies, "1850s?", poking fun at Izzy's age.
The Rocky Horror Picture Show (film, 1975), makes several references to Atlas:
In "Charles Atlas Song / I Can Make You a Man":
The title line exploits the grammatical ambiguity of Atlas's slogan "In just seven days, I can make you a man," between the meanings "... cause you to become a 'real' man" and "... create a man for you."
Both Charles Atlas and "Dynamic-Tension" are mentioned by name.
It refers to a 98-pound weakling, a reference to Atlas' "97-pound weakling."
The second line refers to the Charles Atlas advertising campaign with "Will get sand in his face when kicked to the ground."
The mad-scientist character (Dr. Frank N. Furter) claims that his Frankensteinian creation "carries the Charles Atlas Seal of Approval."
In an episode of That '70s Show, Eric's sister accuses him of being weak by saying he ordered a Charles Atlas video to buff up.
In an episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus, Terry Gilliam creates an animation which is a visual spoof of Charles Atlas' ad campaign.
In an episode of Punky Brewster, Punky asks Henry if he still has his Charles Atlas books after being bullied at school.
In "Mild Mannered", an episode of Warehouse 13, a pair of Charles Atlas's trunks imbue a character with superhuman powers, including superstrength and the ability to alter his own density.
In "The Missing Page", an episode of Hancock's Half Hour, Hancock reads the fictional detective novel 'Lady, Don't Fall Backwards'. The final page has been removed, and Hancock reads the lines 'Men! Are you skinny?! Do you have sand kicked in your face?!', a parody of Atlas' advertising in pulp novels.
In an episode of the television show, What's My Line?, in 1956. Charles Atlas was the mystery guest, calling himself Mr. X.
In an episode of the television show, Red Dwarf, season 3, episode 4, called "Bodyswap", Rimmer claims Lister was no Charles Atlas to begin with. They had previously swapped bodies so that Rimmer could make Listers body fit. Instead, he abused the trust.
Robot Chicken has a sketch wherein a weakling gets sand kicked in his face by a bully. He then gets a shot of "Barry McGwire's Super Happy Fun Time Anger Go Go Juice" which turns him into a huge muscleman and he tears the bully in two.
In the closing segment of Creepshow, after noticing that the voodoo doll ad from the discarded comic book has already been clipped out, one of the garbage collectors starts reading the next ad aloud: "Tired of getting sand kicked in your face..."
The Triangle, a season two episode of The Waltons which first aired in 1973, features Jim Bob secretly purchasing and later reading and practicing the exercises in a Charles Atlas' exercise manual in order to win the heart of a female classmate who favors a bigger and stronger boy.
In the movie Dead Poets Society, Professor Keating (played by Robin Williams) describes his less-than-intellectual youth by saying "I was the intellectual equivalent of a 98-pound weakling. I would go to the beach and people would kick copies of Byron in my face".
In the movie Motherless Brooklyn the Ed Norton character and Ethan Suplee are sitting in the front seat of a car reading a wrestling magazine. A Charles Atlas ad is shown on the back cover.
In the 2020 Netflix mini-series Hollywood season 1, episode 2, Charles Atlas is referenced as an aspirational figure for Rock Hudson by his agent Henry Willson.
In episode 11, series 5 of the drama series, Billions, Charles Rhoades Senior uses Atlas to make a point about strength during a discussion with his son, Chuck.
Music
The song "Sand in My Face" by 10cc, on their debut album, is a detailed description of Atlas's legendary ads.
The band AFI have a song called "Charles Atlas" on their album Very Proud of Ya.
The Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band song "Mr Apollo" is a parody that includes the lines "Five years ago I was a four-stone apology ... Today I am two separate gorillas!"
The Darling Pet Munkee song "Charles Atlas (Hey Skinny...Yer Ribs Are Showing!)" is specifically about the Atlas ads.
The Bob Dylan unreleased song "She's Your Lover Now" from 1965 contains the lyric: "Why must I fall into this sadness? / Do I look like Charles Atlas? / Do you think I still got what you still got, baby?"
The Faces song "On the Beach" contains the line "though I may not be no Charlie Atlas, / Gonna take my shirt off anyway."
The Australian band The Fauves had a minor local hit with their song "The Charles Atlas Way."
The Josef K song "Sorry For Laughing" (made popular in the U.S. by Propaganda) contains the line "when we grooved on into town / Charles Atlas stopped to frown / cause he's not made like me and you"
"We Are The Champions" by Queen includes the line, "I've had my share of sand kicked in my face..."
The Who song "I Can't Reach You", on the album The Who Sell Out, is preceded by a "commercial" for the Charles Atlas Course. ("The Charles Atlas course with "Dynamic Tension" can turn you into a beast of a man.") John Entwistle poses on the cover as a panther skin-clad Charles Atlas alumnus, as the more muscular Roger Daltrey was otherwise occupied in a bathtub filled with baked beans. (After this photo session Daltrey caught pneumonia through the beans being ice cold at the end of the shoot.)
Roger Waters' song "Sunset Strip" from his album Radio K.A.O.S., contains the line "I like riding in my Uncle's car / Down to the beach where the pretty girls all parade / And movie stars and paparazzi play the Charles Atlas kicking-sand-in-the-face game."
In the song "I Will Not Fall" by Wiretrain/Wire, these lyrics appear: "And Charles Atlas Stands, upon the beach, upon his head and says ... I will not fall."
The Statler Brothers song "Do You Remember These" contains the line "Charles Atlas course, Roy Rogers' horse, and 'only the Shadow knows'..."
The Rocky Horror Picture Show song "I Can Make You a Man" references both "Charles Atlas" and "dynamic tension."
Gama Bomb CD titled "Tales From The Grave in Space" features a booklet in which several graphics with song lyrics were designed to resemble Charles Atlas'ads'..."
Art
The artist David Hockney, included a print entitled 'The Seven Stone Weakling' in his 1961-3 series, The Rake's Progress.
Magazine and newspapers
A Canberra Times cartoon features the athletic Tony Abbott having his comeuppance against policy heavyweight Kevin Rudd.
An issue of Nickelodeon Magazine features a fake advertisement that parodies the Atlas body ads; the difference is that the product promises to make a person extremely smart. In this parody, a genius man picks on an incredibly strong yet slow-witted man for his lack of intelligence. The man gets his revenge by scientifically proving that the genius bully does not exist, making him disappear.
An article in The Onion spinoff Our Dumb Century portrays a feud between Adlai Stevenson and General William Westmoreland being carried out in the same vein as illustrated in the Charles Atlas advertisement.
A 1993 Entertainment Weekly video review of the films Hard Target and Last Action Hero depicted Jean-Claude Van Damme as the bully on the beach and Arnold Schwarzenegger as the weakling. In the illustration, Van Damme harasses a scrawny Schwarzenegger, claiming that Hard Target, unlike Schwarzenegger's movie, was well-received by both audiences and critics. Instead of ordering Atlas's program, Schwarzenegger calls his agent and orders Last Action Hero to be released on video immediately. Schwarzenegger, now with a film doing well as a video rental (despite its theatrical failure), returns to the beach and punches Van Damme out.
Comics
In an issue of the DC Comics title Mystery in Space, the main character, Comet, referring to an army of super-powered clones, says, "Physically those clones may make me look like a 98-pound-weakling, but psychically I'm the Charles Atlas of this beach."
The January 1974 issue of the satiric magazine National Lampoon was dedicated to animals: Pets, circus, wild beasts, evolution, law, etc. A fake advertisement in the article 'Popular Evolution', a parody of the magazine Popular Mechanics, presents in the three-stage comic strip manner a Charles Atlas-style commercial. A little skinny mouse suffers the humiliation of being kicked at the beach by a bully, some sort or medium-size carnivore. Little mouse, goes home, kicks a chair, fills the form and sends it to Mr. Charles Darwin, Galapagos Islands. "After a few millions years of evolutionary exercise" little mouse has developed fangs, and ugly scary face, wings, amongst other attributes; goes back to the beach, bites the bully predator in the neck, Count Dracula style and is declared the "heroe of the habitat" by the admiring females. Unfortunately the issue is out of print and cannot be seen online anywhere.
The "kicking sand in the face" image has been used many times in Archie comics.
Flex Mentallo is a comic book character created by writer Grant Morrison and artist Richard Case in 1990, during their run on Doom Patrol. Flex is in part a parody of Charles Atlas' long-running "The Insult that made a Man out of Mac" advertisements seen in American comics from the past.
2000AD featured The insult that made a robot of 'Walt''', featuring Droid Atlas and Walter the Wobot
Marvel Comics' humor series What The--?! used Atlas parodies regularly, as in "The Insult that Made Mac a Blood-Sucking Freak!" (What The--?! #23, November 1992).
Minicomics pioneer Matt Feazell uses the sand-kicking bully to represent the Etruscan attack on Rome in Not Available Comics #25, 1993.
"The Hold-Up that Made a Hero Out of Mac", from Radioactive Man #1 (Bongo Comics, 1993), blends Mac's story with Batman's origin.
Cartoonist Chris Ware appropriated Mac's "chair-kicking resolve" in a Jimmy Corrigan story from Acme Novelty Library #1 (Fantagraphics, Winter 1993).
Cartoonist Josh Neufeld used the ad to spoof business writer David A. Vise in a piece done for Fortune Small Business magazine in 2002.
In the June 4, 2007, edition of "This Modern World," Tom Tomorrow uses the ad to make a point about how President George W. Bush pushes around Congressional Democrats.
New Orleans cartoonist Caesar Meadows spoofed the ad—substituting zine-making for bodybuilding—while advertising the 2008 Alternative Media Expo.The Strange Talent of Luther Strode by Justin Jordan and Tradd Moore features a dark parody of Atlas's Dynamic Tension regimen, one which bestows superhuman strength, durability and reflexes, but at the cost of gaining an aggressive nature and seeing people as their musculature.
One chapter of manga Ranma ½ has minor antagonist Hikaru Gosunkugi buy a suit of powered armor from a parody of the "Beach Bully" advertisements. While it does make him stronger, it comes with a couple of drawbacks: it renders him immobile if he is not chained to a person he hates, and it self-destructs if he is unable to knock out the person he is chained to.
Video games
In early versions of the game, The Secret of Monkey Island, there was a statue in a voodoo shop that when inspected would make the character say "Looks like an emaciated Charles Atlas." The reference has since been removed due to Lucasfilm Games receiving a cease and desist letter.
Video game developer Valve released an update to their popular game, Team Fortress 2 that gave the sniper class a jar of urine called "Jarate". The comic strip that Valve used to advertise the update is a parody of the strip "The Insult that Made a Man out of Mac". A later update that introduced the ability for players to give and receive high fives was promoted with similar comic strip, this time spoofing the strip "Hey, Skinny! Yer Ribs Are Showing!"
The physically unimposing "Little Mac" character in Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!! and the Punch-Out!! franchise is named in homage to the "Mac" of Atlas' best-known comic-book advertisement.
The game Kingdom of Loathing'' contains a reference to the sand-kicking campaign.
References
External links
1893 births
1972 deaths
Advertising campaigns
American bodybuilders
American exercise and fitness writers
Burials at St. John's Cemetery (Queens)
Italian emigrants to the United States
People from Calabria
People from the Province of Cosenza
Sideshow performers
Strength training writers
People of Calabrian descent
American artists' models
People associated with physical culture | [
"Charles Atlas (born Angelo Siciliano; October 30, 1892 – December 24, 1972) was an Italian-born American bodybuilder best remembered as the developer of a bodybuilding method and its associated exercise program which spawned a landmark advertising campaign featuring his name and likeness; it has been described as one of the longest-lasting and most memorable ad campaigns of all time.",
"Atlas trained himself to develop his body from that of a \"scrawny weakling\", eventually becoming the most popular bodybuilder of his day.",
"He took the name \"Charles Atlas\" after a friend told him that he resembled the statue of Atlas on top of a hotel in Coney Island and legally changed his name in 1922.",
"He marketed his first bodybuilding course with health and fitness writer Dr. Frederick Tilney in November 1922.",
"The duo ran the company out of Tilney's home for the first six months.",
"In 1929, Tilney sold his half of the business to advertising man Charles P. Roman and moved to Florida.",
"Charles Atlas Ltd. was founded in 1929 and, as of 2020, continues to market a fitness program for the \"97-pound weakling\" (44 kg).",
"The company is now owned by Jeffrey C. Hogue.",
"History \n\nAngelo Siciliano was born in Acri, Cosenza, on October 30, 1892.",
"Angelino, as he was also called, moved to Brooklyn, New York, in 1904, and eventually became a leather worker.",
"He tried many forms of exercise initially, using weights, pulley-style resistance, and gymnastic-style calisthenics.",
"Atlas claimed that they did not build his body.",
"He was inspired by other fitness and health advocates who preceded him, including world-renowned strongman Eugen Sandow and Bernarr MacFadden (a major proponent of \"physical culture\").",
"He was too poor to join the local YMCA, so he watched how exercises were performed, then performed them at home.",
"He attended the strongman shows at Coney Island, and would question the strongmen about their diets and exercise regimens after the show.",
"He would read Physical Culture magazine for further information on health, strength, and physical development, and finally developed his own system of exercises that was later called \"Dynamic Tension\", a phrase coined by Charles Roman.",
"A bully kicked sand into Siciliano's face at a beach when he was a youth, according to the story that he always told.",
"At this time in his life, also according to the story, he weighed only .",
"According to several stories and claims, he was at the zoo watching a lion stretch when he thought to himself, \"Does this old gentleman have any barbells, any exercisers?",
"... And it came over me.",
"...",
"He's been pitting one muscle against another!\"",
"None of the exercises in the Dynamic Tension course could be attributed to how lions use their bodies.",
"Other exercise courses of the time contained exercises similar to Atlas's course, particularly those marketed by Bernarr McFadden and Earle E. Liederman.",
"Bernarr MacFadden, publisher of the magazine Physical Culture, dubbed Siciliano \"America's Most Handsome Man\" in 1921, and \"Americas Most Perfectly Developed Man\" in a 1922 contest held in Madison Square Garden He soon took the role of strongman in the Coney Island Circus Side Show.",
"Atlas never actually won a title anywhere proclaiming him to be the 'world's most perfectly developed man'.",
"In 1922, 30-year-old Siciliano officially changed his name to Charles Atlas, as it sounded much more American.",
"He met Dr. Frederick Tilney, a British homeopathic physician and course writer who was employed as publisher Bernarr MacFadden's \"ideas man\".",
"Atlas and Tilney met through MacFadden, who was using Atlas as a model for a short movie titled \"The Road to Health\".",
"Atlas wrote a fitness course and then asked Tilney to edit it.",
"Tilney agreed and Atlas went into business in 1922.",
"Dynamic Tension \n\nAtlas' \"Dynamic Tension\" program consists of twelve lessons and one final perpetual lesson.",
"Each lesson is supplemented with photos of Atlas demonstrating the exercises.",
"Atlas' lesson booklets added commentary that referred to the readers as his friends and gave them an open invitation to write him letters to update him on their progress and stories.",
"Among the people who took Atlas' course were Max Baer, heavyweight boxing champion from 1934 to 1935; Rocky Marciano, heavyweight boxing champion from 1952 to 1956; Joe Louis, heavyweight boxing champion from 1937 to 1949; British heavyweight weightlifting champion and Darth Vader actor David Prowse; and Allan Wells, the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games 100 meter champion.",
"Artists' model \n\nBesides photographs, Atlas posed for many statues throughout his life.",
"These included Alexander Stirling Calder's Washington at Peace (1917–18) on the Washington Square Arch, Manhattan; Pietro Montana's Dawn of Glory (1924) in Highland Park, Brooklyn (sometimes misreported as Prospect Park); and James Earle Frazer's Alexander Hamilton (1923) at the U.S. Treasury Building in Washington, D.C.\n\nDeath \nAtlas began to experience chest pains after exercising during his final years, resulting in his hospitalization in December 1972.",
"He died from a heart attack in the hospital on December 24, 1972 in Long Beach, New York at age 80.",
"He left behind a son, Charles Jr., and a daughter, Diana.",
"His wife, Margaret, had died seven years before.",
"Nunziato Siciliano, Atlas' father, who had returned to Italy shortly after arriving in the US in 1903, lived into his 90s.",
"Atlas' son, Charles Jr., died in August 2008 at the age of 89.",
"The print advertisements \n The famous Charles Atlas print advertisements became iconic mostly because they were printed in cartoon form from the 1930s on, and in many comic books from the 1940s onwards – in fact continuing long after Atlas' death.",
"The typical scenario, usually expressed in comic strip form, presented a skinny young man (usually accompanied by a female companion) being threatened by a bully.",
"The bully pushes down the \"97-pound weakling\" and the girlfriend joins in the derision.",
"The young man goes home, gets angry (usually demonstrated by his kicking a chair), and sends away for the free Atlas book.",
"Shortly thereafter, the newly muscled hero returns to the place of his original victimization, seeks out the bully, and beats him up.",
"He is rewarded by the swift return of his girlfriend and the admiration of onlookers.",
"The ad was said to be based on an experience the real Atlas had as a boy.",
"With variations, it was a mainstay of comic books and boys' magazines for decades.",
"The ads usually conclude with the words \"As is true of all the exercises in Atlas's course, you can do these exercises almost anywhere.\"",
"Charles Atlas slogans used in advertising copyrighted in 1932 included \"Battle Fought in Bed that made Fred a He-Man!",
"\", \"Insult that Made a Man out of Mac\", and \"Let Me Give You a Body that Men Respect and Women Admire!\".",
"Slogans copyrighted the following year included \"97 pound weakling... Who became the World's Most Perfectly Developed Man\", and \"Just Seven Days that's All I Need\".",
"\"The Insult that Made a Man out of Mac\" \nIn this, the full-length version, the protagonist, \"Mac,\" is accosted on the beach by a sand-kicking bully while his date watches.",
"Humiliated, the young man goes home and, after kicking a chair and gambling a three-cent stamp, subscribes to Atlas's \"Dynamic-Tension\" program.",
"Later, the now muscular protagonist goes back to the beach and beats up the bully, becoming the \"hero of the beach.\"",
"His girl returns while other women marvel at how big his muscles are.",
"(An earlier but otherwise almost identical version, \"How Joe's Body Brought Him Fame Instead of Shame,\" debuted in the 1940s.)",
"\"The Insult That Turned a 'Chump' Into a Champ\" \nIn this version, which debuted in 1941, \"Joe\" is at a fair with his girl when the bully (who has just shown his strength with the \"Ring-the-Bell\" game) insults and pushes him.",
"Joe goes home, slams his fist on the table, and orders the free Atlas book.",
"Joe then returns to the fair, rings the bell, and pushes down the bully while his girlfriend reappears to compliment him on his new, powerful physique.",
"\"Hey, Skinny!",
"Yer Ribs Are Showing!\"",
"The condensed, four-panel version stars \"Joe,\" though it is otherwise identical to Mac's story.",
"Instead of \"Hero of the beach,\" the words floating above Joe's head are \"What a man!\"",
"\"How Jack the Weakling Slaughtered the Dance-Floor Hog\" \nAnother version of the ad presents a scenario in which \"Jack\" is dancing with his girl, Helen.",
"They are bumped into by a bully, who comments on how puny Jack is, not even worth beating up.",
"Jack goes home, kicks a chair, and sends away for Atlas's \"free book.\"",
"Later, the muscular Jack finds the bully, punches him, and wins back the admiration of Helen.",
"This time, the words \"Hit of the party\" float over his head as he basks in the admiration of the other dancers.",
"In popular culture\n\nLiterature\n In the 1966 postmodern novel Beautiful Losers, written by Leonard Cohen, Charles Atlas is parodied as \"Charles Axis.\"",
"The short story \"Charles Atlas Also Dies\" by Sergio Ramírez centers on the main character, a follower of Atlas's exercise program, and his trip to the United States to meet Charles Atlas himself; written from an ironic and dark-humored perspective.",
"Among the numerous references to Atlas's program/story/advertisements, the main character describes having sand kicked in his face by \"two big hefty guys\" in front of his girlfriend and later being compared to the mythological god Atlas after undergoing the program.",
"The story juxtaposes the superhuman strength and notoriety of Charles Atlas—the symbol, with the fragile and mortal aspects of Charles Atlas—the man.",
"The story begins with the quote: \"Charles Atlas swears that sand story is true.",
"– Edwin Pope, The Miami Herald\".",
"In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Cat's Cradle, Charles Atlas is mentioned.",
"When the narrator comes across the term \"Dynamic Tension\" in a book about the mysterious cult leader Bokonon, he laughs because he imagines the author does not know \"that the term was one vulgarised by Charles Atlas, a mail-order muscle-builder.\"",
"However, as he reads on he finds that Bokonon is an alumnus of Atlas's training program, which has inspired his idea that \"good societies could be built only by pitting good against evil, and by keeping the tension between the two high at all times.\"",
"In Charles Bukowski's short story \"Bop Bop Against That Curtain\", part of the 1973 volume South of No North, the main characters, a bunch of kids, tried Charles Atlas' Dynamic Tension program to look tough, but they prefer lifting weights as it seems to them \"the more rugged and obvious way\".",
"In Michael Connelly's early Harry Bosch books (The Black Echo, The Black Ice, The Concrete Blonde, The Last Coyote), Bosch's Commanding Officer, Lieutenant Harvey Pounds, is nicknamed \"98\" as a reference probably both to Charles Atlas's \"97 pound weakling\" and The Rocky Horror Picture Show.",
"A Spitting Image annual parodies the Charles Atlas advertisement as \"Charles Einstein\", with the two protagonists competing not on muscular physique, but with their rhetorical skills and grasp of postmodernism.",
"Film and TV\n In the 1978 Vietnam war film The Boys in Company C, Marine Vinnie Fazio complains during a force march that he is carrying too much ammunition and gear for the platoon, shouting out \"What am I?",
"Charles Atlas?\".",
"In the Futurama episode \"When Aliens Attack,\" Fry gets sand kicked in his face by a \"professional beach bully\" who asks for payment for his services after Fry has won the girl, Leela.",
"Leela hits on the bully, but the bully claims to be gay.",
"In an episode of Johnny Bravo, Johnny explains that he achieved his muscular physique through the \"Flex Bigarms\" course, a parody of Atlas.",
"The title song of the 1964 film Muscle Beach Party features the lyric \"Cherry little woodies are the center of attention / Til the muscle men start the dynamic tension\"\n In the 1985 film Pee-wee's Big Adventure, Pee-wee steps on a \"Guess Your Weight and Fortune\" arcade scale at home, where he weighs in at 98 lbs (and receives a fortune warning him not to leave the house).",
"In the DVD commentary, star Paul Reubens and director Tim Burton point out during the scene that Pee-wee truly is a \"98-lb.",
"weakling.\"",
"In the Ren and Stimpy episode \"Ren's Pecs,\" Ren seeks counsel from the bodybuilder \"Charles Globe\", who inspires him to get plastic surgery.",
"Charles Globe and the entire episode are obvious spoofs of the Charles Atlas story.",
"In the Seinfeld episode \"The English Patient\", the character of Izzy Mandelbaum is said to have worked out with Charles Atlas in the '50s to which Jerry wryly replies, \"1850s?",
"\", poking fun at Izzy's age.",
"The Rocky Horror Picture Show (film, 1975), makes several references to Atlas:\nIn \"Charles Atlas Song / I Can Make You a Man\":\n The title line exploits the grammatical ambiguity of Atlas's slogan \"In just seven days, I can make you a man,\" between the meanings \"... cause you to become a 'real' man\" and \"... create a man for you.\"",
"Both Charles Atlas and \"Dynamic-Tension\" are mentioned by name.",
"It refers to a 98-pound weakling, a reference to Atlas' \"97-pound weakling.\"",
"The second line refers to the Charles Atlas advertising campaign with \"Will get sand in his face when kicked to the ground.\"",
"The mad-scientist character (Dr. Frank N. Furter) claims that his Frankensteinian creation \"carries the Charles Atlas Seal of Approval.\"",
"In an episode of That '70s Show, Eric's sister accuses him of being weak by saying he ordered a Charles Atlas video to buff up.",
"In an episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus, Terry Gilliam creates an animation which is a visual spoof of Charles Atlas' ad campaign.",
"In an episode of Punky Brewster, Punky asks Henry if he still has his Charles Atlas books after being bullied at school.",
"In \"Mild Mannered\", an episode of Warehouse 13, a pair of Charles Atlas's trunks imbue a character with superhuman powers, including superstrength and the ability to alter his own density.",
"In \"The Missing Page\", an episode of Hancock's Half Hour, Hancock reads the fictional detective novel 'Lady, Don't Fall Backwards'.",
"The final page has been removed, and Hancock reads the lines 'Men!",
"Are you skinny?!",
"Do you have sand kicked in your face?!",
"', a parody of Atlas' advertising in pulp novels.",
"In an episode of the television show, What's My Line?, in 1956.",
"Charles Atlas was the mystery guest, calling himself Mr. X.",
"In an episode of the television show, Red Dwarf, season 3, episode 4, called \"Bodyswap\", Rimmer claims Lister was no Charles Atlas to begin with.",
"They had previously swapped bodies so that Rimmer could make Listers body fit.",
"Instead, he abused the trust.",
"Robot Chicken has a sketch wherein a weakling gets sand kicked in his face by a bully.",
"He then gets a shot of \"Barry McGwire's Super Happy Fun Time Anger Go Go Juice\" which turns him into a huge muscleman and he tears the bully in two.",
"In the closing segment of Creepshow, after noticing that the voodoo doll ad from the discarded comic book has already been clipped out, one of the garbage collectors starts reading the next ad aloud: \"Tired of getting sand kicked in your face...\"\n The Triangle, a season two episode of The Waltons which first aired in 1973, features Jim Bob secretly purchasing and later reading and practicing the exercises in a Charles Atlas' exercise manual in order to win the heart of a female classmate who favors a bigger and stronger boy.",
"In the movie Dead Poets Society, Professor Keating (played by Robin Williams) describes his less-than-intellectual youth by saying \"I was the intellectual equivalent of a 98-pound weakling.",
"I would go to the beach and people would kick copies of Byron in my face\".",
"In the movie Motherless Brooklyn the Ed Norton character and Ethan Suplee are sitting in the front seat of a car reading a wrestling magazine.",
"A Charles Atlas ad is shown on the back cover.",
"In the 2020 Netflix mini-series Hollywood season 1, episode 2, Charles Atlas is referenced as an aspirational figure for Rock Hudson by his agent Henry Willson.",
"In episode 11, series 5 of the drama series, Billions, Charles Rhoades Senior uses Atlas to make a point about strength during a discussion with his son, Chuck.",
"Music\nThe song \"Sand in My Face\" by 10cc, on their debut album, is a detailed description of Atlas's legendary ads.",
"The band AFI have a song called \"Charles Atlas\" on their album Very Proud of Ya.",
"The Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band song \"Mr Apollo\" is a parody that includes the lines \"Five years ago I was a four-stone apology ... Today I am two separate gorillas!\"",
"The Darling Pet Munkee song \"Charles Atlas (Hey Skinny...Yer Ribs Are Showing!)\"",
"is specifically about the Atlas ads.",
"The Bob Dylan unreleased song \"She's Your Lover Now\" from 1965 contains the lyric: \"Why must I fall into this sadness?",
"/ Do I look like Charles Atlas?",
"/ Do you think I still got what you still got, baby?\"",
"The Faces song \"On the Beach\" contains the line \"though I may not be no Charlie Atlas, / Gonna take my shirt off anyway.\"",
"The Australian band The Fauves had a minor local hit with their song \"The Charles Atlas Way.\"",
"The Josef K song \"Sorry For Laughing\" (made popular in the U.S. by Propaganda) contains the line \"when we grooved on into town / Charles Atlas stopped to frown / cause he's not made like me and you\"\n\"We Are The Champions\" by Queen includes the line, \"I've had my share of sand kicked in my face...\"\nThe Who song \"I Can't Reach You\", on the album The Who Sell Out, is preceded by a \"commercial\" for the Charles Atlas Course.",
"(\"The Charles Atlas course with \"Dynamic Tension\" can turn you into a beast of a man.\")",
"John Entwistle poses on the cover as a panther skin-clad Charles Atlas alumnus, as the more muscular Roger Daltrey was otherwise occupied in a bathtub filled with baked beans.",
"(After this photo session Daltrey caught pneumonia through the beans being ice cold at the end of the shoot.)",
"Roger Waters' song \"Sunset Strip\" from his album Radio K.A.O.S., contains the line \"I like riding in my Uncle's car / Down to the beach where the pretty girls all parade / And movie stars and paparazzi play the Charles Atlas kicking-sand-in-the-face game.\"",
"In the song \"I Will Not Fall\" by Wiretrain/Wire, these lyrics appear: \"And Charles Atlas Stands, upon the beach, upon his head and says ...",
"I will not fall.\"",
"The Statler Brothers song \"Do You Remember These\" contains the line \"Charles Atlas course, Roy Rogers' horse, and 'only the Shadow knows'...\"\nThe Rocky Horror Picture Show song \"I Can Make You a Man\" references both \"Charles Atlas\" and \"dynamic tension.\"",
"Gama Bomb CD titled \"Tales From The Grave in Space\" features a booklet in which several graphics with song lyrics were designed to resemble Charles Atlas'ads'...\"\n\nArt\n The artist David Hockney, included a print entitled 'The Seven Stone Weakling' in his 1961-3 series, The Rake's Progress.",
"Magazine and newspapers\n A Canberra Times cartoon features the athletic Tony Abbott having his comeuppance against policy heavyweight Kevin Rudd.",
"An issue of Nickelodeon Magazine features a fake advertisement that parodies the Atlas body ads; the difference is that the product promises to make a person extremely smart.",
"In this parody, a genius man picks on an incredibly strong yet slow-witted man for his lack of intelligence.",
"The man gets his revenge by scientifically proving that the genius bully does not exist, making him disappear.",
"An article in The Onion spinoff Our Dumb Century portrays a feud between Adlai Stevenson and General William Westmoreland being carried out in the same vein as illustrated in the Charles Atlas advertisement.",
"A 1993 Entertainment Weekly video review of the films Hard Target and Last Action Hero depicted Jean-Claude Van Damme as the bully on the beach and Arnold Schwarzenegger as the weakling.",
"In the illustration, Van Damme harasses a scrawny Schwarzenegger, claiming that Hard Target, unlike Schwarzenegger's movie, was well-received by both audiences and critics.",
"Instead of ordering Atlas's program, Schwarzenegger calls his agent and orders Last Action Hero to be released on video immediately.",
"Schwarzenegger, now with a film doing well as a video rental (despite its theatrical failure), returns to the beach and punches Van Damme out.",
"Comics \nIn an issue of the DC Comics title Mystery in Space, the main character, Comet, referring to an army of super-powered clones, says, \"Physically those clones may make me look like a 98-pound-weakling, but psychically I'm the Charles Atlas of this beach.\"",
"The January 1974 issue of the satiric magazine National Lampoon was dedicated to animals: Pets, circus, wild beasts, evolution, law, etc.",
"A fake advertisement in the article 'Popular Evolution', a parody of the magazine Popular Mechanics, presents in the three-stage comic strip manner a Charles Atlas-style commercial.",
"A little skinny mouse suffers the humiliation of being kicked at the beach by a bully, some sort or medium-size carnivore.",
"Little mouse, goes home, kicks a chair, fills the form and sends it to Mr. Charles Darwin, Galapagos Islands.",
"\"After a few millions years of evolutionary exercise\" little mouse has developed fangs, and ugly scary face, wings, amongst other attributes; goes back to the beach, bites the bully predator in the neck, Count Dracula style and is declared the \"heroe of the habitat\" by the admiring females.",
"Unfortunately the issue is out of print and cannot be seen online anywhere.",
"The \"kicking sand in the face\" image has been used many times in Archie comics.",
"Flex Mentallo is a comic book character created by writer Grant Morrison and artist Richard Case in 1990, during their run on Doom Patrol.",
"Flex is in part a parody of Charles Atlas' long-running \"The Insult that made a Man out of Mac\" advertisements seen in American comics from the past.",
"2000AD featured The insult that made a robot of 'Walt''', featuring Droid Atlas and Walter the Wobot\nMarvel Comics' humor series What The--?!",
"used Atlas parodies regularly, as in \"The Insult that Made Mac a Blood-Sucking Freak!\"",
"(What The--?!",
"#23, November 1992).",
"Minicomics pioneer Matt Feazell uses the sand-kicking bully to represent the Etruscan attack on Rome in Not Available Comics #25, 1993.",
"\"The Hold-Up that Made a Hero Out of Mac\", from Radioactive Man #1 (Bongo Comics, 1993), blends Mac's story with Batman's origin.",
"Cartoonist Chris Ware appropriated Mac's \"chair-kicking resolve\" in a Jimmy Corrigan story from Acme Novelty Library #1 (Fantagraphics, Winter 1993).",
"Cartoonist Josh Neufeld used the ad to spoof business writer David A.",
"Vise in a piece done for Fortune Small Business magazine in 2002.",
"In the June 4, 2007, edition of \"This Modern World,\" Tom Tomorrow uses the ad to make a point about how President George W. Bush pushes around Congressional Democrats.",
"New Orleans cartoonist Caesar Meadows spoofed the ad—substituting zine-making for bodybuilding—while advertising the 2008 Alternative Media Expo.The Strange Talent of Luther Strode by Justin Jordan and Tradd Moore features a dark parody of Atlas's Dynamic Tension regimen, one which bestows superhuman strength, durability and reflexes, but at the cost of gaining an aggressive nature and seeing people as their musculature.",
"One chapter of manga Ranma ½ has minor antagonist Hikaru Gosunkugi buy a suit of powered armor from a parody of the \"Beach Bully\" advertisements.",
"While it does make him stronger, it comes with a couple of drawbacks: it renders him immobile if he is not chained to a person he hates, and it self-destructs if he is unable to knock out the person he is chained to.",
"Video games \nIn early versions of the game, The Secret of Monkey Island, there was a statue in a voodoo shop that when inspected would make the character say \"Looks like an emaciated Charles Atlas.\"",
"The reference has since been removed due to Lucasfilm Games receiving a cease and desist letter.",
"Video game developer Valve released an update to their popular game, Team Fortress 2 that gave the sniper class a jar of urine called \"Jarate\".",
"The comic strip that Valve used to advertise the update is a parody of the strip \"The Insult that Made a Man out of Mac\".",
"A later update that introduced the ability for players to give and receive high fives was promoted with similar comic strip, this time spoofing the strip \"Hey, Skinny!",
"Yer Ribs Are Showing!\"",
"The physically unimposing \"Little Mac\" character in Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!!",
"and the Punch-Out!!",
"franchise is named in homage to the \"Mac\" of Atlas' best-known comic-book advertisement.",
"The game Kingdom of Loathing'' contains a reference to the sand-kicking campaign.",
"References\n\nExternal links \n\n \n \n\n1893 births\n1972 deaths\nAdvertising campaigns\nAmerican bodybuilders\nAmerican exercise and fitness writers\nBurials at St. John's Cemetery (Queens)\nItalian emigrants to the United States\nPeople from Calabria\nPeople from the Province of Cosenza\nSideshow performers\nStrength training writers\nPeople of Calabrian descent\nAmerican artists' models\nPeople associated with physical culture"
] | [
"A landmark advertising campaign featuring his name and likeness has been described as one of the longest in the history of advertising.",
"Atlas trained himself to develop his body from that of a \"scrawny weakling\".",
"He legally changed his name to \"Charles Atlas\" in 1922 after a friend told him that he resembled a statue of Atlas on top of a hotel.",
"In 1922, he marketed his first course to Dr. Frederick Tilney.",
"The company was run out of Tilney's home for the first six months.",
"Tilney moved to Florida in 1929 after selling his half of the business.",
"As of 2020, Charles Atlas continues to market a fitness program for the 97-pound weakling.",
"Jeffrey C. Hogue is the new owner of the company.",
"On October 30, 1892, Angelo Siciliano was born.",
"Angelino became a leather worker after moving to Brooklyn, New York, in 1904.",
"He used weights, pulley-style resistance, and gymnastic-style calisthenics.",
"Atlas said that they did not build his body.",
"Other fitness and health advocates who preceded him were Eugen Sandow and Bernarr MacFadden.",
"He was too poor to join the local YMCA, so he did his own exercises at home.",
"He asked the strongmen about their diet and exercise regimen after the show.",
"He developed a system of exercises called \"Dynamic Tension\" after reading Physical Culture magazine for more information on health, strength, and physical development.",
"Siciliano always told a story about a bully kicking sand into his face at the beach.",
"According to the story, he weighed only at this time in his life.",
"He thought to himself, \" Does this old gentleman have any barbells, any exercisers?\" while he was at the zoo.",
"It came over me.",
"...",
"He's pitting one muscle against another.",
"The exercises in the Dynamic Tension course could not be attributed to how lions use their bodies.",
"Some exercise courses of the time were similar to Atlas's course.",
"Bernarr MacFadden, publisher of the magazine Physical Culture, dubbed Siciliano \"America's most handsome man\" in 1921 and \"America's most perfectly developed man\" in 1922, and he soon took the role of strongman in the Coney Island Circus Side.",
"Atlas was never declared the 'world's most perfectly developed man'.",
"Siciliano changed his name to Charles Atlas in 1922 as it sounded more American.",
"He met Dr. Frederick Tilney, who was employed by Bernarr MacFadden's \"ideas man\".",
"MacFadden used Atlas as a model for a short movie called \"The Road to Health\".",
"Tilney was asked to edit the fitness course written by Atlas.",
"Atlas went into business in 1922.",
"There are twelve lessons and one final lesson in Dynamic Tension Atlas' program.",
"Photos of Atlas demonstrating the exercises are included with each lesson.",
"Atlas' lesson booklets added commentary that referred to the readers as his friends and gave them an open invitation to write him letters to update him on their progress and stories.",
"The people who took Atlas' course were: Max Baer, who was a boxing champion from 1934 to 1935; Joe Louis, who was a boxing champion from 1937 to 1949; David Prowse, who was a weightlifting champion and Darth Vader actor; and Allan Wells, who was a boxing",
"Atlas posed for many statues throughout his life.",
"Washington at Peace is on the Washington Square Arch in Manhattan, while Dawn of Glory is in Highland Park, Brooklyn, and Alexander Hamilton is in the U.S.",
"He died of a heart attack in Long Beach, New York at the age of 80.",
"He left behind two children, Charles Jr. and Diana.",
"His wife, Margaret, had died seven years before.",
"After arriving in the US in 1903, Nunziato Siciliano returned to Italy and lived into his 90's.",
"Charles Jr. died in August 2008 at the age of 89.",
"The print advertisements of Charles Atlas became famous because they were printed in cartoon form from the 1930s on, and in many comic books from the 1940s onwards.",
"A skinny young man is being threatened by a bully in a comic strip scenario.",
"The \"97-pound weakling\" is pushed down by the bully.",
"The young man gets angry, kicks a chair, and goes home to get a free Atlas book.",
"The newly muscled hero returns to the place of his previous misfortune and beats the bully up.",
"He is rewarded by the return of his girlfriend and the admiration of onlookers.",
"The real Atlas had an experience that inspired the ad.",
"It was a mainstay of comic books and boys' magazines.",
"The ads usually conclude with \"As is true of all the exercises in Atlas's course, you can do these exercises almost anywhere.\"",
"\"Battle Fought in Bed that made Fred a He-Man!\" was one of the Charles Atlas slogans used in advertising.",
"\"Insult that made a man out of Mac\" and \"Let me give you a body that men respect and women Admire!\"",
"\"97 pound weakling... Who became the World's Most Perfectly developed man\" and \"Just Seven days that's All I Need\" were copyrighted the following year.",
"Mac is accosted on the beach by a sand-kicking bully while his date watches.",
"After kicking a chair and gambling a three-cent stamp, a young man subscribes to Atlas's \"Dynamic-Tension\" program.",
"The hero of the beach later goes back to the beach and beats up the bully.",
"Other women marvel at how big his muscles are.",
"The earlier version of \"How Joe's Body Brought Him Fame Instead of Shame\" was released in the 1940s.",
"In this version, \"Joe\" is at a fair with his girl when the bully (who has just shown his strength with the \"Ring-the-Bell\" game) insults and pushes him.",
"Joe slams his fist on the table and orders a book.",
"Joe returns to the fair, rings the bell, and pushes down the bully while his girlfriend reappears to compliment him on his new, powerful body.",
"\"Hey, skinny!\"",
"The Ribs are Showing!",
"\"Joe\" is the star of the four-panel version of Mac's story.",
"The words above Joe's head are \"What a man!\" instead of \"Hero of the beach\".",
"\"How Jack the Weakling Slaughtered the Dance-Floor Hog\" is one of two versions of the ad.",
"A bully comments on how small Jack is, not even worth beating up.",
"Jack goes home, kicks a chair, and leaves for a book.",
"Jack found the bully, fought him, and got the admiration of Helen.",
"The words \"Hit of the party\" float over his head as he basks in the admiration of the other dancers.",
"Charles Atlas is parodied as \"Charles Axis\" in Leonard Cohen's 1966 novel Beautiful Losers.",
"The main character in the short story \"Charles Atlas Also dies\" is a follower of Atlas's exercise program who goes to the US to meet him.",
"Among the numerous references to Atlas's program/story/advertisements, the main character describes having sand kicked in his face by two big hefty guys in front of his girlfriend and later being compared to the mythological god Atlas after undergoing the program.",
"Charles Atlas is the symbol and the man is the man in the story.",
"Charles Atlas swears that the sand story is true.",
"The Miami Herald had an article about Edwin Pope.",
"Charles Atlas is mentioned in Kurt Vonnegut's novel.",
"The narrator thinks the author doesn't know that the term \"Dynamic Tension\" was used by Charles Atlas, a mail-order muscle-builder.",
"His idea that \"good societies could be built only by pitting good against evil, and by keeping the tension between the two high 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266",
"The main characters, a bunch of kids, tried Charles Atlas' Dynamic Tension program to look tough, but they prefer lifting weights as it seems to them.",
"\"98\" is a reference to Charles Atlas's \"97 pound weakling\" in the early Harry Bosch books.",
"A Spitting Image parodies the Charles Atlas advertisement as \"Charles Einstein\", with the two protagonists competing with their rhetorical skills and grasp of postmodernism.",
"In the 1978 Vietnam war film The Boys in Company C, a Marine complains during a force march that he is carrying too much gear for the platoon, shouting out \"What am I?\"",
"Are you referring to Charles Atlas?",
"In the episode \"When Aliens Attack,\" Fry gets sand kicked in his face by a \"professional beach bully\" who asks for payment for his services after Fry has won the girl.",
"The bully claims to be gay.",
"The \"Flex Bigarms\" course, a parody of Atlas, was the subject of an episode of Johnny Bravo.",
"\"Cherry little woodies are the center of attention, Til the muscle men start the dynamic tension\" is the title song of the 1964 film Muscle Beach Party.",
"In the DVD commentary, the star and director point out that Pee-wee is a 98-lb.",
"Weakling.",
"In the Ren and Stimpy episode \"Ren's Pecs,\" Ren seeks advice from a man who inspired him to get plastic surgery.",
"The entire episode is a spoof of the Charles Atlas story.",
"In the episode \"The English Patient\", the character of Izzy Mandelbaum is said to have worked out with Charles Atlas in the '50s to which Jerry quipped, \"1850s?\"",
"poking fun at his age.",
"\"Charles Atlas Song / I Can Make You a Man\" is a reference to Atlas's slogan \"In just seven days, I can make you a man\".",
"Both Charles Atlas and \"Dynamic-Tension\" are mentioned.",
"Atlas' \"97-pound weakling\" is referred to as a 98-pound weakling.",
"\"Will get sand in his face when kicked to the ground\" is the second line of the Charles Atlas advertising campaign.",
"The mad-scientist character claims that his creation harms the Charles Atlas Seal of Approval.",
"In an episode of That '70s Show, Eric's sister accuses him of being weak by saying he ordered a Charles Atlas video to buff up.",
"In an episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus, Terry Gilliam creates an animation which is a visual spoof of Charles Atlas' ad campaign.",
"Punky asked Henry if he still had his books after he was bullied at school.",
"A character in the Warehouse 13 episode \"Mild Mannered\" has a pair of Charles Atlas's trunks that give him super strength and the ability to alter his own density.",
"\"The Missing Page\" is an episode of \"Hancock's Half Hour\".",
"The last page has been removed.",
"Are you thin?",
"Do you have sand in your face?",
"It's a parody of Atlas' advertising.",
"An episode of What's My Line? was aired in 1956.",
"The guest was called Mr. X by Charles Atlas.",
"In an episode of the television show, Red Dwarf, season 3, episode 4, called \"Body swap\", Rimmer claims that Lister was not Charles Atlas.",
"Rimmer could make Listers body fit because they had swapped bodies before.",
"He abused the trust.",
"A sketch by Robot Chicken shows a weakling getting kicked in the face by a bully.",
"He gets a shot of \"Barry McGwire's Super Happy Fun Time Anger Go Go Juice\" which turns him into a huge muscleman and he tears the bully in two.",
"In the closing segment of the show, a garbage collector reads an ad from a comic book that says, \"Tired of getting sand kicked in your face.\"",
"In the movie Dead Poets Society, Professor Keating says he was the intellectual equivalent of a 98-pound weakling.",
"People would kick copies of my book at the beach.",
"The EdNorton character in Motherless Brooklyn is sitting in the front seat of a car while reading a wrestling magazine.",
"There is an ad on the back cover.",
"Henry Willson, Rock Hudson's agent, refers to Charles Atlas as an aspirational figure in the second episode of Hollywood.",
"During a discussion with his son, Chuck, Charles Rhoades Senior uses Atlas to make a point about strength.",
"The song \"Sand in My Face\" by 10cc is a detailed description of Atlas's legendary ads.",
"\"Charles Atlas\" is a song on the band's album Very Proud of Ya.",
"The song \"Mr Apollo\" is a parody of the song \"Five years ago I was a four-stone apology... Today I am two separate gorillas!\"",
"The song \"Charles Atlas (Hey Skinny...Yer Ribs Are Showing!)\" was written by the Munkees.",
"It's about the Atlas ads.",
"\"Why must I fall into this sadness?\" is a line from the Bob Dylan song \"She's Your Lover Now\".",
"Do I look like Charles Atlas?",
"Do you think I still have what you have?",
"The Faces song \"On the Beach\" has a line \"though I may not be no Charlie Atlas, I will take my shirt off anyway.\"",
"The Fauves had a song called \"The Charles Atlas Way\".",
"The song \"Sorry For Laughing\" was made popular in the U.S. by Propaganda.",
"The Charles Atlas course can make you a beast of a man.",
"The more muscular Roger Daltrey was occupied in a bathtub filled with baked beans, as John Entwistle posed on the cover as a panther skin-clad Charles Atlas alumni.",
"Daltrey caught pneumonia at the end of the photo shoot.",
"The line \"I like riding in my Uncle's car down to the beach where the pretty girls all parade\" is from Roger Waters' song \"Sunset Strip\" from his album Radio K.A.O.S.",
"Charles Atlas stands on the beach, upon his head, and says \"I will not fall\" in the song \"I Will Not Fall\" by Wiretrain/Wire.",
"I will not fall.",
"The Statler Brothers song \"Do You Remember These\" contains the line \"Charles Atlas course, Roy Rogers' horse, and 'only the Shadow knows'...\"",
"The artist David Hockney included a print entitled 'The Seven Stone Weakling' in his series, The Rake.",
"Tony Abbott had his comeuppance against Kevin Rudd in a cartoon.",
"There is a fake advertisement that parodies the Atlas body ads, but the product promises to make a person extremely smart.",
"A genius man ridicules a slow-witted man for his lack of intelligence.",
"The man gets revenge by proving that the genius bully isn't real.",
"The Charles Atlas advertisement depicts a feud between Adlai Stevenson and General William Westmoreland being carried out in the same way as depicted in the Our Dumb Century article.",
"Jean-Claude Van Damme was depicted as the bully on the beach in a 1993 Entertainment Weekly video review of the films Hard Target and Last Action Hero.",
"In the illustration, Van Damme claims that Hard Target was well-received by both audiences and critics.",
"Instead of ordering Atlas's program, Arnold called his agent and ordered Last Action Hero to be released on video immediately.",
"With a film doing well as a video rental, and with Van Damme in it, Arnold returned to the beach and punched him.",
"\"Physically those clones may make me look like a 98-pound-weakling, but I'm the Charles Atlas of them all,\" says the main character in the DC Comics title Mystery in Space.",
"The January 1974 issue of National Lampoon was dedicated to animals.",
"In the article 'Popular Evolution', a parody of Popular Mechanics, there is a fake advertisement in the form of a comic strip.",
"A skinny mouse is kicked by a bully at the beach.",
"A little mouse goes home, kicks a chair, fills out a form, and sends it to Mr. Charles Darwin.",
"\"After a few millions of evolutionary exercise\" little mouse has developed fangs, and ugly scary face, wings, amongst other attributes; goes back to the beach, bites the bully predator in the neck, and is declared the \"heroe of the habitat\" by the admiring females.\"",
"The issue can't be seen online because it's out of print.",
"The \"kicking sand in the face\" image has been used many times in Archie comics.",
"Grant Morrison and Richard Case created Flex Mentallo in a comic book in 1990.",
"Flex is a parody of \"The Insult that made a Man out of Mac\" advertisements from the past.",
"The insult that made a robot of 'Walt'' was featured in 2000AD.",
"Atlas parodies were used frequently.",
"What The--?",
"The article was published in November 1992.",
"In Not Available Comics #25, 1993, Matt Feazell uses a sand-kicking bully to represent the Etruscan attack on Rome.",
"\"The Hold-Up that Made a Hero Out of Mac\", from Radioactive Man #1, blends Mac's story with Batman's origin.",
"Chris Ware appropriated Mac's \"chair-kicking resolve\" in a Jimmy Corrigan story.",
"Josh Neufeld used the ad to make fun of David A.",
"The piece was done for Fortune Small Business magazine.",
"Tom Tomorrow used an ad in the June 4, 2007, edition of \"This Modern World\" to make a point.",
"A dark parody of Atlas's Dynamic Tension regimen is featured in The Strange Talent of Luther Strode.",
"A parody of the \"Beach Bully\" advertisements has an antagonist buy a suit of powered armor.",
"It makes him stronger, but it also makes him immobile if he isn't chained to a person he hates, and it self-destructs if he isn't able to knock out the person he is chained to.",
"In the early versions of The Secret of Monkey Island, there was a statue in a shop that made the character say \"looks like a Charles Atlas.\"",
"Lucasfilm Games received a cease and desist letter, which caused the reference to be removed.",
"The update to Team Fortress 2 gave the class a jar of urine called \"Jarate\".",
"The comic strip that Valve used to advertise the update is a parody of the strip \"The Insult that Made a Man out of Mac\".",
"A later update that introduced the ability for players to give and receive high fives was spoofed by a comic strip.",
"The Ribs are Showing!",
"In Mike Tyson's punch-out, there is a physically unimposing \"Little Mac\" character.",
"There was a punch-out.",
"The franchise is named after the best-known comic-book advertisement.",
"There is a reference to the sand- kicking campaign in the game Kingdom of loathing.",
"People from the Province of Cosenza are buried at the St. John's Cemetery in the United States."
] | <mask> (born Angelo Siciliano; October 30, 1892 – December 24, 1972) was an Italian-born American bodybuilder best remembered as the developer of a bodybuilding method and its associated exercise program which spawned a landmark advertising campaign featuring his name and likeness; it has been described as one of the longest-lasting and most memorable ad campaigns of all time. <mask> trained himself to develop his body from that of a "scrawny weakling", eventually becoming the most popular bodybuilder of his day. He took the name "<mask>" after a friend told him that he resembled the statue of <mask> on top of a hotel in Coney Island and legally changed his name in 1922. He marketed his first bodybuilding course with health and fitness writer Dr. Frederick Tilney in November 1922. The duo ran the company out of Tilney's home for the first six months. In 1929, Tilney sold his half of the business to advertising man <mask>. Roman and moved to Florida. Charles Atlas Ltd. was founded in 1929 and, as of 2020, continues to market a fitness program for the "97-pound weakling" (44 kg).The company is now owned by Jeffrey C. Hogue. History
Angelo Siciliano was born in Acri, Cosenza, on October 30, 1892. Angelino, as he was also called, moved to Brooklyn, New York, in 1904, and eventually became a leather worker. He tried many forms of exercise initially, using weights, pulley-style resistance, and gymnastic-style calisthenics. Atlas claimed that they did not build his body. He was inspired by other fitness and health advocates who preceded him, including world-renowned strongman Eugen Sandow and Bernarr MacFadden (a major proponent of "physical culture"). He was too poor to join the local YMCA, so he watched how exercises were performed, then performed them at home.He attended the strongman shows at Coney Island, and would question the strongmen about their diets and exercise regimens after the show. He would read Physical Culture magazine for further information on health, strength, and physical development, and finally developed his own system of exercises that was later called "Dynamic Tension", a phrase coined by <mask>. A bully kicked sand into Siciliano's face at a beach when he was a youth, according to the story that he always told. At this time in his life, also according to the story, he weighed only . According to several stories and claims, he was at the zoo watching a lion stretch when he thought to himself, "Does this old gentleman have any barbells, any exercisers? ... And it came over me. ...He's been pitting one muscle against another!" None of the exercises in the Dynamic Tension course could be attributed to how lions use their bodies. Other exercise courses of the time contained exercises similar to Atlas's course, particularly those marketed by Bernarr McFadden and Earle E. Liederman. Bernarr MacFadden, publisher of the magazine Physical Culture, dubbed Siciliano "America's Most Handsome Man" in 1921, and "Americas Most Perfectly Developed Man" in a 1922 contest held in Madison Square Garden He soon took the role of strongman in the Coney Island Circus Side Show. <mask> never actually won a title anywhere proclaiming him to be the 'world's most perfectly developed man'. In 1922, 30-year-old Siciliano officially changed his name to <mask>, as it sounded much more American. He met Dr. Frederick Tilney, a British homeopathic physician and course writer who was employed as publisher Bernarr MacFadden's "ideas man".Atlas and Tilney met through MacFadden, who was using Atlas as a model for a short movie titled "The Road to Health". Atlas wrote a fitness course and then asked Tilney to edit it. Tilney agreed and Atlas went into business in 1922. Dynamic Tension
Atlas' "Dynamic Tension" program consists of twelve lessons and one final perpetual lesson. Each lesson is supplemented with photos of Atlas demonstrating the exercises. Atlas' lesson booklets added commentary that referred to the readers as his friends and gave them an open invitation to write him letters to update him on their progress and stories. Among the people who took Atlas' course were Max Baer, heavyweight boxing champion from 1934 to 1935; Rocky Marciano, heavyweight boxing champion from 1952 to 1956; Joe Louis, heavyweight boxing champion from 1937 to 1949; British heavyweight weightlifting champion and Darth Vader actor David Prowse; and Allan Wells, the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games 100 meter champion.Artists' model
Besides photographs, <mask> posed for many statues throughout his life. These included Alexander Stirling Calder's Washington at Peace (1917–18) on the Washington Square Arch, Manhattan; Pietro Montana's Dawn of Glory (1924) in Highland Park, Brooklyn (sometimes misreported as Prospect Park); and James Earle Frazer's Alexander Hamilton (1923) at the U.S. Treasury Building in Washington, D.C.
Death
<mask> began to experience chest pains after exercising during his final years, resulting in his hospitalization in December 1972. He died from a heart attack in the hospital on December 24, 1972 in Long Beach, New York at age 80. He left behind a son, <mask>., and a daughter, Diana. His wife, Margaret, had died seven years before. Nunziato Siciliano, <mask>' father, who had returned to Italy shortly after arriving in the US in 1903, lived into his 90s. <mask>' son, <mask>., died in August 2008 at the age of 89.The print advertisements
The famous <mask> print advertisements became iconic mostly because they were printed in cartoon form from the 1930s on, and in many comic books from the 1940s onwards – in fact continuing long after <mask>' death. The typical scenario, usually expressed in comic strip form, presented a skinny young man (usually accompanied by a female companion) being threatened by a bully. The bully pushes down the "97-pound weakling" and the girlfriend joins in the derision. The young man goes home, gets angry (usually demonstrated by his kicking a chair), and sends away for the free Atlas book. Shortly thereafter, the newly muscled hero returns to the place of his original victimization, seeks out the bully, and beats him up. He is rewarded by the swift return of his girlfriend and the admiration of onlookers. The ad was said to be based on an experience the real <mask> had as a boy.With variations, it was a mainstay of comic books and boys' magazines for decades. The ads usually conclude with the words "As is true of all the exercises in Atlas's course, you can do these exercises almost anywhere." <mask> slogans used in advertising copyrighted in 1932 included "Battle Fought in Bed that made Fred a He-Man! ", "Insult that Made a Man out of Mac", and "Let Me Give You a Body that Men Respect and Women Admire!". Slogans copyrighted the following year included "97 pound weakling... Who became the World's Most Perfectly Developed Man", and "Just Seven Days that's All I Need". "The Insult that Made a Man out of Mac"
In this, the full-length version, the protagonist, "Mac," is accosted on the beach by a sand-kicking bully while his date watches. Humiliated, the young man goes home and, after kicking a chair and gambling a three-cent stamp, subscribes to Atlas's "Dynamic-Tension" program.Later, the now muscular protagonist goes back to the beach and beats up the bully, becoming the "hero of the beach." His girl returns while other women marvel at how big his muscles are. (An earlier but otherwise almost identical version, "How Joe's Body Brought Him Fame Instead of Shame," debuted in the 1940s.) "The Insult That Turned a 'Chump' Into a Champ"
In this version, which debuted in 1941, "Joe" is at a fair with his girl when the bully (who has just shown his strength with the "Ring-the-Bell" game) insults and pushes him. Joe goes home, slams his fist on the table, and orders the free Atlas book. Joe then returns to the fair, rings the bell, and pushes down the bully while his girlfriend reappears to compliment him on his new, powerful physique. "Hey, Skinny!Yer Ribs Are Showing!" The condensed, four-panel version stars "Joe," though it is otherwise identical to Mac's story. Instead of "Hero of the beach," the words floating above Joe's head are "What a man!" "How Jack the Weakling Slaughtered the Dance-Floor Hog"
Another version of the ad presents a scenario in which "Jack" is dancing with his girl, Helen. They are bumped into by a bully, who comments on how puny Jack is, not even worth beating up. Jack goes home, kicks a chair, and sends away for Atlas's "free book." Later, the muscular Jack finds the bully, punches him, and wins back the admiration of Helen.This time, the words "Hit of the party" float over his head as he basks in the admiration of the other dancers. In popular culture
Literature
In the 1966 postmodern novel Beautiful Losers, written by Leonard Cohen, <mask> is parodied as "<mask>." The short story "Charles Atlas Also Dies" by Sergio Ramírez centers on the main character, a follower of <mask>'s exercise program, and his trip to the United States to meet <mask> himself; written from an ironic and dark-humored perspective. Among the numerous references to Atlas's program/story/advertisements, the main character describes having sand kicked in his face by "two big hefty guys" in front of his girlfriend and later being compared to the mythological god <mask> after undergoing the program. The story juxtaposes the superhuman strength and notoriety of <mask>—the symbol, with the fragile and mortal aspects of <mask>—the man. The story begins with the quote: "<mask> swears that sand story is true. – Edwin Pope, The Miami Herald".In Kurt Vonnegut's novel Cat's Cradle, <mask> is mentioned. When the narrator comes across the term "Dynamic Tension" in a book about the mysterious cult leader Bokonon, he laughs because he imagines the author does not know "that the term was one vulgarised by <mask>, a mail-order muscle-builder." However, as he reads on he finds that Bokonon is an alumnus of Atlas's training program, which has inspired his idea that "good societies could be built only by pitting good against evil, and by keeping the tension between the two high at all times." In <mask>'s short story "Bop Bop Against That Curtain", part of the 1973 volume South of No North, the main characters, a bunch of kids, tried <mask> Atlas' Dynamic Tension program to look tough, but they prefer lifting weights as it seems to them "the more rugged and obvious way". In Michael Connelly's early Harry Bosch books (The Black Echo, The Black Ice, The Concrete Blonde, The Last Coyote), Bosch's Commanding Officer, Lieutenant Harvey Pounds, is nicknamed "98" as a reference probably both to <mask>'s "97 pound weakling" and The Rocky Horror Picture Show. A Spitting Image annual parodies the <mask> Atlas advertisement as "Charles Einstein", with the two protagonists competing not on muscular physique, but with their rhetorical skills and grasp of postmodernism. Film and TV
In the 1978 Vietnam war film The Boys in Company C, Marine Vinnie Fazio complains during a force march that he is carrying too much ammunition and gear for the platoon, shouting out "What am I?<mask>?". In the Futurama episode "When Aliens Attack," Fry gets sand kicked in his face by a "professional beach bully" who asks for payment for his services after Fry has won the girl, Leela. Leela hits on the bully, but the bully claims to be gay. In an episode of Johnny Bravo, Johnny explains that he achieved his muscular physique through the "Flex Bigarms" course, a parody of <mask>. The title song of the 1964 film Muscle Beach Party features the lyric "Cherry little woodies are the center of attention / Til the muscle men start the dynamic tension"
In the 1985 film Pee-wee's Big Adventure, Pee-wee steps on a "Guess Your Weight and Fortune" arcade scale at home, where he weighs in at 98 lbs (and receives a fortune warning him not to leave the house). In the DVD commentary, star Paul Reubens and director Tim Burton point out during the scene that Pee-wee truly is a "98-lb. weakling."In the Ren and Stimpy episode "Ren's Pecs," Ren seeks counsel from the bodybuilder "<mask>", who inspires him to get plastic surgery. <mask> and the entire episode are obvious spoofs of the <mask> story. In the Seinfeld episode "The English Patient", the character of Izzy Mandelbaum is said to have worked out with <mask> in the '50s to which Jerry wryly replies, "1850s? ", poking fun at Izzy's age. The Rocky Horror Picture Show (film, 1975), makes several references to <mask>:
In "Charles Atlas Song / I Can Make You a Man":
The title line exploits the grammatical ambiguity of <mask>'s slogan "In just seven days, I can make you a man," between the meanings "... cause you to become a 'real' man" and "... create a man for you." Both <mask> and "Dynamic-Tension" are mentioned by name. It refers to a 98-pound weakling, a reference to <mask>' "97-pound weakling."The second line refers to the Charles Atlas advertising campaign with "Will get sand in his face when kicked to the ground." The mad-scientist character (Dr. Frank N. Furter) claims that his Frankensteinian creation "carries the Charles Atlas Seal of Approval." In an episode of That '70s Show, Eric's sister accuses him of being weak by saying he ordered a Charles Atlas video to buff up. In an episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus, Terry Gilliam creates an animation which is a visual spoof of <mask>' ad campaign. In an episode of Punky Brewster, Punky asks Henry if he still has his Charles Atlas books after being bullied at school. In "Mild Mannered", an episode of Warehouse 13, a pair of <mask> Atlas's trunks imbue a character with superhuman powers, including superstrength and the ability to alter his own density. In "The Missing Page", an episode of Hancock's Half Hour, Hancock reads the fictional detective novel 'Lady, Don't Fall Backwards'.The final page has been removed, and Hancock reads the lines 'Men! Are you skinny?! Do you have sand kicked in your face?! ', a parody of Atlas' advertising in pulp novels. In an episode of the television show, What's My Line?, in 1956. <mask> was the mystery guest, calling himself Mr. X. In an episode of the television show, Red Dwarf, season 3, episode 4, called "Bodyswap", Rimmer claims Lister was no <mask> to begin with.They had previously swapped bodies so that Rimmer could make Listers body fit. Instead, he abused the trust. Robot Chicken has a sketch wherein a weakling gets sand kicked in his face by a bully. He then gets a shot of "Barry McGwire's Super Happy Fun Time Anger Go Go Juice" which turns him into a huge muscleman and he tears the bully in two. In the closing segment of Creepshow, after noticing that the voodoo doll ad from the discarded comic book has already been clipped out, one of the garbage collectors starts reading the next ad aloud: "Tired of getting sand kicked in your face..."
The Triangle, a season two episode of The Waltons which first aired in 1973, features Jim Bob secretly purchasing and later reading and practicing the exercises in a <mask>' exercise manual in order to win the heart of a female classmate who favors a bigger and stronger boy. In the movie Dead Poets Society, Professor Keating (played by Robin Williams) describes his less-than-intellectual youth by saying "I was the intellectual equivalent of a 98-pound weakling. I would go to the beach and people would kick copies of Byron in my face".In the movie Motherless Brooklyn the Ed Norton character and Ethan Suplee are sitting in the front seat of a car reading a wrestling magazine. A <mask> Atlas ad is shown on the back cover. In the 2020 Netflix mini-series Hollywood season 1, episode 2, <mask> is referenced as an aspirational figure for Rock Hudson by his agent Henry Willson. In episode 11, series 5 of the drama series, Billions, <mask> Senior uses <mask> to make a point about strength during a discussion with his son, Chuck. Music
The song "Sand in My Face" by 10cc, on their debut album, is a detailed description of <mask>'s legendary ads. The band AFI have a song called "Charles Atlas" on their album Very Proud of Ya. The Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band song "Mr Apollo" is a parody that includes the lines "Five years ago I was a four-stone apology ... Today I am two separate gorillas!"The Darling Pet Munkee song "Charles Atlas (Hey Skinny...Yer Ribs Are Showing!)" is specifically about the Atlas ads. The Bob Dylan unreleased song "She's Your Lover Now" from 1965 contains the lyric: "Why must I fall into this sadness? / Do I look like <mask>? / Do you think I still got what you still got, baby?" The Faces song "On the Beach" contains the line "though I may not be no <mask>, / Gonna take my shirt off anyway." The Australian band The Fauves had a minor local hit with their song "The Charles Atlas Way."The Josef K song "Sorry For Laughing" (made popular in the U.S. by Propaganda) contains the line "when we grooved on into town / <mask> stopped to frown / cause he's not made like me and you"
"We Are The Champions" by Queen includes the line, "I've had my share of sand kicked in my face..."
The Who song "I Can't Reach You", on the album The Who Sell Out, is preceded by a "commercial" for the Charles Atlas Course. ("The Charles Atlas course with "Dynamic Tension" can turn you into a beast of a man.") John Entwistle poses on the cover as a panther skin-clad <mask> Atlas alumnus, as the more muscular Roger Daltrey was otherwise occupied in a bathtub filled with baked beans. (After this photo session Daltrey caught pneumonia through the beans being ice cold at the end of the shoot.) Roger Waters' song "Sunset Strip" from his album Radio K.A.O.S., contains the line "I like riding in my Uncle's car / Down to the beach where the pretty girls all parade / And movie stars and paparazzi play the Charles Atlas kicking-sand-in-the-face game." In the song "I Will Not Fall" by Wiretrain/Wire, these lyrics appear: "And <mask> Stands, upon the beach, upon his head and says ... I will not fall."The Statler Brothers song "Do You Remember These" contains the line "<mask> course, Roy Rogers' horse, and 'only the Shadow knows'..."
The Rocky Horror Picture Show song "I Can Make You a Man" references both "Charles Atlas" and "dynamic tension." Gama Bomb CD titled "Tales From The Grave in Space" features a booklet in which several graphics with song lyrics were designed to resemble <mask>'ads'..."
Art
The artist David Hockney, included a print entitled 'The Seven Stone Weakling' in his 1961-3 series, The Rake's Progress. Magazine and newspapers
A Canberra Times cartoon features the athletic Tony Abbott having his comeuppance against policy heavyweight Kevin Rudd. An issue of Nickelodeon Magazine features a fake advertisement that parodies the Atlas body ads; the difference is that the product promises to make a person extremely smart. In this parody, a genius man picks on an incredibly strong yet slow-witted man for his lack of intelligence. The man gets his revenge by scientifically proving that the genius bully does not exist, making him disappear. An article in The Onion spinoff Our Dumb Century portrays a feud between Adlai Stevenson and General William Westmoreland being carried out in the same vein as illustrated in the Charles Atlas advertisement.A 1993 Entertainment Weekly video review of the films Hard Target and Last Action Hero depicted Jean-Claude Van Damme as the bully on the beach and Arnold Schwarzenegger as the weakling. In the illustration, Van Damme harasses a scrawny Schwarzenegger, claiming that Hard Target, unlike Schwarzenegger's movie, was well-received by both audiences and critics. Instead of ordering Atlas's program, Schwarzenegger calls his agent and orders Last Action Hero to be released on video immediately. Schwarzenegger, now with a film doing well as a video rental (despite its theatrical failure), returns to the beach and punches Van Damme out. Comics
In an issue of the DC Comics title Mystery in Space, the main character, Comet, referring to an army of super-powered clones, says, "Physically those clones may make me look like a 98-pound-weakling, but psychically I'm the <mask> of this beach." The January 1974 issue of the satiric magazine National Lampoon was dedicated to animals: Pets, circus, wild beasts, evolution, law, etc. A fake advertisement in the article 'Popular Evolution', a parody of the magazine Popular Mechanics, presents in the three-stage comic strip manner a Charles Atlas-style commercial.A little skinny mouse suffers the humiliation of being kicked at the beach by a bully, some sort or medium-size carnivore. Little mouse, goes home, kicks a chair, fills the form and sends it to Mr. <mask>, Galapagos Islands. "After a few millions years of evolutionary exercise" little mouse has developed fangs, and ugly scary face, wings, amongst other attributes; goes back to the beach, bites the bully predator in the neck, Count Dracula style and is declared the "heroe of the habitat" by the admiring females. Unfortunately the issue is out of print and cannot be seen online anywhere. The "kicking sand in the face" image has been used many times in Archie comics. Flex Mentallo is a comic book character created by writer Grant Morrison and artist Richard Case in 1990, during their run on Doom Patrol. Flex is in part a parody of <mask>' long-running "The Insult that made a Man out of Mac" advertisements seen in American comics from the past.2000AD featured The insult that made a robot of 'Walt''', featuring Droid Atlas and Walter the Wobot
Marvel Comics' humor series What The--?! used Atlas parodies regularly, as in "The Insult that Made Mac a Blood-Sucking Freak!" (What The--?! #23, November 1992). Minicomics pioneer Matt Feazell uses the sand-kicking bully to represent the Etruscan attack on Rome in Not Available Comics #25, 1993. "The Hold-Up that Made a Hero Out of Mac", from Radioactive Man #1 (Bongo Comics, 1993), blends Mac's story with Batman's origin. Cartoonist Chris Ware appropriated Mac's "chair-kicking resolve" in a Jimmy Corrigan story from Acme Novelty Library #1 (Fantagraphics, Winter 1993).Cartoonist Josh Neufeld used the ad to spoof business writer David A. Vise in a piece done for Fortune Small Business magazine in 2002. In the June 4, 2007, edition of "This Modern World," Tom Tomorrow uses the ad to make a point about how President George W. Bush pushes around Congressional Democrats. New Orleans cartoonist Caesar Meadows spoofed the ad—substituting zine-making for bodybuilding—while advertising the 2008 Alternative Media Expo.The Strange Talent of Luther Strode by Justin Jordan and Tradd Moore features a dark parody of Atlas's Dynamic Tension regimen, one which bestows superhuman strength, durability and reflexes, but at the cost of gaining an aggressive nature and seeing people as their musculature. One chapter of manga Ranma ½ has minor antagonist Hikaru Gosunkugi buy a suit of powered armor from a parody of the "Beach Bully" advertisements. While it does make him stronger, it comes with a couple of drawbacks: it renders him immobile if he is not chained to a person he hates, and it self-destructs if he is unable to knock out the person he is chained to. Video games
In early versions of the game, The Secret of Monkey Island, there was a statue in a voodoo shop that when inspected would make the character say "Looks like an emaciated <mask>."The reference has since been removed due to Lucasfilm Games receiving a cease and desist letter. Video game developer Valve released an update to their popular game, Team Fortress 2 that gave the sniper class a jar of urine called "Jarate". The comic strip that Valve used to advertise the update is a parody of the strip "The Insult that Made a Man out of Mac". A later update that introduced the ability for players to give and receive high fives was promoted with similar comic strip, this time spoofing the strip "Hey, Skinny! Yer Ribs Are Showing!" The physically unimposing "Little Mac" character in Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!! and the Punch-Out!!franchise is named in homage to the "Mac" of Atlas' best-known comic-book advertisement. The game Kingdom of Loathing'' contains a reference to the sand-kicking campaign. References
External links
1893 births
1972 deaths
Advertising campaigns
American bodybuilders
American exercise and fitness writers
Burials at St. John's Cemetery (Queens)
Italian emigrants to the United States
People from Calabria
People from the Province of Cosenza
Sideshow performers
Strength training writers
People of Calabrian descent
American artists' models
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] | A landmark advertising campaign featuring his name and likeness has been described as one of the longest in the history of advertising. <mask> trained himself to develop his body from that of a "scrawny weakling". He legally changed his name to "<mask>" in 1922 after a friend told him that he resembled a statue of <mask> on top of a hotel. In 1922, he marketed his first course to Dr. Frederick Tilney. The company was run out of Tilney's home for the first six months. Tilney moved to Florida in 1929 after selling his half of the business. As of 2020, <mask> continues to market a fitness program for the 97-pound weakling.Jeffrey C. Hogue is the new owner of the company. On October 30, 1892, Angelo Siciliano was born. Angelino became a leather worker after moving to Brooklyn, New York, in 1904. He used weights, pulley-style resistance, and gymnastic-style calisthenics. <mask> said that they did not build his body. Other fitness and health advocates who preceded him were Eugen Sandow and Bernarr MacFadden. He was too poor to join the local YMCA, so he did his own exercises at home.He asked the strongmen about their diet and exercise regimen after the show. He developed a system of exercises called "Dynamic Tension" after reading Physical Culture magazine for more information on health, strength, and physical development. Siciliano always told a story about a bully kicking sand into his face at the beach. According to the story, he weighed only at this time in his life. He thought to himself, " Does this old gentleman have any barbells, any exercisers?" while he was at the zoo. It came over me. ...He's pitting one muscle against another. The exercises in the Dynamic Tension course could not be attributed to how lions use their bodies. Some exercise courses of the time were similar to Atlas's course. Bernarr MacFadden, publisher of the magazine Physical Culture, dubbed Siciliano "America's most handsome man" in 1921 and "America's most perfectly developed man" in 1922, and he soon took the role of strongman in the Coney Island Circus Side. Atlas was never declared the 'world's most perfectly developed man'. Siciliano changed his name to <mask> in 1922 as it sounded more American. He met Dr. Frederick Tilney, who was employed by Bernarr MacFadden's "ideas man".MacFadden used <mask> as a model for a short movie called "The Road to Health". Tilney was asked to edit the fitness course written by Atlas. Atlas went into business in 1922. There are twelve lessons and one final lesson in Dynamic Tension Atlas' program. Photos of <mask> demonstrating the exercises are included with each lesson. Atlas' lesson booklets added commentary that referred to the readers as his friends and gave them an open invitation to write him letters to update him on their progress and stories. The people who took Atlas' course were: Max Baer, who was a boxing champion from 1934 to 1935; Joe Louis, who was a boxing champion from 1937 to 1949; David Prowse, who was a weightlifting champion and Darth Vader actor; and Allan Wells, who was a boxing<mask> posed for many statues throughout his life. Washington at Peace is on the Washington Square Arch in Manhattan, while Dawn of Glory is in Highland Park, Brooklyn, and Alexander Hamilton is in the U.S. He died of a heart attack in Long Beach, New York at the age of 80. He left behind two children, <mask>. and Diana. His wife, Margaret, had died seven years before. After arriving in the US in 1903, Nunziato Siciliano returned to Italy and lived into his 90's. <mask>. died in August 2008 at the age of 89.The print advertisements of <mask> became famous because they were printed in cartoon form from the 1930s on, and in many comic books from the 1940s onwards. A skinny young man is being threatened by a bully in a comic strip scenario. The "97-pound weakling" is pushed down by the bully. The young man gets angry, kicks a chair, and goes home to get a free Atlas book. The newly muscled hero returns to the place of his previous misfortune and beats the bully up. He is rewarded by the return of his girlfriend and the admiration of onlookers. The real Atlas had an experience that inspired the ad.It was a mainstay of comic books and boys' magazines. The ads usually conclude with "As is true of all the exercises in Atlas's course, you can do these exercises almost anywhere." "Battle Fought in Bed that made Fred a He-Man!" was one of the Charles Atlas slogans used in advertising. "Insult that made a man out of Mac" and "Let me give you a body that men respect and women Admire!" "97 pound weakling... Who became the World's Most Perfectly developed man" and "Just Seven days that's All I Need" were copyrighted the following year. Mac is accosted on the beach by a sand-kicking bully while his date watches. After kicking a chair and gambling a three-cent stamp, a young man subscribes to Atlas's "Dynamic-Tension" program.The hero of the beach later goes back to the beach and beats up the bully. Other women marvel at how big his muscles are. The earlier version of "How Joe's Body Brought Him Fame Instead of Shame" was released in the 1940s. In this version, "Joe" is at a fair with his girl when the bully (who has just shown his strength with the "Ring-the-Bell" game) insults and pushes him. Joe slams his fist on the table and orders a book. Joe returns to the fair, rings the bell, and pushes down the bully while his girlfriend reappears to compliment him on his new, powerful body. "Hey, skinny!"The Ribs are Showing! "Joe" is the star of the four-panel version of Mac's story. The words above Joe's head are "What a man!" instead of "Hero of the beach". "How Jack the Weakling Slaughtered the Dance-Floor Hog" is one of two versions of the ad. A bully comments on how small Jack is, not even worth beating up. Jack goes home, kicks a chair, and leaves for a book. Jack found the bully, fought him, and got the admiration of Helen.The words "Hit of the party" float over his head as he basks in the admiration of the other dancers. <mask> is parodied as "<mask>" in Leonard Cohen's 1966 novel Beautiful Losers. The main character in the short story "<mask> Atlas Also dies" is a follower of Atlas's exercise program who goes to the US to meet him. Among the numerous references to <mask>'s program/story/advertisements, the main character describes having sand kicked in his face by two big hefty guys in front of his girlfriend and later being compared to the mythological god <mask> after undergoing the program. <mask> is the symbol and the man is the man in the story. <mask> swears that the sand story is true. The Miami Herald had an article about Edwin Pope.<mask> is mentioned in Kurt Vonnegut's novel. The narrator thinks the author doesn't know that the term "Dynamic Tension" was used by <mask>, a mail-order muscle-builder. His idea that "good societies could be built only by pitting good against evil, and by keeping the tension between the two high 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 800-381-0266 The main characters, a bunch of kids, tried <mask>' Dynamic Tension program to look tough, but they prefer lifting weights as it seems to them. "98" is a reference to <mask>'s "97 pound weakling" in the early Harry Bosch books. A Spitting Image parodies the <mask> Atlas advertisement as "<mask> Einstein", with the two protagonists competing with their rhetorical skills and grasp of postmodernism. In the 1978 Vietnam war film The Boys in Company C, a Marine complains during a force march that he is carrying too much gear for the platoon, shouting out "What am I?"Are you referring to <mask>? In the episode "When Aliens Attack," Fry gets sand kicked in his face by a "professional beach bully" who asks for payment for his services after Fry has won the girl. The bully claims to be gay. The "Flex Bigarms" course, a parody of Atlas, was the subject of an episode of Johnny Bravo. "Cherry little woodies are the center of attention, Til the muscle men start the dynamic tension" is the title song of the 1964 film Muscle Beach Party. In the DVD commentary, the star and director point out that Pee-wee is a 98-lb. Weakling.In the Ren and Stimpy episode "Ren's Pecs," Ren seeks advice from a man who inspired him to get plastic surgery. The entire episode is a spoof of the <mask> story. In the episode "The English Patient", the character of Izzy Mandelbaum is said to have worked out with <mask> in the '50s to which Jerry quipped, "1850s?" poking fun at his age. "Charles Atlas Song / I Can Make You a Man" is a reference to Atlas's slogan "In just seven days, I can make you a man". Both <mask> and "Dynamic-Tension" are mentioned. Atlas' "97-pound weakling" is referred to as a 98-pound weakling."Will get sand in his face when kicked to the ground" is the second line of the Charles Atlas advertising campaign. The mad-scientist character claims that his creation harms the Charles Atlas Seal of Approval. In an episode of That '70s Show, Eric's sister accuses him of being weak by saying he ordered a Charles Atlas video to buff up. In an episode of Monty Python's Flying Circus, Terry Gilliam creates an animation which is a visual spoof of <mask>' ad campaign. Punky asked Henry if he still had his books after he was bullied at school. A character in the Warehouse 13 episode "Mild Mannered" has a pair of <mask>'s trunks that give him super strength and the ability to alter his own density. "The Missing Page" is an episode of "Hancock's Half Hour".The last page has been removed. Are you thin? Do you have sand in your face? It's a parody of Atlas' advertising. An episode of What's My Line? was aired in 1956. The guest was called Mr. X by <mask>. In an episode of the television show, Red Dwarf, season 3, episode 4, called "Body swap", Rimmer claims that Lister was not <mask>.Rimmer could make Listers body fit because they had swapped bodies before. He abused the trust. A sketch by Robot Chicken shows a weakling getting kicked in the face by a bully. He gets a shot of "Barry McGwire's Super Happy Fun Time Anger Go Go Juice" which turns him into a huge muscleman and he tears the bully in two. In the closing segment of the show, a garbage collector reads an ad from a comic book that says, "Tired of getting sand kicked in your face." In the movie Dead Poets Society, Professor Keating says he was the intellectual equivalent of a 98-pound weakling. People would kick copies of my book at the beach.The EdNorton character in Motherless Brooklyn is sitting in the front seat of a car while reading a wrestling magazine. There is an ad on the back cover. Henry Willson, Rock Hudson's agent, refers to <mask> as an aspirational figure in the second episode of Hollywood. During a discussion with his son, Chuck, <mask> Senior uses <mask> to make a point about strength. The song "Sand in My Face" by 10cc is a detailed description of Atlas's legendary ads. "Charles Atlas" is a song on the band's album Very Proud of Ya. The song "Mr Apollo" is a parody of the song "Five years ago I was a four-stone apology... Today I am two separate gorillas!"The song "Charles Atlas (Hey Skinny...Yer Ribs Are Showing!)" was written by the Munkees. It's about the Atlas ads. "Why must I fall into this sadness?" is a line from the Bob Dylan song "She's Your Lover Now". Do I look like <mask>? Do you think I still have what you have? The Faces song "On the Beach" has a line "though I may not be no <mask>, I will take my shirt off anyway." The Fauves had a song called "The Charles Atlas Way".The song "Sorry For Laughing" was made popular in the U.S. by Propaganda. The Charles Atlas course can make you a beast of a man. The more muscular Roger Daltrey was occupied in a bathtub filled with baked beans, as John Entwistle posed on the cover as a panther skin-clad Charles Atlas alumni. Daltrey caught pneumonia at the end of the photo shoot. The line "I like riding in my Uncle's car down to the beach where the pretty girls all parade" is from Roger Waters' song "Sunset Strip" from his album Radio K.A.O.S. <mask> stands on the beach, upon his head, and says "I will not fall" in the song "I Will Not Fall" by Wiretrain/Wire. I will not fall.The Statler Brothers song "Do You Remember These" contains the line "<mask> course, Roy Rogers' horse, and 'only the Shadow knows'..." The artist David Hockney included a print entitled 'The Seven Stone Weakling' in his series, The Rake. Tony Abbott had his comeuppance against Kevin Rudd in a cartoon. There is a fake advertisement that parodies the Atlas body ads, but the product promises to make a person extremely smart. A genius man ridicules a slow-witted man for his lack of intelligence. The man gets revenge by proving that the genius bully isn't real. The Charles Atlas advertisement depicts a feud between Adlai Stevenson and General William Westmoreland being carried out in the same way as depicted in the Our Dumb Century article.Jean-Claude Van Damme was depicted as the bully on the beach in a 1993 Entertainment Weekly video review of the films Hard Target and Last Action Hero. In the illustration, Van Damme claims that Hard Target was well-received by both audiences and critics. Instead of ordering Atlas's program, Arnold called his agent and ordered Last Action Hero to be released on video immediately. With a film doing well as a video rental, and with Van Damme in it, Arnold returned to the beach and punched him. "Physically those clones may make me look like a 98-pound-weakling, but I'm the <mask> of them all," says the main character in the DC Comics title Mystery in Space. The January 1974 issue of National Lampoon was dedicated to animals. In the article 'Popular Evolution', a parody of Popular Mechanics, there is a fake advertisement in the form of a comic strip.A skinny mouse is kicked by a bully at the beach. A little mouse goes home, kicks a chair, fills out a form, and sends it to Mr. <mask>. "After a few millions of evolutionary exercise" little mouse has developed fangs, and ugly scary face, wings, amongst other attributes; goes back to the beach, bites the bully predator in the neck, and is declared the "heroe of the habitat" by the admiring females." The issue can't be seen online because it's out of print. The "kicking sand in the face" image has been used many times in Archie comics. Grant Morrison and Richard Case created Flex Mentallo in a comic book in 1990. Flex is a parody of "The Insult that made a Man out of Mac" advertisements from the past.The insult that made a robot of 'Walt'' was featured in 2000AD. Atlas parodies were used frequently. What The--? The article was published in November 1992. In Not Available Comics #25, 1993, Matt Feazell uses a sand-kicking bully to represent the Etruscan attack on Rome. "The Hold-Up that Made a Hero Out of Mac", from Radioactive Man #1, blends Mac's story with Batman's origin. Chris Ware appropriated Mac's "chair-kicking resolve" in a Jimmy Corrigan story.Josh Neufeld used the ad to make fun of David A. The piece was done for Fortune Small Business magazine. Tom Tomorrow used an ad in the June 4, 2007, edition of "This Modern World" to make a point. A dark parody of Atlas's Dynamic Tension regimen is featured in The Strange Talent of Luther Strode. A parody of the "Beach Bully" advertisements has an antagonist buy a suit of powered armor. It makes him stronger, but it also makes him immobile if he isn't chained to a person he hates, and it self-destructs if he isn't able to knock out the person he is chained to. In the early versions of The Secret of Monkey Island, there was a statue in a shop that made the character say "looks like a <mask>."Lucasfilm Games received a cease and desist letter, which caused the reference to be removed. The update to Team Fortress 2 gave the class a jar of urine called "Jarate". The comic strip that Valve used to advertise the update is a parody of the strip "The Insult that Made a Man out of Mac". A later update that introduced the ability for players to give and receive high fives was spoofed by a comic strip. The Ribs are Showing! In Mike Tyson's punch-out, there is a physically unimposing "Little Mac" character. There was a punch-out.The franchise is named after the best-known comic-book advertisement. There is a reference to the sand- kicking campaign in the game Kingdom of loathing. People from the Province of Cosenza are buried at the St. John's Cemetery in the United States. | [
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21553444 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert%20Young%20Pickering | Robert Young Pickering | Robert Young Pickering (1849 – 1931) was a British industrialist.
Early life
Pickering was born at Railway Cottage, Shildon, County Durham, England in 1849, the eldest son of John Pickering 1823 - 1900 and Elizabeth Young 1828 - 1890. Robert's father at the time of his birth was classified as a "British Teacher". Robert's only sibling Jonathan was born in 1855. By 1861 the family had moved from Railway Cottage to Main Street, Shildon. John Pickering had over the past ten years changed his profession from teacher to proprietor and head of an iron foundry employing 52 men and four boys.
Family move to Scotland
In 1864 John Pickering moved his family to Scotland and set about constructing his new works in Netherton Wishaw Lanarkshire, which came on stream in 1865. Robert, aged 16, joined his father in the new operation in Wishaw, building railway carriages, wagons and carrying out repairs on rolling stock. In December 1868 at 3 Park Gardens, Glasgow, the home of his in-laws, Robert Young Pickering married Ellen Caldwell Anderson, the daughter of John Anderson, a wealthy Glasgow merchant. Robert and his wife remained at 3 Park Gardens living with her family into the 1880s, this was where his only child was born Robina Ellinor Graham (1873–1916). He lived with his family until 1896 at 19 Montgomerie Quadrant Kelvinside. He was involved with St Brides church adjacent to this building.
Company history
Pickering's of Wishaw expanded and by 1870 they were employing around 150 men and 50 boys. Over the next few years the tide changed and in 1878 the business was on the verge of collapse with a workforce reduced to 14 men, one foreman and a dog.
Robert took control of the business from his father and over the next decade built the business into a thriving railway carriage and wagon fabricators. The expansion included the opening of a second depot at Rawyards, in nearby Airdrie with now a workforce of around 500.
To compete as an international player Robert required to raise capital and in 1888 floated the business as a private limited company as R Y Pickering & Co Ltd, with himself as managing director. On the formation of the new company Robert was paid £4,000 in cash and £4,000 in ordinary shares. By 1906 his shares were worth £70,000 however he was no longer the majority shareholder this he had lost back in 1901 to John Wilson a Lanarkshire coal magnate.
At the end of the 19th century Robert Young Pickering purchased the Dumfriesshire estate of Conheath and through the Edwardian years carried out major improvements.
In the 1901 census we find his nephew John Johnston King Pickering 1880–1914 son of his brother Jonathan, living with Robert and Ellen at the mansion house of Conheath. John was employed by R Y Pickering & Co Ltd as Roberts assistant.
In 1903 Roberts daughter Robina was married in Dumfries to her cousin John J K Pickering. In earlier writings on R Y Pickering, John was referred to as his son, rather than nephew/son-in-law. With the marriage came additional rewards with John being appointed company secretary in 1904. Also in this year John and Robina provided Robert with his only grandchild Christopher Robert Pickering.
R Y Pickering & Co Ltd found the first decade of the 20th century challenging times with dwindling profits and the loss of home market share. Expansion of the repair sector helped to offset some of this with new depots in Fife and Sheffield.
The company looked at oversees orders in particular India and South Africa.
Life must have become very tough for Robert Pickering in 1909, with mounting personal debts, the death of his wife Ellen and company losses of £5,628.
By the following year the company loss reached almost £14,000. During 1911 he was removed from the position of managing director the post he held from the formation in 1888 in the company, which held his name. He had no further involvement in the company and retired to the life of a country gentleman at Conheath.
Retirement
A year after the death of his wife, Robert remarried in the spring of 1910 to Isabelle Edith Jardine the daughter of Sir Alexander Jardine of Applegirth Baronet. Her family resided at Jardine Hall, near Lockerbie part of the founding family of Hong Kong and Jardine and Matheson. Her mother was Henrietta Younger of the Scottish brewing family.
His life in retirement enabled Robert to indulge in his passion for books, and to house them he extended Conheath in 1919 with a new library and billiard room, using the Ayr architect James Morris. This was not the first time he had employed Morris, in 1909 he was engaged to design a new family chapel in the Baroque style. Much of the Morris designs were never built probably due to financial restraints and a more modest Arts and Crafts design were produced by Sir Robert Lorimer. The chapel was not completed until the late 1920s. Lorimer also designed Conheath Farmhouse in 1916 in the arts and crafts style.
Robert's daughter Robina died in an Edinburgh nursing home in 1916 leaving his grandson Christopher an orphan, his father John J K Pickering having died two years earlier at the age of 34 in Natal, South Africa.
Robert Young Pickering died at Conheath at the age of 82 and his second wife Isabel Edith (Jardine) died the following year. Both were interred at Conheath Chapel, with his first wife and daughter in the family crypt. The chapel with surrounding policies is the only part of Conheath estate to remain in the ownership of the Pickering family (Ralph Pickering of Kintradwell) to this day.
At his death Robert left an estate of £11,126, beside a number of small legacies, his grandson Christopher inherited everything including Conheath Estate. In 1933 the tenanted farm was sold for £6,500 and the mansion house and grounds a few years later.
Christopher left Britain and settled in Cape Town where he was a government official, he married first Georgina Martin Gilmour, at Cathcart Glasgow in 1932 and divorced 1935, he later married c. 1950 Mignonne Jean 16 years his junior (died 2008 Cape Town). On 29 May 1951 Christopher's daughter Robin Anne was born to continue the Pickering dynasty.
References
R Y Pickering & Co Ltd 1864 - 1964 centenary booklet
Dictionary of Scottish Business Biography Vol 1, 1986 Aberdeen University Press
Pickering family papers
English industrialists
1849 births
1931 deaths | [
"Robert Young Pickering (1849 – 1931) was a British industrialist.",
"Early life\nPickering was born at Railway Cottage, Shildon, County Durham, England in 1849, the eldest son of John Pickering 1823 - 1900 and Elizabeth Young 1828 - 1890.",
"Robert's father at the time of his birth was classified as a \"British Teacher\".",
"Robert's only sibling Jonathan was born in 1855.",
"By 1861 the family had moved from Railway Cottage to Main Street, Shildon.",
"John Pickering had over the past ten years changed his profession from teacher to proprietor and head of an iron foundry employing 52 men and four boys.",
"Family move to Scotland\nIn 1864 John Pickering moved his family to Scotland and set about constructing his new works in Netherton Wishaw Lanarkshire, which came on stream in 1865.",
"Robert, aged 16, joined his father in the new operation in Wishaw, building railway carriages, wagons and carrying out repairs on rolling stock.",
"In December 1868 at 3 Park Gardens, Glasgow, the home of his in-laws, Robert Young Pickering married Ellen Caldwell Anderson, the daughter of John Anderson, a wealthy Glasgow merchant.",
"Robert and his wife remained at 3 Park Gardens living with her family into the 1880s, this was where his only child was born Robina Ellinor Graham (1873–1916).",
"He lived with his family until 1896 at 19 Montgomerie Quadrant Kelvinside.",
"He was involved with St Brides church adjacent to this building.",
"Company history\nPickering's of Wishaw expanded and by 1870 they were employing around 150 men and 50 boys.",
"Over the next few years the tide changed and in 1878 the business was on the verge of collapse with a workforce reduced to 14 men, one foreman and a dog.",
"Robert took control of the business from his father and over the next decade built the business into a thriving railway carriage and wagon fabricators.",
"The expansion included the opening of a second depot at Rawyards, in nearby Airdrie with now a workforce of around 500.",
"To compete as an international player Robert required to raise capital and in 1888 floated the business as a private limited company as R Y Pickering & Co Ltd, with himself as managing director.",
"On the formation of the new company Robert was paid £4,000 in cash and £4,000 in ordinary shares.",
"By 1906 his shares were worth £70,000 however he was no longer the majority shareholder this he had lost back in 1901 to John Wilson a Lanarkshire coal magnate.",
"At the end of the 19th century Robert Young Pickering purchased the Dumfriesshire estate of Conheath and through the Edwardian years carried out major improvements.",
"In the 1901 census we find his nephew John Johnston King Pickering 1880–1914 son of his brother Jonathan, living with Robert and Ellen at the mansion house of Conheath.",
"John was employed by R Y Pickering & Co Ltd as Roberts assistant.",
"In 1903 Roberts daughter Robina was married in Dumfries to her cousin John J K Pickering.",
"In earlier writings on R Y Pickering, John was referred to as his son, rather than nephew/son-in-law.",
"With the marriage came additional rewards with John being appointed company secretary in 1904.",
"Also in this year John and Robina provided Robert with his only grandchild Christopher Robert Pickering.",
"R Y Pickering & Co Ltd found the first decade of the 20th century challenging times with dwindling profits and the loss of home market share.",
"Expansion of the repair sector helped to offset some of this with new depots in Fife and Sheffield.",
"The company looked at oversees orders in particular India and South Africa.",
"Life must have become very tough for Robert Pickering in 1909, with mounting personal debts, the death of his wife Ellen and company losses of £5,628.",
"By the following year the company loss reached almost £14,000.",
"During 1911 he was removed from the position of managing director the post he held from the formation in 1888 in the company, which held his name.",
"He had no further involvement in the company and retired to the life of a country gentleman at Conheath.",
"Retirement\nA year after the death of his wife, Robert remarried in the spring of 1910 to Isabelle Edith Jardine the daughter of Sir Alexander Jardine of Applegirth Baronet.",
"Her family resided at Jardine Hall, near Lockerbie part of the founding family of Hong Kong and Jardine and Matheson.",
"Her mother was Henrietta Younger of the Scottish brewing family.",
"His life in retirement enabled Robert to indulge in his passion for books, and to house them he extended Conheath in 1919 with a new library and billiard room, using the Ayr architect James Morris.",
"This was not the first time he had employed Morris, in 1909 he was engaged to design a new family chapel in the Baroque style.",
"Much of the Morris designs were never built probably due to financial restraints and a more modest Arts and Crafts design were produced by Sir Robert Lorimer.",
"The chapel was not completed until the late 1920s.",
"Lorimer also designed Conheath Farmhouse in 1916 in the arts and crafts style.",
"Robert's daughter Robina died in an Edinburgh nursing home in 1916 leaving his grandson Christopher an orphan, his father John J K Pickering having died two years earlier at the age of 34 in Natal, South Africa.",
"Robert Young Pickering died at Conheath at the age of 82 and his second wife Isabel Edith (Jardine) died the following year.",
"Both were interred at Conheath Chapel, with his first wife and daughter in the family crypt.",
"The chapel with surrounding policies is the only part of Conheath estate to remain in the ownership of the Pickering family (Ralph Pickering of Kintradwell) to this day.",
"At his death Robert left an estate of £11,126, beside a number of small legacies, his grandson Christopher inherited everything including Conheath Estate.",
"In 1933 the tenanted farm was sold for £6,500 and the mansion house and grounds a few years later.",
"Christopher left Britain and settled in Cape Town where he was a government official, he married first Georgina Martin Gilmour, at Cathcart Glasgow in 1932 and divorced 1935, he later married c. 1950 Mignonne Jean 16 years his junior (died 2008 Cape Town).",
"On 29 May 1951 Christopher's daughter Robin Anne was born to continue the Pickering dynasty.",
"References\nR Y Pickering & Co Ltd 1864 - 1964 centenary booklet\n Dictionary of Scottish Business Biography Vol 1, 1986 Aberdeen University Press\n Pickering family papers\n\nEnglish industrialists\n1849 births\n1931 deaths"
] | [
"Robert Young Pickering was a British industrialist.",
"The oldest son of John and Elizabeth Young was born at Railway Cottage, Shildon, County Durham, England in 1849.",
"Robert's father was a \"British Teacher\" at the time of his birth.",
"Jonathan was Robert's only sibling.",
"The family moved from Railway Cottage to Main Street in the 19th century.",
"Over the past ten years, John Pickering has gone from being a teacher to proprietor and head of an iron foundry with 52 men and four boys.",
"John Pickering's family moved to Scotland in the mid-sixteenth century and he built his new works there in 1865.",
"Robert joined his father in carrying out repairs on rolling stock and building railway carriages.",
"Ellen Caldwell Anderson, daughter of John Anderson, a wealthy Glasgow merchant, was married to Robert Young Pickering in December 1868 at 3 Park Gardens, Glasgow, the home of his in-laws.",
"The only child of Robert and his wife was born at 3 Park Gardens.",
"He lived with his family until 1896.",
"He was involved with the church.",
"By 1870, they employed around 150 men and 50 boys.",
"The business was on the verge of collapse in 1878 when the tide changed and the workforce was reduced to 14 men, one foreman and a dog.",
"Robert took control of the business from his father and built it into a thriving railway carriage and wagon fabrication business.",
"Around 500 people work at the second depot at Rawyards, which opened as part of the expansion.",
"Robert had to raise capital to compete as an international player so he floated the business as a private limited company.",
"Robert was paid in cash and ordinary shares on the formation of the new company.",
"He lost the majority shareholdership in 1901 to John Wilson, who was a coal magnate.",
"Major improvements were made to the estate after Robert Young Pickering purchased it at the end of the 19th century.",
"The 1901 census shows that the nephew of Jonathan was living with Robert and Ellen at the mansion house of Conheath.",
"John was an assistant to Roberts.",
"Roberts daughter Robina was married to her cousin John K Pickering in 1903.",
"John was referred to as his son in earlier writings.",
"John was appointed company secretary in 1904 after the marriage.",
"John and Robina provided Robert with a grandchild.",
"The first decade of the 20th century was challenging with the loss of home market share.",
"Expansion of the repair sector helped to offset some of this.",
"The company looked at orders in India and South Africa.",
"Robert Pickering had mounting personal debts, the death of his wife Ellen and company losses in 1909.",
"The company lost over $13,000 by the following year.",
"He was removed from his position as managing director in 1911 because the company held his name.",
"He retired to the life of a country gentleman after no further involvement in the company.",
"Robert remarried in the spring of 1910 after the death of his wife.",
"She and her family were part of the founding family of Hong Kong.",
"Her mother was from the Younger family.",
"Robert's life in retirement allowed him to indulge in his passion for books and to house them in a new library and billiards room.",
"He had employed Morris before, in 1909 he was going to design a new family chapel in the Baroque style.",
"Much of the Morris designs were never built due to financial constraints and a more modest Arts and Crafts design was produced by Sir Robert Lorimer.",
"The chapel was finished in the late 1920s.",
"Conheath Farmhouse was designed in 1916 in the arts and crafts style.",
"Robert's daughter Robina died in an Edinburgh nursing home in 1916 leaving his grandson Christopher an orphan and his father John K Pickering dead two years later in Natal, South Africa.",
"The second wife of Robert Young Pickering, Isabel Edith (Jardine), died in the year after he died.",
"His first wife and daughter were buried in the family crypt.",
"The chapel is the only part of the estate that is still owned by the Pickering family.",
"Robert left an estate of $11,126, with his grandson Christopher taking everything.",
"The mansion house and grounds were sold in 1933 for just over $6,000.",
"After leaving Britain, Christopher settled in Cape Town where he worked as a government official and later married Mignonne Jean 16 years his junior.",
"Christopher's daughter Robin Anne was born on May 29, 1951.",
"Dictionary of Scottish Business Biography Vol 1, 1986 Aberdeen University Press is related to R Y Pickering & Co."
] | <mask> (1849 – 1931) was a British industrialist. Early life
<mask> was born at Railway Cottage, Shildon, County Durham, England in 1849, the eldest son of <mask> 1823 - 1900 and <mask> 1828 - 1890. <mask>'s father at the time of his birth was classified as a "British Teacher". <mask>'s only sibling Jonathan was born in 1855. By 1861 the family had moved from Railway Cottage to Main Street, Shildon. <mask> had over the past ten years changed his profession from teacher to proprietor and head of an iron foundry employing 52 men and four boys. Family move to Scotland
In 1864 <mask> moved his family to Scotland and set about constructing his new works in Netherton Wishaw Lanarkshire, which came on stream in 1865.<mask>, aged 16, joined his father in the new operation in Wishaw, building railway carriages, wagons and carrying out repairs on rolling stock. In December 1868 at 3 Park Gardens, Glasgow, the home of his in-laws, <mask> <mask> married Ellen Caldwell Anderson, the daughter of John Anderson, a wealthy Glasgow merchant. <mask> and his wife remained at 3 Park Gardens living with her family into the 1880s, this was where his only child was born Robina Ellinor Graham (1873–1916). He lived with his family until 1896 at 19 Montgomerie Quadrant Kelvinside. He was involved with St Brides church adjacent to this building. Company history
Pickering's of Wishaw expanded and by 1870 they were employing around 150 men and 50 boys. Over the next few years the tide changed and in 1878 the business was on the verge of collapse with a workforce reduced to 14 men, one foreman and a dog.<mask> took control of the business from his father and over the next decade built the business into a thriving railway carriage and wagon fabricators. The expansion included the opening of a second depot at Rawyards, in nearby Airdrie with now a workforce of around 500. To compete as an international player <mask> required to raise capital and in 1888 floated the business as a private limited company as R Y Pickering & Co Ltd, with himself as managing director. On the formation of the new company <mask> was paid £4,000 in cash and £4,000 in ordinary shares. By 1906 his shares were worth £70,000 however he was no longer the majority shareholder this he had lost back in 1901 to John Wilson a Lanarkshire coal magnate. At the end of the 19th century <mask> <mask> purchased the Dumfriesshire estate of Conheath and through the Edwardian years carried out major improvements. In the 1901 census we find his nephew John Johnston <mask> 1880–1914 son of his brother Jonathan, living with <mask> and Ellen at the mansion house of Conheath.John was employed by R Y Pickering & Co Ltd as <mask> assistant. In 1903 <mask> daughter Robina was married in Dumfries to her cousin John J <mask>. In earlier writings on R Y Pickering, John was referred to as his son, rather than nephew/son-in-law. With the marriage came additional rewards with John being appointed company secretary in 1904. Also in this year John and Robina provided <mask> with his only grandchild <mask> <mask>. R Y Pickering & Co Ltd found the first decade of the 20th century challenging times with dwindling profits and the loss of home market share. Expansion of the repair sector helped to offset some of this with new depots in Fife and Sheffield.The company looked at oversees orders in particular India and South Africa. Life must have become very tough for <mask> in 1909, with mounting personal debts, the death of his wife Ellen and company losses of £5,628. By the following year the company loss reached almost £14,000. During 1911 he was removed from the position of managing director the post he held from the formation in 1888 in the company, which held his name. He had no further involvement in the company and retired to the life of a country gentleman at Conheath. Retirement
A year after the death of his wife, <mask> remarried in the spring of 1910 to Isabelle Edith Jardine the daughter of Sir Alexander Jardine of Applegirth Baronet. Her family resided at Jardine Hall, near Lockerbie part of the founding family of Hong Kong and Jardine and Matheson.Her mother was <mask> of the Scottish brewing family. His life in retirement enabled <mask> to indulge in his passion for books, and to house them he extended Conheath in 1919 with a new library and billiard room, using the Ayr architect James Morris. This was not the first time he had employed Morris, in 1909 he was engaged to design a new family chapel in the Baroque style. Much of the Morris designs were never built probably due to financial restraints and a more modest Arts and Crafts design were produced by Sir <mask>. The chapel was not completed until the late 1920s. Lorimer also designed Conheath Farmhouse in 1916 in the arts and crafts style. <mask>'s daughter Robina died in an Edinburgh nursing home in 1916 leaving his grandson Christopher an orphan, his father John J <mask> having died two years earlier at the age of 34 in Natal, South Africa.<mask> <mask> died at Conheath at the age of 82 and his second wife Isabel Edith (Jardine) died the following year. Both were interred at Conheath Chapel, with his first wife and daughter in the family crypt. The chapel with surrounding policies is the only part of Conheath estate to remain in the ownership of the <mask> family (<mask> of Kintradwell) to this day. At his death <mask> left an estate of £11,126, beside a number of small legacies, his grandson Christopher inherited everything including Conheath Estate. In 1933 the tenanted farm was sold for £6,500 and the mansion house and grounds a few years later. Christopher left Britain and settled in Cape Town where he was a government official, he married first Georgina Martin Gilmour, at Cathcart Glasgow in 1932 and divorced 1935, he later married c. 1950 Mignonne Jean 16 years his junior (died 2008 Cape Town). On 29 May 1951 Christopher's daughter Robin Anne was born to continue the Pickering dynasty.References
R Y Pickering & Co Ltd 1864 - 1964 centenary booklet
Dictionary of Scottish Business Biography Vol 1, 1986 Aberdeen University Press
Pickering family papers
English industrialists
1849 births
1931 deaths | [
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] | <mask> was a British industrialist. The oldest son of John and <mask> was born at Railway Cottage, Shildon, County Durham, England in 1849. <mask>'s father was a "British Teacher" at the time of his birth. Jonathan was <mask>'s only sibling. The family moved from Railway Cottage to Main Street in the 19th century. Over the past ten years, <mask> has gone from being a teacher to proprietor and head of an iron foundry with 52 men and four boys. <mask>'s family moved to Scotland in the mid-sixteenth century and he built his new works there in 1865.<mask> joined his father in carrying out repairs on rolling stock and building railway carriages. Ellen Caldwell Anderson, daughter of John Anderson, a wealthy Glasgow merchant, was married to <mask> <mask> in December 1868 at 3 Park Gardens, Glasgow, the home of his in-laws. The only child of <mask> and his wife was born at 3 Park Gardens. He lived with his family until 1896. He was involved with the church. By 1870, they employed around 150 men and 50 boys. The business was on the verge of collapse in 1878 when the tide changed and the workforce was reduced to 14 men, one foreman and a dog.<mask> took control of the business from his father and built it into a thriving railway carriage and wagon fabrication business. Around 500 people work at the second depot at Rawyards, which opened as part of the expansion. <mask> had to raise capital to compete as an international player so he floated the business as a private limited company. <mask> was paid in cash and ordinary shares on the formation of the new company. He lost the majority shareholdership in 1901 to John Wilson, who was a coal magnate. Major improvements were made to the estate after <mask> <mask> purchased it at the end of the 19th century. The 1901 census shows that the nephew of Jonathan was living with <mask> and Ellen at the mansion house of Conheath.John was an assistant to <mask>. <mask> daughter Robina was married to her cousin John K <mask> in 1903. John was referred to as his son in earlier writings. John was appointed company secretary in 1904 after the marriage. John and Robina provided <mask> with a grandchild. The first decade of the 20th century was challenging with the loss of home market share. Expansion of the repair sector helped to offset some of this.The company looked at orders in India and South Africa. <mask> had mounting personal debts, the death of his wife Ellen and company losses in 1909. The company lost over $13,000 by the following year. He was removed from his position as managing director in 1911 because the company held his name. He retired to the life of a country gentleman after no further involvement in the company. <mask> remarried in the spring of 1910 after the death of his wife. She and her family were part of the founding family of Hong Kong.Her mother was from the <mask> family. <mask>'s life in retirement allowed him to indulge in his passion for books and to house them in a new library and billiards room. He had employed Morris before, in 1909 he was going to design a new family chapel in the Baroque style. Much of the Morris designs were never built due to financial constraints and a more modest Arts and Crafts design was produced by Sir <mask>. The chapel was finished in the late 1920s. Conheath Farmhouse was designed in 1916 in the arts and crafts style. <mask>'s daughter Robina died in an Edinburgh nursing home in 1916 leaving his grandson Christopher an orphan and his father John K <mask> dead two years later in Natal, South Africa.The second wife of <mask> <mask>, Isabel Edith (Jardine), died in the year after he died. His first wife and daughter were buried in the family crypt. The chapel is the only part of the estate that is still owned by the <mask> family. <mask> left an estate of $11,126, with his grandson Christopher taking everything. The mansion house and grounds were sold in 1933 for just over $6,000. After leaving Britain, Christopher settled in Cape Town where he worked as a government official and later married Mignonne Jean 16 years his junior. Christopher's daughter Robin Anne was born on May 29, 1951.Dictionary of Scottish Business Biography Vol 1, 1986 Aberdeen University Press is related to R Y Pickering & Co. | [
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769195 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel%20Prescott | Samuel Prescott | Samuel Prescott (August 19, 1751 – ) was an American physician and a Massachusetts Patriot during the American Revolutionary War. He is best known for his role in Paul Revere's "midnight ride" to warn the townspeople of Concord, Massachusetts of the impending British army move to capture guns and gunpowder kept there at the beginning of the American Revolution. He was the only participant in the ride to reach Concord.
Early life
Little is known for certain about Prescott's life outside of his involvement in the dramatic events before and during the Battles of Lexington and Concord. He was born on August 19, 1751. He grew up in Concord, Massachusetts where his family had lived for generations. He became a physician, as his father and grandfather had been before him.
According to tradition, Samuel Prescott was courting Lydia Mulliken of Lexington, Massachusetts just prior to the outbreak of the American Revolution. Lydia lived with her widowed mother, four brothers and two sisters in a home across Cambridge Road from Munroe's Tavern. Her older sibling, Nathanial, worked his late father's clock shop and was a member of Captain John Parker's militia.
Due to the fact that Paul Revere referred to Prescott as a "high son of Liberty," (meaning an ardent supporter of the Patriot cause), some have speculated that Prescott had ties to the Sons of Liberty or acted as a courier for the Committees of Correspondence prior to the start of the Revolution.
The Midnight Ride
On the evening of April 18, 1775, Paul Revere and William Dawes were dispatched by Joseph Warren to warn Samuel Adams and John Hancock, who were then in Lexington, that a British expedition was on its way to arrest them. Warren also instructed Revere to deliver a warning to Concord to inform provincial officials that British troops intended to confiscate or destroy the armaments being amassed there by the province's militia. Revere and Dawes took different routes but met in Lexington about midnight and successfully warned Adams and Hancock, who quickly left Lexington. Revere and Dawes then proceeded towards Concord to complete their second mission.
Samuel Prescott was headed home to Concord from Lexington when he encountered Revere and Dawes on horseback around 1 a.m. on April 19. Revere later described their meeting in his 1775 deposition to the Massachusetts Provincial Congress and in a 1798 letter to Jeremy Belknap. Revere claimed that Prescott was a "high son of Liberty"--suggesting that he was trustworthy. Upon hearing about their mission, Prescott offered to assist Revere and Dawes, pointing out that he was known in the area and residents would be more likely to believe a warning coming from him rather than strangers.
Proceeding along the road to Concord, the three riders warned residents of several houses in Lincoln, Massachusetts, by knocking on doors. It was in Lincoln, not far from the Concord town line, that a British mounted patrol intercepted the three riders. The British soldiers were part of a larger scouting party sent out from Boston the previous evening to stop any provincial alarm riders or couriers. The soldiers captured Revere but both Prescott and Dawes escaped. Dawes was thrown from his horse and went back to Lexington. Prescott, according to Revere's account, took off on horseback towards a stone wall, jumped his horse over it, and disappeared into dense woods. After riding through woods and swamp, Prescott emerged at the Hartwell Tavern. He alerted the Hartwell family who, in turn, raced off to warn others. Word soon reached Capt. William Smith, commander of the Lincoln minutemen, who ordered the town bell rung as a signal for his company to muster.
On his way to Concord, Prescott alerted other houses in Lincoln and soon additional riders rode off to alert other towns. When Prescott arrived in Concord, he gave word to the sentry there and the Concord First Parish Church bell was rung to alert the town. Thus Prescott completed the second objective given to Revere and Dawes. In Concord, Prescott bid his brother Abel to ride to Sudbury to alert companies there while, according to tradition, Samuel rode to Acton and Stow to carry the alarm there. His brother Abel, that same day was fired on by British soldiers as he was returning from the neighboring town, whither he had been to apprise the people of the approach of the "regulars" (so called), and slightly wounded in the side, but succeeded in making his escape by secreting himself in the house of a Mrs. Heywood. Due to Prescott's efforts that night, the minuteman and militia companies in numerous towns were alerted, mustered, and marched to Concord in time to engage the British Army at the Old North Bridge and other locations along the road to Boston.
Later career
Details relating to Prescott's life after the ride are scant and inconclusive. According to historian D. Michael Ryan, a record of a "Dr. Sall Prescott" serving as a surgeon at Fort Ticonderoga in 1776 has led many historians to conclude that Prescott served the Continental Army in a medical capacity. A Revolutionary War veteran from Ashburnham, Massachusetts recorded in his memoir that he had been imprisoned by the British in a prison in Halifax, Nova Scotia with a Dr. Prescott. According to this account, Prescott died in prison in 1777. Although corroborating evidence that this was Dr. Samuel Prescott of Concord is lacking, these details are most often accepted as fact.
Legacy
Prescott's arrival in Concord is reenacted every year at midnight on April 19. The reenactment is preceded by a Patriots' Ball and a procession by modern day Minuteman ceremonial honor guards and fife and drum units. Prescott's supposed ride through Acton is reenacted every Patriots' Day beginning in East Acton and concluding at the Liberty Tree Farm, where once stood the home of a minuteman named Simon Hunt.
In 1965, the Concord Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution placed a memorial plaque to Prescott at the location of his home in Concord.
References
Sources
}}
The Prescott memorial, or, A genealogical memoir of the Prescott families in America by Prescott, William, 1788-1875. Published 1870. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
1751 births
1777 deaths
American Revolutionary War deaths
American surgeons
People from Concord, Massachusetts
People of Massachusetts in the American Revolution
Physicians in the American Revolution | [
"Samuel Prescott (August 19, 1751 – ) was an American physician and a Massachusetts Patriot during the American Revolutionary War.",
"He is best known for his role in Paul Revere's \"midnight ride\" to warn the townspeople of Concord, Massachusetts of the impending British army move to capture guns and gunpowder kept there at the beginning of the American Revolution.",
"He was the only participant in the ride to reach Concord.",
"Early life \nLittle is known for certain about Prescott's life outside of his involvement in the dramatic events before and during the Battles of Lexington and Concord.",
"He was born on August 19, 1751.",
"He grew up in Concord, Massachusetts where his family had lived for generations.",
"He became a physician, as his father and grandfather had been before him.",
"According to tradition, Samuel Prescott was courting Lydia Mulliken of Lexington, Massachusetts just prior to the outbreak of the American Revolution.",
"Lydia lived with her widowed mother, four brothers and two sisters in a home across Cambridge Road from Munroe's Tavern.",
"Her older sibling, Nathanial, worked his late father's clock shop and was a member of Captain John Parker's militia.",
"Due to the fact that Paul Revere referred to Prescott as a \"high son of Liberty,\" (meaning an ardent supporter of the Patriot cause), some have speculated that Prescott had ties to the Sons of Liberty or acted as a courier for the Committees of Correspondence prior to the start of the Revolution.",
"The Midnight Ride \n\nOn the evening of April 18, 1775, Paul Revere and William Dawes were dispatched by Joseph Warren to warn Samuel Adams and John Hancock, who were then in Lexington, that a British expedition was on its way to arrest them.",
"Warren also instructed Revere to deliver a warning to Concord to inform provincial officials that British troops intended to confiscate or destroy the armaments being amassed there by the province's militia.",
"Revere and Dawes took different routes but met in Lexington about midnight and successfully warned Adams and Hancock, who quickly left Lexington.",
"Revere and Dawes then proceeded towards Concord to complete their second mission.",
"Samuel Prescott was headed home to Concord from Lexington when he encountered Revere and Dawes on horseback around 1 a.m. on April 19.",
"Revere later described their meeting in his 1775 deposition to the Massachusetts Provincial Congress and in a 1798 letter to Jeremy Belknap.",
"Revere claimed that Prescott was a \"high son of Liberty\"--suggesting that he was trustworthy.",
"Upon hearing about their mission, Prescott offered to assist Revere and Dawes, pointing out that he was known in the area and residents would be more likely to believe a warning coming from him rather than strangers.",
"Proceeding along the road to Concord, the three riders warned residents of several houses in Lincoln, Massachusetts, by knocking on doors.",
"It was in Lincoln, not far from the Concord town line, that a British mounted patrol intercepted the three riders.",
"The British soldiers were part of a larger scouting party sent out from Boston the previous evening to stop any provincial alarm riders or couriers.",
"The soldiers captured Revere but both Prescott and Dawes escaped.",
"Dawes was thrown from his horse and went back to Lexington.",
"Prescott, according to Revere's account, took off on horseback towards a stone wall, jumped his horse over it, and disappeared into dense woods.",
"After riding through woods and swamp, Prescott emerged at the Hartwell Tavern.",
"He alerted the Hartwell family who, in turn, raced off to warn others.",
"Word soon reached Capt.",
"William Smith, commander of the Lincoln minutemen, who ordered the town bell rung as a signal for his company to muster.",
"On his way to Concord, Prescott alerted other houses in Lincoln and soon additional riders rode off to alert other towns.",
"When Prescott arrived in Concord, he gave word to the sentry there and the Concord First Parish Church bell was rung to alert the town.",
"Thus Prescott completed the second objective given to Revere and Dawes.",
"In Concord, Prescott bid his brother Abel to ride to Sudbury to alert companies there while, according to tradition, Samuel rode to Acton and Stow to carry the alarm there.",
"His brother Abel, that same day was fired on by British soldiers as he was returning from the neighboring town, whither he had been to apprise the people of the approach of the \"regulars\" (so called), and slightly wounded in the side, but succeeded in making his escape by secreting himself in the house of a Mrs. Heywood.",
"Due to Prescott's efforts that night, the minuteman and militia companies in numerous towns were alerted, mustered, and marched to Concord in time to engage the British Army at the Old North Bridge and other locations along the road to Boston.",
"Later career \nDetails relating to Prescott's life after the ride are scant and inconclusive.",
"According to historian D. Michael Ryan, a record of a \"Dr. Sall Prescott\" serving as a surgeon at Fort Ticonderoga in 1776 has led many historians to conclude that Prescott served the Continental Army in a medical capacity.",
"A Revolutionary War veteran from Ashburnham, Massachusetts recorded in his memoir that he had been imprisoned by the British in a prison in Halifax, Nova Scotia with a Dr. Prescott.",
"According to this account, Prescott died in prison in 1777.",
"Although corroborating evidence that this was Dr. Samuel Prescott of Concord is lacking, these details are most often accepted as fact.",
"Legacy \nPrescott's arrival in Concord is reenacted every year at midnight on April 19.",
"The reenactment is preceded by a Patriots' Ball and a procession by modern day Minuteman ceremonial honor guards and fife and drum units.",
"Prescott's supposed ride through Acton is reenacted every Patriots' Day beginning in East Acton and concluding at the Liberty Tree Farm, where once stood the home of a minuteman named Simon Hunt.",
"In 1965, the Concord Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution placed a memorial plaque to Prescott at the location of his home in Concord.",
"References\n\nSources \n\n}}\n \n \n \n \n\nThe Prescott memorial, or, A genealogical memoir of the Prescott families in America by Prescott, William, 1788-1875.",
"Published 1870.",
"This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.",
"1751 births\n1777 deaths\nAmerican Revolutionary War deaths\nAmerican surgeons\nPeople from Concord, Massachusetts\nPeople of Massachusetts in the American Revolution\nPhysicians in the American Revolution"
] | [
"During the American Revolutionary War, Samuel Prescott was an American physician.",
"He is best known for his role in Paul Revere's \"midnight ride\" to warn the town of Concord, Massachusetts of the British army's move to capture guns and gunpowder at the beginning of the American Revolution.",
"He was the only one who rode to Concord.",
"Little is known about the early life of the man who was involved in the Battles of Lexington and Concord.",
"He was born in 1751.",
"His family had lived in Massachusetts for many years.",
"His father and grandfather were physicians.",
"According to tradition, Samuel Prescott was courting Lydia Mulliken just prior to the American Revolution.",
"Lydia lived with her family in a home across Cambridge Road from a bar.",
"Nathanial worked at his father's clock shop and was a member of the militia.",
"Due to the fact that Paul Revere referred to him as a \"high son of Liberty,\" some have speculated that he may have been involved with the Sons of Liberty or the Committees of Correspondence prior to the start of the Revolution.",
"On the evening of April 18, 1775, Joseph Warren dispatched Paul and William to warn Samuel Adams and John Hancock that a British expedition was on its way to arrest them.",
"Warren instructed Revere to give a warning to Concord to let them know that British troops were going to take the weapons from the militia.",
"Adams and Hancock were warned by Revere and Dawes after they met in Lexington at midnight.",
"They went towards Concord to complete their second mission.",
"The two men were on horseback around 1 a.m. on April 19.",
"In his deposition to the Massachusetts Provincial Congress, Revere described their meeting.",
"He said that he was a \"high son of Liberty\" and that he was trustworthy.",
"When he heard about the mission, he offered to help, as he was known in the area and residents would be more likely to believe a warning from him.",
"The riders went along the road to Concord and knocked on doors in Lincoln, Massachusetts.",
"The three riders were stopped by a British mounted patrol in Lincoln, not far from the Concord town line.",
"The British soldiers were part of a larger scouting party sent from Boston the previous evening to stop any provincial alarm riders.",
"The soldiers captured Revere but he was not the only one to escape.",
"He was thrown from his horse.",
"He jumped his horse over the stone wall and disappeared into the dense woods.",
"After riding through the woods and swamp, he came to the Hartwell Tavern.",
"The Hartwell family raced off to warn others.",
"Soon, word reached Capt.",
"The town bell was rung by William Smith, commander of the Lincoln minutemen.",
"The riders rode off to alert other towns after the other houses in Lincoln were alerted.",
"The Concord First Parish Church bell was rung to alert the town when Prescott arrived.",
"The second objective was given to the two men.",
"According to tradition, Samuel rode to Acton and Stow to carry the alarm when he rode to Concord to alert companies there.",
"He was wounded in the side by the British soldiers as he was returning from the neighboring town, but was able to escape.",
"In order to engage the British Army at the Old North Bridge and other locations along the road to Boston, the minuteman and militia companies in numerous towns were alerted and marched to Concord.",
"There are little or no details about the life after the ride.",
"According to historian D. Michael Ryan, a record of a \"Dr. Sall Prescott\" serving as a surgeon at Fort Ticonderoga in 1776 has led many historians to conclude that he served the Continental Army in a medical capacity.",
"A Revolutionary War veteran from Massachusetts wrote in his memoir that he was imprisoned by the British in a prison in Nova Scotia with a doctor.",
"According to this account, he died in prison.",
"These details are usually accepted as fact despite the lack of corroborating evidence.",
"Every year at midnight on April 19 there is a reenactment of Legacy Prescott's arrival in Concord.",
"The reenactment begins with a parade by honor guards and fife and drum units.",
"The home of a minuteman named Simon Hunt once stood at the Liberty Tree Farm, which is where the supposed ride through Acton begins and ends.",
"At the location of his home in Concord, a memorial plaque was placed in 1965, by the Concord Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution.",
"A genealogy memoir of the Prescott families in America was written by William.",
"It was published in 1870.",
"The text in this article is in the public domain.",
"People from Massachusetts in the American Revolution died in the American Revolutionary War."
] | <mask> (August 19, 1751 – ) was an American physician and a Massachusetts Patriot during the American Revolutionary War. He is best known for his role in Paul Revere's "midnight ride" to warn the townspeople of Concord, Massachusetts of the impending British army move to capture guns and gunpowder kept there at the beginning of the American Revolution. He was the only participant in the ride to reach Concord. Early life
Little is known for certain about <mask>'s life outside of his involvement in the dramatic events before and during the Battles of Lexington and Concord. He was born on August 19, 1751. He grew up in Concord, Massachusetts where his family had lived for generations. He became a physician, as his father and grandfather had been before him.According to tradition, <mask> was courting Lydia Mulliken of Lexington, Massachusetts just prior to the outbreak of the American Revolution. Lydia lived with her widowed mother, four brothers and two sisters in a home across Cambridge Road from Munroe's Tavern. Her older sibling, Nathanial, worked his late father's clock shop and was a member of Captain John Parker's militia. Due to the fact that Paul Revere referred to <mask> as a "high son of Liberty," (meaning an ardent supporter of the Patriot cause), some have speculated that <mask> had ties to the Sons of Liberty or acted as a courier for the Committees of Correspondence prior to the start of the Revolution. The Midnight Ride
On the evening of April 18, 1775, Paul Revere and William Dawes were dispatched by Joseph Warren to warn <mask> and John Hancock, who were then in Lexington, that a British expedition was on its way to arrest them. Warren also instructed Revere to deliver a warning to Concord to inform provincial officials that British troops intended to confiscate or destroy the armaments being amassed there by the province's militia. Revere and Dawes took different routes but met in Lexington about midnight and successfully warned Adams and Hancock, who quickly left Lexington.Revere and Dawes then proceeded towards Concord to complete their second mission. <mask> was headed home to Concord from Lexington when he encountered Revere and Dawes on horseback around 1 a.m. on April 19. Revere later described their meeting in his 1775 deposition to the Massachusetts Provincial Congress and in a 1798 letter to Jeremy Belknap. Revere claimed that <mask> was a "high son of Liberty"--suggesting that he was trustworthy. Upon hearing about their mission, <mask> offered to assist Revere and Dawes, pointing out that he was known in the area and residents would be more likely to believe a warning coming from him rather than strangers. Proceeding along the road to Concord, the three riders warned residents of several houses in Lincoln, Massachusetts, by knocking on doors. It was in Lincoln, not far from the Concord town line, that a British mounted patrol intercepted the three riders.The British soldiers were part of a larger scouting party sent out from Boston the previous evening to stop any provincial alarm riders or couriers. The soldiers captured Revere but both <mask> and Dawes escaped. Dawes was thrown from his horse and went back to Lexington. <mask>, according to Revere's account, took off on horseback towards a stone wall, jumped his horse over it, and disappeared into dense woods. After riding through woods and swamp, <mask> emerged at the Hartwell Tavern. He alerted the Hartwell family who, in turn, raced off to warn others. Word soon reached Capt.William Smith, commander of the Lincoln minutemen, who ordered the town bell rung as a signal for his company to muster. On his way to Concord, <mask> alerted other houses in Lincoln and soon additional riders rode off to alert other towns. When <mask> arrived in Concord, he gave word to the sentry there and the Concord First Parish Church bell was rung to alert the town. Thus <mask> completed the second objective given to Revere and Dawes. In Concord, <mask> bid his brother Abel to ride to Sudbury to alert companies there while, according to tradition, <mask> rode to Acton and Stow to carry the alarm there. His brother Abel, that same day was fired on by British soldiers as he was returning from the neighboring town, whither he had been to apprise the people of the approach of the "regulars" (so called), and slightly wounded in the side, but succeeded in making his escape by secreting himself in the house of a Mrs. Heywood. Due to <mask>'s efforts that night, the minuteman and militia companies in numerous towns were alerted, mustered, and marched to Concord in time to engage the British Army at the Old North Bridge and other locations along the road to Boston.Later career
Details relating to <mask>'s life after the ride are scant and inconclusive. According to historian D. Michael Ryan, a record of a "Dr. Sall <mask>" serving as a surgeon at Fort Ticonderoga in 1776 has led many historians to conclude that <mask> served the Continental Army in a medical capacity. A Revolutionary War veteran from Ashburnham, Massachusetts recorded in his memoir that he had been imprisoned by the British in a prison in Halifax, Nova Scotia with a Dr. <mask>. According to this account, <mask> died in prison in 1777. Although corroborating evidence that this was Dr. <mask> of Concord is lacking, these details are most often accepted as fact. Legacy
<mask>'s arrival in Concord is reenacted every year at midnight on April 19. The reenactment is preceded by a Patriots' Ball and a procession by modern day Minuteman ceremonial honor guards and fife and drum units.<mask>'s supposed ride through Acton is reenacted every Patriots' Day beginning in East Acton and concluding at the Liberty Tree Farm, where once stood the home of a minuteman named Simon Hunt. In 1965, the Concord Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution placed a memorial plaque to <mask> at the location of his home in Concord. References
Sources
}}
The <mask> memorial, or, A genealogical memoir of the <mask> families in America by <mask>, William, 1788-1875. Published 1870. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. 1751 births
1777 deaths
American Revolutionary War deaths
American surgeons
People from Concord, Massachusetts
People of Massachusetts in the American Revolution
Physicians in the American Revolution | [
"Samuel Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Samuel Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Samuel Adams",
"Samuel Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Samuel",
"Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Samuel Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Prescott",
"Prescott"
] | During the American Revolutionary War, <mask> was an American physician. He is best known for his role in Paul Revere's "midnight ride" to warn the town of Concord, Massachusetts of the British army's move to capture guns and gunpowder at the beginning of the American Revolution. He was the only one who rode to Concord. Little is known about the early life of the man who was involved in the Battles of Lexington and Concord. He was born in 1751. His family had lived in Massachusetts for many years. His father and grandfather were physicians.According to tradition, <mask> was courting Lydia Mulliken just prior to the American Revolution. Lydia lived with her family in a home across Cambridge Road from a bar. Nathanial worked at his father's clock shop and was a member of the militia. Due to the fact that Paul Revere referred to him as a "high son of Liberty," some have speculated that he may have been involved with the Sons of Liberty or the Committees of Correspondence prior to the start of the Revolution. On the evening of April 18, 1775, Joseph Warren dispatched Paul and William to warn <mask> and John Hancock that a British expedition was on its way to arrest them. Warren instructed Revere to give a warning to Concord to let them know that British troops were going to take the weapons from the militia. Adams and Hancock were warned by Revere and Dawes after they met in Lexington at midnight.They went towards Concord to complete their second mission. The two men were on horseback around 1 a.m. on April 19. In his deposition to the Massachusetts Provincial Congress, Revere described their meeting. He said that he was a "high son of Liberty" and that he was trustworthy. When he heard about the mission, he offered to help, as he was known in the area and residents would be more likely to believe a warning from him. The riders went along the road to Concord and knocked on doors in Lincoln, Massachusetts. The three riders were stopped by a British mounted patrol in Lincoln, not far from the Concord town line.The British soldiers were part of a larger scouting party sent from Boston the previous evening to stop any provincial alarm riders. The soldiers captured Revere but he was not the only one to escape. He was thrown from his horse. He jumped his horse over the stone wall and disappeared into the dense woods. After riding through the woods and swamp, he came to the Hartwell Tavern. The Hartwell family raced off to warn others. Soon, word reached Capt.The town bell was rung by William Smith, commander of the Lincoln minutemen. The riders rode off to alert other towns after the other houses in Lincoln were alerted. The Concord First Parish Church bell was rung to alert the town when <mask> arrived. The second objective was given to the two men. According to tradition, <mask> rode to Acton and Stow to carry the alarm when he rode to Concord to alert companies there. He was wounded in the side by the British soldiers as he was returning from the neighboring town, but was able to escape. In order to engage the British Army at the Old North Bridge and other locations along the road to Boston, the minuteman and militia companies in numerous towns were alerted and marched to Concord.There are little or no details about the life after the ride. According to historian D. Michael Ryan, a record of a "Dr. Sall <mask>" serving as a surgeon at Fort Ticonderoga in 1776 has led many historians to conclude that he served the Continental Army in a medical capacity. A Revolutionary War veteran from Massachusetts wrote in his memoir that he was imprisoned by the British in a prison in Nova Scotia with a doctor. According to this account, he died in prison. These details are usually accepted as fact despite the lack of corroborating evidence. Every year at midnight on April 19 there is a reenactment of <mask>'s arrival in Concord. The reenactment begins with a parade by honor guards and fife and drum units.The home of a minuteman named Simon Hunt once stood at the Liberty Tree Farm, which is where the supposed ride through Acton begins and ends. At the location of his home in Concord, a memorial plaque was placed in 1965, by the Concord Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution. A genealogy memoir of the <mask> families in America was written by William. It was published in 1870. The text in this article is in the public domain. People from Massachusetts in the American Revolution died in the American Revolutionary War. | [
"Samuel Prescott",
"Samuel Prescott",
"Samuel Adams",
"Prescott",
"Samuel",
"Prescott",
"Legacy Prescott",
"Prescott"
] |
24449082 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis%20Celeste%20Lecesne | Louis Celeste Lecesne | Louis Celeste Lecesne (c. 1796 or 1798 – 22 November 1847), also known as Lewis Celeste Lecesne, was an anti-slavery activist from the Caribbean islands.
Lecesne was on a committee to improve the rights of free men of colour. He was arrested twice, and transported for life from Jamaica with John Escoffery. Their case was taken up by Dr. Stephen Lushington. Lecesne was compensated after successfully having the case reversed by the British government.
Lecesne became an activist against slavery and attended the world's first anti-slavery convention. He named his son after the British Member of Parliament who had fought for his case. Lecesne was a supporter when the 1839 Anti-Slavery Society was formed.
Disputed birth
Lecesne was the son of Charlotte Celeste and Louis Nicholas Lecesne, and was born in either Port au Prince or Kingston in 1796 or 1798. His mother and father had arrived in Jamaica on 25 August 1798 with a child called Figge. Lecesne's father was French and had left St Domingo, whilst his mother was said to have African ancestry. According to some, his mother was pregnant, Figge died and Louis was born. The Jamaican authorities believed however that Louis was the child who arrived on the brig Mary with his mother.
Lecesne's date of birth was given as 30 August 1798 in Kingston, but he wasn't baptised until 5 March 1814. His place and date of birth were the subject of later court cases. At these cases it was noted that Lecesne's mother and the midwife said that he was born a few months (or days) after their arrival in Jamaica.
Others disagree with this version as his mother said that when they arrived in Jamaica they did have a two-year-old child but he died just after the birth of this child.
Lecesne had two younger brothers Lamorette and Louis Nicholas Lecesne. His mother was manumised by Lescesne's father. The date of the birth was important as a later law gave privileges to children born on the island.
He was taken to Mr Goff's school for "children of colour" in 1802 when his father
asked for him to be given "the best English education". Mr Goffe signed an affidavit later to say that he thought Lecesne to be four years old at the time but others think this a very young age to send such a child to school in Jamaica.
Others said that when Charlotte Celeste arrived she had a two-year-old son called Figge. They claim Lecesne was born in Port a Prince in St Domingo "opposite the post office".
When his father made a will and died in 1816 he made Lecesne his executor. Some claim that this means that his father knew he was 21 years of age, and therefore born before elsewhere.
Marriage
Louis Celeste Lecesne married Hannah Escoffery (born 15 November 1797 and also known as Anette),
the sister of John Escoffery.
At least three children were born to Louis Celeste Lecesne and Hannah Escoffery in Kingston. The first was Louise Amelia Lecesne (born 20 June 1817), followed by Elizabeth Adeline Lecesne (born 24 July 1818) and Celestine Aglaé Lecesne (19 June 1820 – 11 August 1821). On 7 May 1823 Louis Celeste Lecesne was a witness to the marriage of his wife's brother, Edward Escoffery to Marie Montagnac in the Roman Catholic Church, Kingston.
Lecesne and John Escoffery came to notice as members of a committee who were intent on changing the law such that free men "of colour" would be given free and equal rights to white people.
Arrest
Louis Celeste Lecesne and John Escoffery were arrested on 7 October 1823 under the Alien Act by a warrant of the Duke of Manchester, the Governor of Jamaica. William Burge, the Attorney General, considered them to be of "dangerous character"; they were also considered to be aliens, because of claims that they were Haitian. Luckily they had time to raise a writ of Habeas Corpus in the Supreme Court of Jamaica
While Lecesne and Escoffery were held in gaol, petitions made to the Governor were rejected as it was claimed that the signatories were all owed money by the accused. Later investigations showed that the largest debt involved was 25 pounds. After consideration by the judges, the two were released as they were considered to be British-born despite the arguments described earlier. Chief Justice Scarlett released them without bail as there were no charges.
Later, a member of the House of Representatives moved that a secret committee be formed to look at this case. This man, Hector Mitchell, was made the chair of this committee, comprising three others including the Mayor of Kingston. Their investigations resulted in the forced exile of Lecesne and Escoffery to St Domingo. It had been said that Lecesne had sold arms to an insurrection in St George and that the two of them kept correspondence with people in Haiti for treasonable purposes.
Having been separated from their families and possessions, the pair had to sell their watches and with this money and the help of British people on the island they set out for England. With Lecesne and Escoffery deported, the free coloureds movement did not collapse in Jamaica. Instead, other campaigners, such as Edward Jordon, Robert Osborn (Jamaica), and Richard Hill (Jamaica) continued to agitate for equal rights for free coloureds, and they were finally successful when the Jamaican Assembly passed legislation allowing them to vote in elections and run for public office.
A young English sailor boy, Barnet Burns, had been found ill in Jamaica and was cared for by Lecesne and his family. Following the deportation of Lecesne, Burns followed Lecesne's family to London, where he received an education under the patronage of Lecesne.
England
The case of Lecesne and Escoffery was raised in the House of Commons by Stephen Lushington who was a known abolitionist and anti-slavery campaigner. Lushington spoke to the house on 16 June 1825. This resulted in a number of publications:
Debate in house of commons 16 June 1825 regarding deportation of two persons of colour
A Reply to the Speech of Dr. Lushington, in the House of Commons by Mr Barret of the House in Jamaica, 1828
There was a libel case against John Murray, not because he was the author, but because he was the publisher of a book that libelled Lecesne and Escoffery. The case was based on the fact that the book recorded that the politicians in Jamaica considered Lecesne and Escoffery guilty of a criminal conspiracy. This case was held in Britain in order that it should not be biased. If they were guilty of a conspiracy, then under the 1818 Alien Act they could be transported for life if they were born elsewhere.
The book concerned was "The annals of Jamaica, Volume 2" by the Reverend George Wilson Bridges. Bridges combined leading worship at St Annes and speaking up for the value of slavery.
The libel case was successful and Lecesne was therefore innocent. Parliament ruled that they should both be allowed to return and be given compensation.
Lecesne believed in the law. In 1832, Lecesne was living in England at the Fenchurch buildings in Fenchurch Street, London and on 26 June while walking outside his residence Lecesne was the victim of a pickpocket, Thomas Fielder, who had stolen a handkerchief. For this crime, Fielder, aged 15, was sentenced to transportation for life.
Lecesne was on the board of the Anti-Slavery Agency in 1832 with other notable abolitionists such as William Allen, Zachary Macaulay, Robert Forster, George Stacey and Josiah Forster
Louis Celeste Lecesne and his wife had a son whilst they were in London whom they christened Stephen Lushington Macauley Lecesne. He was born on 6 March 1834 and was christened at Saint Matthew Church, Bethnal Green, London, on 25 June 1834.
In July 1838, Lecesne was one of the supporters of a campaign to raise a monument to Zachary Macaulay in Westminster Abbey.
1840 Anti-Slavery Society convention
On 17 April 1840, the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society was formed to campaign for worldwide abolition of slavery. A short time later, the first World Anti-Slavery Convention was held in London, attracting an international participation. Lecesne attended the convention and is depicted in a painting The Anti-Slavery Society Convention, 1840 by Benjamin Haydon(1841).
According to a record at the Montserrat (West Indies) National Trust from the Official Assignee to the President Administering the Government William Shiell, Lescene was declared bankrupt in 1845; the Island Secretary Henry Loving apparently owed Lescene £198 12s 3d.
Following a bout of pneumonia, Louis Celeste Lecesne died on 22 November 1847 at his residence at the Fenchurch buildings, Fenchurch Street in London.
At the end of May in 1848, The Times announced the sale of the "superior" effects of the late L. C. Lecesne Esq including his mahogany four poster and a six octave pianoforte.
References
External links
Anti-Slavery Society Convention, 1840
19th-century Jamaican people
Abolitionism in the United Kingdom
British abolitionists
Jamaican activists
1790s births
1847 deaths | [
"Louis Celeste Lecesne (c. 1796 or 1798 – 22 November 1847), also known as Lewis Celeste Lecesne, was an anti-slavery activist from the Caribbean islands.",
"Lecesne was on a committee to improve the rights of free men of colour.",
"He was arrested twice, and transported for life from Jamaica with John Escoffery.",
"Their case was taken up by Dr. Stephen Lushington.",
"Lecesne was compensated after successfully having the case reversed by the British government.",
"Lecesne became an activist against slavery and attended the world's first anti-slavery convention.",
"He named his son after the British Member of Parliament who had fought for his case.",
"Lecesne was a supporter when the 1839 Anti-Slavery Society was formed.",
"Disputed birth\nLecesne was the son of Charlotte Celeste and Louis Nicholas Lecesne, and was born in either Port au Prince or Kingston in 1796 or 1798.",
"His mother and father had arrived in Jamaica on 25 August 1798 with a child called Figge.",
"Lecesne's father was French and had left St Domingo, whilst his mother was said to have African ancestry.",
"According to some, his mother was pregnant, Figge died and Louis was born.",
"The Jamaican authorities believed however that Louis was the child who arrived on the brig Mary with his mother.",
"Lecesne's date of birth was given as 30 August 1798 in Kingston, but he wasn't baptised until 5 March 1814.",
"His place and date of birth were the subject of later court cases.",
"At these cases it was noted that Lecesne's mother and the midwife said that he was born a few months (or days) after their arrival in Jamaica.",
"Others disagree with this version as his mother said that when they arrived in Jamaica they did have a two-year-old child but he died just after the birth of this child.",
"Lecesne had two younger brothers Lamorette and Louis Nicholas Lecesne.",
"His mother was manumised by Lescesne's father.",
"The date of the birth was important as a later law gave privileges to children born on the island.",
"He was taken to Mr Goff's school for \"children of colour\" in 1802 when his father\nasked for him to be given \"the best English education\".",
"Mr Goffe signed an affidavit later to say that he thought Lecesne to be four years old at the time but others think this a very young age to send such a child to school in Jamaica.",
"Others said that when Charlotte Celeste arrived she had a two-year-old son called Figge.",
"They claim Lecesne was born in Port a Prince in St Domingo \"opposite the post office\".",
"When his father made a will and died in 1816 he made Lecesne his executor.",
"Some claim that this means that his father knew he was 21 years of age, and therefore born before elsewhere.",
"Marriage\nLouis Celeste Lecesne married Hannah Escoffery (born 15 November 1797 and also known as Anette), \nthe sister of John Escoffery.",
"At least three children were born to Louis Celeste Lecesne and Hannah Escoffery in Kingston.",
"The first was Louise Amelia Lecesne (born 20 June 1817), followed by Elizabeth Adeline Lecesne (born 24 July 1818) and Celestine Aglaé Lecesne (19 June 1820 – 11 August 1821).",
"On 7 May 1823 Louis Celeste Lecesne was a witness to the marriage of his wife's brother, Edward Escoffery to Marie Montagnac in the Roman Catholic Church, Kingston.",
"Lecesne and John Escoffery came to notice as members of a committee who were intent on changing the law such that free men \"of colour\" would be given free and equal rights to white people.",
"Arrest\nLouis Celeste Lecesne and John Escoffery were arrested on 7 October 1823 under the Alien Act by a warrant of the Duke of Manchester, the Governor of Jamaica.",
"William Burge, the Attorney General, considered them to be of \"dangerous character\"; they were also considered to be aliens, because of claims that they were Haitian.",
"Luckily they had time to raise a writ of Habeas Corpus in the Supreme Court of Jamaica\n\nWhile Lecesne and Escoffery were held in gaol, petitions made to the Governor were rejected as it was claimed that the signatories were all owed money by the accused.",
"Later investigations showed that the largest debt involved was 25 pounds.",
"After consideration by the judges, the two were released as they were considered to be British-born despite the arguments described earlier.",
"Chief Justice Scarlett released them without bail as there were no charges.",
"Later, a member of the House of Representatives moved that a secret committee be formed to look at this case.",
"This man, Hector Mitchell, was made the chair of this committee, comprising three others including the Mayor of Kingston.",
"Their investigations resulted in the forced exile of Lecesne and Escoffery to St Domingo.",
"It had been said that Lecesne had sold arms to an insurrection in St George and that the two of them kept correspondence with people in Haiti for treasonable purposes.",
"Having been separated from their families and possessions, the pair had to sell their watches and with this money and the help of British people on the island they set out for England.",
"With Lecesne and Escoffery deported, the free coloureds movement did not collapse in Jamaica.",
"Instead, other campaigners, such as Edward Jordon, Robert Osborn (Jamaica), and Richard Hill (Jamaica) continued to agitate for equal rights for free coloureds, and they were finally successful when the Jamaican Assembly passed legislation allowing them to vote in elections and run for public office.",
"A young English sailor boy, Barnet Burns, had been found ill in Jamaica and was cared for by Lecesne and his family.",
"Following the deportation of Lecesne, Burns followed Lecesne's family to London, where he received an education under the patronage of Lecesne.",
"England\nThe case of Lecesne and Escoffery was raised in the House of Commons by Stephen Lushington who was a known abolitionist and anti-slavery campaigner.",
"Lushington spoke to the house on 16 June 1825.",
"This resulted in a number of publications:\n\nDebate in house of commons 16 June 1825 regarding deportation of two persons of colour \nA Reply to the Speech of Dr. Lushington, in the House of Commons by Mr Barret of the House in Jamaica, 1828\n\nThere was a libel case against John Murray, not because he was the author, but because he was the publisher of a book that libelled Lecesne and Escoffery.",
"The case was based on the fact that the book recorded that the politicians in Jamaica considered Lecesne and Escoffery guilty of a criminal conspiracy.",
"This case was held in Britain in order that it should not be biased.",
"If they were guilty of a conspiracy, then under the 1818 Alien Act they could be transported for life if they were born elsewhere.",
"The book concerned was \"The annals of Jamaica, Volume 2\" by the Reverend George Wilson Bridges.",
"Bridges combined leading worship at St Annes and speaking up for the value of slavery.",
"The libel case was successful and Lecesne was therefore innocent.",
"Parliament ruled that they should both be allowed to return and be given compensation.",
"Lecesne believed in the law.",
"In 1832, Lecesne was living in England at the Fenchurch buildings in Fenchurch Street, London and on 26 June while walking outside his residence Lecesne was the victim of a pickpocket, Thomas Fielder, who had stolen a handkerchief.",
"For this crime, Fielder, aged 15, was sentenced to transportation for life.",
"Lecesne was on the board of the Anti-Slavery Agency in 1832 with other notable abolitionists such as William Allen, Zachary Macaulay, Robert Forster, George Stacey and Josiah Forster\n\nLouis Celeste Lecesne and his wife had a son whilst they were in London whom they christened Stephen Lushington Macauley Lecesne.",
"He was born on 6 March 1834 and was christened at Saint Matthew Church, Bethnal Green, London, on 25 June 1834.",
"In July 1838, Lecesne was one of the supporters of a campaign to raise a monument to Zachary Macaulay in Westminster Abbey.",
"1840 Anti-Slavery Society convention\n \nOn 17 April 1840, the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society was formed to campaign for worldwide abolition of slavery.",
"A short time later, the first World Anti-Slavery Convention was held in London, attracting an international participation.",
"Lecesne attended the convention and is depicted in a painting The Anti-Slavery Society Convention, 1840 by Benjamin Haydon(1841).",
"According to a record at the Montserrat (West Indies) National Trust from the Official Assignee to the President Administering the Government William Shiell, Lescene was declared bankrupt in 1845; the Island Secretary Henry Loving apparently owed Lescene £198 12s 3d.",
"Following a bout of pneumonia, Louis Celeste Lecesne died on 22 November 1847 at his residence at the Fenchurch buildings, Fenchurch Street in London.",
"At the end of May in 1848, The Times announced the sale of the \"superior\" effects of the late L. C. Lecesne Esq including his mahogany four poster and a six octave pianoforte.",
"References\n\nExternal links\nAnti-Slavery Society Convention, 1840\n\n19th-century Jamaican people\nAbolitionism in the United Kingdom\nBritish abolitionists\nJamaican activists\n1790s births\n1847 deaths"
] | [
"Lewis Celeste Lecesne was an anti-slavery activist from the Caribbean islands.",
"The committee was formed to improve the rights of free men of colour.",
"He was transported for life from Jamaica after being arrested twice.",
"Their case was taken up by a doctor.",
"The case was reversed by the British government.",
"The world's first anti-slavery convention was attended by Lecesne.",
"The British Member of Parliament was the one who fought for his case.",
"The Anti-Slavery Society was supported by Lecesne.",
"Charlotte Celeste and Louis Nicholas Lecesne had a dispute over the birth of their son, who was born in either Port Au Prince or Kingston.",
"On August 25, 1798, his mother and father arrived in Jamaica.",
"The parents of Lecesne were French and his mother African.",
"According to some, his mother was pregnant and died before he was born.",
"The Jamaican authorities believed that Louis was the child who arrived with his mother.",
"His birth date was given as August 1798 in Kingston, but he wasn't christened until March 1814.",
"He was the subject of court cases because of his place and date of birth.",
"Lecesne's mother and the midwife said that he was born a few months after they arrived in Jamaica.",
"His mother said that when they arrived in Jamaica they had a two-year-old child but he died after the birth of this child.",
"Louis Nicholas and Lamorette were brothers of Lecesne.",
"Lescesne's father mistreated his mother.",
"A later law gave privileges to children who were born on the island.",
"When his father asked for him to be given the best English education, he was taken to Mr. Goff's school for \"children of colour\" in 1802.",
"Some people think it's a very young age for a child to go to school in Jamaica, and that's why Mr. Goffe signed an affidavit saying he thought Lecesne was four years old at the time.",
"Charlotte Celeste had a two-year-old son called Figge, according to others.",
"They say that Lecesne was born in Port a Prince in St Domingo.",
"His father's will was made in 1816.",
"According to some, this means that his father knew he was 21 years of age, and therefore he was born elsewhere.",
"Hannah Escoffery was the sister of John Escoffery and was married to Louis Celeste Lecesne.",
"There are at least three children that were born to Hannah and Louis Celeste.",
"The first was Louise Amelia Lecesne who was born on June 20, 1817.",
"Louis Celeste Lecesne was a witness to the marriage of Edward Escoffery to Marie Montagnac in the Roman Catholic Church in Kingston.",
"The members of the committee were intent on changing the law to give free and equal rights to white people.",
"The Duke of Manchester, the Governor of Jamaica, issued a warrant for the arrest of the two men.",
"According to William Burge, the Attorney General, they were both dangerous and aliens because of the claims that they were Haitian.",
"Luckily they had time to raise a writ of Habeas Corpus in the Supreme Court of Jamaica while the other two were held in gaol.",
"The largest debt was 25 pounds.",
"The two were released as they were considered to be British-born despite their arguments.",
"The Chief Justice released them without bail because there were no charges.",
"A secret committee be formed to look at this case after a member of the House of Representatives moved.",
"The Mayor of Kingston was one of three people who made the chair of this committee.",
"The forced exile of Lecesne and Escoffery to St Domingo was the result of their investigations.",
"It was said that the two of them kept correspondence with people in Haiti in order to sell arms to the insurrection in St George.",
"Having been separated from their families and possessions, the pair had to sell their watches and with the help of British people on the island they set out for England.",
"The free coloureds movement in Jamaica did not collapse after Lecesne and Escoffery were deported.",
"Edward Jordon, Robert Osborn, and Richard Hill were able to run for public office after the Jamaican Assembly passed legislation allowing them to vote.",
"Lecesne and his family cared for a young English sailor boy who was found ill in Jamaica.",
"After the deportation of Lecesne, Burns followed his family to London, where he received an education.",
"Stephen Lushington, an anti-slavery activist, raised the case of Lecesne and Escoffery in the House of Commons.",
"On June 16, 1824, Lushington spoke to the house.",
"There was a debate in the house of commons about the deportation of two people of colour.",
"According to the book, politicians in Jamaica considered Lecesne and Escoffery guilty of a criminal conspiracy.",
"The case was held in Britain in order to not be biased.",
"If they were found guilty of a conspiracy, they would be transported for life if they were born elsewhere.",
"\"The annals of Jamaica, Volume 2\" was written by the Reverend George Wilson Bridges.",
"Bridges spoke up for the value of slavery while leading worship at St Annes.",
"The libel case resulted in the exoneration of Lecesne.",
"They should be given compensation and allowed to return.",
"He believed in the law.",
"In June of 1832, Thomas Fielder pickpocketed Lecesne while he was walking outside his residence in Fenchurch Street, London.",
"Fielder was sentenced to transportation for life for this crime.",
"The Anti-Slavery Agency was chaired by Louis Celeste Lecesne and he and his wife had a son while they were in London.",
"He was christened at Saint Matthew Church in London on June 25, 1834.",
"One of the supporters of the campaign to raise a monument to Macaulay was Lecesne.",
"The British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society was formed in April of 1840.",
"The first World Anti-Slavery Convention was held in London.",
"The Anti-Slavery Society Convention is depicted in a painting by Benjamin Haydon.",
"Lescene was declared bankrupt in 1845 by the official Assignee to the President Administering the Government William Shiell.",
"Louis Celeste Lecesne died of pneumonia at his residence on Fenchurch Street in London on November 22, 1847.",
"The \"superior\" effects of the late L. C. Lecesne were sold by The Times at the end of May.",
"The Anti-Slavery Society Convention was held in the United Kingdom in the 19th century."
] | <mask> (c. 1796 or 1798 – 22 November 1847), also known as <mask>, was an anti-slavery activist from the Caribbean islands. Lecesne was on a committee to improve the rights of free men of colour. He was arrested twice, and transported for life from Jamaica with John Escoffery. Their case was taken up by Dr. Stephen Lushington. Lecesne was compensated after successfully having the case reversed by the British government. Lecesne became an activist against slavery and attended the world's first anti-slavery convention. He named his son after the British Member of Parliament who had fought for his case.Lecesne was a supporter when the 1839 Anti-Slavery Society was formed. Disputed birth
Lecesne was the son of <mask> and <mask> Lecesne, and was born in either Port au Prince or Kingston in 1796 or 1798. His mother and father had arrived in Jamaica on 25 August 1798 with a child called Figge. Lecesne's father was French and had left St Domingo, whilst his mother was said to have African ancestry. According to some, his mother was pregnant, Figge died and <mask> was born. The Jamaican authorities believed however that <mask> was the child who arrived on the brig Mary with his mother. Lecesne's date of birth was given as 30 August 1798 in Kingston, but he wasn't baptised until 5 March 1814.His place and date of birth were the subject of later court cases. At these cases it was noted that Lecesne's mother and the midwife said that he was born a few months (or days) after their arrival in Jamaica. Others disagree with this version as his mother said that when they arrived in Jamaica they did have a two-year-old child but he died just after the birth of this child. Lecesne had two younger brothers Lamorette and <mask> Lecesne. His mother was manumised by Lescesne's father. The date of the birth was important as a later law gave privileges to children born on the island. He was taken to Mr Goff's school for "children of colour" in 1802 when his father
asked for him to be given "the best English education".Mr Goffe signed an affidavit later to say that he thought Lecesne to be four years old at the time but others think this a very young age to send such a child to school in Jamaica. Others said that when <mask> arrived she had a two-year-old son called Figge. They claim Lecesne was born in Port a Prince in St Domingo "opposite the post office". When his father made a will and died in 1816 he made Lecesne his executor. Some claim that this means that his father knew he was 21 years of age, and therefore born before elsewhere. Marriage
<mask> <mask> married Hannah Escoffery (born 15 November 1797 and also known as Anette),
the sister of John Escoffery. At least three children were born to <mask> <mask> and Hannah Escoffery in Kingston.The first was <mask> <mask> (born 20 June 1817), followed by Elizabeth Adeline <mask> (born 24 July 1818) and Celestine Aglaé <mask> (19 June 1820 – 11 August 1821). On 7 May 1823 <mask> <mask> was a witness to the marriage of his wife's brother, Edward Escoffery to Marie Montagnac in the Roman Catholic Church, Kingston. <mask> and John Escoffery came to notice as members of a committee who were intent on changing the law such that free men "of colour" would be given free and equal rights to white people. Arrest
<mask> <mask> and John Escoffery were arrested on 7 October 1823 under the Alien Act by a warrant of the Duke of Manchester, the Governor of Jamaica. William Burge, the Attorney General, considered them to be of "dangerous character"; they were also considered to be aliens, because of claims that they were Haitian. Luckily they had time to raise a writ of Habeas Corpus in the Supreme Court of Jamaica
While <mask> and Escoffery were held in gaol, petitions made to the Governor were rejected as it was claimed that the signatories were all owed money by the accused. Later investigations showed that the largest debt involved was 25 pounds.After consideration by the judges, the two were released as they were considered to be British-born despite the arguments described earlier. Chief Justice Scarlett released them without bail as there were no charges. Later, a member of the House of Representatives moved that a secret committee be formed to look at this case. This man, Hector Mitchell, was made the chair of this committee, comprising three others including the Mayor of Kingston. Their investigations resulted in the forced exile of Lecesne and Escoffery to St Domingo. It had been said that Lecesne had sold arms to an insurrection in St George and that the two of them kept correspondence with people in Haiti for treasonable purposes. Having been separated from their families and possessions, the pair had to sell their watches and with this money and the help of British people on the island they set out for England.With Lecesne and Escoffery deported, the free coloureds movement did not collapse in Jamaica. Instead, other campaigners, such as Edward Jordon, Robert Osborn (Jamaica), and Richard Hill (Jamaica) continued to agitate for equal rights for free coloureds, and they were finally successful when the Jamaican Assembly passed legislation allowing them to vote in elections and run for public office. A young English sailor boy, Barnet Burns, had been found ill in Jamaica and was cared for by Lecesne and his family. Following the deportation of Lecesne, Burns followed Lecesne's family to London, where he received an education under the patronage of Lecesne. England
The case of Lecesne and Escoffery was raised in the House of Commons by Stephen Lushington who was a known abolitionist and anti-slavery campaigner. Lushington spoke to the house on 16 June 1825. This resulted in a number of publications:
Debate in house of commons 16 June 1825 regarding deportation of two persons of colour
A Reply to the Speech of Dr. Lushington, in the House of Commons by Mr Barret of the House in Jamaica, 1828
There was a libel case against John Murray, not because he was the author, but because he was the publisher of a book that libelled Lecesne and Escoffery.The case was based on the fact that the book recorded that the politicians in Jamaica considered Lecesne and Escoffery guilty of a criminal conspiracy. This case was held in Britain in order that it should not be biased. If they were guilty of a conspiracy, then under the 1818 Alien Act they could be transported for life if they were born elsewhere. The book concerned was "The annals of Jamaica, Volume 2" by the Reverend George Wilson Bridges. Bridges combined leading worship at St Annes and speaking up for the value of slavery. The libel case was successful and Lecesne was therefore innocent. Parliament ruled that they should both be allowed to return and be given compensation.Lecesne believed in the law. In 1832, Lecesne was living in England at the Fenchurch buildings in Fenchurch Street, London and on 26 June while walking outside his residence Lecesne was the victim of a pickpocket, Thomas Fielder, who had stolen a handkerchief. For this crime, Fielder, aged 15, was sentenced to transportation for life. Lecesne was on the board of the Anti-Slavery Agency in 1832 with other notable abolitionists such as William Allen, Zachary Macaulay, Robert Forster, George Stacey and Josiah Forster
<mask> <mask> and his wife had a son whilst they were in London whom they christened Stephen Lushington Macauley Lecesne. He was born on 6 March 1834 and was christened at Saint Matthew Church, Bethnal Green, London, on 25 June 1834. In July 1838, Lecesne was one of the supporters of a campaign to raise a monument to Zachary Macaulay in Westminster Abbey. 1840 Anti-Slavery Society convention
On 17 April 1840, the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society was formed to campaign for worldwide abolition of slavery.A short time later, the first World Anti-Slavery Convention was held in London, attracting an international participation. Lecesne attended the convention and is depicted in a painting The Anti-Slavery Society Convention, 1840 by Benjamin Haydon(1841). According to a record at the Montserrat (West Indies) National Trust from the Official Assignee to the President Administering the Government William Shiell, Lescene was declared bankrupt in 1845; the Island Secretary Henry Loving apparently owed Lescene £198 12s 3d. Following a bout of pneumonia, <mask> <mask> died on 22 November 1847 at his residence at the Fenchurch buildings, Fenchurch Street in London. At the end of May in 1848, The Times announced the sale of the "superior" effects of the late L. C. <mask> Esq including his mahogany four poster and a six octave pianoforte. References
External links
Anti-Slavery Society Convention, 1840
19th-century Jamaican people
Abolitionism in the United Kingdom
British abolitionists
Jamaican activists
1790s births
1847 deaths | [
"Louis Celeste Lecesne",
"Lewis Celeste Lecesne",
"Charlotte Celeste",
"Louis Nicholas",
"Louis",
"Louis",
"Louis Nicholas",
"Charlotte Celeste",
"Louis Celeste",
"Lecesne",
"Louis Celeste",
"Lecesne",
"Louise Amelia",
"Lecesne",
"Lecesne",
"Lecesne",
"Louis Celeste",
"Lecesne",
"Lecesne",
"Louis Celeste",
"Lecesne",
"Lecesne",
"Louis Celeste",
"Lecesne",
"Louis Celeste",
"Lecesne",
"Lecesne"
] | <mask> was an anti-slavery activist from the Caribbean islands. The committee was formed to improve the rights of free men of colour. He was transported for life from Jamaica after being arrested twice. Their case was taken up by a doctor. The case was reversed by the British government. The world's first anti-slavery convention was attended by Lecesne. The British Member of Parliament was the one who fought for his case.The Anti-Slavery Society was supported by Lecesne. <mask> and <mask> <mask> had a dispute over the birth of their son, who was born in either Port Au Prince or Kingston. On August 25, 1798, his mother and father arrived in Jamaica. The parents of Lecesne were French and his mother African. According to some, his mother was pregnant and died before he was born. The Jamaican authorities believed that <mask> was the child who arrived with his mother. His birth date was given as August 1798 in Kingston, but he wasn't christened until March 1814.He was the subject of court cases because of his place and date of birth. Lecesne's mother and the midwife said that he was born a few months after they arrived in Jamaica. His mother said that when they arrived in Jamaica they had a two-year-old child but he died after the birth of this child. <mask> and Lamorette were brothers of Lecesne. Lescesne's father mistreated his mother. A later law gave privileges to children who were born on the island. When his father asked for him to be given the best English education, he was taken to Mr. Goff's school for "children of colour" in 1802.Some people think it's a very young age for a child to go to school in Jamaica, and that's why Mr. Goffe signed an affidavit saying he thought Lecesne was four years old at the time. <mask> had a two-year-old son called Figge, according to others. They say that Lecesne was born in Port a Prince in St Domingo. His father's will was made in 1816. According to some, this means that his father knew he was 21 years of age, and therefore he was born elsewhere. Hannah Escoffery was the sister of John Escoffery and was married to <mask> <mask>. There are at least three children that were born to Hannah and <mask>.The first was <mask> <mask> who was born on June 20, 1817. <mask> <mask> was a witness to the marriage of Edward Escoffery to Marie Montagnac in the Roman Catholic Church in Kingston. The members of the committee were intent on changing the law to give free and equal rights to white people. The Duke of Manchester, the Governor of Jamaica, issued a warrant for the arrest of the two men. According to William Burge, the Attorney General, they were both dangerous and aliens because of the claims that they were Haitian. Luckily they had time to raise a writ of Habeas Corpus in the Supreme Court of Jamaica while the other two were held in gaol. The largest debt was 25 pounds.The two were released as they were considered to be British-born despite their arguments. The Chief Justice released them without bail because there were no charges. A secret committee be formed to look at this case after a member of the House of Representatives moved. The Mayor of Kingston was one of three people who made the chair of this committee. The forced exile of Lecesne and Escoffery to St Domingo was the result of their investigations. It was said that the two of them kept correspondence with people in Haiti in order to sell arms to the insurrection in St George. Having been separated from their families and possessions, the pair had to sell their watches and with the help of British people on the island they set out for England.The free coloureds movement in Jamaica did not collapse after Lecesne and Escoffery were deported. Edward Jordon, Robert Osborn, and Richard Hill were able to run for public office after the Jamaican Assembly passed legislation allowing them to vote. Lecesne and his family cared for a young English sailor boy who was found ill in Jamaica. After the deportation of Lecesne, Burns followed his family to London, where he received an education. Stephen Lushington, an anti-slavery activist, raised the case of Lecesne and Escoffery in the House of Commons. On June 16, 1824, Lushington spoke to the house. There was a debate in the house of commons about the deportation of two people of colour.According to the book, politicians in Jamaica considered Lecesne and Escoffery guilty of a criminal conspiracy. The case was held in Britain in order to not be biased. If they were found guilty of a conspiracy, they would be transported for life if they were born elsewhere. "The annals of Jamaica, Volume 2" was written by the Reverend George Wilson Bridges. Bridges spoke up for the value of slavery while leading worship at St Annes. The libel case resulted in the exoneration of Lecesne. They should be given compensation and allowed to return.He believed in the law. In June of 1832, Thomas Fielder pickpocketed Lecesne while he was walking outside his residence in Fenchurch Street, London. Fielder was sentenced to transportation for life for this crime. The Anti-Slavery Agency was chaired by <mask> <mask> and he and his wife had a son while they were in London. He was christened at Saint Matthew Church in London on June 25, 1834. One of the supporters of the campaign to raise a monument to Macaulay was Lecesne. The British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society was formed in April of 1840.The first World Anti-Slavery Convention was held in London. The Anti-Slavery Society Convention is depicted in a painting by Benjamin Haydon. Lescene was declared bankrupt in 1845 by the official Assignee to the President Administering the Government William Shiell. <mask> <mask> died of pneumonia at his residence on Fenchurch Street in London on November 22, 1847. The "superior" effects of the late L. C. Lecesne were sold by The Times at the end of May. The Anti-Slavery Society Convention was held in the United Kingdom in the 19th century. | [
"Lewis Celeste Lecesne",
"Charlotte Celeste",
"Louis Nicholas",
"Lecesne",
"Louis",
"Louis Nicholas",
"Charlotte Celeste",
"Louis Celeste",
"Lecesne",
"Louis Celeste",
"Louise Amelia",
"Lecesne",
"Louis Celeste",
"Lecesne",
"Louis Celeste",
"Lecesne",
"Louis Celeste",
"Lecesne"
] |
1053834 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack%20Horner%20%28politician%29 | Jack Horner (politician) | John Henry "Jack" Horner (July 20, 1927 – November 18, 2004) was a Canadian rancher, politician, and Cabinet minister.
Life and career
Nicknamed "Cactus Jack", Horner was born in Saskatchewan, the fifth child in a family of six boys and three girls. His mother's uncle had been a prisoner of Louis Riel's provisional government. His father, Ralph Horner, was a failed Conservative candidate who was appointed to the board of directors of Canadian National Railways by the government of R. B. Bennett in 1931, and then to the Senate of Canada in 1933.
Jack Horner moved to Alberta at the age of 18 to manage a ranch purchased by his father and then bought his own ranch in 1947.
He was first elected to the House of Commons of Canada in the 1958 federal election from the rural central Alberta riding of Acadia, when the Progressive Conservative Party of which he was a member won the biggest majority government in Canadian history. Horner was an avid supporter of Prime Minister John Diefenbaker. Also elected to the Parliament of Canada as Tories were his older brother, Hugh Horner and cousin Albert Horner. With Jack Horner's father, Ralph, still sitting as a Senator, four Horners were sitting in the two chambers of Parliament simultaneously. Another brother, Norval Horner, was elected to the House in 1972. When Acadia was abolished in 1968, the bulk of it was absorbed into the new riding of Crowfoot, and Horner ran from this riding and won.
According to Jack Horner's obituary in The Globe and Mail newspaper:
He presented himself as a friend of farmers, a foe of railways, an advocate of capital punishment, a critic of generous unemployment payments, an opponent of the right to strike in essential services, and at all times a staunch free enterpriser. He railed against any changes to the Crow's Nest Pass rate that might hurt farmers. He was alert to any threat of socialism, whether from the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation, Opposition Liberals, or the Red Tories in his own party.
Horner developed a reputation as a right winger and outspoken advocate for the rights of farmers and ranchers. He remained one of "Diefenbaker's cowboys" during the 1960s, backing Diefenbaker against the ultimately successful attempts to unseat him. At the 1966 Tory convention which changed the rules to allow a challenge to a sitting leader, Horner threw a punch at Dalton Camp supporter Roy McMurtry, and accosted Brian Mulroney in a hallway. He resented the leadership of Diefenbaker's successor, Robert Stanfield, describing him as "a very, very sad choice". Horner worked to undermine Stanfield's leadership through manoeuvers such as leading a revolt against the party's support for the Official Languages Act.
He was a candidate for the PC Party leadership at the 1976 convention. At one point during the convention, he knocked over an eavesdropping reporter. He finished fourth in the contest, and threw his support to Claude Wagner, who lost on the final ballot to Joe Clark.
Horner had even less respect for Clark than he had for Stanfield. Although Clark was a fellow Albertan, Horner regarded him as a city slicker. Horner once paid Clark the ultimate rancher's insult by describing him as a "sheep herder."
On April 20, 1977, Horner shocked his constituents and many political observers by crossing the floor to join the Liberal Party, which was at the time deeply unpopular in Alberta. The next day, he joined Pierre Trudeau's Cabinet as minister without portfolio, and was promoted in September 1977 to the position of Minister of Industry, Trade and Commerce. When Diefenbaker, who was still in Parliament 14 years after leaving the Prime Ministership, learned of Horner's defection, he said, "the sheriff has joined the rustlers."
Despite (or perhaps due to) his Cabinet position, Horner's floor-crossing was extremely unpopular in his strongly conservative riding. Even by rural Alberta standards, Crowfoot was an unshakably conservative area. Most of its living residents had never been represented by a Liberal, and the bulk of its territory had been represented by centre-right MPs since 1935. He was not helped by the redistribution ahead of the 1979 federal election, which pushed him into a riding that was almost two-thirds new to him. Although it retained the name of Crowfoot, most of its constituents came from neighbouring Battle River, represented by fellow Tory Arnold Malone.
Many critics argued that Horner's floor crossing was motivated by opportunism as opposed to ideology and ultimately provoked by the pending electoral redistribution. Had Horner remained with the Tories, the redistribution meant he would have had to face Malone for the PC nomination. Horner would have faced a difficult road to gaining the PC nomination in the redistributed Crowfoot. It was more Malone's riding than Horner's, and Malone was also favoured by Clark and the PC establishment. That left Horner with only three options: run as an independent, cross the floor, or retire from federal politics. His chances of retaining his seat as an independent were slim, though slightly better than his chances of being elected as a Liberal given the strong antipathy toward the Liberals in rural Alberta. On the other hand, serving as a government member from Alberta virtually guaranteed Horner a cabinet post for the remainder of the 30th Parliament, since the Liberals had not elected any candidates under their own banner from Alberta in the 1974 election. Serving as a Liberal also gave Horner the prospect of securing patronage appointments under future Liberal governments after leaving Parliament, a prospect that Horner considered quite likely because of his low opinion of Clark's leadership.
In any event, Horner ran for reelection even though polling indicated he faced almost certain defeat. One poll showed him getting only 15 percent of the vote, down from 75 percent in 1974. As expected, Horner was badly defeated in the 1979 election, which unseated the Liberal government. His vote share collapsed to 18 percent, losing almost three fourths of his vote from 1974. Ultimately, he finished a very distant second, more than 20,000 votes behind Malone. Horner attempted a comeback in the 1980 federal election, but despite the return of a Liberal government nationally, Horner again placed a poor second in Crowfoot, winning only 4,761 votes, 1,000 votes fewer than he had managed in 1979.
The Liberal government appointed him to the board of Canadian National Railways, where he served as chairman from 1982 to 1984. From 1984 to 1988, he was Administrator (Federal Deputy Minister equivalent) of the Western Grain Transportation Agency, reporting to Parliament through the Minister of Transport.
He died at a Calgary hospital, leaving his wife, Leola, and two sons, Brent and Craig.
References
Further reading
External links
Globe & Mail obituary
1927 births
2004 deaths
Liberal Party of Canada MPs
Members of the 20th Canadian Ministry
Members of the House of Commons of Canada from Alberta
Members of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada
Progressive Conservative Party of Canada MPs
People from Blaine Lake, Saskatchewan
Jack
Progressive Conservative Party of Canada leadership candidates | [
"John Henry \"Jack\" Horner (July 20, 1927 – November 18, 2004) was a Canadian rancher, politician, and Cabinet minister.",
"Life and career\nNicknamed \"Cactus Jack\", Horner was born in Saskatchewan, the fifth child in a family of six boys and three girls.",
"His mother's uncle had been a prisoner of Louis Riel's provisional government.",
"His father, Ralph Horner, was a failed Conservative candidate who was appointed to the board of directors of Canadian National Railways by the government of R. B. Bennett in 1931, and then to the Senate of Canada in 1933.",
"Jack Horner moved to Alberta at the age of 18 to manage a ranch purchased by his father and then bought his own ranch in 1947.",
"He was first elected to the House of Commons of Canada in the 1958 federal election from the rural central Alberta riding of Acadia, when the Progressive Conservative Party of which he was a member won the biggest majority government in Canadian history.",
"Horner was an avid supporter of Prime Minister John Diefenbaker.",
"Also elected to the Parliament of Canada as Tories were his older brother, Hugh Horner and cousin Albert Horner.",
"With Jack Horner's father, Ralph, still sitting as a Senator, four Horners were sitting in the two chambers of Parliament simultaneously.",
"Another brother, Norval Horner, was elected to the House in 1972.",
"When Acadia was abolished in 1968, the bulk of it was absorbed into the new riding of Crowfoot, and Horner ran from this riding and won.",
"According to Jack Horner's obituary in The Globe and Mail newspaper:\nHe presented himself as a friend of farmers, a foe of railways, an advocate of capital punishment, a critic of generous unemployment payments, an opponent of the right to strike in essential services, and at all times a staunch free enterpriser.",
"He railed against any changes to the Crow's Nest Pass rate that might hurt farmers.",
"He was alert to any threat of socialism, whether from the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation, Opposition Liberals, or the Red Tories in his own party.",
"Horner developed a reputation as a right winger and outspoken advocate for the rights of farmers and ranchers.",
"He remained one of \"Diefenbaker's cowboys\" during the 1960s, backing Diefenbaker against the ultimately successful attempts to unseat him.",
"At the 1966 Tory convention which changed the rules to allow a challenge to a sitting leader, Horner threw a punch at Dalton Camp supporter Roy McMurtry, and accosted Brian Mulroney in a hallway.",
"He resented the leadership of Diefenbaker's successor, Robert Stanfield, describing him as \"a very, very sad choice\".",
"Horner worked to undermine Stanfield's leadership through manoeuvers such as leading a revolt against the party's support for the Official Languages Act.",
"He was a candidate for the PC Party leadership at the 1976 convention.",
"At one point during the convention, he knocked over an eavesdropping reporter.",
"He finished fourth in the contest, and threw his support to Claude Wagner, who lost on the final ballot to Joe Clark.",
"Horner had even less respect for Clark than he had for Stanfield.",
"Although Clark was a fellow Albertan, Horner regarded him as a city slicker.",
"Horner once paid Clark the ultimate rancher's insult by describing him as a \"sheep herder.\"",
"On April 20, 1977, Horner shocked his constituents and many political observers by crossing the floor to join the Liberal Party, which was at the time deeply unpopular in Alberta.",
"The next day, he joined Pierre Trudeau's Cabinet as minister without portfolio, and was promoted in September 1977 to the position of Minister of Industry, Trade and Commerce.",
"When Diefenbaker, who was still in Parliament 14 years after leaving the Prime Ministership, learned of Horner's defection, he said, \"the sheriff has joined the rustlers.\"",
"Despite (or perhaps due to) his Cabinet position, Horner's floor-crossing was extremely unpopular in his strongly conservative riding.",
"Even by rural Alberta standards, Crowfoot was an unshakably conservative area.",
"Most of its living residents had never been represented by a Liberal, and the bulk of its territory had been represented by centre-right MPs since 1935.",
"He was not helped by the redistribution ahead of the 1979 federal election, which pushed him into a riding that was almost two-thirds new to him.",
"Although it retained the name of Crowfoot, most of its constituents came from neighbouring Battle River, represented by fellow Tory Arnold Malone.",
"Many critics argued that Horner's floor crossing was motivated by opportunism as opposed to ideology and ultimately provoked by the pending electoral redistribution.",
"Had Horner remained with the Tories, the redistribution meant he would have had to face Malone for the PC nomination.",
"Horner would have faced a difficult road to gaining the PC nomination in the redistributed Crowfoot.",
"It was more Malone's riding than Horner's, and Malone was also favoured by Clark and the PC establishment.",
"That left Horner with only three options: run as an independent, cross the floor, or retire from federal politics.",
"His chances of retaining his seat as an independent were slim, though slightly better than his chances of being elected as a Liberal given the strong antipathy toward the Liberals in rural Alberta.",
"On the other hand, serving as a government member from Alberta virtually guaranteed Horner a cabinet post for the remainder of the 30th Parliament, since the Liberals had not elected any candidates under their own banner from Alberta in the 1974 election.",
"Serving as a Liberal also gave Horner the prospect of securing patronage appointments under future Liberal governments after leaving Parliament, a prospect that Horner considered quite likely because of his low opinion of Clark's leadership.",
"In any event, Horner ran for reelection even though polling indicated he faced almost certain defeat.",
"One poll showed him getting only 15 percent of the vote, down from 75 percent in 1974.",
"As expected, Horner was badly defeated in the 1979 election, which unseated the Liberal government.",
"His vote share collapsed to 18 percent, losing almost three fourths of his vote from 1974.",
"Ultimately, he finished a very distant second, more than 20,000 votes behind Malone.",
"Horner attempted a comeback in the 1980 federal election, but despite the return of a Liberal government nationally, Horner again placed a poor second in Crowfoot, winning only 4,761 votes, 1,000 votes fewer than he had managed in 1979.",
"The Liberal government appointed him to the board of Canadian National Railways, where he served as chairman from 1982 to 1984.",
"From 1984 to 1988, he was Administrator (Federal Deputy Minister equivalent) of the Western Grain Transportation Agency, reporting to Parliament through the Minister of Transport.",
"He died at a Calgary hospital, leaving his wife, Leola, and two sons, Brent and Craig.",
"References\n\nFurther reading\n\nExternal links\nGlobe & Mail obituary\n\n1927 births\n2004 deaths\nLiberal Party of Canada MPs\nMembers of the 20th Canadian Ministry\nMembers of the House of Commons of Canada from Alberta\nMembers of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada\nProgressive Conservative Party of Canada MPs\nPeople from Blaine Lake, Saskatchewan\nJack\nProgressive Conservative Party of Canada leadership candidates"
] | [
"John Henry \"Jack\" Horner was a Canadian rancher, politician, and Cabinet minister.",
"Nicknamed \"Cactus Jack\", he was the fifth child in a family of six boys and three girls.",
"His mother's uncle was a prisoner of the Riel government.",
"His father was a failed Conservative candidate who was appointed to the board of directors of Canadian National Railways by the government of R. B. Bennett in 1931.",
"Jack moved to Canada at the age of 18 to manage his father's ranch and then bought his own ranch in 1947.",
"When the Progressive Conservative Party of which he was a member won the biggest majority government in Canadian history, he was elected to the House of Commons of Canada.",
"John Diefenbaker was an avid supporter of Horner.",
"His older brother, Hugh, and cousin, Albert, were also elected to the Parliament of Canada.",
"Four Horners were sitting in the two chambers of Parliament at the same time, with Jack's father still sitting as a Senator.",
"Norval Horner was elected to the House in 1972.",
"The majority of Acadia was absorbed into the new riding of Crowfoot when it was abolished in 1968.",
"He presented himself as a friend of farmers, a foe of railways, an advocate of capital punishment, a critic of generous unemployment payments, and an opponent of the right to strike in essential services.",
"He was against any changes to the Crow's Nest Pass rate.",
"He was alert to any threat of socialism in his own party.",
"He was an outspoken advocate for the rights of farmers and ranchers.",
"He was one of Diefenbaker's cowboys and supported him against attempts to oust him.",
"The rules for a challenge to a sitting leader were changed at the 1966 Tory convention, which led to a fight between Roy McMurtry and Brian Mulroney.",
"He felt that Robert Stanfield was a sad choice as Diefenbaker's successor.",
"Stanfield's leadership was undermined by manoeuvers such as leading a revolt against the party's support for the Official Languages Act.",
"He was a candidate for the leadership of the PC Party.",
"He knocked over a reporter during the convention.",
"He threw his support behind Claude Wagner, who lost on the final ballot to Joe Clark.",
"He had less respect for Clark than he did for Stanfield.",
"Clark was considered a city slicker by Horner.",
"Clark was insulted by Horner when he described him as a sheep herder.",
"On April 20, 1977, Horner crossed the floor to join the Liberal Party, which was unpopular at the time.",
"After joining Pierre Trudeau's Cabinet, he was promoted to the position of Minister of Industry, Trade and Commerce.",
"The sheriff joined the rustlers when Diefenbaker learned of the defection, he said.",
"The unpopularity of Horner's floor-crossing was due to his Cabinet position.",
"Crowfoot was conservative even by rural standards.",
"Most of its residents have never been represented by a Liberal, and the majority of its territory has been represented by centre-right MPs.",
"The redistribution pushed him into a riding that was almost two-thirds new to him.",
"Although Crowfoot retained its name, most of its residents came from Battle River.",
"Critics argued that the floor crossing was motivated by opportunism as opposed to ideology and that it was provoked by the upcoming electoral redistribution.",
"If he stayed with the Tories, he would have had to face Malone for the PC nomination.",
"It would have been difficult for him to get the PC nomination in Crowfoot.",
"It was more Malone's riding than Horner's, and it was also favored by Clark and the PC establishment.",
"He had three options: run as an independent, cross the floor or retire from federal politics.",
"His chances of retaining his seat as an independent were slim, though slightly better than his chances of being elected as a Liberal because of the strong antipathy towards the Liberals in rural Alberta.",
"Since the Liberals had not elected any candidates fromAlberta in the 1974 election, Horner was guaranteed a cabinet post for the remainder of the 30th Parliament.",
"Because of his low opinion of Clark's leadership, the prospect of securing patronage appointments under future Liberal governments was something that Horner considered quite likely.",
"Even though polling indicated he was going to lose, he ran for reelection.",
"He got only 15 percent of the vote, down from 75 percent in 1974.",
"The 1979 election resulted in the ousting of the Liberal government.",
"His vote share went from 38 percent to 18 percent.",
"He finished a distant second, more than 20,000 votes behind the leader.",
"Despite the return of a Liberal government nationally, Horner placed a poor second in Crowfoot in the 1980 federal election, winning only 4,761 votes, 1,000 less than in 1979.",
"He was appointed to the board of Canadian National Railways by the Liberal government.",
"He was the Administrator of the Western Grain Transportation Agency from 1984 to 1988.",
"His wife, Leola, and their two sons, Brent and Craig, were not with him when he died.",
"Globe & Mail obituary 1927 births 2004 deaths Liberal Party of Canada MPs Members of the 20th Canadian Ministry Members of the House of Commons of Canada from Alberta Members of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada"
] | John Henry "<mask><mask> (July 20, 1927 – November 18, 2004) was a Canadian rancher, politician, and Cabinet minister. Life and career
Nicknamed "Cactus <mask>", Horner was born in Saskatchewan, the fifth child in a family of six boys and three girls. His mother's uncle had been a prisoner of Louis Riel's provisional government. His father, <mask>, was a failed Conservative candidate who was appointed to the board of directors of Canadian National Railways by the government of R. B. Bennett in 1931, and then to the Senate of Canada in 1933. <mask> moved to Alberta at the age of 18 to manage a ranch purchased by his father and then bought his own ranch in 1947. He was first elected to the House of Commons of Canada in the 1958 federal election from the rural central Alberta riding of Acadia, when the Progressive Conservative Party of which he was a member won the biggest majority government in Canadian history. Horner was an avid supporter of Prime Minister John Diefenbaker.Also elected to the Parliament of Canada as Tories were his older brother, <mask> and cousin <mask>. With <mask>'s father, Ralph, still sitting as a Senator, four Horners were sitting in the two chambers of Parliament simultaneously. Another brother, Norval <mask>, was elected to the House in 1972. When Acadia was abolished in 1968, the bulk of it was absorbed into the new riding of Crowfoot, and Horner ran from this riding and won. According to <mask>'s obituary in The Globe and Mail newspaper:
He presented himself as a friend of farmers, a foe of railways, an advocate of capital punishment, a critic of generous unemployment payments, an opponent of the right to strike in essential services, and at all times a staunch free enterpriser. He railed against any changes to the Crow's Nest Pass rate that might hurt farmers. He was alert to any threat of socialism, whether from the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation, Opposition Liberals, or the Red Tories in his own party.Horner developed a reputation as a right winger and outspoken advocate for the rights of farmers and ranchers. He remained one of "Diefenbaker's cowboys" during the 1960s, backing Diefenbaker against the ultimately successful attempts to unseat him. At the 1966 Tory convention which changed the rules to allow a challenge to a sitting leader, Horner threw a punch at Dalton Camp supporter Roy McMurtry, and accosted Brian Mulroney in a hallway. He resented the leadership of Diefenbaker's successor, Robert Stanfield, describing him as "a very, very sad choice". Horner worked to undermine Stanfield's leadership through manoeuvers such as leading a revolt against the party's support for the Official Languages Act. He was a candidate for the PC Party leadership at the 1976 convention. At one point during the convention, he knocked over an eavesdropping reporter.He finished fourth in the contest, and threw his support to Claude Wagner, who lost on the final ballot to Joe Clark. Horner had even less respect for Clark than he had for Stanfield. Although Clark was a fellow Albertan, Horner regarded him as a city slicker. Horner once paid Clark the ultimate rancher's insult by describing him as a "sheep herder." On April 20, 1977, Horner shocked his constituents and many political observers by crossing the floor to join the Liberal Party, which was at the time deeply unpopular in Alberta. The next day, he joined Pierre Trudeau's Cabinet as minister without portfolio, and was promoted in September 1977 to the position of Minister of Industry, Trade and Commerce. When Diefenbaker, who was still in Parliament 14 years after leaving the Prime Ministership, learned of Horner's defection, he said, "the sheriff has joined the rustlers."Despite (or perhaps due to) his Cabinet position, <mask>'s floor-crossing was extremely unpopular in his strongly conservative riding. Even by rural Alberta standards, Crowfoot was an unshakably conservative area. Most of its living residents had never been represented by a Liberal, and the bulk of its territory had been represented by centre-right MPs since 1935. He was not helped by the redistribution ahead of the 1979 federal election, which pushed him into a riding that was almost two-thirds new to him. Although it retained the name of Crowfoot, most of its constituents came from neighbouring Battle River, represented by fellow Tory Arnold Malone. Many critics argued that Horner's floor crossing was motivated by opportunism as opposed to ideology and ultimately provoked by the pending electoral redistribution. Had Horner remained with the Tories, the redistribution meant he would have had to face Malone for the PC nomination.Horner would have faced a difficult road to gaining the PC nomination in the redistributed Crowfoot. It was more Malone's riding than Horner's, and Malone was also favoured by Clark and the PC establishment. That left Horner with only three options: run as an independent, cross the floor, or retire from federal politics. His chances of retaining his seat as an independent were slim, though slightly better than his chances of being elected as a Liberal given the strong antipathy toward the Liberals in rural Alberta. On the other hand, serving as a government member from Alberta virtually guaranteed Horner a cabinet post for the remainder of the 30th Parliament, since the Liberals had not elected any candidates under their own banner from Alberta in the 1974 election. Serving as a Liberal also gave Horner the prospect of securing patronage appointments under future Liberal governments after leaving Parliament, a prospect that Horner considered quite likely because of his low opinion of Clark's leadership. In any event, Horner ran for reelection even though polling indicated he faced almost certain defeat.One poll showed him getting only 15 percent of the vote, down from 75 percent in 1974. As expected, <mask> was badly defeated in the 1979 election, which unseated the Liberal government. His vote share collapsed to 18 percent, losing almost three fourths of his vote from 1974. Ultimately, he finished a very distant second, more than 20,000 votes behind Malone. Horner attempted a comeback in the 1980 federal election, but despite the return of a Liberal government nationally, Horner again placed a poor second in Crowfoot, winning only 4,761 votes, 1,000 votes fewer than he had managed in 1979. The Liberal government appointed him to the board of Canadian National Railways, where he served as chairman from 1982 to 1984. From 1984 to 1988, he was Administrator (Federal Deputy Minister equivalent) of the Western Grain Transportation Agency, reporting to Parliament through the Minister of Transport.He died at a Calgary hospital, leaving his wife, Leola, and two sons, Brent and Craig. References
Further reading
External links
Globe & Mail obituary
1927 births
2004 deaths
Liberal Party of Canada MPs
Members of the 20th Canadian Ministry
Members of the House of Commons of Canada from Alberta
Members of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada
Progressive Conservative Party of Canada MPs
People from Blaine Lake, Saskatchewan
Jack
Progressive Conservative Party of Canada leadership candidates | [
"Jack",
"\" Horner",
"Jack",
"Ralph Horner",
"Jack Horner",
"Hugh Horner",
"Albert Horner",
"Jack Horner",
"Horner",
"Jack Horner",
"Horner",
"Horner"
] | John Henry "<mask>" <mask> was a Canadian rancher, politician, and Cabinet minister. Nicknamed "Cactus <mask>", he was the fifth child in a family of six boys and three girls. His mother's uncle was a prisoner of the Riel government. His father was a failed Conservative candidate who was appointed to the board of directors of Canadian National Railways by the government of R. B. Bennett in 1931. <mask> moved to Canada at the age of 18 to manage his father's ranch and then bought his own ranch in 1947. When the Progressive Conservative Party of which he was a member won the biggest majority government in Canadian history, he was elected to the House of Commons of Canada. John Diefenbaker was an avid supporter of Horner.His older brother, Hugh, and cousin, Albert, were also elected to the Parliament of Canada. Four Horners were sitting in the two chambers of Parliament at the same time, with <mask>'s father still sitting as a Senator. Norval <mask> was elected to the House in 1972. The majority of Acadia was absorbed into the new riding of Crowfoot when it was abolished in 1968. He presented himself as a friend of farmers, a foe of railways, an advocate of capital punishment, a critic of generous unemployment payments, and an opponent of the right to strike in essential services. He was against any changes to the Crow's Nest Pass rate. He was alert to any threat of socialism in his own party.He was an outspoken advocate for the rights of farmers and ranchers. He was one of Diefenbaker's cowboys and supported him against attempts to oust him. The rules for a challenge to a sitting leader were changed at the 1966 Tory convention, which led to a fight between Roy McMurtry and Brian Mulroney. He felt that Robert Stanfield was a sad choice as Diefenbaker's successor. Stanfield's leadership was undermined by manoeuvers such as leading a revolt against the party's support for the Official Languages Act. He was a candidate for the leadership of the PC Party. He knocked over a reporter during the convention.He threw his support behind Claude Wagner, who lost on the final ballot to Joe Clark. He had less respect for Clark than he did for Stanfield. Clark was considered a city slicker by Horner. Clark was insulted by Horner when he described him as a sheep herder. On April 20, 1977, Horner crossed the floor to join the Liberal Party, which was unpopular at the time. After joining Pierre Trudeau's Cabinet, he was promoted to the position of Minister of Industry, Trade and Commerce. The sheriff joined the rustlers when Diefenbaker learned of the defection, he said.The unpopularity of <mask>'s floor-crossing was due to his Cabinet position. Crowfoot was conservative even by rural standards. Most of its residents have never been represented by a Liberal, and the majority of its territory has been represented by centre-right MPs. The redistribution pushed him into a riding that was almost two-thirds new to him. Although Crowfoot retained its name, most of its residents came from Battle River. Critics argued that the floor crossing was motivated by opportunism as opposed to ideology and that it was provoked by the upcoming electoral redistribution. If he stayed with the Tories, he would have had to face Malone for the PC nomination.It would have been difficult for him to get the PC nomination in Crowfoot. It was more Malone's riding than <mask>'s, and it was also favored by Clark and the PC establishment. He had three options: run as an independent, cross the floor or retire from federal politics. His chances of retaining his seat as an independent were slim, though slightly better than his chances of being elected as a Liberal because of the strong antipathy towards the Liberals in rural Alberta. Since the Liberals had not elected any candidates fromAlberta in the 1974 election, Horner was guaranteed a cabinet post for the remainder of the 30th Parliament. Because of his low opinion of Clark's leadership, the prospect of securing patronage appointments under future Liberal governments was something that Horner considered quite likely. Even though polling indicated he was going to lose, he ran for reelection.He got only 15 percent of the vote, down from 75 percent in 1974. The 1979 election resulted in the ousting of the Liberal government. His vote share went from 38 percent to 18 percent. He finished a distant second, more than 20,000 votes behind the leader. Despite the return of a Liberal government nationally, Horner placed a poor second in Crowfoot in the 1980 federal election, winning only 4,761 votes, 1,000 less than in 1979. He was appointed to the board of Canadian National Railways by the Liberal government. He was the Administrator of the Western Grain Transportation Agency from 1984 to 1988.His wife, Leola, and their two sons, Brent and Craig, were not with him when he died. Globe & Mail obituary 1927 births 2004 deaths Liberal Party of Canada MPs Members of the 20th Canadian Ministry Members of the House of Commons of Canada from Alberta Members of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada | [
"Jack",
"Horner",
"Jack",
"Jack",
"Jack",
"Horner",
"Horner",
"Horner"
] |
27419943 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ademar%20Jos%C3%A9%20Gevaerd | Ademar José Gevaerd | Ademar José Gevaerd (born 1952, also known simply as A. J. Gevaerd) is a Brazilian ufologist, or specialist in the study of Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs).
He is editor of Revista UFO (UFO Magazine), founder and director of the Brazilian Center for Flying Saucer Research (CBPDV) and Brazilian Director for Mutual UFO Network (MUFON). He represents Brazil at the Center for UFO Studies. He has appeared on the Globo Network, the Discovery Channel and the History Channel. He has spoken in many cities in Brazil and in other 29 countries, and has conducted over 700 field investigations of UFO cases in Brazil. He has been described as one of the most respected of ufologists.
Early career
On 6 March 1982, spectators at a football match at the Morenão stadium in Campo Grande saw a cigar-shaped object with lights at each end flying overhead. At that time, Ademar José Gevaerd was teaching chemistry in Maringá, Paraná state. Convinced that the object was a flying saucer, and hearing of other sightings at the same time in São Paulo, Paraná, Argentina, Bolivia and Paraguay, he decided to undertake a deeper study of UFOs. In 1985 he launched the magazine Ufologia Nacional & Internacional, which ceased publication in 1986. In 1988 he started UFO Magazine, still being published in 2014. In 1986 he left his teaching job to devote himself full-time to UFOs. The monthly UFO Magazine now has a circulation of 30,000. Gevaerd also runs the Brazilian Center for Flying Saucer Research, with 3,300 members. While attending a conference in Las Vegas in 1992, he personally experienced what may have been a UFO while driving in the Nevada Desert in the US, near the Area 51 military base.
Views on UFOs
At a 1996 conference in Chile, Gevaerd reported that UFO sightings around the world had risen by more than 200% in the past year. He said "there are places where there has been a 400 percent rise. This means a true wave of UFOs visiting Earth, and I have more 100 slides to prove it."
Speaking at the Australian International UFO Symposium in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia in October 1996, he discussed two aliens allegedly captured by the army after their space vehicle crashed in Varginha, Brazil on 20 January 1996. The description of one of the creatures was similar to that of the standard short grey alien, but it had greasy brown skin, red eyes and protuberances that could have been horns.
Both aliens were viewed by many witnesses, but the army warned them not to discuss the subject.
Speaking later, he said that six aliens were captured and several parts of their UFO. There were witnesses among the firefighters who were the first officials on the scene, and the military confirmed the story.
In 1997 Gevaerd's Brazilian Committee of Ufologists organized the First World Forum of Ufology in Brazil, held in Brasília.
Answering questions from the audience during a 2001 talk show, he described the great advances that had been made in ufology in recent years, and particularly in Brazil, which he described as a leading center of research. He defended serious research into UFOs against quacksters seeking to make money, and commentators who ridiculed the subject. He discussed the many documented sightings, including reports in the Bible. He noted that there was evidence that extraterrestrials had been involved in the construction of the Egyptian pyramids. He said that many different alien species had visited Earth, and that for some reason all had two arms, a torso, two legs and a head.
Gevaerd has denounced the controversial Urandir Fernandes de Oliveira, saying he had faked images of UFOs with devices such a laser pens.
Talking of a video of flying saucers over Haiti released on YouTube in late 2007, which had more than 8 million hits on YouTube, he said "It was the largest UFO phenomenon over the past 10 years. But it was a deliberate fraud. These things, while they popularize ufology, stink." He said that unmasking fraud is a major job for ufologists: easy to produce and release videos makes it difficult to separate what is fabricated from what is just inexplicable.
In July 2008 Gevaerd asked "If we already have machines that can investigate the soil of Mars, why should other extraterrestrial beings be unable to develop technology to reach Earth?" He said the problem is that the governments of various countries treat the issue as something top secret, but expressed hope that policy makers were beginning to change their attitude.
In August 2008 he claimed that acceptance of ETs had never been higher. He said that 6 or 7 of every 10 person polled are at least more sure than not that we are not alone in the universe and that we are visited by other species.
In February 2007 the feature-length documentary Fastwalkers was released, featuring interviews of Gevaerd and others on the subject of UFOs and extraterrestrials.
In July 2007 the offices of UFO Magazine were raided, with valuable information taken from filing cabinet folders, along with four computers. A police officer said "it is clear that the action was premeditated and carried out by elements that had knowledge of the activities of UFO Magazine, experience with computers and knew where to find the company's most important files." Gevaerd said that efforts to stop publication would have the opposite effect. That week the magazine launched its 25th DVD documentary, The Phoenix Lights, depicting one of the largest UFO waves in the news, in March 1997, in the city of the state of Arizona, USA.
Gevaerd was a keynote speaker in June 2008 at the first International Meeting of ufology experts in Lisbon, discussing the Varginha UFO incident.
In August 2009 he was a keynote speaker at a ufology conference in San Clemente, Chile.
He was slated as a speaker at the 18th Annual International UFO Congress Convention and Film Festival in Laughlin, Nevada in February 2009, speaking on the need for the public to demand that the government release information about extraterrestrial life.
Crop circles
Discussing UFO sightings and crop circles that appeared near Riolândia, São Paulo in January 2000, he said that the bent reeds were not evidence. What counted was the appearance of discoidal objects.
In 2002, Gevaerd investigated crop circles in the fields of Alton Barnes in southern England, 30 km from the resort of Avebury. He speculated that the circles and other designs in the British fields represented some kind of coded message.
In November 2008, crop circles were found in the west of Santa Catarina. Gevaerd investigated the circles, which he said were similar to crop circles he had investigated in Europe, starting with fields located some 150 miles from London.
Later he found that they were fraudulent. He said they differed in significant respects from genuine crop circles, and there was evidence of fabrication.
Government information
Gevaerd has said that one of the reasons why ufologists do not let themselves be discouraged by lack of proof for their theories is due to the fact most of them believe in the existence of a government conspiracy to hide the truth from the people.
On 15 April 2004, Gevaerd's Brazilian Committee of Ufologists launched a campaign called "Freedom of Information Now!" with the goal of pressuring the government to release information on UFO sightings.
On 20 May 2005, Gevaerd led a delegation of ufologists who met with Brazilian Air Force officials in Brasília headed by Brigadier Telles Ribeiro, chief of the Air Force's Center for Public Communications.
In an interview after the meeting, Gevaerd said his group had been shown information on three specific cases: the testimony of the head of Varig, Nagib Ayub, on a UFO seen in the airspace in Rio Grande do Sul in 1954, testimony from pilots who pursued 21 UFOs flying over São Paulo, São José dos Campos and Rio de Janeiro in May 1986, and a Brazilian Air Force investigation of UFOs held in 1977 in Pará, by Colonel Uyrange Hollanda, who died in 1997. According to Hollanda, "we detected at least nine forms of objects. Probes, flying saucer-shaped spaceships... All reports were sent by the 1st COMAR to Brasilia."
At a 2007 seminar on UFOs in Chile, he disclosed "Operation Plate", a highly secret UFO research project conducted by the Brazilian Air Force.
In August 2008 Gevaerd stated that the government has plenty of information that UFOs enter Brazilian air space every day, but refuses to publish it.
Discussing the campaign for release of government information, at a September 2008 meeting of UFO enthusiasts he stated, "We are being visited by many civilizations from other planets. I have a feeling that we will soon have an answer to the questions we are all seeking."
In April 2009, Gevaerd described the declassification of documents that have always been declared TOP SECRET as a historic event. He said no country had gone so far in the disclosure of information on UFOs.
In September 2009, Gevaerd announced receipt of a significant new set of UFO-related government documents, some of which had been secret for 80 years. The documents included fresh details of UFO reports from the night of 19 May 1986, when 21 spherical objects, which according to military sources were 100 feet in diameter, were detected by radar and sighted by civilian pilots and literally blocked the main airports in Brazil including São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro.
However, Gevaerd said in an interview that tapes of the interception operations from that event had been destroyed.
In March 2010 Gevaerd discussed the downgrading of UFO documents by the administration of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, saying that in 2009 he had received between 50 and 80 documents with a total of four thousand pages contained information from armed forces investigation of the UFO phenomenon.
In an August 2010 interview with Terra Magazine, Gevaerd commented on the Federal Government decree that the air force should send records of any UFO sightings to the National Archives, saying the decision was in response to the campaign by the Brazilian Committee of UFO enthusiasts for freedom of information. He noted that documents already released confirmed that UFOs had been sighted frequently, and said that the government had more than 12 tons of documents about these sightings. Commenting on some initial documents released by the Air Force on 20 March 1996 sightings of UFOs in five cities in southern Brazil, he said "It's just the tip of the iceberg." The Air Force stated that they would not release any secret documents. Brigadier José Carlos Pereira, in charge of UFO records, said "If an extraordinary phenomenon happens, it is obvious that it will be kept under wraps."
Personal life
Gevaerd had three children, Daniel, Daniela and Pedro. Daniel took part of the "Casa de Vidro" (Glass House), a preliminary stage of the Big Brother Brasil 9, but did not make it to the main stage. Daniela was the manager and administrator of Revista Ufo, and died on 8 March 2015 in Campo Grande in a car crash. Pedro is a high school student.
References
External links
Ufologists
Living people
1952 births
Brazilian journalists
People from Maringá | [
"Ademar José Gevaerd (born 1952, also known simply as A. J. Gevaerd) is a Brazilian ufologist, or specialist in the study of Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs).",
"He is editor of Revista UFO (UFO Magazine), founder and director of the Brazilian Center for Flying Saucer Research (CBPDV) and Brazilian Director for Mutual UFO Network (MUFON).",
"He represents Brazil at the Center for UFO Studies.",
"He has appeared on the Globo Network, the Discovery Channel and the History Channel.",
"He has spoken in many cities in Brazil and in other 29 countries, and has conducted over 700 field investigations of UFO cases in Brazil.",
"He has been described as one of the most respected of ufologists.",
"Early career\nOn 6 March 1982, spectators at a football match at the Morenão stadium in Campo Grande saw a cigar-shaped object with lights at each end flying overhead.",
"At that time, Ademar José Gevaerd was teaching chemistry in Maringá, Paraná state.",
"Convinced that the object was a flying saucer, and hearing of other sightings at the same time in São Paulo, Paraná, Argentina, Bolivia and Paraguay, he decided to undertake a deeper study of UFOs.",
"In 1985 he launched the magazine Ufologia Nacional & Internacional, which ceased publication in 1986.",
"In 1988 he started UFO Magazine, still being published in 2014.",
"In 1986 he left his teaching job to devote himself full-time to UFOs.",
"The monthly UFO Magazine now has a circulation of 30,000.",
"Gevaerd also runs the Brazilian Center for Flying Saucer Research, with 3,300 members.",
"While attending a conference in Las Vegas in 1992, he personally experienced what may have been a UFO while driving in the Nevada Desert in the US, near the Area 51 military base.",
"Views on UFOs\n\nAt a 1996 conference in Chile, Gevaerd reported that UFO sightings around the world had risen by more than 200% in the past year.",
"He said \"there are places where there has been a 400 percent rise.",
"This means a true wave of UFOs visiting Earth, and I have more 100 slides to prove it.\"",
"Speaking at the Australian International UFO Symposium in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia in October 1996, he discussed two aliens allegedly captured by the army after their space vehicle crashed in Varginha, Brazil on 20 January 1996.",
"The description of one of the creatures was similar to that of the standard short grey alien, but it had greasy brown skin, red eyes and protuberances that could have been horns.",
"Both aliens were viewed by many witnesses, but the army warned them not to discuss the subject.",
"Speaking later, he said that six aliens were captured and several parts of their UFO.",
"There were witnesses among the firefighters who were the first officials on the scene, and the military confirmed the story.",
"In 1997 Gevaerd's Brazilian Committee of Ufologists organized the First World Forum of Ufology in Brazil, held in Brasília.",
"Answering questions from the audience during a 2001 talk show, he described the great advances that had been made in ufology in recent years, and particularly in Brazil, which he described as a leading center of research.",
"He defended serious research into UFOs against quacksters seeking to make money, and commentators who ridiculed the subject.",
"He discussed the many documented sightings, including reports in the Bible.",
"He noted that there was evidence that extraterrestrials had been involved in the construction of the Egyptian pyramids.",
"He said that many different alien species had visited Earth, and that for some reason all had two arms, a torso, two legs and a head.",
"Gevaerd has denounced the controversial Urandir Fernandes de Oliveira, saying he had faked images of UFOs with devices such a laser pens.",
"Talking of a video of flying saucers over Haiti released on YouTube in late 2007, which had more than 8 million hits on YouTube, he said \"It was the largest UFO phenomenon over the past 10 years.",
"But it was a deliberate fraud.",
"These things, while they popularize ufology, stink.\"",
"He said that unmasking fraud is a major job for ufologists: easy to produce and release videos makes it difficult to separate what is fabricated from what is just inexplicable.",
"In July 2008 Gevaerd asked \"If we already have machines that can investigate the soil of Mars, why should other extraterrestrial beings be unable to develop technology to reach Earth?\"",
"He said the problem is that the governments of various countries treat the issue as something top secret, but expressed hope that policy makers were beginning to change their attitude.",
"In August 2008 he claimed that acceptance of ETs had never been higher.",
"He said that 6 or 7 of every 10 person polled are at least more sure than not that we are not alone in the universe and that we are visited by other species.",
"In February 2007 the feature-length documentary Fastwalkers was released, featuring interviews of Gevaerd and others on the subject of UFOs and extraterrestrials.",
"In July 2007 the offices of UFO Magazine were raided, with valuable information taken from filing cabinet folders, along with four computers.",
"A police officer said \"it is clear that the action was premeditated and carried out by elements that had knowledge of the activities of UFO Magazine, experience with computers and knew where to find the company's most important files.\"",
"Gevaerd said that efforts to stop publication would have the opposite effect.",
"That week the magazine launched its 25th DVD documentary, The Phoenix Lights, depicting one of the largest UFO waves in the news, in March 1997, in the city of the state of Arizona, USA.",
"Gevaerd was a keynote speaker in June 2008 at the first International Meeting of ufology experts in Lisbon, discussing the Varginha UFO incident.",
"In August 2009 he was a keynote speaker at a ufology conference in San Clemente, Chile.",
"He was slated as a speaker at the 18th Annual International UFO Congress Convention and Film Festival in Laughlin, Nevada in February 2009, speaking on the need for the public to demand that the government release information about extraterrestrial life.",
"Crop circles\n\nDiscussing UFO sightings and crop circles that appeared near Riolândia, São Paulo in January 2000, he said that the bent reeds were not evidence.",
"What counted was the appearance of discoidal objects.",
"In 2002, Gevaerd investigated crop circles in the fields of Alton Barnes in southern England, 30 km from the resort of Avebury.",
"He speculated that the circles and other designs in the British fields represented some kind of coded message.",
"In November 2008, crop circles were found in the west of Santa Catarina.",
"Gevaerd investigated the circles, which he said were similar to crop circles he had investigated in Europe, starting with fields located some 150 miles from London.",
"Later he found that they were fraudulent.",
"He said they differed in significant respects from genuine crop circles, and there was evidence of fabrication.",
"Government information\n\nGevaerd has said that one of the reasons why ufologists do not let themselves be discouraged by lack of proof for their theories is due to the fact most of them believe in the existence of a government conspiracy to hide the truth from the people.",
"On 15 April 2004, Gevaerd's Brazilian Committee of Ufologists launched a campaign called \"Freedom of Information Now!\"",
"with the goal of pressuring the government to release information on UFO sightings.",
"On 20 May 2005, Gevaerd led a delegation of ufologists who met with Brazilian Air Force officials in Brasília headed by Brigadier Telles Ribeiro, chief of the Air Force's Center for Public Communications.",
"In an interview after the meeting, Gevaerd said his group had been shown information on three specific cases: the testimony of the head of Varig, Nagib Ayub, on a UFO seen in the airspace in Rio Grande do Sul in 1954, testimony from pilots who pursued 21 UFOs flying over São Paulo, São José dos Campos and Rio de Janeiro in May 1986, and a Brazilian Air Force investigation of UFOs held in 1977 in Pará, by Colonel Uyrange Hollanda, who died in 1997.",
"According to Hollanda, \"we detected at least nine forms of objects.",
"Probes, flying saucer-shaped spaceships... All reports were sent by the 1st COMAR to Brasilia.\"",
"At a 2007 seminar on UFOs in Chile, he disclosed \"Operation Plate\", a highly secret UFO research project conducted by the Brazilian Air Force.",
"In August 2008 Gevaerd stated that the government has plenty of information that UFOs enter Brazilian air space every day, but refuses to publish it.",
"Discussing the campaign for release of government information, at a September 2008 meeting of UFO enthusiasts he stated, \"We are being visited by many civilizations from other planets.",
"I have a feeling that we will soon have an answer to the questions we are all seeking.\"",
"In April 2009, Gevaerd described the declassification of documents that have always been declared TOP SECRET as a historic event.",
"He said no country had gone so far in the disclosure of information on UFOs.",
"In September 2009, Gevaerd announced receipt of a significant new set of UFO-related government documents, some of which had been secret for 80 years.",
"The documents included fresh details of UFO reports from the night of 19 May 1986, when 21 spherical objects, which according to military sources were 100 feet in diameter, were detected by radar and sighted by civilian pilots and literally blocked the main airports in Brazil including São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro.",
"However, Gevaerd said in an interview that tapes of the interception operations from that event had been destroyed.",
"In March 2010 Gevaerd discussed the downgrading of UFO documents by the administration of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, saying that in 2009 he had received between 50 and 80 documents with a total of four thousand pages contained information from armed forces investigation of the UFO phenomenon.",
"In an August 2010 interview with Terra Magazine, Gevaerd commented on the Federal Government decree that the air force should send records of any UFO sightings to the National Archives, saying the decision was in response to the campaign by the Brazilian Committee of UFO enthusiasts for freedom of information.",
"He noted that documents already released confirmed that UFOs had been sighted frequently, and said that the government had more than 12 tons of documents about these sightings.",
"Commenting on some initial documents released by the Air Force on 20 March 1996 sightings of UFOs in five cities in southern Brazil, he said \"It's just the tip of the iceberg.\"",
"The Air Force stated that they would not release any secret documents.",
"Brigadier José Carlos Pereira, in charge of UFO records, said \"If an extraordinary phenomenon happens, it is obvious that it will be kept under wraps.\"",
"Personal life \nGevaerd had three children, Daniel, Daniela and Pedro.",
"Daniel took part of the \"Casa de Vidro\" (Glass House), a preliminary stage of the Big Brother Brasil 9, but did not make it to the main stage.",
"Daniela was the manager and administrator of Revista Ufo, and died on 8 March 2015 in Campo Grande in a car crash.",
"Pedro is a high school student.",
"References\n\nExternal links\n\nUfologists\nLiving people\n1952 births\nBrazilian journalists\nPeople from Maringá"
] | [
"Ademar José Gevaerd is a Brazilian ufologist who studies unexplained flying objects.",
"He is the founder and director of the Brazilian Center for Flying Saucer Research.",
"He is a representative of Brazil at the center.",
"He has appeared on several networks.",
"He has conducted over 700 field investigations of unexplained flying objects in Brazil.",
"He is one of the most respected ufologists.",
"On 6 March 1982, spectators at a football match at the Moreno stadium in Campo Grande saw a cigar-shaped object with lights at each end flying overhead.",
"Ademar José Gevaerd was teaching chemistry in Maring.",
"He was convinced that the object was a flying saucer, and he decided to do a deeper study of the phenomenon.",
"The magazine Ufologia Nacional & Internacional ceased publication in 1986.",
"He started a magazine in 1988.",
"He left his teaching job in 1986 to devote himself to aliens.",
"The magazine has a circulation of 30,000.",
"The Brazilian Center for Flying Saucer Research has 3,300 members.",
"While attending a conference in Las Vegas in 1992, he personally experienced something that may have been a flying object.",
"According to Gevaerd, there had been a 200% increase in the number of unexplained phenomena around the world in the past year.",
"There are places where the rise has been 400 percent.",
"I have more than 100 slides to prove that this is a true wave of aliens.",
"He talked about aliens captured by the army after their space vehicle crashed in Varginha, Brazil, in 1996, at the Australian International UFO Symposium.",
"The description of one of the creatures was similar to that of a short grey alien, but it had brown skin, red eyes, and protuberances that could have been horns.",
"The aliens were warned not to discuss the subject by the army.",
"He said that six aliens were captured.",
"The military confirmed that there were witnesses among the firefighters who were first on the scene.",
"The First World Forum of Ufology in Brazil was held in Braslia in 1997.",
"He described the advances that had been made in ufology during a 2001 talk show, and particularly in Brazil, which he described as a leading center of research.",
"He defended research into the subject against people who were trying to make money.",
"He talked about the reports in the Bible.",
"Evidence shows that extraterrestrials were involved in the construction of the Egyptian pyramids.",
"He said that there were many different alien species that had two arms, a torso, two legs and a head.",
"Gevaerd said that the man had faked images of aliens with devices such as laser pens.",
"He said that a video of flying saucers over Haiti in late 2007, which had more than 8 million hits on YouTube, was the largest UFO phenomenon over the past 10 years.",
"It was a deliberate fraud.",
"These things popularize ufology.",
"It's difficult to separate what is fabricated from what is inexplicable because it's easy to produce and release videos.",
"In July 2008 Gevaerd asked, \"If we already have machines that can investigate the soil of Mars, why should other extraterrestrial beings be unable to develop technology to reach Earth?\"",
"He expressed hope that policy makers were beginning to change their attitude after he said that the governments of various countries treat the issue as something top secret.",
"He claimed in August of 2008 that acceptance had never been higher.",
"He said that 6 or 7 of every 10 people he talked to were more sure that we are not alone in the universe and that we are visited by other species.",
"The documentary Fastwalkers was released in February of 2007, featuring interviews of Gevaerd and others on the subject of extraterrestrials.",
"The offices of UFO Magazine were raided in July of 2007, with valuable information taken from filing cabinet folders.",
"A police officer said that the action was premeditated and carried out by elements that knew where to find the company's most important files and had experience with computers.",
"Efforts to stop publication would have the opposite effect, according to Gevaerd.",
"The magazine launched its 25th DVD documentary, The Phoenix Lights, in March 1997 in the city of Arizona, USA.",
"In June 2008 Gevaerd was a keynote speaker at the first International Meeting of ufology experts in Lisbon.",
"He was a keynote speaker at a ufology conference.",
"He was scheduled to speak on the need for the public to demand that the government release information about extraterrestrial life at the 18th Annual International UFO Congress Convention and Film Festival in Nevada in February 2009.",
"He said that the bent reeds were not evidence of crop circles near Riolndia.",
"The appearance of discs was what counted.",
"30 km from the resort of Avebury, Gevaerd investigated crop circles in the fields of Alton Barnes in 2002.",
"He thought that the circles and other designs in the British fields represented a message.",
"Crop circles were found in the west of Santa Catarina.",
"Gevaerd investigated the circles, which he said were similar to crop circles he had investigated in Europe, starting with fields 150 miles from London.",
"He found that they were not legit.",
"He said they were different from genuine crop circles and there was evidence of fabrication.",
"Government information Gevaerd said that one of the reasons why ufologists don't let themselves be discouraged by lack of proof for their theories is because most of them believe in a government conspiracy to hide the truth from the people.",
"The Brazilian Committee of Ufologists launched a campaign called \"Freedom of Information Now!\" in 2004.",
"The goal is to get the government to release information.",
"Gevaerd led a delegation of ufologists who met with Brazilian Air Force officials in Braslia.",
"In an interview after the meeting, Gevaerd said his group had been shown information on three specific cases: the testimony of the head of Varig, Nagib Ayub, on a UFO seen in the airspace in Rio Grande do Sul in 1954.",
"Hollanda said that they detected at least nine forms of objects.",
"The reports were sent by the 1st COMAR.",
"The Brazilian Air Force conducted a highly secret project called \"Operation Plate\", which was disclosed at a seminar in 2007.",
"According to Gevaerd, the government has a lot of information about aliens entering Brazilian air space but doesn't publish it.",
"He stated that we are being visited by many civilizations from other planets while discussing the campaign for release of government information.",
"I think we will get an answer to the questions we are asking.",
"In April 2009, Gevaerd described the declassification of documents as a historic event.",
"He said there had been no country that had gone as far as he had.",
"In September 2009, Gevaerd announced receipt of a significant new set of government documents, some of which had been secret for 80 years.",
"According to military sources, 21 spherical objects, which were 100 feet in diameter, were detected by radar and spotted by civilian pilots and blocked the main airports in Brazil, including So Paulo and Rio de Janeiro.",
"In an interview, Gevaerd said that tapes of the intercept operations had been destroyed.",
"Gevaerd said in March 2010 that he had received between 50 and 80 documents with four thousand pages of information from the armed forces investigation of the UFO phenomenon.",
"In an August 2010 interview with Terra Magazine, Gevaerd commented on the Federal Government decree that the air force should send records of any unexplained flying objects to the National Archives.",
"He said that the government had more than 12 tons of documents about the occurrences of unexplained flying objects.",
"He said that the initial documents released by the Air Force on 20 March 1996 were just the beginning.",
"The Air Force wouldn't release any secret documents.",
"If an extraordinary phenomenon happens, it is obvious that it will be kept under wraps.",
"Gevaerd had three children.",
"Daniel did not make it to the main stage of the Big Brother Brasil 9 even though he was part of the \"Glass House\".",
"The manager and administrator of Revista Ufo died in a car crash.",
"Pedro is a student.",
"People from Maring are linked to Ufologists Living people 1952 births Brazilian journalists"
] | <mask> (born 1952, also known simply as A. J<mask>) is a Brazilian ufologist, or specialist in the study of Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs). He is editor of Revista UFO (UFO Magazine), founder and director of the Brazilian Center for Flying Saucer Research (CBPDV) and Brazilian Director for Mutual UFO Network (MUFON). He represents Brazil at the Center for UFO Studies. He has appeared on the Globo Network, the Discovery Channel and the History Channel. He has spoken in many cities in Brazil and in other 29 countries, and has conducted over 700 field investigations of UFO cases in Brazil. He has been described as one of the most respected of ufologists. Early career
On 6 March 1982, spectators at a football match at the Morenão stadium in Campo Grande saw a cigar-shaped object with lights at each end flying overhead.At that time, <mask> <mask> was teaching chemistry in Maringá, Paraná state. Convinced that the object was a flying saucer, and hearing of other sightings at the same time in São Paulo, Paraná, Argentina, Bolivia and Paraguay, he decided to undertake a deeper study of UFOs. In 1985 he launched the magazine Ufologia Nacional & Internacional, which ceased publication in 1986. In 1988 he started UFO Magazine, still being published in 2014. In 1986 he left his teaching job to devote himself full-time to UFOs. The monthly UFO Magazine now has a circulation of 30,000. <mask> also runs the Brazilian Center for Flying Saucer Research, with 3,300 members.While attending a conference in Las Vegas in 1992, he personally experienced what may have been a UFO while driving in the Nevada Desert in the US, near the Area 51 military base. Views on UFOs
At a 1996 conference in Chile, <mask> reported that UFO sightings around the world had risen by more than 200% in the past year. He said "there are places where there has been a 400 percent rise. This means a true wave of UFOs visiting Earth, and I have more 100 slides to prove it." Speaking at the Australian International UFO Symposium in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia in October 1996, he discussed two aliens allegedly captured by the army after their space vehicle crashed in Varginha, Brazil on 20 January 1996. The description of one of the creatures was similar to that of the standard short grey alien, but it had greasy brown skin, red eyes and protuberances that could have been horns. Both aliens were viewed by many witnesses, but the army warned them not to discuss the subject.Speaking later, he said that six aliens were captured and several parts of their UFO. There were witnesses among the firefighters who were the first officials on the scene, and the military confirmed the story. In 1997 <mask>'s Brazilian Committee of Ufologists organized the First World Forum of Ufology in Brazil, held in Brasília. Answering questions from the audience during a 2001 talk show, he described the great advances that had been made in ufology in recent years, and particularly in Brazil, which he described as a leading center of research. He defended serious research into UFOs against quacksters seeking to make money, and commentators who ridiculed the subject. He discussed the many documented sightings, including reports in the Bible. He noted that there was evidence that extraterrestrials had been involved in the construction of the Egyptian pyramids.He said that many different alien species had visited Earth, and that for some reason all had two arms, a torso, two legs and a head. <mask> has denounced the controversial Urandir Fernandes de Oliveira, saying he had faked images of UFOs with devices such a laser pens. Talking of a video of flying saucers over Haiti released on YouTube in late 2007, which had more than 8 million hits on YouTube, he said "It was the largest UFO phenomenon over the past 10 years. But it was a deliberate fraud. These things, while they popularize ufology, stink." He said that unmasking fraud is a major job for ufologists: easy to produce and release videos makes it difficult to separate what is fabricated from what is just inexplicable. In July 2008 <mask> asked "If we already have machines that can investigate the soil of Mars, why should other extraterrestrial beings be unable to develop technology to reach Earth?"He said the problem is that the governments of various countries treat the issue as something top secret, but expressed hope that policy makers were beginning to change their attitude. In August 2008 he claimed that acceptance of ETs had never been higher. He said that 6 or 7 of every 10 person polled are at least more sure than not that we are not alone in the universe and that we are visited by other species. In February 2007 the feature-length documentary Fastwalkers was released, featuring interviews of <mask> and others on the subject of UFOs and extraterrestrials. In July 2007 the offices of UFO Magazine were raided, with valuable information taken from filing cabinet folders, along with four computers. A police officer said "it is clear that the action was premeditated and carried out by elements that had knowledge of the activities of UFO Magazine, experience with computers and knew where to find the company's most important files." <mask> said that efforts to stop publication would have the opposite effect.That week the magazine launched its 25th DVD documentary, The Phoenix Lights, depicting one of the largest UFO waves in the news, in March 1997, in the city of the state of Arizona, USA. <mask> was a keynote speaker in June 2008 at the first International Meeting of ufology experts in Lisbon, discussing the Varginha UFO incident. In August 2009 he was a keynote speaker at a ufology conference in San Clemente, Chile. He was slated as a speaker at the 18th Annual International UFO Congress Convention and Film Festival in Laughlin, Nevada in February 2009, speaking on the need for the public to demand that the government release information about extraterrestrial life. Crop circles
Discussing UFO sightings and crop circles that appeared near Riolândia, São Paulo in January 2000, he said that the bent reeds were not evidence. What counted was the appearance of discoidal objects. In 2002, Gevaerd investigated crop circles in the fields of Alton Barnes in southern England, 30 km from the resort of Avebury.He speculated that the circles and other designs in the British fields represented some kind of coded message. In November 2008, crop circles were found in the west of Santa Catarina. <mask> investigated the circles, which he said were similar to crop circles he had investigated in Europe, starting with fields located some 150 miles from London. Later he found that they were fraudulent. He said they differed in significant respects from genuine crop circles, and there was evidence of fabrication. Government information
<mask> has said that one of the reasons why ufologists do not let themselves be discouraged by lack of proof for their theories is due to the fact most of them believe in the existence of a government conspiracy to hide the truth from the people. On 15 April 2004, <mask>'s Brazilian Committee of Ufologists launched a campaign called "Freedom of Information Now!"with the goal of pressuring the government to release information on UFO sightings. On 20 May 2005, <mask> led a delegation of ufologists who met with Brazilian Air Force officials in Brasília headed by Brigadier Telles Ribeiro, chief of the Air Force's Center for Public Communications. In an interview after the meeting, <mask> said his group had been shown information on three specific cases: the testimony of the head of Varig, Nagib Ayub, on a UFO seen in the airspace in Rio Grande do Sul in 1954, testimony from pilots who pursued 21 UFOs flying over São Paulo, São José dos Campos and Rio de Janeiro in May 1986, and a Brazilian Air Force investigation of UFOs held in 1977 in Pará, by Colonel Uyrange Hollanda, who died in 1997. According to Hollanda, "we detected at least nine forms of objects. Probes, flying saucer-shaped spaceships... All reports were sent by the 1st COMAR to Brasilia." At a 2007 seminar on UFOs in Chile, he disclosed "Operation Plate", a highly secret UFO research project conducted by the Brazilian Air Force. In August 2008 <mask> stated that the government has plenty of information that UFOs enter Brazilian air space every day, but refuses to publish it.Discussing the campaign for release of government information, at a September 2008 meeting of UFO enthusiasts he stated, "We are being visited by many civilizations from other planets. I have a feeling that we will soon have an answer to the questions we are all seeking." In April 2009, <mask> described the declassification of documents that have always been declared TOP SECRET as a historic event. He said no country had gone so far in the disclosure of information on UFOs. In September 2009, <mask> announced receipt of a significant new set of UFO-related government documents, some of which had been secret for 80 years. The documents included fresh details of UFO reports from the night of 19 May 1986, when 21 spherical objects, which according to military sources were 100 feet in diameter, were detected by radar and sighted by civilian pilots and literally blocked the main airports in Brazil including São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro. However, <mask> said in an interview that tapes of the interception operations from that event had been destroyed.In March 2010 <mask> discussed the downgrading of UFO documents by the administration of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, saying that in 2009 he had received between 50 and 80 documents with a total of four thousand pages contained information from armed forces investigation of the UFO phenomenon. In an August 2010 interview with Terra Magazine, <mask> commented on the Federal Government decree that the air force should send records of any UFO sightings to the National Archives, saying the decision was in response to the campaign by the Brazilian Committee of UFO enthusiasts for freedom of information. He noted that documents already released confirmed that UFOs had been sighted frequently, and said that the government had more than 12 tons of documents about these sightings. Commenting on some initial documents released by the Air Force on 20 March 1996 sightings of UFOs in five cities in southern Brazil, he said "It's just the tip of the iceberg." The Air Force stated that they would not release any secret documents. Brigadier <mask> Pereira, in charge of UFO records, said "If an extraordinary phenomenon happens, it is obvious that it will be kept under wraps." Personal life
<mask> had three children, Daniel, Daniela and Pedro.Daniel took part of the "Casa de Vidro" (Glass House), a preliminary stage of the Big Brother Brasil 9, but did not make it to the main stage. Daniela was the manager and administrator of Revista Ufo, and died on 8 March 2015 in Campo Grande in a car crash. Pedro is a high school student. References
External links
Ufologists
Living people
1952 births
Brazilian journalists
People from Maringá | [
"Ademar José Gevaerd",
". Gevaerd",
"Ademar",
"José Gevaerd",
"Gevaerd",
"Gevaerd",
"Gevaerd",
"Gevaerd",
"Gevaerd",
"Gevaerd",
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"Gevaerd",
"Gevaerd",
"Gevaerd",
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"Gevaerd",
"Gevaerd",
"Gevaerd",
"Gevaerd",
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"José Carlos",
"Gevaerd"
] | <mask> is a Brazilian ufologist who studies unexplained flying objects. He is the founder and director of the Brazilian Center for Flying Saucer Research. He is a representative of Brazil at the center. He has appeared on several networks. He has conducted over 700 field investigations of unexplained flying objects in Brazil. He is one of the most respected ufologists. On 6 March 1982, spectators at a football match at the Moreno stadium in Campo Grande saw a cigar-shaped object with lights at each end flying overhead.<mask> <mask> was teaching chemistry in Maring. He was convinced that the object was a flying saucer, and he decided to do a deeper study of the phenomenon. The magazine Ufologia Nacional & Internacional ceased publication in 1986. He started a magazine in 1988. He left his teaching job in 1986 to devote himself to aliens. The magazine has a circulation of 30,000. The Brazilian Center for Flying Saucer Research has 3,300 members.While attending a conference in Las Vegas in 1992, he personally experienced something that may have been a flying object. According to Gevaerd, there had been a 200% increase in the number of unexplained phenomena around the world in the past year. There are places where the rise has been 400 percent. I have more than 100 slides to prove that this is a true wave of aliens. He talked about aliens captured by the army after their space vehicle crashed in Varginha, Brazil, in 1996, at the Australian International UFO Symposium. The description of one of the creatures was similar to that of a short grey alien, but it had brown skin, red eyes, and protuberances that could have been horns. The aliens were warned not to discuss the subject by the army.He said that six aliens were captured. The military confirmed that there were witnesses among the firefighters who were first on the scene. The First World Forum of Ufology in Brazil was held in Braslia in 1997. He described the advances that had been made in ufology during a 2001 talk show, and particularly in Brazil, which he described as a leading center of research. He defended research into the subject against people who were trying to make money. He talked about the reports in the Bible. Evidence shows that extraterrestrials were involved in the construction of the Egyptian pyramids.He said that there were many different alien species that had two arms, a torso, two legs and a head. <mask> said that the man had faked images of aliens with devices such as laser pens. He said that a video of flying saucers over Haiti in late 2007, which had more than 8 million hits on YouTube, was the largest UFO phenomenon over the past 10 years. It was a deliberate fraud. These things popularize ufology. It's difficult to separate what is fabricated from what is inexplicable because it's easy to produce and release videos. In July 2008 <mask> asked, "If we already have machines that can investigate the soil of Mars, why should other extraterrestrial beings be unable to develop technology to reach Earth?"He expressed hope that policy makers were beginning to change their attitude after he said that the governments of various countries treat the issue as something top secret. He claimed in August of 2008 that acceptance had never been higher. He said that 6 or 7 of every 10 people he talked to were more sure that we are not alone in the universe and that we are visited by other species. The documentary Fastwalkers was released in February of 2007, featuring interviews of <mask> and others on the subject of extraterrestrials. The offices of UFO Magazine were raided in July of 2007, with valuable information taken from filing cabinet folders. A police officer said that the action was premeditated and carried out by elements that knew where to find the company's most important files and had experience with computers. Efforts to stop publication would have the opposite effect, according to Gevaerd.The magazine launched its 25th DVD documentary, The Phoenix Lights, in March 1997 in the city of Arizona, USA. In June 2008 <mask> was a keynote speaker at the first International Meeting of ufology experts in Lisbon. He was a keynote speaker at a ufology conference. He was scheduled to speak on the need for the public to demand that the government release information about extraterrestrial life at the 18th Annual International UFO Congress Convention and Film Festival in Nevada in February 2009. He said that the bent reeds were not evidence of crop circles near Riolndia. The appearance of discs was what counted. 30 km from the resort of Avebury, Gevaerd investigated crop circles in the fields of Alton Barnes in 2002.He thought that the circles and other designs in the British fields represented a message. Crop circles were found in the west of Santa Catarina. <mask> investigated the circles, which he said were similar to crop circles he had investigated in Europe, starting with fields 150 miles from London. He found that they were not legit. He said they were different from genuine crop circles and there was evidence of fabrication. Government information <mask> said that one of the reasons why ufologists don't let themselves be discouraged by lack of proof for their theories is because most of them believe in a government conspiracy to hide the truth from the people. The Brazilian Committee of Ufologists launched a campaign called "Freedom of Information Now!" in 2004.The goal is to get the government to release information. <mask> led a delegation of ufologists who met with Brazilian Air Force officials in Braslia. In an interview after the meeting, <mask> said his group had been shown information on three specific cases: the testimony of the head of Varig, Nagib Ayub, on a UFO seen in the airspace in Rio Grande do Sul in 1954. Hollanda said that they detected at least nine forms of objects. The reports were sent by the 1st COMAR. The Brazilian Air Force conducted a highly secret project called "Operation Plate", which was disclosed at a seminar in 2007. According to <mask>, the government has a lot of information about aliens entering Brazilian air space but doesn't publish it.He stated that we are being visited by many civilizations from other planets while discussing the campaign for release of government information. I think we will get an answer to the questions we are asking. In April 2009, <mask> described the declassification of documents as a historic event. He said there had been no country that had gone as far as he had. In September 2009, <mask> announced receipt of a significant new set of government documents, some of which had been secret for 80 years. According to military sources, 21 spherical objects, which were 100 feet in diameter, were detected by radar and spotted by civilian pilots and blocked the main airports in Brazil, including So Paulo and Rio de Janeiro. In an interview, <mask> said that tapes of the intercept operations had been destroyed.<mask> said in March 2010 that he had received between 50 and 80 documents with four thousand pages of information from the armed forces investigation of the UFO phenomenon. In an August 2010 interview with Terra Magazine, <mask> commented on the Federal Government decree that the air force should send records of any unexplained flying objects to the National Archives. He said that the government had more than 12 tons of documents about the occurrences of unexplained flying objects. He said that the initial documents released by the Air Force on 20 March 1996 were just the beginning. The Air Force wouldn't release any secret documents. If an extraordinary phenomenon happens, it is obvious that it will be kept under wraps. Gevaerd had three children.Daniel did not make it to the main stage of the Big Brother Brasil 9 even though he was part of the "Glass House". The manager and administrator of Revista Ufo died in a car crash. Pedro is a student. People from Maring are linked to Ufologists Living people 1952 births Brazilian journalists | [
"Ademar José Gevaerd",
"Ademar",
"José Gevaerd",
"Gevaerd",
"Gevaerd",
"Gevaerd",
"Gevaerd",
"Gevaerd",
"Gevaerd",
"Gevaerd",
"Gevaerd",
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"Gevaerd",
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"Gevaerd"
] |
1369850 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kevin%20McCarthy%20%28actor%29 | Kevin McCarthy (actor) | Kevin McCarthy (February 15, 1914 – September 11, 2010) was an American stage, film and television actor. He is best remembered for portraying the male lead in the horror science fiction film Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956).
Following several television guest roles, McCarthy gave his first credited film performance in Death of a Salesman (1951), portraying Biff Loman to Fredric March's Willy Loman. The role earned him a Golden Globe Award and a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.
Early life
Kevin McCarthy was born in Seattle, Washington, the son of Roy Winfield McCarthy and Martha Therese (née Preston). McCarthy's father was descended from a wealthy Irish American family based in Minnesota. His mother was born in Washington State to a Protestant father and a nonobservant Jewish mother; McCarthy's mother converted to Roman Catholicism before her marriage. He was the brother of author Mary McCarthy, and a distant cousin of U.S. Senator and presidential candidate Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota. His parents both died in the 1918 flu pandemic, and the four children went to live with relatives in Minneapolis. After five years of near-Dickensian mistreatment, described in Mary McCarthy's memoirs, the children were separated: Mary lived with their maternal grandparents, and Kevin and his younger brothers were raised by relatives in Minneapolis. McCarthy graduated in 1932 from Campion High School in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin, then attended the University of Minnesota, where he appeared in his first play, Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part 1, and discovered a love of acting.
Career
Early career and military service
During his service in World War II in the United States Army Air Forces, in addition to his acting career, McCarthy appeared in a number of training films. At least one of these films (covering the Boeing B-17), has been distributed on DVD. McCarthy was a founding member of The Actors Studio.
Breakthrough in film
McCarthy's breakthrough role was in Death of a Salesman (1951) portraying Biff Loman to Fredric March's Willy Loman. He had first performed the role in the London theatrical debut and was the only member of that ensemble to be cast in László Benedek's film adaptation. He received good notices for his onscreen work, receiving the Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year – Actor and a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.
1956-1975
His starring roles include the lead in the science fiction film classic Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956), which remains the film for which he is most widely known. On television, he starred the short-lived series, The Survivors (1969) with Lana Turner. He also appeared as a guest star in many television programs, playing a wide variety of character roles.
McCarthy appeared with Alexis Smith in the NBC anthology series, The Joseph Cotten Show in the episode "We Who Love Her" (1956). He was cast in an episode of the religion anthology series, Crossroads. McCarthy appeared in the 1959 episode "The Wall Between" of CBS's The DuPont Show with June Allyson. He guest starred in a classic episode of CBS's The Twilight Zone entitled "Long Live Walter Jameson" (1960), as the title character.
McCarthy made two appearances on The Rifleman, starring Chuck Connors and Johnny Crawford. He portrayed the historical Mark Twain in "The Shattered Idol" (episode 120), original air date: December 4, 1961, and Winslow Quince in "Suspicion" (episode 157), original air date: January 14, 1963.
The Rifleman – Season 4 Episodes
The Rifleman – Suspicion, Episode 157, Season 5
In 1963, McCarthy appeared in the ABC medical drama Breaking Point in the episode titled "Fire and Ice". He guest starred in the ABC drama Going My Way, about the Roman Catholic priesthood in New York City. He was cast as well in a 1964 episode of James Franciscus's NBC education drama, Mr. Novak. In 1966, he appeared in the episode "Wife Killer" of the ABC adventure series The Fugitive. In 1967, he guest starred in the episode "Never Chase a Rainbow" of NBC's western series, The Road West starring Barry Sullivan. Also that year, he guest starred in the episode 'The Watchers' on the television series The Invaders
In 1968, McCarthy guest starred on Hawaii Five-O in the episode "Full Fathom Five" as the chief antagonist, Victor Reese. He appeared as Maj. Gen Kroll in The Night of the Doomsday Formula in season 4 of The Wild Wild West. In 1971, he guest starred in the "Conqueror's Gold" episode of Bearcats!, which starred Rod Taylor with whom McCarthy had appeared in the films A Gathering of Eagles, Hotel and The Hell With Heroes.
1975-1996
In 1976, McCarthy starred in the Broadway play Poor Murderer. In 1977, he and Clu Gulager, previously cast with Barry Sullivan on NBC's The Tall Man, appeared in the episode "The Army Deserter" of the NBC western series The Oregon Trail, with Rod Taylor. In 1978, McCarthy played a cameo role in a remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers, as a man running through the streets shouting a warning in the same manner as his character did in the original 1956 film. He appeared in NBC's Flamingo Road (1980–1982) as Claude Weldon, father of Morgan Fairchild's character. McCarthy appeared as Judge Crandall in The Midnight Hour, a 1985 comedy/horror television movie. Also that year, he guest-starred in a fourth-season episode of The A-Team called "Members Only".
McCarthy was one of four actors (with Dick Miller, Belinda Balaski and Robert Picardo) often cast by director Joe Dante. McCarthy's most notable role in Dante's films was in 1987 as the prime antagonist, Victor Scrimshaw, in Innerspace. They also were in Dante's Matinee.
In 1996, he played Gordon Fitzpatrick in The Pandora Directive, a Full motion video (FMV) adventure game starring Tex Murphy.
21st century
In 2007, McCarthy appeared as himself in the Anthony Hopkins film Slipstream which made references to McCarthy's film Invasion of the Body Snatchers.
On October 24, 2009, McCarthy was honored at the Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival in Florida.
His last role in a feature-length movie was as The Grand Inquisitor in the sci-fi musical comedy The Ghastly Love of Johnny X (2012).
Personal life
McCarthy was married to Augusta Dabney, with whom he had three children, from 1941 until their divorce in 1961. In 1979, he married Kate Crane, who survived him. The couple had two children.
From 1942, McCarthy and his wife Augusta Dabney had a close friendship with actor Montgomery Clift. McCarthy and Clift were cast in a play together, Ramon Naya's Mexican Mural. The two became best friends, acted together in several more projects, and were believed by some prominent individuals, including Tennessee Williams, Truman Capote and George Whitmore, to have been lovers. They also collaborated on a screenplay for a film adaptation of the Tennessee Williams/Donald Windham play You Touched Me!, but the project never came to fruition.
McCarthy died of pneumonia on September 11, 2010, at Cape Cod Hospital in Massachusetts at the age of ninety-six.
Selected filmography
1944 Winged Victory as Ronnie Meade (uncredited)
1951 Death of a Salesman as Biff Loman
1954 Drive a Crooked Road as Steve Norris, Bank Robber
1954 The Gambler from Natchez as André Rivage
1955 Stranger on Horseback as Tom Bannerman
1955 An Annapolis Story as Jim R. Scott
1956 Invasion of the Body Snatchers as Dr. Miles Bennell
1956 Nightmare as Stan Grayson
1958 Diamond Safari as Harry Jordan
1960 The Twilight Zone (TV Series) as Professor Walter Jameson / Tom Bowen / Major Hugh Skelton
1961 The Misfits as Raymond Tabor
1961 Way Out (TV Series) as Dr. Paul Sandham
1962 40 Pounds of Trouble as Louie Blanchard
1963 A Gathering of Eagles as General Jack 'Happy Jack' Kirby
1963 An Affair of the Skin as Allen McCleod
1963 The Prize as Dr. John Garrett
1964 The Best Man as Dick Jensen
1965 Mirage as Sylvester Josephson
1966 A Big Hand for the Little Lady as Otto Habershaw
1966 The Three Sisters as Vershinin
1967 Hotel as Curtis O'Keefe
1968 The Hell with Heroes as Colonel Wilson
1968 If He Hollers, Let Him Go! as Leslie Whitlock
1968 Ace High (1968) as Drake
The High Chaparral (TV Series)
1968-1976 Hawaii Five-O (TV Series) as Hunter R. Hickey / Victor Reese
1969-1970 Harold Robbins' The Survivors (TV Series) as Philip Hastings
1971 Mission: Impossible (TV Series) as Whitmore Channing
1972 Richard as Washington Doctor
1972 Kansas City Bomber as Burt Henry
1973 Columbo (TV Series) as Dr. Frank Simmons
1974 June Moon (TV Series) as Hart
1974 Alien Thunder as Sergeant Malcolm Grant
1975 Order to Assassinate as Ed McLean
1976 Buffalo Bill and the Indians, or Sitting Bull's History Lesson as Major Burke
1977 Mary Jane Harper Cried Last Night (TV Movie) as Tom Atherton
1978 Piranha as Dr. Robert Hoak
1978 Invasion of the Body Snatchers as Running Man (cameo appearance)
1980 Hero at Large as Calvin Donnelly
1980 Those Lips, Those Eyes as Mickey Bellinger
1981 The Howling as Fred Francis
1983 My Tutor as Mr. Chrystal
1983 Twilight Zone: The Movie as Uncle Walt (segment "It's a Good Life")
1983 Making of a Male Model as Ward Hawley
1984 Invitation to Hell (TV Movie) as Mr. Thompson
1985 The Midnight Hour (TV Movie) as Judge Crandall
1986 A Masterpiece of Murder (TV Movie) as Jonathan Hire
1986 The Golden Girls (Second Motherhood)
1987 Innerspace as Victor Eugene Scrimshaw
1987 Hostage as Colonel Tim Shaw
1987 Poor Little Rich Girl: The Barbara Hutton Story (TV Movie) as Franklyn Hutton
1988 Once Upon a Texas Train (TV Movie) as The Governor
1989 Dark Tower as Sergie
1989 Fast Food as Judge Reinholte
1989 UHF as R.J. Fletcher
1990 The Sleeping Car as Vincent Tuttle
1990 Ghoulies III: Ghoulies Go to College (Video) as Professor Ragnar
1991 Eve of Destruction as William Simmons (uncredited)
1991 Final Approach as General Geller
1992 The Distinguished Gentleman as Terry Corrigan
1993 Matinee as General Ankrum (uncredited)
1994 Greedy as Bartlett
1994 Judicial Consent as Judge Pollan
1995 Just Cause as Phil Prentiss
1995 Steal Big Steal Little as Reed Tyler
1995 Mommy as Fire Department Rescuer
1996 The Pandora Directive (Video Game) as Gordon Fitzpatrick
1998 Addams Family Reunion (TV Movie) as Grandpa Addams
2002 The Legend of Razorback as Zondervan
2003 Looney Tunes: Back in Action as Dr. Miles Bennell (cameo)
2006 Loving Annabelle as Father Harris
2006 Fallen Angels as Pastor Waltz
2007 Slipstream as Himself
2007 Trail of the Screaming Forehead as Latecomer
2008 The Boneyard Collection
2008 Her Morbid Desires (Video) as The Monk
2009 Wesley as Bishop Ryder
2012 The Ghastly Love of Johnny X as The Grand Inquisitor (final film role)
Radio appearances
See also
References
External links
Official site (last updated in 2007)
1914 births
2010 deaths
20th-century American male actors
Male actors from Minneapolis
Male actors from Seattle
Military personnel from Seattle
American male film actors
United States Army personnel of World War II
American people of Irish descent
American people of Jewish descent
American male stage actors
American male television actors
Deaths from pneumonia in Massachusetts
New Star of the Year (Actor) Golden Globe winners
United States Army soldiers
University of Minnesota alumni | [
"Kevin McCarthy (February 15, 1914 – September 11, 2010) was an American stage, film and television actor.",
"He is best remembered for portraying the male lead in the horror science fiction film Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956).",
"Following several television guest roles, McCarthy gave his first credited film performance in Death of a Salesman (1951), portraying Biff Loman to Fredric March's Willy Loman.",
"The role earned him a Golden Globe Award and a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.",
"Early life\nKevin McCarthy was born in Seattle, Washington, the son of Roy Winfield McCarthy and Martha Therese (née Preston).",
"McCarthy's father was descended from a wealthy Irish American family based in Minnesota.",
"His mother was born in Washington State to a Protestant father and a nonobservant Jewish mother; McCarthy's mother converted to Roman Catholicism before her marriage.",
"He was the brother of author Mary McCarthy, and a distant cousin of U.S.",
"Senator and presidential candidate Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota.",
"His parents both died in the 1918 flu pandemic, and the four children went to live with relatives in Minneapolis.",
"After five years of near-Dickensian mistreatment, described in Mary McCarthy's memoirs, the children were separated: Mary lived with their maternal grandparents, and Kevin and his younger brothers were raised by relatives in Minneapolis.",
"McCarthy graduated in 1932 from Campion High School in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin, then attended the University of Minnesota, where he appeared in his first play, Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part 1, and discovered a love of acting.",
"Career\n\nEarly career and military service\nDuring his service in World War II in the United States Army Air Forces, in addition to his acting career, McCarthy appeared in a number of training films.",
"At least one of these films (covering the Boeing B-17), has been distributed on DVD.",
"McCarthy was a founding member of The Actors Studio.",
"Breakthrough in film\nMcCarthy's breakthrough role was in Death of a Salesman (1951) portraying Biff Loman to Fredric March's Willy Loman.",
"He had first performed the role in the London theatrical debut and was the only member of that ensemble to be cast in László Benedek's film adaptation.",
"He received good notices for his onscreen work, receiving the Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year – Actor and a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.",
"1956-1975\n\nHis starring roles include the lead in the science fiction film classic Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956), which remains the film for which he is most widely known.",
"On television, he starred the short-lived series, The Survivors (1969) with Lana Turner.",
"He also appeared as a guest star in many television programs, playing a wide variety of character roles.",
"McCarthy appeared with Alexis Smith in the NBC anthology series, The Joseph Cotten Show in the episode \"We Who Love Her\" (1956).",
"He was cast in an episode of the religion anthology series, Crossroads.",
"McCarthy appeared in the 1959 episode \"The Wall Between\" of CBS's The DuPont Show with June Allyson.",
"He guest starred in a classic episode of CBS's The Twilight Zone entitled \"Long Live Walter Jameson\" (1960), as the title character.",
"McCarthy made two appearances on The Rifleman, starring Chuck Connors and Johnny Crawford.",
"He portrayed the historical Mark Twain in \"The Shattered Idol\" (episode 120), original air date: December 4, 1961, and Winslow Quince in \"Suspicion\" (episode 157), original air date: January 14, 1963.",
"The Rifleman – Season 4 Episodes\nThe Rifleman – Suspicion, Episode 157, Season 5\n\nIn 1963, McCarthy appeared in the ABC medical drama Breaking Point in the episode titled \"Fire and Ice\".",
"He guest starred in the ABC drama Going My Way, about the Roman Catholic priesthood in New York City.",
"He was cast as well in a 1964 episode of James Franciscus's NBC education drama, Mr. Novak.",
"In 1966, he appeared in the episode \"Wife Killer\" of the ABC adventure series The Fugitive.",
"In 1967, he guest starred in the episode \"Never Chase a Rainbow\" of NBC's western series, The Road West starring Barry Sullivan.",
"Also that year, he guest starred in the episode 'The Watchers' on the television series The Invaders\n\nIn 1968, McCarthy guest starred on Hawaii Five-O in the episode \"Full Fathom Five\" as the chief antagonist, Victor Reese.",
"He appeared as Maj. Gen Kroll in The Night of the Doomsday Formula in season 4 of The Wild Wild West.",
"In 1971, he guest starred in the \"Conqueror's Gold\" episode of Bearcats!, which starred Rod Taylor with whom McCarthy had appeared in the films A Gathering of Eagles, Hotel and The Hell With Heroes.",
"1975-1996\nIn 1976, McCarthy starred in the Broadway play Poor Murderer.",
"In 1977, he and Clu Gulager, previously cast with Barry Sullivan on NBC's The Tall Man, appeared in the episode \"The Army Deserter\" of the NBC western series The Oregon Trail, with Rod Taylor.",
"In 1978, McCarthy played a cameo role in a remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers, as a man running through the streets shouting a warning in the same manner as his character did in the original 1956 film.",
"He appeared in NBC's Flamingo Road (1980–1982) as Claude Weldon, father of Morgan Fairchild's character.",
"McCarthy appeared as Judge Crandall in The Midnight Hour, a 1985 comedy/horror television movie.",
"Also that year, he guest-starred in a fourth-season episode of The A-Team called \"Members Only\".",
"McCarthy was one of four actors (with Dick Miller, Belinda Balaski and Robert Picardo) often cast by director Joe Dante.",
"McCarthy's most notable role in Dante's films was in 1987 as the prime antagonist, Victor Scrimshaw, in Innerspace.",
"They also were in Dante's Matinee.",
"In 1996, he played Gordon Fitzpatrick in The Pandora Directive, a Full motion video (FMV) adventure game starring Tex Murphy.",
"21st century\nIn 2007, McCarthy appeared as himself in the Anthony Hopkins film Slipstream which made references to McCarthy's film Invasion of the Body Snatchers.",
"On October 24, 2009, McCarthy was honored at the Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival in Florida.",
"His last role in a feature-length movie was as The Grand Inquisitor in the sci-fi musical comedy The Ghastly Love of Johnny X (2012).",
"Personal life \nMcCarthy was married to Augusta Dabney, with whom he had three children, from 1941 until their divorce in 1961.",
"In 1979, he married Kate Crane, who survived him.",
"The couple had two children.",
"From 1942, McCarthy and his wife Augusta Dabney had a close friendship with actor Montgomery Clift.",
"McCarthy and Clift were cast in a play together, Ramon Naya's Mexican Mural.",
"The two became best friends, acted together in several more projects, and were believed by some prominent individuals, including Tennessee Williams, Truman Capote and George Whitmore, to have been lovers.",
"They also collaborated on a screenplay for a film adaptation of the Tennessee Williams/Donald Windham play You Touched Me!, but the project never came to fruition.",
"McCarthy died of pneumonia on September 11, 2010, at Cape Cod Hospital in Massachusetts at the age of ninety-six.",
"Selected filmography \n 1944 Winged Victory as Ronnie Meade (uncredited)\n 1951 Death of a Salesman as Biff Loman\n 1954 Drive a Crooked Road as Steve Norris, Bank Robber\n 1954 The Gambler from Natchez as André Rivage\n 1955 Stranger on Horseback as Tom Bannerman\n 1955 An Annapolis Story as Jim R. Scott\n 1956 Invasion of the Body Snatchers as Dr.",
"Miles Bennell\n 1956 Nightmare as Stan Grayson\n 1958 Diamond Safari as Harry Jordan\n 1960 The Twilight Zone (TV Series) as Professor Walter Jameson / Tom Bowen / Major Hugh Skelton\n 1961 The Misfits as Raymond Tabor\n 1961 Way Out (TV Series) as Dr. Paul Sandham\n 1962 40 Pounds of Trouble as Louie Blanchard\n 1963 A Gathering of Eagles as General Jack 'Happy Jack' Kirby\n 1963 An Affair of the Skin as Allen McCleod\n 1963 The Prize as Dr. John Garrett\n 1964 The Best Man as Dick Jensen\n 1965 Mirage as Sylvester Josephson\n 1966 A Big Hand for the Little Lady as Otto Habershaw\n 1966 The Three Sisters as Vershinin\n 1967 Hotel as Curtis O'Keefe\n 1968 The Hell with Heroes as Colonel Wilson\n 1968 If He Hollers, Let Him Go!",
"Miles Bennell (cameo)\n 2006 Loving Annabelle as Father Harris\n 2006 Fallen Angels as Pastor Waltz\n 2007 Slipstream as Himself\n 2007 Trail of the Screaming Forehead as Latecomer\n 2008 The Boneyard Collection\n 2008 Her Morbid Desires (Video) as The Monk\n 2009 Wesley as Bishop Ryder\n 2012 The Ghastly Love of Johnny X as The Grand Inquisitor (final film role)\n\nRadio appearances\n\nSee also\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links \n\nOfficial site (last updated in 2007)\n\n1914 births\n2010 deaths\n20th-century American male actors\nMale actors from Minneapolis\nMale actors from Seattle\nMilitary personnel from Seattle\nAmerican male film actors\nUnited States Army personnel of World War II\nAmerican people of Irish descent\nAmerican people of Jewish descent\nAmerican male stage actors\nAmerican male television actors\nDeaths from pneumonia in Massachusetts\nNew Star of the Year (Actor) Golden Globe winners\nUnited States Army soldiers\nUniversity of Minnesota alumni"
] | [
"Kevin McCarthy was an American stage, film and television actor.",
"He played the male lead in Invasion of the Body Snatchers.",
"McCarthy's first credited film performance was in Death of a Salesman, in which he played Biff loman to Fredric March's Willy loman.",
"He was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting actor.",
"Kevin McCarthy was born in Seattle, Washington.",
"McCarthy's father was descended from a wealthy Irish American family.",
"McCarthy's mother converted to Roman Catholicism before she married and his mother was born to a Protestant father and a nonobservant Jewish mother.",
"Mary McCarthy's brother was a distant cousin of U.S.",
"Eugene McCarthy is a senator from Minnesota.",
"The four children went to live with relatives in Minneapolis after their parents died of the flu in 1918.",
"Kevin and his brothers were raised by relatives in Minneapolis after five years of near-Dickensian mistreatment, which was described in Mary McCarthy's memoirs.",
"McCarthy discovered a love of acting after appearing in his first play, Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part 1, at the University of Minnesota.",
"McCarthy served in the United States Army Air Force during World War II and also appeared in a number of training films.",
"One of these films has been released on DVD.",
"McCarthy was a founding member.",
"McCarthy's breakthrough role was in Death of a Salesman, in which he played Biff loman to Fredric March's Willy loman.",
"He was the only member of that ensemble to be cast in Lszl Benedek's film adaptation.",
"He received a Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year, as well as a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting actor.",
"The lead role in the science fiction film Invasion of the Body Snatchers was played by him.",
"The Survivors was a short-lived television series that he and Lana Turner starred in.",
"He played a wide variety of character roles as a guest star on television.",
"McCarthy and Smith appeared in an episode of The Joseph Cotten Show.",
"He was cast in an episode of the anthology series.",
"McCarthy appeared in a 1959 CBS show.",
"He played the title character in a 1960 episode of The Twilight Zone.",
"McCarthy appeared on two episodes of The Rifleman.",
"The original air date for \"Suspicion\" was January 14, 1963, and \"The Shattered Idol\" 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611",
"McCarthy appeared in an episode of the ABC medical drama \"Fire and Ice\" in 1963.",
"He played a Roman Catholic priest in New York City in the ABC drama Going My Way.",
"He was cast in an episode of Mr. Novak.",
"He appeared in an episode of The Fugitive in 1966.",
"He guest starred in an episode of NBC's western series, The Road West, in 1967.",
"In 1968, McCarthy guest starred on Hawaii Five-O as the chief antagonist, Victor Reese, in an episode of The Invaders.",
"He was in the fourth season of The Wild Wild West.",
"McCarthy guest starred in the \"Conqueror's Gold\" episode of Bearcats!, which starred Rod Taylor, who had appeared in the films A Gathering of Eagles, Hotel and The Hell With Heroes.",
"In 1976, McCarthy starred in a Broadway play.",
"The Army Deserter of the NBC western series The Oregon Trail, with Rod Taylor, was filmed in 1977.",
"McCarthy played a small role in the remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers, as a man running through the streets shouting a warning in the same way he did in the original film.",
"He played the father of Morgan Fairchild's character in NBC's Flamingo Road.",
"The Midnight Hour was a 1985 comedy/horror television movie.",
"He was in a fourth-season episode of The A-Team called \" Members Only\".",
"McCarthy was one of four actors who were cast by Joe Dante.",
"McCarthy's most notable role in Dante's films was as the main villain in Innerspace.",
"They were in Dante's Matinee as well.",
"In 1996, he played Gordon Fitzpatrick in a Full motion video game.",
"McCarthy's film Invasion of the Body Snatchers was referenced in the film Slipstream, which was released in 2007.",
"McCarthy was honored at the Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival.",
"He played The Grand Inquisitor in the sci-fi musical comedy The Ghastly Love of Johnny X.",
"McCarthy had three children with Augusta Dabney and was married to her from 1941 to 1961.",
"He married Kate Crane in 1979.",
"They had two children.",
"McCarthy and his wife Augusta had a close friendship with Montgomery Clift.",
"McCarthy and Clift were in a play together.",
"The two became best friends, acted together in several more projects, and were believed by some prominent individuals to have been lovers.",
"They collaborated on a script for a film adaptation of You Touched Me!, but the project never came to fruition.",
"McCarthy died of pneumonia at Cape Cod Hospital in Massachusetts at the age of ninety-six.",
"Death of a Salesman, Drive a Crooked Road, Bank Robber, and The Gambler from Natchez were included in the filmography.",
"As Stan Grayson, Miles Bennell had a recurring role in the TV series.",
"As Father Harris, Miles Bennell appeared in 2006 and 2007, as well as Slipstream as Himself and Trail of the Screaming Forehead."
] | <mask> (February 15, 1914 – September 11, 2010) was an American stage, film and television actor. He is best remembered for portraying the male lead in the horror science fiction film Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956). Following several television guest roles, <mask> gave his first credited film performance in Death of a Salesman (1951), portraying Biff Loman to Fredric March's Willy Loman. The role earned him a Golden Globe Award and a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. Early life
<mask> was born in Seattle, Washington, the son of <mask> and Martha Therese (née Preston). <mask>'s father was descended from a wealthy Irish American family based in Minnesota. His mother was born in Washington State to a Protestant father and a nonobservant Jewish mother; <mask>'s mother converted to Roman Catholicism before her marriage.He was the brother of author <mask>, and a distant cousin of U.S. Senator and presidential candidate <mask> of Minnesota. His parents both died in the 1918 flu pandemic, and the four children went to live with relatives in Minneapolis. After five years of near-Dickensian mistreatment, described in <mask>'s memoirs, the children were separated: Mary lived with their maternal grandparents, and <mask> and his younger brothers were raised by relatives in Minneapolis. <mask> graduated in 1932 from Campion High School in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin, then attended the University of Minnesota, where he appeared in his first play, Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part 1, and discovered a love of acting. Career
Early career and military service
During his service in World War II in the United States Army Air Forces, in addition to his acting career, <mask> appeared in a number of training films. At least one of these films (covering the Boeing B-17), has been distributed on DVD.<mask> was a founding member of The Actors Studio. Breakthrough in film
<mask>'s breakthrough role was in Death of a Salesman (1951) portraying Biff Loman to Fredric March's Willy Loman. He had first performed the role in the London theatrical debut and was the only member of that ensemble to be cast in László Benedek's film adaptation. He received good notices for his onscreen work, receiving the Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year – Actor and a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. 1956-1975
His starring roles include the lead in the science fiction film classic Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956), which remains the film for which he is most widely known. On television, he starred the short-lived series, The Survivors (1969) with Lana Turner. He also appeared as a guest star in many television programs, playing a wide variety of character roles.<mask> appeared with Alexis Smith in the NBC anthology series, The Joseph Cotten Show in the episode "We Who Love Her" (1956). He was cast in an episode of the religion anthology series, Crossroads. <mask> appeared in the 1959 episode "The Wall Between" of CBS's The DuPont Show with June Allyson. He guest starred in a classic episode of CBS's The Twilight Zone entitled "Long Live Walter Jameson" (1960), as the title character. <mask> made two appearances on The Rifleman, starring Chuck Connors and Johnny Crawford. He portrayed the historical Mark Twain in "The Shattered Idol" (episode 120), original air date: December 4, 1961, and Winslow Quince in "Suspicion" (episode 157), original air date: January 14, 1963. The Rifleman – Season 4 Episodes
The Rifleman – Suspicion, Episode 157, Season 5
In 1963, <mask> appeared in the ABC medical drama Breaking Point in the episode titled "Fire and Ice".He guest starred in the ABC drama Going My Way, about the Roman Catholic priesthood in New York City. He was cast as well in a 1964 episode of James Franciscus's NBC education drama, Mr. Novak. In 1966, he appeared in the episode "Wife Killer" of the ABC adventure series The Fugitive. In 1967, he guest starred in the episode "Never Chase a Rainbow" of NBC's western series, The Road West starring Barry Sullivan. Also that year, he guest starred in the episode 'The Watchers' on the television series The Invaders
In 1968, <mask> guest starred on Hawaii Five-O in the episode "Full Fathom Five" as the chief antagonist, Victor Reese. He appeared as Maj. Gen Kroll in The Night of the Doomsday Formula in season 4 of The Wild Wild West. In 1971, he guest starred in the "Conqueror's Gold" episode of Bearcats!, which starred Rod Taylor with whom <mask> had appeared in the films A Gathering of Eagles, Hotel and The Hell With Heroes.1975-1996
In 1976, <mask> starred in the Broadway play Poor Murderer. In 1977, he and Clu Gulager, previously cast with Barry Sullivan on NBC's The Tall Man, appeared in the episode "The Army Deserter" of the NBC western series The Oregon Trail, with Rod Taylor. In 1978, <mask> played a cameo role in a remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers, as a man running through the streets shouting a warning in the same manner as his character did in the original 1956 film. He appeared in NBC's Flamingo Road (1980–1982) as Claude Weldon, father of Morgan Fairchild's character. <mask> appeared as Judge Crandall in The Midnight Hour, a 1985 comedy/horror television movie. Also that year, he guest-starred in a fourth-season episode of The A-Team called "Members Only". <mask> was one of four actors (with Dick Miller, Belinda Balaski and Robert Picardo) often cast by director Joe Dante.<mask>'s most notable role in Dante's films was in 1987 as the prime antagonist, Victor Scrimshaw, in Innerspace. They also were in Dante's Matinee. In 1996, he played Gordon Fitzpatrick in The Pandora Directive, a Full motion video (FMV) adventure game starring Tex Murphy. 21st century
In 2007, <mask> appeared as himself in the Anthony Hopkins film Slipstream which made references to <mask>'s film Invasion of the Body Snatchers. On October 24, 2009, <mask> was honored at the Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival in Florida. His last role in a feature-length movie was as The Grand Inquisitor in the sci-fi musical comedy The Ghastly Love of Johnny X (2012). Personal life
<mask> was married to Augusta Dabney, with whom he had three children, from 1941 until their divorce in 1961.In 1979, he married Kate Crane, who survived him. The couple had two children. From 1942, <mask> and his wife Augusta Dabney had a close friendship with actor Montgomery Clift. <mask> and Clift were cast in a play together, Ramon Naya's Mexican Mural. The two became best friends, acted together in several more projects, and were believed by some prominent individuals, including Tennessee Williams, Truman Capote and George Whitmore, to have been lovers. They also collaborated on a screenplay for a film adaptation of the Tennessee Williams/Donald Windham play You Touched Me!, but the project never came to fruition. <mask> died of pneumonia on September 11, 2010, at Cape Cod Hospital in Massachusetts at the age of ninety-six.Selected filmography
1944 Winged Victory as Ronnie Meade (uncredited)
1951 Death of a Salesman as Biff Loman
1954 Drive a Crooked Road as Steve Norris, Bank Robber
1954 The Gambler from Natchez as André Rivage
1955 Stranger on Horseback as Tom Bannerman
1955 An Annapolis Story as Jim R. Scott
1956 Invasion of the Body Snatchers as Dr. Miles Bennell
1956 Nightmare as Stan Grayson
1958 Diamond Safari as Harry Jordan
1960 The Twilight Zone (TV Series) as Professor Walter Jameson / Tom Bowen / Major Hugh Skelton
1961 The Misfits as Raymond Tabor
1961 Way Out (TV Series) as Dr. Paul Sandham
1962 40 Pounds of Trouble as Louie Blanchard
1963 A Gathering of Eagles as General Jack 'Happy Jack' Kirby
1963 An Affair of the Skin as Allen McCleod
1963 The Prize as Dr. John Garrett
1964 The Best Man as Dick Jensen
1965 Mirage as Sylvester Josephson
1966 A Big Hand for the Little Lady as Otto Habershaw
1966 The Three Sisters as Vershinin
1967 Hotel as Curtis O'Keefe
1968 The Hell with Heroes as Colonel Wilson
1968 If He Hollers, Let Him Go! Miles Bennell (cameo)
2006 Loving Annabelle as Father Harris
2006 Fallen Angels as Pastor Waltz
2007 Slipstream as Himself
2007 Trail of the Screaming Forehead as Latecomer
2008 The Boneyard Collection
2008 Her Morbid Desires (Video) as The Monk
2009 Wesley as Bishop Ryder
2012 The Ghastly Love of Johnny X as The Grand Inquisitor (final film role)
Radio appearances
See also
References
External links
Official site (last updated in 2007)
1914 births
2010 deaths
20th-century American male actors
Male actors from Minneapolis
Male actors from Seattle
Military personnel from Seattle
American male film actors
United States Army personnel of World War II
American people of Irish descent
American people of Jewish descent
American male stage actors
American male television actors
Deaths from pneumonia in Massachusetts
New Star of the Year (Actor) Golden Globe winners
United States Army soldiers
University of Minnesota alumni | [
"Kevin McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"Kevin McCarthy",
"Roy Winfield McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"Mary McCarthy",
"Eugene McCarthy",
"Mary McCarthy",
"Kevin",
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"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy",
"McCarthy"
] | <mask> was an American stage, film and television actor. He played the male lead in Invasion of the Body Snatchers. <mask>'s first credited film performance was in Death of a Salesman, in which he played Biff loman to Fredric March's Willy loman. He was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting actor. <mask> was born in Seattle, Washington. <mask>'s father was descended from a wealthy Irish American family. <mask>'s mother converted to Roman Catholicism before she married and his mother was born to a Protestant father and a nonobservant Jewish mother.<mask>'s brother was a distant cousin of U.S. <mask> is a senator from Minnesota. The four children went to live with relatives in Minneapolis after their parents died of the flu in 1918. <mask> and his brothers were raised by relatives in Minneapolis after five years of near-Dickensian mistreatment, which was described in <mask>'s memoirs. <mask> discovered a love of acting after appearing in his first play, Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part 1, at the University of Minnesota. <mask> served in the United States Army Air Force during World War II and also appeared in a number of training films. One of these films has been released on DVD.<mask> was a founding member. <mask>'s breakthrough role was in Death of a Salesman, in which he played Biff loman to Fredric March's Willy loman. He was the only member of that ensemble to be cast in Lszl Benedek's film adaptation. He received a Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year, as well as a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting actor. The lead role in the science fiction film Invasion of the Body Snatchers was played by him. The Survivors was a short-lived television series that he and Lana Turner starred in. He played a wide variety of character roles as a guest star on television.<mask> and Smith appeared in an episode of The Joseph Cotten Show. He was cast in an episode of the anthology series. <mask> appeared in a 1959 CBS show. He played the title character in a 1960 episode of The Twilight Zone. <mask> appeared on two episodes of The Rifleman. The original air date for "Suspicion" was January 14, 1963, and "The Shattered Idol" 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 888-270-6611 <mask> appeared in an episode of the ABC medical drama "Fire and Ice" in 1963.He played a Roman Catholic priest in New York City in the ABC drama Going My Way. He was cast in an episode of Mr. Novak. He appeared in an episode of The Fugitive in 1966. He guest starred in an episode of NBC's western series, The Road West, in 1967. In 1968, <mask> guest starred on Hawaii Five-O as the chief antagonist, Victor Reese, in an episode of The Invaders. He was in the fourth season of The Wild Wild West. <mask> guest starred in the "Conqueror's Gold" episode of Bearcats!, which starred Rod Taylor, who had appeared in the films A Gathering of Eagles, Hotel and The Hell With Heroes.In 1976, <mask> starred in a Broadway play. The Army Deserter of the NBC western series The Oregon Trail, with Rod Taylor, was filmed in 1977. <mask> played a small role in the remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers, as a man running through the streets shouting a warning in the same way he did in the original film. He played the father of Morgan Fairchild's character in NBC's Flamingo Road. The Midnight Hour was a 1985 comedy/horror television movie. He was in a fourth-season episode of The A-Team called " Members Only". <mask> was one of four actors who were cast by Joe Dante.<mask>'s most notable role in Dante's films was as the main villain in Innerspace. They were in Dante's Matinee as well. In 1996, he played Gordon Fitzpatrick in a Full motion video game. <mask>'s film Invasion of the Body Snatchers was referenced in the film Slipstream, which was released in 2007. <mask> was honored at the Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival. He played The Grand Inquisitor in the sci-fi musical comedy The Ghastly Love of Johnny X. <mask> had three children with Augusta Dabney and was married to her from 1941 to 1961.He married Kate Crane in 1979. They had two children. <mask> and his wife Augusta had a close friendship with Montgomery Clift. <mask> and Clift were in a play together. The two became best friends, acted together in several more projects, and were believed by some prominent individuals to have been lovers. They collaborated on a script for a film adaptation of You Touched Me!, but the project never came to fruition. <mask> died of pneumonia at Cape Cod Hospital in Massachusetts at the age of ninety-six.Death of a Salesman, Drive a Crooked Road, Bank Robber, and The Gambler from Natchez were included in the filmography. As Stan Grayson, Miles Bennell had a recurring role in the TV series. As Father Harris, Miles Bennell appeared in 2006 and 2007, as well as Slipstream as Himself and Trail of the Screaming Forehead. | [
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1728804 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russell%20Mittermeier | Russell Mittermeier | Russell Alan Mittermeier (born November 8, 1949) is a primatologist and herpetologist. He has written several books for both popular and scientist audiences, and has authored more than 300 scientific papers.
Biography
Russell A. Mittermeier is Chief Conservation Officer of Global Wildlife Conservation. He served as President of Conservation International from 1989 to 2014, then Executive Vice-Chair from 2014 to 2017. He specialises in the fields of primatology, herpetology, biodiversity and conservation of tropical forests. He has undertaken research in more than 30 countries, including Amazonia (particularly Brazil and Suriname) and Madagascar.
Since 1977, Mittermeier has served as Chairman of the IUCN-World Conservation Union Species Survival Commission Primate Specialist Group, and he has been a member of the Steering Committee of the Species Survival Commission since 1982. Before working for Conservation International, he spent 11 years at the World Wildlife Fund in the United States, starting as Director of their Primate Program and ending up as Vice-President for Science. He also served as an IUCN-World Conservation Union Regional Councillor for the period 2004–2012, was elected as one of IUCN-World Conservation Union's four Vice-Presidents for the period 2009–2012, and then was elected a lifetime Honorary IUCN-World Conservation Union Member in 2012. He also chaired the first World Bank Task Force on Biodiversity in 1988, which was instrumental in introducing the term "biodiversity" to that institution.
He became an Adjunct Professor at the Stony Brook University in 1978, a Research Associate at the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University for more than two decades, and has been President of the Margot Marsh Biodiversity Foundation since 1996. More recently, he was instrumental in the creation of the 25 million Euro Mohamed bin Zayed Species Conservation Fund, a new species-focused fund based in Abu Dhabi, and serves as a member of its Advisory Committee.
In the late 1970s, Mittermeier undertook one of the first studies of the critically endangered northern muriqui woolly spider monkeys in what would become the Caratinga Biological Station. Mittermeier has been particularly interested in the discovery and description of species new to science. He has described a total of 14 new species (three turtles, four lemurs, an African monkey, and six Amazonian monkeys) and has eight species named in his honor (three frogs, a lizard, two lemurs, a monkey, and an ant). The most recent of these is Mittermeier's saki, Pithecia mittermeieri, a monkey from the Brazilian Amazon. The lizard, Anolis williamsmittermeierorum, is named in honor of Mittermeier and American herpetologist Ernest E. Williams.
Mittermeier has also been a leader in promoting species-focused ecotourism, particularly primate-watching and primate life-listing, and more recently turtle-watching and turtle life-listing, following the very successful model of the bird-watching community. To facilitate this, he launched a Tropical Field Guide Series and a Pocket Guide Series focused heavily on primates, but including a number of other species groups as well. More recent publications include The Tropical Field Guide Series are Lemurs of Madagascar, Third Edition (2010) and Primates of West Africa (2011) with a French edition of the Lemurs of Madagascar released in 2014. His own primate life-list, now totaling more than 350 species, is among the largest in the world.
Mittermeier was born in New York City. He received his B.A.(summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa) from Dartmouth college and Ph.D. from Harvard University in biological anthropology for a thesis entitled, "Distribution, Synecology, and Conservation of Suriname Monkeys" in 1977.
Awards and honors
Mittermeier's awards and honors include:
The Order of the Golden Ark from His Royal Highness Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands (1995)
The Grand Order of the Southern Cross from the President of Brazil (1997)
The Cincinnati Zoo Wildlife Conservation Award (1997)
The Brazilian Muriqui Prize (1997)
The Grand Sash and Order of the Yellow Star from the President of Suriname Jules Wijdenbosch(1998)
The Order of the Southern Cross of President Fernando Henrique Cardoso of Brazil (1998)
The second annual Aldo Leopold Award from the American Society of Mammalogists (ASM), 2004.
Sigma Xi's John P. McGovern Science and Society Award (2007)
The Sir Peter Scott Award of IUCN's Species Survival Commission (2008)
The Association of Tropical Biology's Special Recognition Award for Conservation (2008)
The twelfth annual Roger Tory Peterson Memorial Award from the Harvard Museum of Natural History (2009)
Honorary Degree from Eckerd College (St. Petersburg, Florida) in recognition of his conservation work.
The Indianapolis Prize for Conservation (2018)
Selected bibliography
Russell Mittermeier's writing includes 36 books and more than 700 scientific and popular articles. Among his books are The Trilogy Megadiversity (1997), Hotspots (2000) and Wilderness Areas (2002), Wildlife Spectacles (2003), Hotspots Revisited (2004), Transboundary Conservation (2005), Lemurs of Madagascar (1994; 2006; 2010), Pantanal: South America's Wetland Jewel (2005), A Climate for Life (2008), The Wealth of Nature: Ecosystems, Biodiversity and Human Well-Being (2009), Freshwater: The Essence of Life (2010), Oceans: Heart of our Blue Planet (2011) and The Handbook of the Mammals of the World (Vol. 3 Primates) (2013).
Paint It Wild: Paint & See Activity Book (Discover The Rainforest, Vol. 1) (1991), introduction by Mike Roberts and Russell Mittermeier, written by Gad Meiron and Randall Stone, illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer
Sticker Safari: Sticker And Activity Book (Discover The Rainforest, Vol. 2) (1991), introduction by Mike Roberts and Russell Mittermeier, written by Gad Meiron and Randall Stone, illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer
Wonders In The Wild: Activity Book (Discover The Rainforest, Vol. 3) (1991), introduction by Mike Roberts and Russell Mittermeier, written by Gad Meiron and Randall Stone, illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer
Ronald McDonald and the Jewel of the Amazon Kingdom: Storybook (Discover The Rainforest, Vol. 4) (1991), introduction by Mike Roberts and Russell Mittermeier, written by Gad Meiron and Randall Stone, illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer
References
External links
Global Wildlife Conservation Russell Mittermeier
American Society of Mammalogists Honors CI President Russell Mittermeier with Aldo Leopold Award, July 29, 2004. Conservation International Press Release
New Lemur Species Named For CI President Conservation International Press Release, June 21, 2006.
PSG Chairman Russell Mittermeier
1949 births
American anthropologists
21st-century American biologists
Living people
Dartmouth College alumni
Harvard University alumni
Stony Brook University faculty
Honorary Order of the Yellow Star | [
"Russell Alan Mittermeier (born November 8, 1949) is a primatologist and herpetologist.",
"He has written several books for both popular and scientist audiences, and has authored more than 300 scientific papers.",
"Biography\nRussell A. Mittermeier is Chief Conservation Officer of Global Wildlife Conservation.",
"He served as President of Conservation International from 1989 to 2014, then Executive Vice-Chair from 2014 to 2017.",
"He specialises in the fields of primatology, herpetology, biodiversity and conservation of tropical forests.",
"He has undertaken research in more than 30 countries, including Amazonia (particularly Brazil and Suriname) and Madagascar.",
"Since 1977, Mittermeier has served as Chairman of the IUCN-World Conservation Union Species Survival Commission Primate Specialist Group, and he has been a member of the Steering Committee of the Species Survival Commission since 1982.",
"Before working for Conservation International, he spent 11 years at the World Wildlife Fund in the United States, starting as Director of their Primate Program and ending up as Vice-President for Science.",
"He also served as an IUCN-World Conservation Union Regional Councillor for the period 2004–2012, was elected as one of IUCN-World Conservation Union's four Vice-Presidents for the period 2009–2012, and then was elected a lifetime Honorary IUCN-World Conservation Union Member in 2012.",
"He also chaired the first World Bank Task Force on Biodiversity in 1988, which was instrumental in introducing the term \"biodiversity\" to that institution.",
"He became an Adjunct Professor at the Stony Brook University in 1978, a Research Associate at the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University for more than two decades, and has been President of the Margot Marsh Biodiversity Foundation since 1996.",
"More recently, he was instrumental in the creation of the 25 million Euro Mohamed bin Zayed Species Conservation Fund, a new species-focused fund based in Abu Dhabi, and serves as a member of its Advisory Committee.",
"In the late 1970s, Mittermeier undertook one of the first studies of the critically endangered northern muriqui woolly spider monkeys in what would become the Caratinga Biological Station.",
"Mittermeier has been particularly interested in the discovery and description of species new to science.",
"He has described a total of 14 new species (three turtles, four lemurs, an African monkey, and six Amazonian monkeys) and has eight species named in his honor (three frogs, a lizard, two lemurs, a monkey, and an ant).",
"The most recent of these is Mittermeier's saki, Pithecia mittermeieri, a monkey from the Brazilian Amazon.",
"The lizard, Anolis williamsmittermeierorum, is named in honor of Mittermeier and American herpetologist Ernest E. Williams.",
"Mittermeier has also been a leader in promoting species-focused ecotourism, particularly primate-watching and primate life-listing, and more recently turtle-watching and turtle life-listing, following the very successful model of the bird-watching community.",
"To facilitate this, he launched a Tropical Field Guide Series and a Pocket Guide Series focused heavily on primates, but including a number of other species groups as well.",
"More recent publications include The Tropical Field Guide Series are Lemurs of Madagascar, Third Edition (2010) and Primates of West Africa (2011) with a French edition of the Lemurs of Madagascar released in 2014.",
"His own primate life-list, now totaling more than 350 species, is among the largest in the world.",
"Mittermeier was born in New York City.",
"He received his B.A.",
"(summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa) from Dartmouth college and Ph.D. from Harvard University in biological anthropology for a thesis entitled, \"Distribution, Synecology, and Conservation of Suriname Monkeys\" in 1977.",
"Awards and honors\nMittermeier's awards and honors include:\n\nThe Order of the Golden Ark from His Royal Highness Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands (1995)\nThe Grand Order of the Southern Cross from the President of Brazil (1997)\nThe Cincinnati Zoo Wildlife Conservation Award (1997)\nThe Brazilian Muriqui Prize (1997)\nThe Grand Sash and Order of the Yellow Star from the President of Suriname Jules Wijdenbosch(1998)\nThe Order of the Southern Cross of President Fernando Henrique Cardoso of Brazil (1998)\nThe second annual Aldo Leopold Award from the American Society of Mammalogists (ASM), 2004.",
"Sigma Xi's John P. McGovern Science and Society Award (2007)\nThe Sir Peter Scott Award of IUCN's Species Survival Commission (2008)\nThe Association of Tropical Biology's Special Recognition Award for Conservation (2008)\nThe twelfth annual Roger Tory Peterson Memorial Award from the Harvard Museum of Natural History (2009)\nHonorary Degree from Eckerd College (St. Petersburg, Florida) in recognition of his conservation work.",
"The Indianapolis Prize for Conservation (2018)\n\nSelected bibliography\nRussell Mittermeier's writing includes 36 books and more than 700 scientific and popular articles.",
"Among his books are The Trilogy Megadiversity (1997), Hotspots (2000) and Wilderness Areas (2002), Wildlife Spectacles (2003), Hotspots Revisited (2004), Transboundary Conservation (2005), Lemurs of Madagascar (1994; 2006; 2010), Pantanal: South America's Wetland Jewel (2005), A Climate for Life (2008), The Wealth of Nature: Ecosystems, Biodiversity and Human Well-Being (2009), Freshwater: The Essence of Life (2010), Oceans: Heart of our Blue Planet (2011) and The Handbook of the Mammals of the World (Vol.",
"3 Primates) (2013).",
"Paint It Wild: Paint & See Activity Book (Discover The Rainforest, Vol.",
"1) (1991), introduction by Mike Roberts and Russell Mittermeier, written by Gad Meiron and Randall Stone, illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer\n Sticker Safari: Sticker And Activity Book (Discover The Rainforest, Vol.",
"2) (1991), introduction by Mike Roberts and Russell Mittermeier, written by Gad Meiron and Randall Stone, illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer\n Wonders In The Wild: Activity Book (Discover The Rainforest, Vol.",
"3) (1991), introduction by Mike Roberts and Russell Mittermeier, written by Gad Meiron and Randall Stone, illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer\n Ronald McDonald and the Jewel of the Amazon Kingdom: Storybook (Discover The Rainforest, Vol.",
"4) (1991), introduction by Mike Roberts and Russell Mittermeier, written by Gad Meiron and Randall Stone, illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links\nGlobal Wildlife Conservation Russell Mittermeier\nAmerican Society of Mammalogists Honors CI President Russell Mittermeier with Aldo Leopold Award, July 29, 2004.",
"Conservation International Press Release\nNew Lemur Species Named For CI President Conservation International Press Release, June 21, 2006.",
"PSG Chairman Russell Mittermeier\n\n1949 births\nAmerican anthropologists\n21st-century American biologists\nLiving people\nDartmouth College alumni\nHarvard University alumni\nStony Brook University faculty\nHonorary Order of the Yellow Star"
] | [
"He is a primatologist and herpetologist.",
"He has written several books for both popular and scientist audiences.",
"The ChiefConservation Officer is Russell A. Mittermeier.",
"He was the Executive Vice-Chair from 2014 to 2017.",
"He works in the fields of herpetology and tropical forests.",
"He has done research in more than 30 countries.",
"He has been a member of the Steering Committee of the Species Survival Commission since 1982.",
"He spent 11 years at the World Wildlife Fund in the United States, starting as Director of their primate program and ending up as Vice- President for Science.",
"He was elected as one of the four vice-presidents of the world's largest environmental organization in 2009, and was elected as a lifetime member of the world's largest environmental organization in 2012.",
"The term \"biodiversity\" was introduced to the World Bank by the first World Bank Task Force.",
"He was a Research Associate at the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University for more than two decades and has been the President of the Margot Marsh Biodiversity Foundation since 1996.",
"He is a member of the Advisory Committee of the 25 million Euro Mohamed bin Zayed Species Conservation Fund, a new species-focused fund based in Abu Dhabi.",
"One of the first studies of the northern muriqui woolly spider monkeys in what would become the Caratinga Biological Station was done in the late 1970s.",
"The discovery and description of new species has been of interest to him.",
"A total of 14 new species have been described and eight of them have been named in his honor.",
"A monkey from the Brazilian Amazon is the most recent of these.",
"The lizard is named after American herpetologist Ernest E. Williams.",
"The very successful model of the bird-watching community has led to the promotion of species-focused ecotourism, particularly primate-watching and primate life-listing.",
"He launched a Tropical Field Guide Series and a Pocket Guide Series to help facilitate this.",
"The Tropical Field Guide Series has publications such as the Third Edition of the Lemurs of Madagascar, and the French edition of the Primates of West Africa.",
"His primate life-list is one of the largest in the world.",
"He was born in New York.",
"He received a degree.",
"In 1977 he received a PhD from Harvard University in biological anthropology for his thesis, \"Distribution, Synecology, and Preservation of Suriname Monkeys\".",
"His Royal Highness Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands received the Order of the Golden Ark in 1995 and the President of Brazil received the Grand Order of the Southern Cross in 1997.",
"The John P. McGovern Science and Society Award, the Sir Peter Scott Award, the Association of Tropical Biology's Special Recognition Award, and the Roger Tory Peterson Memorial Award were all given by the Harvard Museum of Natural History.",
"Russell's writing includes 36 books and more than 700 scientific and popular articles.",
"His books include The Trilogy Megadiversity, Hotspots, Wilderness Areas and Wildlife Spectacles.",
"3 Primates",
"The book is called Paint It Wild: Paint & See Activity Book.",
"The introduction was written by Mike Roberts and Russell Romney and illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer.",
"The introduction was written by Mike Roberts and Russell Romney and illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer.",
"Ronald McDonald and the Jewel of the Amazon Kingdom: Storybook was illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer.",
"The introduction was written by Mike Roberts and Russell Romney and illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer.",
"The new leu species was named in the press release.",
"There are American anthropologists, 21st-century American biologists, and Harvard University alumni in the Order of the Yellow Star."
] | <mask> (born November 8, 1949) is a primatologist and herpetologist. He has written several books for both popular and scientist audiences, and has authored more than 300 scientific papers. Biography
<mask><mask> is Chief Conservation Officer of Global Wildlife Conservation. He served as President of Conservation International from 1989 to 2014, then Executive Vice-Chair from 2014 to 2017. He specialises in the fields of primatology, herpetology, biodiversity and conservation of tropical forests. He has undertaken research in more than 30 countries, including Amazonia (particularly Brazil and Suriname) and Madagascar. Since 1977, Mittermeier has served as Chairman of the IUCN-World Conservation Union Species Survival Commission Primate Specialist Group, and he has been a member of the Steering Committee of the Species Survival Commission since 1982.Before working for Conservation International, he spent 11 years at the World Wildlife Fund in the United States, starting as Director of their Primate Program and ending up as Vice-President for Science. He also served as an IUCN-World Conservation Union Regional Councillor for the period 2004–2012, was elected as one of IUCN-World Conservation Union's four Vice-Presidents for the period 2009–2012, and then was elected a lifetime Honorary IUCN-World Conservation Union Member in 2012. He also chaired the first World Bank Task Force on Biodiversity in 1988, which was instrumental in introducing the term "biodiversity" to that institution. He became an Adjunct Professor at the Stony Brook University in 1978, a Research Associate at the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University for more than two decades, and has been President of the Margot Marsh Biodiversity Foundation since 1996. More recently, he was instrumental in the creation of the 25 million Euro Mohamed bin Zayed Species Conservation Fund, a new species-focused fund based in Abu Dhabi, and serves as a member of its Advisory Committee. In the late 1970s, Mittermeier undertook one of the first studies of the critically endangered northern muriqui woolly spider monkeys in what would become the Caratinga Biological Station. Mittermeier has been particularly interested in the discovery and description of species new to science.He has described a total of 14 new species (three turtles, four lemurs, an African monkey, and six Amazonian monkeys) and has eight species named in his honor (three frogs, a lizard, two lemurs, a monkey, and an ant). The most recent of these is Mittermeier's saki, Pithecia mittermeieri, a monkey from the Brazilian Amazon. The lizard, Anolis williamsmittermeierorum, is named in honor of Mittermeier and American herpetologist Ernest E. Williams. Mittermeier has also been a leader in promoting species-focused ecotourism, particularly primate-watching and primate life-listing, and more recently turtle-watching and turtle life-listing, following the very successful model of the bird-watching community. To facilitate this, he launched a Tropical Field Guide Series and a Pocket Guide Series focused heavily on primates, but including a number of other species groups as well. More recent publications include The Tropical Field Guide Series are Lemurs of Madagascar, Third Edition (2010) and Primates of West Africa (2011) with a French edition of the Lemurs of Madagascar released in 2014. His own primate life-list, now totaling more than 350 species, is among the largest in the world.Mittermeier was born in New York City. He received his B.A. (summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa) from Dartmouth college and Ph.D. from Harvard University in biological anthropology for a thesis entitled, "Distribution, Synecology, and Conservation of Suriname Monkeys" in 1977. Awards and honors
Mittermeier's awards and honors include:
The Order of the Golden Ark from His Royal Highness Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands (1995)
The Grand Order of the Southern Cross from the President of Brazil (1997)
The Cincinnati Zoo Wildlife Conservation Award (1997)
The Brazilian Muriqui Prize (1997)
The Grand Sash and Order of the Yellow Star from the President of Suriname Jules Wijdenbosch(1998)
The Order of the Southern Cross of President Fernando Henrique Cardoso of Brazil (1998)
The second annual Aldo Leopold Award from the American Society of Mammalogists (ASM), 2004. Sigma Xi's John P. McGovern Science and Society Award (2007)
The Sir Peter Scott Award of IUCN's Species Survival Commission (2008)
The Association of Tropical Biology's Special Recognition Award for Conservation (2008)
The twelfth annual Roger Tory Peterson Memorial Award from the Harvard Museum of Natural History (2009)
Honorary Degree from Eckerd College (St. Petersburg, Florida) in recognition of his conservation work. The Indianapolis Prize for Conservation (2018)
Selected bibliography
<mask>'s writing includes 36 books and more than 700 scientific and popular articles. Among his books are The Trilogy Megadiversity (1997), Hotspots (2000) and Wilderness Areas (2002), Wildlife Spectacles (2003), Hotspots Revisited (2004), Transboundary Conservation (2005), Lemurs of Madagascar (1994; 2006; 2010), Pantanal: South America's Wetland Jewel (2005), A Climate for Life (2008), The Wealth of Nature: Ecosystems, Biodiversity and Human Well-Being (2009), Freshwater: The Essence of Life (2010), Oceans: Heart of our Blue Planet (2011) and The Handbook of the Mammals of the World (Vol.3 Primates) (2013). Paint It Wild: Paint & See Activity Book (Discover The Rainforest, Vol. 1) (1991), introduction by Mike Roberts and <mask>er, written by Gad Meiron and Randall Stone, illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer
Sticker Safari: Sticker And Activity Book (Discover The Rainforest, Vol. 2) (1991), introduction by Mike Roberts and <mask>, written by Gad Meiron and Randall Stone, illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer
Wonders In The Wild: Activity Book (Discover The Rainforest, Vol. 3) (1991), introduction by Mike Roberts and <mask>er, written by Gad Meiron and Randall Stone, illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer
Ronald McDonald and the Jewel of the Amazon Kingdom: Storybook (Discover The Rainforest, Vol. 4) (1991), introduction by Mike Roberts and <mask>er, written by Gad Meiron and Randall Stone, illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer
References
External links
Global Wildlife Conservation <mask>meier
American Society of Mammalogists Honors CI President <mask> with Aldo Leopold Award, July 29, 2004. Conservation International Press Release
New Lemur Species Named For CI President Conservation International Press Release, June 21, 2006.PSG Chairman <mask>
1949 births
American anthropologists
21st-century American biologists
Living people
Dartmouth College alumni
Harvard University alumni
Stony Brook University faculty
Honorary Order of the Yellow Star | [
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] | He is a primatologist and herpetologist. He has written several books for both popular and scientist audiences. The ChiefConservation Officer is <mask><mask>. He was the Executive Vice-Chair from 2014 to 2017. He works in the fields of herpetology and tropical forests. He has done research in more than 30 countries. He has been a member of the Steering Committee of the Species Survival Commission since 1982.He spent 11 years at the World Wildlife Fund in the United States, starting as Director of their primate program and ending up as Vice- President for Science. He was elected as one of the four vice-presidents of the world's largest environmental organization in 2009, and was elected as a lifetime member of the world's largest environmental organization in 2012. The term "biodiversity" was introduced to the World Bank by the first World Bank Task Force. He was a Research Associate at the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University for more than two decades and has been the President of the Margot Marsh Biodiversity Foundation since 1996. He is a member of the Advisory Committee of the 25 million Euro Mohamed bin Zayed Species Conservation Fund, a new species-focused fund based in Abu Dhabi. One of the first studies of the northern muriqui woolly spider monkeys in what would become the Caratinga Biological Station was done in the late 1970s. The discovery and description of new species has been of interest to him.A total of 14 new species have been described and eight of them have been named in his honor. A monkey from the Brazilian Amazon is the most recent of these. The lizard is named after American herpetologist Ernest E. Williams. The very successful model of the bird-watching community has led to the promotion of species-focused ecotourism, particularly primate-watching and primate life-listing. He launched a Tropical Field Guide Series and a Pocket Guide Series to help facilitate this. The Tropical Field Guide Series has publications such as the Third Edition of the Lemurs of Madagascar, and the French edition of the Primates of West Africa. His primate life-list is one of the largest in the world.He was born in New York. He received a degree. In 1977 he received a PhD from Harvard University in biological anthropology for his thesis, "Distribution, Synecology, and Preservation of Suriname Monkeys". His Royal Highness Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands received the Order of the Golden Ark in 1995 and the President of Brazil received the Grand Order of the Southern Cross in 1997. The John P. McGovern Science and Society Award, the Sir Peter Scott Award, the Association of Tropical Biology's Special Recognition Award, and the Roger Tory Peterson Memorial Award were all given by the Harvard Museum of Natural History. <mask>'s writing includes 36 books and more than 700 scientific and popular articles. His books include The Trilogy Megadiversity, Hotspots, Wilderness Areas and Wildlife Spectacles.3 Primates The book is called Paint It Wild: Paint & See Activity Book. The introduction was written by Mike Roberts and <mask> and illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer. The introduction was written by Mike Roberts and <mask> and illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer. Ronald McDonald and the Jewel of the Amazon Kingdom: Storybook was illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer. The introduction was written by Mike Roberts and <mask> and illustrated by Donna Reynolds and Tim Racer. The new leu species was named in the press release.There are American anthropologists, 21st-century American biologists, and Harvard University alumni in the Order of the Yellow Star. | [
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33673755 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim%20Johannson | Jim Johannson | James Johannson (March 10, 1964January 21, 2018) was an American ice hockey player, coach and executive. He played for the United States national junior team at the World Juniors in 1983 and 1984, then played for the United States national team at the Winter Olympics in 1988 and 1992, the Ice Hockey World Championships in 1992, and was captain of the silver medal-winning team at the 1990 Goodwill Games. He played 374 games in the International Hockey League (IHL) after being selected by the Hartford Whalers in the 1982 NHL Entry Draft. He won the Turner Cup as the IHL playoffs champion with the Salt Lake Golden Eagles in 1998, then again with the Indianapolis Ice in 1990. He played 264 consecutive games spanning three seasons by 1991, and received the Ironman Award from the IHL in recognition of his durability. As an amateur, he played for the Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey program and won the National Collegiate Athletic Association championship in 1983. Johannson was twice named to the Western Collegiate Hockey Association All-Academic team, and graduated from the University of Wisconsin–Madison with a degree in sport management.
After retiring as a player, Johannson was head coach and general manager of the Twin Cities Vulcans in the United States Hockey League, and led them to the Junior A National Championship in the 1999–2000 season. He worked in several executive positions for USA Hockey from 2000 to 2018, co-operated with the United States Olympic Committee, and oversaw all men's and women's national hockey teams. During his tenure with USA Hockey, national teams won a combined total of 64 medals in International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) competitions. He helped acquire Compuware Arena to become the home rink for the USA Hockey National Team Development Program, and was general manager of the men's national team at the 2018 Winter Olympics until his death three weeks before the games began. He was posthumously given the Lester Patrick Trophy in recognition of growing hockey in the United States, received the Paul Loicq Award from the IIHF for contributions to international ice hockey, and inducted into the University of Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame. He was son of Ken Johannson who also served as general manager of the United States national team, and was the younger brother of professional hockey player John Johannson.
Early life and family
James Johannson was born on March 10, 1964, in Rochester, Minnesota, and was commonly known as "J.J." He was the youngest of two boys and one girl to Ken Johannson and Marietta Sands, which included his older brother John Johannson. During the 1970s, Johannson's father served as the coaching director of the Amateur Hockey Association of the United States, and was the general manager of the United States national team in 1979 and 1980. As a youth, Johannson and his brother spent summer vacations at hockey camps operated by their father, were included in photographs demonstrating skills for coaching manuals, were stick boys at selection camps for the US national team, and handed out shoes and jackets to the players.
Playing career
Amateur
Johannson played ice hockey as a center, was a right-handed shooter, and was listed as and . He played in the Minnesota state high school tournament with Mayo High School in 1982, and was tied as the tournament's leading scorer with seven points. He was recruited by family friend Bob Johnson to play for the Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey program along with his older brother John. Johannson signed a letter of intent in March 1982 to attend the University of Wisconsin–Madison, then was selected by the Hartford Whalers in the 1982 NHL Entry Draft, 130th overall in the seventh round.
From 1982 to 1986, Johannson played for the Badgers, and won a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) championship as a freshman in the 1982–83 season. He received the Fenton J. Kelsey Award as the most competitive player on the Badgers for the 1983–84 season, in which he scored 17 goals and 21 assists as a sophomore. As a junior, he was named to the Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA) All-Academic team for the 1984–85 season. He was second in goal scoring for the Badgers during the 1985–86 season as a senior, when his collarbone was broken in a body check. He missed 12 games due to the injury, then completed his college career with 63 total goals in four seasons. He received the Wisconsin Williamson Award as a scholar athlete, and was again named to the WCHA All-Academic team. He graduated from Wisconsin with a degree in sport management, but was not offered a professional contract by the Hartford Whalers.
Professional
Johannson began his professional career playing in West Germany with EV Landsberg in the 2nd Bundesliga during the 1986–87 season. He scored 46 goals for EV Landsberg and felt that his skating improved while playing in Europe. He later recalled that he loved his time in Germany and stated, "I got so much ice time, it was great. We had nothing else to do. I had a key to the rink". He became an unrestricted free agent after the season, then trained for two hours daily during the summer with skating coach Jack Blatherwick to become faster.
The Calgary Flames signed Johannson on February 25, 1988, and assigned him to their minor league affiliate team, the Salt Lake Golden Eagles in the International Hockey League (IHL) for the remainder of the 1987–88 season. He scored five goals and two assists in his first eight games in the IHL. He led the league with 15 assists during the 1988 playoffs, and scored eight goals to help the Golden Eagles win the Turner Cup as the IHL playoffs champions in 1988. At the training camp for the Flames in 1988, coach Terry Crisp felt Johannson deserved an opportunity despite the depth of the organization at the center and right wing positions. Johannson returned to the Golden Eagles where he set a team record with eight short-handed goals during the 1988–89 season. He played in all 82 games during the season, scored 35 goals and 40 assists, then was released. Despite not making the NHL roster, Johannson stated that the Flames treated him well and that he departed on good terms.
Johannson discussed a potential contract with European and National Hockey League (NHL) teams, then agreed to terms with the Chicago Blackhawks in October 1989 and was assigned to the Indianapolis Ice in the IHL. He chose to sign with the Blackhawks since he had family ties to Indianapolis through his mother. He was the only player to appear in all 82 games during the 1989–90 season, and won his second Turner Cup when the Indianapolis Ice were playoffs champions. At the end of the 1990–91 season, Johannson had played 264 consecutive games spanning three seasons. He received the Ironman Award from the IHL in recognition of his durability, and offensive and defensive skills. Johannson began the final year of his contract with the Blackhawks on loan to the United States national team for the 1991–92 season. He sought a contract with a team in Switzerland after the 1992 Winter Olympics, then took time off to discuss a contract with the Blackhawks and his plan to coach hockey when he retired from playing. He returned to the Indianapolis Ice on March 13, 1992, despite no future guarantee from the Blackhawks. While in Indianapolis, he was active in the team's Say No to Drugs community service program.
The Milwaukee Admirals signed Johannson to an IHL contract in July 1992. He played 71 games during the 1992–93 season and scored 14 goals, then played 28 games and scored four goals in the 1993–94 season. He retired from professional hockey after playing 374 games in the IHL, where he scored 119 goals and 279 points.
International
The United States national junior team twice named Johannson to its roster at the World Junior Championship, where the team placed fifth in 1983 in the Soviet Union, and placed sixth in 1984 in Sweden. He played for the United States national team at the 1987 Pravda Cup in Leningrad, coached by Dave Peterson who later led the United States national team at the Winter Olympics in 1988 and 1992.
Johannson was one of the first players cut from tryouts for the United States national team in advance of the 1988 Winter Olympics, but was later recalled and worked hard to be a role player on the team. He credited the support from his father and brother as motivation to make the team. During the pre-Olympic tour, Johannson played 60 games for the United States national team and scored 15 goals, 13 assists, and 28 points. In the 1988 Winter Olympics hockey tournament, he played in five of six games and one assist. The Star Tribune described him as the "top penalty killer on the team" that finished in seventh place.
Johannson was invited to play for the United States national team in ice hockey at the 1990 Goodwill Games by his former university coach Jeff Sauer. He served as captain of the team, scored two goals and had three assists in five games played, and led the United States to the silver medal.
Johannson was named to the United States national team which played a 64-game schedule during the 1991–92 season prior to ice hockey at the 1992 Winter Olympics. He was the second oldest player on the team, and became a source of advice and leadership. His teammate Keith Tkachuk said, "[Johannson] could do almost anything for a team. He had skill, but he was a responsible guy who you could put on the ice in the last minute of a game. He was a player you relied on". The United States lost to the Unified Team by a 5–2 score in the semifinals, which Johannson felt was the most disappointing loss he had played in due to five penalties against called against the United States. The United States then placed fourth after a loss to the Czechoslovakia national hockey team in the bronze medal game.
During the Olympics, he wrote a diary for the Wisconsin State Journal about the life of an Olympic athlete and the hockey competition, and donated the money he received to the Bob Johnson Memorial Foundation. Two months later, Johannson was a member of the United States national team at the 1992 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships in Prague, which saw a seventh-place finish for the United States.
Playing statistics
Regular season and playoffs
Career playing statistics:
International
International tournament statistics:
Twin Cities Vulcans
Johannson became involved in junior ice hockey when he was named head coach and general manager of the Twin Cities Vulcans in the United States Hockey League (USHL) on June 13, 1995. He led the Vulcans to an eighth-place finish in the 1995–96 season, then a best-of-seven series in the first round of the playoffs versus the first-place Green Bay Gamblers. The Vulcans won the first three games of the series, but were eliminated from the playoffs with four consecutive losses. The Vulcans placed fourth in the north division during the 1996–97 season, then were defeated four games to one by the Omaha Lancers in the first round of the playoffs. The USHL named Johannson a co-coach of the league's select team that played in the under-20 Four Nations Junior A tournament in Füssen, Germany in November 1997. The USHL Selects won the tournament with two wins and one draw in three games. In the 1997–98 season, he coached the Vulcans to 25 wins in 56 games, a sixth-place finish in the north division, but the team did not qualify for the playoffs.
Jim Hillman assumed the head coaching duties of the Vulcans from Johannson in May 1998. Johannson remained as general manager of the Vulcans and served as a scout for the Nashville Predators. After a fourth-place finish in the Central Division for the 1998–99 season and a first round playoffs loss to the Des Moines Buccaneers, the Vulcans placed fifth in the West Division in the 1999–2000 season. In the playoffs, the Vulcans won their series versus the Sioux Falls Stampede and the Lincoln Stars then lost in the Clark Cup finals to the Green Bay Gamblers. The Vulcans qualified for the USA Hockey Junior A National Championship as the USHL's representative, since the Gamblers already qualified as the host team. The Vulcans defeated the Danville Wings in the semifinal, then won the national championship with a 4–1 victory versus the Gamblers.
The Vulcans were sold and relocated to Kearney, Nebraska to become the Tri-City Storm in 2000. Johannson felt that the Vulcans were victims of declining attendance and the southward geographical shift of the USHL from Minnesota to Iowa and Nebraska. When the Vulcans reduced their ticket prices to be the lowest in the USHL in 1997, Johannson stated that the team had wanted to raise prices but could not due to competition from other sports in the Twin Cities. He felt that selling the team would strengthen the USHL, which transitioned into bigger budget teams based in cities where hockey was the primary sport.
Coaching statistics
Career coaching statistics:
USA Hockey executive
Johannson served as team leader for the United States national team at the World Championships from 1999 to 2004, and was the liaise between USA Hockey and coaching staffs. In September 2000, he became USA Hockey's manager of international activities and co-operated with the United States Olympic Committee to build national teams. He became senior director of hockey operations on August 2003, then assistant executive director of hockey operations in June 2007. As the assistant executive director of hockey operations, Johannson oversaw all men's and women's national teams assembled for international competition. In 2007, he established an advisory group to facilitate selection of players for the men's national team, participated in the selection of players for the Winter Olympics from 2002 to 2018, was the general manager of the United States national junior team from 2009 to 2018, and general manager of the United States national team for the 2018 Winter Olympics. During his tenure with USA Hockey, national teams won a combined total of 64 medals in International Ice Hockey Federation competitions, including 34 gold, 19 silver and 11 bronze.
Johannson oversaw administration for the 2005 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships when USA Hockey hosted the event in North Dakota and Minnesota, and was a guest speaker at the World Hockey Summit in 2010. He helped implement the American Development Model, and acquired Compuware Arena in 2014 to become the home rink for the USA Hockey National Team Development Program (under-18 national team). According to his brother, Johannson was passionate in his efforts for the under-20 and under-18 age groups and felt that competitions and assessments were an important part of the development process for younger players. He reportedly enjoyed international travel for these age groups and for the players to learn about the history of countries traveled to in addition to the hockey experience.
When the NHL did not permit its players to participate in ice hockey at the 2018 Winter Olympics, Johannson assembled a roster for the men's national team composed of players from the NCAA, the American Hockey League, and professional leagues in Europe. USA Hockey executive director Pat Kelleher felt that, "This Olympic team was going to be a testament to [Johannson] because no one knew the depth our player pool better than he did". Kelleher also felt that it meant as much to Johannson as the players who realized their dreams of playing in the Olympics, and that he was excited about a 25-man roster that included "25 great stories".
Personal life
Johannson wrote in 1992, that he had rituals before each game. Before the end of the national anthem, he would say "forecheck, backcheck, bodycheck, guts", which was a saying from one of his minor hockey coaches in Rochester. Then before the game he would say, "don't tear the jersey", as a way to remember what his father said before youth programs at Rochester Community College.
Johannson played golf in addition to ice hockey, and resided in Colorado Springs, Colorado. He married Abigail Tompkins on September 10, 2011, and had a daughter born in December 2015. He died in his sleep due to heart disease at home in Colorado Springs on January 21, 2018, three weeks before the 2018 Winter Olympics began.
Honors and legacy
At a conference of Minnesota State High School League athletic directors in 1999, Johannson was recognized as a distinguished alumnus of Mayo High School. He was posthumously inducted into the University of Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame in 2018, and was given the Lester Patrick Trophy in 2018, in recognition of his efforts to grow hockey in the United States. He was named a Paul Loicq Award recipient by the IIHF in 2019, in recognition of his contributions to international hockey.
The USA Hockey Foundation established Jim Johannson Legacy Fund in 2018, to benefit minor hockey programs across the United States. Detroit Red Wings player Dylan Larkin led efforts to arrange the Stars and Stripes Showdown held at USA Hockey Arena, an exhibition game to raise funds for the charity. The game included former players of the United States national team who asked the a portion of the proceeds benefit Johannson's family and a college fund for his daughter. In 2019, the USA Hockey College Player of the Year award was renamed to the Jim Johannson College Player of the Year award. Its recipient selects a minor hockey association to receive a grant from the Jim Johannson Legacy Fund.
After Johannson died, journalists recalled his work ethic and humility. Andrew Podnieks wrote, "[Johannson] was a presence at most top-level IIHF events, representing both his country and the game with friendly dignity and a strong moral compass", and that "He was both professional and humble, competitive and ethical, hard-working and amiable". David Shoalts wrote, "Jim Johannson is not a familiar name to many hockey fans but his contributions to the game in the United States went far beyond much more famous monikers", and that "Anyone who encountered Johannson was struck by his easygoing and humble nature".
Johannson's work in hockey was recognized by NHL executives. Carolina Hurricanes general manager Don Waddell said, "He was doing jobs that should've taken three people to do". Nashville Predators general manager David Poile felt that, "He's someone you could never outwork. He was the last one to bed and the first one up in the morning". League commissioner Gary Bettman stated, "In building the teams that achieved so much success for USA Hockey, Jim Johannson had a sharp eye for talent, a strong sense of chemistry and a relentless pursuit of excellence".
References
1964 births
2018 deaths
American ice hockey administrators
American ice hockey coaches
American men's ice hockey centers
Competitors at the 1990 Goodwill Games
EV Landsberg players
Hartford Whalers draft picks
Ice hockey players from Minnesota
Ice hockey players at the 1988 Winter Olympics
Ice hockey players at the 1992 Winter Olympics
Indianapolis Ice players
Lester Patrick Trophy recipients
Milwaukee Admirals (IHL) players
Nashville Predators scouts
NCAA men's ice hockey national champions
Olympic ice hockey players of the United States
Paul Loicq Award recipients
Salt Lake Golden Eagles (IHL) players
Sportspeople from Rochester, Minnesota
United States Hockey League coaches
USA Hockey
Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey players | [
"James Johannson (March 10, 1964January 21, 2018) was an American ice hockey player, coach and executive.",
"He played for the United States national junior team at the World Juniors in 1983 and 1984, then played for the United States national team at the Winter Olympics in 1988 and 1992, the Ice Hockey World Championships in 1992, and was captain of the silver medal-winning team at the 1990 Goodwill Games.",
"He played 374 games in the International Hockey League (IHL) after being selected by the Hartford Whalers in the 1982 NHL Entry Draft.",
"He won the Turner Cup as the IHL playoffs champion with the Salt Lake Golden Eagles in 1998, then again with the Indianapolis Ice in 1990.",
"He played 264 consecutive games spanning three seasons by 1991, and received the Ironman Award from the IHL in recognition of his durability.",
"As an amateur, he played for the Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey program and won the National Collegiate Athletic Association championship in 1983.",
"Johannson was twice named to the Western Collegiate Hockey Association All-Academic team, and graduated from the University of Wisconsin–Madison with a degree in sport management.",
"After retiring as a player, Johannson was head coach and general manager of the Twin Cities Vulcans in the United States Hockey League, and led them to the Junior A National Championship in the 1999–2000 season.",
"He worked in several executive positions for USA Hockey from 2000 to 2018, co-operated with the United States Olympic Committee, and oversaw all men's and women's national hockey teams.",
"During his tenure with USA Hockey, national teams won a combined total of 64 medals in International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) competitions.",
"He helped acquire Compuware Arena to become the home rink for the USA Hockey National Team Development Program, and was general manager of the men's national team at the 2018 Winter Olympics until his death three weeks before the games began.",
"He was posthumously given the Lester Patrick Trophy in recognition of growing hockey in the United States, received the Paul Loicq Award from the IIHF for contributions to international ice hockey, and inducted into the University of Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame.",
"He was son of Ken Johannson who also served as general manager of the United States national team, and was the younger brother of professional hockey player John Johannson.",
"Early life and family\nJames Johannson was born on March 10, 1964, in Rochester, Minnesota, and was commonly known as \"J.J.\" He was the youngest of two boys and one girl to Ken Johannson and Marietta Sands, which included his older brother John Johannson.",
"During the 1970s, Johannson's father served as the coaching director of the Amateur Hockey Association of the United States, and was the general manager of the United States national team in 1979 and 1980.",
"As a youth, Johannson and his brother spent summer vacations at hockey camps operated by their father, were included in photographs demonstrating skills for coaching manuals, were stick boys at selection camps for the US national team, and handed out shoes and jackets to the players.",
"Playing career\n\nAmateur\n\nJohannson played ice hockey as a center, was a right-handed shooter, and was listed as and .",
"He played in the Minnesota state high school tournament with Mayo High School in 1982, and was tied as the tournament's leading scorer with seven points.",
"He was recruited by family friend Bob Johnson to play for the Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey program along with his older brother John.",
"Johannson signed a letter of intent in March 1982 to attend the University of Wisconsin–Madison, then was selected by the Hartford Whalers in the 1982 NHL Entry Draft, 130th overall in the seventh round.",
"From 1982 to 1986, Johannson played for the Badgers, and won a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) championship as a freshman in the 1982–83 season.",
"He received the Fenton J. Kelsey Award as the most competitive player on the Badgers for the 1983–84 season, in which he scored 17 goals and 21 assists as a sophomore.",
"As a junior, he was named to the Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA) All-Academic team for the 1984–85 season.",
"He was second in goal scoring for the Badgers during the 1985–86 season as a senior, when his collarbone was broken in a body check.",
"He missed 12 games due to the injury, then completed his college career with 63 total goals in four seasons.",
"He received the Wisconsin Williamson Award as a scholar athlete, and was again named to the WCHA All-Academic team.",
"He graduated from Wisconsin with a degree in sport management, but was not offered a professional contract by the Hartford Whalers.",
"Professional\nJohannson began his professional career playing in West Germany with EV Landsberg in the 2nd Bundesliga during the 1986–87 season.",
"He scored 46 goals for EV Landsberg and felt that his skating improved while playing in Europe.",
"He later recalled that he loved his time in Germany and stated, \"I got so much ice time, it was great.",
"We had nothing else to do.",
"I had a key to the rink\".",
"He became an unrestricted free agent after the season, then trained for two hours daily during the summer with skating coach Jack Blatherwick to become faster.",
"The Calgary Flames signed Johannson on February 25, 1988, and assigned him to their minor league affiliate team, the Salt Lake Golden Eagles in the International Hockey League (IHL) for the remainder of the 1987–88 season.",
"He scored five goals and two assists in his first eight games in the IHL.",
"He led the league with 15 assists during the 1988 playoffs, and scored eight goals to help the Golden Eagles win the Turner Cup as the IHL playoffs champions in 1988.",
"At the training camp for the Flames in 1988, coach Terry Crisp felt Johannson deserved an opportunity despite the depth of the organization at the center and right wing positions.",
"Johannson returned to the Golden Eagles where he set a team record with eight short-handed goals during the 1988–89 season.",
"He played in all 82 games during the season, scored 35 goals and 40 assists, then was released.",
"Despite not making the NHL roster, Johannson stated that the Flames treated him well and that he departed on good terms.",
"Johannson discussed a potential contract with European and National Hockey League (NHL) teams, then agreed to terms with the Chicago Blackhawks in October 1989 and was assigned to the Indianapolis Ice in the IHL.",
"He chose to sign with the Blackhawks since he had family ties to Indianapolis through his mother.",
"He was the only player to appear in all 82 games during the 1989–90 season, and won his second Turner Cup when the Indianapolis Ice were playoffs champions.",
"At the end of the 1990–91 season, Johannson had played 264 consecutive games spanning three seasons.",
"He received the Ironman Award from the IHL in recognition of his durability, and offensive and defensive skills.",
"Johannson began the final year of his contract with the Blackhawks on loan to the United States national team for the 1991–92 season.",
"He sought a contract with a team in Switzerland after the 1992 Winter Olympics, then took time off to discuss a contract with the Blackhawks and his plan to coach hockey when he retired from playing.",
"He returned to the Indianapolis Ice on March 13, 1992, despite no future guarantee from the Blackhawks.",
"While in Indianapolis, he was active in the team's Say No to Drugs community service program.",
"The Milwaukee Admirals signed Johannson to an IHL contract in July 1992.",
"He played 71 games during the 1992–93 season and scored 14 goals, then played 28 games and scored four goals in the 1993–94 season.",
"He retired from professional hockey after playing 374 games in the IHL, where he scored 119 goals and 279 points.",
"International\n\nThe United States national junior team twice named Johannson to its roster at the World Junior Championship, where the team placed fifth in 1983 in the Soviet Union, and placed sixth in 1984 in Sweden.",
"He played for the United States national team at the 1987 Pravda Cup in Leningrad, coached by Dave Peterson who later led the United States national team at the Winter Olympics in 1988 and 1992.",
"Johannson was one of the first players cut from tryouts for the United States national team in advance of the 1988 Winter Olympics, but was later recalled and worked hard to be a role player on the team.",
"He credited the support from his father and brother as motivation to make the team.",
"During the pre-Olympic tour, Johannson played 60 games for the United States national team and scored 15 goals, 13 assists, and 28 points.",
"In the 1988 Winter Olympics hockey tournament, he played in five of six games and one assist.",
"The Star Tribune described him as the \"top penalty killer on the team\" that finished in seventh place.",
"Johannson was invited to play for the United States national team in ice hockey at the 1990 Goodwill Games by his former university coach Jeff Sauer.",
"He served as captain of the team, scored two goals and had three assists in five games played, and led the United States to the silver medal.",
"Johannson was named to the United States national team which played a 64-game schedule during the 1991–92 season prior to ice hockey at the 1992 Winter Olympics.",
"He was the second oldest player on the team, and became a source of advice and leadership.",
"His teammate Keith Tkachuk said, \"[Johannson] could do almost anything for a team.",
"He had skill, but he was a responsible guy who you could put on the ice in the last minute of a game.",
"He was a player you relied on\".",
"The United States lost to the Unified Team by a 5–2 score in the semifinals, which Johannson felt was the most disappointing loss he had played in due to five penalties against called against the United States.",
"The United States then placed fourth after a loss to the Czechoslovakia national hockey team in the bronze medal game.",
"During the Olympics, he wrote a diary for the Wisconsin State Journal about the life of an Olympic athlete and the hockey competition, and donated the money he received to the Bob Johnson Memorial Foundation.",
"Two months later, Johannson was a member of the United States national team at the 1992 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships in Prague, which saw a seventh-place finish for the United States.",
"Playing statistics\n\nRegular season and playoffs\n\nCareer playing statistics:\n\nInternational\nInternational tournament statistics:\n\nTwin Cities Vulcans\n\nJohannson became involved in junior ice hockey when he was named head coach and general manager of the Twin Cities Vulcans in the United States Hockey League (USHL) on June 13, 1995.",
"He led the Vulcans to an eighth-place finish in the 1995–96 season, then a best-of-seven series in the first round of the playoffs versus the first-place Green Bay Gamblers.",
"The Vulcans won the first three games of the series, but were eliminated from the playoffs with four consecutive losses.",
"The Vulcans placed fourth in the north division during the 1996–97 season, then were defeated four games to one by the Omaha Lancers in the first round of the playoffs.",
"The USHL named Johannson a co-coach of the league's select team that played in the under-20 Four Nations Junior A tournament in Füssen, Germany in November 1997.",
"The USHL Selects won the tournament with two wins and one draw in three games.",
"In the 1997–98 season, he coached the Vulcans to 25 wins in 56 games, a sixth-place finish in the north division, but the team did not qualify for the playoffs.",
"Jim Hillman assumed the head coaching duties of the Vulcans from Johannson in May 1998.",
"Johannson remained as general manager of the Vulcans and served as a scout for the Nashville Predators.",
"After a fourth-place finish in the Central Division for the 1998–99 season and a first round playoffs loss to the Des Moines Buccaneers, the Vulcans placed fifth in the West Division in the 1999–2000 season.",
"In the playoffs, the Vulcans won their series versus the Sioux Falls Stampede and the Lincoln Stars then lost in the Clark Cup finals to the Green Bay Gamblers.",
"The Vulcans qualified for the USA Hockey Junior A National Championship as the USHL's representative, since the Gamblers already qualified as the host team.",
"The Vulcans defeated the Danville Wings in the semifinal, then won the national championship with a 4–1 victory versus the Gamblers.",
"The Vulcans were sold and relocated to Kearney, Nebraska to become the Tri-City Storm in 2000.",
"Johannson felt that the Vulcans were victims of declining attendance and the southward geographical shift of the USHL from Minnesota to Iowa and Nebraska.",
"When the Vulcans reduced their ticket prices to be the lowest in the USHL in 1997, Johannson stated that the team had wanted to raise prices but could not due to competition from other sports in the Twin Cities.",
"He felt that selling the team would strengthen the USHL, which transitioned into bigger budget teams based in cities where hockey was the primary sport.",
"Coaching statistics\nCareer coaching statistics:\n\nUSA Hockey executive\n\nJohannson served as team leader for the United States national team at the World Championships from 1999 to 2004, and was the liaise between USA Hockey and coaching staffs.",
"In September 2000, he became USA Hockey's manager of international activities and co-operated with the United States Olympic Committee to build national teams.",
"He became senior director of hockey operations on August 2003, then assistant executive director of hockey operations in June 2007.",
"As the assistant executive director of hockey operations, Johannson oversaw all men's and women's national teams assembled for international competition.",
"In 2007, he established an advisory group to facilitate selection of players for the men's national team, participated in the selection of players for the Winter Olympics from 2002 to 2018, was the general manager of the United States national junior team from 2009 to 2018, and general manager of the United States national team for the 2018 Winter Olympics.",
"During his tenure with USA Hockey, national teams won a combined total of 64 medals in International Ice Hockey Federation competitions, including 34 gold, 19 silver and 11 bronze.",
"Johannson oversaw administration for the 2005 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships when USA Hockey hosted the event in North Dakota and Minnesota, and was a guest speaker at the World Hockey Summit in 2010.",
"He helped implement the American Development Model, and acquired Compuware Arena in 2014 to become the home rink for the USA Hockey National Team Development Program (under-18 national team).",
"According to his brother, Johannson was passionate in his efforts for the under-20 and under-18 age groups and felt that competitions and assessments were an important part of the development process for younger players.",
"He reportedly enjoyed international travel for these age groups and for the players to learn about the history of countries traveled to in addition to the hockey experience.",
"When the NHL did not permit its players to participate in ice hockey at the 2018 Winter Olympics, Johannson assembled a roster for the men's national team composed of players from the NCAA, the American Hockey League, and professional leagues in Europe.",
"USA Hockey executive director Pat Kelleher felt that, \"This Olympic team was going to be a testament to [Johannson] because no one knew the depth our player pool better than he did\".",
"Kelleher also felt that it meant as much to Johannson as the players who realized their dreams of playing in the Olympics, and that he was excited about a 25-man roster that included \"25 great stories\".",
"Personal life\nJohannson wrote in 1992, that he had rituals before each game.",
"Before the end of the national anthem, he would say \"forecheck, backcheck, bodycheck, guts\", which was a saying from one of his minor hockey coaches in Rochester.",
"Then before the game he would say, \"don't tear the jersey\", as a way to remember what his father said before youth programs at Rochester Community College.",
"Johannson played golf in addition to ice hockey, and resided in Colorado Springs, Colorado.",
"He married Abigail Tompkins on September 10, 2011, and had a daughter born in December 2015.",
"He died in his sleep due to heart disease at home in Colorado Springs on January 21, 2018, three weeks before the 2018 Winter Olympics began.",
"Honors and legacy\n\nAt a conference of Minnesota State High School League athletic directors in 1999, Johannson was recognized as a distinguished alumnus of Mayo High School.",
"He was posthumously inducted into the University of Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame in 2018, and was given the Lester Patrick Trophy in 2018, in recognition of his efforts to grow hockey in the United States.",
"He was named a Paul Loicq Award recipient by the IIHF in 2019, in recognition of his contributions to international hockey.",
"The USA Hockey Foundation established Jim Johannson Legacy Fund in 2018, to benefit minor hockey programs across the United States.",
"Detroit Red Wings player Dylan Larkin led efforts to arrange the Stars and Stripes Showdown held at USA Hockey Arena, an exhibition game to raise funds for the charity.",
"The game included former players of the United States national team who asked the a portion of the proceeds benefit Johannson's family and a college fund for his daughter.",
"In 2019, the USA Hockey College Player of the Year award was renamed to the Jim Johannson College Player of the Year award.",
"Its recipient selects a minor hockey association to receive a grant from the Jim Johannson Legacy Fund.",
"After Johannson died, journalists recalled his work ethic and humility.",
"Andrew Podnieks wrote, \"[Johannson] was a presence at most top-level IIHF events, representing both his country and the game with friendly dignity and a strong moral compass\", and that \"He was both professional and humble, competitive and ethical, hard-working and amiable\".",
"David Shoalts wrote, \"Jim Johannson is not a familiar name to many hockey fans but his contributions to the game in the United States went far beyond much more famous monikers\", and that \"Anyone who encountered Johannson was struck by his easygoing and humble nature\".",
"Johannson's work in hockey was recognized by NHL executives.",
"Carolina Hurricanes general manager Don Waddell said, \"He was doing jobs that should've taken three people to do\".",
"Nashville Predators general manager David Poile felt that, \"He's someone you could never outwork.",
"He was the last one to bed and the first one up in the morning\".",
"League commissioner Gary Bettman stated, \"In building the teams that achieved so much success for USA Hockey, Jim Johannson had a sharp eye for talent, a strong sense of chemistry and a relentless pursuit of excellence\".",
"References\n\n1964 births\n2018 deaths\nAmerican ice hockey administrators\nAmerican ice hockey coaches\nAmerican men's ice hockey centers\nCompetitors at the 1990 Goodwill Games\nEV Landsberg players\nHartford Whalers draft picks\nIce hockey players from Minnesota\nIce hockey players at the 1988 Winter Olympics\nIce hockey players at the 1992 Winter Olympics\nIndianapolis Ice players\nLester Patrick Trophy recipients\nMilwaukee Admirals (IHL) players\nNashville Predators scouts\nNCAA men's ice hockey national champions\nOlympic ice hockey players of the United States\nPaul Loicq Award recipients\nSalt Lake Golden Eagles (IHL) players\nSportspeople from Rochester, Minnesota\nUnited States Hockey League coaches\nUSA Hockey\nWisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey players"
] | [
"An American ice hockey player, coach and executive was named James Johannson.",
"He played for the United States national team at the Winter Olympics in 1988 and 1992, the Ice Hockey World Championships in 1992, and was captain of the silver medal-winning team at the 1990 Goodwill Games.",
"He played in the International Hockey League after being selected by the Hartford Whalers in the NHL Entry Draft.",
"He won the Turner Cup with the Salt Lake Golden Eagles in 1998 and the Indianapolis Ice in 1990.",
"He played more games than any other player in the three seasons he played.",
"He was a member of the Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey team that won the NCAA championship in 1983.",
"He graduated from the University of Wisconsin–Madison with a degree in sport management.",
"After retiring as a player, he was the head coach and general manager of the Twin Cities Vulcans, who won the Junior A National Championship in 1999.",
"He oversaw all men's and women's national hockey teams while working in several executive positions for USA Hockey.",
"During his time with USA Hockey, the national teams won a total of 64 medals.",
"He was the general manager of the men's national team at the Winter Olympics until his death three weeks before the games began.",
"He was posthumously given the Lester Patrick Trophy in recognition of growing hockey in the United States, received the Paul Loicq Award from the IIHF for contributions to international ice hockey, and was in the University of Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame.",
"The younger brother of a professional hockey player was the son of the general manager of the United States national team.",
"J.J., as he was known, was the youngest of two boys and a girl who lived with their parents in Rochester, Minnesota.",
"The general manager of the United States national team in 1979 and 1980, as well as the coaching director of the Amateur Hockey Association of the United States, were both father and son.",
"As a child, he and his brother spent summers at hockey camps operated by their father, were included in photographs demonstrating skills for coaching, and handed out shoes and jackets to the players.",
"The amateur played ice hockey as a center and was a right-handed shooter.",
"He was the leading scorer in the Minnesota state high school tournament in 1982 with seven points.",
"He was recruited by Bob Johnson to play for the Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey program along with his older brother.",
"After signing a letter of intent to attend the University of Wisconsin–Madison, he was selected by the Hartford Whalers in the seventh round of the NHL Entry Draft.",
"In the 1982–83 season, he was a freshman at the University of Wisconsin and won the NCAA championship.",
"He was the most competitive player on the team for the 1983–84 season, when he scored 17 goals and 21 assists as a sophomore.",
"He was named to the WCHA All-Academic team as a junior.",
"When he broke his collarbone as a senior, he was second in goal scoring for the Badgers.",
"He missed 12 games due to the injury, but finished his college career with 63 goals.",
"He was named to the WCHA All-Academic team for the second year in a row.",
"He graduated from the University of Wisconsin with a degree in sport management, but was not offered a professional contract by the Whalers.",
"During the 1986–87 season, professional Johannson played for EV Landsberg in the 2nd Bundesliga.",
"He scored 46 goals for EV Landsberg and felt that his skating improved while in Europe.",
"He said that he loved his time in Germany and that he got a lot of ice time.",
"We didn't have anything else to do.",
"I had a key to the rink.",
"He became an unrestricted free agent after the season and trained for two hours daily with skating coach Jack Blatherwick to become faster.",
"The Salt Lake Golden Eagles were assigned to the Flames' minor league team in the International Hockey League for the remainder of the 1987–88 season.",
"He had five goals and two assists in his first eight games.",
"The Golden Eagles won the Turner Cup in 1988 after he scored eight goals and led the league with 15 assists.",
"At the training camp for the Flames in 1988, Terry Crisp felt that Johannson deserved an opportunity despite the depth of the organization at the center and right wing positions.",
"During the 1988–89 season, he set a team record with eight short-handed goals.",
"He played in all of the games and scored 35 goals and 40 assists.",
"He stated that the Flames treated him well despite not making the NHL roster.",
"In October 1989 he was assigned to the Indianapolis Ice in the IHL after agreeing to terms with the Chicago Hawks in the NHL.",
"His mother was from Indianapolis and he chose to sign with the Hawks.",
"He won his second Turner Cup when the Indianapolis Ice won the playoffs in 1989.",
"At the end of the 1990–91) season, he played over 200 games in a row.",
"He received an award for his defensive and offensive skills from the IHL.",
"The last year of his contract was spent on loan to the United States national team.",
"After the 1992 Winter Olympics, he sought a contract with a team in Switzerland, then took time off to discuss a contract with the Blackhawks and his plan to coach hockey when he retired from playing.",
"On March 13, 1992, he returned to the Indianapolis Ice despite not having a future guarantee.",
"He was involved in the team's Say No to Drugs community service program.",
"He was signed to an IHL contract by the Milwaukee Admirals.",
"During the 1992–93 season, he played 71 games and scored 14 goals, then played 28 games and scored four goals in the 1993–94 season.",
"He retired from professional hockey after he scored over 300 points in the IHL.",
"The United States national junior team placed fifth in the Soviet Union in 1983 and sixth in 1984 at the World Junior Championship.",
"He played for the United States national team at the Pravda Cup in 1987 and later led the team at the Winter Olympics in 1988 and 1992.",
"One of the first players cut from the United States national team in advance of the 1988 Winter Olympics, was later recalled and worked hard to be a role player on the team.",
"His father and brother supported him in making the team.",
"In 60 games for the United States national team, he scored 15 goals, 13 assists, and 28 points.",
"He played in five of six games in the 1988 Winter Olympics.",
"He was described as the \"top penalty killer on the team\" by the Star Tribune.",
"He was invited to play for the United States national team in ice hockey at the 1990 Goodwill Games by his former university coach.",
"He was captain of the team, scored two goals and had three assists in five games, and led the United States to a silver medal.",
"The United States national team played a 64 game schedule prior to the 1992 Winter Olympics.",
"He was the second oldest player on the team and became a source of advice and leadership.",
"His teammate said, \"Johannson could do almost anything for a team.\"",
"He was a responsible guy who you could put on the ice in the last minute of a game.",
"He was a player that you relied on.",
"The United States lost to the Unified Team by a 5–2 score in the semifinals because of five penalties against them.",
"The United States lost to the Czechoslovakia national hockey team in the bronze medal game.",
"He donated the money he received from the diary he wrote for the Wisconsin State Journal during the Olympics to the Bob Johnson Memorial Foundation.",
"The United States finished in seventh place at the 1992 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships.",
"When he was named head coach and general manager of the Twin Cities Vulcans in the United States Hockey League in 1995, he became involved in junior ice hockey.",
"He led the Vulcans to an eighth-place finish and a first-round series against the Green Bay Gamblers.",
"The first three games of the series were won by the Vulcans.",
"During the 1996–97 season, the Vulcans placed fourth in the north division, but were defeated by Omaha in the first round of the playoffs.",
"The Under-20 Four Nations Junior A tournament in Fssen, Germany was where the USHL's select team played in 1997.",
"The USHL Selects won two out of three games.",
"In the 1997–98 season, he coached the Vulcans to 25 wins in 56 games, a sixth-place finish in the north division, but the team did not make the playoffs.",
"In May 1998 Jim Hillman became the head coach of the Vulcans.",
"The general manager of the Vulcans was also a scout for the Nashville Preds.",
"The Vulcans placed fifth in the West Division in the 1999–2000 season after finishing fourth in the Central Division in the 1998–99 season.",
"The Lincoln Stars lost in the Clark Cup finals to the Green Bay Gamblers after they won the playoffs.",
"The Vulcans qualified for the USA Hockey Junior A National Championship as the USHL's representative, since the Gamblers already qualified as the host team.",
"The Vulcans defeated the Wings in the semifinals and then defeated the Gamblers in the title game.",
"The Tri-City Storm was formed in 2000 after the sale and relocation of the Vulcans.",
"The southward geographical shift of the USHL from Minnesota to Iowa and Nebraska was felt to be the reason for the declining attendance of the Vulcans.",
"When the Vulcans reduced their ticket prices to be the lowest in the USHL in 1997, the team wanted to raise prices but couldn't due to competition from other sports in the Twin Cities.",
"The USHL transitioned into bigger budget teams based in cities where hockey was the primary sport after he sold the team.",
"The USA Hockey executive served as team leader for the United States national team at the World Championships from 1999 to 2004, and was the liaison between USA Hockey and coaching staffs.",
"In September 2000 he became USA Hockey's manager of international activities and co-operated with the United States Olympic Committee to build national teams.",
"He was the assistant executive director of hockey operations in June 2007.",
"The assistant executive director of hockey operations oversaw all men's and women's national teams.",
"In 2007, he established an advisory group to facilitate selection of players for the men's national team, participated in the selection of players for the Winter Olympics from 2002 to 2018, and was the general manager of the United States national team.",
"During his time with USA Hockey, the national teams won a total of 64 medals, including 34 gold, 19 silver and 11 bronze.",
"When USA Hockey hosted the 2005 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships in North Dakota and Minnesota, Johannson was in charge of the event's administration.",
"The home rink for the USA Hockey National Team Development Program was acquired by him.",
"Competitions and assessments were an important part of the development process for younger players according to his brother.",
"For the players to learn about the history of countries traveled to in addition to the hockey experience, he enjoyed international travel for these age groups.",
"The NHL did not permit its players to participate in ice hockey at the Winter Olympics, which led to the creation of a roster for the men's national team composed of players from the NCAA, the American Hockey League, and professional leagues in Europe.",
"\"This Olympic team was going to be a testament to [Johannson] because no one knew the depth of our player pool better than he did\", said Pat Kelleher, USA Hockey executive director.",
"He was excited about a 25-man roster that included \"25 great stories\" and felt that it meant a lot to the players who realized their dreams of playing in the Olympics.",
"In 1992, Johannson wrote that he had rituals before each game.",
"Before the end of the national anthem, he would say \"forecheck, backcheck, bodycheck, guts\", which was a saying from one of his minor hockey coaches in Rochester.",
"As a way to remember what his father said before youth programs at Rochester Community College, he would say \"don't tear the jersey\" before the game.",
"He resided in Colorado Springs, Colorado, where he played golf and ice hockey.",
"He married and had a daughter in December of 2015.",
"He died in his sleep due to heart disease three weeks before the Winter Olympics began.",
"At a conference of Minnesota State High School League athletic directors in 1999, Johannson was recognized as a distinguished alumni.",
"He was posthumously inducted into the University of Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame in the year of his death, and he was also given the Lester Patrick Trophy in recognition of his efforts to grow hockey in the United States.",
"In recognition of his contributions to international hockey, he was named a Paul Loicq Award recipient.",
"The USA Hockey Foundation established a fund to benefit minor hockey programs.",
"The Stars and Stripes Showdown was an exhibition game held at USA Hockey Arena to raise funds for the charity.",
"The former players of the United States national team asked for a portion of the proceeds from the game to benefit the family and college fund of their daughter.",
"The USA Hockey College Player of the Year award was renamed to the Jim Johannson College Player of the Year in 2019.",
"The recipient selects a minor hockey association to receive a grant.",
"Journalists remembered his humility and work ethic after he died.",
"According to Andrew Podnieks, \"Johannson was a presence at most top-level IIHF events, representing both his country and the game with friendly dignity and a strong moral compass, and that he was both professional and humble, competitive and ethical, hard-working and amiable\".",
"\"Jim Johannson is not a familiar name to many hockey fans but his contributions to the game in the United States went far beyond much more famous monikers\", wrote David Shoalts.",
"NHL executives recognized his work in hockey.",
"The general manager of the Carolina Hurricanes said that he was doing jobs that should have taken three people to do.",
"David Poile felt that, \"He's someone you could never outwork.\"",
"He was the last one to sleep and the first one to wake up.",
"Gary Bettman stated, \"In building the teams that achieved so much success for USA Hockey, Jim Johannson had a sharp eye for talent, a strong sense of chemistry and a relentless pursuit of excellence\".",
"Ice hockey players at the 1990 Goodwill Games and the 1992 Winter Olympics."
] | <mask> (March 10, 1964January 21, 2018) was an American ice hockey player, coach and executive. He played for the United States national junior team at the World Juniors in 1983 and 1984, then played for the United States national team at the Winter Olympics in 1988 and 1992, the Ice Hockey World Championships in 1992, and was captain of the silver medal-winning team at the 1990 Goodwill Games. He played 374 games in the International Hockey League (IHL) after being selected by the Hartford Whalers in the 1982 NHL Entry Draft. He won the Turner Cup as the IHL playoffs champion with the Salt Lake Golden Eagles in 1998, then again with the Indianapolis Ice in 1990. He played 264 consecutive games spanning three seasons by 1991, and received the Ironman Award from the IHL in recognition of his durability. As an amateur, he played for the Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey program and won the National Collegiate Athletic Association championship in 1983. <mask> was twice named to the Western Collegiate Hockey Association All-Academic team, and graduated from the University of Wisconsin–Madison with a degree in sport management.After retiring as a player, <mask> was head coach and general manager of the Twin Cities Vulcans in the United States Hockey League, and led them to the Junior A National Championship in the 1999–2000 season. He worked in several executive positions for USA Hockey from 2000 to 2018, co-operated with the United States Olympic Committee, and oversaw all men's and women's national hockey teams. During his tenure with USA Hockey, national teams won a combined total of 64 medals in International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) competitions. He helped acquire Compuware Arena to become the home rink for the USA Hockey National Team Development Program, and was general manager of the men's national team at the 2018 Winter Olympics until his death three weeks before the games began. He was posthumously given the Lester Patrick Trophy in recognition of growing hockey in the United States, received the Paul Loicq Award from the IIHF for contributions to international ice hockey, and inducted into the University of Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame. He was son of <mask> who also served as general manager of the United States national team, and was the younger brother of professional hockey player <mask>. Early life and family
<mask> was born on March 10, 1964, in Rochester, Minnesota, and was commonly known as "J.J." He was the youngest of two boys and one girl to <mask> and Marietta Sands, which included his older brother <mask>.During the 1970s, <mask>'s father served as the coaching director of the Amateur Hockey Association of the United States, and was the general manager of the United States national team in 1979 and 1980. As a youth, <mask> and his brother spent summer vacations at hockey camps operated by their father, were included in photographs demonstrating skills for coaching manuals, were stick boys at selection camps for the US national team, and handed out shoes and jackets to the players. Playing career
Amateur
<mask> played ice hockey as a center, was a right-handed shooter, and was listed as and . He played in the Minnesota state high school tournament with Mayo High School in 1982, and was tied as the tournament's leading scorer with seven points. He was recruited by family friend Bob Johnson to play for the Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey program along with his older brother John. <mask> signed a letter of intent in March 1982 to attend the University of Wisconsin–Madison, then was selected by the Hartford Whalers in the 1982 NHL Entry Draft, 130th overall in the seventh round. From 1982 to 1986, <mask> played for the Badgers, and won a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) championship as a freshman in the 1982–83 season.He received the Fenton J. Kelsey Award as the most competitive player on the Badgers for the 1983–84 season, in which he scored 17 goals and 21 assists as a sophomore. As a junior, he was named to the Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA) All-Academic team for the 1984–85 season. He was second in goal scoring for the Badgers during the 1985–86 season as a senior, when his collarbone was broken in a body check. He missed 12 games due to the injury, then completed his college career with 63 total goals in four seasons. He received the Wisconsin Williamson Award as a scholar athlete, and was again named to the WCHA All-Academic team. He graduated from Wisconsin with a degree in sport management, but was not offered a professional contract by the Hartford Whalers. Professional
<mask> began his professional career playing in West Germany with EV Landsberg in the 2nd Bundesliga during the 1986–87 season.He scored 46 goals for EV Landsberg and felt that his skating improved while playing in Europe. He later recalled that he loved his time in Germany and stated, "I got so much ice time, it was great. We had nothing else to do. I had a key to the rink". He became an unrestricted free agent after the season, then trained for two hours daily during the summer with skating coach Jack Blatherwick to become faster. The Calgary Flames signed <mask> on February 25, 1988, and assigned him to their minor league affiliate team, the Salt Lake Golden Eagles in the International Hockey League (IHL) for the remainder of the 1987–88 season. He scored five goals and two assists in his first eight games in the IHL.He led the league with 15 assists during the 1988 playoffs, and scored eight goals to help the Golden Eagles win the Turner Cup as the IHL playoffs champions in 1988. At the training camp for the Flames in 1988, coach Terry Crisp felt Johannson deserved an opportunity despite the depth of the organization at the center and right wing positions. <mask> returned to the Golden Eagles where he set a team record with eight short-handed goals during the 1988–89 season. He played in all 82 games during the season, scored 35 goals and 40 assists, then was released. Despite not making the NHL roster, <mask> stated that the Flames treated him well and that he departed on good terms. Johannson discussed a potential contract with European and National Hockey League (NHL) teams, then agreed to terms with the Chicago Blackhawks in October 1989 and was assigned to the Indianapolis Ice in the IHL. He chose to sign with the Blackhawks since he had family ties to Indianapolis through his mother.He was the only player to appear in all 82 games during the 1989–90 season, and won his second Turner Cup when the Indianapolis Ice were playoffs champions. At the end of the 1990–91 season, <mask> had played 264 consecutive games spanning three seasons. He received the Ironman Award from the IHL in recognition of his durability, and offensive and defensive skills. <mask> began the final year of his contract with the Blackhawks on loan to the United States national team for the 1991–92 season. He sought a contract with a team in Switzerland after the 1992 Winter Olympics, then took time off to discuss a contract with the Blackhawks and his plan to coach hockey when he retired from playing. He returned to the Indianapolis Ice on March 13, 1992, despite no future guarantee from the Blackhawks. While in Indianapolis, he was active in the team's Say No to Drugs community service program.The Milwaukee Admirals signed <mask> to an IHL contract in July 1992. He played 71 games during the 1992–93 season and scored 14 goals, then played 28 games and scored four goals in the 1993–94 season. He retired from professional hockey after playing 374 games in the IHL, where he scored 119 goals and 279 points. International
The United States national junior team twice named <mask> to its roster at the World Junior Championship, where the team placed fifth in 1983 in the Soviet Union, and placed sixth in 1984 in Sweden. He played for the United States national team at the 1987 Pravda Cup in Leningrad, coached by Dave Peterson who later led the United States national team at the Winter Olympics in 1988 and 1992. <mask> was one of the first players cut from tryouts for the United States national team in advance of the 1988 Winter Olympics, but was later recalled and worked hard to be a role player on the team. He credited the support from his father and brother as motivation to make the team.During the pre-Olympic tour, <mask> played 60 games for the United States national team and scored 15 goals, 13 assists, and 28 points. In the 1988 Winter Olympics hockey tournament, he played in five of six games and one assist. The Star Tribune described him as the "top penalty killer on the team" that finished in seventh place. <mask> was invited to play for the United States national team in ice hockey at the 1990 Goodwill Games by his former university coach Jeff Sauer. He served as captain of the team, scored two goals and had three assists in five games played, and led the United States to the silver medal. <mask> was named to the United States national team which played a 64-game schedule during the 1991–92 season prior to ice hockey at the 1992 Winter Olympics. He was the second oldest player on the team, and became a source of advice and leadership.His teammate Keith Tkachuk said, "[<mask>] could do almost anything for a team. He had skill, but he was a responsible guy who you could put on the ice in the last minute of a game. He was a player you relied on". The United States lost to the Unified Team by a 5–2 score in the semifinals, which <mask> felt was the most disappointing loss he had played in due to five penalties against called against the United States. The United States then placed fourth after a loss to the Czechoslovakia national hockey team in the bronze medal game. During the Olympics, he wrote a diary for the Wisconsin State Journal about the life of an Olympic athlete and the hockey competition, and donated the money he received to the Bob Johnson Memorial Foundation. Two months later, <mask> was a member of the United States national team at the 1992 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships in Prague, which saw a seventh-place finish for the United States.Playing statistics
Regular season and playoffs
Career playing statistics:
International
International tournament statistics:
Twin Cities Vulcans
Johannson became involved in junior ice hockey when he was named head coach and general manager of the Twin Cities Vulcans in the United States Hockey League (USHL) on June 13, 1995. He led the Vulcans to an eighth-place finish in the 1995–96 season, then a best-of-seven series in the first round of the playoffs versus the first-place Green Bay Gamblers. The Vulcans won the first three games of the series, but were eliminated from the playoffs with four consecutive losses. The Vulcans placed fourth in the north division during the 1996–97 season, then were defeated four games to one by the Omaha Lancers in the first round of the playoffs. The USHL named <mask> a co-coach of the league's select team that played in the under-20 Four Nations Junior A tournament in Füssen, Germany in November 1997. The USHL Selects won the tournament with two wins and one draw in three games. In the 1997–98 season, he coached the Vulcans to 25 wins in 56 games, a sixth-place finish in the north division, but the team did not qualify for the playoffs.<mask> assumed the head coaching duties of the Vulcans from <mask> in May 1998. <mask> remained as general manager of the Vulcans and served as a scout for the Nashville Predators. After a fourth-place finish in the Central Division for the 1998–99 season and a first round playoffs loss to the Des Moines Buccaneers, the Vulcans placed fifth in the West Division in the 1999–2000 season. In the playoffs, the Vulcans won their series versus the Sioux Falls Stampede and the Lincoln Stars then lost in the Clark Cup finals to the Green Bay Gamblers. The Vulcans qualified for the USA Hockey Junior A National Championship as the USHL's representative, since the Gamblers already qualified as the host team. The Vulcans defeated the Danville Wings in the semifinal, then won the national championship with a 4–1 victory versus the Gamblers. The Vulcans were sold and relocated to Kearney, Nebraska to become the Tri-City Storm in 2000.<mask> felt that the Vulcans were victims of declining attendance and the southward geographical shift of the USHL from Minnesota to Iowa and Nebraska. When the Vulcans reduced their ticket prices to be the lowest in the USHL in 1997, <mask> stated that the team had wanted to raise prices but could not due to competition from other sports in the Twin Cities. He felt that selling the team would strengthen the USHL, which transitioned into bigger budget teams based in cities where hockey was the primary sport. Coaching statistics
Career coaching statistics:
USA Hockey executive
<mask> served as team leader for the United States national team at the World Championships from 1999 to 2004, and was the liaise between USA Hockey and coaching staffs. In September 2000, he became USA Hockey's manager of international activities and co-operated with the United States Olympic Committee to build national teams. He became senior director of hockey operations on August 2003, then assistant executive director of hockey operations in June 2007. As the assistant executive director of hockey operations, <mask> oversaw all men's and women's national teams assembled for international competition.In 2007, he established an advisory group to facilitate selection of players for the men's national team, participated in the selection of players for the Winter Olympics from 2002 to 2018, was the general manager of the United States national junior team from 2009 to 2018, and general manager of the United States national team for the 2018 Winter Olympics. During his tenure with USA Hockey, national teams won a combined total of 64 medals in International Ice Hockey Federation competitions, including 34 gold, 19 silver and 11 bronze. <mask> oversaw administration for the 2005 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships when USA Hockey hosted the event in North Dakota and Minnesota, and was a guest speaker at the World Hockey Summit in 2010. He helped implement the American Development Model, and acquired Compuware Arena in 2014 to become the home rink for the USA Hockey National Team Development Program (under-18 national team). According to his brother, <mask> was passionate in his efforts for the under-20 and under-18 age groups and felt that competitions and assessments were an important part of the development process for younger players. He reportedly enjoyed international travel for these age groups and for the players to learn about the history of countries traveled to in addition to the hockey experience. When the NHL did not permit its players to participate in ice hockey at the 2018 Winter Olympics, <mask> assembled a roster for the men's national team composed of players from the NCAA, the American Hockey League, and professional leagues in Europe.USA Hockey executive director Pat Kelleher felt that, "This Olympic team was going to be a testament to [Johannson] because no one knew the depth our player pool better than he did". Kelleher also felt that it meant as much to <mask> as the players who realized their dreams of playing in the Olympics, and that he was excited about a 25-man roster that included "25 great stories". Personal life
<mask> wrote in 1992, that he had rituals before each game. Before the end of the national anthem, he would say "forecheck, backcheck, bodycheck, guts", which was a saying from one of his minor hockey coaches in Rochester. Then before the game he would say, "don't tear the jersey", as a way to remember what his father said before youth programs at Rochester Community College. <mask> played golf in addition to ice hockey, and resided in Colorado Springs, Colorado. He married Abigail Tompkins on September 10, 2011, and had a daughter born in December 2015.He died in his sleep due to heart disease at home in Colorado Springs on January 21, 2018, three weeks before the 2018 Winter Olympics began. Honors and legacy
At a conference of Minnesota State High School League athletic directors in 1999, <mask> was recognized as a distinguished alumnus of Mayo High School. He was posthumously inducted into the University of Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame in 2018, and was given the Lester Patrick Trophy in 2018, in recognition of his efforts to grow hockey in the United States. He was named a Paul Loicq Award recipient by the IIHF in 2019, in recognition of his contributions to international hockey. The USA Hockey Foundation established <mask> Legacy Fund in 2018, to benefit minor hockey programs across the United States. Detroit Red Wings player Dylan Larkin led efforts to arrange the Stars and Stripes Showdown held at USA Hockey Arena, an exhibition game to raise funds for the charity. The game included former players of the United States national team who asked the a portion of the proceeds benefit <mask>'s family and a college fund for his daughter.In 2019, the USA Hockey College Player of the Year award was renamed to the <mask> College Player of the Year award. Its recipient selects a minor hockey association to receive a grant from the <mask>son Legacy Fund. After <mask> died, journalists recalled his work ethic and humility. Andrew Podnieks wrote, "[Johannson] was a presence at most top-level IIHF events, representing both his country and the game with friendly dignity and a strong moral compass", and that "He was both professional and humble, competitive and ethical, hard-working and amiable". David Shoalts wrote, "<mask> is not a familiar name to many hockey fans but his contributions to the game in the United States went far beyond much more famous monikers", and that "Anyone who encountered Johannson was struck by his easygoing and humble nature". <mask>'s work in hockey was recognized by NHL executives. Carolina Hurricanes general manager Don Waddell said, "He was doing jobs that should've taken three people to do".Nashville Predators general manager David Poile felt that, "He's someone you could never outwork. He was the last one to bed and the first one up in the morning". League commissioner Gary Bettman stated, "In building the teams that achieved so much success for USA Hockey, <mask>son had a sharp eye for talent, a strong sense of chemistry and a relentless pursuit of excellence". References
1964 births
2018 deaths
American ice hockey administrators
American ice hockey coaches
American men's ice hockey centers
Competitors at the 1990 Goodwill Games
EV Landsberg players
Hartford Whalers draft picks
Ice hockey players from Minnesota
Ice hockey players at the 1988 Winter Olympics
Ice hockey players at the 1992 Winter Olympics
Indianapolis Ice players
Lester Patrick Trophy recipients
Milwaukee Admirals (IHL) players
Nashville Predators scouts
NCAA men's ice hockey national champions
Olympic ice hockey players of the United States
Paul Loicq Award recipients
Salt Lake Golden Eagles (IHL) players
Sportspeople from Rochester, Minnesota
United States Hockey League coaches
USA Hockey
Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey players | [
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] | An American ice hockey player, coach and executive was named <mask>. He played for the United States national team at the Winter Olympics in 1988 and 1992, the Ice Hockey World Championships in 1992, and was captain of the silver medal-winning team at the 1990 Goodwill Games. He played in the International Hockey League after being selected by the Hartford Whalers in the NHL Entry Draft. He won the Turner Cup with the Salt Lake Golden Eagles in 1998 and the Indianapolis Ice in 1990. He played more games than any other player in the three seasons he played. He was a member of the Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey team that won the NCAA championship in 1983. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin–Madison with a degree in sport management.After retiring as a player, he was the head coach and general manager of the Twin Cities Vulcans, who won the Junior A National Championship in 1999. He oversaw all men's and women's national hockey teams while working in several executive positions for USA Hockey. During his time with USA Hockey, the national teams won a total of 64 medals. He was the general manager of the men's national team at the Winter Olympics until his death three weeks before the games began. He was posthumously given the Lester Patrick Trophy in recognition of growing hockey in the United States, received the Paul Loicq Award from the IIHF for contributions to international ice hockey, and was in the University of Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame. The younger brother of a professional hockey player was the son of the general manager of the United States national team. J.J., as he was known, was the youngest of two boys and a girl who lived with their parents in Rochester, Minnesota.The general manager of the United States national team in 1979 and 1980, as well as the coaching director of the Amateur Hockey Association of the United States, were both father and son. As a child, he and his brother spent summers at hockey camps operated by their father, were included in photographs demonstrating skills for coaching, and handed out shoes and jackets to the players. The amateur played ice hockey as a center and was a right-handed shooter. He was the leading scorer in the Minnesota state high school tournament in 1982 with seven points. He was recruited by Bob Johnson to play for the Wisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey program along with his older brother. After signing a letter of intent to attend the University of Wisconsin–Madison, he was selected by the Hartford Whalers in the seventh round of the NHL Entry Draft. In the 1982–83 season, he was a freshman at the University of Wisconsin and won the NCAA championship.He was the most competitive player on the team for the 1983–84 season, when he scored 17 goals and 21 assists as a sophomore. He was named to the WCHA All-Academic team as a junior. When he broke his collarbone as a senior, he was second in goal scoring for the Badgers. He missed 12 games due to the injury, but finished his college career with 63 goals. He was named to the WCHA All-Academic team for the second year in a row. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin with a degree in sport management, but was not offered a professional contract by the Whalers. During the 1986–87 season, professional <mask> played for EV Landsberg in the 2nd Bundesliga.He scored 46 goals for EV Landsberg and felt that his skating improved while in Europe. He said that he loved his time in Germany and that he got a lot of ice time. We didn't have anything else to do. I had a key to the rink. He became an unrestricted free agent after the season and trained for two hours daily with skating coach Jack Blatherwick to become faster. The Salt Lake Golden Eagles were assigned to the Flames' minor league team in the International Hockey League for the remainder of the 1987–88 season. He had five goals and two assists in his first eight games.The Golden Eagles won the Turner Cup in 1988 after he scored eight goals and led the league with 15 assists. At the training camp for the Flames in 1988, Terry Crisp felt that Johannson deserved an opportunity despite the depth of the organization at the center and right wing positions. During the 1988–89 season, he set a team record with eight short-handed goals. He played in all of the games and scored 35 goals and 40 assists. He stated that the Flames treated him well despite not making the NHL roster. In October 1989 he was assigned to the Indianapolis Ice in the IHL after agreeing to terms with the Chicago Hawks in the NHL. His mother was from Indianapolis and he chose to sign with the Hawks.He won his second Turner Cup when the Indianapolis Ice won the playoffs in 1989. At the end of the 1990–91) season, he played over 200 games in a row. He received an award for his defensive and offensive skills from the IHL. The last year of his contract was spent on loan to the United States national team. After the 1992 Winter Olympics, he sought a contract with a team in Switzerland, then took time off to discuss a contract with the Blackhawks and his plan to coach hockey when he retired from playing. On March 13, 1992, he returned to the Indianapolis Ice despite not having a future guarantee. He was involved in the team's Say No to Drugs community service program.He was signed to an IHL contract by the Milwaukee Admirals. During the 1992–93 season, he played 71 games and scored 14 goals, then played 28 games and scored four goals in the 1993–94 season. He retired from professional hockey after he scored over 300 points in the IHL. The United States national junior team placed fifth in the Soviet Union in 1983 and sixth in 1984 at the World Junior Championship. He played for the United States national team at the Pravda Cup in 1987 and later led the team at the Winter Olympics in 1988 and 1992. One of the first players cut from the United States national team in advance of the 1988 Winter Olympics, was later recalled and worked hard to be a role player on the team. His father and brother supported him in making the team.In 60 games for the United States national team, he scored 15 goals, 13 assists, and 28 points. He played in five of six games in the 1988 Winter Olympics. He was described as the "top penalty killer on the team" by the Star Tribune. He was invited to play for the United States national team in ice hockey at the 1990 Goodwill Games by his former university coach. He was captain of the team, scored two goals and had three assists in five games, and led the United States to a silver medal. The United States national team played a 64 game schedule prior to the 1992 Winter Olympics. He was the second oldest player on the team and became a source of advice and leadership.His teammate said, "Johannson could do almost anything for a team." He was a responsible guy who you could put on the ice in the last minute of a game. He was a player that you relied on. The United States lost to the Unified Team by a 5–2 score in the semifinals because of five penalties against them. The United States lost to the Czechoslovakia national hockey team in the bronze medal game. He donated the money he received from the diary he wrote for the Wisconsin State Journal during the Olympics to the Bob Johnson Memorial Foundation. The United States finished in seventh place at the 1992 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships.When he was named head coach and general manager of the Twin Cities Vulcans in the United States Hockey League in 1995, he became involved in junior ice hockey. He led the Vulcans to an eighth-place finish and a first-round series against the Green Bay Gamblers. The first three games of the series were won by the Vulcans. During the 1996–97 season, the Vulcans placed fourth in the north division, but were defeated by Omaha in the first round of the playoffs. The Under-20 Four Nations Junior A tournament in Fssen, Germany was where the USHL's select team played in 1997. The USHL Selects won two out of three games. In the 1997–98 season, he coached the Vulcans to 25 wins in 56 games, a sixth-place finish in the north division, but the team did not make the playoffs.In May 1998 <mask> became the head coach of the Vulcans. The general manager of the Vulcans was also a scout for the Nashville Preds. The Vulcans placed fifth in the West Division in the 1999–2000 season after finishing fourth in the Central Division in the 1998–99 season. The Lincoln Stars lost in the Clark Cup finals to the Green Bay Gamblers after they won the playoffs. The Vulcans qualified for the USA Hockey Junior A National Championship as the USHL's representative, since the Gamblers already qualified as the host team. The Vulcans defeated the Wings in the semifinals and then defeated the Gamblers in the title game. The Tri-City Storm was formed in 2000 after the sale and relocation of the Vulcans.The southward geographical shift of the USHL from Minnesota to Iowa and Nebraska was felt to be the reason for the declining attendance of the Vulcans. When the Vulcans reduced their ticket prices to be the lowest in the USHL in 1997, the team wanted to raise prices but couldn't due to competition from other sports in the Twin Cities. The USHL transitioned into bigger budget teams based in cities where hockey was the primary sport after he sold the team. The USA Hockey executive served as team leader for the United States national team at the World Championships from 1999 to 2004, and was the liaison between USA Hockey and coaching staffs. In September 2000 he became USA Hockey's manager of international activities and co-operated with the United States Olympic Committee to build national teams. He was the assistant executive director of hockey operations in June 2007. The assistant executive director of hockey operations oversaw all men's and women's national teams.In 2007, he established an advisory group to facilitate selection of players for the men's national team, participated in the selection of players for the Winter Olympics from 2002 to 2018, and was the general manager of the United States national team. During his time with USA Hockey, the national teams won a total of 64 medals, including 34 gold, 19 silver and 11 bronze. When USA Hockey hosted the 2005 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships in North Dakota and Minnesota, <mask> was in charge of the event's administration. The home rink for the USA Hockey National Team Development Program was acquired by him. Competitions and assessments were an important part of the development process for younger players according to his brother. For the players to learn about the history of countries traveled to in addition to the hockey experience, he enjoyed international travel for these age groups. The NHL did not permit its players to participate in ice hockey at the Winter Olympics, which led to the creation of a roster for the men's national team composed of players from the NCAA, the American Hockey League, and professional leagues in Europe."This Olympic team was going to be a testament to [Johannson] because no one knew the depth of our player pool better than he did", said Pat Kelleher, USA Hockey executive director. He was excited about a 25-man roster that included "25 great stories" and felt that it meant a lot to the players who realized their dreams of playing in the Olympics. In 1992, <mask> wrote that he had rituals before each game. Before the end of the national anthem, he would say "forecheck, backcheck, bodycheck, guts", which was a saying from one of his minor hockey coaches in Rochester. As a way to remember what his father said before youth programs at Rochester Community College, he would say "don't tear the jersey" before the game. He resided in Colorado Springs, Colorado, where he played golf and ice hockey. He married and had a daughter in December of 2015.He died in his sleep due to heart disease three weeks before the Winter Olympics began. At a conference of Minnesota State High School League athletic directors in 1999, <mask> was recognized as a distinguished alumni. He was posthumously inducted into the University of Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame in the year of his death, and he was also given the Lester Patrick Trophy in recognition of his efforts to grow hockey in the United States. In recognition of his contributions to international hockey, he was named a Paul Loicq Award recipient. The USA Hockey Foundation established a fund to benefit minor hockey programs. The Stars and Stripes Showdown was an exhibition game held at USA Hockey Arena to raise funds for the charity. The former players of the United States national team asked for a portion of the proceeds from the game to benefit the family and college fund of their daughter.The USA Hockey College Player of the Year award was renamed to the <mask>son College Player of the Year in 2019. The recipient selects a minor hockey association to receive a grant. Journalists remembered his humility and work ethic after he died. According to Andrew Podnieks, "Johannson was a presence at most top-level IIHF events, representing both his country and the game with friendly dignity and a strong moral compass, and that he was both professional and humble, competitive and ethical, hard-working and amiable". "<mask> is not a familiar name to many hockey fans but his contributions to the game in the United States went far beyond much more famous monikers", wrote David Shoalts. NHL executives recognized his work in hockey. The general manager of the Carolina Hurricanes said that he was doing jobs that should have taken three people to do.David Poile felt that, "He's someone you could never outwork." He was the last one to sleep and the first one to wake up. Gary Bettman stated, "In building the teams that achieved so much success for USA Hockey, <mask>son had a sharp eye for talent, a strong sense of chemistry and a relentless pursuit of excellence". Ice hockey players at the 1990 Goodwill Games and the 1992 Winter Olympics. | [
"James Johannson",
"Johannson",
"Jim Hillman",
"Johannson",
"Johannson",
"Johannson",
"Jim Johann",
"Jim Johannson",
"Jim Johann"
] |
2418657 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glenne%20Headly | Glenne Headly | Glenne Aimee Headly (March 13, 1955 – June 8, 2017) was an American actress. She was widely known for her roles in Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Dick Tracy, and Mr. Holland's Opus. Headly received a Theatre World Award and four Joseph Jefferson Awards and was nominated for two Primetime Emmy Awards.
In 2017, she starred in The Circle and Just Getting Started, the latter marking her final film role, released six months after her death. She also starred with Ed Begley Jr. and Josh Hutcherson in Future Man, Hulu's half-hour comedy television series produced by Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg; she died on June 8, 2017, mid-way through filming the series.
Early life and education
Headly was born on March 13, 1955, in New London, Connecticut. Her first years were spent living in the care of her mother, Joan Ida Headly (née Sniscak), in San Francisco, and her maternal grandmother in Lansford, Pennsylvania.
Early in her elementary school years, she joined her mother, who was then living in Greenwich Village. She studied ballet at the Robert Joffrey school of ballet and modern dance at the Martha Graham Studios. In New York, she attended public schools, including P. S. 41, where she was placed in a class for intellectually gifted children. There, a fifth-grade teacher introduced her to the work of Jacques Cousteau in an oceanography class, triggering a lifelong interest in preserving the natural world. She later went on to the High School of Performing Arts, majoring in drama and graduating with honors.
Rather than continuing to study the dramatic arts, she attended the American College of Switzerland, a small college in Leysin from which she graduated with a bachelor's degree. Soon after, she moved to New York, taking day jobs as a waitress so she could work nights in the theater for little or no salary. Later, she moved to Chicago, where she joined the New Works Ensemble at the St. Nicholas Theatre. She was eventually cast in a Goodman Theatre production of Curse of the Starving Class, directed by Robert Falls and co-starring John Malkovich.
Film and television career
While appearing on the Chicago stage in Curse of the Starving Class, Headly was asked to join the Steppenwolf Theatre ensemble, which was looking to expand. She also appeared in several other productions. In Chicago, she was nominated for five Joseph Jefferson awards, and won three for best supporting actress. She received her Actors' Equity card when cast by Vivian Matalon in a summer theatre production of Charley's Aunt, and joined SAG when Arthur Penn wrote a breakout role for her in the film Four Friends.
On August 2, 1982, Headly married fellow ensemble member John Malkovich. Soon after, she replaced Ellen Barkin in Extremities off-Broadway. She then was cast in The Philanthropist, also off-Broadway, and won a Theatre World Award for best newcomer. In New York, she appeared in Balm in Gilead with her fellow Steppenwolf Theatre members, and in Arms and the Man, on Broadway, with Kevin Kline and Raul Julia.
1988–1995: Early work
Headly played several supporting roles in such films as Making Mr. Right, Paperhouse, Seize the Day and Nadine, but her role in Dirty Rotten Scoundrels (1988), with Steve Martin and Michael Caine, truly launched her film career. In 1988, Headly was named Most Promising New Actress by the Chicago Film Critics Association. That same year, Headly divorced Malkovich after he had an affair with Michelle Pfeiffer during the filming of Dangerous Liaisons.
In 1989, Headly played the role of Elmira Boot Johnson in the critically acclaimed TV miniseries Lonesome Dove, a part for which she received her first of two Emmy Awards nominations for best supporting actress in a television movie.
Headly then was cast by Warren Beatty to appear as Tess Trueheart in Dick Tracy. She next starred with Demi Moore and Bruce Willis in Mortal Thoughts, directed by Alan Rudolph. In 1992, she worked on a small Canadian film called Ordinary Magic, and on the first day of filming, met her future husband Byron McCulloch, whom she married in 1993. She also co-starred with Ted Danson and Macaulay Culkin in the 1994 comedy Getting Even with Dad.
1995–2004
Headly appeared in Mr. Holland's Opus, Sgt. Bilko, What's the Worst That Could Happen?, Breakfast of Champions, Around the Bend, 2 Days in the Valley, and others.
Headly appeared in the television movies Winchell, And the Band Played On, Pronto, My Own Country, and Women vs. Men,. Headly received her second of two Emmy Awards nominations for best supporting actress in a television movie for Bastard Out of Carolina (1996). She appeared as Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer's daughter in the 2001 live telecast of the play On Golden Pond for CBS. She was cast in the series Encore! Encore!, starring Nathan Lane and Joan Plowright, from 1998 to 1999, and had recurring roles as Dr. Abby Keaton on ER from 1996 to 1997 and as Leland Stottlemeyer's wife, Karen, on Monk.
2004–2017
In 2004, she played the mother of Lindsay Lohan's character in Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen. She appeared in the films The Amateurs (2005), The Namesake (2006), Comeback Season (2006), Kit Kittredge: An American Girl (2008), The Joneses (2009), and Don Jon (2013).
Headly appeared in the film Strange Weather (2016) and in the HBO limited series The Night Of (2016).
Future Man
Headly and Ed Begley Jr. were cast in lead roles with Josh Hutcherson in Future Man, Hulu's half-hour comedy television series produced by Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg. Headly died on June 8, 2017, during filming of the series. At the time of her death, she had filmed five episodes of the planned 13-episode season order. Producers stated that she would not be recast and that the episodes she filmed will air, leaving the writers to rework the episodes in which she was due to appear.
Theater
Headly was an ensemble member of the Steppenwolf Theatre Company from 1979 until 2005, although she never returned to Chicago to do a play after the late 1980s, believing that such a move would uproot and be disruptive to her family. She took a break from the stage altogether for 10 years until 1999, when she starred with Miranda Richardson in Wallace Shawn's Aunt Dan and Lemon, which premiered at the Almeida Theatre in London.
In 1983, Headly appeared in Christopher Hampton's The Philanthropist at the Manhattan Theater Club in New York.
In 1984, Headly appeared in Lanford Wilson's Balm in Gilead presented by the Circle Repertory Company and the Steppenwolf Theater Ensemble.
In 1985, Headly starred as Raina in George Bernard Shaw's Arms and the Man, directed by John Malkovich, in New York.
In 2000, Headly starred as Ellen in Detachments at the Tiffany Theater in Los Angeles, written and directed by Colleen Dodson-Baker.
In 2001, Headly starred as Angela Kennedy Lipsky in the premiere of My Brilliant Divorce at the Druid Theatre in Galway, Ireland.
In 2003, Headly starred with David Hyde Pierce in The Guys as part of a revolving cast at the Actors' Gang in Los Angeles. She also appeared in Malkovich's production of Shaw's Arms and the Man, with Kevin Kline at New York City's Circle in the Square Uptown.
In 2012, Headly played Eva White in the Geffen Playhouse's production of The Jacksonian, written by Beth Henley.
In 2016, once again at the Geffen Playhouse, Headly starred in Sarah Ruhl's Stage Kiss.
Death
Headly died of complications from a pulmonary embolism on June 8, 2017, at the age of 62, in Santa Monica, California.
Filmography
Film
Television
References
External links
Glenne Headly at Find A Grave
1955 births
2017 deaths
American stage actresses
American film actresses
American television actresses
20th-century American actresses
21st-century American actresses
Drama Desk Award winners
Theatre World Award winners
Steppenwolf Theatre Company players
Actresses from New York City
Actresses from Connecticut
Mensans
Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School alumni
People from New London, Connecticut
People from Greenwich Village
Deaths from pulmonary embolism | [
"Glenne Aimee Headly (March 13, 1955 – June 8, 2017) was an American actress.",
"She was widely known for her roles in Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Dick Tracy, and Mr. Holland's Opus.",
"Headly received a Theatre World Award and four Joseph Jefferson Awards and was nominated for two Primetime Emmy Awards.",
"In 2017, she starred in The Circle and Just Getting Started, the latter marking her final film role, released six months after her death.",
"She also starred with Ed Begley Jr. and Josh Hutcherson in Future Man, Hulu's half-hour comedy television series produced by Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg; she died on June 8, 2017, mid-way through filming the series.",
"Early life and education\nHeadly was born on March 13, 1955, in New London, Connecticut.",
"Her first years were spent living in the care of her mother, Joan Ida Headly (née Sniscak), in San Francisco, and her maternal grandmother in Lansford, Pennsylvania.",
"Early in her elementary school years, she joined her mother, who was then living in Greenwich Village.",
"She studied ballet at the Robert Joffrey school of ballet and modern dance at the Martha Graham Studios.",
"In New York, she attended public schools, including P. S. 41, where she was placed in a class for intellectually gifted children.",
"There, a fifth-grade teacher introduced her to the work of Jacques Cousteau in an oceanography class, triggering a lifelong interest in preserving the natural world.",
"She later went on to the High School of Performing Arts, majoring in drama and graduating with honors.",
"Rather than continuing to study the dramatic arts, she attended the American College of Switzerland, a small college in Leysin from which she graduated with a bachelor's degree.",
"Soon after, she moved to New York, taking day jobs as a waitress so she could work nights in the theater for little or no salary.",
"Later, she moved to Chicago, where she joined the New Works Ensemble at the St. Nicholas Theatre.",
"She was eventually cast in a Goodman Theatre production of Curse of the Starving Class, directed by Robert Falls and co-starring John Malkovich.",
"Film and television career\nWhile appearing on the Chicago stage in Curse of the Starving Class, Headly was asked to join the Steppenwolf Theatre ensemble, which was looking to expand.",
"She also appeared in several other productions.",
"In Chicago, she was nominated for five Joseph Jefferson awards, and won three for best supporting actress.",
"She received her Actors' Equity card when cast by Vivian Matalon in a summer theatre production of Charley's Aunt, and joined SAG when Arthur Penn wrote a breakout role for her in the film Four Friends.",
"On August 2, 1982, Headly married fellow ensemble member John Malkovich.",
"Soon after, she replaced Ellen Barkin in Extremities off-Broadway.",
"She then was cast in The Philanthropist, also off-Broadway, and won a Theatre World Award for best newcomer.",
"In New York, she appeared in Balm in Gilead with her fellow Steppenwolf Theatre members, and in Arms and the Man, on Broadway, with Kevin Kline and Raul Julia.",
"1988–1995: Early work\nHeadly played several supporting roles in such films as Making Mr.",
"Right, Paperhouse, Seize the Day and Nadine, but her role in Dirty Rotten Scoundrels (1988), with Steve Martin and Michael Caine, truly launched her film career.",
"In 1988, Headly was named Most Promising New Actress by the Chicago Film Critics Association.",
"That same year, Headly divorced Malkovich after he had an affair with Michelle Pfeiffer during the filming of Dangerous Liaisons.",
"In 1989, Headly played the role of Elmira Boot Johnson in the critically acclaimed TV miniseries Lonesome Dove, a part for which she received her first of two Emmy Awards nominations for best supporting actress in a television movie.",
"Headly then was cast by Warren Beatty to appear as Tess Trueheart in Dick Tracy.",
"She next starred with Demi Moore and Bruce Willis in Mortal Thoughts, directed by Alan Rudolph.",
"In 1992, she worked on a small Canadian film called Ordinary Magic, and on the first day of filming, met her future husband Byron McCulloch, whom she married in 1993.",
"She also co-starred with Ted Danson and Macaulay Culkin in the 1994 comedy Getting Even with Dad.",
"1995–2004\nHeadly appeared in Mr. Holland's Opus, Sgt.",
"Bilko, What's the Worst That Could Happen?, Breakfast of Champions, Around the Bend, 2 Days in the Valley, and others.",
"Headly appeared in the television movies Winchell, And the Band Played On, Pronto, My Own Country, and Women vs. Men,.",
"Headly received her second of two Emmy Awards nominations for best supporting actress in a television movie for Bastard Out of Carolina (1996).",
"She appeared as Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer's daughter in the 2001 live telecast of the play On Golden Pond for CBS.",
"She was cast in the series Encore!",
"Encore!, starring Nathan Lane and Joan Plowright, from 1998 to 1999, and had recurring roles as Dr. Abby Keaton on ER from 1996 to 1997 and as Leland Stottlemeyer's wife, Karen, on Monk.",
"2004–2017\nIn 2004, she played the mother of Lindsay Lohan's character in Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen.",
"She appeared in the films The Amateurs (2005), The Namesake (2006), Comeback Season (2006), Kit Kittredge: An American Girl (2008), The Joneses (2009), and Don Jon (2013).",
"Headly appeared in the film Strange Weather (2016) and in the HBO limited series The Night Of (2016).",
"Future Man\nHeadly and Ed Begley Jr. were cast in lead roles with Josh Hutcherson in Future Man, Hulu's half-hour comedy television series produced by Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg.",
"Headly died on June 8, 2017, during filming of the series.",
"At the time of her death, she had filmed five episodes of the planned 13-episode season order.",
"Producers stated that she would not be recast and that the episodes she filmed will air, leaving the writers to rework the episodes in which she was due to appear.",
"Theater\nHeadly was an ensemble member of the Steppenwolf Theatre Company from 1979 until 2005, although she never returned to Chicago to do a play after the late 1980s, believing that such a move would uproot and be disruptive to her family.",
"She took a break from the stage altogether for 10 years until 1999, when she starred with Miranda Richardson in Wallace Shawn's Aunt Dan and Lemon, which premiered at the Almeida Theatre in London.",
"In 1983, Headly appeared in Christopher Hampton's The Philanthropist at the Manhattan Theater Club in New York.",
"In 1984, Headly appeared in Lanford Wilson's Balm in Gilead presented by the Circle Repertory Company and the Steppenwolf Theater Ensemble.",
"In 1985, Headly starred as Raina in George Bernard Shaw's Arms and the Man, directed by John Malkovich, in New York.",
"In 2000, Headly starred as Ellen in Detachments at the Tiffany Theater in Los Angeles, written and directed by Colleen Dodson-Baker.",
"In 2001, Headly starred as Angela Kennedy Lipsky in the premiere of My Brilliant Divorce at the Druid Theatre in Galway, Ireland.",
"In 2003, Headly starred with David Hyde Pierce in The Guys as part of a revolving cast at the Actors' Gang in Los Angeles.",
"She also appeared in Malkovich's production of Shaw's Arms and the Man, with Kevin Kline at New York City's Circle in the Square Uptown.",
"In 2012, Headly played Eva White in the Geffen Playhouse's production of The Jacksonian, written by Beth Henley.",
"In 2016, once again at the Geffen Playhouse, Headly starred in Sarah Ruhl's Stage Kiss.",
"Death\nHeadly died of complications from a pulmonary embolism on June 8, 2017, at the age of 62, in Santa Monica, California.",
"Filmography\n\nFilm\n\nTelevision\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links\n \n \n \nGlenne Headly at Find A Grave \n\n1955 births\n2017 deaths\nAmerican stage actresses\nAmerican film actresses\nAmerican television actresses\n20th-century American actresses\n21st-century American actresses\nDrama Desk Award winners\nTheatre World Award winners\nSteppenwolf Theatre Company players\nActresses from New York City\nActresses from Connecticut\nMensans\nFiorello H. LaGuardia High School alumni\nPeople from New London, Connecticut\nPeople from Greenwich Village\nDeaths from pulmonary embolism"
] | [
"Glenne Headly was an American actress.",
"She played the role of Dick Tracy in Mr. Holland's Opus.",
"Headly was nominated for two Primetime Emmy Awards.",
"She starred in The Circle and Just Getting Started, both of which were released six months after her death.",
"She died on June 8, 2017, mid-way through filming Future Man, a half-hour comedy television series she starred in with Ed Begley Jr. and Josh Hutcherson.",
"Headly was born on March 13, 1955 in New London, Connecticut.",
"Her mother and grandmother cared for her in San Francisco and Lansford, Pennsylvania.",
"She joined her mother in the early years of elementary school.",
"She studied ballet at the Robert Joffrey school and modern dance at the Martha Graham Studios.",
"She attended public schools in New York and was placed in a class for intellectually gifted children.",
"A fifth-grade teacher introduced her to the work of Jacques Cousteau, triggering a lifelong interest in preserving the natural world.",
"She graduated from the High School of Performing Arts with honors.",
"She graduated with a bachelor's degree from the American College of Switzerland, a small college in Leysin, rather than continuing to study the dramatic arts.",
"She moved to New York so she could work nights in the theater for little or no salary as a waitress.",
"She joined the New Works ensemble in Chicago.",
"She was cast in a production of Curse of the Starving Class, directed by Robert Falls.",
"While appearing on the Chicago stage in Curse of the Starving Class, Headly was asked to join the Steppenwolf Theatre ensemble, which was looking to expand.",
"She appeared in more than one production.",
"She won three Joseph Jefferson awards in Chicago.",
"She received her Actors' Equity card when she was cast in a summer theatre production of Charley's Aunt, and joined the Screen Actors Guild when Arthur Penn wrote a role for her in the film Four Friends.",
"On August 2, 1982, Headly married John Malkovich.",
"She replaced Ellen Barkin in Extremities.",
"She won a Theatre World Award for best newcomer for her performance in The Philanthropist.",
"She was a member of the Steppenwolf Theatre in New York and in Arms and the Man on Broadway.",
"Making Mr. was one of the films Headly played in.",
"Paperhouse, Seize the Day and Nadine, but her role in Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, with Steve Martin and Michael Caine, truly launched her film career.",
"The Chicago Film Critics Association named Headly the most promising new actress in 1988.",
"Headly divorced Malkovich after he had an affair with Pfeiffer while filming Dangerous Liaisons.",
"In 1989 Headly received her first of two nominations for best supporting actress in a movie for her role in the TV mini-series Lonesome Dove.",
"It was Warren Beatty who cast Headly in Dick Tracy.",
"She was in the movie, directed by Alan Rudolph.",
"She met her future husband on the first day of filming, after working on a small Canadian film called Ordinary Magic.",
"In 1994, she co-stars with Ted Danson and Macaulay Culkin in Getting Even with Dad.",
"Headly was in Mr. Holland's Opus, Sgt.",
"Breakfast of Champs, 2 days in the Valley, and others are included.",
"Headly was in several television movies, including Winchell, And the Band Played On, and My Own Country.",
"Headly received a second nomination for best supporting actress in a television movie for Bastard Out of Carolina.",
"The play On Golden Pond was aired live on CBS in 2001.",
"She was cast in a show.",
"There were recurring roles for Nathan Lane and Joan Plowright on ER and Monk.",
"She played the mother of Lindsay's character in the movie.",
"She appeared in The Namesake, Comeback Season, Kittredge: An American Girl, The Joneses, and Don Jon.",
"Headly appeared in two films, Strange Weather and The Night Of.",
"Ed Begley Jr. and Future Man Headly were cast in Future Man, a half-hour comedy television series.",
"During the filming of the series, Headly died.",
"She filmed five episodes of the 13-episode season order at the time of her death.",
"The producers said that she wouldn't be replaced and that the episodes she filmed would air.",
"Although she was an ensemble member of the Steppenwolf Theatre Company from 1979 until 2005, Theater Headly never returned to Chicago to do a play after the late 1980s because she didn't think it would be good for her family.",
"She took a break from the stage for 10 years until 1999, when she starred with Miranda Richardson in Wallace Shawn's Aunt Dan and Lemon.",
"Headly appeared in The Philanthropist at the Manhattan Theater Club in 1983.",
"In 1984 Headly appeared in Lanford Wilson's Balm in Gilead.",
"In 1985, Headly played Raina in George Bernard Shaw's Arms and the Man.",
"In 2000, Headly starred as Ellen in a movie written and directed by Colleen Dodson-Baker.",
"The premiere of My Brilliant Divorce was held at the Druid Theatre in Ireland.",
"Headly and David Hyde Pierce starred in The Guys in Los Angeles in 2003 as part of a revolving cast.",
"She was in the New York City production of Shaw's Arms and the Man.",
"Eva White was played by Headly in The Jacksonian at the Geffen Playhouse.",
"Headly starred in Stage Kiss again in 2016 at the Geffen Playhouse.",
"Death Headly died of a pulmonary embolism at the age of 62 in Santa Monica, California.",
"Glenne Headly has links to film and television references."
] | <mask> (March 13, 1955 – June 8, 2017) was an American actress. She was widely known for her roles in Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Dick Tracy, and Mr. Holland's Opus. <mask> received a Theatre World Award and four Joseph Jefferson Awards and was nominated for two Primetime Emmy Awards. In 2017, she starred in The Circle and Just Getting Started, the latter marking her final film role, released six months after her death. She also starred with Ed Begley Jr. and Josh Hutcherson in Future Man, Hulu's half-hour comedy television series produced by Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg; she died on June 8, 2017, mid-way through filming the series. Early life and education
<mask> was born on March 13, 1955, in New London, Connecticut. Her first years were spent living in the care of her mother, <mask> (née Sniscak), in San Francisco, and her maternal grandmother in Lansford, Pennsylvania.Early in her elementary school years, she joined her mother, who was then living in Greenwich Village. She studied ballet at the Robert Joffrey school of ballet and modern dance at the Martha Graham Studios. In New York, she attended public schools, including P. S. 41, where she was placed in a class for intellectually gifted children. There, a fifth-grade teacher introduced her to the work of Jacques Cousteau in an oceanography class, triggering a lifelong interest in preserving the natural world. She later went on to the High School of Performing Arts, majoring in drama and graduating with honors. Rather than continuing to study the dramatic arts, she attended the American College of Switzerland, a small college in Leysin from which she graduated with a bachelor's degree. Soon after, she moved to New York, taking day jobs as a waitress so she could work nights in the theater for little or no salary.Later, she moved to Chicago, where she joined the New Works Ensemble at the St. Nicholas Theatre. She was eventually cast in a Goodman Theatre production of Curse of the Starving Class, directed by Robert Falls and co-starring John Malkovich. Film and television career
While appearing on the Chicago stage in Curse of the Starving Class, Headly was asked to join the Steppenwolf Theatre ensemble, which was looking to expand. She also appeared in several other productions. In Chicago, she was nominated for five Joseph Jefferson awards, and won three for best supporting actress. She received her Actors' Equity card when cast by Vivian Matalon in a summer theatre production of Charley's Aunt, and joined SAG when Arthur Penn wrote a breakout role for her in the film Four Friends. On August 2, 1982, Headly married fellow ensemble member John Malkovich.Soon after, she replaced Ellen Barkin in Extremities off-Broadway. She then was cast in The Philanthropist, also off-Broadway, and won a Theatre World Award for best newcomer. In New York, she appeared in Balm in Gilead with her fellow Steppenwolf Theatre members, and in Arms and the Man, on Broadway, with Kevin Kline and Raul Julia. 1988–1995: Early work
Headly played several supporting roles in such films as Making Mr. Right, Paperhouse, Seize the Day and Nadine, but her role in Dirty Rotten Scoundrels (1988), with Steve Martin and Michael Caine, truly launched her film career. In 1988, <mask> was named Most Promising New Actress by the Chicago Film Critics Association. That same year, Headly divorced Malkovich after he had an affair with Michelle Pfeiffer during the filming of Dangerous Liaisons.In 1989, Headly played the role of Elmira Boot Johnson in the critically acclaimed TV miniseries Lonesome Dove, a part for which she received her first of two Emmy Awards nominations for best supporting actress in a television movie. <mask> then was cast by Warren Beatty to appear as Tess Trueheart in Dick Tracy. She next starred with Demi Moore and Bruce Willis in Mortal Thoughts, directed by Alan Rudolph. In 1992, she worked on a small Canadian film called Ordinary Magic, and on the first day of filming, met her future husband Byron McCulloch, whom she married in 1993. She also co-starred with Ted Danson and Macaulay Culkin in the 1994 comedy Getting Even with Dad. 1995–2004
Headly appeared in Mr. Holland's Opus, Sgt. Bilko, What's the Worst That Could Happen?, Breakfast of Champions, Around the Bend, 2 Days in the Valley, and others.<mask> appeared in the television movies Winchell, And the Band Played On, Pronto, My Own Country, and Women vs. Men,. <mask> received her second of two Emmy Awards nominations for best supporting actress in a television movie for Bastard Out of Carolina (1996). She appeared as Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer's daughter in the 2001 live telecast of the play On Golden Pond for CBS. She was cast in the series Encore! Encore!, starring Nathan Lane and Joan Plowright, from 1998 to 1999, and had recurring roles as Dr. Abby Keaton on ER from 1996 to 1997 and as Leland Stottlemeyer's wife, Karen, on Monk. 2004–2017
In 2004, she played the mother of Lindsay Lohan's character in Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen. She appeared in the films The Amateurs (2005), The Namesake (2006), Comeback Season (2006), Kit Kittredge: An American Girl (2008), The Joneses (2009), and Don Jon (2013).<mask> appeared in the film Strange Weather (2016) and in the HBO limited series The Night Of (2016). Future Man
<mask> and Ed Begley Jr. were cast in lead roles with Josh Hutcherson in Future Man, Hulu's half-hour comedy television series produced by Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg. <mask> died on June 8, 2017, during filming of the series. At the time of her death, she had filmed five episodes of the planned 13-episode season order. Producers stated that she would not be recast and that the episodes she filmed will air, leaving the writers to rework the episodes in which she was due to appear. <mask> was an ensemble member of the Steppenwolf Theatre Company from 1979 until 2005, although she never returned to Chicago to do a play after the late 1980s, believing that such a move would uproot and be disruptive to her family. She took a break from the stage altogether for 10 years until 1999, when she starred with Miranda Richardson in Wallace Shawn's Aunt Dan and Lemon, which premiered at the Almeida Theatre in London.In 1983, <mask> appeared in Christopher Hampton's The Philanthropist at the Manhattan Theater Club in New York. In 1984, <mask> appeared in Lanford Wilson's Balm in Gilead presented by the Circle Repertory Company and the Steppenwolf Theater Ensemble. In 1985, <mask> starred as Raina in George Bernard Shaw's Arms and the Man, directed by John Malkovich, in New York. In 2000, Headly starred as Ellen in Detachments at the Tiffany Theater in Los Angeles, written and directed by Colleen Dodson-Baker. In 2001, <mask> starred as Angela Kennedy Lipsky in the premiere of My Brilliant Divorce at the Druid Theatre in Galway, Ireland. In 2003, <mask> starred with David Hyde Pierce in The Guys as part of a revolving cast at the Actors' Gang in Los Angeles. She also appeared in Malkovich's production of Shaw's Arms and the Man, with Kevin Kline at New York City's Circle in the Square Uptown.In 2012, <mask> played Eva White in the Geffen Playhouse's production of The Jacksonian, written by Beth Henley. In 2016, once again at the Geffen Playhouse, <mask> starred in Sarah Ruhl's Stage Kiss. Death
Headly died of complications from a pulmonary embolism on June 8, 2017, at the age of 62, in Santa Monica, California. Filmography
Film
Television
References
External links
Glenne <mask> at Find A Grave
1955 births
2017 deaths
American stage actresses
American film actresses
American television actresses
20th-century American actresses
21st-century American actresses
Drama Desk Award winners
Theatre World Award winners
Steppenwolf Theatre Company players
Actresses from New York City
Actresses from Connecticut
Mensans
Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School alumni
People from New London, Connecticut
People from Greenwich Village
Deaths from pulmonary embolism | [
"Glenne Aimee Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Joan Ida Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Theater Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly"
] | <mask> was an American actress. She played the role of Dick Tracy in Mr. Holland's Opus. <mask> was nominated for two Primetime Emmy Awards. She starred in The Circle and Just Getting Started, both of which were released six months after her death. She died on June 8, 2017, mid-way through filming Future Man, a half-hour comedy television series she starred in with Ed Begley Jr. and Josh Hutcherson. <mask> was born on March 13, 1955 in New London, Connecticut. Her mother and grandmother cared for her in San Francisco and Lansford, Pennsylvania.She joined her mother in the early years of elementary school. She studied ballet at the Robert Joffrey school and modern dance at the Martha Graham Studios. She attended public schools in New York and was placed in a class for intellectually gifted children. A fifth-grade teacher introduced her to the work of Jacques Cousteau, triggering a lifelong interest in preserving the natural world. She graduated from the High School of Performing Arts with honors. She graduated with a bachelor's degree from the American College of Switzerland, a small college in Leysin, rather than continuing to study the dramatic arts. She moved to New York so she could work nights in the theater for little or no salary as a waitress.She joined the New Works ensemble in Chicago. She was cast in a production of Curse of the Starving Class, directed by Robert Falls. While appearing on the Chicago stage in Curse of the Starving Class, <mask> was asked to join the Steppenwolf Theatre ensemble, which was looking to expand. She appeared in more than one production. She won three Joseph Jefferson awards in Chicago. She received her Actors' Equity card when she was cast in a summer theatre production of Charley's Aunt, and joined the Screen Actors Guild when Arthur Penn wrote a role for her in the film Four Friends. On August 2, 1982, <mask> married John Malkovich.She replaced Ellen Barkin in Extremities. She won a Theatre World Award for best newcomer for her performance in The Philanthropist. She was a member of the Steppenwolf Theatre in New York and in Arms and the Man on Broadway. Making Mr. was one of the films <mask> played in. Paperhouse, Seize the Day and Nadine, but her role in Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, with Steve Martin and Michael Caine, truly launched her film career. The Chicago Film Critics Association named <mask> the most promising new actress in 1988. Headly divorced Malkovich after he had an affair with Pfeiffer while filming Dangerous Liaisons.In 1989 <mask> received her first of two nominations for best supporting actress in a movie for her role in the TV mini-series Lonesome Dove. It was Warren Beatty who cast <mask> in Dick Tracy. She was in the movie, directed by Alan Rudolph. She met her future husband on the first day of filming, after working on a small Canadian film called Ordinary Magic. In 1994, she co-stars with Ted Danson and Macaulay Culkin in Getting Even with Dad. Headly was in Mr. Holland's Opus, Sgt. Breakfast of Champs, 2 days in the Valley, and others are included.<mask> was in several television movies, including Winchell, And the Band Played On, and My Own Country. <mask> received a second nomination for best supporting actress in a television movie for Bastard Out of Carolina. The play On Golden Pond was aired live on CBS in 2001. She was cast in a show. There were recurring roles for Nathan Lane and Joan Plowright on ER and Monk. She played the mother of Lindsay's character in the movie. She appeared in The Namesake, Comeback Season, Kittredge: An American Girl, The Joneses, and Don Jon.<mask> appeared in two films, Strange Weather and The Night Of. Ed Begley Jr. and Future Man <mask> were cast in Future Man, a half-hour comedy television series. During the filming of the series, <mask> died. She filmed five episodes of the 13-episode season order at the time of her death. The producers said that she wouldn't be replaced and that the episodes she filmed would air. Although she was an ensemble member of the Steppenwolf Theatre Company from 1979 until 2005, <mask> never returned to Chicago to do a play after the late 1980s because she didn't think it would be good for her family. She took a break from the stage for 10 years until 1999, when she starred with Miranda Richardson in Wallace Shawn's Aunt Dan and Lemon.<mask> appeared in The Philanthropist at the Manhattan Theater Club in 1983. In 1984 <mask> appeared in Lanford Wilson's Balm in Gilead. In 1985, <mask> played Raina in George Bernard Shaw's Arms and the Man. In 2000, <mask> starred as Ellen in a movie written and directed by Colleen Dodson-Baker. The premiere of My Brilliant Divorce was held at the Druid Theatre in Ireland. <mask> and David Hyde Pierce starred in The Guys in Los Angeles in 2003 as part of a revolving cast. She was in the New York City production of Shaw's Arms and the Man.Eva White was played by <mask> in The Jacksonian at the Geffen Playhouse. <mask> starred in Stage Kiss again in 2016 at the Geffen Playhouse. Death <mask> died of a pulmonary embolism at the age of 62 in Santa Monica, California. <mask> <mask> has links to film and television references. | [
"Glenne Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Theater Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Headly",
"Glenne",
"Headly"
] |
38753561 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry%20E%20McDaniel | Henry E McDaniel | Henry Edison McDaniel (October 2, 1906 − March 2, 2008) was a watercolor artist of landscapes, trout and salmon fishing scenes.
Biography
McDaniel was born in Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia (2 October 1906) and died in Quincy, Massachusetts (2 March 2008). He emigrated at age 19 from Bridgewater, Nova Scotia to Boston, Massachusetts, where he studied at the Vesper George School of Art (1925-1927) with Vesper George, Prescott Jones, William Hazelton and Frank Waldo Murray.
McDaniel earned his living in advertising. He was art director of four Boston agencies, Bennett and Northrup, Inc.; Norman-Buffet Display Industries,Inc.; Vose Swain Inc. and Bowne of Boston,Inc..
He developed his skills with watercolor in his leisure time beginning in the 1930s and painted en plein air for 20 years before he began his studio art in the 1950s. His first one-man exhibit (1940) consisted of Nova Scotian scenes at The Boston City Club Gallery. McDaniel stopped painting at age 100 after completing over 500 works, most of which are in private collections; some are in museums and corporate offices. His fine art work and articles by or about him have appeared in 27 publications from 1936-2010.
McDaniel's first print, "Fishing the Dry on the Upper Connecticut", was a limited edition made at Royal Smeets Offset Printers in Weert, Netherlands in 1973 for the members of The Anglers' Club of New York. His painting hangs at the club with the art of Winslow Homer and Ogden Pleissner. His print "Morning on Taylor Shore" was presented to Charles, Prince of Wales in 1978 at the International Atlantic Salmon Foundation Symposium, London, England. It was produced by the International Atlantic Salmon Foundation and the Crossroads of Sports, Inc. in 1976. A later print, "Miramichi Morning", was produced in 1989 by the Atlantic Salmon Federation for its members. For this painting, McDaniel was named artist of the year by the ASF.
Henry McDaniel's art and illustrations were used in two books: "The Art of the Atlantic Salmon Fly" by Joseph D Bates, Jr. (1987), published by David R Godine, Boston, MA. and "The Compleat Lee Wulff" by Lee Wulff (1989), published by Truman Talley Books, E. P. Dutton, Ny, NY.
Philosophy
Like artists of the Hudson River School, McDaniel painted streams, seascapes and landscapes as an outpouring of his passion for place and to promote conservation. Yet, McDaniel was determined not to stage or sentimentalize his art, often choosing unconventional subjects such as "Bush Island Castaways" and "Memories of Blue Rocks". He was influenced by Ogden Pleissner, Winslow Homer and Aiden Lassell Ripley. His paintings are representational and notable for realistic water and light effects. As he was a skilled and avid fisherman, he painted trout and salmon scenes with authentic detail. Most of his fishing scenes are set in New England and Maritime Canada.
Memberships
1951 Boston Watercolor Society
1953 The Guild of Boston Artists
1988 The Hudson Valley Art Association
Museums
The Holyoke Museum of Art, Holyoke, Massachusetts
American Museum of Fly Fishing, Manchester, Vermont
Miramichi Salmon Museum, Doaktown, New Brunswick, Canada
Awards and honors
1950s Several awards for Excellence at the Boston Guild of Watercolor Society Painters exhibits, Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts.
1958 B.L. Makepeace award for "Approaching Shower" at the Boston Society of Watercolor Painters exhibit, Boston Museum of Fine Arts.
1960 Richard Mitton medal for " Waitsfield, Vermont" most popular in Class D.
1964 Richard Mitton medal for "Road to the Sea" most popular in Class D.
1966 Richard Mitton medal for "Down East Memories" most popular in Class D.
The Richard Mitton medals were given at the Annual Exhibit of Paintings by Contemporary Artists of New England at the Jordan Marsh galleries in Boston, Massachusetts.
1973 The Angler's Club of New York selected "Fishing the Dry on the Upper Connecticut" for their gallery and to be used for prints for their members.
1988 First Place at The State of Maine Wildlife Art Show.
1989 Third Place at the State of Maine Wildlife Art Show.
1989 Artist of the Year, The Atlantic Salmon Federation, Montreal, Canada, for his "MIramichi Morning" made into a print for ASF members.
1991 New England Watercolor Society prize, annual Grumbacher Show, Guild of Boston Artists.
1993 Hall of Fame Inductee Miramichi Salmon Museum, Doaktown, New Brunswick, Canada.
Exhibits
1940 Boston City Club Gallery, a one-man show of Nova Scotian scenes.
1949, 1955, 1957 National Academy Galleries, 5th Ave. N.Y. American Watercolor Society.
1958,1972 Scituate Arts Festival, Scituate, Massachusetts.
1963 7th Annual Eastern States Art Exhibit, Springfield, Massachusetts.
1955−1959 An Exhibition of Paintings from the Ford Times Collection of American Art, "Artists and Fishermen", Ford Motor Company and New England Journeys Exhibits toured New England museums, art galleries and libraries.
1940-1973 Contemporary New England Artists exhibits at Jordan Marsh Company Gallery, Boston, Massachusetts, 22 shows.
1940−1975 Boston Society of Watercolor Painters exhibits: Vose Galleries in 1950, Boston Museum of Fine Arts 1951-1973, Boston Center for the Arts 1974 and 1975, 23 shows.
1955 and on Guild of Boston Artists, Boston, South Braintree and Lexington, Massachusetts.
1979 Thomas Crane Public Library, Quincy, Massachusetts, a one-man show; also 1976.
1973 The Angler's Club of New York, New York City.
1975 Arlington Art Association, Arlington, Massachusetts.
1979 Soaring Wings Gallery, Eugene, Oregon.
1985, 1986 Atlantic Salmon Federation Conclaves, Corner Brook, Newfoundland, Canada.
1987−1989 Atlantic Salmon Federation Dinners, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
1990 Hudson Valley Art Show, Westchester County Center, White Plains, New York.
1990 The Miramichi Salmon Museum Art Festival, Doaktown, New Brunswick, Canada.
1993 Atlantic Salmon Federation show at L.L. Bean, Freeport, Maine.
2010 Petite Riviere, Nova Scotia, Canada, a one-man retrospective exhibit of his paintings of Lunenburg County, Nova Scotia accompanied by a lecture on the paintings by Brian Oickle, Toronto MFA.
Publications
1936 National Sportsman May vol. LXXV, no. 5, cover painting.
1937 National Sportsman April vol. LXXVII, no. 4, cover painting.
1954 Lincoln-Mercury Times March–April published by the Ford Motor Company, Dearborn, Michigan "Song of the Margaree" story and paintings by Henry McDaniel pgs. 1-4.
1955 Ford Times May published by Ford Motor Company "Big Trout in Vermont Streams" story and paintings by Henry McDaniel pgs. 2-5.
1957 Ford Times March published by Ford Motor Company "Nova Scotia's Little Rivers" story and paintings by Henry McDaniel pgs. 2-7
1957 Ford Times July published by Ford Motor Company "Quebec's Roadside River for Salmon" by Peter Barrett, paintings by Henry McDaniel pgs. 28-33.
1959 Ford Times June published by Ford Motor Company "St. Mary's River for Salmon" story and paintings by Henry McDaniel pgs. 2-5.
1960 Ford Times June published by Ford Motor Company "Connecticut River Trout Pools" by Corey Ford, paintings by Henry McDaniel pgs. 2-7.
1961 Ford Times September published by Ford Motor Company " River of Distinction" by Jeff Rawlings, paintings by Henry McDaniel pgs. 31-33.
1962 Ford Times published by Ford Motor Company "The Water is Always Bluer" by Robert G. Deindorfer, paintings by Henry McDaniel pgs. 61-63.
1974 Sports Afield magazine February painting by Henry McDaniel pg. 36.
1976 Gray's Sporting Journal Spring vol. 1, no. 2 cover painting by Henry McDaniel.
1984 Gray's Sporting Journal Summer vol. 9, issue 2 inside cover painting by Henry McDaniel.
1985 Atlantic Salmon Journal Summer vol. XXXIV, no. 2 "A Brush With Adventure: the sporting art of Henry McDaniel" by Spence Conley pgs. 36-39, 41.
1986 Spawner Sport Fishing Annual cover painting by Henry McDaniel.
1987 Landmarks, Ontario's Natural Resources Magazine painting by Henry McDaniel pg. 9.
1987 The Fishers Forum December "The FlyFisher's Artist - Henry McDaniel" by Tom McMillan pgs. 1, 12, 13.
1987 Book "The Art of the Atlantic Salmon Fly" by Joseph D. Bates, Jr. published by David R. Godine, Boston, Massachusetts "The Return" and line drawings by Henry McDaniel.
1989 Atlantic Salmon Journal Autumn vol. XXXVIII, no. 3 painting by Henry McDaniel pg. 16.
1989 Book "The Compleat Lee Wulff" by Lee Wulff published by Truman Talley Books, E.P.Dutton, N.Y., N.Y. cover painting and illustrations by Henry McDaniel.
1990 Fishing Collectibles Magazine Fall vol. 2, no. 2 cover painting by Henry McDaniel.
1992 Fly Rod and Reel April "Profile: Henry McDaniel" by Spence Conley pgs. 29-30, 84-86.
2003 Art of Angling Journal vol. 2 issue 2 "A Brush With Immortality in the Art of Henry McDaniel" by Douglas Marchant cover and pgs. 4, 26-64.
2004 The Magazine Antiques July "Fishing in the Rapids" a painting by Henry McDaniel attributed falsely to John Whorf by Avery Galleries. Haverford, Pennsylvania.
2005 Atlantic Salmon Journal Spring vol. 54, no. 1 cover "Unnamed Pool" painting by Henry McDaniel attributed falsely to John Whorf.
2005 Atlantic Salmon Journal Summer vol.54, no. 2 "Stealing Henry's Name" pgs. 60-65 and "The Henry McDaniel Affair" pg. 4 both by Martin Silverstone, editor.
2005 IFAR International Foundation for Art ResearchJournal vol. 8, no. 1 "The Painting is Real, The Name is Not" by Sharon Flescher painting by Henry McDaniel pgs. 4-5.
2008 Atlantic Salmon Journal vol. 57, no. 2 "Perfect Water" by Martin Silverstone, "The Return" painting by Henry McDaniel (1906-2008).
2009 Photographic book, "A Celebration of Henry McDaniel", 208 paintings reproduced, privately published by Joseph W McDaniel.
References
Ford Times
Ogden Pleissner
Winslow Homer
Lee Wulff
Hudson River School
The Guild of Boston Artists
External links
[IFAR] International Federation for Art Research www.ifar.org
John Whorf - two of Henry McDaniel's paintings, here at auction under the name of John Whorf,
"Unnamed Pool" and "Fishing the White River".
http://henrymcdaniel.com/
20th-century American painters
American male painters
21st-century American painters
21st-century male artists
Artists from Boston
Landscape paintings
Realist painters
20th-century Canadian painters
Canadian male painters
Artists from Nova Scotia
People from Annapolis County, Nova Scotia
1906 births
2008 deaths | [
"Henry Edison McDaniel (October 2, 1906 − March 2, 2008) was a watercolor artist of landscapes, trout and salmon fishing scenes.",
"Biography \nMcDaniel was born in Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia (2 October 1906) and died in Quincy, Massachusetts (2 March 2008).",
"He emigrated at age 19 from Bridgewater, Nova Scotia to Boston, Massachusetts, where he studied at the Vesper George School of Art (1925-1927) with Vesper George, Prescott Jones, William Hazelton and Frank Waldo Murray.",
"McDaniel earned his living in advertising.",
"He was art director of four Boston agencies, Bennett and Northrup, Inc.; Norman-Buffet Display Industries,Inc.",
"; Vose Swain Inc. and Bowne of Boston,Inc..",
"He developed his skills with watercolor in his leisure time beginning in the 1930s and painted en plein air for 20 years before he began his studio art in the 1950s.",
"His first one-man exhibit (1940) consisted of Nova Scotian scenes at The Boston City Club Gallery.",
"McDaniel stopped painting at age 100 after completing over 500 works, most of which are in private collections; some are in museums and corporate offices.",
"His fine art work and articles by or about him have appeared in 27 publications from 1936-2010.",
"McDaniel's first print, \"Fishing the Dry on the Upper Connecticut\", was a limited edition made at Royal Smeets Offset Printers in Weert, Netherlands in 1973 for the members of The Anglers' Club of New York.",
"His painting hangs at the club with the art of Winslow Homer and Ogden Pleissner.",
"His print \"Morning on Taylor Shore\" was presented to Charles, Prince of Wales in 1978 at the International Atlantic Salmon Foundation Symposium, London, England.",
"It was produced by the International Atlantic Salmon Foundation and the Crossroads of Sports, Inc. in 1976.",
"A later print, \"Miramichi Morning\", was produced in 1989 by the Atlantic Salmon Federation for its members.",
"For this painting, McDaniel was named artist of the year by the ASF.",
"Henry McDaniel's art and illustrations were used in two books: \"The Art of the Atlantic Salmon Fly\" by Joseph D Bates, Jr. (1987), published by David R Godine, Boston, MA.",
"and \"The Compleat Lee Wulff\" by Lee Wulff (1989), published by Truman Talley Books, E. P. Dutton, Ny, NY.",
"Philosophy \nLike artists of the Hudson River School, McDaniel painted streams, seascapes and landscapes as an outpouring of his passion for place and to promote conservation.",
"Yet, McDaniel was determined not to stage or sentimentalize his art, often choosing unconventional subjects such as \"Bush Island Castaways\" and \"Memories of Blue Rocks\".",
"He was influenced by Ogden Pleissner, Winslow Homer and Aiden Lassell Ripley.",
"His paintings are representational and notable for realistic water and light effects.",
"As he was a skilled and avid fisherman, he painted trout and salmon scenes with authentic detail.",
"Most of his fishing scenes are set in New England and Maritime Canada.",
"Memberships \n1951 Boston Watercolor Society\n1953 The Guild of Boston Artists\n1988 The Hudson Valley Art Association\n\nMuseums \nThe Holyoke Museum of Art, Holyoke, Massachusetts\nAmerican Museum of Fly Fishing, Manchester, Vermont\nMiramichi Salmon Museum, Doaktown, New Brunswick, Canada\n\nAwards and honors\n1950s Several awards for Excellence at the Boston Guild of Watercolor Society Painters exhibits, Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts.",
"1958 B.L.",
"Makepeace award for \"Approaching Shower\" at the Boston Society of Watercolor Painters exhibit, Boston Museum of Fine Arts.",
"1960 Richard Mitton medal for \" Waitsfield, Vermont\" most popular in Class D.\n1964 Richard Mitton medal for \"Road to the Sea\" most popular in Class D.\n1966 Richard Mitton medal for \"Down East Memories\" most popular in Class D.\n\nThe Richard Mitton medals were given at the Annual Exhibit of Paintings by Contemporary Artists of New England at the Jordan Marsh galleries in Boston, Massachusetts.",
"1973 The Angler's Club of New York selected \"Fishing the Dry on the Upper Connecticut\" for their gallery and to be used for prints for their members.",
"1988 First Place at The State of Maine Wildlife Art Show.",
"1989 Third Place at the State of Maine Wildlife Art Show.",
"1989 Artist of the Year, The Atlantic Salmon Federation, Montreal, Canada, for his \"MIramichi Morning\" made into a print for ASF members.",
"1991 New England Watercolor Society prize, annual Grumbacher Show, Guild of Boston Artists.",
"1993 Hall of Fame Inductee Miramichi Salmon Museum, Doaktown, New Brunswick, Canada.",
"Exhibits \n1940 Boston City Club Gallery, a one-man show of Nova Scotian scenes.",
"1949, 1955, 1957 National Academy Galleries, 5th Ave. N.Y. American Watercolor Society.",
"1958,1972 Scituate Arts Festival, Scituate, Massachusetts.",
"1963 7th Annual Eastern States Art Exhibit, Springfield, Massachusetts.",
"1955−1959 An Exhibition of Paintings from the Ford Times Collection of American Art, \"Artists and Fishermen\", Ford Motor Company and New England Journeys Exhibits toured New England museums, art galleries and libraries.",
"1940-1973 Contemporary New England Artists exhibits at Jordan Marsh Company Gallery, Boston, Massachusetts, 22 shows.",
"1940−1975 Boston Society of Watercolor Painters exhibits: Vose Galleries in 1950, Boston Museum of Fine Arts 1951-1973, Boston Center for the Arts 1974 and 1975, 23 shows.",
"1955 and on Guild of Boston Artists, Boston, South Braintree and Lexington, Massachusetts.",
"1979 Thomas Crane Public Library, Quincy, Massachusetts, a one-man show; also 1976.",
"1973 The Angler's Club of New York, New York City.",
"1975 Arlington Art Association, Arlington, Massachusetts.",
"1979 Soaring Wings Gallery, Eugene, Oregon.",
"1985, 1986 Atlantic Salmon Federation Conclaves, Corner Brook, Newfoundland, Canada.",
"1987−1989 Atlantic Salmon Federation Dinners, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.",
"1990 Hudson Valley Art Show, Westchester County Center, White Plains, New York.",
"1990 The Miramichi Salmon Museum Art Festival, Doaktown, New Brunswick, Canada.",
"1993 Atlantic Salmon Federation show at L.L.",
"Bean, Freeport, Maine.",
"2010 Petite Riviere, Nova Scotia, Canada, a one-man retrospective exhibit of his paintings of Lunenburg County, Nova Scotia accompanied by a lecture on the paintings by Brian Oickle, Toronto MFA.",
"Publications \n1936 National Sportsman May vol.",
"LXXV, no.",
"5, cover painting.",
"1937 National Sportsman April vol.",
"LXXVII, no.",
"4, cover painting.",
"1954 Lincoln-Mercury Times March–April published by the Ford Motor Company, Dearborn, Michigan \"Song of the Margaree\" story and paintings by Henry McDaniel pgs.",
"1-4.",
"1955 Ford Times May published by Ford Motor Company \"Big Trout in Vermont Streams\" story and paintings by Henry McDaniel pgs.",
"2-5.",
"1957 Ford Times March published by Ford Motor Company \"Nova Scotia's Little Rivers\" story and paintings by Henry McDaniel pgs.",
"2-7\n1957 Ford Times July published by Ford Motor Company \"Quebec's Roadside River for Salmon\" by Peter Barrett, paintings by Henry McDaniel pgs.",
"28-33.",
"1959 Ford Times June published by Ford Motor Company \"St. Mary's River for Salmon\" story and paintings by Henry McDaniel pgs.",
"2-5.",
"1960 Ford Times June published by Ford Motor Company \"Connecticut River Trout Pools\" by Corey Ford, paintings by Henry McDaniel pgs.",
"2-7.",
"1961 Ford Times September published by Ford Motor Company \" River of Distinction\" by Jeff Rawlings, paintings by Henry McDaniel pgs.",
"31-33.",
"1962 Ford Times published by Ford Motor Company \"The Water is Always Bluer\" by Robert G. Deindorfer, paintings by Henry McDaniel pgs.",
"61-63.",
"1974 Sports Afield magazine February painting by Henry McDaniel pg.",
"36.",
"1976 Gray's Sporting Journal Spring vol.",
"1, no.",
"2 cover painting by Henry McDaniel.",
"1984 Gray's Sporting Journal Summer vol.",
"9, issue 2 inside cover painting by Henry McDaniel.",
"1985 Atlantic Salmon Journal Summer vol.",
"XXXIV, no.",
"2 \"A Brush With Adventure: the sporting art of Henry McDaniel\" by Spence Conley pgs.",
"36-39, 41.",
"1986 Spawner Sport Fishing Annual cover painting by Henry McDaniel.",
"1987 Landmarks, Ontario's Natural Resources Magazine painting by Henry McDaniel pg.",
"9.",
"1987 The Fishers Forum December \"The FlyFisher's Artist - Henry McDaniel\" by Tom McMillan pgs.",
"1, 12, 13.",
"1987 Book \"The Art of the Atlantic Salmon Fly\" by Joseph D. Bates, Jr. published by David R. Godine, Boston, Massachusetts \"The Return\" and line drawings by Henry McDaniel.",
"1989 Atlantic Salmon Journal Autumn vol.",
"XXXVIII, no.",
"3 painting by Henry McDaniel pg.",
"16.",
"1989 Book \"The Compleat Lee Wulff\" by Lee Wulff published by Truman Talley Books, E.P.Dutton, N.Y., N.Y. cover painting and illustrations by Henry McDaniel.",
"1990 Fishing Collectibles Magazine Fall vol.",
"2, no.",
"2 cover painting by Henry McDaniel.",
"1992 Fly Rod and Reel April \"Profile: Henry McDaniel\" by Spence Conley pgs.",
"29-30, 84-86.",
"2003 Art of Angling Journal vol.",
"2 issue 2 \"A Brush With Immortality in the Art of Henry McDaniel\" by Douglas Marchant cover and pgs.",
"4, 26-64.",
"2004 The Magazine Antiques July \"Fishing in the Rapids\" a painting by Henry McDaniel attributed falsely to John Whorf by Avery Galleries.",
"Haverford, Pennsylvania.",
"2005 Atlantic Salmon Journal Spring vol.",
"54, no.",
"1 cover \"Unnamed Pool\" painting by Henry McDaniel attributed falsely to John Whorf.",
"2005 Atlantic Salmon Journal Summer vol.54, no.",
"2 \"Stealing Henry's Name\" pgs.",
"60-65 and \"The Henry McDaniel Affair\" pg.",
"4 both by Martin Silverstone, editor.",
"2005 IFAR International Foundation for Art ResearchJournal vol.",
"8, no.",
"1 \"The Painting is Real, The Name is Not\" by Sharon Flescher painting by Henry McDaniel pgs.",
"4-5.",
"2008 Atlantic Salmon Journal vol.",
"57, no.",
"2 \"Perfect Water\" by Martin Silverstone, \"The Return\" painting by Henry McDaniel (1906-2008).",
"2009 Photographic book, \"A Celebration of Henry McDaniel\", 208 paintings reproduced, privately published by Joseph W McDaniel.",
"References \n\n \n\n \n\n \nFord Times \nOgden Pleissner \nWinslow Homer \nLee Wulff \nHudson River School \nThe Guild of Boston Artists\n\nExternal links \n [IFAR] International Federation for Art Research www.ifar.org\nJohn Whorf - two of Henry McDaniel's paintings, here at auction under the name of John Whorf,\n \"Unnamed Pool\" and \"Fishing the White River\".",
"http://henrymcdaniel.com/\n\n20th-century American painters\nAmerican male painters\n21st-century American painters\n21st-century male artists\nArtists from Boston\nLandscape paintings\nRealist painters\n20th-century Canadian painters\nCanadian male painters\nArtists from Nova Scotia\nPeople from Annapolis County, Nova Scotia\n1906 births\n2008 deaths"
] | [
"A watercolor artist of landscapes, trout and salmon fishing scenes, Henry Edison McDaniel was born in 1906.",
"In 1906, he was born in Nova Scotia and died in Massachusetts.",
"He graduated from the Vesper George School of Art in Boston, Massachusetts at the age of 19 after moving from Nova Scotia.",
"He worked in advertising.",
"He was art director of four Boston agencies.",
"Vose Swain Inc. and Bowne of Boston are both located in Boston.",
"He began his studio art in the 1950s after 20 years of painting in the air with watercolors.",
"His first exhibit was at The Boston City Club Gallery.",
"Most of the works that McDaniel did after he stopped painting at age 100 are in private collections.",
"From 1936-2010, his fine art work and articles have appeared in 27 publications.",
"In 1973, a limited edition of \"Fishing the Dry on the Upper Connecticut\" was printed for the members of The Anglers' Club of New York.",
"His painting is on display at the club.",
"His print \"Morning on Taylor Shore\" was presented to Charles, Prince of Wales in 1978.",
"It was produced by the International Atlantic Salmon Foundation.",
"The Atlantic Salmon Federation produced a print called \"Miramichi Morning\" in 1989.",
"The painting was named artist of the year by the ASF.",
"\"The Art of the Atlantic Salmon Fly\" was published by David R Godine in Boston, MA.",
"\"The Compleat Lee Wulff\" was published in 1989.",
"Like artists of the Hudson River School, McDaniel painted streams, seascapes and landscapes as an expression of his passion for place and to promote conservativism.",
"The unconventional subjects of \"Bush Island Castaways\" and \"Memories of Blue Rocks\" were chosen not to stage or sentimentalize his art.",
"He was influenced by a number of people.",
"His paintings feature realistic water and light effects.",
"He was an avid fisherman and was skilled in painting trout and salmon scenes.",
"New England and Maritime Canada are where most of his fishing scenes are set.",
"The Guild of Boston Artists received several awards in the 1950s.",
"1959 B.L.",
"The Makepeace award was presented at the Boston Society of Watercolor Painters exhibit.",
"1960 Richard Mitton medal for Waitsfield, Vermont was most popular in Class D.",
"\"Fishing the Dry on the Upper Connecticut\" was selected by the Angler's Club of New York to be used for prints.",
"The State of Maine Wildlife Art Show had a first place winner in 1988.",
"The State of Maine Wildlife Art Show had a third place finish in 1989.",
"His \"MIramichi Morning\" was made into a print for the Atlantic Salmon Federation.",
"The Guild of Boston Artists won the 1991 New England Watercolor Society prize.",
"Miramichi Salmon Museum is a Hall of Fame inductee.",
"There is a one-man show of Nova Scotian scenes in the Boston City Club Gallery.",
"National Academy Galleries, 5th Ave. N.Y.",
"The Scituate Arts Festival was held in 1972",
"The 7th Annual Eastern States Art Exhibit was held in Massachusetts.",
"An exhibition of paintings from the Ford Times Collection of American Art, \"Artists and Fishermen\", Ford Motor Company and New England Journeys Exhibits toured New England museums, art galleries and libraries.",
"The Contemporary New England Artists exhibits are at the Jordan Marsh Company Gallery.",
"The Boston Society of Watercolor Painters has exhibits in Vose Galleries, Boston Museum of Fine Arts, and Boston Center for the Arts.",
"The Guild of Boston Artists was founded in 1955.",
"A one-man show was held at the Thomas Crane Public Library.",
"The Angler's Club of New York was founded in 1973.",
"The Arlington Art Association is in Massachusetts.",
"The gallery was in Eugene, Oregon.",
"The Atlantic Salmon Federation conclaves took place in Corner brook, Newfoundland, Canada.",
"The Atlantic Salmon Federation Dinners were held in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.",
"The Hudson Valley Art Show was held in White Plains, New York.",
"The Miramichi Salmon Museum Art Festival was held in 1990.",
"L.L. hosted the 1993 Atlantic Salmon Federation show.",
"The town of Bean is in Maine.",
"The one-man retrospective exhibit of his paintings of Lunenburg County, Nova Scotia was accompanied by a lecture on the paintings by Brian Oickle.",
"National sportsman May vol. was published in 1936.",
"LXXV, no.",
"There is a cover painting.",
"National sportsman April vol.",
"LxVII, no.",
"There is a cover painting.",
"The Lincoln-Mercury Times was published by the Ford Motor Company.",
"A few.",
"The story \"Big Trout in Vermont Streams\" was published in the 1955 Ford Times.",
"4-5.",
"The story \"Nova Scotia's Little Rivers\" was published in 1957 in the Ford Times March.",
"The \"Quebec's Roadside River for Salmon\" paintings were published in the July 1957 Ford Times.",
"28-33.",
"The story \"St. Mary's River for Salmon\" was published in the June 1959 Ford Times.",
"4-5.",
"Ford Motor Company published \"Connecticut River Trout Pools\" in June 1960.",
"There were no more than LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar",
"The paintings by Henry McDaniel are in the Ford Times September 1961.",
"31-33",
"The Water is Always Bluer by Robert G. Deindorfer was published in the 1962 Ford Times.",
"61- 63.",
"A painting by Henry McDaniel was in the February 1974 edition of Sports Afield magazine.",
"36.",
"The spring edition of Gray's Sporting Journal was published in 1976.",
"1, no.",
"The 2 cover paintings are by Henry McDaniel.",
"Gray's Journal Summer vol. was published in 1984.",
"The inside cover painting is by Henry McDaniel.",
"The summer edition of the Atlantic Salmon Journal.",
"No. XXXIV, no.",
"A brush with adventure is the sporting art of Henry McDaniel.",
"36, 39, 41.",
"Henry McDaniel painted the 1986 Spawner Sport Fishing Annual cover.",
"The painting is from Ontario's Natural Resources Magazine.",
"There are 9.",
"Tom McMillan wrote \"The FlyFisher's Artist - Henry McDaniel\" for The Fishers Forum.",
"There were 1, 12, 13",
"The book \"The Art of the Atlantic Salmon Fly\" was published in 1987.",
"The Atlantic Salmon Journal was published in 1989.",
"No. XXXVIII.",
"There are three paintings by Henry McDaniel.",
"16.",
"The book \"The Compleat Lee Wulff\" was published in 1989.",
"The Fishing Collectibles Magazine was published in 1990.",
"2, no.",
"The 2 cover paintings are by Henry McDaniel.",
"Fly Rod and Reel April \"Profile: Henry McDaniel\" was published in 1992.",
"29-31, 84-87.",
"The Art of Angling Journal was published in 2003",
"The second issue of \"A Brush With Immortality in the Art of Henry McDaniel\" was published by Douglas Marchant.",
"4, 26-64.",
"The Magazine Antiques July \"Fishing in the Rapids\" is a painting attributed to John Whorf.",
"The town of Haverford, Pennsylvania.",
"The Atlantic Salmon Journal was published in 2005.",
"54, no.",
"The painting \"Unnamed Pool\" was attributed to John Whorf.",
"The summer edition of the Atlantic Salmon Journal was published in 2005.",
"2 stories about stealing Henry's name.",
"\"The Henry McDaniel Affair\" was published in the 60s and 65s.",
"Martin Silverstone is the editor.",
"The IFAR International Foundation for Art Research Journal was published in 2005.",
"No. 8, no.",
"\"The Painting is Real, The Name is Not\" is a painting by Sharon Flescher.",
"4-5",
"The Atlantic Salmon Journal was published in 2008.",
"No. 57, no.",
"\"Perfect Water\" is a painting by Martin Silverstone and \"The Return\" is a painting by Henry McDaniel.",
"\"A Celebration of Henry McDaniel\" is a photographic book and paintings.",
"The International Federation for Art Research has links to the Ford Times and the Guild of Boston Artists.",
"20th-century American painters American male painters 21st-century American painters 21st-century male artists Artists from Boston Landscape paintings Realist painters 20th-century Canadian male painters"
] | <mask> (October 2, 1906 − March 2, 2008) was a watercolor artist of landscapes, trout and salmon fishing scenes. Biography
<mask> was born in Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia (2 October 1906) and died in Quincy, Massachusetts (2 March 2008). He emigrated at age 19 from Bridgewater, Nova Scotia to Boston, Massachusetts, where he studied at the Vesper George School of Art (1925-1927) with Vesper George, Prescott Jones, William Hazelton and Frank Waldo Murray. McDaniel earned his living in advertising. He was art director of four Boston agencies, Bennett and Northrup, Inc.; Norman-Buffet Display Industries,Inc. ; Vose Swain Inc. and Bowne of Boston,Inc.. He developed his skills with watercolor in his leisure time beginning in the 1930s and painted en plein air for 20 years before he began his studio art in the 1950s.His first one-man exhibit (1940) consisted of Nova Scotian scenes at The Boston City Club Gallery. McDaniel stopped painting at age 100 after completing over 500 works, most of which are in private collections; some are in museums and corporate offices. His fine art work and articles by or about him have appeared in 27 publications from 1936-2010. <mask>'s first print, "Fishing the Dry on the Upper Connecticut", was a limited edition made at Royal Smeets Offset Printers in Weert, Netherlands in 1973 for the members of The Anglers' Club of New York. His painting hangs at the club with the art of Winslow Homer and Ogden Pleissner. His print "Morning on Taylor Shore" was presented to Charles, Prince of Wales in 1978 at the International Atlantic Salmon Foundation Symposium, London, England. It was produced by the International Atlantic Salmon Foundation and the Crossroads of Sports, Inc. in 1976.A later print, "Miramichi Morning", was produced in 1989 by the Atlantic Salmon Federation for its members. For this painting, McDaniel was named artist of the year by the ASF. <mask>'s art and illustrations were used in two books: "The Art of the Atlantic Salmon Fly" by Joseph D Bates, Jr. (1987), published by David R Godine, Boston, MA. and "The Compleat Lee Wulff" by Lee Wulff (1989), published by Truman Talley Books, E. P. Dutton, Ny, NY. Philosophy
Like artists of the Hudson River School, McDaniel painted streams, seascapes and landscapes as an outpouring of his passion for place and to promote conservation. Yet, <mask> was determined not to stage or sentimentalize his art, often choosing unconventional subjects such as "Bush Island Castaways" and "Memories of Blue Rocks". He was influenced by Ogden Pleissner, Winslow Homer and Aiden Lassell Ripley.His paintings are representational and notable for realistic water and light effects. As he was a skilled and avid fisherman, he painted trout and salmon scenes with authentic detail. Most of his fishing scenes are set in New England and Maritime Canada. Memberships
1951 Boston Watercolor Society
1953 The Guild of Boston Artists
1988 The Hudson Valley Art Association
Museums
The Holyoke Museum of Art, Holyoke, Massachusetts
American Museum of Fly Fishing, Manchester, Vermont
Miramichi Salmon Museum, Doaktown, New Brunswick, Canada
Awards and honors
1950s Several awards for Excellence at the Boston Guild of Watercolor Society Painters exhibits, Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts. 1958 B.L. Makepeace award for "Approaching Shower" at the Boston Society of Watercolor Painters exhibit, Boston Museum of Fine Arts. 1960 Richard Mitton medal for " Waitsfield, Vermont" most popular in Class D.
1964 Richard Mitton medal for "Road to the Sea" most popular in Class D.
1966 Richard Mitton medal for "Down East Memories" most popular in Class D.
The Richard Mitton medals were given at the Annual Exhibit of Paintings by Contemporary Artists of New England at the Jordan Marsh galleries in Boston, Massachusetts.1973 The Angler's Club of New York selected "Fishing the Dry on the Upper Connecticut" for their gallery and to be used for prints for their members. 1988 First Place at The State of Maine Wildlife Art Show. 1989 Third Place at the State of Maine Wildlife Art Show. 1989 Artist of the Year, The Atlantic Salmon Federation, Montreal, Canada, for his "MIramichi Morning" made into a print for ASF members. 1991 New England Watercolor Society prize, annual Grumbacher Show, Guild of Boston Artists. 1993 Hall of Fame Inductee Miramichi Salmon Museum, Doaktown, New Brunswick, Canada. Exhibits
1940 Boston City Club Gallery, a one-man show of Nova Scotian scenes.1949, 1955, 1957 National Academy Galleries, 5th Ave. N.Y. American Watercolor Society. 1958,1972 Scituate Arts Festival, Scituate, Massachusetts. 1963 7th Annual Eastern States Art Exhibit, Springfield, Massachusetts. 1955−1959 An Exhibition of Paintings from the Ford Times Collection of American Art, "Artists and Fishermen", Ford Motor Company and New England Journeys Exhibits toured New England museums, art galleries and libraries. 1940-1973 Contemporary New England Artists exhibits at Jordan Marsh Company Gallery, Boston, Massachusetts, 22 shows. 1940−1975 Boston Society of Watercolor Painters exhibits: Vose Galleries in 1950, Boston Museum of Fine Arts 1951-1973, Boston Center for the Arts 1974 and 1975, 23 shows. 1955 and on Guild of Boston Artists, Boston, South Braintree and Lexington, Massachusetts.1979 Thomas Crane Public Library, Quincy, Massachusetts, a one-man show; also 1976. 1973 The Angler's Club of New York, New York City. 1975 Arlington Art Association, Arlington, Massachusetts. 1979 Soaring Wings Gallery, Eugene, Oregon. 1985, 1986 Atlantic Salmon Federation Conclaves, Corner Brook, Newfoundland, Canada. 1987−1989 Atlantic Salmon Federation Dinners, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. 1990 Hudson Valley Art Show, Westchester County Center, White Plains, New York.1990 The Miramichi Salmon Museum Art Festival, Doaktown, New Brunswick, Canada. 1993 Atlantic Salmon Federation show at L.L. Bean, Freeport, Maine. 2010 Petite Riviere, Nova Scotia, Canada, a one-man retrospective exhibit of his paintings of Lunenburg County, Nova Scotia accompanied by a lecture on the paintings by Brian Oickle, Toronto MFA. Publications
1936 National Sportsman May vol. LXXV, no. 5, cover painting.1937 National Sportsman April vol. LXXVII, no. 4, cover painting. 1954 Lincoln-Mercury Times March–April published by the Ford Motor Company, Dearborn, Michigan "Song of the Margaree" story and paintings by <mask>el pgs. 1-4. 1955 Ford Times May published by Ford Motor Company "Big Trout in Vermont Streams" story and paintings by <mask> pgs. 2-5.1957 Ford Times March published by Ford Motor Company "Nova Scotia's Little Rivers" story and paintings by <mask> pgs. 2-7
1957 Ford Times July published by Ford Motor Company "Quebec's Roadside River for Salmon" by Peter Barrett, paintings by <mask> pgs. 28-33. 1959 Ford Times June published by Ford Motor Company "St. Mary's River for Salmon" story and paintings by <mask> pgs. 2-5. 1960 Ford Times June published by Ford Motor Company "Connecticut River Trout Pools" by Corey Ford, paintings by <mask> pgs. 2-7.1961 Ford Times September published by Ford Motor Company " River of Distinction" by Jeff Rawlings, paintings by <mask> pgs. 31-33. 1962 Ford Times published by Ford Motor Company "The Water is Always Bluer" by Robert G. Deindorfer, paintings by <mask> pgs. 61-63. 1974 Sports Afield magazine February painting by <mask> pg. 36. 1976 Gray's Sporting Journal Spring vol.1, no. 2 cover painting by <mask>. 1984 Gray's Sporting Journal Summer vol. 9, issue 2 inside cover painting by <mask>. 1985 Atlantic Salmon Journal Summer vol. XXXIV, no. 2 "A Brush With Adventure: the sporting art of <mask>" by Spence Conley pgs.36-39, 41. 1986 Spawner Sport Fishing Annual cover painting by <mask>. 1987 Landmarks, Ontario's Natural Resources Magazine painting by <mask> pg. 9. 1987 The Fishers Forum December "The FlyFisher's Artist - <mask>el" by Tom McMillan pgs. 1, 12, 13. 1987 Book "The Art of the Atlantic Salmon Fly" by Joseph D. Bates, Jr. published by David R. Godine, Boston, Massachusetts "The Return" and line drawings by <mask>.1989 Atlantic Salmon Journal Autumn vol. XXXVIII, no. 3 painting by <mask> pg. 16. 1989 Book "The Compleat Lee Wulff" by Lee Wulff published by Truman Talley Books, E.P.Dutton, N.Y., N.Y. cover painting and illustrations by <mask>. 1990 Fishing Collectibles Magazine Fall vol. 2, no.2 cover painting by <mask>. 1992 Fly Rod and Reel April "Profile: <mask>" by Spence Conley pgs. 29-30, 84-86. 2003 Art of Angling Journal vol. 2 issue 2 "A Brush With Immortality in the Art of <mask>el" by Douglas Marchant cover and pgs. 4, 26-64. 2004 The Magazine Antiques July "Fishing in the Rapids" a painting by <mask> attributed falsely to John Whorf by Avery Galleries.Haverford, Pennsylvania. 2005 Atlantic Salmon Journal Spring vol. 54, no. 1 cover "Unnamed Pool" painting by <mask> attributed falsely to John Whorf. 2005 Atlantic Salmon Journal Summer vol.54, no. 2 "Stealing <mask>'s Name" pgs. 60-65 and "The Henry McDaniel Affair" pg.4 both by Martin Silverstone, editor. 2005 IFAR International Foundation for Art ResearchJournal vol. 8, no. 1 "The Painting is Real, The Name is Not" by Sharon Flescher painting by <mask> pgs. 4-5. 2008 Atlantic Salmon Journal vol. 57, no.2 "Perfect Water" by Martin Silverstone, "The Return" painting by <mask> (1906-2008). 2009 Photographic book, "A Celebration of Henry McDaniel", 208 paintings reproduced, privately published by Joseph W McDaniel. References
Ford Times
Ogden Pleissner
Winslow Homer
Lee Wulff
Hudson River School
The Guild of Boston Artists
External links
[IFAR] International Federation for Art Research www.ifar.org
John Whorf - two of <mask>'s paintings, here at auction under the name of John Whorf,
"Unnamed Pool" and "Fishing the White River". http://henrymcdaniel.com/
20th-century American painters
American male painters
21st-century American painters
21st-century male artists
Artists from Boston
Landscape paintings
Realist painters
20th-century Canadian painters
Canadian male painters
Artists from Nova Scotia
People from Annapolis County, Nova Scotia
1906 births
2008 deaths | [
"Henry Edison McDaniel",
"McDaniel",
"McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
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"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDani",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDani",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry",
"Henry McDaniel",
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] | A watercolor artist of landscapes, trout and salmon fishing scenes, <mask> was born in 1906. In 1906, he was born in Nova Scotia and died in Massachusetts. He graduated from the Vesper George School of Art in Boston, Massachusetts at the age of 19 after moving from Nova Scotia. He worked in advertising. He was art director of four Boston agencies. Vose Swain Inc. and Bowne of Boston are both located in Boston. He began his studio art in the 1950s after 20 years of painting in the air with watercolors.His first exhibit was at The Boston City Club Gallery. Most of the works that McDaniel did after he stopped painting at age 100 are in private collections. From 1936-2010, his fine art work and articles have appeared in 27 publications. In 1973, a limited edition of "Fishing the Dry on the Upper Connecticut" was printed for the members of The Anglers' Club of New York. His painting is on display at the club. His print "Morning on Taylor Shore" was presented to Charles, Prince of Wales in 1978. It was produced by the International Atlantic Salmon Foundation.The Atlantic Salmon Federation produced a print called "Miramichi Morning" in 1989. The painting was named artist of the year by the ASF. "The Art of the Atlantic Salmon Fly" was published by David R Godine in Boston, MA. "The Compleat Lee Wulff" was published in 1989. Like artists of the Hudson River School, McDaniel painted streams, seascapes and landscapes as an expression of his passion for place and to promote conservativism. The unconventional subjects of "Bush Island Castaways" and "Memories of Blue Rocks" were chosen not to stage or sentimentalize his art. He was influenced by a number of people.His paintings feature realistic water and light effects. He was an avid fisherman and was skilled in painting trout and salmon scenes. New England and Maritime Canada are where most of his fishing scenes are set. The Guild of Boston Artists received several awards in the 1950s. 1959 B.L. The Makepeace award was presented at the Boston Society of Watercolor Painters exhibit. 1960 Richard Mitton medal for Waitsfield, Vermont was most popular in Class D."Fishing the Dry on the Upper Connecticut" was selected by the Angler's Club of New York to be used for prints. The State of Maine Wildlife Art Show had a first place winner in 1988. The State of Maine Wildlife Art Show had a third place finish in 1989. His "MIramichi Morning" was made into a print for the Atlantic Salmon Federation. The Guild of Boston Artists won the 1991 New England Watercolor Society prize. Miramichi Salmon Museum is a Hall of Fame inductee. There is a one-man show of Nova Scotian scenes in the Boston City Club Gallery.National Academy Galleries, 5th Ave. N.Y. The Scituate Arts Festival was held in 1972 The 7th Annual Eastern States Art Exhibit was held in Massachusetts. An exhibition of paintings from the Ford Times Collection of American Art, "Artists and Fishermen", Ford Motor Company and New England Journeys Exhibits toured New England museums, art galleries and libraries. The Contemporary New England Artists exhibits are at the Jordan Marsh Company Gallery. The Boston Society of Watercolor Painters has exhibits in Vose Galleries, Boston Museum of Fine Arts, and Boston Center for the Arts. The Guild of Boston Artists was founded in 1955.A one-man show was held at the Thomas Crane Public Library. The Angler's Club of New York was founded in 1973. The Arlington Art Association is in Massachusetts. The gallery was in Eugene, Oregon. The Atlantic Salmon Federation conclaves took place in Corner brook, Newfoundland, Canada. The Atlantic Salmon Federation Dinners were held in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The Hudson Valley Art Show was held in White Plains, New York.The Miramichi Salmon Museum Art Festival was held in 1990. L.L. hosted the 1993 Atlantic Salmon Federation show. The town of Bean is in Maine. The one-man retrospective exhibit of his paintings of Lunenburg County, Nova Scotia was accompanied by a lecture on the paintings by Brian Oickle. National sportsman May vol. was published in 1936. LXXV, no. There is a cover painting.National sportsman April vol. LxVII, no. There is a cover painting. The Lincoln-Mercury Times was published by the Ford Motor Company. A few. The story "Big Trout in Vermont Streams" was published in the 1955 Ford Times. 4-5.The story "Nova Scotia's Little Rivers" was published in 1957 in the Ford Times March. The "Quebec's Roadside River for Salmon" paintings were published in the July 1957 Ford Times. 28-33. The story "St. Mary's River for Salmon" was published in the June 1959 Ford Times. 4-5. Ford Motor Company published "Connecticut River Trout Pools" in June 1960. There were no more than LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumar LLumarThe paintings by <mask> are in the Ford Times September 1961. 31-33 The Water is Always Bluer by Robert G. Deindorfer was published in the 1962 Ford Times. 61- 63. A painting by <mask> was in the February 1974 edition of Sports Afield magazine. 36. The spring edition of Gray's Sporting Journal was published in 1976.1, no. The 2 cover paintings are by <mask>. Gray's Journal Summer vol. was published in 1984. The inside cover painting is by <mask>. The summer edition of the Atlantic Salmon Journal. No. XXXIV, no. A brush with adventure is the sporting art of <mask>.36, 39, 41. <mask> painted the 1986 Spawner Sport Fishing Annual cover. The painting is from Ontario's Natural Resources Magazine. There are 9. Tom McMillan wrote "The FlyFisher's Artist - <mask>" for The Fishers Forum. There were 1, 12, 13 The book "The Art of the Atlantic Salmon Fly" was published in 1987.The Atlantic Salmon Journal was published in 1989. No. XXXVIII. There are three paintings by <mask>el. 16. The book "The Compleat Lee Wulff" was published in 1989. The Fishing Collectibles Magazine was published in 1990. 2, no.The 2 cover paintings are by <mask>. Fly Rod and Reel April "Profile: <mask>" was published in 1992. 29-31, 84-87. The Art of Angling Journal was published in 2003 The second issue of "A Brush With Immortality in the Art of <mask>" was published by Douglas Marchant. 4, 26-64. The Magazine Antiques July "Fishing in the Rapids" is a painting attributed to John Whorf.The town of Haverford, Pennsylvania. The Atlantic Salmon Journal was published in 2005. 54, no. The painting "Unnamed Pool" was attributed to John Whorf. The summer edition of the Atlantic Salmon Journal was published in 2005. 2 stories about stealing <mask>'s name. "The <mask>el Affair" was published in the 60s and 65s.Martin Silverstone is the editor. The IFAR International Foundation for Art Research Journal was published in 2005. No. 8, no. "The Painting is Real, The Name is Not" is a painting by Sharon Flescher. 4-5 The Atlantic Salmon Journal was published in 2008. No. 57, no."Perfect Water" is a painting by Martin Silverstone and "The Return" is a painting by <mask>. "A Celebration of <mask>el" is a photographic book and paintings. The International Federation for Art Research has links to the Ford Times and the Guild of Boston Artists. 20th-century American painters American male painters 21st-century American painters 21st-century male artists Artists from Boston Landscape paintings Realist painters 20th-century Canadian male painters | [
"Henry Edison McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDani",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry",
"Henry MDani",
"Henry McDaniel",
"Henry McDani"
] |
3001074 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane%20Barker | Jane Barker | Jane Barker (1652–1732) was a popular English fiction writer, poet, and a staunch Jacobite. She went into self-imposed exile when James II fled England during the Glorious Revolution in 1688. Her novels, The Amours of Bosvil and Galesia, also published as Love Intrigues (1713), Exilius or The Banish'd Roman (1715), A Patchwork Screen for the Ladies (1723), and The Lining of the Patchwork Screen for the Ladies (1726) were written after she returned to London in 1704. Prior to and during her exile, she wrote a collection of poems justifying the value of feminine education and female single life, "Poetical Recreations" (1688), and a group of political poems, "A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times" (1701), which conveyed her anxiety about the political future of England.
Although not known for her letter writing, four extant letters are located in the British Library and within the Magdalen Manuscript at the Oxford Magdalen library, written between 1670 and 1688. Jane Barker was one of the first female authors to publish writings both in manuscript and print form, allowing modern scholars to study "the passage of Barker's poetry from coterie circles to larger, more impersonal communities of readers" Never married, Jane Barker died quietly in 1732.
Early life
Jane Barker was born in May 1652, in the village of Blatherwick, Northamptonshire, in England to Thomas Barker and Anne Connock. Anne Connock seems to be descended from an unlanded and Roman Catholic branch of the Connock family, which might explain Jane's Papist affiliation. A member of a royalist family, Jane Barker went into exile with James II once William of Orange entered England, threatening an overthrow of the outwardly Catholic James II. When Jane was 10 years old, Thomas Barker leased a property and manor in Wilsthorpe, Lincolnshire. This property was bequeathed to both Jane Barker and her mother upon her father's death in 1681 and she relocated to the property upon returning from exile in 1704.
As a young woman, Jane Barker was taught Latin, anatomy, and herbal medicine by her brother, Edward, who matriculated at St. John's College, Oxford in 1668 and earned his M.A. from Christ Church, Oxford, in 1674–5. Proof of Jane Barker's knowledge of medicine can be seen in the advertisement for Dr. Barker's Famous Gout Plaister, and in her poems about anatomy found in her "Poetical Recreations". Indebted to her brother for providing her with the basis of her education, Jane mourned his death in 1675, shortly after he finished his time at Oxford.
Political affiliations and exile
Barker was baptized on 17 May 1652 according to the rites of the Church of England; however, she converted to Catholicism during reign of James II (of England), between 1685 and 1688. After James' defeat by the Prince of Orange (William III) in the Glorious Revolution, London became a dangerous place for Catholics, prompting Barker to follow James II to exile in France.
Following an ideology of Jacobitism, and a royalist, Jane Barker was one of the 40,000 people who followed James II in exile to France. She was one of the smaller number of individuals who maintained residence at Saint-Germain-en-Laye in 1689. James II maintained court in Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye, a castle lent to the Stuarts by Louis XIV from 1689 to 1704.
Barker's Jacobite involvement is further evidenced in her letter to James Butler, 2nd Duke of Ormonde, who began organizing a Jacobite invasion from France. Dated 19 March 1718, the letter implicitly informed Ormonde that his supporters in England awaited his invasion. However, the letter was intercepted in that same year by the British Secrete Office, the anti-Jacobite intelligence organization. Since Barker's name and handwriting were unknown to the government authorities, it is suspected that she was used as a ghost-writer for the letter—a technique used to protect plotters whose identities and handwriting were already well known by authorities.
Major works
Poetical Recreations (1688)
A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times (1701)
Love Intrigues';' or The Amours of Bosvil and Galesia (1713)Exilius; or The Banish'd Roman (1715)The Christian Pilgrimage (1718)A Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies (1723)The Lining of the Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies (1726)
Poetry
Poetical Recreations
Originally published in 1688, the first part of this two-part compilation comprises Barker's own poems addressed to her friends, and the second part contains poems written by Barker's friends addressed to Barker herself. Described as written by "several Gentlemen of the Universities, and Others," the second part of Poetical Recreations was written by contributors from Cambridge or Oxford University. Originally printed without the author's permission by Benjamin Crayle, the title page of Poetical Recreations boasted that poems within were "Occasionally written by Mrs. Jane Barker". Benjamin Crayle also contributed twelve poems in Part Two and expressed his admiration for Barker's literary taste. A note in what is now called the Magdalen Manuscript suggests that the publisher did not have Barker's permission to print the collection: it reads "now corrected by her own hand." The marginalia indicates that the initial collection was not yet meant for public consumption. Scholar Kathryn King finds evidence through marginal notations in the Magdalen Manuscript that Barker's works are autobiographical.
A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times
Written at the end of her time at Saint-Germaine-en-Laye, A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times is highly political and takes a pro-Stuart position. The speaker in the collection, Fidelia, is considered autobiographical. She is characterized as a Stuart loyalist and Catholic convert, depicting Barker's own political and religious affiliations. Upon returning to England, Jane Barker gifted a copy of her A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times to the son of James II for his birthday. The manuscript holding in the British Library is believed to contain a prototype copy of the collection.
Prose
Love Intrigues or The Amours of Bosvil and Galesia
Originally printed in 1713 and revised and reprinted in 1719, Love Intrigues was the first installment in what came to be known as the Galesia Trilogy. It has been suggested that Bosvil's character was based heavily on a man whom Barker knew well. King suggests that the original edition of the novel in 1713 was not meant for publication because major revisions were made before it was reprinted, with a new title, in 1719. Love Intrigues was the first novel that Barker published, though probably without her permission, with Edmund Curll. Curll published some of her later works. It was suspected that Curll probably added the term "Amours" to the title for better commercial appeal.
Exilius or The Banish'd Roman
Published just after the death of Queen Anne in 1714, Exilius can be read as a pro-Stuart response to the succession crisis that followed Anne's death. There is some suggestion that Curll sped up the release of the work so that he could capitalize on the market potential during the political upheaval. This novel is understood to be a projection of Jacobite feeling through themes including romance, love, and heroism. Written primarily for a female audience, the male characters within the fiction are stock representations while female characters are developed virtuously and follow strict moral tenets. Jonathan Grieder states that formally the work is weak, but because it appeals to women during the early eighteenth century it can inform the reader about feminine interests during the time of its publication.
The Christian Pilgrimage
In 1718, Barker published her translation of a French Catholic devotional manual, The Christian Pilgrimage, originally written by François Fénelon, the archbishop of Cambrai. Translated as a response to the severe government reprisals on the Catholic community in England in early 1716, this devotional manual reframed a Protestants' understanding of Catholicism in order to discourage any further egregious actions against the Catholic community. Barker's translation of Fénelon's work offered a take on Catholicism that used the vocabulary of the Church of England; she removed extraneous Catholic representation from the original so as not to dissuade Protestant readership.
A Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies or, Love and Virtue and The Lining of the Patch Work Screen
Published in 1723, A Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies is based loosely on the Lettres Portugaises, published in 1669. The Lining of the Patch-Work Screen was written in 1726. Often recognized to be a blending of genre conventions including romance, bourgeois fiction, poems, hymns, odes, recipes, philosophical reflections, among others, the two works create a hybrid genre. Barker uses the metaphor of the patch-work screen to raise questions about politics, sexual politics, economics, and finance in her society. In A Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies, Barker includes autobiographical information and also includes revised poems from Poetical Recreations including "Anatomy," the poem which indicates Barker's proficiency in medicine.
Gender issues
Capitalizing on the education she received from her brother, Barker established herself as an author within mostly male coteries during the second half of the seventeenth century. Barker worked to alleviate the stigma of spinsterhood and make it an acceptable alternative to marriage. A celibate woman, Barker belonged to the tradition of female martial valor and enjoyed her freedom from men in her own personal life. There is evidence that Barker used Katherine Philips' Orinda as a model for her own speaker, Fidelia, without including homosexual undertones that are present within Katherine Philips' writings. Barker established herself as a published female author whose print works were primarily for a female audience. Her dedications, "to the ladies," also suggest that she was writing for an elite female readership, although this dedication may have been included by Edmund Curll for marketing purposes.
Legacy
Jane Barker was the first woman to firmly position herself as an author working with both manuscript and print media. Choosing to publish in both spheres gave both a mainstream readership as well as the more intimate coteries access to her work. Because of her interest in manuscript and print, Barker has one foot in the old world methods of circulating works and one in the modern market-place. Relying upon income from her later publications for money, Barker had more freedom and independence than other female authors of the early modern period. Depicted as an autobiographical author by Kathryn R. King, Jane Barker's works display a strong feminist bent, offering her readership information regarding single womanhood, female education and politics.
Notes
References list
King, Kathryn and Jeslyn Medoff. "Jane Barker and Her Life (1652–1732): The Documentary Record." Eighteenth Century Life. 21.3 (1997): 16–38.
King, Kathryn R. "Barker, Jane (bap. 1652, d.1732)." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford UP, 2004.
King, Kathryn R. Jane Barker, Exile. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2000. Print
Mello, Patrick. "Barker, Jane." The Encyclopedia of British Literature 1660–1789. Wiley-Blackwell, 2015. Print.
Pickard, Claire. "Jane Barker." Perdita. University of Warwickshire. Web. 25 October 2015.
Wilson, Carol Shiner, ed. The Galesia Trilogy and Selected Manuscript Poems of Jane Barker. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997.
Further reading
King, Kathryn R. "Jane Barker, Poetical Recreations, and the Sociable Text." ELH. 61.3 (1994): 551–570. ((ISSN|0013-8304)) ((OCLC|361323977))
McArthur, Tonya Moutray. "Jane Barker and the Politics of Catholic Celibacy," Studies in English Literature 47.3 (2007): 595–618.
Spencer, Jane. "Creating the Woman Writer: The Autobiographical Works of Jane Barker." Tulsa Studies in Literature. 2.2 (1983): 165–181. Web. 13 October 2015.
Swenson, Rivka. "Representing Modernity in Jane Barker’s Galesia Trilogy: Jacobite Allegory and the Patch-Work Aesthetic," Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture''. (Spring 2005): 55–80.
External links
King, Kathryn. "Jane Barker and Her Life (1652–1732): the documentary record." Eighteenth-Century Life 21.3 (1997): 16–38.
Jane Barker, Exilius (London: Edmund Curll, 1715) – e-text.
Online editions from eBooks @ Adelaide
1652 births
1732 deaths
Converts to Roman Catholicism from Anglicanism
English Catholic poets
English women poets
English women novelists
English Roman Catholics
Roman Catholic writers
People from North Northamptonshire
People from South Kesteven District
17th-century English poets
18th-century English novelists
17th-century English women writers
17th-century English writers
18th-century English women writers
18th-century English writers
18th-century British writers
18th-century pseudonymous writers
Pseudonymous women writers | [
"Jane Barker (1652–1732) was a popular English fiction writer, poet, and a staunch Jacobite.",
"She went into self-imposed exile when James II fled England during the Glorious Revolution in 1688.",
"Her novels, The Amours of Bosvil and Galesia, also published as Love Intrigues (1713), Exilius or The Banish'd Roman (1715), A Patchwork Screen for the Ladies (1723), and The Lining of the Patchwork Screen for the Ladies (1726) were written after she returned to London in 1704.",
"Prior to and during her exile, she wrote a collection of poems justifying the value of feminine education and female single life, \"Poetical Recreations\" (1688), and a group of political poems, \"A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times\" (1701), which conveyed her anxiety about the political future of England.",
"Although not known for her letter writing, four extant letters are located in the British Library and within the Magdalen Manuscript at the Oxford Magdalen library, written between 1670 and 1688.",
"Jane Barker was one of the first female authors to publish writings both in manuscript and print form, allowing modern scholars to study \"the passage of Barker's poetry from coterie circles to larger, more impersonal communities of readers\" Never married, Jane Barker died quietly in 1732.",
"Early life \nJane Barker was born in May 1652, in the village of Blatherwick, Northamptonshire, in England to Thomas Barker and Anne Connock.",
"Anne Connock seems to be descended from an unlanded and Roman Catholic branch of the Connock family, which might explain Jane's Papist affiliation.",
"A member of a royalist family, Jane Barker went into exile with James II once William of Orange entered England, threatening an overthrow of the outwardly Catholic James II.",
"When Jane was 10 years old, Thomas Barker leased a property and manor in Wilsthorpe, Lincolnshire.",
"This property was bequeathed to both Jane Barker and her mother upon her father's death in 1681 and she relocated to the property upon returning from exile in 1704.",
"As a young woman, Jane Barker was taught Latin, anatomy, and herbal medicine by her brother, Edward, who matriculated at St. John's College, Oxford in 1668 and earned his M.A.",
"from Christ Church, Oxford, in 1674–5.",
"Proof of Jane Barker's knowledge of medicine can be seen in the advertisement for Dr. Barker's Famous Gout Plaister, and in her poems about anatomy found in her \"Poetical Recreations\".",
"Indebted to her brother for providing her with the basis of her education, Jane mourned his death in 1675, shortly after he finished his time at Oxford.",
"Political affiliations and exile\nBarker was baptized on 17 May 1652 according to the rites of the Church of England; however, she converted to Catholicism during reign of James II (of England), between 1685 and 1688.",
"After James' defeat by the Prince of Orange (William III) in the Glorious Revolution, London became a dangerous place for Catholics, prompting Barker to follow James II to exile in France.",
"Following an ideology of Jacobitism, and a royalist, Jane Barker was one of the 40,000 people who followed James II in exile to France.",
"She was one of the smaller number of individuals who maintained residence at Saint-Germain-en-Laye in 1689.",
"James II maintained court in Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye, a castle lent to the Stuarts by Louis XIV from 1689 to 1704.",
"Barker's Jacobite involvement is further evidenced in her letter to James Butler, 2nd Duke of Ormonde, who began organizing a Jacobite invasion from France.",
"Dated 19 March 1718, the letter implicitly informed Ormonde that his supporters in England awaited his invasion.",
"However, the letter was intercepted in that same year by the British Secrete Office, the anti-Jacobite intelligence organization.",
"Since Barker's name and handwriting were unknown to the government authorities, it is suspected that she was used as a ghost-writer for the letter—a technique used to protect plotters whose identities and handwriting were already well known by authorities.",
"Major works\nPoetical Recreations (1688)\nA Collection of Poems Referring to the Times (1701)\nLove Intrigues';' or The Amours of Bosvil and Galesia (1713)Exilius; or The Banish'd Roman (1715)The Christian Pilgrimage (1718)A Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies (1723)The Lining of the Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies (1726)\n\n Poetry \n\nPoetical Recreations\n\nOriginally published in 1688, the first part of this two-part compilation comprises Barker's own poems addressed to her friends, and the second part contains poems written by Barker's friends addressed to Barker herself.",
"Described as written by \"several Gentlemen of the Universities, and Others,\" the second part of Poetical Recreations was written by contributors from Cambridge or Oxford University.",
"Originally printed without the author's permission by Benjamin Crayle, the title page of Poetical Recreations boasted that poems within were \"Occasionally written by Mrs. Jane Barker\".",
"Benjamin Crayle also contributed twelve poems in Part Two and expressed his admiration for Barker's literary taste.",
"A note in what is now called the Magdalen Manuscript suggests that the publisher did not have Barker's permission to print the collection: it reads \"now corrected by her own hand.\"",
"The marginalia indicates that the initial collection was not yet meant for public consumption.",
"Scholar Kathryn King finds evidence through marginal notations in the Magdalen Manuscript that Barker's works are autobiographical.",
"A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times\nWritten at the end of her time at Saint-Germaine-en-Laye, A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times is highly political and takes a pro-Stuart position.",
"The speaker in the collection, Fidelia, is considered autobiographical.",
"She is characterized as a Stuart loyalist and Catholic convert, depicting Barker's own political and religious affiliations.",
"Upon returning to England, Jane Barker gifted a copy of her A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times to the son of James II for his birthday.",
"The manuscript holding in the British Library is believed to contain a prototype copy of the collection.",
"Prose\n\nLove Intrigues or The Amours of Bosvil and Galesia\n\nOriginally printed in 1713 and revised and reprinted in 1719, Love Intrigues was the first installment in what came to be known as the Galesia Trilogy.",
"It has been suggested that Bosvil's character was based heavily on a man whom Barker knew well.",
"King suggests that the original edition of the novel in 1713 was not meant for publication because major revisions were made before it was reprinted, with a new title, in 1719.",
"Love Intrigues was the first novel that Barker published, though probably without her permission, with Edmund Curll.",
"Curll published some of her later works.",
"It was suspected that Curll probably added the term \"Amours\" to the title for better commercial appeal.",
"Exilius or The Banish'd Roman\n\nPublished just after the death of Queen Anne in 1714, Exilius can be read as a pro-Stuart response to the succession crisis that followed Anne's death.",
"There is some suggestion that Curll sped up the release of the work so that he could capitalize on the market potential during the political upheaval.",
"This novel is understood to be a projection of Jacobite feeling through themes including romance, love, and heroism.",
"Written primarily for a female audience, the male characters within the fiction are stock representations while female characters are developed virtuously and follow strict moral tenets.",
"Jonathan Grieder states that formally the work is weak, but because it appeals to women during the early eighteenth century it can inform the reader about feminine interests during the time of its publication.",
"The Christian Pilgrimage \nIn 1718, Barker published her translation of a French Catholic devotional manual, The Christian Pilgrimage, originally written by François Fénelon, the archbishop of Cambrai.",
"Translated as a response to the severe government reprisals on the Catholic community in England in early 1716, this devotional manual reframed a Protestants' understanding of Catholicism in order to discourage any further egregious actions against the Catholic community.",
"Barker's translation of Fénelon's work offered a take on Catholicism that used the vocabulary of the Church of England; she removed extraneous Catholic representation from the original so as not to dissuade Protestant readership.",
"A Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies or, Love and Virtue and The Lining of the Patch Work Screen\nPublished in 1723, A Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies is based loosely on the Lettres Portugaises, published in 1669.",
"The Lining of the Patch-Work Screen was written in 1726.",
"Often recognized to be a blending of genre conventions including romance, bourgeois fiction, poems, hymns, odes, recipes, philosophical reflections, among others, the two works create a hybrid genre.",
"Barker uses the metaphor of the patch-work screen to raise questions about politics, sexual politics, economics, and finance in her society.",
"In A Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies, Barker includes autobiographical information and also includes revised poems from Poetical Recreations including \"Anatomy,\" the poem which indicates Barker's proficiency in medicine.",
"Gender issues \n\nCapitalizing on the education she received from her brother, Barker established herself as an author within mostly male coteries during the second half of the seventeenth century.",
"Barker worked to alleviate the stigma of spinsterhood and make it an acceptable alternative to marriage.",
"A celibate woman, Barker belonged to the tradition of female martial valor and enjoyed her freedom from men in her own personal life.",
"There is evidence that Barker used Katherine Philips' Orinda as a model for her own speaker, Fidelia, without including homosexual undertones that are present within Katherine Philips' writings.",
"Barker established herself as a published female author whose print works were primarily for a female audience.",
"Her dedications, \"to the ladies,\" also suggest that she was writing for an elite female readership, although this dedication may have been included by Edmund Curll for marketing purposes.",
"Legacy\nJane Barker was the first woman to firmly position herself as an author working with both manuscript and print media.",
"Choosing to publish in both spheres gave both a mainstream readership as well as the more intimate coteries access to her work.",
"Because of her interest in manuscript and print, Barker has one foot in the old world methods of circulating works and one in the modern market-place.",
"Relying upon income from her later publications for money, Barker had more freedom and independence than other female authors of the early modern period.",
"Depicted as an autobiographical author by Kathryn R. King, Jane Barker's works display a strong feminist bent, offering her readership information regarding single womanhood, female education and politics.",
"Notes\n\nReferences list\nKing, Kathryn and Jeslyn Medoff.",
"\"Jane Barker and Her Life (1652–1732): The Documentary Record.\"",
"Eighteenth Century Life.",
"21.3 (1997): 16–38.",
"King, Kathryn R. \"Barker, Jane (bap.",
"1652, d.1732).\"",
"Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.",
"Oxford UP, 2004.",
"King, Kathryn R. Jane Barker, Exile.",
"Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2000.",
"Print \nMello, Patrick.",
"\"Barker, Jane.\"",
"The Encyclopedia of British Literature 1660–1789.",
"Wiley-Blackwell, 2015.",
"Print.",
"Pickard, Claire.",
"\"Jane Barker.\"",
"Perdita.",
"University of Warwickshire.",
"Web.",
"25 October 2015.",
"Wilson, Carol Shiner, ed.",
"The Galesia Trilogy and Selected Manuscript Poems of Jane Barker.",
"New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997.",
"Further reading\nKing, Kathryn R. \"Jane Barker, Poetical Recreations, and the Sociable Text.\"",
"ELH.",
"61.3 (1994): 551–570.",
"((ISSN|0013-8304)) ((OCLC|361323977))\nMcArthur, Tonya Moutray.",
"\"Jane Barker and the Politics of Catholic Celibacy,\" Studies in English Literature 47.3 (2007): 595–618.",
"Spencer, Jane.",
"\"Creating the Woman Writer: The Autobiographical Works of Jane Barker.\"",
"Tulsa Studies in Literature.",
"2.2 (1983): 165–181.",
"Web.",
"13 October 2015.",
"Swenson, Rivka.",
"\"Representing Modernity in Jane Barker’s Galesia Trilogy: Jacobite Allegory and the Patch-Work Aesthetic,\" Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture''.",
"(Spring 2005): 55–80.",
"External links \n\n King, Kathryn.",
"\"Jane Barker and Her Life (1652–1732): the documentary record.\"",
"Eighteenth-Century Life 21.3 (1997): 16–38.",
"Jane Barker, Exilius (London: Edmund Curll, 1715) – e-text.",
"Online editions from eBooks @ Adelaide\n\n1652 births\n1732 deaths\nConverts to Roman Catholicism from Anglicanism\nEnglish Catholic poets\nEnglish women poets\nEnglish women novelists\nEnglish Roman Catholics\nRoman Catholic writers\nPeople from North Northamptonshire\nPeople from South Kesteven District\n17th-century English poets\n18th-century English novelists\n17th-century English women writers\n17th-century English writers\n18th-century English women writers\n18th-century English writers\n18th-century British writers\n18th-century pseudonymous writers\nPseudonymous women writers"
] | [
"Jane Barker was a popular English fiction writer.",
"She went into exile when James II fled England.",
"Love Intrigues, Exilius or The Banish'd Roman, A Patchwork Screen for the Ladies, and The Lining of the Patchwork Screen for the Ladies are her novels.",
"During her exile, she wrote a collection of poems justifying the value of feminine education and female single life, \"Poetical Recreations\", and a group of political poems, \"A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times\".",
"There are four letters in the British Library that were written between 1670 and 1688.",
"Jane Barker was one of the first female authors to publish writings both in manuscript and print form, allowing modern scholars to study the passage of Barker's poetry from coterie circles to larger, more impersonal communities of readers.",
"In the village of Blatherwick, Northamptonshire, in England, Jane Barker was born in May 1652 to Thomas Barker and Anne Connock.",
"Anne Connock seems to be descended from an unlanded and Roman Catholic branch of the Connock family.",
"A member of a royalist family, Jane Barker went into exile with James II once William of Orange entered England, threatening an overthrow of the Catholic James II.",
"Thomas Barker leased a property to Jane when she was 10 years old.",
"Jane Barker relocated to the property after returning from exile in 1704 after her father's death.",
"Edward graduated from St. John's College, Oxford in 1668 with his M.A., after teaching Jane Barker Latin, anatomy, and herbal medicine as a young woman.",
"In 1674–5, from Christ Church, Oxford.",
"There is proof of Jane Barker's knowledge of medicine in her poems and advertisements.",
"Jane was indebted to her brother for giving her the basis of her education and he died in 1675.",
"Barker converted to Catholicism during the reign of James II of England, despite her political affiliations and exile.",
"Barker followed James II to France after he was defeated by the Prince of Orange in London.",
"One of the 40,000 people who followed James II in exile to France was Jane Barker.",
"She resided at Saint-Germain-en-Laye in 1689.",
"The castle lent to the Stuarts by Louis XIV was maintained by James II.",
"The 2nd Duke of Ormonde, who began organizing a Jacobite invasion from France, received a letter from Barker.",
"Ormonde's supporters in England were informed that his invasion was imminent.",
"The British Secrete Office is an anti-Jacobite intelligence organization.",
"Since Barker's name and handwriting were unknown to the government authorities, it is suspected that she was used as a ghost-writer for the letter, a technique used to protect plotters whose identities and handwriting were already known by authorities.",
"A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times is one of the major works of Poetical Recreations.",
"The second part of Poetical Recreations was written by people from Cambridge or Oxford University.",
"The title page of Poetical Recreations boasted that poems within were written by Mrs. Jane Barker.",
"In Part Two, Benjamin Crayle contributed twelve poems and expressed his admiration for Barker's literary taste.",
"The Magdalen Manuscript states that the publisher did not have Barker's permission to print the collection, and that it is now corrected by her own hand.",
"The initial collection was not meant for public consumption according to the marginalia.",
"The Magdalen Manuscript contains evidence that Barker's works areautobiographical.",
"A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times was written at the end of her time at Saint-Germaine-en-Laye.",
"The speaker in the collection is autobiographical.",
"Barker's own political and religious affiliations are depicted in her description as a Stuart loyalist and Catholic convert.",
"The son of James II received a copy of Jane Barker's A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times for his birthday.",
"A prototype copy of the collection is believed to be contained in a manuscript in the British Library.",
"Love Intrigues was the first part of the Galesia trilogy and was published in 1713.",
"Barker knew a man who was the basis of the character that was based on him.",
"The original edition of the novel was not meant for publication because major revisions were made before it was published, according to King.",
"Love Intrigues was the first novel that Barker published.",
"Curll's later works were published.",
"The term \"Amours\" may have been added to the title for better commercial appeal.",
"After the death of Queen Anne in 1714, Exilius was published as a pro-Stuart response.",
"There is a suggestion that Curll sped up the release of the work so that he could take advantage of the political upheaval.",
"Jacobite feeling is projected through themes of romance, love, and heroism in this novel.",
"The male characters within the fiction are stock representations while the female characters follow strict moral tenets.",
"The work is weak but can inform the reader about feminine interests because it appeals to women during the early 18th century.",
"In 1718, Barker published her translation of a French Catholic devotional manual called The Christian Pilgrimage.",
"The devotional manual was written in 1716 in response to the government reprisals against the Catholic community in England.",
"Barker's translation of Fénelon's work offered a take on Catholicism that used the vocabulary of the Church of England, but she removed extraneous Catholic representation from the original so as not to discourage Protestant readership.",
"A Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies, Love and Virtue and The Lining of the Patch Work Screen were published in 1723 and 1669, respectively.",
"In 1726, the Lining of the Patch-Work Screen was written.",
"A blend of genre conventions including romance, bourgeois fiction, poems, hymns, odes, recipes, philosophical reflections, among others, the two works create a hybrid genre.",
"Barker uses the metaphor of the patch-work screen to raise questions about politics, sexual politics, economics, and finance in her society.",
"Barker's autobiographical information and revised poems from Poetical Recreations are included in A Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies.",
"Barker established herself as an author during the second half of the 17th century because of the education she received from her brother.",
"Spinsterhood was made an acceptable alternative to marriage by Barker.",
"Barker was a celibate woman who enjoyed her freedom from men in her own life.",
"There is evidence that Barker used Orinda as a model for her own speaker, Fidelia, without including homosexual undertones in her writings.",
"Barker was a published female author who wrote for a female audience.",
"Edmund Curll may have included her dedication to the ladies in order to market her work.",
"Jane Barker was the first woman to firmly position herself as an author working with both manuscript and print media.",
"She was able to give both a mainstream readership and more intimate access to her work by publishing in both spheres.",
"Barker has one foot in the old world and one in the modern market-place because of her interest in manuscript and print.",
"Barker had more freedom and independence than other female authors of the early modern period because she relied on income from her later publications for money.",
"Jane Barker's works show a strong feminist bent, offering her readers information regarding single womanhood, female education and politics.",
"The notes list King and Medoff.",
"Jane Barker and Her Life is a documentary record.",
"Life in the 18th century.",
"In 1997: 16–38.",
"\"Barker, Jane\" was written by King.",
"1692, d. 1732).",
"The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.",
"Oxford UP in 2004.",
"King and Jane Barker are related.",
"Clarendon Press was published in 2000.",
"Print Patrick.",
"\"Barker, Jane.\"",
"The Encyclopedia of British Literature was published in 1699.",
"The book \"Blackwell\" was published in 2015.",
"Print.",
"Pickard.",
"\"Jane Barker.\"",
"Perdita.",
"The University of Warwickshire is located in the United Kingdom.",
"There is a website.",
"October 25, 2015.",
"Carol Shiner, ed. was written by Wilson.",
"Jane Barker had a trilogy of poems.",
"Oxford University Press published New York and Oxford in 1997.",
"\"Jane Barker, Poetical Recreations, and the Sociable Text\" was written by King.",
"It's Elh.",
"551–570 is from 61.3 (1994).",
"There is a person named \"Tonya Moutray\" who is also known as the \"ISSN\" or the \"OCLC\" or the \"361323977\".",
"\"Jane Barker and the Politics of Catholic Celibacy\" was published in 2007.",
"Jane, Spencer.",
"\"Creating the Woman Writer: The Autobiographical Works of Jane Barker.\"",
"Literature studies in the state of Oklahoma.",
"2.2 was published in 1983.",
"There is a website.",
"13 October 2015.",
"Rivka Swenson.",
"\"Representing Modernity in Jane Barker's Galesia Trilogy: Jacobite Allegory and the Patch-Work Aesthetic\"",
"55–80 was the spring of 2005.",
"There are external links to King.",
"\"Jane Barker and Her Life\" is a documentary record.",
"The Eighteenth-Century Life 21.3 was published in 1997.",
"The e-text is Jane Barker, Exilius.",
"English Catholic poets, English women poets, English women novelists, English Roman Catholics, and people from South Kesteven District were all converts to Roman Catholicism."
] | <mask> (1652–1732) was a popular English fiction writer, poet, and a staunch Jacobite. She went into self-imposed exile when James II fled England during the Glorious Revolution in 1688. Her novels, The Amours of Bosvil and Galesia, also published as Love Intrigues (1713), Exilius or The Banish'd Roman (1715), A Patchwork Screen for the Ladies (1723), and The Lining of the Patchwork Screen for the Ladies (1726) were written after she returned to London in 1704. Prior to and during her exile, she wrote a collection of poems justifying the value of feminine education and female single life, "Poetical Recreations" (1688), and a group of political poems, "A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times" (1701), which conveyed her anxiety about the political future of England. Although not known for her letter writing, four extant letters are located in the British Library and within the Magdalen Manuscript at the Oxford Magdalen library, written between 1670 and 1688. <mask> was one of the first female authors to publish writings both in manuscript and print form, allowing modern scholars to study "the passage of <mask>'s poetry from coterie circles to larger, more impersonal communities of readers" Never married, <mask> died quietly in 1732. Early life
<mask> was born in May 1652, in the village of Blatherwick, Northamptonshire, in England to <mask> and Anne Connock.Anne Connock seems to be descended from an unlanded and Roman Catholic branch of the Connock family, which might explain <mask>'s Papist affiliation. A member of a royalist family, <mask> went into exile with James II once William of Orange entered England, threatening an overthrow of the outwardly Catholic James II. When <mask> was 10 years old, <mask> leased a property and manor in Wilsthorpe, Lincolnshire. This property was bequeathed to both <mask> and her mother upon her father's death in 1681 and she relocated to the property upon returning from exile in 1704. As a young woman, <mask> was taught Latin, anatomy, and herbal medicine by her brother, Edward, who matriculated at St. John's College, Oxford in 1668 and earned his M.A. from Christ Church, Oxford, in 1674–5. Proof of <mask>'s knowledge of medicine can be seen in the advertisement for Dr. <mask>'s Famous Gout Plaister, and in her poems about anatomy found in her "Poetical Recreations".Indebted to her brother for providing her with the basis of her education, <mask> mourned his death in 1675, shortly after he finished his time at Oxford. Political affiliations and exile
<mask> was baptized on 17 May 1652 according to the rites of the Church of England; however, she converted to Catholicism during reign of James II (of England), between 1685 and 1688. After James' defeat by the Prince of Orange (William III) in the Glorious Revolution, London became a dangerous place for Catholics, prompting <mask> to follow James II to exile in France. Following an ideology of Jacobitism, and a royalist, <mask> was one of the 40,000 people who followed James II in exile to France. She was one of the smaller number of individuals who maintained residence at Saint-Germain-en-Laye in 1689. James II maintained court in Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye, a castle lent to the Stuarts by Louis XIV from 1689 to 1704. <mask>'s Jacobite involvement is further evidenced in her letter to James Butler, 2nd Duke of Ormonde, who began organizing a Jacobite invasion from France.Dated 19 March 1718, the letter implicitly informed Ormonde that his supporters in England awaited his invasion. However, the letter was intercepted in that same year by the British Secrete Office, the anti-Jacobite intelligence organization. Since <mask>'s name and handwriting were unknown to the government authorities, it is suspected that she was used as a ghost-writer for the letter—a technique used to protect plotters whose identities and handwriting were already well known by authorities. Major works
Poetical Recreations (1688)
A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times (1701)
Love Intrigues';' or The Amours of Bosvil and Galesia (1713)Exilius; or The Banish'd Roman (1715)The Christian Pilgrimage (1718)A Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies (1723)The Lining of the Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies (1726)
Poetry
Poetical Recreations
Originally published in 1688, the first part of this two-part compilation comprises <mask>'s own poems addressed to her friends, and the second part contains poems written by <mask>'s friends addressed to <mask> herself. Described as written by "several Gentlemen of the Universities, and Others," the second part of Poetical Recreations was written by contributors from Cambridge or Oxford University. Originally printed without the author's permission by Benjamin Crayle, the title page of Poetical Recreations boasted that poems within were "Occasionally written by Mrs. <mask>". Benjamin Crayle also contributed twelve poems in Part Two and expressed his admiration for <mask>'s literary taste.A note in what is now called the Magdalen Manuscript suggests that the publisher did not have <mask>'s permission to print the collection: it reads "now corrected by her own hand." The marginalia indicates that the initial collection was not yet meant for public consumption. Scholar Kathryn King finds evidence through marginal notations in the Magdalen Manuscript that <mask>'s works are autobiographical. A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times
Written at the end of her time at Saint-Germaine-en-Laye, A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times is highly political and takes a pro-Stuart position. The speaker in the collection, Fidelia, is considered autobiographical. She is characterized as a Stuart loyalist and Catholic convert, depicting <mask>'s own political and religious affiliations. Upon returning to England, <mask> gifted a copy of her A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times to the son of James II for his birthday.The manuscript holding in the British Library is believed to contain a prototype copy of the collection. Prose
Love Intrigues or The Amours of Bosvil and Galesia
Originally printed in 1713 and revised and reprinted in 1719, Love Intrigues was the first installment in what came to be known as the Galesia Trilogy. It has been suggested that Bosvil's character was based heavily on a man whom <mask> knew well. King suggests that the original edition of the novel in 1713 was not meant for publication because major revisions were made before it was reprinted, with a new title, in 1719. Love Intrigues was the first novel that <mask> published, though probably without her permission, with Edmund Curll. Curll published some of her later works. It was suspected that Curll probably added the term "Amours" to the title for better commercial appeal.Exilius or The Banish'd Roman
Published just after the death of Queen Anne in 1714, Exilius can be read as a pro-Stuart response to the succession crisis that followed Anne's death. There is some suggestion that Curll sped up the release of the work so that he could capitalize on the market potential during the political upheaval. This novel is understood to be a projection of Jacobite feeling through themes including romance, love, and heroism. Written primarily for a female audience, the male characters within the fiction are stock representations while female characters are developed virtuously and follow strict moral tenets. Jonathan Grieder states that formally the work is weak, but because it appeals to women during the early eighteenth century it can inform the reader about feminine interests during the time of its publication. The Christian Pilgrimage
In 1718, <mask> published her translation of a French Catholic devotional manual, The Christian Pilgrimage, originally written by François Fénelon, the archbishop of Cambrai. Translated as a response to the severe government reprisals on the Catholic community in England in early 1716, this devotional manual reframed a Protestants' understanding of Catholicism in order to discourage any further egregious actions against the Catholic community.<mask>'s translation of Fénelon's work offered a take on Catholicism that used the vocabulary of the Church of England; she removed extraneous Catholic representation from the original so as not to dissuade Protestant readership. A Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies or, Love and Virtue and The Lining of the Patch Work Screen
Published in 1723, A Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies is based loosely on the Lettres Portugaises, published in 1669. The Lining of the Patch-Work Screen was written in 1726. Often recognized to be a blending of genre conventions including romance, bourgeois fiction, poems, hymns, odes, recipes, philosophical reflections, among others, the two works create a hybrid genre. <mask> uses the metaphor of the patch-work screen to raise questions about politics, sexual politics, economics, and finance in her society. In A Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies, <mask> includes autobiographical information and also includes revised poems from Poetical Recreations including "Anatomy," the poem which indicates <mask>'s proficiency in medicine. Gender issues
Capitalizing on the education she received from her brother, <mask> established herself as an author within mostly male coteries during the second half of the seventeenth century.<mask> worked to alleviate the stigma of spinsterhood and make it an acceptable alternative to marriage. A celibate woman, <mask> belonged to the tradition of female martial valor and enjoyed her freedom from men in her own personal life. There is evidence that <mask> used Katherine Philips' Orinda as a model for her own speaker, Fidelia, without including homosexual undertones that are present within Katherine Philips' writings. <mask> established herself as a published female author whose print works were primarily for a female audience. Her dedications, "to the ladies," also suggest that she was writing for an elite female readership, although this dedication may have been included by Edmund Curll for marketing purposes. Legacy
<mask> was the first woman to firmly position herself as an author working with both manuscript and print media. Choosing to publish in both spheres gave both a mainstream readership as well as the more intimate coteries access to her work.Because of her interest in manuscript and print, <mask> has one foot in the old world methods of circulating works and one in the modern market-place. Relying upon income from her later publications for money, <mask> had more freedom and independence than other female authors of the early modern period. Depicted as an autobiographical author by Kathryn R. King, <mask>'s works display a strong feminist bent, offering her readership information regarding single womanhood, female education and politics. Notes
References list
King, Kathryn and Jeslyn Medoff. "<mask> and Her Life (1652–1732): The Documentary Record." Eighteenth Century Life. 21.3 (1997): 16–38.King, Kathryn R. "<mask>, <mask> (bap. 1652, d.1732)." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford UP, 2004. King, Kathryn R. <mask>, Exile. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2000. Print
Mello, Patrick."<mask>, <mask>." The Encyclopedia of British Literature 1660–1789. Wiley-Blackwell, 2015. Print. Pickard, Claire. "<mask>." Perdita.University of Warwickshire. Web. 25 October 2015. Wilson, Carol Shiner, ed. The Galesia Trilogy and Selected Manuscript Poems of <mask>. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997. Further reading
King, Kathryn R. "<mask>, Poetical Recreations, and the Sociable Text."ELH. 61.3 (1994): 551–570. ((ISSN|0013-8304)) ((OCLC|361323977))
McArthur, Tonya Moutray. "<mask> and the Politics of Catholic Celibacy," Studies in English Literature 47.3 (2007): 595–618. Spencer, <mask>. "Creating the Woman Writer: The Autobiographical Works of <mask>." Tulsa Studies in Literature.2.2 (1983): 165–181. Web. 13 October 2015. Swenson, Rivka. "Representing Modernity in <mask>’s Galesia Trilogy: Jacobite Allegory and the Patch-Work Aesthetic," Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture''. (Spring 2005): 55–80. External links
King, Kathryn."<mask> and Her Life (1652–1732): the documentary record." Eighteenth-Century Life 21.3 (1997): 16–38. <mask>, Exilius (London: Edmund Curll, 1715) – e-text. Online editions from eBooks @ Adelaide
1652 births
1732 deaths
Converts to Roman Catholicism from Anglicanism
English Catholic poets
English women poets
English women novelists
English Roman Catholics
Roman Catholic writers
People from North Northamptonshire
People from South Kesteven District
17th-century English poets
18th-century English novelists
17th-century English women writers
17th-century English writers
18th-century English women writers
18th-century English writers
18th-century British writers
18th-century pseudonymous writers
Pseudonymous women writers | [
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] | <mask> was a popular English fiction writer. She went into exile when James II fled England. Love Intrigues, Exilius or The Banish'd Roman, A Patchwork Screen for the Ladies, and The Lining of the Patchwork Screen for the Ladies are her novels. During her exile, she wrote a collection of poems justifying the value of feminine education and female single life, "Poetical Recreations", and a group of political poems, "A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times". There are four letters in the British Library that were written between 1670 and 1688. <mask> was one of the first female authors to publish writings both in manuscript and print form, allowing modern scholars to study the passage of <mask>'s poetry from coterie circles to larger, more impersonal communities of readers. In the village of Blatherwick, Northamptonshire, in England, <mask> was born in May 1652 to <mask> and Anne Connock.Anne Connock seems to be descended from an unlanded and Roman Catholic branch of the Connock family. A member of a royalist family, <mask> went into exile with James II once William of Orange entered England, threatening an overthrow of the Catholic James II. <mask> leased a property to <mask> when she was 10 years old. <mask> relocated to the property after returning from exile in 1704 after her father's death. Edward graduated from St. John's College, Oxford in 1668 with his M.A., after teaching <mask> Latin, anatomy, and herbal medicine as a young woman. In 1674–5, from Christ Church, Oxford. There is proof of <mask>'s knowledge of medicine in her poems and advertisements.<mask> was indebted to her brother for giving her the basis of her education and he died in 1675. <mask> converted to Catholicism during the reign of James II of England, despite her political affiliations and exile. <mask> followed James II to France after he was defeated by the Prince of Orange in London. One of the 40,000 people who followed James II in exile to France was <mask>. She resided at Saint-Germain-en-Laye in 1689. The castle lent to the Stuarts by Louis XIV was maintained by James II. The 2nd Duke of Ormonde, who began organizing a Jacobite invasion from France, received a letter from <mask>.Ormonde's supporters in England were informed that his invasion was imminent. The British Secrete Office is an anti-Jacobite intelligence organization. Since <mask>'s name and handwriting were unknown to the government authorities, it is suspected that she was used as a ghost-writer for the letter, a technique used to protect plotters whose identities and handwriting were already known by authorities. A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times is one of the major works of Poetical Recreations. The second part of Poetical Recreations was written by people from Cambridge or Oxford University. The title page of Poetical Recreations boasted that poems within were written by Mrs. <mask>. In Part Two, Benjamin Crayle contributed twelve poems and expressed his admiration for <mask>'s literary taste.The Magdalen Manuscript states that the publisher did not have <mask>'s permission to print the collection, and that it is now corrected by her own hand. The initial collection was not meant for public consumption according to the marginalia. The Magdalen Manuscript contains evidence that <mask>'s works areautobiographical. A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times was written at the end of her time at Saint-Germaine-en-Laye. The speaker in the collection is autobiographical. <mask>'s own political and religious affiliations are depicted in her description as a Stuart loyalist and Catholic convert. The son of James II received a copy of <mask>'s A Collection of Poems Referring to the Times for his birthday.A prototype copy of the collection is believed to be contained in a manuscript in the British Library. Love Intrigues was the first part of the Galesia trilogy and was published in 1713. <mask> knew a man who was the basis of the character that was based on him. The original edition of the novel was not meant for publication because major revisions were made before it was published, according to King. Love Intrigues was the first novel that <mask> published. Curll's later works were published. The term "Amours" may have been added to the title for better commercial appeal.After the death of Queen Anne in 1714, Exilius was published as a pro-Stuart response. There is a suggestion that Curll sped up the release of the work so that he could take advantage of the political upheaval. Jacobite feeling is projected through themes of romance, love, and heroism in this novel. The male characters within the fiction are stock representations while the female characters follow strict moral tenets. The work is weak but can inform the reader about feminine interests because it appeals to women during the early 18th century. In 1718, <mask> published her translation of a French Catholic devotional manual called The Christian Pilgrimage. The devotional manual was written in 1716 in response to the government reprisals against the Catholic community in England.<mask>'s translation of Fénelon's work offered a take on Catholicism that used the vocabulary of the Church of England, but she removed extraneous Catholic representation from the original so as not to discourage Protestant readership. A Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies, Love and Virtue and The Lining of the Patch Work Screen were published in 1723 and 1669, respectively. In 1726, the Lining of the Patch-Work Screen was written. A blend of genre conventions including romance, bourgeois fiction, poems, hymns, odes, recipes, philosophical reflections, among others, the two works create a hybrid genre. <mask> uses the metaphor of the patch-work screen to raise questions about politics, sexual politics, economics, and finance in her society. <mask>'s autobiographical information and revised poems from Poetical Recreations are included in A Patch-Work Screen for the Ladies. <mask> established herself as an author during the second half of the 17th century because of the education she received from her brother.Spinsterhood was made an acceptable alternative to marriage by <mask>. <mask> was a celibate woman who enjoyed her freedom from men in her own life. There is evidence that <mask> used Orinda as a model for her own speaker, Fidelia, without including homosexual undertones in her writings. <mask> was a published female author who wrote for a female audience. Edmund Curll may have included her dedication to the ladies in order to market her work. <mask> was the first woman to firmly position herself as an author working with both manuscript and print media. She was able to give both a mainstream readership and more intimate access to her work by publishing in both spheres.<mask> has one foot in the old world and one in the modern market-place because of her interest in manuscript and print. <mask> had more freedom and independence than other female authors of the early modern period because she relied on income from her later publications for money. <mask>'s works show a strong feminist bent, offering her readers information regarding single womanhood, female education and politics. The notes list King and Medoff. <mask> and Her Life is a documentary record. Life in the 18th century. In 1997: 16–38."<mask>, <mask>" was written by King. 1692, d. 1732). The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford UP in 2004. King and <mask> are related. Clarendon Press was published in 2000. Print Patrick."<mask>, <mask>." The Encyclopedia of British Literature was published in 1699. The book "Blackwell" was published in 2015. Print. Pickard. "<mask>." Perdita.The University of Warwickshire is located in the United Kingdom. There is a website. October 25, 2015. Carol Shiner, ed. was written by Wilson. <mask> had a trilogy of poems. Oxford University Press published New York and Oxford in 1997. "<mask>, Poetical Recreations, and the Sociable Text" was written by King.It's Elh. 551–570 is from 61.3 (1994). There is a person named "Tonya Moutray" who is also known as the "ISSN" or the "OCLC" or the "361323977". "<mask> and the Politics of Catholic Celibacy" was published in 2007. <mask>, Spencer. "Creating the Woman Writer: The Autobiographical Works of <mask>." Literature studies in the state of Oklahoma.2.2 was published in 1983. There is a website. 13 October 2015. Rivka Swenson. "Representing Modernity in <mask>'s Galesia Trilogy: Jacobite Allegory and the Patch-Work Aesthetic" 55–80 was the spring of 2005. There are external links to King."<mask> and Her Life" is a documentary record. The Eighteenth-Century Life 21.3 was published in 1997. The e-text is <mask>, Exilius. English Catholic poets, English women poets, English women novelists, English Roman Catholics, and people from South Kesteven District were all converts to Roman Catholicism. | [
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42596721 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Li%20Jianxun | Li Jianxun | Li Jianxun (; died 952), courtesy name Zhiyao (), known late in life as the Duke of Zhongshan (), was an official of the Chinese Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period states Wu and Wu's successor state Southern Tang, serving as a chancellor during Southern Tang and possibly during Wu.
Background
It is not known what year Li Jianxun was born — although subsequent events of his life would tend to place a framework on the possible time of his birth. He was the fourth son of Li Decheng, who served as a general under the major late-Tang warlord Yang Xingmi the military governor of Huainan Circuit (, headquartered in modern Yangzhou, Jiangsu). He was studious in his youth and capable in writing, particularly in poetry.
During Hongnong/Wu
After Tang fell in 907, Yang Xingmi's domain, then ruled by his son and successor Yang Wo, became the state of Hongnong (later known as Wu). In 908, his officers Zhang Hao and Xu Wen assassinated him, and shortly after, Xu killed Zhang and supported Yang Wo's younger brother Yang Longyan to succeed Yang Wo as the Prince of Hongnong. Xu thereafter took effective reins of the state as its regent. At this time, Li Jianxun's father Li Decheng was serving as the prefect of Run Prefecture (潤州, in modern Zhenjiang, Jiangsu), and had a habit of going out of the city at night. This drew Xu's suspicion, concerned that Li Decheng might be planning to act against him, so he transferred Li Decheng to Jiang Prefecture (江州, in modern Jiujiang, Jiangxi), farther from the Hongnong capital Guangling. Realizing that Xu suspected him, Li Decheng tried to alleviate Xu's concerns by sending Li Jianxun to pay homage to Xu. When Xu met Li Jianxun, he was impressed and stated, "If he had a son like this, he cannot be an evil man." He then gave a daughter to Li Jianxun in marriage. Despite Li Jianxun's being honored based on his father's and his father-in-law's statuses, he himself was said to be careful and (at that time) not involved in politics, although he often met with the poorer members of the intelligentsia.
Li Jianxun later became a surveyor at Sheng Prefecture (昇州, in modern Nanjing, Jiangsu), where his father-in-law Xu Wen had his headquarters. After Xu's death in 927, he continued to serve under Xu's biological son Xu Zhixun, who took over the Jinling (i.e., Sheng) headquarters as well as the army stationed there, as Xu Zhixun succeeded to Xu Wen's titles of military governor (Jiedushi) of Zhenhai (鎮海, headquartered at Run Prefecture) and Ningguo (寧國, headquartered in modern Xuancheng, Anhui) Circuits. A struggle for the control of the state (known as Wu by that point and whose emperor was Yang Longyan's brother and successor Yang Pu) thereafter developed between Xu Wen's adoptive, but older, son Xu Zhigao, whom Xu Wen had assigned as junior regent at Guangling and controlled the Wu imperial government, and Xu Zhixun, who controlled the largest army in the Wu realm. In 929, Xu Zhigao tricked Xu Zhixun into coming to Guangling, and then forced him to remain at Guangling, sending other generals to take over the army and bringing it back to Guangling. Most of Xu Zhixun's staff members were demoted, but Li escaped this fate (perhaps because, as the later statement by Li's wife suggested, he was in communications with Xu Zhigao).
In 931, Xu Zhigao himself, following Xu Wen's precedent, went to Jinling to take up position there as the military governor of Zhenhai and Ningguo, leaving his son Xu Jingtong in control of the Wu government at Guangling as junior regent. Li served as Xu's deputy military governor. By 934, when Xu Zhigao was beginning to consider taking over the throne, Li and Xu Jie were in favor, and participated in the planning. By late 936, when the plans for such a transition were deep in motion, Xu Zhigao had Li Jianxun's father Li Decheng and Zhou Ben, the two most senior generals of the realm, go to Guangling to petition Yang Pu to pass the throne to Xu Zhigao, and then come to Jinling to petition him to accept. This led Xu's advisor Song Qiqiu, who opposed the transition, to state to Li Jianxun, "Your honored father was a great contributor to Emperor Taizu [(i.e., Yang Xingmi)], but now his accomplishments are destroyed." (By this time, Li Jianxun carried the title of Zhongshu Shilang (中書侍郎, deputy head of the legislative bureau of government (中書省, Zhongshu Sheng)), which was a post generally designated for a chancellor, although it is not completely clear whether he was in fact a chancellor, as the traditional accounts did not indicate whether he also carried the title of Tong Zhongshu Menxia Pingzhangshi (), usually a prerequisite title for a chancellor.) Xu thereafter accepted the throne, ending Wu and starting Southern Tang.
During Southern Tang
During Li Bian's reign
After the establishment of the Southern Tang state, Li Jianxun continued to serve as Zhongshu Shilang, and by this point was clearly a chancellor, as he was given the title of Tong Zhongshu Menxia Pingzhangshi, along with Zhang Yanhan and Zhang Juyong. He was also given the title of Zuo Pushe (左僕射, one of the heads of the executive bureau (尚書省, Shangshu Sheng)), put in charge of editing the imperial history, and given the military governorship of Yicheng Circuit (義成, headquartered in modern Anyang, Henan, a completely honorary title as Yicheng was then the territory of Southern Tang's northern neighbor Later Jin). In 938, Xu Zhigao sent him to escort Yang Pu and Yang Pu's family from the palace at Guangling to Run Prefecture, whose inner city was converted into Danyang Palace, to house the Yang family. In 939, Xu Zhigao changed his family name back to his birth name of Li, and took on a personal name of Bian, and declared a mourning period for his birth parents. Even though she was Xu Wen's biological daughter, Li Jianxun's wife, who by this point was carrying the title of Grand Princess Guangde, joined in the mourning.
As Li Bian took the throne based on his service as a Wu official, he was apprehensive of giving his own officials too much power. Chancellors thus did not remain in their positions for long, but Li Jianxun was an exception. Still, by 941, Li Bian was apprehensive of having Li Jianxun remaining as chancellor, but Li Jianxun was showing no signs that he would ask to leave the position. According to the Spring and Autumn Annals of the Ten Kingdoms, at that time, there happened to be another official who made a proposal in governance, and, in the proposal, stated, "This is such an important matter that you should not let one of your subjects issue the order. You should issue the order yourself." While Li Bian had agreed to this proposal, he had not yet actually acted on it. Li Jianxun, however, knowing that Li Bian had agreed, ordered one of the designated imperial edict drafters to begin drafting the edict. The imperial attendant Chang Mengxi () thereafter submitted an accusation against Li Jianxun for wrongly drafting an edict. As Li Bian was looking for an excuse to relieve Li Jianxun from his chancellorship, he did so. However, the Grand Princess Guangde went to see Li Bian, and, in a pointed tone, stated, "When my father was ill, you, older brother, also often requested to see his instructions to Master Li [(i.e., Li Jianxun)]. Now why do you turn against him?" Li Bian responded, "This is a matter of the state. Master Li and I are flesh and blood, and I have no suspicions of him." Li Bian summoned Li Jianxun and comforted him, and soon returned him to chancellorship. (However, the Zizhi Tongjian gave a different version of the events, stating that what happened was that it was Li Jianxun who made the proposal, and was expecting that Li Bian would examine the proposal for some time before ruling on it. However, Li Bian went ahead and approved the proposal and prepared to promulgate it. Li Jianxun, realizing that there were aspects of the proposal that would be viewed as benefitting himself and therefore he would be viewed in a negative light, modified the proposal without resubmitting it to the emperor, and therefore was removed.)
Late in his reign, Li Bian often took medication made by the alchemist Shi Shouchong (), which he believed to be able to enhance health, but which in actuality changed his disposition such that he became harsher and less patient. At one point, he gave some of the medication to Li Jianxun as a gift. Li Jianxun later stated to him, "I, your subject, took it for several days, and I felt overactive and having hot flashes. How could it be that it could be taken more than that?" Li Bian responded, "I have been taking it for a long time," and did not heed Li Jianxun's warnings. The medication ended up damaging Li Bian's health and, in 943, he died, and was succeeded by Xu Jingtong, whose name had been changed to Li Jing.
During Li Jing's reign
After Li Jing took the throne, others asked Li Jianxun of his impression of the new emperor. Li Jianxun commented, "The Master is kind and tolerant, and in that aspect is superior to the Deceased Emperor [(i.e., Li Bian)]. However, his habits are unset, and the people close to him are not righteous men. I fear that he cannot protect the foundation the Deceased Emperor left him." Li Jing honored Li Jianxun as greatly as he did Song Qiqiu, and often referred to him as just "the Historian" rather than by name, to show respect.
In 943, Li Jianxun was sent out of the capital Jinling to serve as military governor of Zhaowu Circuit (, headquartered in modern Fuzhou, Jiangxi). When Southern Tang captured Jian Prefecture (, in modern Nanping, Fujian), the capital of its southeastern neighbor Min and thus ending Min, in 945, Li Jianxun, distressed at the poor discipline that the Southern Tang army displayed at Jian, including capturing the people of Jian to serve as servants, asked that the imperial government use its own stores of gold and silk to ransom the captured people of Jian to set them free, and Li Jing agreed. In 946, Li Jing recalled him to the imperial government to serve as You Pushe and Menxia Shilang (, deputy head of the examination bureau (), as well as chancellor, along with Feng Yanji. It was said that this time around as chancellor, Li Jianxun, while experienced in administrative matters, was indecisive, allowing Feng, who was considered wicked, to make most of the decisions.
At a subsequent point (before 951), Li Jianxun built a lodge at Mount Zhong, and requested retirement there. Li Jing granted him leave to retire with the honorary title of Situ (), and gave him the title of Duke of Zhongshan — although it is unclear whether this was just an appellation or an actual creation of a noble title. His wife, the Grand Princess, also took to referring herself as "the Old Woman of Zhongshan." Someone questioned him as to why he was retiring even though he was not yet old, asking him whether he was trying to follow the example of "the Lord of Jiuhua" (i.e., Song Qiqiu, referring to an infamous incident in 943, when Song, in a fit of anger, offered to retire to Jiuhua, believing that Li Jing would keep him at the imperial government, but Li Jing did not do so, although Song would in fact later return to the imperial government). Li Jianxun laughed and responded, "I had, throughout my life, laughed at Lord Song for returning to duty so easily, so why should I not follow him in retiring? I know that I will not have a long life, and so I want a few years of peace."
In 951, while in retirement, Li Jianxun attended a celebration where the imperial officials congratulated Li Jing on Southern Tang's recent conquest of its southwestern neighbor Chu. Most of the officials were in a festive mood, but Li Jianxun believed that this was the start of a disaster. (Indeed, the next year, 952, an uprising by former Chu officers, led by Liu Yan, expelled the Southern Tang forces from the former Chu territory, leaving Southern Tang with no gain.)
Li Jianxun died in 952 and was given posthumous honors. It was said that later, after Southern Tang was destroyed, the tombs of the prominent officials were largely all robbed for treasure. However, no one at that time knew where Li Jianxun's tomb was, and so it escaped such a fate. It was said that Song, proud of his abilities, rarely praised colleagues, but he praised Li for Li's ability to speak well.
Notes and references
Spring and Autumn Annals of the Ten Kingdoms, vol. 21.
Zizhi Tongjian, vols. 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 285, 290.
9th-century births
952 deaths
Yang Wu people born during Tang
Yang Wu poets
Yang Wu chancellors
Southern Tang poets
Southern Tang historians
Southern Tang chancellors
Southern Tang jiedushi of Yicheng Circuit
Southern Tang jiedushi of Zhaowu Circuit
People from East China
10th-century Chinese poets
10th-century Chinese historians | [
"Li Jianxun (; died 952), courtesy name Zhiyao (), known late in life as the Duke of Zhongshan (), was an official of the Chinese Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period states Wu and Wu's successor state Southern Tang, serving as a chancellor during Southern Tang and possibly during Wu.",
"Background \nIt is not known what year Li Jianxun was born — although subsequent events of his life would tend to place a framework on the possible time of his birth.",
"He was the fourth son of Li Decheng, who served as a general under the major late-Tang warlord Yang Xingmi the military governor of Huainan Circuit (, headquartered in modern Yangzhou, Jiangsu).",
"He was studious in his youth and capable in writing, particularly in poetry.",
"During Hongnong/Wu \nAfter Tang fell in 907, Yang Xingmi's domain, then ruled by his son and successor Yang Wo, became the state of Hongnong (later known as Wu).",
"In 908, his officers Zhang Hao and Xu Wen assassinated him, and shortly after, Xu killed Zhang and supported Yang Wo's younger brother Yang Longyan to succeed Yang Wo as the Prince of Hongnong.",
"Xu thereafter took effective reins of the state as its regent.",
"At this time, Li Jianxun's father Li Decheng was serving as the prefect of Run Prefecture (潤州, in modern Zhenjiang, Jiangsu), and had a habit of going out of the city at night.",
"This drew Xu's suspicion, concerned that Li Decheng might be planning to act against him, so he transferred Li Decheng to Jiang Prefecture (江州, in modern Jiujiang, Jiangxi), farther from the Hongnong capital Guangling.",
"Realizing that Xu suspected him, Li Decheng tried to alleviate Xu's concerns by sending Li Jianxun to pay homage to Xu.",
"When Xu met Li Jianxun, he was impressed and stated, \"If he had a son like this, he cannot be an evil man.\"",
"He then gave a daughter to Li Jianxun in marriage.",
"Despite Li Jianxun's being honored based on his father's and his father-in-law's statuses, he himself was said to be careful and (at that time) not involved in politics, although he often met with the poorer members of the intelligentsia.",
"Li Jianxun later became a surveyor at Sheng Prefecture (昇州, in modern Nanjing, Jiangsu), where his father-in-law Xu Wen had his headquarters.",
"After Xu's death in 927, he continued to serve under Xu's biological son Xu Zhixun, who took over the Jinling (i.e., Sheng) headquarters as well as the army stationed there, as Xu Zhixun succeeded to Xu Wen's titles of military governor (Jiedushi) of Zhenhai (鎮海, headquartered at Run Prefecture) and Ningguo (寧國, headquartered in modern Xuancheng, Anhui) Circuits.",
"A struggle for the control of the state (known as Wu by that point and whose emperor was Yang Longyan's brother and successor Yang Pu) thereafter developed between Xu Wen's adoptive, but older, son Xu Zhigao, whom Xu Wen had assigned as junior regent at Guangling and controlled the Wu imperial government, and Xu Zhixun, who controlled the largest army in the Wu realm.",
"In 929, Xu Zhigao tricked Xu Zhixun into coming to Guangling, and then forced him to remain at Guangling, sending other generals to take over the army and bringing it back to Guangling.",
"Most of Xu Zhixun's staff members were demoted, but Li escaped this fate (perhaps because, as the later statement by Li's wife suggested, he was in communications with Xu Zhigao).",
"In 931, Xu Zhigao himself, following Xu Wen's precedent, went to Jinling to take up position there as the military governor of Zhenhai and Ningguo, leaving his son Xu Jingtong in control of the Wu government at Guangling as junior regent.",
"Li served as Xu's deputy military governor.",
"By 934, when Xu Zhigao was beginning to consider taking over the throne, Li and Xu Jie were in favor, and participated in the planning.",
"By late 936, when the plans for such a transition were deep in motion, Xu Zhigao had Li Jianxun's father Li Decheng and Zhou Ben, the two most senior generals of the realm, go to Guangling to petition Yang Pu to pass the throne to Xu Zhigao, and then come to Jinling to petition him to accept.",
"This led Xu's advisor Song Qiqiu, who opposed the transition, to state to Li Jianxun, \"Your honored father was a great contributor to Emperor Taizu [(i.e., Yang Xingmi)], but now his accomplishments are destroyed.\"",
"(By this time, Li Jianxun carried the title of Zhongshu Shilang (中書侍郎, deputy head of the legislative bureau of government (中書省, Zhongshu Sheng)), which was a post generally designated for a chancellor, although it is not completely clear whether he was in fact a chancellor, as the traditional accounts did not indicate whether he also carried the title of Tong Zhongshu Menxia Pingzhangshi (), usually a prerequisite title for a chancellor.)",
"Xu thereafter accepted the throne, ending Wu and starting Southern Tang.",
"During Southern Tang\n\nDuring Li Bian's reign \nAfter the establishment of the Southern Tang state, Li Jianxun continued to serve as Zhongshu Shilang, and by this point was clearly a chancellor, as he was given the title of Tong Zhongshu Menxia Pingzhangshi, along with Zhang Yanhan and Zhang Juyong.",
"He was also given the title of Zuo Pushe (左僕射, one of the heads of the executive bureau (尚書省, Shangshu Sheng)), put in charge of editing the imperial history, and given the military governorship of Yicheng Circuit (義成, headquartered in modern Anyang, Henan, a completely honorary title as Yicheng was then the territory of Southern Tang's northern neighbor Later Jin).",
"In 938, Xu Zhigao sent him to escort Yang Pu and Yang Pu's family from the palace at Guangling to Run Prefecture, whose inner city was converted into Danyang Palace, to house the Yang family.",
"In 939, Xu Zhigao changed his family name back to his birth name of Li, and took on a personal name of Bian, and declared a mourning period for his birth parents.",
"Even though she was Xu Wen's biological daughter, Li Jianxun's wife, who by this point was carrying the title of Grand Princess Guangde, joined in the mourning.",
"As Li Bian took the throne based on his service as a Wu official, he was apprehensive of giving his own officials too much power.",
"Chancellors thus did not remain in their positions for long, but Li Jianxun was an exception.",
"Still, by 941, Li Bian was apprehensive of having Li Jianxun remaining as chancellor, but Li Jianxun was showing no signs that he would ask to leave the position.",
"According to the Spring and Autumn Annals of the Ten Kingdoms, at that time, there happened to be another official who made a proposal in governance, and, in the proposal, stated, \"This is such an important matter that you should not let one of your subjects issue the order.",
"You should issue the order yourself.\"",
"While Li Bian had agreed to this proposal, he had not yet actually acted on it.",
"Li Jianxun, however, knowing that Li Bian had agreed, ordered one of the designated imperial edict drafters to begin drafting the edict.",
"The imperial attendant Chang Mengxi () thereafter submitted an accusation against Li Jianxun for wrongly drafting an edict.",
"As Li Bian was looking for an excuse to relieve Li Jianxun from his chancellorship, he did so.",
"However, the Grand Princess Guangde went to see Li Bian, and, in a pointed tone, stated, \"When my father was ill, you, older brother, also often requested to see his instructions to Master Li [(i.e., Li Jianxun)].",
"Now why do you turn against him?\"",
"Li Bian responded, \"This is a matter of the state.",
"Master Li and I are flesh and blood, and I have no suspicions of him.\"",
"Li Bian summoned Li Jianxun and comforted him, and soon returned him to chancellorship.",
"(However, the Zizhi Tongjian gave a different version of the events, stating that what happened was that it was Li Jianxun who made the proposal, and was expecting that Li Bian would examine the proposal for some time before ruling on it.",
"However, Li Bian went ahead and approved the proposal and prepared to promulgate it.",
"Li Jianxun, realizing that there were aspects of the proposal that would be viewed as benefitting himself and therefore he would be viewed in a negative light, modified the proposal without resubmitting it to the emperor, and therefore was removed.)",
"Late in his reign, Li Bian often took medication made by the alchemist Shi Shouchong (), which he believed to be able to enhance health, but which in actuality changed his disposition such that he became harsher and less patient.",
"At one point, he gave some of the medication to Li Jianxun as a gift.",
"Li Jianxun later stated to him, \"I, your subject, took it for several days, and I felt overactive and having hot flashes.",
"How could it be that it could be taken more than that?\"",
"Li Bian responded, \"I have been taking it for a long time,\" and did not heed Li Jianxun's warnings.",
"The medication ended up damaging Li Bian's health and, in 943, he died, and was succeeded by Xu Jingtong, whose name had been changed to Li Jing.",
"During Li Jing's reign \nAfter Li Jing took the throne, others asked Li Jianxun of his impression of the new emperor.",
"Li Jianxun commented, \"The Master is kind and tolerant, and in that aspect is superior to the Deceased Emperor [(i.e., Li Bian)].",
"However, his habits are unset, and the people close to him are not righteous men.",
"I fear that he cannot protect the foundation the Deceased Emperor left him.\"",
"Li Jing honored Li Jianxun as greatly as he did Song Qiqiu, and often referred to him as just \"the Historian\" rather than by name, to show respect.",
"In 943, Li Jianxun was sent out of the capital Jinling to serve as military governor of Zhaowu Circuit (, headquartered in modern Fuzhou, Jiangxi).",
"When Southern Tang captured Jian Prefecture (, in modern Nanping, Fujian), the capital of its southeastern neighbor Min and thus ending Min, in 945, Li Jianxun, distressed at the poor discipline that the Southern Tang army displayed at Jian, including capturing the people of Jian to serve as servants, asked that the imperial government use its own stores of gold and silk to ransom the captured people of Jian to set them free, and Li Jing agreed.",
"In 946, Li Jing recalled him to the imperial government to serve as You Pushe and Menxia Shilang (, deputy head of the examination bureau (), as well as chancellor, along with Feng Yanji.",
"It was said that this time around as chancellor, Li Jianxun, while experienced in administrative matters, was indecisive, allowing Feng, who was considered wicked, to make most of the decisions.",
"At a subsequent point (before 951), Li Jianxun built a lodge at Mount Zhong, and requested retirement there.",
"Li Jing granted him leave to retire with the honorary title of Situ (), and gave him the title of Duke of Zhongshan — although it is unclear whether this was just an appellation or an actual creation of a noble title.",
"His wife, the Grand Princess, also took to referring herself as \"the Old Woman of Zhongshan.\"",
"Someone questioned him as to why he was retiring even though he was not yet old, asking him whether he was trying to follow the example of \"the Lord of Jiuhua\" (i.e., Song Qiqiu, referring to an infamous incident in 943, when Song, in a fit of anger, offered to retire to Jiuhua, believing that Li Jing would keep him at the imperial government, but Li Jing did not do so, although Song would in fact later return to the imperial government).",
"Li Jianxun laughed and responded, \"I had, throughout my life, laughed at Lord Song for returning to duty so easily, so why should I not follow him in retiring?",
"I know that I will not have a long life, and so I want a few years of peace.\"",
"In 951, while in retirement, Li Jianxun attended a celebration where the imperial officials congratulated Li Jing on Southern Tang's recent conquest of its southwestern neighbor Chu.",
"Most of the officials were in a festive mood, but Li Jianxun believed that this was the start of a disaster.",
"(Indeed, the next year, 952, an uprising by former Chu officers, led by Liu Yan, expelled the Southern Tang forces from the former Chu territory, leaving Southern Tang with no gain.)",
"Li Jianxun died in 952 and was given posthumous honors.",
"It was said that later, after Southern Tang was destroyed, the tombs of the prominent officials were largely all robbed for treasure.",
"However, no one at that time knew where Li Jianxun's tomb was, and so it escaped such a fate.",
"It was said that Song, proud of his abilities, rarely praised colleagues, but he praised Li for Li's ability to speak well.",
"Notes and references \n\n Spring and Autumn Annals of the Ten Kingdoms, vol.",
"21.",
"Zizhi Tongjian, vols.",
"279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 285, 290.",
"9th-century births\n952 deaths\nYang Wu people born during Tang\nYang Wu poets\nYang Wu chancellors\nSouthern Tang poets\nSouthern Tang historians\nSouthern Tang chancellors\nSouthern Tang jiedushi of Yicheng Circuit\nSouthern Tang jiedushi of Zhaowu Circuit\nPeople from East China\n10th-century Chinese poets\n10th-century Chinese historians"
] | [
"The Duke of Zhongshan was an official of the Chinese Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period and served as a chancellor.",
"It is not known what year Li Jianxun was born, although events of his life would place a framework on the possible time of his birth.",
"He was the fourth son of Li Decheng, who was a general and the military governor of the Huainan Circuit.",
"He was a capable writer in his youth.",
"The state of Hongnong was created after Tang fell and was ruled by his son and successor.",
"The Prince of Hongnong was assassinated by his officers in 908 and his younger brother was supported by the officers to succeed him.",
"The state's regent was Xu.",
"Li Decheng, Li Jianxun's father, had a habit of going out of the city at night.",
"The transfer of Li Decheng to Jiang Prefecture was due to the suspicion that he might be planning to act against him.",
"Realizing that he was suspected, Li Decheng sent Li Jianxun to pay homage to him.",
"\"If he had a son like this, he wouldn't be an evil man,\" he said when he met Li.",
"He married Li Jianxun and gave a daughter to him.",
"Despite being honored based on his father's and his father-in-law's statuses, he himself was said to be careful and not involved in politics, although he often met with the poorer members of the intelligentsia.",
"The father-in-law of Li Jianxun had his headquarters at Sheng Prefecture.",
"After the death of his father, he continued to serve under his father's son, who took over the Jinling headquarters as well as the army stationed there.",
"There was a struggle for control of the state between the son of the regent and the adoptive son of the emperor.",
"In 962, the army was taken over by other generals and brought back to Guangling.",
"Most of the staff members were demoted, but Li escaped this fate because he was in communications with another person.",
"After the precedent set by his father, the military governor of Zhenhai and Ningguo, Xu Zhigao went to Jinling to take up the position, leaving his son, the junior regent, in charge.",
"Li was the deputy military governor.",
"By 934, Li and Xu Jie were in favor of the plan to take over the throne.",
"When the plans for a transition were in motion, the father and the most senior general of the realm, Zhou Ben, went to Guangling to petition Yang Pu to pass the throne.",
"\"Your father was a great contributor to Emperor Taizu, but now his accomplishments are destroyed,\" said Song Qiqiu, who opposed the transition.",
"The title of Zhongshu Shilang (, deputy head of the legislative bureau of government), which was a post generally designated for a chancellor, was given to Li by this time.",
"After accepting the throne, Xu started Southern Tang.",
"After the establishment of the Southern Tang state, Li Bian gave the title of chancellor to Li Jianxun, who continued to serve as Zhongshu Shilang.",
"He was given the title of Zuo Pushe, one of the heads of the executive bureau, and put in charge of editing the imperial history.",
"He was sent to escort the family from the palace at Guangling to the Danyang Palace in Run Prefecture.",
"After changing his family name back to Li, and taking on a personal name of Bian, he declared a mourning period for his birth parents.",
"The wife of Li Jianxun joined in the mourning even though she was the biological daughter of the man.",
"Li Bian was hesitant to give his own officials too much power after taking the throne.",
"Li Jianxun was the exception as chancellors did not stay in their positions for long.",
"Li Bian was worried about having Li Jianxun remain as chancellor, but he wasn't showing any signs that he would leave the position.",
"According to the Spring and Autumn Annals of the Ten Kingdoms, at that time, there was another official who made a proposal in governance and, in the proposal, stated, \"This is such an important matter that you should not let one of your subjects issue the order.\"",
"You should issue the order on your own.",
"Li Bian hadn't acted on the proposal yet.",
"Knowing that Li Bian had agreed, Li Jianxun ordered one of the designated imperial edict drafters to begin drafting.",
"The imperial attendant submitted an accusation against Li Jianxun.",
"As Li Bian was looking for an excuse to relieve Li Jianxun from his chancellorship, he did so.",
"When my father was ill, you, older brother, often requested to see his instructions to Master Li, and that's why the Grand Princess went to see Li Bian.",
"Why do you dislike him?",
"\"This is a matter of the state,\" Li Bian said.",
"I have no doubts about Master Li.",
"Li Bian comforted Li and returned him to chancellorship.",
"The person who gave a different version of the events was the person who said that Li Bian would examine the proposal for some time before making a decision.",
"Li Bian approved the proposal and was prepared to promulgate it.",
"There were aspects of the proposal that would be viewed as benefiting himself and therefore he would be viewed in a negative light, so Li modified the proposal without resubmitting it to the emperor.",
"Li Bian took medication made by the Shi Shouchong, which he believed to be able to enhance health, but which in actuality changed his disposition such that he became harsher and less patient.",
"He gave some of the medication to Li Jianxun as a gift.",
"Li said that he had hot flashes after taking it for several days.",
"How could it be that it could be more?",
"Li Bian said that he had been taking it for a long time.",
"The medication damaged Li Bian's health and he died in 943, replaced by the person who had changed his name.",
"After Li Jing took the throne, others asked Li Jianxun what he thought of the new emperor.",
"The Master is kind and tolerant, and in that aspect is superior to the Deceased Emperor.",
"The people close to him are not righteous.",
"I fear that he won't be able to protect the foundation that the Emperor left him.",
"To show respect, Li Jing referred to Li Jianxun as \"the Historian\" rather than by name, and honored him as much as he did Song Qiqiu.",
"Li Jianxun was sent out of the capital of Jinling to serve as the military governor of the circuit.",
"When Southern Tang captured Jian Prefecture, the capital of its southeastern neighbor Min and thus ending Min in 955, Li Jianxun was distressed at the poor discipline that the Southern Tang army displayed.",
"He was recalled to the imperial government to serve as You Pushe and Menxia Shilang, deputy head of the examination bureau.",
"It was said that this time around as chancellor, Li Jianxun, who was experienced in administrative matters, was indecisive, allowing Feng, who was considered wicked, to make most of the decisions.",
"After building a lodge at Mount Zhong, Li Jianxun wanted to retire there.",
"He was given leave to retire with the title of Situ and the title of Duke of Zhongshan, but it is not clear if this was an actual creation of a noble title.",
"The Grand Princess referred to herself as the Old Woman of Zhongshan.",
"Someone questioned him if he was trying to follow in the footsteps of \"the Lord of Jiuhua\" when he retired even though he was not yet old.",
"After laughing at Lord Song for returning to duty so easily, why should I not follow him in retiring?",
"I want a few years of peace because I know I won't have a long life.",
"Southern Tang's recent conquest of its southwestern neighbor Chu was celebrated by the imperial officials in 962.",
"Most of the officials were in a festive mood, but Li believed that this was the start of a disaster.",
"The Southern Tang forces were expelled from the former Chu territory by an uprising led by former Chu officers.",
"posthumous honors were given to Li Jianxun after he died.",
"After Southern Tang was destroyed, the tombs of the prominent officials were mostly taken for treasure.",
"At that time, no one knew where Li Jianxun's tomb was, so it escaped such a fate.",
"Song praised Li for his ability to speak well, even though he was proud of his abilities.",
"There are notes about Spring and Autumn Annals of the Ten Kingdoms.",
"21.",
"There are three vols.",
"295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295,",
"Southern Tang chancellors, Southern Tang historians, and people from East China were born during the 9th century."
] | <mask>o (), known late in life as the Duke of Zhongshan (), was an official of the Chinese Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period states Wu and Wu's successor state Southern Tang, serving as a chancellor during Southern Tang and possibly during Wu. Background
It is not known what year <mask>un was born — although subsequent events of his life would tend to place a framework on the possible time of his birth. He was the fourth son of <mask>heng, who served as a general under the major late-Tang warlord Yang Xingmi the military governor of Huainan Circuit (, headquartered in modern Yangzhou, Jiangsu). He was studious in his youth and capable in writing, particularly in poetry. During Hongnong/Wu
After Tang fell in 907, Yang Xingmi's domain, then ruled by his son and successor Yang Wo, became the state of Hongnong (later known as Wu). In 908, his officers Zhang Hao and Xu Wen assassinated him, and shortly after, Xu killed Zhang and supported Yang Wo's younger brother Yang Longyan to succeed Yang Wo as the Prince of Hongnong. Xu thereafter took effective reins of the state as its regent.At this time, <mask>un's father <mask>g was serving as the prefect of Run Prefecture (潤州, in modern Zhenjiang, Jiangsu), and had a habit of going out of the city at night. This drew Xu's suspicion, concerned that <mask>g might be planning to act against him, so he transferred <mask>g to Jiang Prefecture (江州, in modern Jiujiang, Jiangxi), farther from the Hongnong capital Guangling. Realizing that Xu suspected him, <mask>g tried to alleviate Xu's concerns by sending <mask>un to pay homage to Xu. When Xu met <mask>un, he was impressed and stated, "If he had a son like this, he cannot be an evil man." He then gave a daughter to <mask>xun in marriage. Despite <mask>un's being honored based on his father's and his father-in-law's statuses, he himself was said to be careful and (at that time) not involved in politics, although he often met with the poorer members of the intelligentsia. <mask>un later became a surveyor at Sheng Prefecture (昇州, in modern Nanjing, Jiangsu), where his father-in-law Xu Wen had his headquarters.After Xu's death in 927, he continued to serve under Xu's biological son Xu Zhixun, who took over the Jinling (i.e., Sheng) headquarters as well as the army stationed there, as Xu Zhixun succeeded to Xu Wen's titles of military governor (Jiedushi) of Zhenhai (鎮海, headquartered at Run Prefecture) and Ningguo (寧國, headquartered in modern Xuancheng, Anhui) Circuits. A struggle for the control of the state (known as Wu by that point and whose emperor was Yang Longyan's brother and successor Yang Pu) thereafter developed between Xu Wen's adoptive, but older, son Xu Zhigao, whom Xu Wen had assigned as junior regent at Guangling and controlled the Wu imperial government, and Xu Zhixun, who controlled the largest army in the Wu realm. In 929, Xu Zhigao tricked Xu Zhixun into coming to Guangling, and then forced him to remain at Guangling, sending other generals to take over the army and bringing it back to Guangling. Most of Xu Zhixun's staff members were demoted, but <mask> escaped this fate (perhaps because, as the later statement by <mask>'s wife suggested, he was in communications with Xu Zhigao). In 931, Xu Zhigao himself, following Xu Wen's precedent, went to Jinling to take up position there as the military governor of Zhenhai and Ningguo, leaving his son Xu Jingtong in control of the Wu government at Guangling as junior regent. <mask> served as Xu's deputy military governor. By 934, when Xu Zhigao was beginning to consider taking over the throne, <mask> and Xu Jie were in favor, and participated in the planning.By late 936, when the plans for such a transition were deep in motion, Xu Zhigao had <mask>un's father <mask>g and Zhou Ben, the two most senior generals of the realm, go to Guangling to petition Yang Pu to pass the throne to Xu Zhigao, and then come to Jinling to petition him to accept. This led Xu's advisor Song Qiqiu, who opposed the transition, to state to <mask>un, "Your honored father was a great contributor to Emperor Taizu [(i.e., Yang Xingmi)], but now his accomplishments are destroyed." (By this time, <mask>un carried the title of Zhongshu Shilang (中書侍郎, deputy head of the legislative bureau of government (中書省, Zhongshu Sheng)), which was a post generally designated for a chancellor, although it is not completely clear whether he was in fact a chancellor, as the traditional accounts did not indicate whether he also carried the title of Tong Zhongshu Menxia Pingzhangshi (), usually a prerequisite title for a chancellor.) Xu thereafter accepted the throne, ending Wu and starting Southern Tang. During Southern Tang
During <mask>ian's reign
After the establishment of the Southern Tang state, <mask>anxun continued to serve as Zhongshu Shilang, and by this point was clearly a chancellor, as he was given the title of Tong Zhongshu Menxia Pingzhangshi, along with Zhang Yanhan and Zhang Juyong. He was also given the title of Zuo Pushe (左僕射, one of the heads of the executive bureau (尚書省, Shangshu Sheng)), put in charge of editing the imperial history, and given the military governorship of Yicheng Circuit (義成, headquartered in modern Anyang, Henan, a completely honorary title as Yicheng was then the territory of Southern Tang's northern neighbor Later Jin). In 938, Xu Zhigao sent him to escort Yang Pu and Yang Pu's family from the palace at Guangling to Run Prefecture, whose inner city was converted into Danyang Palace, to house the Yang family.In 939, Xu Zhigao changed his family name back to his birth name of <mask>, and took on a personal name of Bian, and declared a mourning period for his birth parents. Even though she was Xu Wen's biological daughter, <mask>xun's wife, who by this point was carrying the title of Grand Princess Guangde, joined in the mourning. As <mask> took the throne based on his service as a Wu official, he was apprehensive of giving his own officials too much power. Chancellors thus did not remain in their positions for long, but <mask>xun was an exception. Still, by 941, <mask> was apprehensive of having <mask>xun remaining as chancellor, but <mask>xun was showing no signs that he would ask to leave the position. According to the Spring and Autumn Annals of the Ten Kingdoms, at that time, there happened to be another official who made a proposal in governance, and, in the proposal, stated, "This is such an important matter that you should not let one of your subjects issue the order. You should issue the order yourself."While <mask> had agreed to this proposal, he had not yet actually acted on it. <mask>un, however, knowing that <mask> had agreed, ordered one of the designated imperial edict drafters to begin drafting the edict. The imperial attendant Chang Mengxi () thereafter submitted an accusation against <mask>un for wrongly drafting an edict. As <mask> was looking for an excuse to relieve <mask>un from his chancellorship, he did so. However, the Grand Princess Guangde went to see <mask>, and, in a pointed tone, stated, "When my father was ill, you, older brother, also often requested to see his instructions to Master <mask> [(i.e., <mask>un)]. Now why do you turn against him?" <mask> responded, "This is a matter of the state.Master <mask> and I are flesh and blood, and I have no suspicions of him." <mask> summoned <mask>un and comforted him, and soon returned him to chancellorship. (However, the Zizhi Tongjian gave a different version of the events, stating that what happened was that it was <mask>un who made the proposal, and was expecting that <mask> would examine the proposal for some time before ruling on it. However, <mask> went ahead and approved the proposal and prepared to promulgate it. <mask>un, realizing that there were aspects of the proposal that would be viewed as benefitting himself and therefore he would be viewed in a negative light, modified the proposal without resubmitting it to the emperor, and therefore was removed.) Late in his reign, <mask> often took medication made by the alchemist Shi Shouchong (), which he believed to be able to enhance health, but which in actuality changed his disposition such that he became harsher and less patient. At one point, he gave some of the medication to <mask>xun as a gift.<mask> later stated to him, "I, your subject, took it for several days, and I felt overactive and having hot flashes. How could it be that it could be taken more than that?" <mask> responded, "I have been taking it for a long time," and did not heed <mask>un's warnings. The medication ended up damaging <mask>'s health and, in 943, he died, and was succeeded by Xu Jingtong, whose name had been changed to <mask>. During <mask>'s reign
After <mask> took the throne, others asked <mask> of his impression of the new emperor. <mask>un commented, "The Master is kind and tolerant, and in that aspect is superior to the Deceased Emperor [(i.e., <mask>)]. However, his habits are unset, and the people close to him are not righteous men.I fear that he cannot protect the foundation the Deceased Emperor left him." <mask> honored <mask>un as greatly as he did Song Qiqiu, and often referred to him as just "the Historian" rather than by name, to show respect. In 943, <mask>un was sent out of the capital Jinling to serve as military governor of Zhaowu Circuit (, headquartered in modern Fuzhou, Jiangxi). When Southern Tang captured Jian Prefecture (, in modern Nanping, Fujian), the capital of its southeastern neighbor Min and thus ending Min, in 945, <mask>un, distressed at the poor discipline that the Southern Tang army displayed at Jian, including capturing the people of Jian to serve as servants, asked that the imperial government use its own stores of gold and silk to ransom the captured people of Jian to set them free, and <mask> agreed. In 946, <mask> recalled him to the imperial government to serve as You Pushe and Menxia Shilang (, deputy head of the examination bureau (), as well as chancellor, along with Feng Yanji. It was said that this time around as chancellor, <mask>xun, while experienced in administrative matters, was indecisive, allowing Feng, who was considered wicked, to make most of the decisions. At a subsequent point (before 951), <mask>xun built a lodge at Mount Zhong, and requested retirement there.<mask> granted him leave to retire with the honorary title of Situ (), and gave him the title of Duke of Zhongshan — although it is unclear whether this was just an appellation or an actual creation of a noble title. His wife, the Grand Princess, also took to referring herself as "the Old Woman of Zhongshan." Someone questioned him as to why he was retiring even though he was not yet old, asking him whether he was trying to follow the example of "the Lord of Jiuhua" (i.e., Song Qiqiu, referring to an infamous incident in 943, when Song, in a fit of anger, offered to retire to Jiuhua, believing that <mask> would keep him at the imperial government, but <mask> did not do so, although Song would in fact later return to the imperial government). <mask>xun laughed and responded, "I had, throughout my life, laughed at Lord Song for returning to duty so easily, so why should I not follow him in retiring? I know that I will not have a long life, and so I want a few years of peace." In 951, while in retirement, <mask>xun attended a celebration where the imperial officials congratulated <mask> on Southern Tang's recent conquest of its southwestern neighbor Chu. Most of the officials were in a festive mood, but <mask>xun believed that this was the start of a disaster.(Indeed, the next year, 952, an uprising by former Chu officers, led by <mask>, expelled the Southern Tang forces from the former Chu territory, leaving Southern Tang with no gain.) <mask> died in 952 and was given posthumous honors. It was said that later, after Southern Tang was destroyed, the tombs of the prominent officials were largely all robbed for treasure. However, no one at that time knew where <mask>xun's tomb was, and so it escaped such a fate. It was said that Song, proud of his abilities, rarely praised colleagues, but he praised <mask> for <mask>'s ability to speak well. Notes and references
Spring and Autumn Annals of the Ten Kingdoms, vol. 21.Zizhi Tongjian, vols. 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 285, 290. 9th-century births
952 deaths
Yang Wu people born during Tang
Yang Wu poets
Yang Wu chancellors
Southern Tang poets
Southern Tang historians
Southern Tang chancellors
Southern Tang jiedushi of Yicheng Circuit
Southern Tang jiedushi of Zhaowu Circuit
People from East China
10th-century Chinese poets
10th-century Chinese historians | [
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] | The Duke of Zhongshan was an official of the Chinese Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period and served as a chancellor. It is not known what year <mask>xun was born, although events of his life would place a framework on the possible time of his birth. He was the fourth son of <mask>heng, who was a general and the military governor of the Huainan Circuit. He was a capable writer in his youth. The state of Hongnong was created after Tang fell and was ruled by his son and successor. The Prince of Hongnong was assassinated by his officers in 908 and his younger brother was supported by the officers to succeed him. The state's regent was Xu.<mask>, <mask>un's father, had a habit of going out of the city at night. The transfer of <mask>g to Jiang Prefecture was due to the suspicion that he might be planning to act against him. Realizing that he was suspected, <mask>g sent <mask>un to pay homage to him. "If he had a son like this, he wouldn't be an evil man," he said when he met <mask>. He married <mask>un and gave a daughter to him. Despite being honored based on his father's and his father-in-law's statuses, he himself was said to be careful and not involved in politics, although he often met with the poorer members of the intelligentsia. The father-in-law of <mask>un had his headquarters at Sheng Prefecture.After the death of his father, he continued to serve under his father's son, who took over the Jinling headquarters as well as the army stationed there. There was a struggle for control of the state between the son of the regent and the adoptive son of the emperor. In 962, the army was taken over by other generals and brought back to Guangling. Most of the staff members were demoted, but <mask> escaped this fate because he was in communications with another person. After the precedent set by his father, the military governor of Zhenhai and Ningguo, Xu Zhigao went to Jinling to take up the position, leaving his son, the junior regent, in charge. <mask> was the deputy military governor. By 934, <mask> and Xu Jie were in favor of the plan to take over the throne.When the plans for a transition were in motion, the father and the most senior general of the realm, Zhou Ben, went to Guangling to petition Yang Pu to pass the throne. "Your father was a great contributor to Emperor Taizu, but now his accomplishments are destroyed," said Song Qiqiu, who opposed the transition. The title of Zhongshu Shilang (, deputy head of the legislative bureau of government), which was a post generally designated for a chancellor, was given to <mask> by this time. After accepting the throne, Xu started Southern Tang. After the establishment of the Southern Tang state, <mask> gave the title of chancellor to <mask>xun, who continued to serve as Zhongshu Shilang. He was given the title of Zuo Pushe, one of the heads of the executive bureau, and put in charge of editing the imperial history. He was sent to escort the family from the palace at Guangling to the Danyang Palace in Run Prefecture.After changing his family name back to <mask>, and taking on a personal name of Bian, he declared a mourning period for his birth parents. The wife of <mask>xun joined in the mourning even though she was the biological daughter of the man. <mask> was hesitant to give his own officials too much power after taking the throne. <mask>un was the exception as chancellors did not stay in their positions for long. <mask> was worried about having <mask>un remain as chancellor, but he wasn't showing any signs that he would leave the position. According to the Spring and Autumn Annals of the Ten Kingdoms, at that time, there was another official who made a proposal in governance and, in the proposal, stated, "This is such an important matter that you should not let one of your subjects issue the order." You should issue the order on your own.<mask> hadn't acted on the proposal yet. Knowing that <mask>ian had agreed, <mask>xun ordered one of the designated imperial edict drafters to begin drafting. The imperial attendant submitted an accusation against <mask>xun. As <mask> was looking for an excuse to relieve <mask>xun from his chancellorship, he did so. When my father was ill, you, older brother, often requested to see his instructions to Master <mask>, and that's why the Grand Princess went to see <mask>ian. Why do you dislike him? "This is a matter of the state," <mask> said.I have no doubts about Master <mask>. <mask> comforted <mask> and returned him to chancellorship. The person who gave a different version of the events was the person who said that <mask> would examine the proposal for some time before making a decision. <mask> approved the proposal and was prepared to promulgate it. There were aspects of the proposal that would be viewed as benefiting himself and therefore he would be viewed in a negative light, so <mask> modified the proposal without resubmitting it to the emperor. <mask> took medication made by the Shi Shouchong, which he believed to be able to enhance health, but which in actuality changed his disposition such that he became harsher and less patient. He gave some of the medication to <mask>xun as a gift.<mask> said that he had hot flashes after taking it for several days. How could it be that it could be more? <mask> said that he had been taking it for a long time. The medication damaged <mask>'s health and he died in 943, replaced by the person who had changed his name. After <mask> took the throne, others asked <mask>xun what he thought of the new emperor. The Master is kind and tolerant, and in that aspect is superior to the Deceased Emperor. The people close to him are not righteous.I fear that he won't be able to protect the foundation that the Emperor left him. To show respect, <mask> referred to <mask>un as "the Historian" rather than by name, and honored him as much as he did Song Qiqiu. <mask>un was sent out of the capital of Jinling to serve as the military governor of the circuit. When Southern Tang captured Jian Prefecture, the capital of its southeastern neighbor Min and thus ending Min in 955, <mask>xun was distressed at the poor discipline that the Southern Tang army displayed. He was recalled to the imperial government to serve as You Pushe and Menxia Shilang, deputy head of the examination bureau. It was said that this time around as chancellor, <mask>xun, who was experienced in administrative matters, was indecisive, allowing Feng, who was considered wicked, to make most of the decisions. After building a lodge at Mount Zhong, <mask>xun wanted to retire there.He was given leave to retire with the title of Situ and the title of Duke of Zhongshan, but it is not clear if this was an actual creation of a noble title. The Grand Princess referred to herself as the Old Woman of Zhongshan. Someone questioned him if he was trying to follow in the footsteps of "the Lord of Jiuhua" when he retired even though he was not yet old. After laughing at Lord Song for returning to duty so easily, why should I not follow him in retiring? I want a few years of peace because I know I won't have a long life. Southern Tang's recent conquest of its southwestern neighbor Chu was celebrated by the imperial officials in 962. Most of the officials were in a festive mood, but <mask> believed that this was the start of a disaster.The Southern Tang forces were expelled from the former Chu territory by an uprising led by former Chu officers. posthumous honors were given to <mask>xun after he died. After Southern Tang was destroyed, the tombs of the prominent officials were mostly taken for treasure. At that time, no one knew where <mask>xun's tomb was, so it escaped such a fate. Song praised <mask> for his ability to speak well, even though he was proud of his abilities. There are notes about Spring and Autumn Annals of the Ten Kingdoms. 21.There are three vols. 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, 295, Southern Tang chancellors, Southern Tang historians, and people from East China were born during the 9th century. | [
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3767538 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William%20Stark%20%28loyalist%29 | William Stark (loyalist) | William Stark (1 April 1724 – 27 August 1776) was a Revolutionary War era officer. He was the brother of celebrated Revolutionary war hero John Stark.
Early life
Stark was born in Londonderry, New Hampshire.
He was with his brother John Stark, David Stinson and Amos Eastman, hunting along the Baker River, a tributary of the Pemigewasset River, on 28 April 1752, when John Stark and Amos Eastman were captured and David Stinson was killed by Abenaki Indians. William escaped in his canoe after being warned by his brother.
Career
During the French and Indian War Stark commanded a company of Rogers' Rangers in northern New York and Nova Scotia where he served under James Rogers. He took part in the assaults on Fortress Louisbourg in 1758, the St. John River Campaign and Battle of the Plains of Abraham in 1759, where he served as a Major for General James Wolfe. In the painting by Benjamin West titled "The Death of General Wolfe", Major William Stark is seen holding the mortally wounded General in cradle. Major William Stark was essential in the British triumph and was a pathfinder leading the Royal troops from riverside to the Field of Abraham, high above. Early in the American Revolution, Stark did not join the New Hampshire Militia forces in the Siege of Boston, but the sounds of the Battle of Bunker Hill could be heard at his home in Dunbarton, New Hampshire, and he left on his swiftest horse to fight, but he arrived too late and the battle had already ended.
Both General John Sullivan and Colonel Jonathan Moulton recommended Stark to command the new regiment being raised in New Hampshire for service with the Continental Army in the invasion of Canada, but the New Hampshire General Assembly gave the command to Timothy Bedel, a former subordinate of Stark's. Stark, feeling ill-used by his home state, left for New York City, which was occupied by the British Army, and offered his services to them. The British made him a lieutenant colonel of Loyalist troops.
Stark's property in New Hampshire was confiscated by the revolutionary government.
Rick Holmes, of Derry News 1 Aug 2013, Derry, New Hampshire wrote:
"William Stark was born in 1724 in a small house on Stark Road in Derry. In the 1750s, William moved to Starktown – now Dunbarton, N.H. — where his house was used as the meeting house for the next 17 years. On the frontier, the Stark brothers soon gained a reputation as skilled hunters and trappers who ranged all over New Hampshire and Quebec. While hunting in 1754, they were ambush by Indians. William managed to escape but his brother was taken prisoner. John was taken to Montreal where he was eventually ransomed for $103 – the price of a pony. During the French and Indian War, William Stark was part of Rogers' Rangers – colonial America’s greatest fighting force. William Stark was appointed captain and was second in command to the legendary Robert Rogers himself. During the next few years, he fought with bravery in many battles from Fortress Louisbourg in Cape Breton to Fort Ticonderoga in New York. William frequently traveled with his dog Beau de Bien, who drew full soldiers pay because of services as a scout and guard. William was assigned to go with Gen. James Wolfe to attack the French-held city of Quebec. The general could find no way to attack the French army, which was secure on top of the impenetrable cliffs looming high above the St. Lawrence River. One historian purports that it was Major William Stark who told Wolfe of the hidden path to the top of the cliff. The English went on to win the battle but Gen. Wolfe was critically wounded. Stark was one of the four officers who were assigned to carry Wolfe away from the fighting. In Benjamin West’s famous painting, "The Death of General Wolfe", it is believed that it's William Stark cradling the dying general in a pose reminiscent of Christ in Michelangelo's "Pieta". This battle resulted in England taking control of all of Canada. It is considered one of the most important battles in world history. After Quebec, William returned to his farm high on a ridge in Dunbarton. Here for the next 16 years, the soldier was at peace; here he and his wife raised seven children and took part in small-town politics. During the morning of 17 April 1775, he was startled to hear the distant sounds of cannon fire coming from 70 miles away at Bunker Hill outside of Boston. Immediately, he grabbed his musket, jumped on his horse and rode toward the fighting. By the time he arrived, the battle was over and he joined his brother John in Medford. William Stark was solidly on the patriot side and soon applied for command of an army to protect the northern border and capture the city of Quebec. Because of his experiences in the French and Indian War there was no one who more qualified for that position then Stark. The New Hampshire government saw fit however to award the command to a politically connected soldier who had formerly been one of Stark's lieutenants. This act of disrespect and idiocy infuriated William Stark. He rode to the British line and became a colonel in the king's army. This action was very upsetting to his brother, patriot Gen. John Stark. When hearing about his brother leaving the state, John Stark said that leaving was "the best thing he ever did!” During the war William Stark served in the defense of New York City. The government of New Hampshire confiscated all of his property consisting of thousands of acres of farm and forest land."
Death
Stark died from injuries he received in falling from his horse on Long Island, New York during the Battle of Long Island on 27 August 1776.
Notes from Debbie Carr record that: "According to an "Abstract of Graves of Revolutionary Patriots about William Stark" he is buried in: Lyme Plain Cemeter in Lyme, Grafton County, New Hampshire 29I". However, the Cemetery listing is apparently of his son, William, Jr., b. 1740, d. 5 Oct 1787. m. Joanna (1742-1811). https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/121887456/william-stark
Personal life
Stark was the son of Archibald and Eleanor Nichols Stark and the older brother of General John Stark, the hero of the Battle of Bennington. He married Mary Stinson on 22 February 1754 and they had seven children: William JR., John, Archibald, Mary, Stephen, Thomas, and James.
References
External links
1724 births
1776 deaths
People from Londonderry, New Hampshire
People of colonial New Hampshire
People of New Hampshire in the French and Indian War
Loyalists in the American Revolution from New Hampshire
United States Army Rangers
Deaths by horse-riding accident in the United States
Accidental deaths in New York (state)
British America army officers
People from Dunbarton, New Hampshire | [
"William Stark (1 April 1724 – 27 August 1776) was a Revolutionary War era officer.",
"He was the brother of celebrated Revolutionary war hero John Stark.",
"Early life\nStark was born in Londonderry, New Hampshire.",
"He was with his brother John Stark, David Stinson and Amos Eastman, hunting along the Baker River, a tributary of the Pemigewasset River, on 28 April 1752, when John Stark and Amos Eastman were captured and David Stinson was killed by Abenaki Indians.",
"William escaped in his canoe after being warned by his brother.",
"Career\nDuring the French and Indian War Stark commanded a company of Rogers' Rangers in northern New York and Nova Scotia where he served under James Rogers.",
"He took part in the assaults on Fortress Louisbourg in 1758, the St. John River Campaign and Battle of the Plains of Abraham in 1759, where he served as a Major for General James Wolfe.",
"In the painting by Benjamin West titled \"The Death of General Wolfe\", Major William Stark is seen holding the mortally wounded General in cradle.",
"Major William Stark was essential in the British triumph and was a pathfinder leading the Royal troops from riverside to the Field of Abraham, high above.",
"Early in the American Revolution, Stark did not join the New Hampshire Militia forces in the Siege of Boston, but the sounds of the Battle of Bunker Hill could be heard at his home in Dunbarton, New Hampshire, and he left on his swiftest horse to fight, but he arrived too late and the battle had already ended.",
"Both General John Sullivan and Colonel Jonathan Moulton recommended Stark to command the new regiment being raised in New Hampshire for service with the Continental Army in the invasion of Canada, but the New Hampshire General Assembly gave the command to Timothy Bedel, a former subordinate of Stark's.",
"Stark, feeling ill-used by his home state, left for New York City, which was occupied by the British Army, and offered his services to them.",
"The British made him a lieutenant colonel of Loyalist troops.",
"Stark's property in New Hampshire was confiscated by the revolutionary government.",
"Rick Holmes, of Derry News 1 Aug 2013, Derry, New Hampshire wrote:\n\"William Stark was born in 1724 in a small house on Stark Road in Derry.",
"In the 1750s, William moved to Starktown – now Dunbarton, N.H. — where his house was used as the meeting house for the next 17 years.",
"On the frontier, the Stark brothers soon gained a reputation as skilled hunters and trappers who ranged all over New Hampshire and Quebec.",
"While hunting in 1754, they were ambush by Indians.",
"William managed to escape but his brother was taken prisoner.",
"John was taken to Montreal where he was eventually ransomed for $103 – the price of a pony.",
"During the French and Indian War, William Stark was part of Rogers' Rangers – colonial America’s greatest fighting force.",
"William Stark was appointed captain and was second in command to the legendary Robert Rogers himself.",
"During the next few years, he fought with bravery in many battles from Fortress Louisbourg in Cape Breton to Fort Ticonderoga in New York.",
"William frequently traveled with his dog Beau de Bien, who drew full soldiers pay because of services as a scout and guard.",
"William was assigned to go with Gen. James Wolfe to attack the French-held city of Quebec.",
"The general could find no way to attack the French army, which was secure on top of the impenetrable cliffs looming high above the St. Lawrence River.",
"One historian purports that it was Major William Stark who told Wolfe of the hidden path to the top of the cliff.",
"The English went on to win the battle but Gen. Wolfe was critically wounded.",
"Stark was one of the four officers who were assigned to carry Wolfe away from the fighting.",
"In Benjamin West’s famous painting, \"The Death of General Wolfe\", it is believed that it's William Stark cradling the dying general in a pose reminiscent of Christ in Michelangelo's \"Pieta\".",
"This battle resulted in England taking control of all of Canada.",
"It is considered one of the most important battles in world history.",
"After Quebec, William returned to his farm high on a ridge in Dunbarton.",
"Here for the next 16 years, the soldier was at peace; here he and his wife raised seven children and took part in small-town politics.",
"During the morning of 17 April 1775, he was startled to hear the distant sounds of cannon fire coming from 70 miles away at Bunker Hill outside of Boston.",
"Immediately, he grabbed his musket, jumped on his horse and rode toward the fighting.",
"By the time he arrived, the battle was over and he joined his brother John in Medford.",
"William Stark was solidly on the patriot side and soon applied for command of an army to protect the northern border and capture the city of Quebec.",
"Because of his experiences in the French and Indian War there was no one who more qualified for that position then Stark.",
"The New Hampshire government saw fit however to award the command to a politically connected soldier who had formerly been one of Stark's lieutenants.",
"This act of disrespect and idiocy infuriated William Stark.",
"He rode to the British line and became a colonel in the king's army.",
"This action was very upsetting to his brother, patriot Gen. John Stark.",
"When hearing about his brother leaving the state, John Stark said that leaving was \"the best thing he ever did!” During the war William Stark served in the defense of New York City.",
"The government of New Hampshire confiscated all of his property consisting of thousands of acres of farm and forest land.\"",
"Death\nStark died from injuries he received in falling from his horse on Long Island, New York during the Battle of Long Island on 27 August 1776.",
"Notes from Debbie Carr record that: \"According to an \"Abstract of Graves of Revolutionary Patriots about William Stark\" he is buried in: Lyme Plain Cemeter in Lyme, Grafton County, New Hampshire 29I\".",
"However, the Cemetery listing is apparently of his son, William, Jr., b.",
"1740, d. 5 Oct 1787. m. Joanna (1742-1811).",
"https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/121887456/william-stark\n\nPersonal life\nStark was the son of Archibald and Eleanor Nichols Stark and the older brother of General John Stark, the hero of the Battle of Bennington.",
"He married Mary Stinson on 22 February 1754 and they had seven children: William JR., John, Archibald, Mary, Stephen, Thomas, and James.",
"References\n\nExternal links\n\n1724 births\n1776 deaths\nPeople from Londonderry, New Hampshire\nPeople of colonial New Hampshire\nPeople of New Hampshire in the French and Indian War\nLoyalists in the American Revolution from New Hampshire\nUnited States Army Rangers\nDeaths by horse-riding accident in the United States\nAccidental deaths in New York (state)\nBritish America army officers\nPeople from Dunbarton, New Hampshire"
] | [
"William Stark was an officer in the Revolutionary War.",
"John Stark was a celebrated Revolutionary war hero.",
"Stark was born in New Hampshire.",
"On April 28, 1752, John Stark and Amos Eastman were captured and David Stinson was killed by Abenaki Indians while they were hunting along the Baker River.",
"William escaped in his canoe after being warned.",
"Stark commanded a company of Rogers' Rangers in northern New York and Nova Scotia during the French and Indian War.",
"He was part of the assaults on Fortress Louisbourg in 1758, the St. John River Campaign and the Battle of the Plains of Abraham.",
"The death of General Wolfe is depicted in a painting by Benjamin West.",
"Major William Stark was the leader of the Royal troops from the riverside to the Field of Abraham high above.",
"The sounds of the Battle of Bunker Hill could be heard at Stark's home in New Hampshire, but he did not join the New Hampshire Militia forces in Boston.",
"The New Hampshire General Assembly gave the command to Timothy Bedel, a former lieutenant of Stark's, despite the recommendation of both General John Sullivan and Colonel Jonathan Moulton.",
"Stark left his home state and went to New York City, where he offered his services to the British Army.",
"He was made a lieutenant colonel by the British.",
"Stark's property in New Hampshire was taken over by the government.",
"William Stark was born in a small house on Stark Road in Derry.",
"William's house in Starktown was the meeting house for the next 17 years.",
"The Stark brothers were skilled hunters and trappers who traveled all over New Hampshire and Quebec.",
"They were attacked by Indians while hunting.",
"William was taken prisoner while he escaped.",
"John was taken to Montreal where he was forced to pay $103 for a pony.",
"William Stark was a member of the Rogers' Rangers during the French and Indian War.",
"William Stark was second in command to Robert Rogers.",
"He fought in many battles during the next few years, from Fortress Louisbourg in Cape Breton to Fort Ticonderoga in New York.",
"William's dog Beau de Bien drew full soldiers pay because of his services as a scout and guard.",
"The city of Quebec is held by the French.",
"The French army was secured on top of the cliffs above the St. Lawrence River, making it impossible for the general to attack them.",
"According to one historian, Major William Stark told Wolfe of the hidden path to the top of the cliff.",
"The English won the battle, but Gen. Wolfe was critically wounded.",
"Four officers were assigned to carry Wolfe away from the fighting.",
"In Benjamin West's famous painting, \"The Death of General Wolfe\", it is believed that William Stark is holding the dying general in a pose reminiscent of Christ.",
"England took control of Canada.",
"It is one of the most important battles in the history of the world.",
"William went back to his farm high on a ridge.",
"For the next 16 years, the soldier was at peace, and here he and his wife raised seven children and took part in small-town politics.",
"During the morning of 17 April 1775, he was startled to hear cannon fire coming from 70 miles away at Bunker Hill outside of Boston.",
"He jumped on his horse and rode toward the fighting after grabbing his musket.",
"He joined his brother in Medford after the battle was over.",
"William Stark applied for command of an army to protect the northern border and capture the city of Quebec.",
"He was qualified for that position because of his experiences in the French and Indian War.",
"The New Hampshire government decided to give the command to a soldier who was once one of Stark's lieutenants.",
"William Stark was incensed by this act of disrespect.",
"He became a colonel in the king's army after riding to the British line.",
"His brother, Gen. John Stark, was upset by this action.",
"John Stark said that leaving the state was the best thing his brother had ever done.",
"Thousands of acres of farm and forest land were taken over by the New Hampshire government.",
"Death Stark died from injuries he received when he fell from his horse during the Battle of Long Island.",
"According to the \"Abstract of Graves of Revolutionary Patriots about William Stark\", he is buried in a churchyard in New Hampshire.",
"The Cemetery listing is for his son, William, Jr.",
"1740, d. 5 October 1787.",
"Stark was the younger brother of General John Stark, who was the hero of the Battle of Bennington.",
"He married Mary on February 22, 1754 and they had seven children.",
"The French and Indian War Loyalists in the American Revolution were from New Hampshire. Accidental deaths in New York were caused by horse-riding accidents."
] | <mask> (1 April 1724 – 27 August 1776) was a Revolutionary War era officer. He was the brother of celebrated Revolutionary war hero <mask>. Early life
<mask> was born in Londonderry, New Hampshire. He was with his brother <mask>, David Stinson and Amos Eastman, hunting along the Baker River, a tributary of the Pemigewasset River, on 28 April 1752, when <mask> and Amos Eastman were captured and David Stinson was killed by Abenaki Indians. <mask> escaped in his canoe after being warned by his brother. Career
During the French and Indian War <mask> commanded a company of Rogers' Rangers in northern New York and Nova Scotia where he served under James Rogers. He took part in the assaults on Fortress Louisbourg in 1758, the St. John River Campaign and Battle of the Plains of Abraham in 1759, where he served as a Major for General James Wolfe.In the painting by Benjamin West titled "The Death of General Wolfe", Major <mask> is seen holding the mortally wounded General in cradle. Major <mask> was essential in the British triumph and was a pathfinder leading the Royal troops from riverside to the Field of Abraham, high above. Early in the American Revolution, <mask> did not join the New Hampshire Militia forces in the Siege of Boston, but the sounds of the Battle of Bunker Hill could be heard at his home in Dunbarton, New Hampshire, and he left on his swiftest horse to fight, but he arrived too late and the battle had already ended. Both General John Sullivan and Colonel Jonathan Moulton recommended <mask> to command the new regiment being raised in New Hampshire for service with the Continental Army in the invasion of Canada, but the New Hampshire General Assembly gave the command to Timothy Bedel, a former subordinate of <mask>'s. <mask>, feeling ill-used by his home state, left for New York City, which was occupied by the British Army, and offered his services to them. The British made him a lieutenant colonel of Loyalist troops. <mask>'s property in New Hampshire was confiscated by the revolutionary government.Rick Holmes, of Derry News 1 Aug 2013, Derry, New Hampshire wrote:
"<mask> was born in 1724 in a small house on Stark Road in Derry. In the 1750s, <mask> moved to Starktown – now Dunbarton, N.H. — where his house was used as the meeting house for the next 17 years. On the frontier, the <mask> brothers soon gained a reputation as skilled hunters and trappers who ranged all over New Hampshire and Quebec. While hunting in 1754, they were ambush by Indians. <mask> managed to escape but his brother was taken prisoner. John was taken to Montreal where he was eventually ransomed for $103 – the price of a pony. During the French and Indian War, <mask> was part of Rogers' Rangers – colonial America’s greatest fighting force.<mask> was appointed captain and was second in command to the legendary Robert Rogers himself. During the next few years, he fought with bravery in many battles from Fortress Louisbourg in Cape Breton to Fort Ticonderoga in New York. <mask> frequently traveled with his dog Beau de Bien, who drew full soldiers pay because of services as a scout and guard. <mask> was assigned to go with Gen. James Wolfe to attack the French-held city of Quebec. The general could find no way to attack the French army, which was secure on top of the impenetrable cliffs looming high above the St. Lawrence River. One historian purports that it was Major <mask> who told Wolfe of the hidden path to the top of the cliff. The English went on to win the battle but Gen. Wolfe was critically wounded.<mask> was one of the four officers who were assigned to carry Wolfe away from the fighting. In Benjamin West’s famous painting, "The Death of General Wolfe", it is believed that it's <mask> cradling the dying general in a pose reminiscent of Christ in Michelangelo's "Pieta". This battle resulted in England taking control of all of Canada. It is considered one of the most important battles in world history. After Quebec, <mask> returned to his farm high on a ridge in Dunbarton. Here for the next 16 years, the soldier was at peace; here he and his wife raised seven children and took part in small-town politics. During the morning of 17 April 1775, he was startled to hear the distant sounds of cannon fire coming from 70 miles away at Bunker Hill outside of Boston.Immediately, he grabbed his musket, jumped on his horse and rode toward the fighting. By the time he arrived, the battle was over and he joined his brother John in Medford. <mask> was solidly on the patriot side and soon applied for command of an army to protect the northern border and capture the city of Quebec. Because of his experiences in the French and Indian War there was no one who more qualified for that position then <mask>. The New Hampshire government saw fit however to award the command to a politically connected soldier who had formerly been one of <mask>'s lieutenants. This act of disrespect and idiocy infuriated <mask>. He rode to the British line and became a colonel in the king's army.This action was very upsetting to his brother, patriot Gen. <mask>. When hearing about his brother leaving the state, <mask> said that leaving was "the best thing he ever did!” During the war <mask> served in the defense of New York City. The government of New Hampshire confiscated all of his property consisting of thousands of acres of farm and forest land." <mask> died from injuries he received in falling from his horse on Long Island, New York during the Battle of Long Island on 27 August 1776. Notes from Debbie Carr record that: "According to an "Abstract of Graves of Revolutionary Patriots about <mask>" he is buried in: Lyme Plain Cemeter in Lyme, Grafton County, New Hampshire 29I". However, the Cemetery listing is apparently of his son, <mask>, Jr., b. 1740, d. 5 Oct 1787. m. Joanna (1742-1811).https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/121887456/william-stark
Personal life
<mask> was the son of Archibald and Eleanor Nichols <mask> and the older brother of General <mask>, the hero of the Battle of Bennington. He married Mary Stinson on 22 February 1754 and they had seven children: <mask>., John, Archibald, Mary, Stephen, Thomas, and James. References
External links
1724 births
1776 deaths
People from Londonderry, New Hampshire
People of colonial New Hampshire
People of New Hampshire in the French and Indian War
Loyalists in the American Revolution from New Hampshire
United States Army Rangers
Deaths by horse-riding accident in the United States
Accidental deaths in New York (state)
British America army officers
People from Dunbarton, New Hampshire | [
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"William Stark",
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"John Stark",
"John Stark",
"William Stark",
"Death Stark",
"William Stark",
"William",
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"John Stark",
"William JR"
] | <mask> was an officer in the Revolutionary War. <mask> was a celebrated Revolutionary war hero. <mask> was born in New Hampshire. On April 28, 1752, <mask> and Amos Eastman were captured and David Stinson was killed by Abenaki Indians while they were hunting along the Baker River. <mask> escaped in his canoe after being warned. <mask> commanded a company of Rogers' Rangers in northern New York and Nova Scotia during the French and Indian War. He was part of the assaults on Fortress Louisbourg in 1758, the St. John River Campaign and the Battle of the Plains of Abraham.The death of General Wolfe is depicted in a painting by Benjamin West. Major <mask> was the leader of the Royal troops from the riverside to the Field of Abraham high above. The sounds of the Battle of Bunker Hill could be heard at <mask>'s home in New Hampshire, but he did not join the New Hampshire Militia forces in Boston. The New Hampshire General Assembly gave the command to Timothy Bedel, a former lieutenant of <mask>'s, despite the recommendation of both General John Sullivan and Colonel Jonathan Moulton. <mask> left his home state and went to New York City, where he offered his services to the British Army. He was made a lieutenant colonel by the British. <mask>'s property in New Hampshire was taken over by the government.<mask> was born in a small house on Stark Road in Derry. <mask>'s house in Starktown was the meeting house for the next 17 years. The <mask> brothers were skilled hunters and trappers who traveled all over New Hampshire and Quebec. They were attacked by Indians while hunting. <mask> was taken prisoner while he escaped. John was taken to Montreal where he was forced to pay $103 for a pony. <mask> was a member of the Rogers' Rangers during the French and Indian War.<mask> was second in command to Robert Rogers. He fought in many battles during the next few years, from Fortress Louisbourg in Cape Breton to Fort Ticonderoga in New York. <mask>'s dog Beau de Bien drew full soldiers pay because of his services as a scout and guard. The city of Quebec is held by the French. The French army was secured on top of the cliffs above the St. Lawrence River, making it impossible for the general to attack them. According to one historian, Major <mask> told Wolfe of the hidden path to the top of the cliff. The English won the battle, but Gen. Wolfe was critically wounded.Four officers were assigned to carry Wolfe away from the fighting. In Benjamin West's famous painting, "The Death of General Wolfe", it is believed that <mask> is holding the dying general in a pose reminiscent of Christ. England took control of Canada. It is one of the most important battles in the history of the world. <mask> went back to his farm high on a ridge. For the next 16 years, the soldier was at peace, and here he and his wife raised seven children and took part in small-town politics. During the morning of 17 April 1775, he was startled to hear cannon fire coming from 70 miles away at Bunker Hill outside of Boston.He jumped on his horse and rode toward the fighting after grabbing his musket. He joined his brother in Medford after the battle was over. <mask> applied for command of an army to protect the northern border and capture the city of Quebec. He was qualified for that position because of his experiences in the French and Indian War. The New Hampshire government decided to give the command to a soldier who was once one of <mask>'s lieutenants. <mask> was incensed by this act of disrespect. He became a colonel in the king's army after riding to the British line.His brother, Gen. <mask>, was upset by this action. <mask> said that leaving the state was the best thing his brother had ever done. Thousands of acres of farm and forest land were taken over by the New Hampshire government. Death <mask> died from injuries he received when he fell from his horse during the Battle of Long Island. According to the "Abstract of Graves of Revolutionary Patriots about <mask>", he is buried in a churchyard in New Hampshire. The Cemetery listing is for his son, <mask>, Jr. 1740, d. 5 October 1787.<mask> was the younger brother of General <mask>, who was the hero of the Battle of Bennington. He married Mary on February 22, 1754 and they had seven children. The French and Indian War Loyalists in the American Revolution were from New Hampshire. Accidental deaths in New York were caused by horse-riding accidents. | [
"William Stark",
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] |
47165786 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheah%20Cheang%20Lim | Cheah Cheang Lim | Cheah Cheang Lim (; 6 December 1875 – 15 November 1948) was born in Taiping, Perak, Malaysia. Brought up by his father, Cheah Boon Hean, who was in the trading business, he grew up to become a businessman and miner. He was introduced to the tin mining industries of the time by his uncle Foo Choo Choon, the 'Tin King', who hired him as his attorney. Later, Cheah Cheang Lim was appointed to manage his affairs. Eventually, he started his own company. He also invested in rubber estates but his main interest remained in the tin business.
Cheah was also known as a social reformer whose concerns were spread across various issues. He was involved in the anti-opium movement and campaigned for Chinese status in the Malay States, including such efforts as debating against the Banishment Enactment to non-Malays born in the States. He furthermore dedicated his life to promoting and improving Malayan education by instituting several scholarship schemes, including the Queen's Scholarships in British Malaya and through donations.
Volunteering in the Malayan Volunteer Infantry was a significant part of his later career, as he led the younger generation in a volunteer programme. He was active in several clubs and societies across Malaysia, but mainly in Perak and Penang, where he resided. He was lastly elected as a Federal Counsellor, as a representative of the Chinese population.
Early life
Cheah Cheang Lim was born to a Penang Hokkien family in Taiping and started out as a postal assistant on the Perak frontier. Growing up, he spent his early years in Taiping. His father was Cheah Boon Hean, son of Cheah Teah and a businessman and trader. His mother was Foo Kang Nyong. At that time, British administrative branches occupied the area, together with the Perak Sikhs, the police force. The Residential System was in practice. Later, a great fire destroyed the Cheah house. The family was invited to stay at Dr. Legge's residence until Cheah Boon Hean made new arrangements.
Education
After attending a few temporary schools in Taiping, Cheah studied at the Central Government School, managed by Mr. J.L. Greene, now known as the King Edward VII School, up to Standard VI. In 1889, he finished school and applied for a job at the Land Office in Taiping. He was rejected due to his age. He went back to school, became a pupil teacher and studied privately for one year.
Career
In 1890, he became a probationer at the Posts and Telegraphs Department. Later, he went to replace a brother officer in Port Weld and subsequently, to his friend Joo Sip San at Lahat, Perak. Cheah was a Malay scholar and helped with English correspondence, while he also taught the staff at the Posts and Telegraphs Department to read and write in the Malay language.
In 1894, Cheah took over R. Bulner as the postmaster in Tanjung Malim. He was later transferred back to Lahat, where he resigned, as a government office no longer satisfied his ambitions. He had planned to travel to China but was offered a job as the private secretary of Foo Choo Choon, his cousin, proprietor of the globally known Tronoh Mines. In 1900, he became the general manager. He worked under Foo Choo Choon for 14 years, until he decided to start his own mining business. His first mine was at Azar Dungsang.
In 1923, he was appointed a justice of peace for the State of Perak.
In 1927, he was elected as a member of the Federal Council to represent the Chinese community. He served for two terms, from 1927 to 1930 and from 1930 to 1933.
The Anti-Opium Movement
Cheah was an active supporter of the anti-opium movement. He was one of the founders of the Perak Anti-Opium Society, which was created in December 1906, and was elected as the treasurer. A similar organization was founded in Penang, presided by Dr.Wu Lien-teh. The first Anti-Opium Conference of the Straits Settlements and Federated Malay States was held in Ipoh in 1907. It attracted around 3,000 people. The second conference was renewed in 1908 with Mr. Foo Choo Choon as the chairman. It was held in Penang, as, at that time, Penang was a significant landmark in the manufacturing and export of opium to Perak and Southern Siam. In addition, mass meetings were conducted during those years.
By the time the International Opium Convention Treaty was registered with the League of Nations in 1922, Cheah became the President of the Anti-Opium Society. Consequently, in October 1923, a joint Federated Malay States petition for the abolition of the opium trade was strengthened by 2,000 signatures. The ban on opium was finally applied 20 years after the beginning of the campaign. Cheah had dedicated 30 years of his life to the cause.
Benevolent works
1904: Donated a plot of land for the construction of the first Ipoh Maternity Hospital
1919: Instituted the Cheah Boon Hean Scholarship at his former school, King Edward VII School.
1922: Instituted the competitive Cheah Cheang Lim Scholarship in Anderson School, Anglo-Chinese School and St. Michael's Institution in Ipoh.
1924: Donated $500 to Westminster College in Fujian, China and was the third largest donor.
1927: Donated a classroom in the new Anglo-Chinese Girls' School
Clubs and organizations
Committee member of the Perak Literary and Debating Society
Committee member of Public Health Education, Kuala Lumpur
Founding member of the Chinese Association of Malaya, Perak Turf Club and the Chinese Widows and Orphans Institution
Patron of Hu Yew Seah, Penang
President of the Radio Club, Penang
Honorary memberships
Ipoh Club
Life memberships
Royal Society of the Arts
Royal Empire Society
British Institute of Philosophical Studies
Ipoh Gymkhana Club (now known as the Perak Turf Club)
Garden Club, Singapore
Memberships
Association of British Malaya
Red Cross Society of China
Chinese World Student Association of Shanghai
Chinese Recreation Clubs of Penang, Selangor and Perak
Chinese Chambers of Commerce of Perak and Penang
Anglo-Chinese School Union, Penang
Chinese Merchants Club, Penang
Cheang Chew Hoy Kwan, Penang
Chin Sim Seah, Ipoh
Chin Woo Seah, Ipoh
Decrepit Ward Fund, Taiping
Trusteeships
Hokkien Kong Huey
Chinese Widows and Orphans Institution
Wah Yen Yee Theong (Chinese New Cemetery)
Yok Choy School
Perak Mining and Planting Association
Cheah Kongsi, Penang
Properties
Perak Lodge in Leith Street, George Town, Penang.
Vihara Lodge in Jalan Tambun, Ipoh, Perak.
Contributed to Penang Hill by building 'Westspur', a bungalow accessible via the Hill Railway.
Adorable at Tanjung Bungah, Penang.
Cheah Kongsi
Cheah belonged to the third generation of the Cheah family trustees of Cheah Kongsi (谢公司) in Penang, his grandfather and father before him. He was also appointed honorary secretary. In 1918, he revised the rules and regulations of the organization to adjust to those times. The new constitution was published in 1921. Moreover, he undertook research on the Cheah history and lineage in China, the Cheah Kongsi history and the family cemetery, and came up with a pictorial compilation. In 1927, he was exempted from the obligation of attending the monthly meetings, due to his increasing commitment to the Federated Malay States. From 1931 to 1933, after the President, Cheah Choo Yew, died, Cheah Cheang Lim contributed to the renovation of the Cheah Kongsi. In 1934, he resigned his trusteeship, after 17 years of service, from 1917 to 1934.
Volunteering
In 1924, Cheah was requested by Colonel Parr to instill the volunteering spirit of the Straits Chinese youth. He thus volunteered as a second lieutenant and appointed Officer Commanding (OC), Chinese Platoon 1, in the Malayan Volunteer Infantry in Perak. In 1930, he was promoted to lieutenant.
Family life
In 1896, Cheah married Khoo Pek Hua, a Penang-born Straits Chinese woman. She died on 6 March 1930, due to illness and the grief of losing of three daughters within five years. She was buried at the Cheah family cemetery at Pulau Tikus, Penang. She left Cheang Lim with one son and one daughter, named Cheah Ghim Leng and Cheah Liew Pin, respectively. Ghim Leng was previously a sergeant in the Chinese Company of the Penang and Province Wellesley Volunteer Force, before taking over his father's business in Ipoh. Later, he was appointed Officer Commanding Chinese Platoon I, Malayan Volunteer Infantry, in Perak. In 1935, he was elected a justice of the peace. In the beginning of the year 1941, he was awarded the Order of the British Empire and became a member of the Perak State Council.
Cheah remarried in July 1930. His second wife was an English-educated lady named Khoo Chin Choo. The couple adopted a girl named Cheah Liew Khin.
Later Years
After serving in the Federal Council, he retired from public life. He nevertheless hosted the occasional 'At Home', attended by honorable guests. Upon reaching 60 years of age, he hired Francis Cooray, author and journalist of The Malay Mail to write his biography. In 1946, he also helped in leading the formation of the second/third Penang Clerical Union
Cheah died on 16 November 1948, aged 77, in his home, at Leith Street, Penang. He was buried at Pulau Tikus, Penang. Lorong Cheah Cheang Lim in Ipoh, Perak is named after him.
References
People from Perak
1875 births
1948 deaths
Malaysian people of Hokkien descent
Hokkien businesspeople | [
"Cheah Cheang Lim (; 6 December 1875 – 15 November 1948) was born in Taiping, Perak, Malaysia.",
"Brought up by his father, Cheah Boon Hean, who was in the trading business, he grew up to become a businessman and miner.",
"He was introduced to the tin mining industries of the time by his uncle Foo Choo Choon, the 'Tin King', who hired him as his attorney.",
"Later, Cheah Cheang Lim was appointed to manage his affairs.",
"Eventually, he started his own company.",
"He also invested in rubber estates but his main interest remained in the tin business.",
"Cheah was also known as a social reformer whose concerns were spread across various issues.",
"He was involved in the anti-opium movement and campaigned for Chinese status in the Malay States, including such efforts as debating against the Banishment Enactment to non-Malays born in the States.",
"He furthermore dedicated his life to promoting and improving Malayan education by instituting several scholarship schemes, including the Queen's Scholarships in British Malaya and through donations.",
"Volunteering in the Malayan Volunteer Infantry was a significant part of his later career, as he led the younger generation in a volunteer programme.",
"He was active in several clubs and societies across Malaysia, but mainly in Perak and Penang, where he resided.",
"He was lastly elected as a Federal Counsellor, as a representative of the Chinese population.",
"Early life\nCheah Cheang Lim was born to a Penang Hokkien family in Taiping and started out as a postal assistant on the Perak frontier.",
"Growing up, he spent his early years in Taiping.",
"His father was Cheah Boon Hean, son of Cheah Teah and a businessman and trader.",
"His mother was Foo Kang Nyong.",
"At that time, British administrative branches occupied the area, together with the Perak Sikhs, the police force.",
"The Residential System was in practice.",
"Later, a great fire destroyed the Cheah house.",
"The family was invited to stay at Dr. Legge's residence until Cheah Boon Hean made new arrangements.",
"Education\nAfter attending a few temporary schools in Taiping, Cheah studied at the Central Government School, managed by Mr. J.L.",
"Greene, now known as the King Edward VII School, up to Standard VI.",
"In 1889, he finished school and applied for a job at the Land Office in Taiping.",
"He was rejected due to his age.",
"He went back to school, became a pupil teacher and studied privately for one year.",
"Career\nIn 1890, he became a probationer at the Posts and Telegraphs Department.",
"Later, he went to replace a brother officer in Port Weld and subsequently, to his friend Joo Sip San at Lahat, Perak.",
"Cheah was a Malay scholar and helped with English correspondence, while he also taught the staff at the Posts and Telegraphs Department to read and write in the Malay language.",
"In 1894, Cheah took over R. Bulner as the postmaster in Tanjung Malim.",
"He was later transferred back to Lahat, where he resigned, as a government office no longer satisfied his ambitions.",
"He had planned to travel to China but was offered a job as the private secretary of Foo Choo Choon, his cousin, proprietor of the globally known Tronoh Mines.",
"In 1900, he became the general manager.",
"He worked under Foo Choo Choon for 14 years, until he decided to start his own mining business.",
"His first mine was at Azar Dungsang.",
"In 1923, he was appointed a justice of peace for the State of Perak.",
"In 1927, he was elected as a member of the Federal Council to represent the Chinese community.",
"He served for two terms, from 1927 to 1930 and from 1930 to 1933.",
"The Anti-Opium Movement\nCheah was an active supporter of the anti-opium movement.",
"He was one of the founders of the Perak Anti-Opium Society, which was created in December 1906, and was elected as the treasurer.",
"A similar organization was founded in Penang, presided by Dr.Wu Lien-teh.",
"The first Anti-Opium Conference of the Straits Settlements and Federated Malay States was held in Ipoh in 1907.",
"It attracted around 3,000 people.",
"The second conference was renewed in 1908 with Mr. Foo Choo Choon as the chairman.",
"It was held in Penang, as, at that time, Penang was a significant landmark in the manufacturing and export of opium to Perak and Southern Siam.",
"In addition, mass meetings were conducted during those years.",
"By the time the International Opium Convention Treaty was registered with the League of Nations in 1922, Cheah became the President of the Anti-Opium Society.",
"Consequently, in October 1923, a joint Federated Malay States petition for the abolition of the opium trade was strengthened by 2,000 signatures.",
"The ban on opium was finally applied 20 years after the beginning of the campaign.",
"Cheah had dedicated 30 years of his life to the cause.",
"Benevolent works\n1904: Donated a plot of land for the construction of the first Ipoh Maternity Hospital\n1919: Instituted the Cheah Boon Hean Scholarship at his former school, King Edward VII School.",
"1922: Instituted the competitive Cheah Cheang Lim Scholarship in Anderson School, Anglo-Chinese School and St. Michael's Institution in Ipoh.",
"1924: Donated $500 to Westminster College in Fujian, China and was the third largest donor.",
"1927: Donated a classroom in the new Anglo-Chinese Girls' School\n\nClubs and organizations\nCommittee member of the Perak Literary and Debating Society\nCommittee member of Public Health Education, Kuala Lumpur\nFounding member of the Chinese Association of Malaya, Perak Turf Club and the Chinese Widows and Orphans Institution\nPatron of Hu Yew Seah, Penang\nPresident of the Radio Club, Penang\n\nHonorary memberships\nIpoh Club\n\nLife memberships\nRoyal Society of the Arts\nRoyal Empire Society\nBritish Institute of Philosophical Studies\nIpoh Gymkhana Club (now known as the Perak Turf Club)\nGarden Club, Singapore\n\nMemberships\nAssociation of British Malaya\nRed Cross Society of China\nChinese World Student Association of Shanghai\nChinese Recreation Clubs of Penang, Selangor and Perak\nChinese Chambers of Commerce of Perak and Penang\nAnglo-Chinese School Union, Penang\nChinese Merchants Club, Penang\nCheang Chew Hoy Kwan, Penang\nChin Sim Seah, Ipoh\nChin Woo Seah, Ipoh\nDecrepit Ward Fund, Taiping\n\nTrusteeships\nHokkien Kong Huey\nChinese Widows and Orphans Institution \nWah Yen Yee Theong (Chinese New Cemetery)\nYok Choy School\nPerak Mining and Planting Association\nCheah Kongsi, Penang\n\nProperties\nPerak Lodge in Leith Street, George Town, Penang.",
"Vihara Lodge in Jalan Tambun, Ipoh, Perak.",
"Contributed to Penang Hill by building 'Westspur', a bungalow accessible via the Hill Railway.",
"Adorable at Tanjung Bungah, Penang.",
"Cheah Kongsi\nCheah belonged to the third generation of the Cheah family trustees of Cheah Kongsi (谢公司) in Penang, his grandfather and father before him.",
"He was also appointed honorary secretary.",
"In 1918, he revised the rules and regulations of the organization to adjust to those times.",
"The new constitution was published in 1921.",
"Moreover, he undertook research on the Cheah history and lineage in China, the Cheah Kongsi history and the family cemetery, and came up with a pictorial compilation.",
"In 1927, he was exempted from the obligation of attending the monthly meetings, due to his increasing commitment to the Federated Malay States.",
"From 1931 to 1933, after the President, Cheah Choo Yew, died, Cheah Cheang Lim contributed to the renovation of the Cheah Kongsi.",
"In 1934, he resigned his trusteeship, after 17 years of service, from 1917 to 1934.",
"Volunteering\nIn 1924, Cheah was requested by Colonel Parr to instill the volunteering spirit of the Straits Chinese youth.",
"He thus volunteered as a second lieutenant and appointed Officer Commanding (OC), Chinese Platoon 1, in the Malayan Volunteer Infantry in Perak.",
"In 1930, he was promoted to lieutenant.",
"Family life\nIn 1896, Cheah married Khoo Pek Hua, a Penang-born Straits Chinese woman.",
"She died on 6 March 1930, due to illness and the grief of losing of three daughters within five years.",
"She was buried at the Cheah family cemetery at Pulau Tikus, Penang.",
"She left Cheang Lim with one son and one daughter, named Cheah Ghim Leng and Cheah Liew Pin, respectively.",
"Ghim Leng was previously a sergeant in the Chinese Company of the Penang and Province Wellesley Volunteer Force, before taking over his father's business in Ipoh.",
"Later, he was appointed Officer Commanding Chinese Platoon I, Malayan Volunteer Infantry, in Perak.",
"In 1935, he was elected a justice of the peace.",
"In the beginning of the year 1941, he was awarded the Order of the British Empire and became a member of the Perak State Council.",
"Cheah remarried in July 1930.",
"His second wife was an English-educated lady named Khoo Chin Choo.",
"The couple adopted a girl named Cheah Liew Khin.",
"Later Years\nAfter serving in the Federal Council, he retired from public life.",
"He nevertheless hosted the occasional 'At Home', attended by honorable guests.",
"Upon reaching 60 years of age, he hired Francis Cooray, author and journalist of The Malay Mail to write his biography.",
"In 1946, he also helped in leading the formation of the second/third Penang Clerical Union\n\nCheah died on 16 November 1948, aged 77, in his home, at Leith Street, Penang.",
"He was buried at Pulau Tikus, Penang.",
"Lorong Cheah Cheang Lim in Ipoh, Perak is named after him.",
"References\n\nPeople from Perak\n1875 births\n1948 deaths\nMalaysian people of Hokkien descent\nHokkien businesspeople"
] | [
"Cheah Cheang Lim was born in Taiping, Perak, Malaysia.",
"He was brought up by his father who was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"He was introduced to the tin mining industries by his uncle, who hired him as his attorney.",
"Cheah Cheang Lim was appointed to manage his affairs.",
"He started his own company.",
"His main interest was in the tin business.",
"Cheah was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"He was involved in the anti-opium movement as well as campaigning for Chinese status in the Malay States.",
"He devoted his life to improving Malayan education by instituting several scholarship schemes, including the Queen's Scholarships in British Malaya.",
"He led the younger generation in a volunteer programme while volunteering in the Malayan Volunteer Infantry.",
"He resided in Penang and Perak where he was active in several clubs and societies.",
"He was elected as a Federal Counsellor to represent the Chinese population.",
"Cheah Cheang was born to a Penang Hokkien family in Taiping and started out as a postal assistant on the Perak frontier.",
"He spent his formative years in Taiping.",
"His father was a businessman and trader.",
"His mother was a woman.",
"The British administrative branches occupied the area with the Perak Sikhs.",
"The Residential System was being used.",
"The Cheah house was destroyed in a fire.",
"The family was invited to stay at Dr. Legge's residence until new arrangements were made.",
"After attending a few temporary schools in Taiping, Cheah studied at the Central Government School.",
"The school was known as the King Edward VII School.",
"He applied for a job at the Land Office after finishing school.",
"He was turned down because of his age.",
"He studied privately for a year and became a teacher.",
"He worked at the Posts and Telegraphs Department.",
"He went to replace a brother officer in Port Weld and then to his friend at Lahat, Perak.",
"The staff at the Posts and Telegraphs Department were taught to read and write in the Malay language by Cheah, who was a Malay scholar.",
"Cheah took over as the postmaster in 1894.",
"He resigned as a government office no longer fulfilled his ambitions after he was transferred back to Lahat.",
"He was offered a job as the private secretary of Foo Choo Choon, his cousin and proprietor of the globally known Tronoh Mines.",
"He became the general manager in 1900.",
"He decided to start his own mining business after 14 years working for Foo Choo Choon.",
"His first mine was in the area.",
"He was appointed a justice of peace in 1923.",
"He was elected to the Federal Council in 1927 to represent the Chinese community.",
"He served from 1927 to 1930 and from 1930 to 1933.",
"The anti-opium movement was supported by Cheah.",
"He was one of the founding members of the Perak Anti-Opium Society.",
"A similar organization was founded in Penang.",
"The Straits Settlements and Federated Malay States held the first Anti-Opium Conference in 1907.",
"It attracted a lot of people.",
"The second conference was chaired by Mr. Foo Choo Choon.",
"Penang was a significant landmark in the manufacturing and export of opium to Perak and Southern Siam.",
"Mass meetings were conducted during those years.",
"Cheah became the President of the Anti-Opium Society when the International Opium Convention was registered with the League of Nations.",
"In October 1923, a petition for the abolition of the opium trade was strengthened by 2,000 signatures.",
"After the beginning of the campaign, the ban on opium was applied.",
"Cheah devoted 30 years of his life to the cause.",
"In 1904, he donated a plot of land for the construction of the Ipoh Maternity Hospital.",
"The Cheah Cheang Lim Scholarship was instituted in Anderson School, Anglo-Chinese School and St. Michael's Institution in Ipoh.",
"The third largest donor was donated $500 to Westminster College in China in 1924.",
"A member of the Perak Literary and Debating Society donated a classroom to the new Anglo- Chinese Girls' School Clubs.",
"The vihara lodge is in Ipoh.",
"The bungalow 'Westspur' is accessible via the Hill Railway.",
"There is an adorable place in Penang.",
"His grandfather and father were trustees of Cheah Kongsi in Penang.",
"He was made an assistant secretary.",
"The organization's rules and regulations were revised in 1918.",
"In 1921, the new constitution was published.",
"He researched the Cheah history in China, the Cheah Kongsi history and the family cemetery and came up with a collection.",
"He was not required to attend the monthly meetings in 1927 due to his increasing commitment to the Federated Malay States.",
"The renovation of the Cheah Kongsi was started after the death of the President.",
"He resigned his Trusteeship in 1934 after 17 years of service.",
"The volunteering spirit of the Straits Chinese youth was instilled by Cheah.",
"He volunteered to be a second lieutenant in the Malayan Volunteer Infantry in Perak.",
"He was promoted to lieutenant in 1930.",
"Cheah married a Straits Chinese woman in 1896.",
"She died due to illness and the grief of losing three daughters within five years.",
"She was buried in Penang.",
"She had two children, one son and one daughter, named Cheah Ghim Leng and Cheah Liew Pin.",
"Ghim Leng took over his father's business in Ipoh after being a sergeant in the Chinese Company of the Penang and Province Wellesley Volunteer Force.",
"He was appointed Officer Commanding Chinese Platoon I, Malayan Volunteer Infantry in Perak.",
"He was elected a justice of the peace in 1935.",
"He was awarded the Order of the British Empire in 1941 and became a member of the Perak State Council.",
"Cheah was married in July 1930.",
"His second wife was an English woman.",
"Cheah Liew Khin was adopted by the couple.",
"He retired from public life after serving in the Federal Council.",
"The occasional 'At Home' was hosted by him.",
"Francis Cooray, author and journalist of The Malay Mail, was hired to write his biography after he reached 60 years of age.",
"He died on November 16, 1948, at the age of 77, at his home at Leith Street, Penang, after helping in leading the formation of the second/third Penang Clerical Union Cheah.",
"He was buried in Penang.",
"In Ipoh, Perak is named after him.",
"There are people from Perak who died in 1948, Malaysian people who died in 1948, and business people from Hokkien descent."
] | <mask> (; 6 December 1875 – 15 November 1948) was born in Taiping, Perak, Malaysia. Brought up by his father, <mask>, who was in the trading business, he grew up to become a businessman and miner. He was introduced to the tin mining industries of the time by his uncle Foo Choo Choon, the 'Tin King', who hired him as his attorney. Later, <mask> was appointed to manage his affairs. Eventually, he started his own company. He also invested in rubber estates but his main interest remained in the tin business. <mask> was also known as a social reformer whose concerns were spread across various issues.He was involved in the anti-opium movement and campaigned for Chinese status in the Malay States, including such efforts as debating against the Banishment Enactment to non-Malays born in the States. He furthermore dedicated his life to promoting and improving Malayan education by instituting several scholarship schemes, including the Queen's Scholarships in British Malaya and through donations. Volunteering in the Malayan Volunteer Infantry was a significant part of his later career, as he led the younger generation in a volunteer programme. He was active in several clubs and societies across Malaysia, but mainly in Perak and Penang, where he resided. He was lastly elected as a Federal Counsellor, as a representative of the Chinese population. Early life
<mask> <mask> <mask> was born to a Penang Hokkien family in Taiping and started out as a postal assistant on the Perak frontier. Growing up, he spent his early years in Taiping.His father was <mask> Boon Hean, son of <mask> Teah and a businessman and trader. His mother was Foo Kang Nyong. At that time, British administrative branches occupied the area, together with the Perak Sikhs, the police force. The Residential System was in practice. Later, a great fire destroyed the Cheah house. The family was invited to stay at Dr. Legge's residence until <mask> Boon Hean made new arrangements. Education
After attending a few temporary schools in Taiping, Cheah studied at the Central Government School, managed by Mr. J.L.Greene, now known as the King Edward VII School, up to Standard VI. In 1889, he finished school and applied for a job at the Land Office in Taiping. He was rejected due to his age. He went back to school, became a pupil teacher and studied privately for one year. Career
In 1890, he became a probationer at the Posts and Telegraphs Department. Later, he went to replace a brother officer in Port Weld and subsequently, to his friend Joo Sip San at Lahat, Perak. <mask> was a Malay scholar and helped with English correspondence, while he also taught the staff at the Posts and Telegraphs Department to read and write in the Malay language.In 1894, <mask> took over R. Bulner as the postmaster in Tanjung Malim. He was later transferred back to Lahat, where he resigned, as a government office no longer satisfied his ambitions. He had planned to travel to China but was offered a job as the private secretary of Foo Choo Choon, his cousin, proprietor of the globally known Tronoh Mines. In 1900, he became the general manager. He worked under Foo Choo Choon for 14 years, until he decided to start his own mining business. His first mine was at Azar Dungsang. In 1923, he was appointed a justice of peace for the State of Perak.In 1927, he was elected as a member of the Federal Council to represent the Chinese community. He served for two terms, from 1927 to 1930 and from 1930 to 1933. The Anti-Opium Movement
Cheah was an active supporter of the anti-opium movement. He was one of the founders of the Perak Anti-Opium Society, which was created in December 1906, and was elected as the treasurer. A similar organization was founded in Penang, presided by Dr.Wu Lien-teh. The first Anti-Opium Conference of the Straits Settlements and Federated Malay States was held in Ipoh in 1907. It attracted around 3,000 people.The second conference was renewed in 1908 with Mr. Foo Choo Choon as the chairman. It was held in Penang, as, at that time, Penang was a significant landmark in the manufacturing and export of opium to Perak and Southern Siam. In addition, mass meetings were conducted during those years. By the time the International Opium Convention Treaty was registered with the League of Nations in 1922, <mask> became the President of the Anti-Opium Society. Consequently, in October 1923, a joint Federated Malay States petition for the abolition of the opium trade was strengthened by 2,000 signatures. The ban on opium was finally applied 20 years after the beginning of the campaign. Cheah had dedicated 30 years of his life to the cause.Benevolent works
1904: Donated a plot of land for the construction of the first Ipoh Maternity Hospital
1919: Instituted the Cheah Boon Hean Scholarship at his former school, King Edward VII School. 1922: Instituted the competitive Cheah Cheang Lim Scholarship in Anderson School, Anglo-Chinese School and St. Michael's Institution in Ipoh. 1924: Donated $500 to Westminster College in Fujian, China and was the third largest donor. 1927: Donated a classroom in the new Anglo-Chinese Girls' School
Clubs and organizations
Committee member of the Perak Literary and Debating Society
Committee member of Public Health Education, Kuala Lumpur
Founding member of the Chinese Association of Malaya, Perak Turf Club and the Chinese Widows and Orphans Institution
Patron of Hu Yew Seah, Penang
President of the Radio Club, Penang
Honorary memberships
Ipoh Club
Life memberships
Royal Society of the Arts
Royal Empire Society
British Institute of Philosophical Studies
Ipoh Gymkhana Club (now known as the Perak Turf Club)
Garden Club, Singapore
Memberships
Association of British Malaya
Red Cross Society of China
Chinese World Student Association of Shanghai
Chinese Recreation Clubs of Penang, Selangor and Perak
Chinese Chambers of Commerce of Perak and Penang
Anglo-Chinese School Union, Penang
Chinese Merchants Club, Penang
Cheang Chew Hoy Kwan, Penang
Chin Sim Seah, Ipoh
Chin Woo Seah, Ipoh
Decrepit Ward Fund, Taiping
Trusteeships
Hokkien Kong Huey
Chinese Widows and Orphans Institution
Wah Yen Yee Theong (Chinese New Cemetery)
Yok Choy School
Perak Mining and Planting Association
Cheah Kongsi, Penang
Properties
Perak Lodge in Leith Street, George Town, Penang. Vihara Lodge in Jalan Tambun, Ipoh, Perak. Contributed to Penang Hill by building 'Westspur', a bungalow accessible via the Hill Railway. Adorable at Tanjung Bungah, Penang.Cheah Kongsi
Cheah belonged to the third generation of the Cheah family trustees of Cheah Kongsi (谢公司) in Penang, his grandfather and father before him. He was also appointed honorary secretary. In 1918, he revised the rules and regulations of the organization to adjust to those times. The new constitution was published in 1921. Moreover, he undertook research on the Cheah history and lineage in China, the Cheah Kongsi history and the family cemetery, and came up with a pictorial compilation. In 1927, he was exempted from the obligation of attending the monthly meetings, due to his increasing commitment to the Federated Malay States. From 1931 to 1933, after the President, <mask> Choo Yew, died, <mask> <mask> <mask> contributed to the renovation of the Cheah Kongsi.In 1934, he resigned his trusteeship, after 17 years of service, from 1917 to 1934. Volunteering
In 1924, Cheah was requested by Colonel Parr to instill the volunteering spirit of the Straits Chinese youth. He thus volunteered as a second lieutenant and appointed Officer Commanding (OC), Chinese Platoon 1, in the Malayan Volunteer Infantry in Perak. In 1930, he was promoted to lieutenant. Family life
In 1896, <mask> married Khoo Pek Hua, a Penang-born Straits Chinese woman. She died on 6 March 1930, due to illness and the grief of losing of three daughters within five years. She was buried at the Cheah family cemetery at Pulau Tikus, Penang.She left <mask> <mask> with one son and one daughter, named Cheah Ghim Leng and Cheah Liew Pin, respectively. Ghim Leng was previously a sergeant in the Chinese Company of the Penang and Province Wellesley Volunteer Force, before taking over his father's business in Ipoh. Later, he was appointed Officer Commanding Chinese Platoon I, Malayan Volunteer Infantry, in Perak. In 1935, he was elected a justice of the peace. In the beginning of the year 1941, he was awarded the Order of the British Empire and became a member of the Perak State Council. <mask> remarried in July 1930. His second wife was an English-educated lady named Khoo Chin Choo.The couple adopted a girl named <mask> Liew Khin. Later Years
After serving in the Federal Council, he retired from public life. He nevertheless hosted the occasional 'At Home', attended by honorable guests. Upon reaching 60 years of age, he hired Francis Cooray, author and journalist of The Malay Mail to write his biography. In 1946, he also helped in leading the formation of the second/third Penang Clerical Union
Cheah died on 16 November 1948, aged 77, in his home, at Leith Street, Penang. He was buried at Pulau Tikus, Penang. Lorong Cheah Cheang Lim in Ipoh, Perak is named after him.References
People from Perak
1875 births
1948 deaths
Malaysian people of Hokkien descent
Hokkien businesspeople | [
"Cheah Cheang Lim",
"Cheah Boon Hean",
"Cheah Cheang Lim",
"Cheah",
"Cheah",
"Cheang",
"Lim",
"Cheah",
"Cheah",
"Cheah",
"Cheah",
"Cheah",
"Cheah",
"Cheah",
"Cheah",
"Cheang",
"Lim",
"Cheah",
"Cheang",
"Lim",
"Cheah",
"Cheah"
] | <mask> was born in Taiping, Perak, Malaysia. He was brought up by his father who was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 He was introduced to the tin mining industries by his uncle, who hired him as his attorney. Cheah Cheang <mask> was appointed to manage his affairs. He started his own company. His main interest was in the tin business. Cheah was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217He was involved in the anti-opium movement as well as campaigning for Chinese status in the Malay States. He devoted his life to improving Malayan education by instituting several scholarship schemes, including the Queen's Scholarships in British Malaya. He led the younger generation in a volunteer programme while volunteering in the Malayan Volunteer Infantry. He resided in Penang and Perak where he was active in several clubs and societies. He was elected as a Federal Counsellor to represent the Chinese population. <mask> Cheang was born to a Penang Hokkien family in Taiping and started out as a postal assistant on the Perak frontier. He spent his formative years in Taiping.His father was a businessman and trader. His mother was a woman. The British administrative branches occupied the area with the Perak Sikhs. The Residential System was being used. The Cheah house was destroyed in a fire. The family was invited to stay at Dr. Legge's residence until new arrangements were made. After attending a few temporary schools in Taiping, Cheah studied at the Central Government School.The school was known as the King Edward VII School. He applied for a job at the Land Office after finishing school. He was turned down because of his age. He studied privately for a year and became a teacher. He worked at the Posts and Telegraphs Department. He went to replace a brother officer in Port Weld and then to his friend at Lahat, Perak. The staff at the Posts and Telegraphs Department were taught to read and write in the Malay language by <mask>, who was a Malay scholar.<mask> Choo Choon, his cousin and proprietor of the globally known Tronoh Mines. He became the general manager in 1900. He decided to start his own mining business after 14 years working for Foo Choo Choon. His first mine was in the area. He was appointed a justice of peace in 1923.He was elected to the Federal Council in 1927 to represent the Chinese community. He served from 1927 to 1930 and from 1930 to 1933. The anti-opium movement was supported by <mask>. He was one of the founding members of the Perak Anti-Opium Society. A similar organization was founded in Penang. The Straits Settlements and Federated Malay States held the first Anti-Opium Conference in 1907. It attracted a lot of people.The second conference was chaired by Mr. Foo Choo Choon. Penang was a significant landmark in the manufacturing and export of opium to Perak and Southern Siam. Mass meetings were conducted during those years. <mask> became the President of the Anti-Opium Society when the International Opium Convention was registered with the League of Nations. In October 1923, a petition for the abolition of the opium trade was strengthened by 2,000 signatures. After the beginning of the campaign, the ban on opium was applied. <mask> devoted 30 years of his life to the cause.In 1904, he donated a plot of land for the construction of the Ipoh Maternity Hospital. The Cheah Cheang Lim Scholarship was instituted in Anderson School, Anglo-Chinese School and St. Michael's Institution in Ipoh. The third largest donor was donated $500 to Westminster College in China in 1924. A member of the Perak Literary and Debating Society donated a classroom to the new Anglo- Chinese Girls' School Clubs. The vihara lodge is in Ipoh. The bungalow 'Westspur' is accessible via the Hill Railway. There is an adorable place in Penang.His grandfather and father were trustees of Cheah Kongsi in Penang. He was made an assistant secretary. The organization's rules and regulations were revised in 1918. In 1921, the new constitution was published. He researched the Cheah history in China, the Cheah Kongsi history and the family cemetery and came up with a collection. He was not required to attend the monthly meetings in 1927 due to his increasing commitment to the Federated Malay States. The renovation of the Cheah Kongsi was started after the death of the President.He resigned his Trusteeship in 1934 after 17 years of service. The volunteering spirit of the Straits Chinese youth was instilled by <mask>. He volunteered to be a second lieutenant in the Malayan Volunteer Infantry in Perak. He was promoted to lieutenant in 1930. <mask> married a Straits Chinese woman in 1896. She died due to illness and the grief of losing three daughters within five years. She was buried in Penang.She had two children, one son and one daughter, named <mask> Ghim Leng and <mask> Liew Pin. Ghim Leng took over his father's business in Ipoh after being a sergeant in the Chinese Company of the Penang and Province Wellesley Volunteer Force. He was appointed Officer Commanding Chinese Platoon I, Malayan Volunteer Infantry in Perak. He was elected a justice of the peace in 1935. He was awarded the Order of the British Empire in 1941 and became a member of the Perak State Council. <mask> was married in July 1930. His second wife was an English woman.<mask> Liew Khin was adopted by the couple. He retired from public life after serving in the Federal Council. The occasional 'At Home' was hosted by him. Francis Cooray, author and journalist of The Malay Mail, was hired to write his biography after he reached 60 years of age. He died on November 16, 1948, at the age of 77, at his home at Leith Street, Penang, after helping in leading the formation of the second/third Penang Clerical Union Cheah. He was buried in Penang. In Ipoh, Perak is named after him.There are people from Perak who died in 1948, Malaysian people who died in 1948, and business people from Hokkien descent. | [
"Chh Cheang Lim",
"Lim",
"Cheah",
"Cheah",
"Cheahoo",
"Cheah",
"Cheah",
"Cheah",
"Cheah",
"Cheah",
"Cheah",
"Cheah",
"Cheah",
"Cheah"
] |
4827193 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert%20Barr%20%28writer%29 | Robert Barr (writer) | Robert Barr (16 September 1849 – 21 October 1912) was a Scottish-Canadian short story writer and novelist.
Early years in Canada
Robert Barr was born in Barony, Lanark, Scotland to Robert Barr and Jane Watson. In 1854, he emigrated with his parents to Upper Canada at the age of four years old. His family settled on a farm near the village of Muirkirk. Barr assisted his father with his job as a carpenter, and developed a sound work ethic. Robert Barr then worked as a steel smelter for a number of years before he was educated at Toronto Normal School in 1873 to train as a teacher.
After graduating Toronto Normal School, Barr became a teacher, and eventually headmaster/principal of the Central School of Windsor, Ontario in 1874. While Barr worked as head master of the Central School of Windsor, Ontario, he began to contribute short stories—often based on personal experiences, and recorded his work. In August 1876, when he was 27, Robert Barr married Ontario-born Eva Bennett, who was 21. According to the 1891 England Census, the couple appears to have had three children, Laura, William, and Andrew.
In 1876, Barr quit his teaching position to become a staff member of publication, and later on became the news editor for the Detroit Free Press. Barr wrote for this newspaper under the pseudonym, "Luke Sharp." The idea for this pseudonym was inspired during his morning commute to work when Barr saw a sign that read "Luke Sharp, Undertaker." In 1881, Barr left Canada for England in order to start a new weekly version of "The Detroit Free Press Magazine."
London years
In 1881 Barr decided to "vamoose the ranch", as he called the process of immigration in search of literary fame outside of Canada, and relocated to London to continue to write/establish the weekly English edition of the Detroit Free Press. During the 1890s, he broadened his literary works, and started writing novels from the popular crime genre. In 1892 he founded the magazine The Idler, choosing Jerome K. Jerome as his collaborator (wanting, as Jerome said, "a popular name"). He retired from its co-editorship in 1895.
In London of the 1890s Barr became a more prolific author—publishing a book a year—and was familiar with many of the best-selling authors of his day, including Arnold Bennett, Horatio Gilbert Parker, Joseph Conrad, Bret Harte, Rudyard Kipling, H. Rider Haggard, H. G. Wells, and George Robert Gissing. Barr was well-spoken, well-cultured due to travel, and considered a "socializer."
Because most of Barr's literary output was of the crime genre, his works were highly in vogue. As Sherlock Holmes stories were becoming well-known, Barr wrote and published in the Idler the first Holmes parody, "The Adventures of "Sherlaw Kombs" (1892), a spoof that was continued a decade later in another Barr story, "The Adventure of the Second Swag" (1904). Despite those jibes at the growing Holmes phenomenon, Barr remained on very good terms with its creator Arthur Conan Doyle. In Memories and Adventures, a serial memoir published 1923–24, Doyle described him as "a volcanic Anglo—or rather Scot-American, with a violent manner, a wealth of strong adjectives, and one of the kindest natures underneath it all".
In 1904, Robert Barr completed an unfinished novel for Methuen & Co. by the recently deceased American author Stephen Crane entitled The O'Ruddy, a romance. Despite his reservations at taking on the project, Barr reluctantly finished the last eight chapters due to his longstanding friendship with Crane and his common-law wife, Cora, the war correspondent and bordello owner.
Death
The 1911 census places Robert Barr, "a writer of fiction," at Hillhead, Woldingham, Surrey, a small village southeast of London, living with his wife, Eva, their son William, and two female servants. At this home, the author died from heart disease on 21 October 1912.
Writing Style
Barr's volumes of short stories were often written with an ironic twist in the story with a witty, appealing narrator telling the story. Barr's other works also include numerous fiction and non-fiction contributions to periodicals. A few of his mystery stories and stories of the supernatural were put in anthologies, and a few novels have been republished. His writings have also attracted scholarly attention. His narrative personae also featured moral and editorial interpolations within their tales. Barr's achievements were recognized by an honorary degree from the University of Michigan in 1900.
His protagonists were journalists, princes, detectives, deserving commercial and social climbers, financiers, the new woman of bright wit and aggressive accomplishment, and lords. Often, his characters were stereotypical and romanticized.
Barr wrote fiction in an episode-like format. He developed this style when working as an editor for the newspaper Detroit Press. Barr developed his skill with the anecdote and vignette; often only the central character serves to link the nearly self-contained chapters of the novels.
Works
In a Steamer Chair and Other Stories (Thirteen short stories by one of the most famous writers in his day -1892)
"The Face And The Mask" (1894) consists of twenty-four delightful short stories.
In the Midst of Alarms (1894, 1900, 1912), a story of the attempted Fenian invasion of Canada in 1866.
From Whose Bourne (1896) Novel in which the main character, William Brenton, searches for truth to set his wife free.
One Day's Courtship (1896)
Revenge! (Collection of 20 short stories, Alfred Hitchcock-like style, thriller with a surprise ending)
The Strong Arm
A Woman Intervenes (1896), a story of love, finance, and American journalism.
Tekla: A Romance of Love and War (1898)
Jennie Baxter, Journalist (1899)
The Unchanging East (1900)
The Victors (1901)
A Prince of Good Fellows (1902)
Over The Border: A Romance (1903)
The O'Ruddy, A Romance, with Stephen Crane (1903)
A Chicago Princess (1904)
The Speculations of John Steele (1905)
The Tempestuous Petticoat (1905–12)
A Rock in the Baltic (1906)
The Triumphs of Eugène Valmont (1906)
The Measure of the Rule (1907)
Young Lord Stranleigh (1908)
Stranleigh's Millions (1909)
The Sword Maker (Medieval action/adventure novel, genre: Historical Fiction-1910)
The Palace of Logs (1912)
"The Ambassadors Pigeons" (1899)
"And the Rigor of the Game" (1892)
"Converted" (1896)
"Count Conrad's Courtship" (1896)
"The Count's Apology" (1896)
"A Deal on Change " (1896)
"The Exposure of Lord Stanford" (1896)
"Gentlemen: The King!"
"The Hour-Glass" (1899)
"An invitation" (1892)
" A Ladies Man"
"The Long Ladder" (1899)
"Mrs. Tremain" (1892)
" Transformation" (1896)
"The Understudy" (1896)
" The Vengeance of the Dead" (1896)
"The Bromley Gibbert's Story" (1896)
" Out of Thun" (1896)
"The Shadow of Greenback" (1896)
"Flight of the Red Dog" (fiction)
"Lord Stranleigh Abroad" (1913)
"One Day's Courtship and the Herald's of Fame" (1896)
"Cardillac"
"Dr. Barr's Tales"
"The Triumphs of Eugene Valmont"
Sources
References
External links
Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
Jerome K. Jerome, My Life and Times (1926)
Works by or about Robert Barr at HathiTrust
Electronic editions
Works by or about Robert Barr at The Literature Network
FREE Sony Reader e-book version of The Triumph of Eugene Valmon by Robert Barr
1850 births
1912 deaths
19th-century Canadian novelists
19th-century Canadian short story writers
19th-century British male writers
19th-century Scottish novelists
20th-century Canadian male writers
20th-century Canadian novelists
20th-century Canadian short story writers
20th-century Scottish novelists
Canadian male novelists
Canadian male short story writers
Canadian science fiction writers
Detroit Free Press people
Scottish male novelists
Scottish science fiction writers
Scottish short story writers
Scottish emigrants to Canada
Writers from Glasgow | [
"Robert Barr (16 September 1849 – 21 October 1912) was a Scottish-Canadian short story writer and novelist.",
"Early years in Canada \n\nRobert Barr was born in Barony, Lanark, Scotland to Robert Barr and Jane Watson.",
"In 1854, he emigrated with his parents to Upper Canada at the age of four years old.",
"His family settled on a farm near the village of Muirkirk.",
"Barr assisted his father with his job as a carpenter, and developed a sound work ethic.",
"Robert Barr then worked as a steel smelter for a number of years before he was educated at Toronto Normal School in 1873 to train as a teacher.",
"After graduating Toronto Normal School, Barr became a teacher, and eventually headmaster/principal of the Central School of Windsor, Ontario in 1874.",
"While Barr worked as head master of the Central School of Windsor, Ontario, he began to contribute short stories—often based on personal experiences, and recorded his work.",
"In August 1876, when he was 27, Robert Barr married Ontario-born Eva Bennett, who was 21.",
"According to the 1891 England Census, the couple appears to have had three children, Laura, William, and Andrew.",
"In 1876, Barr quit his teaching position to become a staff member of publication, and later on became the news editor for the Detroit Free Press.",
"Barr wrote for this newspaper under the pseudonym, \"Luke Sharp.\"",
"The idea for this pseudonym was inspired during his morning commute to work when Barr saw a sign that read \"Luke Sharp, Undertaker.\"",
"In 1881, Barr left Canada for England in order to start a new weekly version of \"The Detroit Free Press Magazine.\"",
"London years \n\nIn 1881 Barr decided to \"vamoose the ranch\", as he called the process of immigration in search of literary fame outside of Canada, and relocated to London to continue to write/establish the weekly English edition of the Detroit Free Press.",
"During the 1890s, he broadened his literary works, and started writing novels from the popular crime genre.",
"In 1892 he founded the magazine The Idler, choosing Jerome K. Jerome as his collaborator (wanting, as Jerome said, \"a popular name\").",
"He retired from its co-editorship in 1895.",
"In London of the 1890s Barr became a more prolific author—publishing a book a year—and was familiar with many of the best-selling authors of his day, including Arnold Bennett, Horatio Gilbert Parker, Joseph Conrad, Bret Harte, Rudyard Kipling, H. Rider Haggard, H. G. Wells, and George Robert Gissing.",
"Barr was well-spoken, well-cultured due to travel, and considered a \"socializer.\"",
"Because most of Barr's literary output was of the crime genre, his works were highly in vogue.",
"As Sherlock Holmes stories were becoming well-known, Barr wrote and published in the Idler the first Holmes parody, \"The Adventures of \"Sherlaw Kombs\" (1892), a spoof that was continued a decade later in another Barr story, \"The Adventure of the Second Swag\" (1904).",
"Despite those jibes at the growing Holmes phenomenon, Barr remained on very good terms with its creator Arthur Conan Doyle.",
"In Memories and Adventures, a serial memoir published 1923–24, Doyle described him as \"a volcanic Anglo—or rather Scot-American, with a violent manner, a wealth of strong adjectives, and one of the kindest natures underneath it all\".",
"In 1904, Robert Barr completed an unfinished novel for Methuen & Co. by the recently deceased American author Stephen Crane entitled The O'Ruddy, a romance.",
"Despite his reservations at taking on the project, Barr reluctantly finished the last eight chapters due to his longstanding friendship with Crane and his common-law wife, Cora, the war correspondent and bordello owner.",
"Death \n\nThe 1911 census places Robert Barr, \"a writer of fiction,\" at Hillhead, Woldingham, Surrey, a small village southeast of London, living with his wife, Eva, their son William, and two female servants.",
"At this home, the author died from heart disease on 21 October 1912.",
"Writing Style \nBarr's volumes of short stories were often written with an ironic twist in the story with a witty, appealing narrator telling the story.",
"Barr's other works also include numerous fiction and non-fiction contributions to periodicals.",
"A few of his mystery stories and stories of the supernatural were put in anthologies, and a few novels have been republished.",
"His writings have also attracted scholarly attention.",
"His narrative personae also featured moral and editorial interpolations within their tales.",
"Barr's achievements were recognized by an honorary degree from the University of Michigan in 1900.",
"His protagonists were journalists, princes, detectives, deserving commercial and social climbers, financiers, the new woman of bright wit and aggressive accomplishment, and lords.",
"Often, his characters were stereotypical and romanticized.",
"Barr wrote fiction in an episode-like format.",
"He developed this style when working as an editor for the newspaper Detroit Press.",
"Barr developed his skill with the anecdote and vignette; often only the central character serves to link the nearly self-contained chapters of the novels.",
"Works \n\n In a Steamer Chair and Other Stories (Thirteen short stories by one of the most famous writers in his day -1892) \n\"The Face And The Mask\" (1894) consists of twenty-four delightful short stories.",
"In the Midst of Alarms (1894, 1900, 1912), a story of the attempted Fenian invasion of Canada in 1866.",
"From Whose Bourne (1896) Novel in which the main character, William Brenton, searches for truth to set his wife free.",
"One Day's Courtship (1896)\n Revenge!",
"(Collection of 20 short stories, Alfred Hitchcock-like style, thriller with a surprise ending) \nThe Strong Arm \n A Woman Intervenes (1896), a story of love, finance, and American journalism.",
"Tekla: A Romance of Love and War (1898) \n Jennie Baxter, Journalist (1899)\n The Unchanging East (1900)\n The Victors (1901)\n A Prince of Good Fellows (1902) \n Over The Border: A Romance (1903)\n The O'Ruddy, A Romance, with Stephen Crane (1903)\n A Chicago Princess (1904)\n The Speculations of John Steele (1905) \n The Tempestuous Petticoat (1905–12)\n A Rock in the Baltic (1906)\n The Triumphs of Eugène Valmont (1906)\n The Measure of the Rule (1907)\n Young Lord Stranleigh (1908)\n Stranleigh's Millions (1909)\n The Sword Maker (Medieval action/adventure novel, genre: Historical Fiction-1910) \nThe Palace of Logs (1912)\n\"The Ambassadors Pigeons\" (1899)\n\"And the Rigor of the Game\" (1892)\n\"Converted\" (1896)\n\"Count Conrad's Courtship\" (1896) \n\"The Count's Apology\" (1896)\n \"A Deal on Change \" (1896)\n \"The Exposure of Lord Stanford\" (1896)\n \"Gentlemen: The King!\""
] | [
"Robert Barr was a Scottish-Canadian short story writer.",
"Robert Barr was born in Barony, Lanark, Scotland in the early years of Canada.",
"At the age of four years old, he and his parents moved to Upper Canada.",
"His family lived on a farm.",
"Barr helped his father with his job as a carpenter.",
"Robert Barr was educated at the Toronto Normal School in 1873 to become a teacher.",
"Barr became the principal of the Central School of Windsor in 1874 after graduating from Toronto Normal School.",
"Barr began to contribute short stories when he was the head master of the Central School of Windsor.",
"Robert Barr married Eva Bennett in August 1876 when he was 27.",
"The 1891 England Census shows that the couple had three children, Laura, William, and Andrew.",
"After quitting his teaching position, Barr became a staff member of publication and later the news editor for the Detroit Free Press.",
"Barr used the name \"luke Sharp\" to write for this newspaper.",
"During his morning commute to work, Barr saw a sign that read \"luke Sharp, taker.\" That's when he came up with the idea for this name.",
"Barr left Canada in order to start a new weekly magazine in England.",
"Barr decided to \"vamoose the ranch\" as he called the process of immigration in search of literary fame outside of Canada, and relocated to London to continue to write and establish the weekly English edition of the Detroit Free Press.",
"He wrote novels from the popular crime genre during the 1890s.",
"The Idler was founded by him in 1892 and he chose Jerome K. Jerome as his partner.",
"He left its co-editorship in 1895.",
"Barr was familiar with many of the best-selling authors of his day, including Arnold Bennett, H. Rider Haggard, and Joseph Conrad.",
"Barr was 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884",
"Barr's works were popular because most of his work was in the crime genre.",
"Barr wrote and published a spoof of \"Sherlaw Kombs\" in the Idler as well as \"The Adventure of the Second Swag\" a decade later.",
"Barr remained on good terms with its creator.",
"He was described as a volcanic Anglo, or rather Scot-American, with a violent manner, and one of the kindest natures underneath it all.",
"The O'Ruddy, a romance was an unfinished novel by Robert Barr.",
"Barr reluctantly finished the last eight chapters due to his longstanding friendship with Crane and his common-law wife.",
"Robert Barr, a writer of fiction, lived with his wife, Eva, their son William, and two female servants in a small village southeast of London.",
"The author died of heart disease at this home.",
"Writing Style Barr's volumes of short stories were often written with an ironic twist in the story with a witty narrator telling the story.",
"Numerous fiction and non-fiction contributions to periodicals are included in Barr's other works.",
"A few of his mysteries and stories of the supernatural have been published.",
"His writings have attracted the attention of scholars.",
"His narratives had moral and editorials within them.",
"The University of Michigan gave Barr a degree in 1900.",
"His protagonists were journalists, princes, detectives, deserving commercial and social climbers, financiers, the new woman of bright wit and aggressive accomplishment, and lords.",
"His characters were stereotypical.",
"Barr wrote fiction in a format similar to an episode.",
"He was an editor for the Detroit Press.",
"The central character is often the only link between the nearly self-contained chapters of the novels.",
"\"The Face And The Mask\" is a collection of twenty-four delightful short stories by one of the most famous writers in his day.",
"The story of the attempted Fenian invasion of Canada in 1866 is in the Midst of Alarms.",
"The main character in the novel searches for truth to set his wife free.",
"Revenge! One Day's Courtship!",
"The Strong Arm A Woman Intervenes is a story of love, finance, and American journalism.",
"The O'Ruddy, A Romance, with Stephen Crane, was written in 1903."
] | <mask> (16 September 1849 – 21 October 1912) was a Scottish-Canadian short story writer and novelist. Early years in Canada
<mask> was born in Barony, Lanark, Scotland to <mask> and Jane Watson. In 1854, he emigrated with his parents to Upper Canada at the age of four years old. His family settled on a farm near the village of Muirkirk. <mask> assisted his father with his job as a carpenter, and developed a sound work ethic. <mask> then worked as a steel smelter for a number of years before he was educated at Toronto Normal School in 1873 to train as a teacher. After graduating Toronto Normal School, <mask> became a teacher, and eventually headmaster/principal of the Central School of Windsor, Ontario in 1874.While <mask> worked as head master of the Central School of Windsor, Ontario, he began to contribute short stories—often based on personal experiences, and recorded his work. In August 1876, when he was 27, <mask> married Ontario-born Eva Bennett, who was 21. According to the 1891 England Census, the couple appears to have had three children, Laura, William, and Andrew. In 1876, <mask> quit his teaching position to become a staff member of publication, and later on became the news editor for the Detroit Free Press. <mask> wrote for this newspaper under the pseudonym, "Luke Sharp." The idea for this pseudonym was inspired during his morning commute to work when <mask> saw a sign that read "Luke Sharp, Undertaker." In 1881, <mask> left Canada for England in order to start a new weekly version of "The Detroit Free Press Magazine."London years
In 1881 <mask> decided to "vamoose the ranch", as he called the process of immigration in search of literary fame outside of Canada, and relocated to London to continue to write/establish the weekly English edition of the Detroit Free Press. During the 1890s, he broadened his literary works, and started writing novels from the popular crime genre. In 1892 he founded the magazine The Idler, choosing Jerome K. Jerome as his collaborator (wanting, as Jerome said, "a popular name"). He retired from its co-editorship in 1895. In London of the 1890s <mask> became a more prolific author—publishing a book a year—and was familiar with many of the best-selling authors of his day, including Arnold Bennett, Horatio Gilbert Parker, Joseph Conrad, Bret Harte, Rudyard Kipling, H. Rider Haggard, H. G. Wells, and <mask> Gissing. <mask> was well-spoken, well-cultured due to travel, and considered a "socializer." Because most of <mask>'s literary output was of the crime genre, his works were highly in vogue.As Sherlock Holmes stories were becoming well-known, <mask> wrote and published in the Idler the first Holmes parody, "The Adventures of "Sherlaw Kombs" (1892), a spoof that was continued a decade later in another <mask> story, "The Adventure of the Second Swag" (1904). Despite those jibes at the growing Holmes phenomenon, <mask> remained on very good terms with its creator Arthur Conan Doyle. In Memories and Adventures, a serial memoir published 1923–24, Doyle described him as "a volcanic Anglo—or rather Scot-American, with a violent manner, a wealth of strong adjectives, and one of the kindest natures underneath it all". In 1904, <mask> completed an unfinished novel for Methuen & Co. by the recently deceased American author Stephen Crane entitled The O'Ruddy, a romance. Despite his reservations at taking on the project, <mask> reluctantly finished the last eight chapters due to his longstanding friendship with Crane and his common-law wife, Cora, the war correspondent and bordello owner. Death
The 1911 census places <mask>, "a writer of fiction," at Hillhead, Woldingham, Surrey, a small village southeast of London, living with his wife, Eva, their son William, and two female servants. At this home, the author died from heart disease on 21 October 1912.Writing Style
<mask>'s volumes of short stories were often written with an ironic twist in the story with a witty, appealing narrator telling the story. <mask>'s other works also include numerous fiction and non-fiction contributions to periodicals. A few of his mystery stories and stories of the supernatural were put in anthologies, and a few novels have been republished. His writings have also attracted scholarly attention. His narrative personae also featured moral and editorial interpolations within their tales. <mask>'s achievements were recognized by an honorary degree from the University of Michigan in 1900. His protagonists were journalists, princes, detectives, deserving commercial and social climbers, financiers, the new woman of bright wit and aggressive accomplishment, and lords.Often, his characters were stereotypical and romanticized. <mask> wrote fiction in an episode-like format. He developed this style when working as an editor for the newspaper Detroit Press. <mask> developed his skill with the anecdote and vignette; often only the central character serves to link the nearly self-contained chapters of the novels. Works
In a Steamer Chair and Other Stories (Thirteen short stories by one of the most famous writers in his day -1892)
"The Face And The Mask" (1894) consists of twenty-four delightful short stories. In the Midst of Alarms (1894, 1900, 1912), a story of the attempted Fenian invasion of Canada in 1866. From Whose Bourne (1896) Novel in which the main character, William Brenton, searches for truth to set his wife free.One Day's Courtship (1896)
Revenge! (Collection of 20 short stories, Alfred Hitchcock-like style, thriller with a surprise ending)
The Strong Arm
A Woman Intervenes (1896), a story of love, finance, and American journalism. Tekla: A Romance of Love and War (1898)
Jennie Baxter, Journalist (1899)
The Unchanging East (1900)
The Victors (1901)
A Prince of Good Fellows (1902)
Over The Border: A Romance (1903)
The O'Ruddy, A Romance, with Stephen Crane (1903)
A Chicago Princess (1904)
The Speculations of John Steele (1905)
The Tempestuous Petticoat (1905–12)
A Rock in the Baltic (1906)
The Triumphs of Eugène Valmont (1906)
The Measure of the Rule (1907)
Young Lord Stranleigh (1908)
Stranleigh's Millions (1909)
The Sword Maker (Medieval action/adventure novel, genre: Historical Fiction-1910)
The Palace of Logs (1912)
"The Ambassadors Pigeons" (1899)
"And the Rigor of the Game" (1892)
"Converted" (1896)
"Count Conrad's Courtship" (1896)
"The Count's Apology" (1896)
"A Deal on Change " (1896)
"The Exposure of Lord Stanford" (1896)
"Gentlemen: The King!" | [
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] | <mask> was a Scottish-Canadian short story writer. <mask> was born in Barony, Lanark, Scotland in the early years of Canada. At the age of four years old, he and his parents moved to Upper Canada. His family lived on a farm. <mask> helped his father with his job as a carpenter. <mask> was educated at the Toronto Normal School in 1873 to become a teacher. <mask> became the principal of the Central School of Windsor in 1874 after graduating from Toronto Normal School.<mask> began to contribute short stories when he was the head master of the Central School of Windsor. <mask> married Eva Bennett in August 1876 when he was 27. The 1891 England Census shows that the couple had three children, Laura, William, and Andrew. After quitting his teaching position, <mask> became a staff member of publication and later the news editor for the Detroit Free Press. <mask> used the name "luke Sharp" to write for this newspaper. During his morning commute to work, <mask> saw a sign that read "luke Sharp, taker." That's when he came up with the idea for this name. <mask> left Canada in order to start a new weekly magazine in England.<mask> decided to "vamoose the ranch" as he called the process of immigration in search of literary fame outside of Canada, and relocated to London to continue to write and establish the weekly English edition of the Detroit Free Press. He wrote novels from the popular crime genre during the 1890s. The Idler was founded by him in 1892 and he chose Jerome K. Jerome as his partner. He left its co-editorship in 1895. <mask> was familiar with many of the best-selling authors of his day, including Arnold Bennett, H. Rider Haggard, and Joseph Conrad. <mask> was 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 888-349-8884 Barr's works were popular because most of his work was in the crime genre.<mask> wrote and published a spoof of "Sherlaw Kombs" in the Idler as well as "The Adventure of the Second Swag" a decade later. <mask> remained on good terms with its creator. He was described as a volcanic Anglo, or rather Scot-American, with a violent manner, and one of the kindest natures underneath it all. The O'Ruddy, a romance was an unfinished novel by <mask>. <mask> reluctantly finished the last eight chapters due to his longstanding friendship with Crane and his common-law wife. <mask>, a writer of fiction, lived with his wife, Eva, their son William, and two female servants in a small village southeast of London. The author died of heart disease at this home.Writing Style <mask>'s volumes of short stories were often written with an ironic twist in the story with a witty narrator telling the story. Numerous fiction and non-fiction contributions to periodicals are included in <mask>'s other works. A few of his mysteries and stories of the supernatural have been published. His writings have attracted the attention of scholars. His narratives had moral and editorials within them. The University of Michigan gave <mask> a degree in 1900. His protagonists were journalists, princes, detectives, deserving commercial and social climbers, financiers, the new woman of bright wit and aggressive accomplishment, and lords.His characters were stereotypical. <mask> wrote fiction in a format similar to an episode. He was an editor for the Detroit Press. The central character is often the only link between the nearly self-contained chapters of the novels. "The Face And The Mask" is a collection of twenty-four delightful short stories by one of the most famous writers in his day. The story of the attempted Fenian invasion of Canada in 1866 is in the Midst of Alarms. The main character in the novel searches for truth to set his wife free.Revenge! One Day's Courtship! The Strong Arm A Woman Intervenes is a story of love, finance, and American journalism. The O'Ruddy, A Romance, with Stephen Crane, was written in 1903. | [
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"Robert Barr",
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] |
52094925 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phyllis%20Ntantala-Jordan | Phyllis Ntantala-Jordan | Phyllis Ntantala-Jordan (born Phyllis Priscilla Ntantala; 7 January 1920 – 17 July 2016) was a South African political activist and author. She and literary historian Archibald Campbell Jordan were the parents of politician Pallo Jordan.
Personal life
Phyllis Priscilla “Nogqaza” Ntantala was born on 7 January 1920 at Gqubeni, along the bends of the Nqabarha River, eDutywa in the Eastern Cape, South Africa. Ntantala-Jordan's father, George Govan Ntantala was a prosperous farmer who served on the Transkei General Council, iBhunga and her mother, Ida Balfour, was a descendant of the earliest African Christian community, founded by the prophet Ntsikana during the second decade of the 19th century in the Eastern Cape. In describing her upbringing, Ntantala-Jordan said, "Like Trotsky, I did not leave home without the proverbial one-and-six in my pocket. I came from a family of landed gentry in the Transkei". Ntantala-Jordan started her schooling at the tender age of four years. Six months later, she lost her mother. After completing Standard 6 (Grade 8),then aged 12, Ntantala-Jordan was sent to Healdtown. Healdtown was highly recommended to her father over Lovedale by her primary school principal Rhodes Cakata. Ntantala says at Healdtown students were treated equally despite their background and smaller than Lovedale. At 15, Ntantala was awarded the Transkeian Bhunga Scholarship to study at the University of Fort Hare. At the time, Fort Hare, although offering degrees, admitted students for matric studies. After completing her matric, she completed a teachers’ diploma at the University of Fort Hare in 1937. Ntantala-Jordan began working at Bantu High School in Kroonstad as a teacher in 1938. In 1939, Ntantala-Jordan married isiXhosa writer Archibald Campbell Jordan, whom she had met during her time at Fort Hare University.
In 1945, following the appointment of AC Jordan as lecturer of Bantu Languages at Fort Hare, the Jordans, then with two children, and a third on the way, left Kroonstad for the Eastern Cape. However, Their stay at the University of Fort Hare was short-lived. In 1946, AC Jordan moved with his family to Cape Town after he successfully applied for a lectureship in Bantu Languages at the University of Cape Town (UCT). In 1957, Dr Ntantala-Jordan registered at the University of Cape Town for a Higher Diploma in Native Law and Administration. She would later obtain qualifications from the University of South Africa, the Madison Area Technical College as well as an honorary Doctorate in Philosophy from the University of Fort Hare. Due to the political pressures exerted by the then apartheid South African government during the late 1950s and 1960s, the Jordans went into exile in 1961. The Jordans moved to America, where they and their two children are laid to rest. Ntantala-Jordan died at the age of 96 in Michigan on 17 July 2016. She was 96 years old. She was laid to rest at the Forest Hill Cemetery in Madison, Wisconsin on 30 July 2016. Ntantala-Jordan and AC Jordan are survived by their son Pallo Jordan.
Political Work
Ntantala-Jordan attributes her political awakening to her time as a teacher at Bantu High School in Kroonstad. In describing her political awakening, Ntantala-Jordan says "I always tell people that it was my experience in the Free State that really roused to anger my social consciousness...Most of our students in Kroonstad did not see a future beyond their school. They remained in school because it was a better place than life in the location. I knew that something was wrong somewhere."
When her family moved to Moshesh Avenue in the Langa location after her husband AC Jordan's appointment at the University of Cape Town in 1946, Ntantala-Jordan fought hard to ensure her family moved out of the township. In October 1946, after months of house-hunting in the then white areas (under Group Areas Act), the Jordans wrote to Governor General Mr Brownlee, requesting permission to purchase a lot from a Mr Guttman in Fleur Street, Lincoln Estate, Cape Town. In November, the Jordans acquired permission to buy the lot from Mr Guttman becoming one of the first African families to do so in the area. They named their residence "Thabisano", a place of rejoicing. The Jordans never sent their children to African schools as the government demanded but sent them to St Marks English Church in Athlone, Rosmead and Livingstone High School in Claremont.
During her first five years in Cape Town, in the late 1940s and early 1950s, while she was raising their children, she “was busy with political work and in the Cape African Teachers’ Association".The issues that CATA focused in the early 1950s revolved around the condemnation of the Group Areas Act of 1950, the Bantu Authorities Act of 1951, the Jan van Riebeeck celebrations at the Grand Parade in Cape Town in 1952 and the Bantu Education Act of 1953. Ntantala-Jordan wrote Ukwayo:Isikrweqe nekhakha, an isiXhosa translation of I.B Tabata's "Boycott as a weapon of struggle", which was widely distributed by the Society of Young Africa (SOYA) in Transkei. Ntantala-Jordan made a speech at the largest rally in opposition to the celebration of Jan van Riebeeck on 4 April 1952, two days before the celebration which were scheduled for 6 April. Ntantala-Jordan describes the celebrations as a flop for the government and a success for the people's boycott.
In 1957, Ntantala-Jordan was asked to contribute an article for a magazine called Africa South on “African women" by Ronnie Segal she chose to write about the “other women whom nobody ever hears about, whose story had never been told, because they are not the `pillars’ of their societies”. According to her, these “were some of the girls I had grown up with, now married and living the lives of widows, as their menfolk were away in the cities”. Her second article in this magazine was entitled “The Widows of the Reserves” which was later translated to Flemish, French and Dutch.
During the State of emergency as a result of the Sharpeville massacre and Langaprotest of 21 March 1960, there was general harassment of blacks. AC Jordan was arrested and assaulted on the 4th of April 1960, five days after the declaration of the State of Emergency. Against this background, the Jordan opted to moved to the United States of America. In early in 1961, AC Jordan was awarded a Carnegie Travel Grant to visit universities and colleges in the US. When he was denied a passport, he opted for an exit permit. His family followed him in 1962 and they ended up in the United States of America.
Legacy
Ntantala-Jordan is remembered as an intellectual, an author and an outspoken political activist. In describing her role in the struggle for liberation, The African National Congress said "the passing of Mama Phyllis Ntantala-Jordan has robbed South Africa and the world at large of an astute, inquisitive and inspiring mind. We have lost a champion of gender equality for African women in particular..."
Ntantala-Jordan translated into English her husband AC Jordan's novel, Ingqumbo Yeminyanya, spoke at a number of public lectures, wrote essays, a book Let's Hear Them Speak, a book amplifying the voices of many unsung heroines being South African women and her autobiography: A Life’s Mosaic: The Autobiography of PHYLLIS NTANTALA.
References
Relevant literature
Ndlela, Ndela. 2019. ‘Firing with the pen’: Centering the intellectual legacy of Phyllis Ntantala-Jordan. South African Journal of African Languages 40.1:26-31.
External links
Life’s Mosaic: The Autobiography of Phyllis Ntantala by Phyllis Ntantala
South African women's rights activists
1920 births
2016 deaths | [
"Phyllis Ntantala-Jordan (born Phyllis Priscilla Ntantala; 7 January 1920 – 17 July 2016) was a South African political activist and author.",
"She and literary historian Archibald Campbell Jordan were the parents of politician Pallo Jordan.",
"Personal life\n\nPhyllis Priscilla “Nogqaza” Ntantala was born on 7 January 1920 at Gqubeni, along the bends of the Nqabarha River, eDutywa in the Eastern Cape, South Africa.",
"Ntantala-Jordan's father, George Govan Ntantala was a prosperous farmer who served on the Transkei General Council, iBhunga and her mother, Ida Balfour, was a descendant of the earliest African Christian community, founded by the prophet Ntsikana during the second decade of the 19th century in the Eastern Cape.",
"In describing her upbringing, Ntantala-Jordan said, \"Like Trotsky, I did not leave home without the proverbial one-and-six in my pocket.",
"I came from a family of landed gentry in the Transkei\".",
"Ntantala-Jordan started her schooling at the tender age of four years.",
"Six months later, she lost her mother.",
"After completing Standard 6 (Grade 8),then aged 12, Ntantala-Jordan was sent to Healdtown.",
"Healdtown was highly recommended to her father over Lovedale by her primary school principal Rhodes Cakata.",
"Ntantala says at Healdtown students were treated equally despite their background and smaller than Lovedale.",
"At 15, Ntantala was awarded the Transkeian Bhunga Scholarship to study at the University of Fort Hare.",
"At the time, Fort Hare, although offering degrees, admitted students for matric studies.",
"After completing her matric, she completed a teachers’ diploma at the University of Fort Hare in 1937.",
"Ntantala-Jordan began working at Bantu High School in Kroonstad as a teacher in 1938.",
"In 1939, Ntantala-Jordan married isiXhosa writer Archibald Campbell Jordan, whom she had met during her time at Fort Hare University.",
"In 1945, following the appointment of AC Jordan as lecturer of Bantu Languages at Fort Hare, the Jordans, then with two children, and a third on the way, left Kroonstad for the Eastern Cape.",
"However, Their stay at the University of Fort Hare was short-lived.",
"In 1946, AC Jordan moved with his family to Cape Town after he successfully applied for a lectureship in Bantu Languages at the University of Cape Town (UCT).",
"In 1957, Dr Ntantala-Jordan registered at the University of Cape Town for a Higher Diploma in Native Law and Administration.",
"She would later obtain qualifications from the University of South Africa, the Madison Area Technical College as well as an honorary Doctorate in Philosophy from the University of Fort Hare.",
"Due to the political pressures exerted by the then apartheid South African government during the late 1950s and 1960s, the Jordans went into exile in 1961.",
"The Jordans moved to America, where they and their two children are laid to rest.",
"Ntantala-Jordan died at the age of 96 in Michigan on 17 July 2016.",
"She was 96 years old.",
"She was laid to rest at the Forest Hill Cemetery in Madison, Wisconsin on 30 July 2016.",
"Ntantala-Jordan and AC Jordan are survived by their son Pallo Jordan.",
"Political Work\n\nNtantala-Jordan attributes her political awakening to her time as a teacher at Bantu High School in Kroonstad.",
"In describing her political awakening, Ntantala-Jordan says \"I always tell people that it was my experience in the Free State that really roused to anger my social consciousness...Most of our students in Kroonstad did not see a future beyond their school.",
"They remained in school because it was a better place than life in the location.",
"I knew that something was wrong somewhere.\"",
"When her family moved to Moshesh Avenue in the Langa location after her husband AC Jordan's appointment at the University of Cape Town in 1946, Ntantala-Jordan fought hard to ensure her family moved out of the township.",
"In October 1946, after months of house-hunting in the then white areas (under Group Areas Act), the Jordans wrote to Governor General Mr Brownlee, requesting permission to purchase a lot from a Mr Guttman in Fleur Street, Lincoln Estate, Cape Town.",
"In November, the Jordans acquired permission to buy the lot from Mr Guttman becoming one of the first African families to do so in the area.",
"They named their residence \"Thabisano\", a place of rejoicing.",
"The Jordans never sent their children to African schools as the government demanded but sent them to St Marks English Church in Athlone, Rosmead and Livingstone High School in Claremont.",
"During her first five years in Cape Town, in the late 1940s and early 1950s, while she was raising their children, she “was busy with political work and in the Cape African Teachers’ Association\".The issues that CATA focused in the early 1950s revolved around the condemnation of the Group Areas Act of 1950, the Bantu Authorities Act of 1951, the Jan van Riebeeck celebrations at the Grand Parade in Cape Town in 1952 and the Bantu Education Act of 1953.",
"Ntantala-Jordan wrote Ukwayo:Isikrweqe nekhakha, an isiXhosa translation of I.B Tabata's \"Boycott as a weapon of struggle\", which was widely distributed by the Society of Young Africa (SOYA) in Transkei.",
"Ntantala-Jordan made a speech at the largest rally in opposition to the celebration of Jan van Riebeeck on 4 April 1952, two days before the celebration which were scheduled for 6 April.",
"Ntantala-Jordan describes the celebrations as a flop for the government and a success for the people's boycott.",
"In 1957, Ntantala-Jordan was asked to contribute an article for a magazine called Africa South on “African women\" by Ronnie Segal she chose to write about the “other women whom nobody ever hears about, whose story had never been told, because they are not the `pillars’ of their societies”.",
"According to her, these “were some of the girls I had grown up with, now married and living the lives of widows, as their menfolk were away in the cities”.",
"Her second article in this magazine was entitled “The Widows of the Reserves” which was later translated to Flemish, French and Dutch.",
"During the State of emergency as a result of the Sharpeville massacre and Langaprotest of 21 March 1960, there was general harassment of blacks.",
"AC Jordan was arrested and assaulted on the 4th of April 1960, five days after the declaration of the State of Emergency.",
"Against this background, the Jordan opted to moved to the United States of America.",
"In early in 1961, AC Jordan was awarded a Carnegie Travel Grant to visit universities and colleges in the US.",
"When he was denied a passport, he opted for an exit permit.",
"His family followed him in 1962 and they ended up in the United States of America.",
"Legacy\n\nNtantala-Jordan is remembered as an intellectual, an author and an outspoken political activist.",
"In describing her role in the struggle for liberation, The African National Congress said \"the passing of Mama Phyllis Ntantala-Jordan has robbed South Africa and the world at large of an astute, inquisitive and inspiring mind.",
"We have lost a champion of gender equality for African women in particular...\"\n\nNtantala-Jordan translated into English her husband AC Jordan's novel, Ingqumbo Yeminyanya, spoke at a number of public lectures, wrote essays, a book Let's Hear Them Speak, a book amplifying the voices of many unsung heroines being South African women and her autobiography: A Life’s Mosaic: The Autobiography of PHYLLIS NTANTALA.",
"References\n\nRelevant literature\nNdlela, Ndela.",
"2019.",
"‘Firing with the pen’: Centering the intellectual legacy of Phyllis Ntantala-Jordan.",
"South African Journal of African Languages 40.1:26-31.",
"External links\n Life’s Mosaic: The Autobiography of Phyllis Ntantala by Phyllis Ntantala\n\nSouth African women's rights activists\n1920 births\n2016 deaths"
] | [
"Ntantala-Jordan was a South African political activist and author.",
"They were the parents of a politician.",
"On January 7, 1920, Nogqaza Ntantala was born at Gqubeni, near the Nqabarha River, in the Eastern Cape, South Africa.",
"George Govan Ntantala was a prosperous farmer who served on the Transkei General Council and was a descendant of the earliest African Christian community.",
"Ntantala-Jordan said that she did not leave home without the one-and-six in her pocket.",
"I am descended from a family in the Transkei.",
"Ntantala-Jordan started school when she was four years old.",
"She lost her mother six months later.",
"Ntantala-Jordan was sent to Healdtown after completing Standard 6.",
"Healdtown was recommended to her father by her primary school principal.",
"Healdtown students were treated equally despite being smaller than Lovedale.",
"Ntantala received a scholarship to study at the University of Fort Hare.",
"Fort Hare admitted students for studies at the time.",
"She graduated from the University of Fort Hare in 1937 with a teachers' degree.",
"Ntantala-Jordan was a teacher at Bantu High School.",
"Ntantala-Jordan met her husband at Fort Hare University.",
"Following the appointment of AC Jordan as lecturer of Bantu Languages at Fort Hare, the Jordans, then with two children, and a third on the way, left Kroonstad for the Eastern Cape.",
"Their stay at the University of Fort Hare was brief.",
"AC Jordan moved to Cape Town with his family in 1946, after applying for a lectureship at the University of Cape Town.",
"Dr Ntantala-Jordan obtained a higher degree in Native Law and Administration from the University of Cape Town in 1957.",
"She obtained degrees from the University of South Africa, the Madison Area Technical College and the University of Fort Hare.",
"The Jordans went into exile in 1961.",
"The Jordans are buried in America with their two children.",
"Ntantala-Jordan died in Michigan at the age of 96.",
"She was 96 years old.",
"She was buried at the Forest Hill Cemetery in Madison, Wisconsin.",
"Pallo Jordan is the son of Ntantala-Jordan and AC Jordan.",
"Ntantala-Jordan attributes her political awakening to her time as a teacher.",
"In describing her political awakening, Ntantala-Jordan says \"I always tell people that it was my experience in the Free State that really roused to anger my social consciousness.\"",
"They stayed in school because it was a better place to live.",
"I knew something wasn't right.",
"After AC Jordan's appointment at the University of Cape Town in 1946, Ntantala-Jordan fought hard to keep her family out of the township.",
"In October 1946, after months of house-hunting in the white areas, the Jordans wrote to the Governor General Mr Brownlee requesting permission to purchase a lot from a Mr Guttman.",
"One of the first African families to do so in the area, the Jordans obtained permission to buy the lot from Mr Guttman in November.",
"\"Thabisano\" is a place of rejoicing.",
"The government wanted the Jordans to send their children to African schools, but they sent them to St Marks English Church and Livingstone High School.",
"During her first five years in Cape Town, in the late 1940s and early 1950s, while she was raising their children, she was busy with political work and in the Cape African Teachers' Association.",
"Ntantala-Jordan wrote Ukwayo:Isikrweqe nekhakha, an isiXhosa translation of I.B Tabata's \"boycott as a weapon of struggle\", which was widely distributed by the Society of Young Africa.",
"Two days before the celebration of Jan van Riebeeck was scheduled to take place, Ntantala-Jordan made a speech at the largest rally in opposition to it.",
"The celebrations were a flop for the government and a success for the people's boycott.",
"In 1957, Ntantala-Jordan was asked to contribute an article for a magazine called Africa South on \"African women\" and she chose to write about the other women whom nobody ever hears about.",
"These were some of the girls I had grown up with, now married and living the lives of widows, as their menfolk were away in the cities.",
"Her second article in this magazine was entitled \"The Widows of the Reserves\" which was later translated to Flemish, French and Dutch.",
"There was a general harassment of blacks during the State of emergency that took place after the Sharpeville massacre.",
"Five days after the declaration of the State of Emergency, AC Jordan was attacked and arrested.",
"The Jordan decided to move to the United States of America.",
"AC Jordan was awarded a Carnegie Travel Grant to visit universities and colleges in the US.",
"He got an exit permit when he was denied a passport.",
"His family moved to the United States of America after following him.",
"Ntantala-Jordan was remembered as an intellectual, an author and a political activist.",
"The African National Congress said that the passing of Mama Ntantala-Jordan robbed South Africa and the world of an astute, inquisitive and inspiring mind.",
"We have lost a champion of gender equality for African women in particular.",
"There are references to literature Ndlela and Ndela.",
"2019.",
"The intellectual legacy of Phyllis Ntantala-Jordan was centered by savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay",
"The Journal of African Languages is published in South Africa.",
"South African women's rights activists 1920 births 2016 deaths were linked to Life's Mosaic: The Autobiography of Phyllis Ntantala."
] | <mask>-Jordan (born <mask>; 7 January 1920 – 17 July 2016) was a South African political activist and author. She and literary historian Archibald Campbell Jordan were the parents of politician Pallo Jordan. Personal life
<mask>za” Ntantala was born on 7 January 1920 at Gqubeni, along the bends of the Nqabarha River, eDutywa in the Eastern Cape, South Africa. Ntantala-Jordan's father, George Govan Ntantala was a prosperous farmer who served on the Transkei General Council, iBhunga and her mother, Ida Balfour, was a descendant of the earliest African Christian community, founded by the prophet Ntsikana during the second decade of the 19th century in the Eastern Cape. In describing her upbringing, Ntantala-Jordan said, "Like Trotsky, I did not leave home without the proverbial one-and-six in my pocket. I came from a family of landed gentry in the Transkei". Ntantala-Jordan started her schooling at the tender age of four years.Six months later, she lost her mother. After completing Standard 6 (Grade 8),then aged 12, Ntantala-Jordan was sent to Healdtown. Healdtown was highly recommended to her father over Lovedale by her primary school principal Rhodes Cakata. Ntantala says at Healdtown students were treated equally despite their background and smaller than Lovedale. At 15, Ntantala was awarded the Transkeian Bhunga Scholarship to study at the University of Fort Hare. At the time, Fort Hare, although offering degrees, admitted students for matric studies. After completing her matric, she completed a teachers’ diploma at the University of Fort Hare in 1937.Ntantala-Jordan began working at Bantu High School in Kroonstad as a teacher in 1938. In 1939, Ntantala-Jordan married isiXhosa writer Archibald Campbell Jordan, whom she had met during her time at Fort Hare University. In 1945, following the appointment of AC Jordan as lecturer of Bantu Languages at Fort Hare, the Jordans, then with two children, and a third on the way, left Kroonstad for the Eastern Cape. However, Their stay at the University of Fort Hare was short-lived. In 1946, AC Jordan moved with his family to Cape Town after he successfully applied for a lectureship in Bantu Languages at the University of Cape Town (UCT). In 1957, Dr Ntantala-Jordan registered at the University of Cape Town for a Higher Diploma in Native Law and Administration. She would later obtain qualifications from the University of South Africa, the Madison Area Technical College as well as an honorary Doctorate in Philosophy from the University of Fort Hare.Due to the political pressures exerted by the then apartheid South African government during the late 1950s and 1960s, the Jordans went into exile in 1961. The Jordans moved to America, where they and their two children are laid to rest. Ntantala-Jordan died at the age of 96 in Michigan on 17 July 2016. She was 96 years old. She was laid to rest at the Forest Hill Cemetery in Madison, Wisconsin on 30 July 2016. Ntantala-Jordan and AC Jordan are survived by their son Pallo Jordan. Political Work
Ntantala-Jordan attributes her political awakening to her time as a teacher at Bantu High School in Kroonstad.In describing her political awakening, Ntantala-Jordan says "I always tell people that it was my experience in the Free State that really roused to anger my social consciousness...Most of our students in Kroonstad did not see a future beyond their school. They remained in school because it was a better place than life in the location. I knew that something was wrong somewhere." When her family moved to Moshesh Avenue in the Langa location after her husband AC Jordan's appointment at the University of Cape Town in 1946, Ntantala-Jordan fought hard to ensure her family moved out of the township. In October 1946, after months of house-hunting in the then white areas (under Group Areas Act), the Jordans wrote to Governor General Mr Brownlee, requesting permission to purchase a lot from a Mr Guttman in Fleur Street, Lincoln Estate, Cape Town. In November, the Jordans acquired permission to buy the lot from Mr Guttman becoming one of the first African families to do so in the area. They named their residence "Thabisano", a place of rejoicing.The Jordans never sent their children to African schools as the government demanded but sent them to St Marks English Church in Athlone, Rosmead and Livingstone High School in Claremont. During her first five years in Cape Town, in the late 1940s and early 1950s, while she was raising their children, she “was busy with political work and in the Cape African Teachers’ Association".The issues that CATA focused in the early 1950s revolved around the condemnation of the Group Areas Act of 1950, the Bantu Authorities Act of 1951, the Jan van Riebeeck celebrations at the Grand Parade in Cape Town in 1952 and the Bantu Education Act of 1953. Ntantala-Jordan wrote Ukwayo:Isikrweqe nekhakha, an isiXhosa translation of I.B Tabata's "Boycott as a weapon of struggle", which was widely distributed by the Society of Young Africa (SOYA) in Transkei. Ntantala-Jordan made a speech at the largest rally in opposition to the celebration of Jan van Riebeeck on 4 April 1952, two days before the celebration which were scheduled for 6 April. Ntantala-Jordan describes the celebrations as a flop for the government and a success for the people's boycott. In 1957, Ntantala-Jordan was asked to contribute an article for a magazine called Africa South on “African women" by Ronnie Segal she chose to write about the “other women whom nobody ever hears about, whose story had never been told, because they are not the `pillars’ of their societies”. According to her, these “were some of the girls I had grown up with, now married and living the lives of widows, as their menfolk were away in the cities”.Her second article in this magazine was entitled “The Widows of the Reserves” which was later translated to Flemish, French and Dutch. During the State of emergency as a result of the Sharpeville massacre and Langaprotest of 21 March 1960, there was general harassment of blacks. AC Jordan was arrested and assaulted on the 4th of April 1960, five days after the declaration of the State of Emergency. Against this background, the Jordan opted to moved to the United States of America. In early in 1961, AC Jordan was awarded a Carnegie Travel Grant to visit universities and colleges in the US. When he was denied a passport, he opted for an exit permit. His family followed him in 1962 and they ended up in the United States of America.Legacy
Ntantala-Jordan is remembered as an intellectual, an author and an outspoken political activist. In describing her role in the struggle for liberation, The African National Congress said "the passing of <mask> Ntantala-Jordan has robbed South Africa and the world at large of an astute, inquisitive and inspiring mind. We have lost a champion of gender equality for African women in particular..."
Ntantala-Jordan translated into English her husband AC Jordan's novel, Ingqumbo Yeminyanya, spoke at a number of public lectures, wrote essays, a book Let's Hear Them Speak, a book amplifying the voices of many unsung heroines being South African women and her autobiography: A Life’s Mosaic: The Autobiography of PHYLLIS NTANTALA. References
Relevant literature
Ndlela, Ndela. 2019. ‘Firing with the pen’: Centering the intellectual legacy of <mask>-Jordan. South African Journal of African Languages 40.1:26-31.External links
Life’s Mosaic: The Autobiography of <mask> by <mask>
South African women's rights activists
1920 births
2016 deaths | [
"Phyllis Ntantala",
"Phyllis Priscilla Ntantala",
"Phyllis Priscilla “qa",
"Mama Phyllis",
"Phyllis Ntantala",
"Phyllis Ntantala",
"Phyllis Ntantala"
] | Ntantala-Jordan was a South African political activist and author. They were the parents of a politician. On January 7, 1920, Nogqaza Ntantala was born at Gqubeni, near the Nqabarha River, in the Eastern Cape, South Africa. George Govan Ntantala was a prosperous farmer who served on the Transkei General Council and was a descendant of the earliest African Christian community. Ntantala-Jordan said that she did not leave home without the one-and-six in her pocket. I am descended from a family in the Transkei. Ntantala-Jordan started school when she was four years old.She lost her mother six months later. Ntantala-Jordan was sent to Healdtown after completing Standard 6. Healdtown was recommended to her father by her primary school principal. Healdtown students were treated equally despite being smaller than Lovedale. Ntantala received a scholarship to study at the University of Fort Hare. Fort Hare admitted students for studies at the time. She graduated from the University of Fort Hare in 1937 with a teachers' degree.Ntantala-Jordan was a teacher at Bantu High School. Ntantala-Jordan met her husband at Fort Hare University. Following the appointment of AC Jordan as lecturer of Bantu Languages at Fort Hare, the Jordans, then with two children, and a third on the way, left Kroonstad for the Eastern Cape. Their stay at the University of Fort Hare was brief. AC Jordan moved to Cape Town with his family in 1946, after applying for a lectureship at the University of Cape Town. Dr Ntantala-Jordan obtained a higher degree in Native Law and Administration from the University of Cape Town in 1957. She obtained degrees from the University of South Africa, the Madison Area Technical College and the University of Fort Hare.The Jordans went into exile in 1961. The Jordans are buried in America with their two children. Ntantala-Jordan died in Michigan at the age of 96. She was 96 years old. She was buried at the Forest Hill Cemetery in Madison, Wisconsin. Pallo Jordan is the son of Ntantala-Jordan and AC Jordan. Ntantala-Jordan attributes her political awakening to her time as a teacher.In describing her political awakening, Ntantala-Jordan says "I always tell people that it was my experience in the Free State that really roused to anger my social consciousness." They stayed in school because it was a better place to live. I knew something wasn't right. After AC Jordan's appointment at the University of Cape Town in 1946, Ntantala-Jordan fought hard to keep her family out of the township. In October 1946, after months of house-hunting in the white areas, the Jordans wrote to the Governor General Mr Brownlee requesting permission to purchase a lot from a Mr Guttman. One of the first African families to do so in the area, the Jordans obtained permission to buy the lot from Mr Guttman in November. "Thabisano" is a place of rejoicing.The government wanted the Jordans to send their children to African schools, but they sent them to St Marks English Church and Livingstone High School. During her first five years in Cape Town, in the late 1940s and early 1950s, while she was raising their children, she was busy with political work and in the Cape African Teachers' Association. Ntantala-Jordan wrote Ukwayo:Isikrweqe nekhakha, an isiXhosa translation of I.B Tabata's "boycott as a weapon of struggle", which was widely distributed by the Society of Young Africa. Two days before the celebration of Jan van Riebeeck was scheduled to take place, Ntantala-Jordan made a speech at the largest rally in opposition to it. The celebrations were a flop for the government and a success for the people's boycott. In 1957, Ntantala-Jordan was asked to contribute an article for a magazine called Africa South on "African women" and she chose to write about the other women whom nobody ever hears about. These were some of the girls I had grown up with, now married and living the lives of widows, as their menfolk were away in the cities.Her second article in this magazine was entitled "The Widows of the Reserves" which was later translated to Flemish, French and Dutch. There was a general harassment of blacks during the State of emergency that took place after the Sharpeville massacre. Five days after the declaration of the State of Emergency, AC Jordan was attacked and arrested. The Jordan decided to move to the United States of America. AC Jordan was awarded a Carnegie Travel Grant to visit universities and colleges in the US. He got an exit permit when he was denied a passport. His family moved to the United States of America after following him.Ntantala-Jordan was remembered as an intellectual, an author and a political activist. The African National Congress said that the passing of Mama Ntantala-Jordan robbed South Africa and the world of an astute, inquisitive and inspiring mind. We have lost a champion of gender equality for African women in particular. There are references to literature Ndlela and Ndela. 2019. The intellectual legacy of <mask>-Jordan was centered by savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay The Journal of African Languages is published in South Africa.South African women's rights activists 1920 births 2016 deaths were linked to Life's Mosaic: The Autobiography of <mask>. | [
"Phyllis Ntantala",
"Phyllis Ntantala"
] |
6065031 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard%20Connolly%20%28composer%29 | Richard Connolly (composer) | Richard Connolly (born 10 November 1927) is an Australian musician, composer and former broadcaster for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
His published and performed works allow him to be counted as among Australia's most prolific composers of Catholic Church music, particularly with regard to the hymns he composed for the Church in Australia, and which are now published and used inter-denominationally. His hymns have been composed to accommodate and adorn the liturgical reforms of the Second Vatican Council.
He is noted for his collaborations with Australian poet James McAuley. His compositions have been successful internationally, both in the Christian and secular field.
Biography
From 1946 to 1950, Connolly pursued theological studies for the priesthood in Rome. A few months before his ordination, he abandoned his studies and returned to Australia, where he completed an Arts degree from the University of Sydney. At that time, Connolly was a member of the Holy Spirit parish at North Ryde. In 1955, he was introduced to McAuley by Father Ted Kennedy. Kennedy asked Connolly to compose hymns to sing at various points during the Mass. Thus began a long-standing partnership between McAuley and Connolly. Their subsequent musical collaboration during the 1950s and 1960s contributed significantly to contemporary Australian hymnody. Their compositions were first released in a collection titled Hymns for the Year of Grace in 1963. In 1960 Connolly's work had anchored the Living Parish hymnbook, edited by Tony Newman and published by a group gathered around Roger Pryke, which would sell one million copies over the next decade, enabling congregations to sing hymns in a distinctively Australian voice. Many of the hymns published in both collections are still widely sung across all Christian denominations in Australia and abroad.
In 1956, Connolly joined the ABC, and by 1960 worked in the ABC Education department, working mainly in Schools Broadcasts. In 1967 he joined the Radio Drama and Features Department, becoming Features Editor. In 1971 he undertook a Churchill fellowship in Italy, Radio France, and Bayerischer Rundfunk, and spent several months working in the BBC's radio drama script unit. During this time, he also composed music for the BBC TV series, The British Empire. He returned to Australia and was appointed Head of Radio Drama and Features.
He composed music for the first Australian visit of a pope, Pope Paul VI at both Randwick and at St Mary's Cathedral, Sydney. In particular, for this occasion he composed a "papal entry and march" version of Psalm 85.
Back in 1844, the bishops of Australia had chosen the Virgin Mary, under the title "Help of Christians" as patroness for the Australian nation, and the words are nationalistically resonant for Australian Catholics. While personally remaining largely aloof from in-house Catholic politics, Connolly's setting of these words in his hymn "Help of Christians, Guard this Land" became the battle hymn of the Catholic Right in Australia in the 1950s and 1960s.
In December 2009, he was awarded the honorary degree of Doctor of Arts by the University of Notre Dame Australia in recognition of his "extraordinary contributions to Catholic liturgical music in Australia". In his acceptance speech he said the hymns he had made with James McAuley were "the centrepiece of my liturgical work and, of all the things that I have made, apart from my family, the best".
Connolly fell ill prior to his ninetieth birthday on 10 November 2017, and celebrated with his family in Sydney’s Royal North Shore Hospital; but went on to make a full recovery.
Contributions
Hymnody
A few of his hymn tunes have particularly Australian names. Connolly's tunes include (but are not limited to) the following:
Araluen (In Faith and Hope and Love)
Camilla (Help of Christians)
Catherine (Holy Father, God of Might)
(Come Lord Jesus)
Cosmic Praise (Sing a new song)
Forbes Street (O Jesus crucified)
Helen (From many grapes and grains of wheat)
Jeremy (Where there is Charity and love)
Lindfield (May this Lenten discipline)
Newtown (Come O Jesus)
Sancta Sophia (Jesus in your heart we find)
Ruggiero (By your kingly power)
Sandy Bay (Father, we praise you)
Travalli (By your priestly power)
Venantius (Seek, O seek the Lord),
Service music
1967-68 "Go teach all nations" (Mass for schola, choir, organ, tympany and brass consort) for the Christian Brothers' Centenary Year, Sydney 1968
Psalm 85 ('Song of the Church') – choir unison, organ and brass consort
Give us Peace Mass (Congregational)
2002 Mass of St John the Apostle dedicated to the people of St John the Apostle Parish, Narraweena (Congregational)
2005, Missa Pax et Bonum; a choral and congregational Mass dedicated to the pastors, musicians and people of St Francis of Assisi Parish, Paddington, NSW, Australia (SATB Choir, 2 trumpets, 2 trombones and organ)
2007 Mass of Our Lady Help of Christians (congregational)
2009 Mass 'Common Things Divinely" (congregational). Published by Willow Publishing.
2010 Mass, Notre Dame. Published by Willow Publishing.
2012 Year of Grace. Published by Willow Publishing
2015 Psalms - Praise the Lord My Soul, 35 Psalm Settings for Sundays, Seasons, Feasts & Australian Occasions. Published by Willow Publishing.
2017 Motet Mater Boni Consilii (SATB Choir)
Secular music
The Play School theme for the ABC (There's A Bear in There!) – a theme known by heart by generations of Australians.
References
External links
From the Great South Land of the Holy Spirit: A Heritage of Traditional Catholic Hymns
Article on Vatican II renewal mentioning Richard Connolly and James McAuley
Obituary for Fr Ted Kennedy noting his links with Connolly
The choir of St Francis, Paddington, Australia, with sound file of Connolly's 2005 Mass
Further reading
R. J. Stove, "Visions of Ceremony: An interview with Richard Connolly", Quadrant, October 2013, pp. 109–113
Australian male composers
Australian composers
Australian Roman Catholics
Catholic music
Christian hymnwriters
Australian performers of Christian music
Australian hymnwriters
Living people
1927 births
University of Sydney alumni
Place of birth missing (living people)
Australian Broadcasting Corporation people | [
"Richard Connolly (born 10 November 1927) is an Australian musician, composer and former broadcaster for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.",
"His published and performed works allow him to be counted as among Australia's most prolific composers of Catholic Church music, particularly with regard to the hymns he composed for the Church in Australia, and which are now published and used inter-denominationally.",
"His hymns have been composed to accommodate and adorn the liturgical reforms of the Second Vatican Council.",
"He is noted for his collaborations with Australian poet James McAuley.",
"His compositions have been successful internationally, both in the Christian and secular field.",
"Biography\nFrom 1946 to 1950, Connolly pursued theological studies for the priesthood in Rome.",
"A few months before his ordination, he abandoned his studies and returned to Australia, where he completed an Arts degree from the University of Sydney.",
"At that time, Connolly was a member of the Holy Spirit parish at North Ryde.",
"In 1955, he was introduced to McAuley by Father Ted Kennedy.",
"Kennedy asked Connolly to compose hymns to sing at various points during the Mass.",
"Thus began a long-standing partnership between McAuley and Connolly.",
"Their subsequent musical collaboration during the 1950s and 1960s contributed significantly to contemporary Australian hymnody.",
"Their compositions were first released in a collection titled Hymns for the Year of Grace in 1963.",
"In 1960 Connolly's work had anchored the Living Parish hymnbook, edited by Tony Newman and published by a group gathered around Roger Pryke, which would sell one million copies over the next decade, enabling congregations to sing hymns in a distinctively Australian voice.",
"Many of the hymns published in both collections are still widely sung across all Christian denominations in Australia and abroad.",
"In 1956, Connolly joined the ABC, and by 1960 worked in the ABC Education department, working mainly in Schools Broadcasts.",
"In 1967 he joined the Radio Drama and Features Department, becoming Features Editor.",
"In 1971 he undertook a Churchill fellowship in Italy, Radio France, and Bayerischer Rundfunk, and spent several months working in the BBC's radio drama script unit.",
"During this time, he also composed music for the BBC TV series, The British Empire.",
"He returned to Australia and was appointed Head of Radio Drama and Features.",
"He composed music for the first Australian visit of a pope, Pope Paul VI at both Randwick and at St Mary's Cathedral, Sydney.",
"In particular, for this occasion he composed a \"papal entry and march\" version of Psalm 85.",
"Back in 1844, the bishops of Australia had chosen the Virgin Mary, under the title \"Help of Christians\" as patroness for the Australian nation, and the words are nationalistically resonant for Australian Catholics.",
"While personally remaining largely aloof from in-house Catholic politics, Connolly's setting of these words in his hymn \"Help of Christians, Guard this Land\" became the battle hymn of the Catholic Right in Australia in the 1950s and 1960s.",
"In December 2009, he was awarded the honorary degree of Doctor of Arts by the University of Notre Dame Australia in recognition of his \"extraordinary contributions to Catholic liturgical music in Australia\".",
"In his acceptance speech he said the hymns he had made with James McAuley were \"the centrepiece of my liturgical work and, of all the things that I have made, apart from my family, the best\".",
"Connolly fell ill prior to his ninetieth birthday on 10 November 2017, and celebrated with his family in Sydney’s Royal North Shore Hospital; but went on to make a full recovery.",
"Contributions\n\nHymnody\nA few of his hymn tunes have particularly Australian names.",
"Published by Willow Publishing.",
"2010 Mass, Notre Dame.",
"Published by Willow Publishing.",
"2012 Year of Grace.",
"Published by Willow Publishing\n2015 Psalms - Praise the Lord My Soul, 35 Psalm Settings for Sundays, Seasons, Feasts & Australian Occasions.",
"Published by Willow Publishing.",
"2017 Motet Mater Boni Consilii (SATB Choir)\n\nSecular music\n The Play School theme for the ABC (There's A Bear in There!)",
"– a theme known by heart by generations of Australians.",
"References\n\nExternal links\n From the Great South Land of the Holy Spirit: A Heritage of Traditional Catholic Hymns \n Article on Vatican II renewal mentioning Richard Connolly and James McAuley \n Obituary for Fr Ted Kennedy noting his links with Connolly\n The choir of St Francis, Paddington, Australia, with sound file of Connolly's 2005 Mass\n\nFurther reading\n R. J. Stove, \"Visions of Ceremony: An interview with Richard Connolly\", Quadrant, October 2013, pp.",
"109–113\n\nAustralian male composers\nAustralian composers\nAustralian Roman Catholics\nCatholic music\nChristian hymnwriters\nAustralian performers of Christian music\nAustralian hymnwriters\nLiving people\n1927 births\nUniversity of Sydney alumni\nPlace of birth missing (living people)\nAustralian Broadcasting Corporation people"
] | [
"Richard Connolly is an Australian musician, composer and former broadcaster.",
"His published and performed works allow him to be counted as among Australia's most prolific composers of Catholic Church music, particularly with regard to the hymns he composed for the Church in Australia, and which are now published and used inter-denominationally.",
"The liturgical reforms of the Second Vatican Council necessitated the creation of his hymns.",
"He collaborated with Australian poet James McAuley.",
"In the Christian and secular field, his compositions have been successful.",
"Connolly pursued theological studies for the priesthood in Rome.",
"He returned to Australia after abandoning his studies a few months before his ordination.",
"Connolly was a member of the Holy Spirit parish.",
"Father Ted Kennedy introduced him to McAuley.",
"Connolly was asked to sing at various points during the Mass.",
"McAuley and Connolly have been partners for a long time.",
"During the 1950s and 1960s, their musical collaboration contributed to Australian hymnody.",
"The first collection of their compositions was called Hymns for the Year of Grace.",
"The Living Parish hymnbook, edited by Tony Newman and published by a group gathered around Roger Pryke, would sell one million copies over the next decade, thanks to Connolly's work.",
"Many of the hymns published in both collections are still widely sung across all Christian denominations in Australia and abroad.",
"Connolly joined the ABC in 1956 and worked in the ABC Education department until 1960.",
"He joined the Radio Drama and Features Department in 1967.",
"He worked in the radio drama script unit for several months at the time.",
"He also composed music for The British Empire.",
"He was appointed Head of Radio Drama and Features after returning to Australia.",
"He composed music for the first Australian visit of a pope, Pope Paul VI.",
"He composed a papal entry and march for this occasion.",
"The Virgin Mary was the patroness of the Australian nation in the 19th century and the words \"Help of Christians\" are relevant to Australian Catholics.",
"Connolly's setting of these words in his hymn \"Help of Christians, Guard this Land\" became the battle hymn of the Catholic Right in Australia in the 1950s and 1960s.",
"He received a Doctor of Arts degree from the University of Notre Dame Australia in recognition of his \"extraordinary contributions to Catholic liturgical music in Australia\".",
"He said in his acceptance speech that the hymns he had made with James McAuley were \"the centerpiece of my liturgical work and, of all the things that I have made, apart from my family, the best\".",
"Connolly fell ill prior to his ninth birthday in November of last year, but recovered in time to celebrate with his family at the Royal North Shore Hospital.",
"Some of his hymn tunes have Australian names.",
"It was published by Willow Publishing.",
"The 2010 Mass was at Notre Dame.",
"It was published by Willow Publishing.",
"The year 2012 is the Year of Grace.",
"There are 35 Psalm settings for Sundays, Seasons, Feasts and Australian Occasions.",
"It was published by Willow Publishing.",
"The play school theme for the ABC was Secular music.",
"Generations of Australians have a theme.",
"The choir of St Francis, Paddington, Australia, has a sound file of Connolly.",
"Australian Broadcasting Corporation people are missing a place of birth."
] | <mask> (born 10 November 1927) is an Australian musician, composer and former broadcaster for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. His published and performed works allow him to be counted as among Australia's most prolific composers of Catholic Church music, particularly with regard to the hymns he composed for the Church in Australia, and which are now published and used inter-denominationally. His hymns have been composed to accommodate and adorn the liturgical reforms of the Second Vatican Council. He is noted for his collaborations with Australian poet James McAuley. His compositions have been successful internationally, both in the Christian and secular field. Biography
From 1946 to 1950, <mask> pursued theological studies for the priesthood in Rome. A few months before his ordination, he abandoned his studies and returned to Australia, where he completed an Arts degree from the University of Sydney.At that time, <mask> was a member of the Holy Spirit parish at North Ryde. In 1955, he was introduced to McAuley by Father Ted Kennedy. Kennedy asked <mask> to compose hymns to sing at various points during the Mass. Thus began a long-standing partnership between McAuley and <mask>. Their subsequent musical collaboration during the 1950s and 1960s contributed significantly to contemporary Australian hymnody. Their compositions were first released in a collection titled Hymns for the Year of Grace in 1963. In 1960 <mask>'s work had anchored the Living Parish hymnbook, edited by Tony Newman and published by a group gathered around Roger Pryke, which would sell one million copies over the next decade, enabling congregations to sing hymns in a distinctively Australian voice.Many of the hymns published in both collections are still widely sung across all Christian denominations in Australia and abroad. In 1956, <mask> joined the ABC, and by 1960 worked in the ABC Education department, working mainly in Schools Broadcasts. In 1967 he joined the Radio Drama and Features Department, becoming Features Editor. In 1971 he undertook a Churchill fellowship in Italy, Radio France, and Bayerischer Rundfunk, and spent several months working in the BBC's radio drama script unit. During this time, he also composed music for the BBC TV series, The British Empire. He returned to Australia and was appointed Head of Radio Drama and Features. He composed music for the first Australian visit of a pope, Pope Paul VI at both Randwick and at St Mary's Cathedral, Sydney.In particular, for this occasion he composed a "papal entry and march" version of Psalm 85. Back in 1844, the bishops of Australia had chosen the Virgin Mary, under the title "Help of Christians" as patroness for the Australian nation, and the words are nationalistically resonant for Australian Catholics. While personally remaining largely aloof from in-house Catholic politics, <mask>'s setting of these words in his hymn "Help of Christians, Guard this Land" became the battle hymn of the Catholic Right in Australia in the 1950s and 1960s. In December 2009, he was awarded the honorary degree of Doctor of Arts by the University of Notre Dame Australia in recognition of his "extraordinary contributions to Catholic liturgical music in Australia". In his acceptance speech he said the hymns he had made with James McAuley were "the centrepiece of my liturgical work and, of all the things that I have made, apart from my family, the best". <mask> fell ill prior to his ninetieth birthday on 10 November 2017, and celebrated with his family in Sydney’s Royal North Shore Hospital; but went on to make a full recovery. Contributions
Hymnody
A few of his hymn tunes have particularly Australian names.Published by Willow Publishing. 2010 Mass, Notre Dame. Published by Willow Publishing. 2012 Year of Grace. Published by Willow Publishing
2015 Psalms - Praise the Lord My Soul, 35 Psalm Settings for Sundays, Seasons, Feasts & Australian Occasions. Published by Willow Publishing. 2017 Motet Mater Boni Consilii (SATB Choir)
Secular music
The Play School theme for the ABC (There's A Bear in There!)– a theme known by heart by generations of Australians. References
External links
From the Great South Land of the Holy Spirit: A Heritage of Traditional Catholic Hymns
Article on Vatican II renewal mentioning <mask> and James McAuley
Obituary for Fr Ted Kennedy noting his links with <mask>
The choir of St Francis, Paddington, Australia, with sound file of <mask>'s 2005 Mass
Further reading
R. J. Stove, "Visions of Ceremony: An interview with <mask>", Quadrant, October 2013, pp. 109–113
Australian male composers
Australian composers
Australian Roman Catholics
Catholic music
Christian hymnwriters
Australian performers of Christian music
Australian hymnwriters
Living people
1927 births
University of Sydney alumni
Place of birth missing (living people)
Australian Broadcasting Corporation people | [
"Richard Connolly",
"Connolly",
"Connolly",
"Connolly",
"Connolly",
"Connolly",
"Connolly",
"Connolly",
"Connolly",
"Richard Connolly",
"Connolly",
"Connolly",
"Richard Connolly"
] | <mask> is an Australian musician, composer and former broadcaster. His published and performed works allow him to be counted as among Australia's most prolific composers of Catholic Church music, particularly with regard to the hymns he composed for the Church in Australia, and which are now published and used inter-denominationally. The liturgical reforms of the Second Vatican Council necessitated the creation of his hymns. He collaborated with Australian poet James McAuley. In the Christian and secular field, his compositions have been successful. <mask> pursued theological studies for the priesthood in Rome. He returned to Australia after abandoning his studies a few months before his ordination.<mask> was a member of the Holy Spirit parish. Father Ted Kennedy introduced him to McAuley. <mask> was asked to sing at various points during the Mass. McAuley and <mask> have been partners for a long time. During the 1950s and 1960s, their musical collaboration contributed to Australian hymnody. The first collection of their compositions was called Hymns for the Year of Grace. The Living Parish hymnbook, edited by Tony Newman and published by a group gathered around Roger Pryke, would sell one million copies over the next decade, thanks to <mask>'s work.Many of the hymns published in both collections are still widely sung across all Christian denominations in Australia and abroad. <mask> joined the ABC in 1956 and worked in the ABC Education department until 1960. He joined the Radio Drama and Features Department in 1967. He worked in the radio drama script unit for several months at the time. He also composed music for The British Empire. He was appointed Head of Radio Drama and Features after returning to Australia. He composed music for the first Australian visit of a pope, Pope Paul VI.He composed a papal entry and march for this occasion. The Virgin Mary was the patroness of the Australian nation in the 19th century and the words "Help of Christians" are relevant to Australian Catholics. <mask>'s setting of these words in his hymn "Help of Christians, Guard this Land" became the battle hymn of the Catholic Right in Australia in the 1950s and 1960s. He received a Doctor of Arts degree from the University of Notre Dame Australia in recognition of his "extraordinary contributions to Catholic liturgical music in Australia". He said in his acceptance speech that the hymns he had made with James McAuley were "the centerpiece of my liturgical work and, of all the things that I have made, apart from my family, the best". <mask> fell ill prior to his ninth birthday in November of last year, but recovered in time to celebrate with his family at the Royal North Shore Hospital. Some of his hymn tunes have Australian names.It was published by Willow Publishing. The 2010 Mass was at Notre Dame. It was published by Willow Publishing. The year 2012 is the Year of Grace. There are 35 Psalm settings for Sundays, Seasons, Feasts and Australian Occasions. It was published by Willow Publishing. The play school theme for the ABC was Secular music.Generations of Australians have a theme. The choir of St Francis, Paddington, Australia, has a sound file of <mask>. Australian Broadcasting Corporation people are missing a place of birth. | [
"Richard Connolly",
"Connolly",
"Connolly",
"Connolly",
"Connolly",
"Connolly",
"Connolly",
"Connolly",
"Connolly",
"Connolly"
] |
57288203 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terry%20Desmond%20Macfarlane | Terry Desmond Macfarlane | Terry Desmond Macfarlane (born 1953) is a botanist and taxonomist, who has worked in both Australia and Peru. A senior research scientist at the Western Australian Herbarium, Macfarlane is associate editor of its journal Nuytsia and currently collaborates with researchers across Australia and in Canada, Germany, New Zealand, Russia, Spain and United Kingdom. He was also involved in the development of FloraBase, the Western Australian flora database.
The standard author abbreviation T.D.Macfarl. is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name.
Names published
Macfarlane has published approximately 62 species.
Anthericaceae Thysanotus exfimbriatus Sirisena, Conran & T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 27: 123. 2016 [1 Jul 2016] [published online]
Thysanotus fragrans (Brittan) Sirisena, Conran & T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 27: 122. 2016 [1 Jul 2016] [published online]
Thysanotus racemoides Sirisena, T.D.Macfarl. & Conran—Telopea 15: 206, figs 1-3. 2013 [15 Nov 2013] [published online]
Thysanotus unicupensis Sirisena, T.D.Macfarl. & Conran—Nuytsia 19(2): 260 (259-263; fig. 1). 2009 [17 Dec 2009]
Tricoryne soullierae T.D.Macfarl. & Keighery—Austral. Syst. Bot. 27(5-6): 417. 2015 [2014 publ. 29 Jun 2015]
Tricoryne tuberosa Keighery & T.D.Macfarl. -- Austral. Syst. Bot. 27(5-6): 416. 2015 [2014 publ. 29 Jun 2015]
Colchicaceae Wurmbea biglandulosa (R.Br.) T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 3(2): 191 (1980):. (IK)
Wurmbea biglandulosa subsp. flindersica R.J.Bates—J. Adelaide Bot. Gard. 16: 36. 1995 (IK)
Wurmbea calcicola T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 9(2): 233 (1993). (IK)
Wurmbea centralis T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)
Wurmbea centralis subsp. australis R.J.Bates—J. Adelaide Bot. Gard. 16: 39. 1995 (IK)
Wurmbea cernua T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)
Wurmbea densiflora (Benth.) T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 3(2): 198 (1980):. (IK)
Wurmbea deserticola T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)
Wurmbea dilatata T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 3(2): 165 (1980). (IK)
Wurmbea dioica F.Muell. subsp. alba T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 3(2): 164 (1980). (IK)
Wurmbea fluviatilis T.D.Macfarl. & A.L.Case—Nuytsia 21(1): 26 (-29; fig. 1, map). 2011 [24 Jun 2011]
Wurmbea graniticola T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 5(1) 1984 (APNI)
Wurmbea humilis T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)
Wurmbea inflata T.D.Macfarl. & A.L.Case—Nuytsia 17: 223 (-228; fig. 1, map). 2007 [5 Dec 2007]
Wurmbea inframediana T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)
Wurmbea latifolia T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)
Wurmbea latifolia subsp. vanessae R.J.Bates—J. Adelaide Bot. Gard. 16: 48. 1995 (IK)
Wurmbea monantha (Endl.) T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 3(2): 167 (1980):. (IK)
Wurmbea murchisoniana T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 5(3) 1986 (APNI)
Wurmbea odorata T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)
Wurmbea saccata T.D.Macfarl. & S.J.van Leeuwen—Nuytsia 10(3): 429 (1996). (IK)
Wurmbea sinora T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 3(2): 196 (1980). (IK)
Wurmbea uniflora (R.Br.) T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)
Haemodoraceae subfam. Conostylidoideae T.D.Macfarl. & Hopper—Fl. Australia 45: 454. 1987 [15 May 1987] (IK)
Haemodoraceae trib. Tribonantheae T.D.Macfarl. & Hopper—Fl. Australia 45: 454, 131. 1987 [15 May 1987] (IK)
Haemodoraceae Haemodorum basalticum R.L.Barrett, Hopper & T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 26: 114. 2015 [3 Nov 2015] [published online]
Haemodorum discolor T.D.Macfarl. -- Flora of Australia 45 1987
Haemodorum gracile T.D.Macfarl. -- Flora of Australia 45 1987
Haemodorum loratum T.D.Macfarl. -- Flora of Australia 45 1987
Haemodorum venosum T.D.Macfarl. -- Flora of Australia 45 1987
Phlebocarya pilosissima subsp. teretifolia T.D.Macfarl. -- Flora of Australia 45 1987 (APNI)
Tribonanthes purpurea T.D.Macfarl. & Hopper—Flora of Australia 45 1987 (APNI)
Hydatellaceae Trithuria austinensis D.D.Sokoloff, Remizowa, T.D.Macfarl. & Rudall—Taxon 57(1): 192 (-193; figs., map). 2008 [28 Feb 2008]
Trithuria australis (Diels) D.D.Sokoloff, Remizowa, T.D.Macfarl. & Rudall—Taxon 57(1): 193. 2008 [28 Feb 2008]
Trithuria cookeana D.D.Sokoloff, Remizowa, T.D.Macfarl. & Rudall—Taxon 57(1): 193 (195; figs., map). 2008 [28 Feb 2008]
Trithuria polybracteata D.A.Cooke ex D.D.Sokoloff, Remizowa, T.D.Macfarl. & Rudall—Taxon 57(1): 196 (figs., map). 2008 [28 Feb 2008]
Loganiaceae Logania sylvicola Cranfield, Hislop & T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 20: 272 (271-275; figs. 2-3, map). 2010 [29 Sep 2010]
Lomandraceae Chamaexeros longicaulis T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 9(3): 375 (1994). (IK)
Lomandra integra T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 5(1): 21 (1984). (IK)
Lomandra marginata T.D.Macfarl. & Conran—Austral. Syst. Bot. 27(5-6): 422. 2015 [2014 publ. 29 Jun 2015]
Lomandra multiflora subsp. dura (F.Muell.) T.D.Macfarl. -- Flora of Australia 46 1986 (APNI)
Lomandra nigricans T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 5(1) 1984 (APNI)
Lomandra nutans T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 5(1) 1984 (APNI)
Lomandra teres T.D.Macfarl. -- Fl. Australia 46: 224, 106. 1986 [2 May 1986] (IK)
Poaceae Poa sect. Tovarochloa (T.D.Macfarl. & But) Molinari—Polish Bot. J. 60(1): 68. 2015 [11 Jul 2015] [published online]
Poaceae trib. Amphipogoneae L.Watson & T.D.Macfarl. -- Fl. Australia 43(1): 373. 2002 [28 Aug 2002] (IK)
Poaceae Amphipogon laguroides R.Br. subsp. havelii T.D.Macfarl. -- Fl. Australia 43(1): 374. 2002 [28 Aug 2002] (IK)
Amphipogon sericeus (Vickery) T.D.Macfarl. -- Fl. Australia 43(1): 375. 2002 [28 Aug 2002] (IK)
Neurachne annularis T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 17: 217 (215-222; fig. 2, map). 2007 [5 Dec 2007]
Tovarochloa T.D.Macfarl. & But—Brittonia 34(4): 478 (1982). (IK)
Tovarochloa T.D.Macfarl. & But—Brittonia 34(4): 478. 1982 [17 Dec 1982] (GCI)
Tovarochloa peruviana T.D.Macfarl. & But—Brittonia 34(4): 478 (1982). (IK)
Proteaceae Petrophile vana Cranfield & T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 17: 154 (153-157; fig. 1, map). 2007 [5 Dec 2007]
Solanaceae Anthocercis sylvicola T.D.Macfarl. & Ward.-Johnson—Nuytsia 11(1): 71 (1996). (IK)
Zannichelliaceae Althenia hearnii T.D.Macfarl. & D.D.Sokoloff—Phytotaxa 317(1): 54. 2017 [11 Aug 2017] [published online]
Althenia patentifolia (E.L.Robertson) T.D.Macfarl. & D.D.Sokoloff—Phytotaxa 317(1): 58. 2017 [11 Aug 2017] [published online]
Selected publications
Macfarlane, T.D. 1984.
Macfarlane, T.D. 1984.
Macfarlane, T.D. 1986.
Macfarlane, T.D. 1993.
Macfarlane, T.D. 1994.
References
20th-century Australian botanists
Australian taxonomists
1953 births
Living people
Botanists active in Australia
Botany in Western Australia
Botanists with author abbreviations
Scientists from Western Australia
21st-century Australian scientists
21st-century botanists
Australian Botanical Liaison Officers | [
"Terry Desmond Macfarlane (born 1953) is a botanist and taxonomist, who has worked in both Australia and Peru.",
"A senior research scientist at the Western Australian Herbarium, Macfarlane is associate editor of its journal Nuytsia and currently collaborates with researchers across Australia and in Canada, Germany, New Zealand, Russia, Spain and United Kingdom.",
"He was also involved in the development of FloraBase, the Western Australian flora database.",
"The standard author abbreviation T.D.Macfarl.",
"is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name.",
"Names published\nMacfarlane has published approximately 62 species.",
"Anthericaceae Thysanotus exfimbriatus Sirisena, Conran & T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Nuytsia 27: 123.",
"2016 [1 Jul 2016] [published online]\n Thysanotus fragrans (Brittan) Sirisena, Conran & T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Nuytsia 27: 122.",
"2016 [1 Jul 2016] [published online]\n Thysanotus racemoides Sirisena, T.D.Macfarl.",
"& Conran—Telopea 15: 206, figs 1-3.",
"2013 [15 Nov 2013] [published online]\n Thysanotus unicupensis Sirisena, T.D.Macfarl.",
"& Conran—Nuytsia 19(2): 260 (259-263; fig.",
"1).",
"2009 [17 Dec 2009]\n Tricoryne soullierae T.D.Macfarl.",
"& Keighery—Austral.",
"Syst.",
"Bot.",
"27(5-6): 417.",
"2015 [2014 publ.",
"29 Jun 2015]\n Tricoryne tuberosa Keighery & T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Austral.",
"Syst.",
"Bot.",
"27(5-6): 416.",
"2015 [2014 publ.",
"29 Jun 2015]\n Colchicaceae Wurmbea biglandulosa (R.Br.)",
"T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Brunonia 3(2): 191 (1980):.",
"(IK)\n Wurmbea biglandulosa subsp.",
"flindersica R.J.Bates—J.",
"Adelaide Bot.",
"Gard.",
"16: 36.",
"1995 (IK)\n Wurmbea calcicola T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Nuytsia 9(2): 233 (1993).",
"(IK)\n Wurmbea centralis T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)\n Wurmbea centralis subsp.",
"australis R.J.Bates—J.",
"Adelaide Bot.",
"Gard.",
"16: 39.",
"1995 (IK)\n Wurmbea cernua T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)\nWurmbea densiflora (Benth.)",
"T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Brunonia 3(2): 198 (1980):.",
"(IK)\n Wurmbea deserticola T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)\n Wurmbea dilatata T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Brunonia 3(2): 165 (1980).",
"(IK)\n Wurmbea dioica F.Muell.",
"subsp.",
"alba T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Brunonia 3(2): 164 (1980).",
"(IK)\n Wurmbea fluviatilis T.D.Macfarl.",
"& A.L.Case—Nuytsia 21(1): 26 (-29; fig.",
"1, map).",
"2011 [24 Jun 2011]\n Wurmbea graniticola T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Nuytsia 5(1) 1984 (APNI)\n Wurmbea humilis T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)\n Wurmbea inflata T.D.Macfarl.",
"& A.L.Case—Nuytsia 17: 223 (-228; fig.",
"1, map).",
"2007 [5 Dec 2007]\n Wurmbea inframediana T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)\n Wurmbea latifolia T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)\n Wurmbea latifolia subsp.",
"vanessae R.J.Bates—J.",
"Adelaide Bot.",
"Gard.",
"16: 48.",
"1995 (IK)\n Wurmbea monantha (Endl.)",
"T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Brunonia 3(2): 167 (1980):.",
"(IK)\nWurmbea murchisoniana T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Nuytsia 5(3) 1986 (APNI)\nWurmbea odorata T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)\n Wurmbea saccata T.D.Macfarl.",
"& S.J.van Leeuwen—Nuytsia 10(3): 429 (1996).",
"(IK)\n Wurmbea sinora T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Brunonia 3(2): 196 (1980).",
"(IK)\nWurmbea uniflora (R.Br.)",
"T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)\nHaemodoraceae subfam.",
"Conostylidoideae T.D.Macfarl.",
"& Hopper—Fl.",
"Australia 45: 454.",
"1987 [15 May 1987] (IK)\nHaemodoraceae trib.",
"Tribonantheae T.D.Macfarl.",
"& Hopper—Fl.",
"Australia 45: 454, 131.",
"1987 [15 May 1987] (IK)\nHaemodoraceae Haemodorum basalticum R.L.Barrett, Hopper & T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Nuytsia 26: 114.",
"2015 [3 Nov 2015] [published online]\n Haemodorum discolor T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Flora of Australia 45 1987 \n Haemodorum gracile T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Flora of Australia 45 1987 \n Haemodorum loratum T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Flora of Australia 45 1987 \n Haemodorum venosum T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Flora of Australia 45 1987 \n Phlebocarya pilosissima subsp.",
"teretifolia T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Flora of Australia 45 1987 (APNI)\n Tribonanthes purpurea T.D.Macfarl.",
"& Hopper—Flora of Australia 45 1987 (APNI)\nHydatellaceae Trithuria austinensis D.D.Sokoloff, Remizowa, T.D.Macfarl.",
"& Rudall—Taxon 57(1): 192 (-193; figs., map).",
"2008 [28 Feb 2008]\n Trithuria australis (Diels) D.D.Sokoloff, Remizowa, T.D.Macfarl.",
"& Rudall—Taxon 57(1): 193.",
"2008 [28 Feb 2008]\nTrithuria cookeana D.D.Sokoloff, Remizowa, T.D.Macfarl.",
"& Rudall—Taxon 57(1): 193 (195; figs., map).",
"2008 [28 Feb 2008]\n Trithuria polybracteata D.A.Cooke ex D.D.Sokoloff, Remizowa, T.D.Macfarl.",
"& Rudall—Taxon 57(1): 196 (figs., map).",
"2008 [28 Feb 2008]\nLoganiaceae Logania sylvicola Cranfield, Hislop & T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Nuytsia 20: 272 (271-275; figs.",
"2-3, map).",
"2010 [29 Sep 2010]\nLomandraceae Chamaexeros longicaulis T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Nuytsia 9(3): 375 (1994).",
"(IK)\nLomandra integra T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Nuytsia 5(1): 21 (1984).",
"(IK)\nLomandra marginata T.D.Macfarl.",
"& Conran—Austral.",
"Syst.",
"Bot.",
"27(5-6): 422.",
"2015 [2014 publ.",
"29 Jun 2015]\nLomandra multiflora subsp.",
"dura (F.Muell.)",
"T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Flora of Australia 46 1986 (APNI)\nLomandra nigricans T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Nuytsia 5(1) 1984 (APNI)\nLomandra nutans T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Nuytsia 5(1) 1984 (APNI)\nLomandra teres T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Fl.",
"Australia 46: 224, 106.",
"1986 [2 May 1986] (IK)\nPoaceae Poa sect.",
"Tovarochloa (T.D.Macfarl.",
"& But) Molinari—Polish Bot.",
"J.",
"60(1): 68.",
"2015 [11 Jul 2015] [published online]\nPoaceae trib.",
"Amphipogoneae L.Watson & T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Fl.",
"Australia 43(1): 373.",
"2002 [28 Aug 2002] (IK)\nPoaceae Amphipogon laguroides R.Br.",
"subsp.",
"havelii T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Fl.",
"Australia 43(1): 374.",
"2002 [28 Aug 2002] (IK)\nAmphipogon sericeus (Vickery) T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Fl.",
"Australia 43(1): 375.",
"2002 [28 Aug 2002] (IK)\n Neurachne annularis T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Nuytsia 17: 217 (215-222; fig.",
"2, map).",
"2007 [5 Dec 2007]\nTovarochloa T.D.Macfarl.",
"& But—Brittonia 34(4): 478 (1982).",
"(IK)\nTovarochloa T.D.Macfarl.",
"& But—Brittonia 34(4): 478.",
"1982 [17 Dec 1982] (GCI)\nTovarochloa peruviana T.D.Macfarl.",
"& But—Brittonia 34(4): 478 (1982).",
"(IK)\nProteaceae Petrophile vana Cranfield & T.D.Macfarl.",
"-- Nuytsia 17: 154 (153-157; fig.",
"1, map).",
"2007 [5 Dec 2007]\nSolanaceae Anthocercis sylvicola T.D.Macfarl.",
"& Ward.-Johnson—Nuytsia 11(1): 71 (1996).",
"(IK)\nZannichelliaceae Althenia hearnii T.D.Macfarl.",
"& D.D.Sokoloff—Phytotaxa 317(1): 54.",
"2017 [11 Aug 2017] [published online]\n Althenia patentifolia (E.L.Robertson) T.D.Macfarl.",
"& D.D.Sokoloff—Phytotaxa 317(1): 58.",
"2017 [11 Aug 2017] [published online]\n\nSelected publications\n Macfarlane, T.D.",
"1984.",
"Macfarlane, T.D.",
"1984.",
"Macfarlane, T.D.",
"1986.",
"Macfarlane, T.D.",
"1993.",
"Macfarlane, T.D.",
"1994.",
"References\n\n20th-century Australian botanists\nAustralian taxonomists\n1953 births\nLiving people\nBotanists active in Australia\nBotany in Western Australia\nBotanists with author abbreviations\nScientists from Western Australia\n21st-century Australian scientists\n21st-century botanists\nAustralian Botanical Liaison Officers"
] | [
"Terry Macfarlane has worked in both Australia and Peru.",
"Macfarlane is an associate editor of the journal Nuytsia and works with researchers across Australia, Canada, Germany, New Zealand, Russia, Spain and the United Kingdom.",
"He was involved in the development of the Western Australian flora database.",
"T.D.Macfarl is the standard author abbreviation.",
"This person is indicated as the author when citing a botanical name.",
"Macfarlane has published approximately 62 species.",
"The Anthericaceae is named after Conran and T.D. Macfarl.",
"Nuytsia 27: 123.",
"The book \"Thysanotus fragrans (Brittan) Sirisena, Conran and T.D.Macfarl\" was published online in July of 2016",
"Nuytsia 27: 122.",
"The article \"Thysanotus racemoides Sirisena, T.D. Macfarl\" was published online in July of 2016",
"Telopea 15: 206, figs 1-2.",
"The article \"Thysanotus unicupensis Sirisena, T.D. Macfarl\" was published online in November.",
"Conran—Nuytsia 19 (2): 260 (259-263; fig.",
"This is the first one.",
"T.D.Macfarl died on 17 December 2009.",
"Keighery is fromAustral.",
"There is a system called the Syst.",
"There is a Bot.",
"27(5-6): 417.",
"In the year of 2015.",
"T.D.Macfarl and Tricoryne tuberosa Keighery were killed on June 29th.",
"Austral.",
"There is a system called the Syst.",
"There is a Bot.",
"27(5-6): 417.",
"In the year of 2015.",
"Colchicea biglandulosa is a member of the Colchicaceae family.",
"T.D.Macfarl was a person.",
"Brunonia 3(2): 191 was published in 1980.",
"There is a subsp. of the Wurmbea biglandulosa.",
"R.J.Bates is a person.",
"The name of the city is Adelaide Bot.",
"There is a Gard.",
"16: 36",
"T.D.Macfarl was born in 1995.",
"Nuytsia 9(2): 233 was published in 1993.",
"T.D. Macfarl is the centralis.",
"Brunonia 1980 is a subsp. of the centralis.",
"Australis R.J.Bates.",
"The name of the city is Adelaide Bot.",
"There is a Gard.",
"It was 16: 39.",
"T.D.Macfarl was born in 1995.",
"Brunonia 1980 (APNI) Wurmbea densiflora.",
"T.D.Macfarl was a person.",
"Brunonia 3(2): 198 was published in 1980.",
"T.D.Macfarl is from the desert.",
"T.D.Macfarl is from Brunonia 1980.",
"Brunonia 3(2): 165 was published in 1980.",
"F.Muell is the name of the dioica.",
"subsp.",
"alba T.D. Macfarl.",
"Brunonia 3(2): 164 was published in 1980.",
"T.D. Macfarl is the author of \"Wrombea fluviatilis\".",
"Nuytsia 21(1): 26 (29) is a case by the A.L. Case.",
"There is a map.",
"T.D.Macfarl died in 2011.",
"T.D.Macfarl is from Nuytsia 5(1) 1984.",
"Brunonia 1980 (APNI) was named after T.D. Macfarl.",
"A.L. Case-Nuytsia 17: 222 (-224; fig.",
"There is a map.",
"T.D.Macfarl was killed in the line of duty.",
"Brunonia 1980 is named after T.D.Macfarl.",
"Brunonia 1980 is also known as the APNI.",
"R.J.Bates is a person.",
"The name of the city is Adelaide Bot.",
"There is a Gard.",
"It was 16: 48.",
"1995 was the year of the Wurmbea monantha.",
"T.D.Macfarl was a person.",
"Brunonia 3(2): 167 was published in 1980.",
"T.D.Macfarl is the name of the person.",
"T.D.Macfarl is the author of Nuytsia 5(3) 1986.",
"Brunonia 1980 (APNI) T.D. Macfarl.",
"Nuytsia 10 (3): 429 was written by S.J.van Leeuwen.",
"T.D.Macfarl is the name of the person.",
"Brunonia 3(2): 196 was published in 1980.",
"There is a plant called Wurmbea uniflora.",
"T.D.Macfarl was a person.",
"Brunonia was a part of the APNI.",
"T.D.Macfarl is from Conostylidoideae.",
"Fl. and Hopper--Fl.",
"Australia: 454.",
"15 May 1987 is when the Haemodoraceae trib.",
"T.D.Macfarl is a descendant of Tribonantheae.",
"Fl. and Hopper--Fl.",
"Australia 45: 454, 131.",
"R.L.Barrett, Hopper, and T.D.Macfarl were named in 1987.",
"Nuytsia 26: 114.",
"The article was published online on November 3, 2015.",
"T.D.Macfarl is the author of the flora of Australia.",
"The flora of Australia was published in 1987.",
"The flora of Australia was published in 1987.",
"The flora of Australia was published in 1987.",
"T.D.Macfarl is a teretifolia.",
"Tribonanthes purpurea T.D.Macfarl is a flora of Australia.",
"The flora of Australia was published in 1987.",
"Taxon 57(1): 192 (-193; figs., map) was written by Rudall.",
"Trithuria australis is a group of people.",
"Taxon 57(1): 193 was written by Rudall.",
"2008 [28 Feb 2008] Trithuria cookeana D.D.Sokoloff.",
"Taxon 57(1): 195 ( figs., map) was written by Rudall.",
"The Trithuria polybracteata D.A.Cooke was ex D.D.Sokoloff.",
"Taxon 57(1): 196 is a map.",
"T.D. Macfarl, Hislop, and Cranfield are members of the Logania sylvicola.",
"Nuytsia 20: 272 is figs.",
"The map.",
"The Lomandraceae Chamaexeros longicaulis T.D.Macfarl was published in 2010.",
"Nuytsia 9(3): 375 was published in 1994.",
"T.D.Macfarl is named after Lomandra.",
"Nuytsia 5(1) was published in 1984.",
"T.D. Macfarl is known as the Lomandra marginata.",
"Conran is anAustral.",
"There is a system called the Syst.",
"There is a Bot.",
"27(5-6): 423.",
"In the year of 2015.",
"There is a Lomandra multiflora subsp.",
"F.Muell's name is dura.",
"T.D.Macfarl was a person.",
"T.D.Macfarl is from Australia.",
"T.D.Macfarl is from Nuytsia 5(1) 1984.",
"Nuytsia 5(1) 1984 was written by T.D. Macfarl.",
"It was 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519",
"Australia had a total of 224 and 106.",
"The Poaceae Poa sect was formed in 1986.",
"Tovarochloa is named after T.D. Macfarl.",
"There is a Polish Bot.",
"J.",
"Sixty-one:68.",
"The Poaceae trib was published online in 2015.",
"L.Watson and T.D.Macfarl are Amphipogoneae.",
"It was 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519",
"Australia 43(1): 373.",
"2002 [28 Aug 2002] is the year of the Poaceae Amphipogon.",
"subsp.",
"T.D.Macfarl is related to havelii.",
"It was 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519",
"Australia 43(1): 372.",
"Amphipogon sericeus (Vickery) T.D.Macfarl was born in 2002.",
"It was 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519",
"Australia 43(1): 355.",
"T.D.Macfarl was born on August 28, 2002.",
"Nuytsia 17: 217 is a fig.",
"There is a map.",
"T.D.Macfarl died in 2007.",
"Brittonia 34(4): 478 was published in 1982.",
"T.D.Macfarl is named after Tovarochloa.",
"Brittonia 34(4): 478.",
"Tovarochloa peruviana T.D.Macfarl was born in 1982.",
"Brittonia 34(4): 478 was published in 1982.",
"T.D.Macfarl is a member of the Proteaceae Petrophile.",
"Nuytsia 17: 154 is a fig.",
"There is a map.",
"Solanaceae anthocercis sylvicola T.D.Macfarl was found in 2007.",
"Nuytsia 11(1): 71 was published in 1996.",
"Althenia hearnii T.D.Macfarl is a species of zannichelliaceae.",
"The phytotaxa 317(1): 54 was written by D.D. Sokoloff.",
"Althenia patentifolia (E.L.Robertson) T.D.Macfarl was published online.",
"The phytotaxa 317(1): 58 was written by D.D. Sokoloff.",
"The publications Macfarlane, T.D. published in 2017:",
"1984.",
"T.D. Macfarlane.",
"1984.",
"T.D. Macfarlane.",
"The year 1986.",
"T.D. Macfarlane.",
"1993.",
"T.D. Macfarlane.",
"1994.",
"There are references to 20th-century Australian botanists and to 21st-century Australian scientists."
] | <mask> (born 1953) is a botanist and taxonomist, who has worked in both Australia and Peru. A senior research scientist at the Western Australian Herbarium, <mask> is associate editor of its journal Nuytsia and currently collaborates with researchers across Australia and in Canada, Germany, New Zealand, Russia, Spain and United Kingdom. He was also involved in the development of FloraBase, the Western Australian flora database. The standard author abbreviation T.D.Macfarl. is used to indicate this person as the author when citing a botanical name. Names published
<mask> has published approximately 62 species. Anthericaceae Thysanotus exfimbriatus Sirisena, Conran & T.D.Macfarl.-- Nuytsia 27: 123. 2016 [1 Jul 2016] [published online]
Thysanotus fragrans (Brittan) Sirisena, Conran & T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 27: 122. 2016 [1 Jul 2016] [published online]
Thysanotus racemoides Sirisena, T.D.Macfarl. & Conran—Telopea 15: 206, figs 1-3. 2013 [15 Nov 2013] [published online]
Thysanotus unicupensis Sirisena, T.D.Macfarl. & Conran—Nuytsia 19(2): 260 (259-263; fig.1). 2009 [17 Dec 2009]
Tricoryne soullierae T.D.Macfarl. & Keighery—Austral. Syst. Bot. 27(5-6): 417. 2015 [2014 publ.29 Jun 2015]
Tricoryne tuberosa Keighery & T.D.Macfarl. -- Austral. Syst. Bot. 27(5-6): 416. 2015 [2014 publ. 29 Jun 2015]
Colchicaceae Wurmbea biglandulosa (R.Br.)T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 3(2): 191 (1980):. (IK)
Wurmbea biglandulosa subsp. flindersica R.J.Bates—J. Adelaide Bot. Gard. 16: 36.1995 (IK)
Wurmbea calcicola T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 9(2): 233 (1993). (IK)
Wurmbea centralis T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)
Wurmbea centralis subsp. australis R.J.Bates—J. Adelaide Bot. Gard.16: 39. 1995 (IK)
Wurmbea cernua T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)
Wurmbea densiflora (Benth.) T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 3(2): 198 (1980):. (IK)
Wurmbea deserticola T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)
Wurmbea dilatata T.D.Macfarl.-- Brunonia 3(2): 165 (1980). (IK)
Wurmbea dioica F.Muell. subsp. alba T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 3(2): 164 (1980). (IK)
Wurmbea fluviatilis T.D.Macfarl. & A.L.Case—Nuytsia 21(1): 26 (-29; fig.1, map). 2011 [24 Jun 2011]
Wurmbea graniticola T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 5(1) 1984 (APNI)
Wurmbea humilis T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)
Wurmbea inflata T.D.Macfarl. & A.L.Case—Nuytsia 17: 223 (-228; fig. 1, map). 2007 [5 Dec 2007]
Wurmbea inframediana T.D.Macfarl.-- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)
Wurmbea latifolia T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)
Wurmbea latifolia subsp. vanessae R.J.Bates—J. Adelaide Bot. Gard. 16: 48. 1995 (IK)
Wurmbea monantha (Endl.)T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 3(2): 167 (1980):. (IK)
Wurmbea murchisoniana T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 5(3) 1986 (APNI)
Wurmbea odorata T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)
Wurmbea saccata T.D.Macfarl. & S.J.van Leeuwen—Nuytsia 10(3): 429 (1996). (IK)
Wurmbea sinora T.D.Macfarl.-- Brunonia 3(2): 196 (1980). (IK)
Wurmbea uniflora (R.Br.) T.D.Macfarl. -- Brunonia 1980 (APNI)
Haemodoraceae subfam. Conostylidoideae T.D.Macfarl. & Hopper—Fl. Australia 45: 454.1987 [15 May 1987] (IK)
Haemodoraceae trib. Tribonantheae T.D.Macfarl. & Hopper—Fl. Australia 45: 454, 131. 1987 [15 May 1987] (IK)
Haemodoraceae Haemodorum basalticum R.L.Barrett, Hopper & T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 26: 114. 2015 [3 Nov 2015] [published online]
Haemodorum discolor T.D.Macfarl.-- Flora of Australia 45 1987
Haemodorum gracile T.D.Macfarl. -- Flora of Australia 45 1987
Haemodorum loratum T.D.Macfarl. -- Flora of Australia 45 1987
Haemodorum venosum T.D.Macfarl. -- Flora of Australia 45 1987
Phlebocarya pilosissima subsp. teretifolia T.D.Macfarl. -- Flora of Australia 45 1987 (APNI)
Tribonanthes purpurea T.D.Macfarl. & Hopper—Flora of Australia 45 1987 (APNI)
Hydatellaceae Trithuria austinensis D.D.Sokoloff, Remizowa, T.D.Macfarl.& Rudall—Taxon 57(1): 192 (-193; figs., map). 2008 [28 Feb 2008]
Trithuria australis (Diels) D.D.Sokoloff, Remizowa, T.D.Macfarl. & Rudall—Taxon 57(1): 193. 2008 [28 Feb 2008]
Trithuria cookeana D.D.Sokoloff, Remizowa, T.D.Macfarl. & Rudall—Taxon 57(1): 193 (195; figs., map). 2008 [28 Feb 2008]
Trithuria polybracteata D.A.Cooke ex D.D.Sokoloff, Remizowa, T.D.Macfarl. & Rudall—Taxon 57(1): 196 (figs., map).2008 [28 Feb 2008]
Loganiaceae Logania sylvicola Cranfield, Hislop & T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 20: 272 (271-275; figs. 2-3, map). 2010 [29 Sep 2010]
Lomandraceae Chamaexeros longicaulis T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 9(3): 375 (1994). (IK)
Lomandra integra T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 5(1): 21 (1984).(IK)
Lomandra marginata T.D.Macfarl. & Conran—Austral. Syst. Bot. 27(5-6): 422. 2015 [2014 publ. 29 Jun 2015]
Lomandra multiflora subsp.dura (F.Muell.) T.D.Macfarl. -- Flora of Australia 46 1986 (APNI)
Lomandra nigricans T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 5(1) 1984 (APNI)
Lomandra nutans T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 5(1) 1984 (APNI)
Lomandra teres T.D.Macfarl. -- Fl. Australia 46: 224, 106.1986 [2 May 1986] (IK)
Poaceae Poa sect. Tovarochloa (T.D.Macfarl. & But) Molinari—Polish Bot. J. 60(1): 68. 2015 [11 Jul 2015] [published online]
Poaceae trib. Amphipogoneae L.Watson & T.D.Macfarl.-- Fl. Australia 43(1): 373. 2002 [28 Aug 2002] (IK)
Poaceae Amphipogon laguroides R.Br. subsp. havelii T.D.Macfarl. -- Fl. Australia 43(1): 374.2002 [28 Aug 2002] (IK)
Amphipogon sericeus (Vickery) T.D.Macfarl. -- Fl. Australia 43(1): 375. 2002 [28 Aug 2002] (IK)
Neurachne annularis T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 17: 217 (215-222; fig. 2, map). 2007 [5 Dec 2007]
Tovarochloa T.D.Macfarl.& But—Brittonia 34(4): 478 (1982). (IK)
Tovarochloa T.D.Macfarl. & But—Brittonia 34(4): 478. 1982 [17 Dec 1982] (GCI)
Tovarochloa peruviana T.D.Macfarl. & But—Brittonia 34(4): 478 (1982). (IK)
Proteaceae Petrophile vana Cranfield & T.D.Macfarl. -- Nuytsia 17: 154 (153-157; fig.1, map). 2007 [5 Dec 2007]
Solanaceae Anthocercis sylvicola T.D.Macfarl. & Ward.-Johnson—Nuytsia 11(1): 71 (1996). (IK)
Zannichelliaceae Althenia hearnii T.D.Macfarl. & D.D.Sokoloff—Phytotaxa 317(1): 54. 2017 [11 Aug 2017] [published online]
Althenia patentifolia (E.L.Robertson) T.D.Macfarl. & D.D.Sokoloff—Phytotaxa 317(1): 58.2017 [11 Aug 2017] [published online]
Selected publications
<mask>, T.D. 1984. <mask>, T.D. 1984. <mask>, T.D. 1986. <mask>, T.D.1993. <mask>, T.D. 1994. References
20th-century Australian botanists
Australian taxonomists
1953 births
Living people
Botanists active in Australia
Botany in Western Australia
Botanists with author abbreviations
Scientists from Western Australia
21st-century Australian scientists
21st-century botanists
Australian Botanical Liaison Officers | [
"Terry Desmond Macfarlane",
"Macfarlane",
"Macfarlane",
"Macfarlane",
"Macfarlane",
"Macfarlane",
"Macfarlane",
"Macfarlane"
] | <mask> has worked in both Australia and Peru. <mask> is an associate editor of the journal Nuytsia and works with researchers across Australia, Canada, Germany, New Zealand, Russia, Spain and the United Kingdom. He was involved in the development of the Western Australian flora database. T.D.Macfarl is the standard author abbreviation. This person is indicated as the author when citing a botanical name. <mask> has published approximately 62 species. The Anthericaceae is named after Conran and T.D. Macfarl.Nuytsia 27: 123. The book "Thysanotus fragrans (Brittan) Sirisena, Conran and T.D.Macfarl" was published online in July of 2016 Nuytsia 27: 122. The article "Thysanotus racemoides Sirisena, T.D. Macfarl" was published online in July of 2016 Telopea 15: 206, figs 1-2. The article "Thysanotus unicupensis Sirisena, T.D. Macfarl" was published online in November. Conran—Nuytsia 19 (2): 260 (259-263; fig.This is the first one. T.D.Macfarl died on 17 December 2009. Keighery is fromAustral. There is a system called the Syst. There is a Bot. 27(5-6): 417. In the year of 2015.T.D.Macfarl and Tricoryne tuberosa Keighery were killed on June 29th. Austral. There is a system called the Syst. There is a Bot. 27(5-6): 417. In the year of 2015. Colchicea biglandulosa is a member of the Colchicaceae family.T.D.Macfarl was a person. Brunonia 3(2): 191 was published in 1980. There is a subsp. of the Wurmbea biglandulosa. R.J.Bates is a person. The name of the city is Adelaide Bot. There is a Gard. 16: 36T.D.Macfarl was born in 1995. Nuytsia 9(2): 233 was published in 1993. T.D. Macfarl is the centralis. Brunonia 1980 is a subsp. of the centralis. Australis R.J.Bates. The name of the city is Adelaide Bot. There is a Gard.It was 16: 39. T.D.Macfarl was born in 1995. Brunonia 1980 (APNI) Wurmbea densiflora. T.D.Macfarl was a person. Brunonia 3(2): 198 was published in 1980. T.D.Macfarl is from the desert. T.D.Macfarl is from Brunonia 1980.Brunonia 3(2): 165 was published in 1980. F.Muell is the name of the dioica. subsp. alba T.D. Macfarl. Brunonia 3(2): 164 was published in 1980. T.D. Macfarl is the author of "Wrombea fluviatilis". Nuytsia 21(1): 26 (29) is a case by the A.L. Case.There is a map. T.D.Macfarl died in 2011. T.D.Macfarl is from Nuytsia 5(1) 1984. Brunonia 1980 (APNI) was named after T.D. Macfarl. A.L. Case-Nuytsia 17: 222 (-224; fig. There is a map. T.D.Macfarl was killed in the line of duty.Brunonia 1980 is named after T.D.Macfarl. Brunonia 1980 is also known as the APNI. R.J.Bates is a person. The name of the city is Adelaide Bot. There is a Gard. It was 16: 48. 1995 was the year of the Wurmbea monantha.T.D.Macfarl was a person. Brunonia 3(2): 167 was published in 1980. T.D.Macfarl is the name of the person. T.D.Macfarl is the author of Nuytsia 5(3) 1986. Brunonia 1980 (APNI) T.D. Macfarl. Nuytsia 10 (3): 429 was written by S.J.van Leeuwen. T.D.Macfarl is the name of the person.Brunonia 3(2): 196 was published in 1980. There is a plant called Wurmbea uniflora. T.D.Macfarl was a person. Brunonia was a part of the APNI. T.D.Macfarl is from Conostylidoideae. Fl. and Hopper--Fl. Australia: 454.15 May 1987 is when the Haemodoraceae trib. T.D.Macfarl is a descendant of Tribonantheae. Fl. and Hopper--Fl. Australia 45: 454, 131. R.L.Barrett, Hopper, and T.D.Macfarl were named in 1987. Nuytsia 26: 114. The article was published online on November 3, 2015.T.D.Macfarl is the author of the flora of Australia. The flora of Australia was published in 1987. The flora of Australia was published in 1987. The flora of Australia was published in 1987. T.D.Macfarl is a teretifolia. Tribonanthes purpurea T.D.Macfarl is a flora of Australia. The flora of Australia was published in 1987.Taxon 57(1): 192 (-193; figs., map) was written by Rudall. Trithuria australis is a group of people. Taxon 57(1): 193 was written by Rudall. 2008 [28 Feb 2008] Trithuria cookeana D.D.Sokoloff. Taxon 57(1): 195 ( figs., map) was written by Rudall. The Trithuria polybracteata D.A.Cooke was ex D.D.Sokoloff. Taxon 57(1): 196 is a map.T.D. Macfarl, Hislop, and Cranfield are members of the Logania sylvicola. Nuytsia 20: 272 is figs. The map. The Lomandraceae Chamaexeros longicaulis T.D.Macfarl was published in 2010. Nuytsia 9(3): 375 was published in 1994. T.D.Macfarl is named after Lomandra. Nuytsia 5(1) was published in 1984.T.D. Macfarl is known as the Lomandra marginata. Conran is anAustral. There is a system called the Syst. There is a Bot. 27(5-6): 423. In the year of 2015. There is a Lomandra multiflora subsp.F.Muell's name is dura. T.D.Macfarl was a person. T.D.Macfarl is from Australia. T.D.Macfarl is from Nuytsia 5(1) 1984. Nuytsia 5(1) 1984 was written by T.D. Macfarl. It was 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 Australia had a total of 224 and 106.The Poaceae Poa sect was formed in 1986. Tovarochloa is named after T.D. Macfarl. There is a Polish Bot. J. Sixty-one:68. The Poaceae trib was published online in 2015. L.Watson and T.D.Macfarl are Amphipogoneae.It was 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 Australia 43(1): 373. 2002 [28 Aug 2002] is the year of the Poaceae Amphipogon. subsp. T.D.Macfarl is related to havelii. It was 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 Australia 43(1): 372.Amphipogon sericeus (Vickery) T.D.Macfarl was born in 2002. It was 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 800-211-2519 Australia 43(1): 355. T.D.Macfarl was born on August 28, 2002. Nuytsia 17: 217 is a fig. There is a map. T.D.Macfarl died in 2007.Brittonia 34(4): 478 was published in 1982. T.D.Macfarl is named after Tovarochloa. Brittonia 34(4): 478. Tovarochloa peruviana T.D.Macfarl was born in 1982. Brittonia 34(4): 478 was published in 1982. T.D.Macfarl is a member of the Proteaceae Petrophile. Nuytsia 17: 154 is a fig.There is a map. Solanaceae anthocercis sylvicola T.D.Macfarl was found in 2007. Nuytsia 11(1): 71 was published in 1996. Althenia hearnii T.D.Macfarl is a species of zannichelliaceae. The phytotaxa 317(1): 54 was written by D.D. Sokoloff. Althenia patentifolia (E.L.Robertson) T.D.Macfarl was published online. The phytotaxa 317(1): 58 was written by D.D. Sokoloff.The publications Macfarlane, T.D. published in 2017: 1984. T.D<mask>. 1984. T.D<mask>. The year 1986. T.D<mask>.1993. T.D<mask>. 1994. There are references to 20th-century Australian botanists and to 21st-century Australian scientists. | [
"Terry Macfarlane",
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7670257 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonam%20Kapoor | Sonam Kapoor | Sonam Kapoor Ahuja (; née Kapoor; born 9 June 1985) is an Indian actress who works in Hindi cinema (Bollywood). She has won a National Film Award and a Filmfare Award, and from 2012 to 2016, she appeared in Forbes India Celebrity 100 list based on her income and popularity.
Kapoor, the daughter of actor Anil Kapoor, began her career as an assistant director on filmmaker Sanjay Leela Bhansali's 2005 highly acclaimed drama Black. She later made her acting debut in Bhansali's romantic drama Saawariya (2007), a box office flop, and had her first commercial successes with the romantic comedy I Hate Luv Storys (2010) and the ensemble romantic comedy-drama Aisha (2010). However, this was followed by a series of commercial failures and repetitive roles, which garnered her negative reviews. The 2013 box office hit Raanjhanaa marked a turning point in Kapoor's career, garnering her praise and Best Actress nominations at several award ceremonies. Kapoor had her biggest commercial successes with supporting roles in the biopics Bhaag Milkha Bhaag (2013) and Sanju (2018), and a leading role in the romance Prem Ratan Dhan Payo (2015); the latter two rank among the highest-grossing Bollywood films. Her highly acclaimed portrayal of Neerja Bhanot in the 2016 biographical thriller Neerja won her the National Film Award – Special Mention and a Filmfare Critics Award for Best Actress, and she followed it with a starring role in the 2018 female buddy film Veere Di Wedding, both of which rank among the highest-grossing female-led Hindi films.
Kapoor supports the raising awareness of breast cancer and LGBT rights. Known in the media for her outspoken personality, she is frequently credited as one of India's most trendy celebrities. She is married to the businessman, Anand Ahuja.
Life and career
Early life (1985–2006)
Kapoor was born in the Chembur, Bombay (present-day Mumbai) on 9 June 1985. Her father is actor and producer Anil Kapoor, the son of the late filmmaker Surinder Kapoor and the founder of the Anil Kapoor Films Company. Her mother, Sunita, is a former model and designer. Kapoor has two younger siblings: film producer Rhea and brother Harshvardhan. She is the niece of film producer Boney Kapoor and actor Sanjay Kapoor; actress Sridevi and producer Mona Shourie (Boney's wives) are her aunts. Kapoor's paternal cousins are actors Arjun Kapoor, Janhvi Kapoor and Mohit Marwah, and maternal second cousin is actor Ranveer Singh.
The family moved to the suburb of Juhu when Kapoor was one month old. She was educated at the Arya Vidya Mandir school in Juhu, where she confessed to being a "naughty" and "carefree" child who would bully the boys. She excelled at sports such as rugby and basketball, and trained in Kathak, classical music and Latin dance. Kapoor, who practices Hinduism, states that she is "quite religious", and that it is a way of "reminding myself that I need to be thankful for so much".
Kapoor's first job was as a waitress at age 15, although it lasted only a week. As a teenager, she struggled with her weight: "I had every issue related to weight that I could have. I was unhealthy, I had bad skin, and I had hair growing on my face!" Kapoor was diagnosed with insulin resistance and polycystic ovarian disease, and has since begun an initiative to increase awareness of diabetes. Kapoor enrolled at the United World College of South East Asia in Singapore for her pre-university education, where she studied theatre and arts. She has said she later started courses in economics and political science through University of Mumbai correspondence programme, after returning from University of East London where she began her bachelor's degree in the same subjects but returned to Mumbai soon after she began. Actress Rani Mukerji, a family friend, visited her family in Singapore on holiday while working on Black (2005). Kapoor, who had originally wanted to be a director and writer, expressed a desire to work as a crew member on the film. On her father's recommendation to director Sanjay Leela Bhansali, she was appointed as his assistant.
Debut and career fluctuations (2007–2012)
During the production of Black, Kapoor developed an interest in acting when Bhansali professed that he wanted to cast her in the lead in his next film, Saawariya. She was advised to lose weight; at the time, she weighed about . Motivated by Bhansali's confidence in her, she lost in two years. Kapoor studied acting with Roshan Taneja, Jayati Bhatia and Feroz Abbas Khan, and has cited actresses Waheeda Rehman and Nutan as influences, admiring their "path-breaking films ... [and] quality of doing different things".
Released in 2007, Saawariya saw Kapoor play a Muslim woman awaiting the return of her lover opposite Mukerji, Ranbir Kapoor and Salman Khan. It was the first Indian feature film produced by a Hollywood studio, Sony Pictures Entertainment. Saawariya proved to be a major critical and commercial failure. Writing for BBC, Jaspreet Pandohar called the film a "misfire-on-a-massive-scale". Raja Sen of Rediff.com described her laugh as "almost as infectious as her father's", but wished that she had been "allowed to simper softly, instead of having a clearly overdubbed plastic giggle plastered onto her." The film earned her a Filmfare Award for Best Female Debut nomination and the Stardust Award for Superstar of Tomorrow – Female.
In 2009, Kapoor played an aspiring singer opposite Waheeda Rehman and Abhishek Bachchan in the Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra-directed social drama Delhi-6. The film received mixed reviews from critics and was a box-office failure. CNN-IBN's Rajeev Masand referred to Kapoor as a "revelation", writing that she was "a firecracker, instinctive and uninhibited in what isn't even a conventional female lead". Sonia Chopra of Sify described Kapoor as an "earnest and effortless performer", and found her character likeable, despite the "typical Delhi-girl recipe".
Kapoor's first release in 2010 was Punit Malhotra's romantic comedy I Hate Luv Storys, opposite Imran Khan. She played an engaged woman who develops a one-sided attraction to her commitment-phobic co-worker. Khan said about Kapoor's craft, "We'd be shooting a scene from multiple angles—for three or four hours you're doing the same scene, the same lines—and here is this person [Kapoor] who brings consistency to her work, from the way she talks, to her accent." Although Shubhra Gupta of The Indian Express called Kapoor's performance "stiff and rehearsed", Daily News and Analysis Johnson Thomas found her "likeable and believable". I Hate Luv Storys was Kapoor's first commercial success, earning worldwide.
Kapoor next played the eponymous role in Aisha, an ensemble romantic comedy-drama based on Jane Austen's novel Emma, which was produced by her sister Rhea. She described her character as "a meddlesome busybody with a passion for matchmaking and playing Cupid". Aisha also starred Abhay Deol, Ira Dubey, Cyrus Sahukar, Amrita Puri, Anand Tiwari, Arunoday Singh and Lisa Haydon. An Indo-Asian News Service reviewer thought that Kapoor had stood out in the ensemble with her performance, making "the best of a rather rare opportunity for an Indian leading lady to be part of a Bollywood film that salutes Victorian mores and Delhi's elitist affectations in one clean cool sweep".
In 2011, Kapoor starred in Thank You, a comedy about three women who teach a lesson to their philandering husbands. The film, along with Kapoor's performance, received poor reviews; Nikhat Kazmi of The Times of India called her "terribly out of sync". She then played the romantic interest of Shahid Kapoor in the Pankaj Kapur-directed romantic drama, Mausam, which was also poorly received. Despite doubts about her acting ability, critic Saibal Chatterjee of NDTV thought Kapoor conveyed "the essential vulnerability of a girl forever under duress, bringing out just the right mix of feminine fragility and native resolve". The following year, Kapoor played a computer hacker opposite Abhishek Bachchan, Neil Nitin Mukesh and Bipasha Basu in the Abbas–Mustan-directed heist film, Players, a remake of 2003's The Italian Job. Her role was originally written for Katrina Kaif, who was unavailable for the film. Although journalists had high expectations, it failed commercially, and Sukanya Verma of Rediff.com remarked derogatively that Kapoor "truly entertains with her childish attempt to pass off as a gold-medalist hacker". Kapoor's string of poorly received films began to hinder her career.
Establishing with Raanjhanaa (2013–2015)
Kapoor's role in the Anand L. Rai-directed romantic drama Raanjhanaa (2013) marked a turning point in her career; Geety Sahgal called it her best performance to date in The Indian Express. Kapoor's role was that of Zoya Haider, a young Muslim student from Varanasi who is drawn into politics after the murder of her Sikh lover. To prepare for her part, Kapoor interacted with students, attended workshops and practised with theatre groups associated with Jawaharlal Nehru University. She also studied Jaya Bachchan's work in Guddi (1971), which she felt was "perfect" for her role. Discussing her character in the film, Kapoor described her approach to acting: "I have always tried to do different films and ... I try to be different for every character. I like doing different things to challenge myself in every way and don't like to repeat myself." Although Raanjhanaa received mixed-to-positive reviews, her performance was praised; Rajeev Masand wrote that she "does some of her best work here, going smoothly from innocent to manipulative to cynical, without ever losing Zoya's inherent vulnerability". With worldwide earnings of over , Raanjhanaa was a commercial success and Kapoor received her first nomination for the Filmfare Award for Best Actress.
Kapoor followed the success of Raanjhanaa with a brief appearance in Bhaag Milkha Bhaag (2013), a biopic on athlete Milkha Singh. She received for the film, made on a budget of , citing her admiration for director Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra and the film itself as reasons for her appearance. Critically praised, Bhaag Milkha Bhaag was one of the top-grossing Bollywood films of the year. Critic Sarita A. Tanwar wrote in her review that despite her minor role, Kapoor proved to "be the perfect warm counterpart to Milkha". Both Raanjhanaa and Bhaag Milkha Bhaag received Filmfare Award for Best Film nominations, the latter of which won.
In 2014, Kapoor portrayed the banker Mayera Sehgal opposite Ayushmann Khurrana and Rishi Kapoor in the Yash Raj Films comedy-drama Bewakoofiyaan, in a role which film critic Anupama Chopra found to be poorly written and an "uphill climb". She next starred with Fawad Khan in the romantic comedy Khoobsurat, an adaptation of the 1980 film of the same name, playing the role which had originally been given to Rekha. Though she received a Filmfare Best Actress nomination for her performance, critics were divided in their response, with Shilpa Jamkhandikar of Reuters calling her "loud and exasperating", and Andy Webster of The New York Times comparing her to a young Anne Hathaway and highlighting her "Julia Roberts-like smile". Later that year, she met entrepreneur-model Sahir Berry on a social media network, and began a romantic relationship with him, although they broke up a few months later.
In 2015, Kapoor starred as a runaway bride in Dolly Ki Doli, a heist comedy co-starring Pulkit Samrat, Rajkummar Rao and Varun Sharma. Mints Udita Jhunjhunwala criticised Kapoor's performance in the film, writing that her "range is too limited to bring alive a character that may have had heaps of potential on paper". Shubhra Gupta wrote: "Kapoor is in almost every frame, and should have filled them all. But the treatment of the character shows up her limitations." Despite the negative reviews for her performance, she was nominated for the Filmfare Award for Best Actress. While filming Sooraj R. Barjatya's Prem Ratan Dhan Payo with Salman Khan in Gondal, Gujarat in February 2015, Kapoor was diagnosed with swine influenza, from which she recovered the following month. Kapoor portrayed Rajkumari Maithili Devi, a princess looking for love. The film became one of the highest-grossing Bollywood films of all time. She was praised by Rachit Gupta for her credibility as a royal, and Komal Nahta thought that the role was significant enough to be a turning point in her career. However, she won a Golden Kela Award for Worst Actress.
Female-oriented films and marriage (2016–present)
Following an appearance in the music video of Coldplay's "Hymn for the Weekend" (featuring Beyoncé), Kapoor starred in Ram Madhvani's biographical thriller Neerja (2016). She was cast as the eponymous air hostess Neerja Bhanot, who died while saving the passengers of the hijacked Pan Am Flight 73 in 1986. Kapoor felt responsible towards the project because it is about real events, and met Bhanot's family as a preparation for her role. The film garnered high critical acclaim, and several commentators considered Kapoor's performance to be her best to date. Raja Sen found her performance to be career-defining, while Hindustan Times Rohit Vats wrote that "she carries [the film] entirely on her shoulder. She looks earnest, scared, benevolent and bold, all at the same time." Sen listed Kapoor as the best actress in Hindi cinema in 2016, while Rajeev Masand invited her to his annual best actresses roundtable. In addition to several other accolades, Kapoor won a National Film Award – Special Mention and a Filmfare Best Actress (Critics), in addition to a Filmfare Best Actress nomination. With a worldwide gross over , Neerja emerged as one of the highest-grossing Bollywood films featuring a female protagonist.
After a two-year absence from the screen, Kapoor played a social worker in R. Balki's comedy-drama Pad Man (2018), based on a short story in Twinkle Khanna's book The Legend of Lakshmi Prasad. Co-starring Akshay Kumar and Radhika Apte, the film is inspired by the life of Arunachalam Muruganantham, who campaigned for menstrual hygiene in rural India. Kapoor said that the length of the role is of little importance to her as long as the film has "relevance beyond just having a good time at the movies". She liked featuring in a film that addresses important social issues and is about something more than just entertainment. Although finding her role to be "largely superfluous", Saibal Chatterjee wrote that Kapoor "makes the most of the limited opportunity"; Anna M. M. Vetticad of Firstpost commended her screen presence but disliked a romantic subplot involving her and Kumar, criticising the chemistry and age-gap between them.
On 8 May 2018, Kapoor married Indian businessman Anand Ahuja in a traditional Sikh ceremony in Bandra. Mumbai. The following month, she featured in Shashanka Ghosh's Veere Di Wedding, a female buddy film co-starring Kareena Kapoor, Swara Bhaskar and Shikha Talsania. Namrita Joshi of The Hindu found the film formulaic and clichéd, while Sweta Kaushal of Hindustan Times thought the film had "style but no soul" and was partly impressed with Kapoor's performance. With earnings of over , the film proved to her second top-grossing Hindi film not featuring a well-known male star. Later that month, Kapoor featured in Rajkumar Hirani's biopic of Bollywood actor Sanjay Dutt, entitled Sanju, as one of Dutt's love interests. Kapoor said that despite her brief role, she agreed to the project to work with Hirani and to reunite with Ranbir Kapoor after her debut. Anna M. M. Vetticad criticised the film's attempt to whitewash Dutt's misdeeds, but found Kapoor's portrayal of her small role "sweet". On the other hand, Rajeev Masand called the film "consistently engaging", and wrote that Kapoor "hit the right notes as Sanjay Dutt's [partner]". Sanju broke several box-office records, becoming one of the highest-grossing Indian films.
In 2019, Kapoor starred in the coming-of-age film Ek Ladki Ko Dekha Toh Aisa Laga (as Sonam K Ahuja), co-starring her father, Juhi Chawla, and Rajkummar Rao. She played a closeted lesbian who has trouble coming out to her conservative family. She agreed to the project to break stereotypes about same-sex relationships in India. Critics were encouraging of its positive representation of homosexuality, but it failed to do well commercially. Kapoor next starred in Abhishek Sharma's film adaptation of Anuja Chauhan's romantic comedy novel The Zoya Factor, in which she played the titular character of a clumsy woman who becomes a lucky charm for the Indian cricket team. Ankur Pathak of HuffPost was appreciative of her comic timing but bemoaned that "she's out of depth in scenes that require her to exhibit more emotion".
In the media
Born into a prominent actor family, Kapoor has appeared in the media from an early age,
and is one of the highest-paid actresses in Bollywood. After the success of Raanjhanaa and Bhaag Milkha Bhaag she was cited by Subhash K. Jha as one of the top actresses in India, though a commentator for Rediff.com notes that several of her films have been commercial failures. In 2009 she was the first Indian actress to appear on The Hollywood Reporter "Next Generation: Asia Class", a list of newcomers in film. Outspoken publicly, Kapoor's comments about contemporaries and others in the Indian film industry have occasionally caused controversy. In a 2015 interview, she acknowledged that her opinions often get her into trouble, but remarked that "I believe it pays to be honest in the longer run".
Kapoor is a popular figure nationally, with a significant following on Twitter and Facebook since 2009. She appeared on The Huffington Post list of "100 most influential women on Twitter" in 2015. She has been described by the media as a style icon, and featured on Rediff.com's list of "Bollywood's Best Dressed Actresses" in 2012 and 2013. In 2013, the newspaper Hindustan Times and Indian edition of Vogue called her Style Icon (Reader's Choice) and Beauty of the Year, respectively. Though Kapoor has earned praise for her dress sense and style, she has faced some criticism for wearing traditional Indian dresses.
Kapoor was ranked seventh on The Times of India 2010 "Most Desirable Woman" list, placing 14th, 28th and 14th the next three years, and was in the top ten of UK magazine Eastern Eye "World's Sexiest Asian Women" list from 2011 to 2014. In 2012 and 2013 she also held 48th and 45th place, respectively, on the Indian edition of Forbes "Celebrity 100" lists, based on the income and popularity of Indian celebrities. She was named Woman of the Year by the men's magazine GQ India in 2013. In 2014 and 2015, Kapoor reached 31st place and 26th position, respectively, peaking at the 18th position the following year with an annual income of . Kapoor has acquired several titles at the Filmfare Glamour and Style Awards—in 2015 she won for Most Stylish Star (Female) and Absolut Elyx Style & Substance Award, and in 2016, she was named Most Stylish Star (Female) and Red Carpet Royalty.
As well as endorsing brands such as Colgate, Electrolux, Lux, Mont Blanc, Oppo Mobile, Salvatore Ferragamo S.p.A. and Signature, Kapoor is the Indian ambassador for international cosmetics manufacturer L'Oréal. In 2011, she was named Brand Ambassador of the Year at the NDTV Good Times Gadget Guru Awards. Rediff.com reported in 2012 that she received for each endorsement, making her one of the highest-paid celebrity endorsers in India. In 2020, Kapoor was among several Bollywood actors who were called out for posting Instagram messages showing solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement, despite their previous work advertising skin-lightening products which perpetuate colorism.
Activism
Kapoor has supported charitable organisations for various causes. In 2009, she participated in the International Indian Film Academy Awards fashion show, which supports widows and orphans of Indian film-industry workers. On behalf of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) she wrote to Maharashtra Home Minister R. R. Patil, protesting against the use of glass-coated manja (used on fighter kites), which kills birds who become entangled in it. In 2018, however, she attracted some controversy when she declared her support for Salman Khan upon his conviction for hunting an endangered blackbuck, despite her previous criticism of trophy hunting.
In 2012, Kapoor asked fans to donate to the Ogaan Cancer Foundation for her birthday, and collaborated with the foundation to increase awareness of breast cancer. She is also the brand ambassador for the Elle Breast Cancer Campaign. Kapoor is vocal in her support for LGBT rights in India. She launched the trailer of the film, Sisak, India's first silent gay love story, through her Twitter account in January 2017.
Kapoor auctioned some of her clothes on stylist Pernia Qureshi's online fashion boutique, Pernia's Pop-Up Shop, in 2012. The proceeds were donated to Smile Foundation, a child-welfare organisation. In 2014, she attended a charitable art exhibition organised by the Rouble Nagi Art Foundation, and donated clothing and accessories to a website raising funds for In Defense of Animals. Kapoor walked the ramp in a 2015 fashion show by Manish Malhotra for the Mijwan Welfare Society, a non-profit organisation dedicated to empowering girls. The same year, she appeared with Hrithik Roshan in the music video for "Dheere Dheere", whose profits were donated to charity. In 2017, she hosted a dinner to raise funds for children suffering from cancer.
Filmography
Films
Music video appearances
Awards and nominations
References
External links
21st-century Indian actresses
1985 births
Actresses from Mumbai
Actresses in Hindi cinema
People educated at a United World College
Alumni of the University of East London
Indian film actresses
Sonam
Living people
Punjabi people
Indian Hindus
Sindhi people
University of Mumbai alumni
Filmfare Awards winners
Special Mention (feature film) National Film Award winners
LGBT rights activists from India | [
"Sonam Kapoor Ahuja (; née Kapoor; born 9 June 1985) is an Indian actress who works in Hindi cinema (Bollywood).",
"She has won a National Film Award and a Filmfare Award, and from 2012 to 2016, she appeared in Forbes India Celebrity 100 list based on her income and popularity.",
"Kapoor, the daughter of actor Anil Kapoor, began her career as an assistant director on filmmaker Sanjay Leela Bhansali's 2005 highly acclaimed drama Black.",
"She later made her acting debut in Bhansali's romantic drama Saawariya (2007), a box office flop, and had her first commercial successes with the romantic comedy I Hate Luv Storys (2010) and the ensemble romantic comedy-drama Aisha (2010).",
"However, this was followed by a series of commercial failures and repetitive roles, which garnered her negative reviews.",
"The 2013 box office hit Raanjhanaa marked a turning point in Kapoor's career, garnering her praise and Best Actress nominations at several award ceremonies.",
"Kapoor had her biggest commercial successes with supporting roles in the biopics Bhaag Milkha Bhaag (2013) and Sanju (2018), and a leading role in the romance Prem Ratan Dhan Payo (2015); the latter two rank among the highest-grossing Bollywood films.",
"Her highly acclaimed portrayal of Neerja Bhanot in the 2016 biographical thriller Neerja won her the National Film Award – Special Mention and a Filmfare Critics Award for Best Actress, and she followed it with a starring role in the 2018 female buddy film Veere Di Wedding, both of which rank among the highest-grossing female-led Hindi films.",
"Kapoor supports the raising awareness of breast cancer and LGBT rights.",
"Known in the media for her outspoken personality, she is frequently credited as one of India's most trendy celebrities.",
"She is married to the businessman, Anand Ahuja.",
"Life and career\n\nEarly life (1985–2006)\n\nKapoor was born in the Chembur, Bombay (present-day Mumbai) on 9 June 1985.",
"Her father is actor and producer Anil Kapoor, the son of the late filmmaker Surinder Kapoor and the founder of the Anil Kapoor Films Company.",
"Her mother, Sunita, is a former model and designer.",
"Kapoor has two younger siblings: film producer Rhea and brother Harshvardhan.",
"She is the niece of film producer Boney Kapoor and actor Sanjay Kapoor; actress Sridevi and producer Mona Shourie (Boney's wives) are her aunts.",
"Kapoor's paternal cousins are actors Arjun Kapoor, Janhvi Kapoor and Mohit Marwah, and maternal second cousin is actor Ranveer Singh.",
"The family moved to the suburb of Juhu when Kapoor was one month old.",
"She was educated at the Arya Vidya Mandir school in Juhu, where she confessed to being a \"naughty\" and \"carefree\" child who would bully the boys.",
"She excelled at sports such as rugby and basketball, and trained in Kathak, classical music and Latin dance.",
"Kapoor, who practices Hinduism, states that she is \"quite religious\", and that it is a way of \"reminding myself that I need to be thankful for so much\".",
"Kapoor's first job was as a waitress at age 15, although it lasted only a week.",
"As a teenager, she struggled with her weight: \"I had every issue related to weight that I could have.",
"I was unhealthy, I had bad skin, and I had hair growing on my face!\"",
"Kapoor was diagnosed with insulin resistance and polycystic ovarian disease, and has since begun an initiative to increase awareness of diabetes.",
"Kapoor enrolled at the United World College of South East Asia in Singapore for her pre-university education, where she studied theatre and arts.",
"She has said she later started courses in economics and political science through University of Mumbai correspondence programme, after returning from University of East London where she began her bachelor's degree in the same subjects but returned to Mumbai soon after she began.",
"Actress Rani Mukerji, a family friend, visited her family in Singapore on holiday while working on Black (2005).",
"Kapoor, who had originally wanted to be a director and writer, expressed a desire to work as a crew member on the film.",
"On her father's recommendation to director Sanjay Leela Bhansali, she was appointed as his assistant.",
"Debut and career fluctuations (2007–2012)\nDuring the production of Black, Kapoor developed an interest in acting when Bhansali professed that he wanted to cast her in the lead in his next film, Saawariya.",
"She was advised to lose weight; at the time, she weighed about .",
"Motivated by Bhansali's confidence in her, she lost in two years.",
"Kapoor studied acting with Roshan Taneja, Jayati Bhatia and Feroz Abbas Khan, and has cited actresses Waheeda Rehman and Nutan as influences, admiring their \"path-breaking films ... [and] quality of doing different things\".",
"Released in 2007, Saawariya saw Kapoor play a Muslim woman awaiting the return of her lover opposite Mukerji, Ranbir Kapoor and Salman Khan.",
"It was the first Indian feature film produced by a Hollywood studio, Sony Pictures Entertainment.",
"Saawariya proved to be a major critical and commercial failure.",
"Writing for BBC, Jaspreet Pandohar called the film a \"misfire-on-a-massive-scale\".",
"Raja Sen of Rediff.com described her laugh as \"almost as infectious as her father's\", but wished that she had been \"allowed to simper softly, instead of having a clearly overdubbed plastic giggle plastered onto her.\"",
"The film earned her a Filmfare Award for Best Female Debut nomination and the Stardust Award for Superstar of Tomorrow – Female.",
"In 2009, Kapoor played an aspiring singer opposite Waheeda Rehman and Abhishek Bachchan in the Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra-directed social drama Delhi-6.",
"The film received mixed reviews from critics and was a box-office failure.",
"CNN-IBN's Rajeev Masand referred to Kapoor as a \"revelation\", writing that she was \"a firecracker, instinctive and uninhibited in what isn't even a conventional female lead\".",
"Sonia Chopra of Sify described Kapoor as an \"earnest and effortless performer\", and found her character likeable, despite the \"typical Delhi-girl recipe\".",
"Kapoor's first release in 2010 was Punit Malhotra's romantic comedy I Hate Luv Storys, opposite Imran Khan.",
"She played an engaged woman who develops a one-sided attraction to her commitment-phobic co-worker.",
"Khan said about Kapoor's craft, \"We'd be shooting a scene from multiple angles—for three or four hours you're doing the same scene, the same lines—and here is this person [Kapoor] who brings consistency to her work, from the way she talks, to her accent.\"",
"Although Shubhra Gupta of The Indian Express called Kapoor's performance \"stiff and rehearsed\", Daily News and Analysis Johnson Thomas found her \"likeable and believable\".",
"I Hate Luv Storys was Kapoor's first commercial success, earning worldwide.",
"Kapoor next played the eponymous role in Aisha, an ensemble romantic comedy-drama based on Jane Austen's novel Emma, which was produced by her sister Rhea.",
"She described her character as \"a meddlesome busybody with a passion for matchmaking and playing Cupid\".",
"Aisha also starred Abhay Deol, Ira Dubey, Cyrus Sahukar, Amrita Puri, Anand Tiwari, Arunoday Singh and Lisa Haydon.",
"An Indo-Asian News Service reviewer thought that Kapoor had stood out in the ensemble with her performance, making \"the best of a rather rare opportunity for an Indian leading lady to be part of a Bollywood film that salutes Victorian mores and Delhi's elitist affectations in one clean cool sweep\".",
"In 2011, Kapoor starred in Thank You, a comedy about three women who teach a lesson to their philandering husbands.",
"The film, along with Kapoor's performance, received poor reviews; Nikhat Kazmi of The Times of India called her \"terribly out of sync\".",
"She then played the romantic interest of Shahid Kapoor in the Pankaj Kapur-directed romantic drama, Mausam, which was also poorly received.",
"Despite doubts about her acting ability, critic Saibal Chatterjee of NDTV thought Kapoor conveyed \"the essential vulnerability of a girl forever under duress, bringing out just the right mix of feminine fragility and native resolve\".",
"The following year, Kapoor played a computer hacker opposite Abhishek Bachchan, Neil Nitin Mukesh and Bipasha Basu in the Abbas–Mustan-directed heist film, Players, a remake of 2003's The Italian Job.",
"Her role was originally written for Katrina Kaif, who was unavailable for the film.",
"Although journalists had high expectations, it failed commercially, and Sukanya Verma of Rediff.com remarked derogatively that Kapoor \"truly entertains with her childish attempt to pass off as a gold-medalist hacker\".",
"Kapoor's string of poorly received films began to hinder her career.",
"Establishing with Raanjhanaa (2013–2015)\nKapoor's role in the Anand L. Rai-directed romantic drama Raanjhanaa (2013) marked a turning point in her career; Geety Sahgal called it her best performance to date in The Indian Express.",
"Kapoor's role was that of Zoya Haider, a young Muslim student from Varanasi who is drawn into politics after the murder of her Sikh lover.",
"To prepare for her part, Kapoor interacted with students, attended workshops and practised with theatre groups associated with Jawaharlal Nehru University.",
"She also studied Jaya Bachchan's work in Guddi (1971), which she felt was \"perfect\" for her role.",
"Discussing her character in the film, Kapoor described her approach to acting: \"I have always tried to do different films and ...",
"I try to be different for every character.",
"I like doing different things to challenge myself in every way and don't like to repeat myself.\"",
"Although Raanjhanaa received mixed-to-positive reviews, her performance was praised; Rajeev Masand wrote that she \"does some of her best work here, going smoothly from innocent to manipulative to cynical, without ever losing Zoya's inherent vulnerability\".",
"With worldwide earnings of over , Raanjhanaa was a commercial success and Kapoor received her first nomination for the Filmfare Award for Best Actress.",
"Kapoor followed the success of Raanjhanaa with a brief appearance in Bhaag Milkha Bhaag (2013), a biopic on athlete Milkha Singh.",
"She received for the film, made on a budget of , citing her admiration for director Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra and the film itself as reasons for her appearance.",
"Critically praised, Bhaag Milkha Bhaag was one of the top-grossing Bollywood films of the year.",
"Critic Sarita A. Tanwar wrote in her review that despite her minor role, Kapoor proved to \"be the perfect warm counterpart to Milkha\".",
"Both Raanjhanaa and Bhaag Milkha Bhaag received Filmfare Award for Best Film nominations, the latter of which won.",
"In 2014, Kapoor portrayed the banker Mayera Sehgal opposite Ayushmann Khurrana and Rishi Kapoor in the Yash Raj Films comedy-drama Bewakoofiyaan, in a role which film critic Anupama Chopra found to be poorly written and an \"uphill climb\".",
"She next starred with Fawad Khan in the romantic comedy Khoobsurat, an adaptation of the 1980 film of the same name, playing the role which had originally been given to Rekha.",
"Though she received a Filmfare Best Actress nomination for her performance, critics were divided in their response, with Shilpa Jamkhandikar of Reuters calling her \"loud and exasperating\", and Andy Webster of The New York Times comparing her to a young Anne Hathaway and highlighting her \"Julia Roberts-like smile\".",
"Later that year, she met entrepreneur-model Sahir Berry on a social media network, and began a romantic relationship with him, although they broke up a few months later.",
"In 2015, Kapoor starred as a runaway bride in Dolly Ki Doli, a heist comedy co-starring Pulkit Samrat, Rajkummar Rao and Varun Sharma.",
"Mints Udita Jhunjhunwala criticised Kapoor's performance in the film, writing that her \"range is too limited to bring alive a character that may have had heaps of potential on paper\".",
"Shubhra Gupta wrote: \"Kapoor is in almost every frame, and should have filled them all.",
"But the treatment of the character shows up her limitations.\"",
"Despite the negative reviews for her performance, she was nominated for the Filmfare Award for Best Actress.",
"While filming Sooraj R. Barjatya's Prem Ratan Dhan Payo with Salman Khan in Gondal, Gujarat in February 2015, Kapoor was diagnosed with swine influenza, from which she recovered the following month.",
"Kapoor portrayed Rajkumari Maithili Devi, a princess looking for love.",
"The film became one of the highest-grossing Bollywood films of all time.",
"She was praised by Rachit Gupta for her credibility as a royal, and Komal Nahta thought that the role was significant enough to be a turning point in her career.",
"However, she won a Golden Kela Award for Worst Actress.",
"Female-oriented films and marriage (2016–present)\nFollowing an appearance in the music video of Coldplay's \"Hymn for the Weekend\" (featuring Beyoncé), Kapoor starred in Ram Madhvani's biographical thriller Neerja (2016).",
"She was cast as the eponymous air hostess Neerja Bhanot, who died while saving the passengers of the hijacked Pan Am Flight 73 in 1986.",
"Kapoor felt responsible towards the project because it is about real events, and met Bhanot's family as a preparation for her role.",
"The film garnered high critical acclaim, and several commentators considered Kapoor's performance to be her best to date.",
"Raja Sen found her performance to be career-defining, while Hindustan Times Rohit Vats wrote that \"she carries [the film] entirely on her shoulder.",
"She looks earnest, scared, benevolent and bold, all at the same time.\"",
"Sen listed Kapoor as the best actress in Hindi cinema in 2016, while Rajeev Masand invited her to his annual best actresses roundtable.",
"In addition to several other accolades, Kapoor won a National Film Award – Special Mention and a Filmfare Best Actress (Critics), in addition to a Filmfare Best Actress nomination.",
"With a worldwide gross over , Neerja emerged as one of the highest-grossing Bollywood films featuring a female protagonist.",
"After a two-year absence from the screen, Kapoor played a social worker in R. Balki's comedy-drama Pad Man (2018), based on a short story in Twinkle Khanna's book The Legend of Lakshmi Prasad.",
"Co-starring Akshay Kumar and Radhika Apte, the film is inspired by the life of Arunachalam Muruganantham, who campaigned for menstrual hygiene in rural India.",
"Kapoor said that the length of the role is of little importance to her as long as the film has \"relevance beyond just having a good time at the movies\".",
"She liked featuring in a film that addresses important social issues and is about something more than just entertainment.",
"Although finding her role to be \"largely superfluous\", Saibal Chatterjee wrote that Kapoor \"makes the most of the limited opportunity\"; Anna M. M. Vetticad of Firstpost commended her screen presence but disliked a romantic subplot involving her and Kumar, criticising the chemistry and age-gap between them.",
"On 8 May 2018, Kapoor married Indian businessman Anand Ahuja in a traditional Sikh ceremony in Bandra.",
"Mumbai.",
"The following month, she featured in Shashanka Ghosh's Veere Di Wedding, a female buddy film co-starring Kareena Kapoor, Swara Bhaskar and Shikha Talsania.",
"Namrita Joshi of The Hindu found the film formulaic and clichéd, while Sweta Kaushal of Hindustan Times thought the film had \"style but no soul\" and was partly impressed with Kapoor's performance.",
"With earnings of over , the film proved to her second top-grossing Hindi film not featuring a well-known male star.",
"Later that month, Kapoor featured in Rajkumar Hirani's biopic of Bollywood actor Sanjay Dutt, entitled Sanju, as one of Dutt's love interests.",
"Kapoor said that despite her brief role, she agreed to the project to work with Hirani and to reunite with Ranbir Kapoor after her debut.",
"Anna M. M. Vetticad criticised the film's attempt to whitewash Dutt's misdeeds, but found Kapoor's portrayal of her small role \"sweet\".",
"On the other hand, Rajeev Masand called the film \"consistently engaging\", and wrote that Kapoor \"hit the right notes as Sanjay Dutt's [partner]\".",
"Sanju broke several box-office records, becoming one of the highest-grossing Indian films.",
"In 2019, Kapoor starred in the coming-of-age film Ek Ladki Ko Dekha Toh Aisa Laga (as Sonam K Ahuja), co-starring her father, Juhi Chawla, and Rajkummar Rao.",
"She played a closeted lesbian who has trouble coming out to her conservative family.",
"She agreed to the project to break stereotypes about same-sex relationships in India.",
"Critics were encouraging of its positive representation of homosexuality, but it failed to do well commercially.",
"Kapoor next starred in Abhishek Sharma's film adaptation of Anuja Chauhan's romantic comedy novel The Zoya Factor, in which she played the titular character of a clumsy woman who becomes a lucky charm for the Indian cricket team.",
"Ankur Pathak of HuffPost was appreciative of her comic timing but bemoaned that \"she's out of depth in scenes that require her to exhibit more emotion\".",
"In the media \n\nBorn into a prominent actor family, Kapoor has appeared in the media from an early age,\nand is one of the highest-paid actresses in Bollywood.",
"After the success of Raanjhanaa and Bhaag Milkha Bhaag she was cited by Subhash K. Jha as one of the top actresses in India, though a commentator for Rediff.com notes that several of her films have been commercial failures.",
"In 2009 she was the first Indian actress to appear on The Hollywood Reporter \"Next Generation: Asia Class\", a list of newcomers in film.",
"Outspoken publicly, Kapoor's comments about contemporaries and others in the Indian film industry have occasionally caused controversy.",
"In a 2015 interview, she acknowledged that her opinions often get her into trouble, but remarked that \"I believe it pays to be honest in the longer run\".",
"Kapoor is a popular figure nationally, with a significant following on Twitter and Facebook since 2009.",
"She appeared on The Huffington Post list of \"100 most influential women on Twitter\" in 2015.",
"She has been described by the media as a style icon, and featured on Rediff.com's list of \"Bollywood's Best Dressed Actresses\" in 2012 and 2013.",
"In 2013, the newspaper Hindustan Times and Indian edition of Vogue called her Style Icon (Reader's Choice) and Beauty of the Year, respectively.",
"Though Kapoor has earned praise for her dress sense and style, she has faced some criticism for wearing traditional Indian dresses.",
"Kapoor was ranked seventh on The Times of India 2010 \"Most Desirable Woman\" list, placing 14th, 28th and 14th the next three years, and was in the top ten of UK magazine Eastern Eye \"World's Sexiest Asian Women\" list from 2011 to 2014.",
"In 2012 and 2013 she also held 48th and 45th place, respectively, on the Indian edition of Forbes \"Celebrity 100\" lists, based on the income and popularity of Indian celebrities.",
"She was named Woman of the Year by the men's magazine GQ India in 2013.",
"In 2014 and 2015, Kapoor reached 31st place and 26th position, respectively, peaking at the 18th position the following year with an annual income of .",
"Kapoor has acquired several titles at the Filmfare Glamour and Style Awards—in 2015 she won for Most Stylish Star (Female) and Absolut Elyx Style & Substance Award, and in 2016, she was named Most Stylish Star (Female) and Red Carpet Royalty.",
"As well as endorsing brands such as Colgate, Electrolux, Lux, Mont Blanc, Oppo Mobile, Salvatore Ferragamo S.p.A. and Signature, Kapoor is the Indian ambassador for international cosmetics manufacturer L'Oréal.",
"In 2011, she was named Brand Ambassador of the Year at the NDTV Good Times Gadget Guru Awards.",
"Rediff.com reported in 2012 that she received for each endorsement, making her one of the highest-paid celebrity endorsers in India.",
"In 2020, Kapoor was among several Bollywood actors who were called out for posting Instagram messages showing solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement, despite their previous work advertising skin-lightening products which perpetuate colorism.",
"Activism \n\nKapoor has supported charitable organisations for various causes.",
"In 2009, she participated in the International Indian Film Academy Awards fashion show, which supports widows and orphans of Indian film-industry workers.",
"On behalf of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) she wrote to Maharashtra Home Minister R. R. Patil, protesting against the use of glass-coated manja (used on fighter kites), which kills birds who become entangled in it.",
"In 2018, however, she attracted some controversy when she declared her support for Salman Khan upon his conviction for hunting an endangered blackbuck, despite her previous criticism of trophy hunting.",
"In 2012, Kapoor asked fans to donate to the Ogaan Cancer Foundation for her birthday, and collaborated with the foundation to increase awareness of breast cancer.",
"She is also the brand ambassador for the Elle Breast Cancer Campaign.",
"Kapoor is vocal in her support for LGBT rights in India.",
"She launched the trailer of the film, Sisak, India's first silent gay love story, through her Twitter account in January 2017.",
"Kapoor auctioned some of her clothes on stylist Pernia Qureshi's online fashion boutique, Pernia's Pop-Up Shop, in 2012.",
"The proceeds were donated to Smile Foundation, a child-welfare organisation.",
"In 2014, she attended a charitable art exhibition organised by the Rouble Nagi Art Foundation, and donated clothing and accessories to a website raising funds for In Defense of Animals.",
"Kapoor walked the ramp in a 2015 fashion show by Manish Malhotra for the Mijwan Welfare Society, a non-profit organisation dedicated to empowering girls.",
"The same year, she appeared with Hrithik Roshan in the music video for \"Dheere Dheere\", whose profits were donated to charity.",
"In 2017, she hosted a dinner to raise funds for children suffering from cancer.",
"Filmography\n\nFilms\n\nMusic video appearances\n\nAwards and nominations\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links \n\n \n \n \n \n\n21st-century Indian actresses\n1985 births\nActresses from Mumbai\nActresses in Hindi cinema\nPeople educated at a United World College\nAlumni of the University of East London\nIndian film actresses\nSonam\nLiving people\nPunjabi people\nIndian Hindus\nSindhi people\nUniversity of Mumbai alumni\nFilmfare Awards winners\nSpecial Mention (feature film) National Film Award winners\nLGBT rights activists from India"
] | [
"Sonam Ahuja is an Indian actress who works in Hindi cinema.",
"From 2012 to 2016 she appeared in the Forbes India 100 Celebrity list based on her income and popularity.",
"The daughter of an actor began her career as an assistant director on a film.",
"She made her acting debut in Saawariya, a box office flop, and had her first commercial success with the romantic comedy I Hate Luv Storys.",
"Her negative reviews came from a series of commercial failures and repetitive roles.",
"The box office hit was a turning point in Kapoor's career, as she was nominated for Best Actress at several award ceremonies.",
"Bhaag Milkha Bhaag and Sanju rank among the highest-grossing Bollywood films of all time.",
"Her portrayal of Neerja Bhanot in the biographical film Neerja won her the National Film Award - Special Mention and a Filmfare Critics Award for Best Actress, and she followed it with a starring role in the female buddy film Veere Di Wedding.",
"The actress supports raising awareness of breast cancer.",
"She is often credited as one of India's most trendy celebrities because of her outspoken personality.",
"She is married to a businessman.",
"Kapoor was born in Chembur, Bombay on 9 June 1985 and is now in Mumbai.",
"Her father is an actor and producer, as well as the founder of the Anil Kapoor Films Company.",
"Her mother was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"The film producer and brother are related to the Kapoor family.",
"She is the niece of actor and film producer Boney Kapoor and actress Sridevi, as well as the producer's wives.",
"Kapoor's paternal cousins are actors, while his maternal cousins are actors.",
"The family lived in the suburb of Juhu.",
"She confessed to being a \"naughty\" and \"carefree\" child who would bully the boys at the school she attended.",
"She trained in classical music and Latin dance and excelled at sports.",
"She states that she is quite religious and that it is a way of reminding herself that she needs to be thankful.",
"At the age of 15, she had her first job as a waitress.",
"She was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"I had bad skin and hair growing on my face.",
"An initiative to increase awareness of diabetes was started by Kapoor after she was diagnosed with polycystic ovarian disease.",
"She studied theatre and arts at the United World College of South East Asia in Singapore.",
"She began her bachelor's degree in economics and political science at the University of East London but returned to Mumbai soon after to take courses in economics and political science through the University of Mumbai correspondence programme.",
"Rani Mukerji visited her family in Singapore while she was working on Black.",
"He wanted to work on the film as a crew member.",
"She was appointed as his assistant because of her father's recommendation.",
"During the production of Black, she became interested in acting when Bhansali mentioned that he wanted to cast her in the lead in his next film.",
"At the time, she was advised to lose weight.",
"She lost in two years because of Bhansali's confidence.",
"Waheeda Rehman and Nutan have been cited as influences by Kapoor, who studied acting with Feroz Abbas Khan and Jayati Bhatia.",
"The film was released in 2007, and featured a Muslim woman waiting for her lover to come back to her.",
"The first Indian feature film was produced by a Hollywood studio.",
"It was a major critical and commercial failure.",
"Jaspreet Pandohar called the film a \"misfire-on-a- massive-scale\".",
"Raja Sen of Rediff.com said that her laugh was almost as infectious as her father's, but wished she had been allowed to simper softly instead of having a clearly overdubbed plastic giggle plastered onto her.",
"She was nominated for a Filmfare Award for Best Female Debut and a Stardust Award for Superstar of Tomorrow - Female.",
"In 2009, Kapoor played an aspiring singer in a social drama.",
"The film was a flop at the box office.",
"CNN-IBN's Rajeev Masand wrote that she was a \"revelation\", writing that she was \"a firecracker, instinctive and uninhibited in what isn't even a conventional female lead\".",
"She was described as an \"earnest and effortless performer\" and found her character likeable despite the \"typical Delhi-girl recipe\".",
"Punit Malhotra's romantic comedy I Hate Luv Storys was the first release of the year.",
"She played a woman who develops a one-sided attraction to her co-worker.",
"\"We'd be shooting a scene from multiple angles, for three or four hours you're doing the same scene, the same lines, and here is this person who brings consistency to her work, from the way she talks,\" Khan said.",
"Daily News and Analysis Johnson Thomas found her to be \"likeable and believable\".",
"I Hate Luv Storys was Kapoor's first commercial success.",
"The film was produced by her sister, and was based on Jane Austen's novel Emma.",
"She described her character as a busybody with a passion for dating.",
"Abhay Deol and Lisa Haydon starred in the film.",
"It was the best of a rare opportunity for an Indian leading lady to be part of a Bollywood film that salutes Victorian mores and Delhi's elitist affectations in one clean cool sweep, according to a reviewer.",
"Thank You was a comedy about three women who teach a lesson to their unfaithful husbands.",
"The film received poor reviews and was described as \"terribly out of sync\" by The Times of India.",
"She played the romantic interest of a man in a movie that was poorly received.",
"Despite doubts about her acting ability, critic Saibal Chatterjee thought that Kapoor conveyed the essential vulnerability of a girl forever under duress, bringing out just the right mix of feminine and native resolve.",
"In the Abbas–Mustan-helmed film, Players, which was a remake of the 2003's The Italian Job, Kapoor played a computer hacker.",
"Her role was written for someone else.",
"Although journalists had high expectations, it failed commercially, and as a result, they were derogative of her childish attempt to pass off as a gold-medalist hacker.",
"Her career was hampered by her string of poorly received films.",
"It was her best performance to date in The Indian Express, and it marked a turning point in her career.",
"A young Muslim student from Varanasi is drawn into politics after her Sikh lover is murdered.",
"To prepare for her part, Kapoor interacted with students, attended workshops and practiced with theatre groups associated with Jawaharlal Nehru University.",
"She felt that she was perfect for her role in the film.",
"She talked about her approach to acting, saying she has always tried to do different films.",
"I try to be different for each character.",
"I like to challenge myself and don't like to repeat myself.",
"Although she received mixed reviews, she did some of her best work here, going smoothly from innocent to cynical, without ever losing her vulnerability.",
"Kapoor received her first nomination for the Filmfare Award for Best Actress because of her commercial success.",
"Bhaag Milkha Bhaag is a biographical film about athlete Milkha Singh.",
"She received the film because of her admiration for the director and the film itself.",
"One of the top-grossing Bollywood films of the year was Bhaag Milkha Bhaag.",
"In her review, the critic wrote that she was the perfect warm counterpart to Milkha.",
"The Filmfare Award for Best Film nominations was won by Bhaag Milkha Bhaag.",
"Anupama Chopra found the role of Mayera Sehgal in the film to be poorly written and an \"uphill climb\".",
"She played the role that was originally given to Rekha in the romantic comedy Khoobsurat, an adaptation of the 1980 film of the same name.",
"Though she received a Filmfare Best Actress nomination for her performance, critics were divided as to whether she was good or bad.",
"She began a romantic relationship with a man she met on a social media network, but they broke up a few months later.",
"In 2015, she starred as a runaway bride in a comedy called Dolly Ki Doli.",
"Mints Udita Jhunjhunwala wrote that her \"range is too limited to bring alive a character that may have had heaps of potential on paper\".",
"Poor is in almost every frame, and should have filled them all.",
"The treatment of the character shows her limitations.",
"She was nominated for the Filmfare Award for Best Actress despite the negative reviews.",
"A month after she was diagnosed with swine flu, she recovered.",
"A princess is looking for love.",
"One of the highest-grossing Bollywood films of all time was the film.",
"She was praised for her credibility as a royal, and Komal Nahta thought that the role was significant enough to be a turning point in her career.",
"She won the Golden Kela Award for Worst Actress.",
"After starring in the biographical film Neerja, she appeared in a music video for the song \"Hymn for the Weekend.\"",
"She was cast as Neerja Bhanot, the air hostess who died saving the passengers of Pan Am Flight 73.",
"She met Bhanot's family as a preparation for her role and felt responsible for the project because it is about real events.",
"The film received high critical praise, and several commentators considered her performance to be her best to date.",
"She carries the film entirely on her shoulder and Raja Sen found her performance to be career- defining.",
"All at the same time, she looks earnest, scared, benevolent, and bold.",
"Sen listed Kapoor as the best actress in Hindi cinema in 2016 while Masand invited her to his annual best actresses Roundtable.",
"In addition to that, she won a National Film Award, a Filmfare Best Actress nomination, and a Filmfare Special Mention.",
"Neerja was one of the highest-grossing Bollywood films with a female lead.",
"After a two-year absence from the screen, Kapoor plays a social worker in R. Balki's comedy-drama Pad Man.",
"The film is based on the life of Arunachalam Muruganantham, who worked for menstrual hygiene in rural India.",
"As long as the film has resonance beyond just having a good time at the movies, the length of the role is unimportant to her.",
"She likes a film that addresses important social issues and is about more than just entertainment.",
"Although finding her role to be \"largely superfluous\", Saibal Chatterjee wrote that she makes the most of the limited opportunity.",
"Kapoor married Ahuja in a traditional Sikh ceremony in May of last year.",
"Mumbai.",
"She was a part of Shashanka Ghosh's film, which was a female buddy film.",
"The film was thought to have \"style but no soul\" and was partly impressed with Kapoor's performance.",
"The film proved to be her second top-grossing Hindi film not featuring a well-known male star.",
"In the film Sanju, which was released later that month, Kapoor was one of the love interests of the actor.",
"Despite her brief role, she agreed to the project to work with Hirani and to have a reunion with her co-star after her debut.",
"The film's attempt to whitewash Dutt's misdeeds was criticized by Anna M. M. Vetticad, but she found the portrayal of her small role \"sweet\".",
"The film was called \"consistently engaging\" and \"hit the right notes as his partner\".",
"Sanju became one of the highest-grossing Indian films.",
"The coming-of-age film Ek Ladki Ko Dekha Toh Aisa Laga (as Sonam K Ahuja) starred her father, Juhi Chawla, and Rajkummar Rao.",
"She played a lesbian who had trouble coming out to her conservative family.",
"She agreed to help break stereotypes about same-sex relationships in India.",
"It failed to do well commercially despite being positive about homosexuality.",
"In the film The Zoya Factor, she played the role of a clumsy woman who becomes a lucky charm for the Indian cricket team.",
"Ankur Pathak of HuffPost said that she's out of depth in scenes that require her to exhibit more emotion.",
"One of the highest-paid actresses in Bollywood, Kapoor has appeared in the media from an early age.",
"According to a commentator for Rediff.com, several of her films have been commercial failures, despite being cited as one of the top actresses in India.",
"She was the first Indian actress to appear on the \"Next Generation: Asia Class\" list.",
"Kapoor's comments about others in the Indian film industry have caused controversy.",
"She acknowledged in a 2015 interview that her opinions get her into trouble, but said that she believes it pays to be honest in the long run.",
"A popular figure nationally, Kapoor has a large following on social media.",
"She was on The Huffington Post list of 100 most influential women.",
"She was featured on Rediff.com's list of \"Bollywood's Best Dressed Actresses\" in 2012 and 2013.",
"Her Style Icon and Beauty of the Year were both named in the Indian edition of Vogue.",
"Although she has earned praise for her dress sense and style, she has faced some criticism for wearing traditional Indian dresses.",
"In 2010 she was ranked seventh on The Times of India's \"most desirable woman\" list and in the next three years she placed 14th, 28th and 14th on the Eastern Eye \"World's Sexiest Asian Women\" list.",
"She was 48th and 45th on the Indian edition of Forbes \"Celebrity 100\" lists in 2012 and 2013, based on income and popularity of Indian celebrities.",
"She was named Woman of the Year by a men's magazine.",
"After peaking at the 18th position in the following year with an annual income of, Kapoor reached 31st place and 26th position in the following year.",
"In 2015, she won for Most Stylish Star (female), and in 2016 she was named Most Stylish Star (female) and Red Carpet Royalty at the Filmfare Glamour and Style Awards.",
"As well as endorsing brands, Kapoor is the Indian ambassador for L'Oréal.",
"She was named Brand Ambassador of the Year in 2011.",
"According to Rediff.com, she was one of the highest-paid celebrity endorsers in India.",
"Several Bollywood actors were called out for posting messages on social media showing their support for the Black Lives Matter movement despite their previous work advertising skin-lightening products which perpetuate colorism.",
"Activists have supported charities for various causes.",
"The International Indian Film Academy Awards fashion show supports widows and orphans of Indian film-industry workers.",
"She wrote to the Maharashtra Home Minister to protest against the use of glass-coated manja, which kills birds who become entangled in it.",
"Despite her previous criticism of trophy hunting, she declared her support for Khan when he was found guilty of hunting a blackbuck.",
"In 2012 Kapoor asked fans to donate to the Ogaan Cancer Foundation for her birthday, and collaborated with the foundation to increase awareness of breast cancer.",
"She is a brand ambassador for the campaign.",
"She supports LGBT rights in India.",
"The trailer of the film, Sisak, India's first silent gay love story, was launched on her account.",
"Some of her clothes were auctioned off in 2012 on Pernia's Pop-Up Shop.",
"The money was donated to a charity.",
"She donated clothing and accessories to a website that raised funds for In Defense of Animals after attending a charity art exhibition.",
"The Mijwan Welfare Society is a non-profit organisation dedicated to empowering girls.",
"The profits from the \"Dheere Dheere\" music video were donated to charity.",
"She hosted a dinner to raise money for children with cancer.",
"There are links to External links to Filmography Films Music video appearances Awards and nominations."
] | <mask> (; née <mask>; born 9 June 1985) is an Indian actress who works in Hindi cinema (Bollywood). She has won a National Film Award and a Filmfare Award, and from 2012 to 2016, she appeared in Forbes India Celebrity 100 list based on her income and popularity. <mask>, the daughter of actor <mask>, began her career as an assistant director on filmmaker Sanjay Leela Bhansali's 2005 highly acclaimed drama Black. She later made her acting debut in Bhansali's romantic drama Saawariya (2007), a box office flop, and had her first commercial successes with the romantic comedy I Hate Luv Storys (2010) and the ensemble romantic comedy-drama Aisha (2010). However, this was followed by a series of commercial failures and repetitive roles, which garnered her negative reviews. The 2013 box office hit Raanjhanaa marked a turning point in <mask>'s career, garnering her praise and Best Actress nominations at several award ceremonies. <mask> had her biggest commercial successes with supporting roles in the biopics Bhaag Milkha Bhaag (2013) and Sanju (2018), and a leading role in the romance Prem Ratan Dhan Payo (2015); the latter two rank among the highest-grossing Bollywood films.Her highly acclaimed portrayal of Neerja Bhanot in the 2016 biographical thriller Neerja won her the National Film Award – Special Mention and a Filmfare Critics Award for Best Actress, and she followed it with a starring role in the 2018 female buddy film Veere Di Wedding, both of which rank among the highest-grossing female-led Hindi films. <mask> supports the raising awareness of breast cancer and LGBT rights. Known in the media for her outspoken personality, she is frequently credited as one of India's most trendy celebrities. She is married to the businessman, Anand Ahuja. Life and career
Early life (1985–2006)
<mask> was born in the Chembur, Bombay (present-day Mumbai) on 9 June 1985. Her father is actor and producer Anil <mask>, the son of the late filmmaker Surinder <mask> and the founder of the Anil Kapoor Films Company. Her mother, Sunita, is a former model and designer.<mask> has two younger siblings: film producer Rhea and brother Harshvardhan. She is the niece of film producer Boney <mask> and actor Sanjay <mask>; actress Sridevi and producer Mona Shourie (Boney's wives) are her aunts. <mask>'s paternal cousins are actors Arjun <mask>, Janhvi <mask> and Mohit Marwah, and maternal second cousin is actor Ranveer Singh. The family moved to the suburb of Juhu when <mask> was one month old. She was educated at the Arya Vidya Mandir school in Juhu, where she confessed to being a "naughty" and "carefree" child who would bully the boys. She excelled at sports such as rugby and basketball, and trained in Kathak, classical music and Latin dance. <mask>, who practices Hinduism, states that she is "quite religious", and that it is a way of "reminding myself that I need to be thankful for so much".<mask>'s first job was as a waitress at age 15, although it lasted only a week. As a teenager, she struggled with her weight: "I had every issue related to weight that I could have. I was unhealthy, I had bad skin, and I had hair growing on my face!" <mask> was diagnosed with insulin resistance and polycystic ovarian disease, and has since begun an initiative to increase awareness of diabetes. <mask> enrolled at the United World College of South East Asia in Singapore for her pre-university education, where she studied theatre and arts. She has said she later started courses in economics and political science through University of Mumbai correspondence programme, after returning from University of East London where she began her bachelor's degree in the same subjects but returned to Mumbai soon after she began. Actress Rani Mukerji, a family friend, visited her family in Singapore on holiday while working on Black (2005).<mask>, who had originally wanted to be a director and writer, expressed a desire to work as a crew member on the film. On her father's recommendation to director Sanjay Leela Bhansali, she was appointed as his assistant. Debut and career fluctuations (2007–2012)
During the production of Black, <mask> developed an interest in acting when Bhansali professed that he wanted to cast her in the lead in his next film, Saawariya. She was advised to lose weight; at the time, she weighed about . Motivated by Bhansali's confidence in her, she lost in two years. <mask> studied acting with Roshan Taneja, Jayati Bhatia and Feroz Abbas Khan, and has cited actresses Waheeda Rehman and Nutan as influences, admiring their "path-breaking films ... [and] quality of doing different things". Released in 2007, Saawariya saw <mask> play a Muslim woman awaiting the return of her lover opposite Mukerji, Ranbir <mask> and Salman Khan.It was the first Indian feature film produced by a Hollywood studio, Sony Pictures Entertainment. Saawariya proved to be a major critical and commercial failure. Writing for BBC, Jaspreet Pandohar called the film a "misfire-on-a-massive-scale". Raja Sen of Rediff.com described her laugh as "almost as infectious as her father's", but wished that she had been "allowed to simper softly, instead of having a clearly overdubbed plastic giggle plastered onto her." The film earned her a Filmfare Award for Best Female Debut nomination and the Stardust Award for Superstar of Tomorrow – Female. In 2009, <mask> played an aspiring singer opposite Waheeda Rehman and Abhishek Bachchan in the Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra-directed social drama Delhi-6. The film received mixed reviews from critics and was a box-office failure.CNN-IBN's Rajeev Masand referred to <mask> as a "revelation", writing that she was "a firecracker, instinctive and uninhibited in what isn't even a conventional female lead". Sonia Chopra of Sify described <mask> as an "earnest and effortless performer", and found her character likeable, despite the "typical Delhi-girl recipe". <mask>'s first release in 2010 was Punit Malhotra's romantic comedy I Hate Luv Storys, opposite Imran Khan. She played an engaged woman who develops a one-sided attraction to her commitment-phobic co-worker. Khan said about <mask>'s craft, "We'd be shooting a scene from multiple angles—for three or four hours you're doing the same scene, the same lines—and here is this person [<mask>] who brings consistency to her work, from the way she talks, to her accent." Although Shubhra Gupta of The Indian Express called <mask>'s performance "stiff and rehearsed", Daily News and Analysis Johnson Thomas found her "likeable and believable". I Hate Luv Storys was <mask>'s first commercial success, earning worldwide.<mask> next played the eponymous role in Aisha, an ensemble romantic comedy-drama based on Jane Austen's novel Emma, which was produced by her sister Rhea. She described her character as "a meddlesome busybody with a passion for matchmaking and playing Cupid". Aisha also starred Abhay Deol, Ira Dubey, Cyrus Sahukar, Amrita Puri, Anand Tiwari, Arunoday Singh and Lisa Haydon. An Indo-Asian News Service reviewer thought that <mask> had stood out in the ensemble with her performance, making "the best of a rather rare opportunity for an Indian leading lady to be part of a Bollywood film that salutes Victorian mores and Delhi's elitist affectations in one clean cool sweep". In 2011, <mask> starred in Thank You, a comedy about three women who teach a lesson to their philandering husbands. The film, along with <mask>'s performance, received poor reviews; Nikhat Kazmi of The Times of India called her "terribly out of sync". She then played the romantic interest of Shahid <mask> Kapur-directed romantic drama, Mausam, which was also poorly received.Despite doubts about her acting ability, critic Saibal Chatterjee of NDTV thought <mask> conveyed "the essential vulnerability of a girl forever under duress, bringing out just the right mix of feminine fragility and native resolve". The following year, <mask> played a computer hacker opposite Abhishek Bachchan, Neil Nitin Mukesh and Bipasha Basu in the Abbas–Mustan-directed heist film, Players, a remake of 2003's The Italian Job. Her role was originally written for Katrina Kaif, who was unavailable for the film. Although journalists had high expectations, it failed commercially, and Sukanya Verma of Rediff.com remarked derogatively that <mask> "truly entertains with her childish attempt to pass off as a gold-medalist hacker". <mask>'s string of poorly received films began to hinder her career. Establishing with Raanjhanaa (2013–2015)
<mask>'s role in the Anand L. Rai-directed romantic drama Raanjhanaa (2013) marked a turning point in her career; Geety Sahgal called it her best performance to date in The Indian Express. <mask>'s role was that of Zoya Haider, a young Muslim student from Varanasi who is drawn into politics after the murder of her Sikh lover.To prepare for her part, <mask> interacted with students, attended workshops and practised with theatre groups associated with Jawaharlal Nehru University. She also studied Jaya Bachchan's work in Guddi (1971), which she felt was "perfect" for her role. Discussing her character in the film, <mask> described her approach to acting: "I have always tried to do different films and ... I try to be different for every character. I like doing different things to challenge myself in every way and don't like to repeat myself." Although Raanjhanaa received mixed-to-positive reviews, her performance was praised; Rajeev Masand wrote that she "does some of her best work here, going smoothly from innocent to manipulative to cynical, without ever losing Zoya's inherent vulnerability". With worldwide earnings of over , Raanjhanaa was a commercial success and <mask> received her first nomination for the Filmfare Award for Best Actress.<mask> followed the success of Raanjhanaa with a brief appearance in Bhaag Milkha Bhaag (2013), a biopic on athlete Milkha Singh. She received for the film, made on a budget of , citing her admiration for director Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra and the film itself as reasons for her appearance. Critically praised, Bhaag Milkha Bhaag was one of the top-grossing Bollywood films of the year. Critic Sarita A. Tanwar wrote in her review that despite her minor role, <mask> proved to "be the perfect warm counterpart to Milkha". Both Raanjhanaa and Bhaag Milkha Bhaag received Filmfare Award for Best Film nominations, the latter of which won. In 2014, <mask> portrayed the banker Mayera Sehgal opposite Ayushmann Khurrana and Rishi <mask> in the Yash Raj Films comedy-drama Bewakoofiyaan, in a role which film critic Anupama Chopra found to be poorly written and an "uphill climb". She next starred with Fawad Khan in the romantic comedy Khoobsurat, an adaptation of the 1980 film of the same name, playing the role which had originally been given to Rekha.Though she received a Filmfare Best Actress nomination for her performance, critics were divided in their response, with Shilpa Jamkhandikar of Reuters calling her "loud and exasperating", and Andy Webster of The New York Times comparing her to a young Anne Hathaway and highlighting her "Julia Roberts-like smile". Later that year, she met entrepreneur-model Sahir Berry on a social media network, and began a romantic relationship with him, although they broke up a few months later. In 2015, <mask> starred as a runaway bride in Dolly Ki Doli, a heist comedy co-starring Pulkit Samrat, Rajkummar Rao and Varun Sharma. Mints Udita Jhunjhunwala criticised <mask>'s performance in the film, writing that her "range is too limited to bring alive a character that may have had heaps of potential on paper". Shubhra Gupta wrote: "<mask> is in almost every frame, and should have filled them all. But the treatment of the character shows up her limitations." Despite the negative reviews for her performance, she was nominated for the Filmfare Award for Best Actress.While filming Sooraj R. Barjatya's Prem Ratan Dhan Payo with Salman Khan in Gondal, Gujarat in February 2015, <mask> was diagnosed with swine influenza, from which she recovered the following month. <mask> portrayed Rajkumari Maithili Devi, a princess looking for love. The film became one of the highest-grossing Bollywood films of all time. She was praised by Rachit Gupta for her credibility as a royal, and Komal Nahta thought that the role was significant enough to be a turning point in her career. However, she won a Golden Kela Award for Worst Actress. Female-oriented films and marriage (2016–present)
Following an appearance in the music video of Coldplay's "Hymn for the Weekend" (featuring Beyoncé), <mask> starred in Ram Madhvani's biographical thriller Neerja (2016). She was cast as the eponymous air hostess Neerja Bhanot, who died while saving the passengers of the hijacked Pan Am Flight 73 in 1986.<mask> felt responsible towards the project because it is about real events, and met Bhanot's family as a preparation for her role. The film garnered high critical acclaim, and several commentators considered <mask>'s performance to be her best to date. Raja Sen found her performance to be career-defining, while Hindustan Times Rohit Vats wrote that "she carries [the film] entirely on her shoulder. She looks earnest, scared, benevolent and bold, all at the same time." Sen listed <mask> as the best actress in Hindi cinema in 2016, while Rajeev Masand invited her to his annual best actresses roundtable. In addition to several other accolades, <mask> won a National Film Award – Special Mention and a Filmfare Best Actress (Critics), in addition to a Filmfare Best Actress nomination. With a worldwide gross over , Neerja emerged as one of the highest-grossing Bollywood films featuring a female protagonist.After a two-year absence from the screen, <mask> played a social worker in R. Balki's comedy-drama Pad Man (2018), based on a short story in Twinkle Khanna's book The Legend of Lakshmi Prasad. Co-starring Akshay Kumar and Radhika Apte, the film is inspired by the life of Arunachalam Muruganantham, who campaigned for menstrual hygiene in rural India. <mask> said that the length of the role is of little importance to her as long as the film has "relevance beyond just having a good time at the movies". She liked featuring in a film that addresses important social issues and is about something more than just entertainment. Although finding her role to be "largely superfluous", Saibal Chatterjee wrote that <mask> "makes the most of the limited opportunity"; Anna M. M. Vetticad of Firstpost commended her screen presence but disliked a romantic subplot involving her and Kumar, criticising the chemistry and age-gap between them. On 8 May 2018, <mask> married Indian businessman Anand Ahuja in a traditional Sikh ceremony in Bandra. Mumbai.The following month, she featured in Shashanka Ghosh's Veere Di Wedding, a female buddy film co-starring Kareena <mask>, Swara Bhaskar and Shikha Talsania. Namrita Joshi of The Hindu found the film formulaic and clichéd, while Sweta Kaushal of Hindustan Times thought the film had "style but no soul" and was partly impressed with <mask>'s performance. With earnings of over , the film proved to her second top-grossing Hindi film not featuring a well-known male star. Later that month, <mask> featured in Rajkumar Hirani's biopic of Bollywood actor Sanjay Dutt, entitled Sanju, as one of Dutt's love interests. <mask> said that despite her brief role, she agreed to the project to work with Hirani and to reunite with Ranbir <mask> after her debut. Anna M. M. Vetticad criticised the film's attempt to whitewash Dutt's misdeeds, but found <mask>'s portrayal of her small role "sweet". On the other hand, Rajeev Masand called the film "consistently engaging", and wrote that <mask> "hit the right notes as Sanjay Dutt's [partner]".Sanju broke several box-office records, becoming one of the highest-grossing Indian films. In 2019, <mask> starred in the coming-of-age film Ek Ladki Ko Dekha Toh Aisa Laga (as <mask> K Ahuja), co-starring her father, Juhi Chawla, and Rajkummar Rao. She played a closeted lesbian who has trouble coming out to her conservative family. She agreed to the project to break stereotypes about same-sex relationships in India. Critics were encouraging of its positive representation of homosexuality, but it failed to do well commercially. <mask> next starred in Abhishek Sharma's film adaptation of Anuja Chauhan's romantic comedy novel The Zoya Factor, in which she played the titular character of a clumsy woman who becomes a lucky charm for the Indian cricket team. Ankur Pathak of HuffPost was appreciative of her comic timing but bemoaned that "she's out of depth in scenes that require her to exhibit more emotion".In the media
Born into a prominent actor family, <mask> has appeared in the media from an early age,
and is one of the highest-paid actresses in Bollywood. After the success of Raanjhanaa and Bhaag Milkha Bhaag she was cited by Subhash K. Jha as one of the top actresses in India, though a commentator for Rediff.com notes that several of her films have been commercial failures. In 2009 she was the first Indian actress to appear on The Hollywood Reporter "Next Generation: Asia Class", a list of newcomers in film. Outspoken publicly, <mask>'s comments about contemporaries and others in the Indian film industry have occasionally caused controversy. In a 2015 interview, she acknowledged that her opinions often get her into trouble, but remarked that "I believe it pays to be honest in the longer run". <mask> is a popular figure nationally, with a significant following on Twitter and Facebook since 2009. She appeared on The Huffington Post list of "100 most influential women on Twitter" in 2015.She has been described by the media as a style icon, and featured on Rediff.com's list of "Bollywood's Best Dressed Actresses" in 2012 and 2013. In 2013, the newspaper Hindustan Times and Indian edition of Vogue called her Style Icon (Reader's Choice) and Beauty of the Year, respectively. Though <mask> has earned praise for her dress sense and style, she has faced some criticism for wearing traditional Indian dresses. <mask> was ranked seventh on The Times of India 2010 "Most Desirable Woman" list, placing 14th, 28th and 14th the next three years, and was in the top ten of UK magazine Eastern Eye "World's Sexiest Asian Women" list from 2011 to 2014. In 2012 and 2013 she also held 48th and 45th place, respectively, on the Indian edition of Forbes "Celebrity 100" lists, based on the income and popularity of Indian celebrities. She was named Woman of the Year by the men's magazine GQ India in 2013. In 2014 and 2015, <mask> reached 31st place and 26th position, respectively, peaking at the 18th position the following year with an annual income of .<mask> has acquired several titles at the Filmfare Glamour and Style Awards—in 2015 she won for Most Stylish Star (Female) and Absolut Elyx Style & Substance Award, and in 2016, she was named Most Stylish Star (Female) and Red Carpet Royalty. As well as endorsing brands such as Colgate, Electrolux, Lux, Mont Blanc, Oppo Mobile, Salvatore Ferragamo S.p.A. and Signature, <mask> is the Indian ambassador for international cosmetics manufacturer L'Oréal. In 2011, she was named Brand Ambassador of the Year at the NDTV Good Times Gadget Guru Awards. Rediff.com reported in 2012 that she received for each endorsement, making her one of the highest-paid celebrity endorsers in India. In 2020, <mask> was among several Bollywood actors who were called out for posting Instagram messages showing solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement, despite their previous work advertising skin-lightening products which perpetuate colorism. Activism
<mask> has supported charitable organisations for various causes. In 2009, she participated in the International Indian Film Academy Awards fashion show, which supports widows and orphans of Indian film-industry workers.On behalf of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) she wrote to Maharashtra Home Minister R. R. Patil, protesting against the use of glass-coated manja (used on fighter kites), which kills birds who become entangled in it. In 2018, however, she attracted some controversy when she declared her support for Salman Khan upon his conviction for hunting an endangered blackbuck, despite her previous criticism of trophy hunting. In 2012, <mask> asked fans to donate to the Ogaan Cancer Foundation for her birthday, and collaborated with the foundation to increase awareness of breast cancer. She is also the brand ambassador for the Elle Breast Cancer Campaign. <mask> is vocal in her support for LGBT rights in India. She launched the trailer of the film, Sisak, India's first silent gay love story, through her Twitter account in January 2017. <mask> auctioned some of her clothes on stylist Pernia Qureshi's online fashion boutique, Pernia's Pop-Up Shop, in 2012.The proceeds were donated to Smile Foundation, a child-welfare organisation. In 2014, she attended a charitable art exhibition organised by the Rouble Nagi Art Foundation, and donated clothing and accessories to a website raising funds for In Defense of Animals. <mask> walked the ramp in a 2015 fashion show by Manish Malhotra for the Mijwan Welfare Society, a non-profit organisation dedicated to empowering girls. The same year, she appeared with Hrithik Roshan in the music video for "Dheere Dheere", whose profits were donated to charity. In 2017, she hosted a dinner to raise funds for children suffering from cancer. Filmography
Films
Music video appearances
Awards and nominations
References
External links
21st-century Indian actresses
1985 births
Actresses from Mumbai
Actresses in Hindi cinema
People educated at a United World College
Alumni of the University of East London
Indian film actresses
Sonam
Living people
Punjabi people
Indian Hindus
Sindhi people
University of Mumbai alumni
Filmfare Awards winners
Special Mention (feature film) National Film Award winners
LGBT rights activists from India | [
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] | <mask> is an Indian actress who works in Hindi cinema. From 2012 to 2016 she appeared in the Forbes India 100 Celebrity list based on her income and popularity. The daughter of an actor began her career as an assistant director on a film. She made her acting debut in Saawariya, a box office flop, and had her first commercial success with the romantic comedy I Hate Luv Storys. Her negative reviews came from a series of commercial failures and repetitive roles. The box office hit was a turning point in <mask>'s career, as she was nominated for Best Actress at several award ceremonies. Bhaag Milkha Bhaag and Sanju rank among the highest-grossing Bollywood films of all time.Her portrayal of Neerja Bhanot in the biographical film Neerja won her the National Film Award - Special Mention and a Filmfare Critics Award for Best Actress, and she followed it with a starring role in the female buddy film Veere Di Wedding. The actress supports raising awareness of breast cancer. She is often credited as one of India's most trendy celebrities because of her outspoken personality. She is married to a businessman<mask> was born in Chembur, Bombay on 9 June 1985 and is now in Mumbai. Her father is an actor and producer, as well as the founder of the Anil Kapoor Films Company. Her mother was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217The film producer and brother are related to the <mask> family. She is the niece of actor and film producer Boney <mask> and actress Sridevi, as well as the producer's wives. <mask>'s paternal cousins are actors, while his maternal cousins are actors. The family lived in the suburb of Juhu. She confessed to being a "naughty" and "carefree" child who would bully the boys at the school she attended. She trained in classical music and Latin dance and excelled at sports. She states that she is quite religious and that it is a way of reminding herself that she needs to be thankful.At the age of 15, she had her first job as a waitress. She was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 I had bad skin and hair growing on my face. An initiative to increase awareness of diabetes was started by <mask> after she was diagnosed with polycystic ovarian disease. She studied theatre and arts at the United World College of South East Asia in Singapore. She began her bachelor's degree in economics and political science at the University of East London but returned to Mumbai soon after to take courses in economics and political science through the University of Mumbai correspondence programme. Rani Mukerji visited her family in Singapore while she was working on Black.He wanted to work on the film as a crew member. She was appointed as his assistant because of her father's recommendation. During the production of Black, she became interested in acting when Bhansali mentioned that he wanted to cast her in the lead in his next film. At the time, she was advised to lose weight. She lost in two years because of Bhansali's confidence. Waheeda Rehman and Nutan have been cited as influences by <mask>, who studied acting with Feroz Abbas Khan and Jayati Bhatia. The film was released in 2007, and featured a Muslim woman waiting for her lover to come back to her.The first Indian feature film was produced by a Hollywood studio. It was a major critical and commercial failure. Jaspreet Pandohar called the film a "misfire-on-a- massive-scale". Raja Sen of Rediff.com said that her laugh was almost as infectious as her father's, but wished she had been allowed to simper softly instead of having a clearly overdubbed plastic giggle plastered onto her. She was nominated for a Filmfare Award for Best Female Debut and a Stardust Award for Superstar of Tomorrow - Female. In 2009, <mask> played an aspiring singer in a social drama. The film was a flop at the box office.CNN-IBN's Rajeev Masand wrote that she was a "revelation", writing that she was "a firecracker, instinctive and uninhibited in what isn't even a conventional female lead". She was described as an "earnest and effortless performer" and found her character likeable despite the "typical Delhi-girl recipe". Punit Malhotra's romantic comedy I Hate Luv Storys was the first release of the year. She played a woman who develops a one-sided attraction to her co-worker. "We'd be shooting a scene from multiple angles, for three or four hours you're doing the same scene, the same lines, and here is this person who brings consistency to her work, from the way she talks," Khan said. Daily News and Analysis Johnson Thomas found her to be "likeable and believable". I Hate Luv Storys was <mask>'s first commercial success.The film was produced by her sister, and was based on Jane Austen's novel Emma. She described her character as a busybody with a passion for dating. Abhay Deol and Lisa Haydon starred in the film. It was the best of a rare opportunity for an Indian leading lady to be part of a Bollywood film that salutes Victorian mores and Delhi's elitist affectations in one clean cool sweep, according to a reviewer. Thank You was a comedy about three women who teach a lesson to their unfaithful husbands. The film received poor reviews and was described as "terribly out of sync" by The Times of India. She played the romantic interest of a man in a movie that was poorly received.Despite doubts about her acting ability, critic Saibal Chatterjee thought that <mask> conveyed the essential vulnerability of a girl forever under duress, bringing out just the right mix of feminine and native resolve. In the Abbas–Mustan-helmed film, Players, which was a remake of the 2003's The Italian Job, <mask> played a computer hacker. Her role was written for someone else. Although journalists had high expectations, it failed commercially, and as a result, they were derogative of her childish attempt to pass off as a gold-medalist hacker. Her career was hampered by her string of poorly received films. It was her best performance to date in The Indian Express, and it marked a turning point in her career. A young Muslim student from Varanasi is drawn into politics after her Sikh lover is murdered.To prepare for her part, <mask> interacted with students, attended workshops and practiced with theatre groups associated with Jawaharlal Nehru University. She felt that she was perfect for her role in the film. She talked about her approach to acting, saying she has always tried to do different films. I try to be different for each character. I like to challenge myself and don't like to repeat myself. Although she received mixed reviews, she did some of her best work here, going smoothly from innocent to cynical, without ever losing her vulnerability. <mask> received her first nomination for the Filmfare Award for Best Actress because of her commercial success.Bhaag Milkha Bhaag is a biographical film about athlete Milkha Singh. She received the film because of her admiration for the director and the film itself. One of the top-grossing Bollywood films of the year was Bhaag Milkha Bhaag. In her review, the critic wrote that she was the perfect warm counterpart to Milkha. The Filmfare Award for Best Film nominations was won by Bhaag Milkha Bhaag. Anupama Chopra found the role of Mayera Sehgal in the film to be poorly written and an "uphill climb". She played the role that was originally given to Rekha in the romantic comedy Khoobsurat, an adaptation of the 1980 film of the same name.Though she received a Filmfare Best Actress nomination for her performance, critics were divided as to whether she was good or bad. She began a romantic relationship with a man she met on a social media network, but they broke up a few months later. In 2015, she starred as a runaway bride in a comedy called Dolly Ki Doli. Mints Udita Jhunjhunwala wrote that her "range is too limited to bring alive a character that may have had heaps of potential on paper". Poor is in almost every frame, and should have filled them all. The treatment of the character shows her limitations. She was nominated for the Filmfare Award for Best Actress despite the negative reviews.A month after she was diagnosed with swine flu, she recovered. A princess is looking for love. One of the highest-grossing Bollywood films of all time was the film. She was praised for her credibility as a royal, and Komal Nahta thought that the role was significant enough to be a turning point in her career. She won the Golden Kela Award for Worst Actress. After starring in the biographical film Neerja, she appeared in a music video for the song "Hymn for the Weekend." She was cast as Neerja Bhanot, the air hostess who died saving the passengers of Pan Am Flight 73.She met Bhanot's family as a preparation for her role and felt responsible for the project because it is about real events. The film received high critical praise, and several commentators considered her performance to be her best to date. She carries the film entirely on her shoulder and Raja Sen found her performance to be career- defining. All at the same time, she looks earnest, scared, benevolent, and bold. Sen listed <mask> as the best actress in Hindi cinema in 2016 while Masand invited her to his annual best actresses Roundtable. In addition to that, she won a National Film Award, a Filmfare Best Actress nomination, and a Filmfare Special Mention. Neerja was one of the highest-grossing Bollywood films with a female lead.After a two-year absence from the screen, <mask> plays a social worker in R. Balki's comedy-drama Pad Man. The film is based on the life of Arunachalam Muruganantham, who worked for menstrual hygiene in rural India. As long as the film has resonance beyond just having a good time at the movies, the length of the role is unimportant to her. She likes a film that addresses important social issues and is about more than just entertainment. Although finding her role to be "largely superfluous", Saibal Chatterjee wrote that she makes the most of the limited opportunity. <mask> married Ahuja in a traditional Sikh ceremony in May of last year. Mumbai.She was a part of Shashanka Ghosh's film, which was a female buddy film. The film was thought to have "style but no soul" and was partly impressed with <mask>'s performance. The film proved to be her second top-grossing Hindi film not featuring a well-known male star. In the film Sanju, which was released later that month, <mask> was one of the love interests of the actor. Despite her brief role, she agreed to the project to work with Hirani and to have a reunion with her co-star after her debut. The film's attempt to whitewash Dutt's misdeeds was criticized by Anna M. M. Vetticad, but she found the portrayal of her small role "sweet". The film was called "consistently engaging" and "hit the right notes as his partner".Sanju became one of the highest-grossing Indian films. The coming-of-age film Ek Ladki Ko Dekha Toh Aisa Laga (as <mask> K Ahuja) starred her father, Juhi Chawla, and Rajkummar Rao. She played a lesbian who had trouble coming out to her conservative family. She agreed to help break stereotypes about same-sex relationships in India. It failed to do well commercially despite being positive about homosexuality. In the film The Zoya Factor, she played the role of a clumsy woman who becomes a lucky charm for the Indian cricket team. Ankur Pathak of HuffPost said that she's out of depth in scenes that require her to exhibit more emotion.One of the highest-paid actresses in Bollywood, <mask> has appeared in the media from an early age. According to a commentator for Rediff.com, several of her films have been commercial failures, despite being cited as one of the top actresses in India. She was the first Indian actress to appear on the "Next Generation: Asia Class" list. <mask>'s comments about others in the Indian film industry have caused controversy. She acknowledged in a 2015 interview that her opinions get her into trouble, but said that she believes it pays to be honest in the long run. A popular figure nationally, <mask> has a large following on social media. She was on The Huffington Post list of 100 most influential women.She was featured on Rediff.com's list of "Bollywood's Best Dressed Actresses" in 2012 and 2013. Her Style Icon and Beauty of the Year were both named in the Indian edition of Vogue. Although she has earned praise for her dress sense and style, she has faced some criticism for wearing traditional Indian dresses. In 2010 she was ranked seventh on The Times of India's "most desirable woman" list and in the next three years she placed 14th, 28th and 14th on the Eastern Eye "World's Sexiest Asian Women" list. She was 48th and 45th on the Indian edition of Forbes "Celebrity 100" lists in 2012 and 2013, based on income and popularity of Indian celebrities. She was named Woman of the Year by a men's magazine. After peaking at the 18th position in the following year with an annual income of, <mask> reached 31st place and 26th position in the following year.In 2015, she won for Most Stylish Star (female), and in 2016 she was named Most Stylish Star (female) and Red Carpet Royalty at the Filmfare Glamour and Style Awards. As well as endorsing brands, <mask> is the Indian ambassador for L'Oréal. She was named Brand Ambassador of the Year in 2011. According to Rediff.com, she was one of the highest-paid celebrity endorsers in India. Several Bollywood actors were called out for posting messages on social media showing their support for the Black Lives Matter movement despite their previous work advertising skin-lightening products which perpetuate colorism. Activists have supported charities for various causes. The International Indian Film Academy Awards fashion show supports widows and orphans of Indian film-industry workers.She wrote to the Maharashtra Home Minister to protest against the use of glass-coated manja, which kills birds who become entangled in it. Despite her previous criticism of trophy hunting, she declared her support for Khan when he was found guilty of hunting a blackbuck. In 2012 <mask> asked fans to donate to the Ogaan Cancer Foundation for her birthday, and collaborated with the foundation to increase awareness of breast cancer. She is a brand ambassador for the campaign. She supports LGBT rights in India. The trailer of the film, Sisak, India's first silent gay love story, was launched on her account. Some of her clothes were auctioned off in 2012 on Pernia's Pop-Up Shop.The money was donated to a charity. She donated clothing and accessories to a website that raised funds for In Defense of Animals after attending a charity art exhibition. The Mijwan Welfare Society is a non-profit organisation dedicated to empowering girls. The profits from the "Dheere Dheere" music video were donated to charity. She hosted a dinner to raise money for children with cancer. There are links to External links to Filmography Films Music video appearances Awards and nominations. | [
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63515638 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elijah%20Olaniyi | Elijah Olaniyi | Elijah Olaniyi (born January 11, 1999) is a former American college basketball player. Olaniyi played for the Stony Brook Seawolves of the America East Conference and the Miami Hurricanes of the Atlantic Coast Conference.
He began his career at Stony Brook, winning America East Rookie of the Year in 2018 and being named first-team All-Conference in 2020 before transferring to Miami. He transferred back to Stony Brook for his fifth and final year, but left the team before the end of the season.
Early life and high school career
Olaniyi was born in Brooklyn, New York. He attended a charter school, which did not have a basketball team, as a high school freshman before transferring to East Side in Newark, New Jersey the following semester. Olaniyi did not begin playing basketball until eighth grade when a gym teacher pointed him towards the direction of AAU basketball. He played two years in AAU with the NJ Roadrunners. At East Side, he played for head coach Anthony Tavares. With Olaniyi, the East Side Red Raiders won county championships in 2014 and 2017, as well as a state title in 2015. In 87 high school games, Olaniyi recorded 928 points and 588 rebounds. In his junior season, he was named to the All-Group 4 First Team. He was named first-team All-State and All-Conference as a senior.
Olaniyi was listed as a two-star recruit by ESPN as a small forward, with a 67 overall grade. ESPN ranked Olaniyi as the 11th-best recruit in the state of New Jersey and the 75th-best small forward.
College career
Olaniyi made his college debut on November 10, 2017, against Maryland, where he played 20 minutes and scored three points. On November 19, Olaniyi came off the bench and led Stony Brook with 16 points against No. 2 Michigan State. The game started a series of five double-digit games in a row off the bench for Olaniyi. In his first career start, he had a double-double with 10 points and 10 rebounds against Hartford. He won the 2018 America East Rookie of the Year award after leading all freshmen with 7.8 points and 3.8 rebounds per game. He was named America East Rookie of the Week four times and was also named to the America East All-Rookie Team.
In his sophomore season, Olaniyi averaged 16.8 points in Stony Brook's first four games before suffering a concussion in the team's home opener against Molloy. He missed two games and came off the bench against Quinnipiac in his return. On February 2, 2019, Olaniyi scored a new career-high 28 points against Hartford. In Stony Brook's America East quarterfinal loss to Binghamton, Olaniyi led all players with 27 points. He finished his sophomore season averaging 12.3 points per game and 5.9 rebounds per game with a 42.5 percent field goal rate. He was named to the Third-Team All-America East.
Olaniyi broke out in his junior season. On December 7, 2019, he had a career game, scoring 30 points against Brown on 11-for-15 shooting. He scored his 1,000th career point in a 70–62 victory over Albany on January 18, 2020, his fourth-straight 20-point, 10-rebound double-double. On February 5, he scored a career-high 33 points against UMass Lowell. On February 8, Olaniyi suffered a high ankle sprain versus New Hampshire and missed five games, prior to the injury, he was averaging 19.7 points and 6.9 rebounds per game. He returned off the bench on March 3 against UMBC and re-entered the starting lineup in the 2020 America East Tournament, scoring 11 points against Albany in the quarterfinals and 19 points against Hartford in the semifinals. Olaniyi was named to the First-Team All-America East, ending his junior season averaging 18.0 points and 6.5 rebounds per game while shooting 43.5 percent from the floor and 36.1 percent from three-point range.
On March 28, 2020, Olaniyi officially declared for the 2020 NBA draft. On May 17, he announced that he would transfer to Miami (Florida) for his senior season. He averaged 10.5 points and 5.1 rebounds per game. After the season, he entered the transfer portal. On April 2, 2021, Olaniyi announced that he would be transferring back to Stony Brook for his fifth season of eligibility.
On November 22, 2021, Olaniyi suffered a leg injury against Sacred Heart and missed 10 games. He returned on January 8, 2022 against Maine. Olaniyi took a personal leave of absence from the team on January 19, 2022 and rejoined the team on January 26. On February 10, Olaniyi announced that he had permanently left the team and withdrawn from the university, citing his injury and Stony Brook's inability to participate in the postseason as a result of the America East Conference's punishment for Stony Brook joining the Colonial Athletic Association in July. He played seven games, averaging 8.9 points and 3.7 rebounds per game.
Olaniyi ended his college career with 1,417 points – 1,197 at Stony Brook (eighth-most in program history) and 220 at Miami.
Career statistics
College
|-
| style="text-align:left;"| 2017–18
| style="text-align:left;"| Stony Brook
| 32 || 8 || 22.3 || .455 || .313 || .534 || 3.8 || 0.7 || 1.0 || 0.1 || 7.8
|-
| style="text-align:left;"| 2018–19
| style="text-align:left;"| Stony Brook
| 31 || 30 || 31.1 || .425 || .319 || .705 || 5.9 || 1.7 || 0.8 || 0.4 || 12.3
|-
| style="text-align:left;"| 2019–20
| style="text-align:left;"| Stony Brook
| 28 || 26 || 32.6 || .435 || .361 || .709 || 6.5 || 2.1 || 1.6 || 0.3 || 18.0
|-
| style="text-align:left;"| 2020–21
| style="text-align:left;"| Miami
| 21 || 18 || 32.6 || .421 || .263 || .709 || 5.1 || 0.9 || 0.9 || 0.4 || 10.5
|-
| style="text-align:left;"| 2021–22
| style="text-align:left;"| Stony Brook
| 7 || 4 || 25.1 || .434 || .125 || .737 || 3.7 || 0.9 || 1.1 || 0.6 || 8.9
|- class="sortbottom"
| style="text-align:center;" colspan="2"| Career
| 119 || 86 || 29.0 || .434 || .314 || .684 || 5.2 || 1.3 || 1.1 || 0.3 || 11.9
Personal life
Olaniyi was born to Festus and Ruth Olaniyi and has five siblings. Olaniyi was the first member of his family to be a natural born citizen of the United States after his parents immigrated from Nigeria. Olaniyi cites Kobe Bryant and Jimmy Butler as personal influences on his basketball career.
References
External links
Miami Hurricanes bio
Stony Brook Seawolves bio
1999 births
Living people
American men's basketball players
Basketball players from New York City
East Side High School (Newark, New Jersey) alumni
Shooting guards
Sportspeople from Brooklyn
Basketball players from Newark, New Jersey
Stony Brook Seawolves men's basketball players | [
"Elijah Olaniyi (born January 11, 1999) is a former American college basketball player.",
"Olaniyi played for the Stony Brook Seawolves of the America East Conference and the Miami Hurricanes of the Atlantic Coast Conference.",
"He began his career at Stony Brook, winning America East Rookie of the Year in 2018 and being named first-team All-Conference in 2020 before transferring to Miami.",
"He transferred back to Stony Brook for his fifth and final year, but left the team before the end of the season.",
"Early life and high school career\nOlaniyi was born in Brooklyn, New York.",
"He attended a charter school, which did not have a basketball team, as a high school freshman before transferring to East Side in Newark, New Jersey the following semester.",
"Olaniyi did not begin playing basketball until eighth grade when a gym teacher pointed him towards the direction of AAU basketball.",
"He played two years in AAU with the NJ Roadrunners.",
"At East Side, he played for head coach Anthony Tavares.",
"With Olaniyi, the East Side Red Raiders won county championships in 2014 and 2017, as well as a state title in 2015.",
"In 87 high school games, Olaniyi recorded 928 points and 588 rebounds.",
"In his junior season, he was named to the All-Group 4 First Team.",
"He was named first-team All-State and All-Conference as a senior.",
"Olaniyi was listed as a two-star recruit by ESPN as a small forward, with a 67 overall grade.",
"ESPN ranked Olaniyi as the 11th-best recruit in the state of New Jersey and the 75th-best small forward.",
"College career\nOlaniyi made his college debut on November 10, 2017, against Maryland, where he played 20 minutes and scored three points.",
"On November 19, Olaniyi came off the bench and led Stony Brook with 16 points against No.",
"2 Michigan State.",
"The game started a series of five double-digit games in a row off the bench for Olaniyi.",
"In his first career start, he had a double-double with 10 points and 10 rebounds against Hartford.",
"He won the 2018 America East Rookie of the Year award after leading all freshmen with 7.8 points and 3.8 rebounds per game.",
"He was named America East Rookie of the Week four times and was also named to the America East All-Rookie Team.",
"In his sophomore season, Olaniyi averaged 16.8 points in Stony Brook's first four games before suffering a concussion in the team's home opener against Molloy.",
"He missed two games and came off the bench against Quinnipiac in his return.",
"On February 2, 2019, Olaniyi scored a new career-high 28 points against Hartford.",
"In Stony Brook's America East quarterfinal loss to Binghamton, Olaniyi led all players with 27 points.",
"He finished his sophomore season averaging 12.3 points per game and 5.9 rebounds per game with a 42.5 percent field goal rate.",
"He was named to the Third-Team All-America East.",
"Olaniyi broke out in his junior season.",
"On December 7, 2019, he had a career game, scoring 30 points against Brown on 11-for-15 shooting.",
"He scored his 1,000th career point in a 70–62 victory over Albany on January 18, 2020, his fourth-straight 20-point, 10-rebound double-double.",
"On February 5, he scored a career-high 33 points against UMass Lowell.",
"On February 8, Olaniyi suffered a high ankle sprain versus New Hampshire and missed five games, prior to the injury, he was averaging 19.7 points and 6.9 rebounds per game.",
"He returned off the bench on March 3 against UMBC and re-entered the starting lineup in the 2020 America East Tournament, scoring 11 points against Albany in the quarterfinals and 19 points against Hartford in the semifinals.",
"Olaniyi was named to the First-Team All-America East, ending his junior season averaging 18.0 points and 6.5 rebounds per game while shooting 43.5 percent from the floor and 36.1 percent from three-point range.",
"On March 28, 2020, Olaniyi officially declared for the 2020 NBA draft.",
"On May 17, he announced that he would transfer to Miami (Florida) for his senior season.",
"He averaged 10.5 points and 5.1 rebounds per game.",
"After the season, he entered the transfer portal.",
"On April 2, 2021, Olaniyi announced that he would be transferring back to Stony Brook for his fifth season of eligibility.",
"On November 22, 2021, Olaniyi suffered a leg injury against Sacred Heart and missed 10 games.",
"He returned on January 8, 2022 against Maine.",
"Olaniyi took a personal leave of absence from the team on January 19, 2022 and rejoined the team on January 26.",
"On February 10, Olaniyi announced that he had permanently left the team and withdrawn from the university, citing his injury and Stony Brook's inability to participate in the postseason as a result of the America East Conference's punishment for Stony Brook joining the Colonial Athletic Association in July.",
"He played seven games, averaging 8.9 points and 3.7 rebounds per game.",
"Olaniyi ended his college career with 1,417 points – 1,197 at Stony Brook (eighth-most in program history) and 220 at Miami.",
"Olaniyi was the first member of his family to be a natural born citizen of the United States after his parents immigrated from Nigeria.",
"Olaniyi cites Kobe Bryant and Jimmy Butler as personal influences on his basketball career.",
"References\n\nExternal links\nMiami Hurricanes bio\nStony Brook Seawolves bio\n\n1999 births\nLiving people\nAmerican men's basketball players\nBasketball players from New York City\nEast Side High School (Newark, New Jersey) alumni\nShooting guards\nSportspeople from Brooklyn\nBasketball players from Newark, New Jersey\nStony Brook Seawolves men's basketball players"
] | [
"Olaniyi is a former college basketball player.",
"Olaniyi played for the Seawolves of the America East Conference and the Hurricanes of the Atlantic Coast Conference.",
"He was named first-team All-Conference in 2020 after being named America East Freshman of the Year in 2018, before transferring to Miami.",
"He left the team before the end of the season after five years.",
"Olaniyi was born in New York.",
"He transferred to East Side in Newark, New Jersey after attending a charter school that did not have a basketball team.",
"The gym teacher pointed Olaniyi towards the direction of basketball when he was in eighth grade.",
"He was a member of the NJ Roadrunners for two years.",
"He played for the head coach at East Side.",
"The East Side Red Raiders won county and state titles with Olaniyi.",
"Olaniyi scored 928 points in 87 high school games.",
"He was named to the All- Group 4 First Team in his junior season.",
"He was a first-team All-State and All-Conference as a senior.",
"Olaniyi was a two-star recruit and had a 67 overall grade.",
"Olaniyi was the 11th-best recruit in the state of New Jersey and the 75th-best small forward.",
"Olaniyi played 20 minutes and scored three points in his college debut against Maryland in the savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay",
"On November 19th, Olaniyi came off the bench and scored 16 points.",
"There are 2 Michigan State.",
"Olaniyi started a series of double-digit games off the bench.",
"He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"He won the America East Freshman of the Year award after leading all rookies with 7.8 points and 3.8 rebound per game.",
"He was named the America East Freshman of the Week four times.",
"Olaniyi suffered a concussion in the team's home opener and missed the rest of the season.",
"He came off the bench in his return after missing two games.",
"Olaniyi scored a career-high 28 points against Hartford.",
"In the America East quarterfinals, Olaniyi led all players with 27 points.",
"He averaged 12.3 points per game and 5.9 rebound per game in his sophomore season.",
"He was named to the All-America East.",
"In his junior season, Olaniyi broke out.",
"He had a career game in December, scoring 30 points against Brown.",
"He scored his 1,000th career point in a 70–62 victory over Albany on January 18, 2020.",
"On February 5, he scored a career-high 33 points.",
"Olaniyi missed five games due to an ankle injury he sustained against New Hampshire on February 8.",
"He came off the bench to score 11 points against Albany in the quarterfinals and 19 points against Hartford in the semifinals of the 2020 America East Tournament.",
"Olaniyi finished his junior season with 18.0 points and 6.5 rebound per game while shooting 43.5 percent from the floor and 36.1 percent from three-point range and was named to the First-Team All-America East.",
"Olaniyi declared for the 2020 NBA draft on March 28, 2020.",
"He announced on May 17 that he would transfer to Miami for his senior season.",
"He averaged more than 10 points per game.",
"He entered the transfer portal after the season.",
"On April 2, 2021, Olaniyi announced that he would be returning to the school for his fifth season of eligibility.",
"Olaniyi missed 10 games due to a leg injury.",
"He came back on January 8, 2022, against Maine.",
"Olaniyi rejoined the team on January 26 after taking a personal leave of absence.",
"On February 10, Olaniyi announced that he had permanently left the team and withdrawn from the university, citing his injury and the America East Conference's inability to participate in the playoffs as a result of their punishment for joining the Colonial Athletic Association.",
"He played in seven games and averaged 8.9 points and 3.7 rebound per game.",
"Olaniyi ended his college career with more points than any other player in the history of the program.",
"Olaniyi was the first member of his family to be a natural born citizen of the United States.",
"Kobe Bryant is one of the personal influences on Olaniyi's basketball career.",
"There are basketball players from New York City East Side High School and players from Newark, New Jersey."
] | <mask> (born January 11, 1999) is a former American college basketball player. Olaniyi played for the Stony Brook Seawolves of the America East Conference and the Miami Hurricanes of the Atlantic Coast Conference. He began his career at Stony Brook, winning America East Rookie of the Year in 2018 and being named first-team All-Conference in 2020 before transferring to Miami. He transferred back to Stony Brook for his fifth and final year, but left the team before the end of the season. Early life and high school career
<mask> was born in Brooklyn, New York. He attended a charter school, which did not have a basketball team, as a high school freshman before transferring to East Side in Newark, New Jersey the following semester. Olaniyi did not begin playing basketball until eighth grade when a gym teacher pointed him towards the direction of AAU basketball.He played two years in AAU with the NJ Roadrunners. At East Side, he played for head coach Anthony Tavares. With Olaniyi, the East Side Red Raiders won county championships in 2014 and 2017, as well as a state title in 2015. In 87 high school games, <mask> recorded 928 points and 588 rebounds. In his junior season, he was named to the All-Group 4 First Team. He was named first-team All-State and All-Conference as a senior. <mask> was listed as a two-star recruit by ESPN as a small forward, with a 67 overall grade.ESPN ranked Olaniyi as the 11th-best recruit in the state of New Jersey and the 75th-best small forward. College career
<mask> made his college debut on November 10, 2017, against Maryland, where he played 20 minutes and scored three points. On November 19, <mask> came off the bench and led Stony Brook with 16 points against No. 2 Michigan State. The game started a series of five double-digit games in a row off the bench for Olaniyi. In his first career start, he had a double-double with 10 points and 10 rebounds against Hartford. He won the 2018 America East Rookie of the Year award after leading all freshmen with 7.8 points and 3.8 rebounds per game.He was named America East Rookie of the Week four times and was also named to the America East All-Rookie Team. In his sophomore season, Olaniyi averaged 16.8 points in Stony Brook's first four games before suffering a concussion in the team's home opener against Molloy. He missed two games and came off the bench against Quinnipiac in his return. On February 2, 2019, <mask> scored a new career-high 28 points against Hartford. In Stony Brook's America East quarterfinal loss to Binghamton, Olaniyi led all players with 27 points. He finished his sophomore season averaging 12.3 points per game and 5.9 rebounds per game with a 42.5 percent field goal rate. He was named to the Third-Team All-America East.<mask> broke out in his junior season. On December 7, 2019, he had a career game, scoring 30 points against Brown on 11-for-15 shooting. He scored his 1,000th career point in a 70–62 victory over Albany on January 18, 2020, his fourth-straight 20-point, 10-rebound double-double. On February 5, he scored a career-high 33 points against UMass Lowell. On February 8, <mask> suffered a high ankle sprain versus New Hampshire and missed five games, prior to the injury, he was averaging 19.7 points and 6.9 rebounds per game. He returned off the bench on March 3 against UMBC and re-entered the starting lineup in the 2020 America East Tournament, scoring 11 points against Albany in the quarterfinals and 19 points against Hartford in the semifinals. <mask> was named to the First-Team All-America East, ending his junior season averaging 18.0 points and 6.5 rebounds per game while shooting 43.5 percent from the floor and 36.1 percent from three-point range.On March 28, 2020, <mask> officially declared for the 2020 NBA draft. On May 17, he announced that he would transfer to Miami (Florida) for his senior season. He averaged 10.5 points and 5.1 rebounds per game. After the season, he entered the transfer portal. On April 2, 2021, <mask> announced that he would be transferring back to Stony Brook for his fifth season of eligibility. On November 22, 2021, <mask> suffered a leg injury against Sacred Heart and missed 10 games. He returned on January 8, 2022 against Maine.<mask> took a personal leave of absence from the team on January 19, 2022 and rejoined the team on January 26. On February 10, <mask> announced that he had permanently left the team and withdrawn from the university, citing his injury and Stony Brook's inability to participate in the postseason as a result of the America East Conference's punishment for Stony Brook joining the Colonial Athletic Association in July. He played seven games, averaging 8.9 points and 3.7 rebounds per game. Olaniyi ended his college career with 1,417 points – 1,197 at Stony Brook (eighth-most in program history) and 220 at Miami. Olaniyi was the first member of his family to be a natural born citizen of the United States after his parents immigrated from Nigeria. Olaniyi cites Kobe Bryant and Jimmy Butler as personal influences on his basketball career. References
External links
Miami Hurricanes bio
Stony Brook Seawolves bio
1999 births
Living people
American men's basketball players
Basketball players from New York City
East Side High School (Newark, New Jersey) alumni
Shooting guards
Sportspeople from Brooklyn
Basketball players from Newark, New Jersey
Stony Brook Seawolves men's basketball players | [
"Elijah Olaniyi",
"Olaniyi",
"Olaniyi",
"Olaniyi",
"Olaniyi",
"Olaniyi",
"Olaniyi",
"Olaniyi",
"Olaniyi",
"Olaniyi",
"Olaniyi",
"Olaniyi",
"Olaniyi",
"Olaniyi",
"Olaniyi"
] | <mask> is a former college basketball player. Olaniyi played for the Seawolves of the America East Conference and the Hurricanes of the Atlantic Coast Conference. He was named first-team All-Conference in 2020 after being named America East Freshman of the Year in 2018, before transferring to Miami. He left the team before the end of the season after five years. <mask> was born in New York. He transferred to East Side in Newark, New Jersey after attending a charter school that did not have a basketball team. The gym teacher pointed Olaniyi towards the direction of basketball when he was in eighth grade.He was a member of the NJ Roadrunners for two years. He played for the head coach at East Side. The East Side Red Raiders won county and state titles with Olaniyi. Olaniyi scored 928 points in 87 high school games. He was named to the All- Group 4 First Team in his junior season. He was a first-team All-State and All-Conference as a senior. Olaniyi was a two-star recruit and had a 67 overall grade.Olaniyi was the 11th-best recruit in the state of New Jersey and the 75th-best small forward. Olaniyi played 20 minutes and scored three points in his college debut against Maryland in the savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay savesay On November 19th, Olaniyi came off the bench and scored 16 points. There are 2 Michigan State. Olaniyi started a series of double-digit games off the bench. He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 He won the America East Freshman of the Year award after leading all rookies with 7.8 points and 3.8 rebound per game.He was named the America East Freshman of the Week four times. <mask> suffered a concussion in the team's home opener and missed the rest of the season. He came off the bench in his return after missing two games. <mask> scored a career-high 28 points against Hartford. In the America East quarterfinals, <mask> led all players with 27 points. He averaged 12.3 points per game and 5.9 rebound per game in his sophomore season. He was named to the All-America East.In his junior season, <mask> broke out. He had a career game in December, scoring 30 points against Brown. He scored his 1,000th career point in a 70–62 victory over Albany on January 18, 2020. On February 5, he scored a career-high 33 points. <mask> missed five games due to an ankle injury he sustained against New Hampshire on February 8. He came off the bench to score 11 points against Albany in the quarterfinals and 19 points against Hartford in the semifinals of the 2020 America East Tournament. <mask> finished his junior season with 18.0 points and 6.5 rebound per game while shooting 43.5 percent from the floor and 36.1 percent from three-point range and was named to the First-Team All-America East.<mask> declared for the 2020 NBA draft on March 28, 2020. He announced on May 17 that he would transfer to Miami for his senior season. He averaged more than 10 points per game. He entered the transfer portal after the season. On April 2, 2021, <mask> announced that he would be returning to the school for his fifth season of eligibility. Olaniyi missed 10 games due to a leg injury. He came back on January 8, 2022, against Maine.<mask> rejoined the team on January 26 after taking a personal leave of absence. On February 10, <mask> announced that he had permanently left the team and withdrawn from the university, citing his injury and the America East Conference's inability to participate in the playoffs as a result of their punishment for joining the Colonial Athletic Association. He played in seven games and averaged 8.9 points and 3.7 rebound per game. <mask> ended his college career with more points than any other player in the history of the program. Olaniyi was the first member of his family to be a natural born citizen of the United States. Kobe Bryant is one of the personal influences on <mask>'s basketball career. There are basketball players from New York City East Side High School and players from Newark, New Jersey. | [
"Olaniyi",
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"Olaniyi"
] |
9495628 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M.%20Athalie%20Range | M. Athalie Range | M. Athalie Range (born Mary Athalie Wilkinson; November 7, 1915 in Key West, Florida – November 14, 2006 in Miami, Florida) was a Bahamian American civil rights activist and politician who was the first African-American to serve on the Miami, Florida City Commission, and the first African-American since Reconstruction and the first woman to head a Florida state agency, the Department of Community Affairs.
Early life and marriage
Mary Athalie Wilkinson was born in Key West, Florida on November 7, 1915. Her grandparents had all been immigrants from the Bahamas. When Athalie was five or six years old, the Wilkinson family moved to Miami. Athalie Wilkinson graduated from all-black Booker T. Washington High School in Overtown, Miami. She married Oscar Lee Range in 1937 & had 4 children Myrna, Patrick, Oscar, and Gary. During this period the Ranges lived in the Liberty Square Housing Project. During World War II Athalie Range found work cleaning trash from railroad cars.
In 1953 Oscar Range became a certified funeral director and opened the Range Funeral Home in the Liberty City neighborhood in Miami. Oscar Range died unexpectedly of a heart attack in 1960. Athalie Range then enrolled in the New England Institute of Anatomy and Embalming and obtained her funeral director certification so that she could operate the family business. The Range Funeral Homes eventually expanded to three locations, and Athalie Range continued to work in the business for the rest of her life.
School activism
In 1948 Athalie Range became President of the Parent Teacher Association at her children's school, Liberty City Elementary. The school had 1200 students and consisted of all portable classrooms, with no permanent buildings. There were only some twelve toilets for boys and for girls. The only drinking fountains were outside, fed by pipes laid on top of the ground, so that the water was usually too hot to drink. There were no trees or grassy areas on the school grounds and no lunchroom. Liberty City Elementary was one of the few schools in the (county-wide) school district holding two half-day sessions.
Range led 125 African-American parents from the school to a meeting of the school board to present their demands for improvements to the school. After delaying the start of the meeting for an hour, the board heard Athalie Range speak. Much to her surprise, the board agreed to make improvements. They ordered hot meals to be provided by a nearby white school to Liberty City Elementary, moved another portable to the school to use in serving the hot lunches, and began construction of a new, permanent school building, the first school for African-Americans built in the district in twenty-one years. Althalie Range continued to serve as President of school and county-wide PTAs for sixteen years.
City Commission
In 1965 Alice Wainwright, who was the first woman to serve on the Miami City Commission, decided to not seek re-election. Athalie Range became a candidate for the vacant seat, the first African-American to run for the City Commission. She won a plurality in the primary election, although not a majority. In the runoff election, Range's opponent, a white man named Irwin Christie, sent a sound truck through white neighborhoods the day before the election broadcasting the message that if the white people did not get out and vote, they would have a black woman making laws for them. Athalie Range would later say, "His campaign decided to play the race card, which took me out of contention." Many black voters had been allowed to take time off from work to vote in the primary, but were not allowed to do so for the runoff. Range lost the runoff, receiving about 17,000 votes, while Christie received about 18,000. Christie later apologized to Range for the way he had run his campaign, and she accepted the apology.
In 1966 one of the city commissioners resigned his seat, possibly with the encouragement of Miami Mayor Robert King High. High was running for the Democratic Party nomination for Governor of Florida at the time. He appointed Athalie Range to fill the unexpired term of the commissioner who had resigned. In 1967 and again in 1969 Athalie Range was reelected to the City Commission. While on the commission, Range sought to have garbage collection improved in black neighborhoods, which sometimes went three weeks between garbage pickups, while white neighborhoods got twice a week pickups. After a vote on her proposed ordinance to equalize garbage service was twice postponed, Range had her neighbors bring bags of garbage to the commission meeting and dump them on the commissioners' desks. After that, the ordinance was passed. She also pressed for tighter gun controls but was able to get only part of what she wanted. After a fire caused by a kerosene heater killed eleven people in a house in a black neighborhood, Range led an effort to have such heaters banned in Miami.
Range approached City Manager Melvin Reese about having an African-American police officer assigned to motorcycle patrol. When Reese resisted, Range made a deal with Mayor High; her vote for buying the land for the proposed Alice Wainwright Park in exchange for an African-American motorcycle patrolman. The first African-American motorcycle patrolman in Miami was Robert Ingraham, who later became Chief of Police and then Mayor of Opa-locka, Florida
When asked about her accomplishments in office, Range said, "There were so many inequities in those days that you could just reach out and pick something and change it."
Later accomplishments
In 1971 newly-elected Florida Governor Reubin Askew appointed Athalie Range as Secretary of the Department of Community Affairs. She became the first African-American since Reconstruction and the first woman ever to head a state agency in Florida. As Secretary, she managed a department with 200 employees and a US$5.2 million annual budget. She remained in the position until 1973.
In 1974, Athalie Range became the first honorary member of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority in the state of Florida. Her membership into the historic African-American sorority was sponsored by the Gamma Zeta Omega Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha.
Athalie Range was one of the first African-Americans in Florida to back Jimmy Carter when he ran for President. Range introduced Carter to African-American groups in Florida before he had announced his candidacy. President Carter later appointed Range to a two-year term on the National Railroad Passenger Corporation (AMTRAK) governing board. In a little over thirty years she had gone from cleaning railroad cars to helping run AMTRAK.
In 1989 Athalie Range was once again appointed to fill a vacancy on the Miami City Commission. Athalie Range was inducted into the Florida Women's Hall of Fame in 1997. In 2004 she was still helping run the family funeral homes and served as the founding Chairman of the Virginia Key Beach Park Task Force later known as the Virginia Key Beach Park Trust, which was established to preserve the Virginia Key Beach Park which re-opened in 2008 as Historic Virginia Key Beach Park, once the only public beach in Dade County open to African-Americans.
Athalie Range Park, and the Athalie Range Olympic Swimming Complex are named after her. There is also a strip of Miami's Biscayne Boulevard named in her honor. M. Athalie Range died November 14, 2006, in Miami, at the age of 91.
Notes
References
, archived at
External links
MP3 of an interview with M. Athalie Range from August 16, 2006, three months before her death, conducted by Michael Hibblen of WLRN-Miami Herald News, runs 13:19.
1915 births
2006 deaths
African-American people in Florida politics
African-American women in politics
American civil rights activists
American people of Bahamian descent
Florida Democrats
Funeral directors
People from Key West, Florida
Politicians from Miami
State cabinet secretaries of Florida
Women in Florida politics
20th-century African-American women
20th-century African-American people
20th-century American people
21st-century African-American people
21st-century African-American women | [
"M. Athalie Range (born Mary Athalie Wilkinson; November 7, 1915 in Key West, Florida – November 14, 2006 in Miami, Florida) was a Bahamian American civil rights activist and politician who was the first African-American to serve on the Miami, Florida City Commission, and the first African-American since Reconstruction and the first woman to head a Florida state agency, the Department of Community Affairs.",
"Early life and marriage\nMary Athalie Wilkinson was born in Key West, Florida on November 7, 1915.",
"Her grandparents had all been immigrants from the Bahamas.",
"When Athalie was five or six years old, the Wilkinson family moved to Miami.",
"Athalie Wilkinson graduated from all-black Booker T. Washington High School in Overtown, Miami.",
"She married Oscar Lee Range in 1937 & had 4 children Myrna, Patrick, Oscar, and Gary.",
"During this period the Ranges lived in the Liberty Square Housing Project.",
"During World War II Athalie Range found work cleaning trash from railroad cars.",
"In 1953 Oscar Range became a certified funeral director and opened the Range Funeral Home in the Liberty City neighborhood in Miami.",
"Oscar Range died unexpectedly of a heart attack in 1960.",
"Athalie Range then enrolled in the New England Institute of Anatomy and Embalming and obtained her funeral director certification so that she could operate the family business.",
"The Range Funeral Homes eventually expanded to three locations, and Athalie Range continued to work in the business for the rest of her life.",
"School activism\nIn 1948 Athalie Range became President of the Parent Teacher Association at her children's school, Liberty City Elementary.",
"The school had 1200 students and consisted of all portable classrooms, with no permanent buildings.",
"There were only some twelve toilets for boys and for girls.",
"The only drinking fountains were outside, fed by pipes laid on top of the ground, so that the water was usually too hot to drink.",
"There were no trees or grassy areas on the school grounds and no lunchroom.",
"Liberty City Elementary was one of the few schools in the (county-wide) school district holding two half-day sessions.",
"Range led 125 African-American parents from the school to a meeting of the school board to present their demands for improvements to the school.",
"After delaying the start of the meeting for an hour, the board heard Athalie Range speak.",
"Much to her surprise, the board agreed to make improvements.",
"They ordered hot meals to be provided by a nearby white school to Liberty City Elementary, moved another portable to the school to use in serving the hot lunches, and began construction of a new, permanent school building, the first school for African-Americans built in the district in twenty-one years.",
"Althalie Range continued to serve as President of school and county-wide PTAs for sixteen years.",
"City Commission\nIn 1965 Alice Wainwright, who was the first woman to serve on the Miami City Commission, decided to not seek re-election.",
"Athalie Range became a candidate for the vacant seat, the first African-American to run for the City Commission.",
"She won a plurality in the primary election, although not a majority.",
"In the runoff election, Range's opponent, a white man named Irwin Christie, sent a sound truck through white neighborhoods the day before the election broadcasting the message that if the white people did not get out and vote, they would have a black woman making laws for them.",
"Athalie Range would later say, \"His campaign decided to play the race card, which took me out of contention.\"",
"Many black voters had been allowed to take time off from work to vote in the primary, but were not allowed to do so for the runoff.",
"Range lost the runoff, receiving about 17,000 votes, while Christie received about 18,000.",
"Christie later apologized to Range for the way he had run his campaign, and she accepted the apology.",
"In 1966 one of the city commissioners resigned his seat, possibly with the encouragement of Miami Mayor Robert King High.",
"High was running for the Democratic Party nomination for Governor of Florida at the time.",
"He appointed Athalie Range to fill the unexpired term of the commissioner who had resigned.",
"In 1967 and again in 1969 Athalie Range was reelected to the City Commission.",
"While on the commission, Range sought to have garbage collection improved in black neighborhoods, which sometimes went three weeks between garbage pickups, while white neighborhoods got twice a week pickups.",
"After a vote on her proposed ordinance to equalize garbage service was twice postponed, Range had her neighbors bring bags of garbage to the commission meeting and dump them on the commissioners' desks.",
"After that, the ordinance was passed.",
"She also pressed for tighter gun controls but was able to get only part of what she wanted.",
"After a fire caused by a kerosene heater killed eleven people in a house in a black neighborhood, Range led an effort to have such heaters banned in Miami.",
"Range approached City Manager Melvin Reese about having an African-American police officer assigned to motorcycle patrol.",
"When Reese resisted, Range made a deal with Mayor High; her vote for buying the land for the proposed Alice Wainwright Park in exchange for an African-American motorcycle patrolman.",
"The first African-American motorcycle patrolman in Miami was Robert Ingraham, who later became Chief of Police and then Mayor of Opa-locka, Florida\n\nWhen asked about her accomplishments in office, Range said, \"There were so many inequities in those days that you could just reach out and pick something and change it.\"",
"Later accomplishments\nIn 1971 newly-elected Florida Governor Reubin Askew appointed Athalie Range as Secretary of the Department of Community Affairs.",
"She became the first African-American since Reconstruction and the first woman ever to head a state agency in Florida.",
"As Secretary, she managed a department with 200 employees and a US$5.2 million annual budget.",
"She remained in the position until 1973.",
"In 1974, Athalie Range became the first honorary member of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority in the state of Florida.",
"Her membership into the historic African-American sorority was sponsored by the Gamma Zeta Omega Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha.",
"Athalie Range was one of the first African-Americans in Florida to back Jimmy Carter when he ran for President.",
"Range introduced Carter to African-American groups in Florida before he had announced his candidacy.",
"President Carter later appointed Range to a two-year term on the National Railroad Passenger Corporation (AMTRAK) governing board.",
"In a little over thirty years she had gone from cleaning railroad cars to helping run AMTRAK.",
"In 1989 Athalie Range was once again appointed to fill a vacancy on the Miami City Commission.",
"Athalie Range was inducted into the Florida Women's Hall of Fame in 1997.",
"In 2004 she was still helping run the family funeral homes and served as the founding Chairman of the Virginia Key Beach Park Task Force later known as the Virginia Key Beach Park Trust, which was established to preserve the Virginia Key Beach Park which re-opened in 2008 as Historic Virginia Key Beach Park, once the only public beach in Dade County open to African-Americans.",
"Athalie Range Park, and the Athalie Range Olympic Swimming Complex are named after her.",
"There is also a strip of Miami's Biscayne Boulevard named in her honor.",
"M. Athalie Range died November 14, 2006, in Miami, at the age of 91.",
"Notes\n\nReferences\n \n\n, archived at\n\nExternal links\n MP3 of an interview with M. Athalie Range from August 16, 2006, three months before her death, conducted by Michael Hibblen of WLRN-Miami Herald News, runs 13:19.",
"1915 births\n2006 deaths\nAfrican-American people in Florida politics\nAfrican-American women in politics\nAmerican civil rights activists\nAmerican people of Bahamian descent\nFlorida Democrats\nFuneral directors\nPeople from Key West, Florida\nPoliticians from Miami\nState cabinet secretaries of Florida\nWomen in Florida politics\n20th-century African-American women\n20th-century African-American people\n20th-century American people\n21st-century African-American people\n21st-century African-American women"
] | [
"M. Athalie Range was an American civil rights activist and politician who was the first African-American to serve on the Miami, Florida City Commission.",
"Mary Athalie Wilkinson was born in Key West, Florida in 1915.",
"Her grandparents were from the Bahamas.",
"The family moved to Miami when Athalie was young.",
"Athalie graduated from Booker T. Washington High School.",
"She had 4 children, Myrna, Patrick, Oscar, and Gary.",
"The Ranges lived in the Liberty Square Housing Project.",
"Athalie Range was cleaning trash from railroad cars during World War II.",
"Oscar Range opened the Range Funeral Home in the Liberty City neighborhood in Miami in 1953.",
"Oscar Range died of a heart attack.",
"Athalie Range obtained her funeral director certification after studying at the New England Institute of Anatomy and Embalming.",
"Athalie Range continued to work in the business for the rest of her life after The Range Funeral Homes expanded to three locations.",
"Athalie Range became President of the Parent Teacher Association at her children's school.",
"All portable classrooms were used for the 1200 students at the school.",
"There were only a few toilets for boys and girls.",
"The drinking fountains were fed by pipes laid on top of the ground so that the water was too hot to drink.",
"There was no lunchroom or trees on the school grounds.",
"Liberty City Elementary was one of the few schools that held two half-day sessions.",
"Range led 125 African-American parents from the school to a meeting of the school board to present their demands for improvements.",
"The board heard Athalie Range speak after the meeting was delayed for an hour.",
"She was surprised that the board agreed to make improvements.",
"They ordered hot meals to be provided by a nearby white school to Liberty City Elementary, moved another portable to the school to use in serving the hot lunches, and began construction of a new, permanent school building, the first school for African-Americans built in the district in twenty-one years",
"Althalie Range was the President of the school and county-wide PTAs for sixteen years.",
"Alice Wainwright was the first woman to serve on the Miami City Commission.",
"Athalie Range is the first African-American to run for the City Commission.",
"She won a plurality of votes in the primary election.",
"On the day before the election, Range's opponent, a white man named Irwin Christie, sent a sound truck through white neighborhoods, telling people that if they didn't vote, they would have a black woman making laws for them.",
"Athalie Range said that his campaign decided to play the race card.",
"Black voters who took time off from work to vote in the primary were not allowed to vote in the second round.",
"Christie received 18,000 votes, while Range received 17,000.",
"Christie apologized to Range for the way he had run his campaign.",
"Miami Mayor Robert King High may have encouraged one of the city commissioners to resign in 1966.",
"He was running for the Democratic Party nomination for Governor of Florida.",
"Athalie Range was appointed to fill the unexpired term of the commissioner who resigned.",
"In 1967, and 1969 Athalie Range was re-elected to the City Commission.",
"Range wanted to improve garbage collection in black neighborhoods, which sometimes went three weeks between garbage pickup, while white neighborhoods got twice a week pickup.",
"Range had her neighbors bring bags of garbage to the commission meeting and dump them on the commissioners' desks after a vote on equalizing garbage service was twice postponed.",
"The legislation was passed after that.",
"She was able to get part of what she wanted by pressing for tighter gun controls.",
"Range led an effort to have the heaters banned in Miami after a fire in a house in a black neighborhood killed eleven people.",
"Range wanted an African-American police officer assigned to motorcycle patrol.",
"Range made a deal with Mayor High, in exchange for her vote for buying the land for the proposed Alice Wainwright Park.",
"When asked about her accomplishments in office, Range said, \"There were so many inequalities in those days that you could just reach out and pick something.\"",
"In 1971 Governor Reubin Askew appointed Athalie Range as Secretary of the Department of Community Affairs.",
"She is the first African-American since Reconstruction to head a state agency in Florida.",
"A department with 200 employees and a US$5 million annual budget was managed by her as Secretary.",
"She was in the position until 1973.",
"Athalie Range was the first member of Alpha Kappa Alpha in Florida.",
"Her membership was sponsored by a chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha.",
"When Jimmy Carter ran for President, Athalie Range was one of the first African-Americans in Florida to back him.",
"Carter was introduced to African-American groups in Florida by Range.",
"Range was appointed to a two-year term on the AMTRAK governing board by President Carter.",
"Over the course of thirty years, she went from cleaning railroad cars to running AMTRAK.",
"Athalie Range was appointed to the Miami City Commission again in 1989.",
"Athalie Range was a member of the Florida Women's Hall of Fame.",
"She served as the founding Chairman of the Virginia Key Beach Park Task Force later known as the Virginia Key Beach Park Trust, which was established to preserve the Virginia Key Beach Park which re-opened in 2008 as Historic Virginia Key Beach Park.",
"The Athalie Range Olympic Swimming Complex is named after her.",
"There is a section of Miami's Biscayne Boulevard named after her.",
"M. Athalie Range passed away on November 14, 2006 in Miami.",
"The interview with M. Athalie Range was conducted three months before her death.",
"The deaths of African-American people in Florida politics include politicians from Key West and Miami."
] | M<mask> (born <mask>; November 7, 1915 in Key West, Florida – November 14, 2006 in Miami, Florida) was a Bahamian American civil rights activist and politician who was the first African-American to serve on the Miami, Florida City Commission, and the first African-American since Reconstruction and the first woman to head a Florida state agency, the Department of Community Affairs. Early life and marriage
<mask> was born in Key West, Florida on November 7, 1915. Her grandparents had all been immigrants from the Bahamas. When Athalie was five or six years old, the Wilkinson family moved to Miami. Athalie Wilkinson graduated from all-black Booker T. Washington High School in Overtown, Miami. She married <mask> in 1937 & had 4 children <mask>, Patrick, Oscar, and Gary. During this period the <mask>s lived in the Liberty Square Housing Project.During World War II Athalie <mask> found work cleaning trash from railroad cars. In 1953 <mask> became a certified funeral director and opened the Range Funeral Home in the Liberty City neighborhood in Miami. <mask> died unexpectedly of a heart attack in 1960. Athalie <mask> then enrolled in the New England Institute of Anatomy and Embalming and obtained her funeral director certification so that she could operate the family business. The Range Funeral Homes eventually expanded to three locations, and Athalie <mask> continued to work in the business for the rest of her life. School activism
In 1948 Athalie <mask> became President of the Parent Teacher Association at her children's school, Liberty City Elementary. The school had 1200 students and consisted of all portable classrooms, with no permanent buildings.There were only some twelve toilets for boys and for girls. The only drinking fountains were outside, fed by pipes laid on top of the ground, so that the water was usually too hot to drink. There were no trees or grassy areas on the school grounds and no lunchroom. Liberty City Elementary was one of the few schools in the (county-wide) school district holding two half-day sessions. <mask> led 125 African-American parents from the school to a meeting of the school board to present their demands for improvements to the school. After delaying the start of the meeting for an hour, the board heard Athalie <mask> speak. Much to her surprise, the board agreed to make improvements.They ordered hot meals to be provided by a nearby white school to Liberty City Elementary, moved another portable to the school to use in serving the hot lunches, and began construction of a new, permanent school building, the first school for African-Americans built in the district in twenty-one years. Althalie <mask> continued to serve as President of school and county-wide PTAs for sixteen years. City Commission
In 1965 Alice Wainwright, who was the first woman to serve on the Miami City Commission, decided to not seek re-election. <mask> <mask> became a candidate for the vacant seat, the first African-American to run for the City Commission. She won a plurality in the primary election, although not a majority. In the runoff election, <mask>'s opponent, a white man named Irwin Christie, sent a sound truck through white neighborhoods the day before the election broadcasting the message that if the white people did not get out and vote, they would have a black woman making laws for them. Athalie <mask> would later say, "His campaign decided to play the race card, which took me out of contention."Many black voters had been allowed to take time off from work to vote in the primary, but were not allowed to do so for the runoff. <mask> lost the runoff, receiving about 17,000 votes, while Christie received about 18,000. Christie later apologized to <mask> for the way he had run his campaign, and she accepted the apology. In 1966 one of the city commissioners resigned his seat, possibly with the encouragement of Miami Mayor Robert King High. High was running for the Democratic Party nomination for Governor of Florida at the time. He appointed <mask> <mask> to fill the unexpired term of the commissioner who had resigned. In 1967 and again in 1969 Athalie <mask> was reelected to the City Commission.While on the commission, <mask> sought to have garbage collection improved in black neighborhoods, which sometimes went three weeks between garbage pickups, while white neighborhoods got twice a week pickups. After a vote on her proposed ordinance to equalize garbage service was twice postponed, <mask> had her neighbors bring bags of garbage to the commission meeting and dump them on the commissioners' desks. After that, the ordinance was passed. She also pressed for tighter gun controls but was able to get only part of what she wanted. After a fire caused by a kerosene heater killed eleven people in a house in a black neighborhood, <mask> led an effort to have such heaters banned in Miami. <mask> approached City Manager <mask> about having an African-American police officer assigned to motorcycle patrol. When Reese resisted, <mask> made a deal with <mask>; her vote for buying the land for the proposed Alice Wainwright Park in exchange for an African-American motorcycle patrolman.The first African-American motorcycle patrolman in Miami was Robert Ingraham, who later became Chief of Police and then Mayor of Opa-locka, Florida
When asked about her accomplishments in office, <mask> said, "There were so many inequities in those days that you could just reach out and pick something and change it." Later accomplishments
In 1971 newly-elected Florida Governor Reubin Askew appointed <mask> <mask> as Secretary of the Department of Community Affairs. She became the first African-American since Reconstruction and the first woman ever to head a state agency in Florida. As Secretary, she managed a department with 200 employees and a US$5.2 million annual budget. She remained in the position until 1973. In 1974, Athalie <mask> became the first honorary member of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority in the state of Florida. Her membership into the historic African-American sorority was sponsored by the Gamma Zeta Omega Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha.<mask> <mask> was one of the first African-Americans in Florida to back Jimmy Carter when he ran for President. <mask> introduced Carter to African-American groups in Florida before he had announced his candidacy. President Carter later appointed <mask> to a two-year term on the National Railroad Passenger Corporation (AMTRAK) governing board. In a little over thirty years she had gone from cleaning railroad cars to helping run AMTRAK. In 1989 <mask> <mask> was once again appointed to fill a vacancy on the Miami City Commission. <mask> <mask> was inducted into the Florida Women's Hall of Fame in 1997. In 2004 she was still helping run the family funeral homes and served as the founding Chairman of the Virginia Key Beach Park Task Force later known as the Virginia Key Beach Park Trust, which was established to preserve the Virginia Key Beach Park which re-opened in 2008 as Historic Virginia Key Beach Park, once the only public beach in Dade County open to African-Americans.Athalie Range Park, and the Athalie Range Olympic Swimming Complex are named after her. There is also a strip of Miami's Biscayne Boulevard named in her honor. M. Athalie <mask> died November 14, 2006, in Miami, at the age of 91. Notes
References
, archived at
External links
MP3 of an interview with M. Athalie <mask> from August 16, 2006, three months before her death, conducted by <mask> of WLRN-Miami Herald News, runs 13:19. 1915 births
2006 deaths
African-American people in Florida politics
African-American women in politics
American civil rights activists
American people of Bahamian descent
Florida Democrats
Funeral directors
People from Key West, Florida
Politicians from Miami
State cabinet secretaries of Florida
Women in Florida politics
20th-century African-American women
20th-century African-American people
20th-century American people
21st-century African-American people
21st-century African-American women | [
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] | M<mask> was an American civil rights activist and politician who was the first African-American to serve on the Miami, Florida City Commission. <mask> was born in Key West, Florida in 1915. Her grandparents were from the Bahamas. The family moved to Miami when Athalie was young. Athalie graduated from Booker T. Washington High School. She had 4 children, <mask>, Patrick, Oscar, and Gary. The <mask>s lived in the Liberty Square Housing Project.Athalie <mask> was cleaning trash from railroad cars during World War II. <mask> opened the Range Funeral Home in the Liberty City neighborhood in Miami in 1953. <mask> died of a heart attack. Athalie <mask> obtained her funeral director certification after studying at the New England Institute of Anatomy and Embalming. Athalie <mask> continued to work in the business for the rest of her life after The Range Funeral Homes expanded to three locations. Athalie <mask> became President of the Parent Teacher Association at her children's school. All portable classrooms were used for the 1200 students at the school.There were only a few toilets for boys and girls. The drinking fountains were fed by pipes laid on top of the ground so that the water was too hot to drink. There was no lunchroom or trees on the school grounds. Liberty City Elementary was one of the few schools that held two half-day sessions. <mask> led 125 African-American parents from the school to a meeting of the school board to present their demands for improvements. The board heard <mask> <mask> speak after the meeting was delayed for an hour. She was surprised that the board agreed to make improvements.They ordered hot meals to be provided by a nearby white school to Liberty City Elementary, moved another portable to the school to use in serving the hot lunches, and began construction of a new, permanent school building, the first school for African-Americans built in the district in twenty-one years Althalie <mask> was the President of the school and county-wide PTAs for sixteen years. Alice Wainwright was the first woman to serve on the Miami City Commission. Athalie <mask> is the first African-American to run for the City Commission. She won a plurality of votes in the primary election. On the day before the election, <mask>'s opponent, a white man named Irwin Christie, sent a sound truck through white neighborhoods, telling people that if they didn't vote, they would have a black woman making laws for them. <mask> <mask> said that his campaign decided to play the race card.Black voters who took time off from work to vote in the primary were not allowed to vote in the second round. Christie received 18,000 votes, while <mask> received 17,000. Christie apologized to <mask> for the way he had run his campaign. Miami Mayor Robert King High may have encouraged one of the city commissioners to resign in 1966. He was running for the Democratic Party nomination for Governor of Florida. <mask> <mask> was appointed to fill the unexpired term of the commissioner who resigned. In 1967, and 1969 Athalie <mask> was re-elected to the City Commission.<mask> wanted to improve garbage collection in black neighborhoods, which sometimes went three weeks between garbage pickup, while white neighborhoods got twice a week pickup. <mask> had her neighbors bring bags of garbage to the commission meeting and dump them on the commissioners' desks after a vote on equalizing garbage service was twice postponed. The legislation was passed after that. She was able to get part of what she wanted by pressing for tighter gun controls. <mask> led an effort to have the heaters banned in Miami after a fire in a house in a black neighborhood killed eleven people. <mask> wanted an African-American police officer assigned to motorcycle patrol. <mask> made a deal with <mask>, in exchange for her vote for buying the land for the proposed Alice Wainwright Park.When asked about her accomplishments in office, <mask> said, "There were so many inequalities in those days that you could just reach out and pick something." In 1971 Governor Reubin Askew appointed <mask> <mask> as Secretary of the Department of Community Affairs. She is the first African-American since Reconstruction to head a state agency in Florida. A department with 200 employees and a US$5 million annual budget was managed by her as Secretary. She was in the position until 1973. <mask> <mask> was the first member of Alpha Kappa Alpha in Florida. Her membership was sponsored by a chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha.When Jimmy Carter ran for President, <mask> <mask> was one of the first African-Americans in Florida to back him. Carter was introduced to African-American groups in Florida by <mask>. <mask> was appointed to a two-year term on the AMTRAK governing board by President Carter. Over the course of thirty years, she went from cleaning railroad cars to running AMTRAK. <mask> <mask> was appointed to the Miami City Commission again in 1989. Athalie <mask> was a member of the Florida Women's Hall of Fame. She served as the founding Chairman of the Virginia Key Beach Park Task Force later known as the Virginia Key Beach Park Trust, which was established to preserve the Virginia Key Beach Park which re-opened in 2008 as Historic Virginia Key Beach Park.The Athalie Range Olympic Swimming Complex is named after her. There is a section of Miami's Biscayne Boulevard named after her. M<mask> <mask> passed away on November 14, 2006 in Miami. The interview with M. <mask> <mask> was conducted three months before her death. The deaths of African-American people in Florida politics include politicians from Key West and Miami. | [
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17562 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leni%20Riefenstahl | Leni Riefenstahl | Helene Bertha Amalie "Leni" Riefenstahl (; 22 August 1902 – 8 September 2003) was a German film director, photographer and actress known for her seminal role in producing Nazi propaganda.
A talented swimmer and an artist, Riefenstahl also became interested in dancing during her childhood, taking lessons and performing across Europe. After seeing a promotional poster for the 1924 film Mountain of Destiny, she was inspired to move into acting and between 1925 and 1929 starred in five successful motion pictures. Riefenstahl became one of the few women in Germany to direct a film during the Weimar Period when, in 1932, she decided to try directing with her own film, Das Blaue Licht ("The Blue Light").
In the 1930s, she directed the Nazi propaganda films Triumph des Willens ("Triumph of the Will") and Olympia, resulting in worldwide attention and acclaim. The films are widely considered two of the most effective and technically innovative propaganda films ever made. Her involvement in Triumph des Willens, however, significantly damaged her career and reputation after World War II. Adolf Hitler was in close collaboration with Riefenstahl during the production of at least three important Nazi films, and they formed a friendly relationship.
After the war, Riefenstahl was arrested, but classified as being a "fellow traveler" or "Nazi sympathizer" only and was not charged with war crimes. Throughout her life, she denied having known about the Holocaust. Besides directing, Riefenstahl released an autobiography and wrote several books on the Nuba people.
Early life
Helene Bertha Amalie Riefenstahl was born in Berlin on 22 August 1902. Her father, Alfred Theodor Paul Riefenstahl, owned a successful heating and ventilation company and wanted his daughter to follow him into the business world. Since Riefenstahl was the only child for several years, Alfred wanted her to carry on the family name and secure the family fortune. However, her mother, Bertha Ida (Scherlach), who had been a part-time seamstress before her marriage, had faith in Riefenstahl and believed that her daughter's future was in show business. Riefenstahl had a younger brother, Heinz, who was killed at the age of 39 on the Eastern Front in Nazi Germany's war against the Soviet Union.
Riefenstahl fell in love with the arts in her childhood. She began to paint and write poetry at the age of four. She was also athletic, and at the age of twelve joined a gymnastics and swimming club. Her mother was confident her daughter would grow up to be successful in the field of art and therefore gave her full support, unlike Riefenstahl's father, who was not interested in his daughter's artistic inclinations. In 1918, when she was 16, Riefenstahl attended a presentation of Snow White which interested her deeply; it led her to want to be a dancer. Her father instead wanted to provide his daughter with an education that could lead to a more dignified occupation. His wife, however, continued to support her daughter's passion. Without her husband's knowledge, she enrolled Riefenstahl in dance and ballet classes at the Grimm-Reiter Dance School in Berlin, where she quickly became a star pupil.
Dancing and acting careers
Riefenstahl attended dancing academies and became well known for her self-styled interpretive dancing skills, traveling across Europe with Max Reinhardt in a show funded by Jewish producer Harry Sokal. Riefenstahl often made almost 700 Reichsmarks for each performance and was so dedicated to dancing that she gave filmmaking no thought. She began to suffer a series of foot injuries that led to knee surgery that threatened her dancing career. It was while going to a doctor's appointment that she first saw a poster for the 1924 film Mountain of Destiny. She became inspired to go into movie making, and began visiting the cinema to see films and also attended film shows.
On one of her adventures, Riefenstahl met Luis Trenker, an actor who had appeared in Mountain of Destiny. At a meeting arranged by her friend Gunther Rahn, she met Arnold Fanck, the director of Mountain of Destiny and a pioneer of the mountain film genre. Fanck was working on a film in Berlin. After Riefenstahl told him how much she admired his work, she also convinced him of her acting skill. She persuaded him to feature her in one of his films. Riefenstahl later received a package from Fanck containing the script of the 1926 film The Holy Mountain. She made a series of films for Fanck, where she learned from him acting and film editing techniques. One of Fanck's films that brought Riefenstahl into the limelight was The White Hell of Pitz Palu of 1929, co-directed by G. W. Pabst. Her fame spread to countries outside Germany.
Riefenstahl produced and directed her own work called Das Blaue Licht ("The Blue Light") in 1932, co-written by Carl Mayer and Béla Balázs. This film won the silver medal at the Venice Film Festival, but was not universally well-received, for which Riefenstahl blamed the critics, many of whom were Jewish. Upon its 1938 re-release, the names of Balázs and Sokal, both Jewish, were removed from the credits; some reports say this was at Riefenstahl's behest. In the film, Riefenstahl played an innocent peasant girl who is hated by the villagers because they think she is diabolic and cast out. She is protected by a glowing mountain grotto. According to herself, Riefenstahl received invitations to travel to Hollywood to create films, but she refused them in favour of remaining in Germany with a boyfriend. Hitler was a fan of the film, and thought Riefenstahl epitomized the perfect German female. He saw talent in Riefenstahl and arranged a meeting.
In 1933, Riefenstahl appeared in the U.S.-German co-productions of the Arnold Fanck-directed, German-language SOS Eisberg and the Tay Garnett-directed, English-language S.O.S. Iceberg. The films were filmed simultaneously in English and German and produced and distributed by Universal Studios. Her role as an actress in S.O.S. Iceberg was her only English language role in film.
Directing career
Propaganda films
Riefenstahl heard Nazi Party (NSDAP) leader Adolf Hitler speak at a rally in 1932 and was mesmerized by his talent as a public speaker. Describing the experience in her memoir, Riefenstahl wrote, "I had an almost apocalyptic vision that I was never able to forget. It seemed as if the Earth's surface were spreading out in front of me, like a hemisphere that suddenly splits apart in the middle, spewing out an enormous jet of water, so powerful that it touched the sky and shook the earth".
Hitler was immediately captivated by Riefenstahl's work. She is described as fitting in with Hitler's ideal of Aryan womanhood, a feature he had noted when he saw her starring performance in Das Blaue Licht. After meeting Hitler, Riefenstahl was offered the opportunity to direct Der Sieg des Glaubens ("The Victory of Faith"), an hour-long propaganda film about the fifth Nuremberg Rally in 1933. The opportunity that was offered was a huge surprise to Riefenstahl. Hitler had ordered Goebbels' Propaganda Ministry to give the film commission to Riefenstahl, but the Ministry had never informed her. Riefenstahl agreed to direct the movie even though she was only given a few days before the rally to prepare. She and Hitler got on well, forming a friendly relationship. The propaganda film was funded entirely by the NSDAP.
During the filming of Victory of Faith, Hitler had stood side by side with the leader of the Sturmabteilung (SA), Ernst Röhm, a man with whom he clearly had a close working relationship. Röhm was murdered on Hitler's orders a short time later, during the purge of the SA referred to as the Night of the Long Knives. It has gone on record that, immediately following the killings, Hitler ordered all copies of the film to be destroyed, although Riefenstahl disputes that this ever happened.
Still impressed with Riefenstahl's work, Hitler asked her to film Triumph des Willens ("Triumph of the Will"), a new propaganda film about the 1934 party rally in Nuremberg. More than one million Germans participated in the rally. The film is sometimes considered the greatest propaganda film ever made. Initially, according to Riefenstahl, she resisted and did not want to create further Nazi Party films, instead wanting to direct a feature film based on Eugen d'Albert's Tiefland ("Lowlands"), an opera that was extremely popular in Berlin in the 1920s. Riefenstahl received private funding for the production of Tiefland, but the filming in Spain was derailed and the project was cancelled. (When Tiefland was eventually shot, between 1940 and 1944, it was done in black and white, and was the third most expensive film produced in Nazi Germany. During the filming of Tiefland, Riefenstahl utilized Romani from internment camps for extras, who were severely mistreated on set, and when the filming completed they were sent to the death camp Auschwitz.) Hitler was able to convince her to film Triumph des Willens on the condition that she would not be required to make further films for the party, according to Riefenstahl. The motion picture was generally recognized as an epic, innovative work of propaganda filmmaking. The film took Riefenstahl's career to a new level and gave her further international recognition.
In interviews for the 1993 documentary The Wonderful, Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl, Riefenstahl adamantly denied any deliberate attempt to create Nazi propaganda and said she was disgusted that Triumph des Willens was used in such a way.
Despite allegedly vowing not to make any more films about the Nazi Party, Riefenstahl made the 28-minute Tag der Freiheit: Unsere Wehrmacht ("Day of Freedom: Our Armed Forces") about the German Army in 1935. Like Der Sieg des Glaubens and Triumph des Willens, this was filmed at the annual Nazi Party rally at Nuremberg. Riefenstahl said this film was a sub-set of Der Sieg des Glaubens, added to mollify the German Army which felt it was not represented well in Triumph des Willens.
Hitler invited Riefenstahl to film the 1936 Summer Olympics scheduled to be held in Berlin, a film which Riefenstahl said had been commissioned by the International Olympic Committee. She visited Greece to take footage of the route of the inaugural torch relay and the games' original site at Olympia, where she was aided by Greek photographer Nelly's. This material became Olympia, a hugely successful film which has since been widely noted for its technical and aesthetic achievements. Olympia was secretly funded by the Nazis. She was one of the first filmmakers to use tracking shots in a documentary, placing a camera on rails to follow the athletes' movement. The film is also noted for its slow motion shots. Riefenstahl played with the idea of slow motion, underwater diving shots, extremely high and low shooting angles, panoramic aerial shots, and tracking system shots for allowing fast action. Many of these shots were relatively unheard of at the time, but Riefenstahl's use and augmentation of them set a standard, and is the reason they are still used to this day. Riefenstahl's work on Olympia has been cited as a major influence in modern sports photography. Riefenstahl filmed competitors of all races, including African-American Jesse Owens in what later became famous footage.
Olympia premiered for Hitler's 49th birthday in 1938. Its international debut led Riefenstahl to embark on an American publicity tour in an attempt to secure commercial release. In February 1937, Riefenstahl enthusiastically told a reporter for the Detroit News, "To me, Hitler is the greatest man who ever lived. He truly is without fault, so simple and at the same time possessed of masculine strength". She arrived in New York City on 4 November 1938, five days before Kristallnacht (the "Night of the Broken Glass"). When news of the event reached the United States, Riefenstahl publicly defended Hitler. On 18 November, she was received by Henry Ford in Detroit. Olympia was shown at the Chicago Engineers Club two days later. Avery Brundage, President of the International Olympic Committee, praised the film and held Riefenstahl in the highest regard. She negotiated with Louis B. Mayer, and on 8 December, Walt Disney brought her on a three-hour tour showing her the ongoing production of Fantasia.
From the Goebbels Diaries, researchers learned that Riefenstahl had been friendly with Joseph Goebbels and his wife Magda, attending the opera with them and going to his parties. Riefenstahl maintained that Goebbels was upset when she rejected his advances and was jealous of her influence on Hitler, seeing her as an internal threat. She therefore insisted his diary entries could not be trusted. By later accounts, Goebbels thought highly of Riefenstahl's filmmaking but was angered with what he saw as her overspending on the Nazi-provided filmmaking budgets.
Iconography
In Triumph of the Will, Tom Saunders argues that Hitler serves as the object of the camera's gaze. Saunders writes, "Without denying that "rampant masculinity" (the "sexiness" of Hitler and the SS) serves as the object of the gaze, I would suggest that desire is also directed toward the feminine. This occurs not in the familiar sequences of adoring women greeting Hitler's arrival and cavalcade through Nuremberg. In these Hitler clearly remains the focus of attraction, as more generally in the visual treatment of his mass following. Rather, it is encoded in representation of flags and banners, which were shot in such a way as to make them visually desirable as well as potent political symbols". The flag serves as a symbol of masculinity, equated with national pride and dominance, that supposedly channels men's sexual and masculine energy. Riefenstahl's cinematic framing of the flags encapsulated its iconography. Saunders continues, "The effect is a significant double transformation: the images mechanize human beings and breathe life into flags. Even when the carriers are not mostly submerged under the sea of colored cloth, and when facial features are visible in profile, they attain neither character nor distinctiveness. The men remain ants in a vast enterprise. By contrast and paradoxically, the flags, whether a few or hundreds peopling the frame, assume distinct identities".
Use of music
Riefenstahl distorts the diegetic sound in Triumph of the Will. Her distortion of sound suggests she was influenced by German art cinema. Influenced by Classical Hollywood cinema's style, German art film employed music to enhance the narrative, establish a sense of grandeur, and to heighten the emotions in a scene. In Triumph of the Will, Riefenstahl used traditional folk music to accompany and intensify her shots. Ben Morgan comments on Riefenstahl's distortion of sound: "In Triumph of the Will, the material world leaves no aural impression beyond the music. Where the film does combine diegetic noise with the music, the effects used are human (laughter or cheering) and offer a rhythmic extension to the music rather than a contrast to it. By replacing diegetic sound, Riefenstahl's film employs music to combine the documentary with the fantastic."
World War II
When Germany invaded Poland on 1 September 1939, Riefenstahl was photographed in Poland wearing a military uniform and a pistol on her belt in the company of German soldiers; she had gone to Poland as a war correspondent. On 12 September, she was in the town of Końskie when 30 civilians were executed in retaliation for an alleged attack on German soldiers. According to her memoir, Riefenstahl tried to intervene but a furious German soldier held her at gunpoint and threatened to shoot her on the spot. She said she did not realize the victims were Jews. Photographs of a potentially distraught Riefenstahl survive from that day. Nevertheless, by 5 October 1939, Riefenstahl was back in occupied Poland filming Hitler's victory parade in Warsaw. Afterwards, she left Poland and chose not to make any more Nazi-related films.
On 14 June 1940, the day Paris was declared an open city by the French and occupied by German troops, Riefenstahl wrote to Hitler in a telegram, "With indescribable joy, deeply moved and filled with burning gratitude, we share with you, my Führer, your and Germany's greatest victory, the entry of German troops into Paris. You exceed anything human imagination has the power to conceive, achieving deeds without parallel in the history of mankind. How can we ever thank you?" She later explained, "Everyone thought the war was over, and in that spirit I sent the cable to Hitler". Riefenstahl was friends with Hitler for 12 years. However, her relationship with Hitler severely declined in 1944 after her brother died on the Russian Front.
After the Nuremberg rallies trilogy and Olympia, Riefenstahl began work on the movie she had tried and failed to direct once before, namely Tiefland. On Hitler's direct order, the German government paid her seven million Reichsmarks in compensation. From 23 September until 13 November 1940, she filmed in Krün near Mittenwald. The extras playing Spanish women and farmers were drawn from Romani detained in a camp at Salzburg-Maxglan who were forced to work with her. Filming at the Babelsberg Studios near Berlin began 18 months later in April 1942. This time Sinti and Roma people from the Marzahn detention camp near Berlin were compelled to work as extras. Almost to the end of her life, despite overwhelming evidence that the concentration camp occupants had been forced to work on the movie unpaid, Riefenstahl continued to maintain all the film extras survived and that she had met several of them after the war. Riefenstahl sued filmmaker Nina Gladitz, who said Riefenstahl personally chose the extras at their holding camp; Gladitz had found one of the Romani survivors and matched his memory with stills of the movie for a documentary Gladitz was filming. The German court ruled largely in favour of Gladitz, declaring that Riefenstahl had known the extras were from a concentration camp, but they also agreed that Riefenstahl had not been informed the Romani would be sent to Auschwitz after filming was completed.
This issue came up again in 2002, when Riefenstahl was 100 years old and she was taken to court by a Roma group for denying the Nazis had exterminated Romani. Riefenstahl apologized and said, "I regret that Sinti and Roma [people] had to suffer during the period of National Socialism. It is known today that many of them were murdered in concentration camps".
In October 1944 the production of Tiefland moved to Barrandov Studios in Prague for interior filming. Lavish sets made these shots some of the most costly of the film. The film was not edited and released until almost ten years later.
The last time Riefenstahl saw Hitler was when she married Peter Jacob on 21 March 1944. Riefenstahl and Jacob divorced in 1946. As Germany's military situation became impossible by early 1945, Riefenstahl left Berlin and was hitchhiking with a group of men, trying to reach her mother, when she was taken into custody by American troops. She walked out of a holding camp, beginning a series of escapes and arrests across the chaotic landscape. At last making it back home on a bicycle, she found that American troops had seized her house. She was surprised by how kindly they treated her.
Thwarted film projects
Most of Riefenstahl's unfinished projects were lost towards the end of the war. The French government confiscated all of her editing equipment, along with the production reels of Tiefland. After years of legal wrangling, these were returned to her, but the French government had reportedly damaged some of the film stock whilst trying to develop and edit it, with a few key scenes being missing (although Riefenstahl was surprised to find the original negatives for Olympia in the same shipment). During the filming of Olympia, Riefenstahl was funded by the state to create her own production company in her own name, Riefenstahl-Film GmbH, which was uninvolved with her most influential works. She edited and dubbed the remaining material and Tiefland premiered on 11 February 1954 in Stuttgart. However, it was denied entry into the Cannes Film Festival. Although Riefenstahl lived for almost another half century, Tiefland was her last feature film.
Riefenstahl tried many times to make more films during the 1950s and 1960s, but was met with resistance, public protests and sharp criticism. Many of her filmmaking peers in Hollywood had fled Nazi Germany and were unsympathetic to her. Although both film professionals and investors were willing to support her work, most of the projects she attempted were stopped owing to ever-renewed and highly negative publicity about her past work in Nazi Germany.
In 1954, Jean Cocteau, who greatly admired the film, insisted on Tiefland being shown at the Cannes Film Festival, which he was running that year. In 1960, Riefenstahl attempted to prevent filmmaker Erwin Leiser from juxtaposing scenes from Triumph des Willens with footage from concentration camps in his film Mein Kampf. Riefenstahl had high hopes for a collaboration with Cocteau called Friedrich und Voltaire ("Friedrich and Voltaire"), wherein Cocteau was to play two roles. They thought the film might symbolize the love-hate relationship between Germany and France. Cocteau's illness and 1963 death put an end to the project. A musical remake of Das Blaue Licht ("The Blue Light") with an English production company also fell apart.
In the 1960s, Riefenstahl became interested in Africa from Ernest Hemingway's Green Hills of Africa and from the photographs of George Rodger. She visited Kenya for the first time in 1956 and later Sudan, where she photographed Nuba tribes with whom she sporadically lived, learning about their culture so she could photograph them more easily. Even though her film project about modern slavery entitled Die Schwarze Fracht ("The Black Cargo") was never completed, Riefenstahl was able to sell the stills from the expedition to magazines in various parts of the world. While scouting shooting locations, she almost died from injuries received in a truck accident. After waking up from a coma in a Nairobi hospital, she finished writing the script, but was soon thoroughly thwarted by uncooperative locals, the Suez Canal crisis and bad weather. In the end, the film project was called off. Even so, Riefenstahl was granted Sudanese citizenship for her services to the country, becoming the first foreigner to receive a Sudanese passport.
Detention and trials
Novelist and sports writer Budd Schulberg, assigned by the U.S. Navy to the OSS for intelligence work while attached to John Ford's documentary unit, was ordered to arrest Riefenstahl at her chalet in Kitzbühel, ostensibly to have her identify Nazi war criminals in German film footage captured by the Allied troops shortly after the war. Riefenstahl said she was not aware of the nature of the internment camps. According to Schulberg, "She gave me the usual song and dance. She said, 'Of course, you know, I'm really so misunderstood. I'm not political'".
Riefenstahl said she was fascinated by the Nazis, but also politically naive, remaining ignorant about war crimes. Throughout 1945 to 1948, she was held by various Allied-controlled prison camps across Germany. She was also under house arrest for a period of time. She was tried four times by postwar authorities for denazification and eventually found to be a "fellow traveller" (Mitläufer) who sympathised with the Nazis. She was never an official member of the Nazi party but was always seen in association with the propaganda films she made in Nazi Germany. Over the years she filed and won over fifty libel cases against people who had accused her of complicity with Nazi crimes.
Riefenstahl said that her biggest regret in life was meeting Hitler, declaring, "It was the biggest catastrophe of my life. Until the day I die people will keep saying, 'Leni is a Nazi', and I'll keep saying, 'But what did she do?'" Even though she went on to win up to 50 libel cases, details about her relation to the Nazi party generally remain unclear.
Shortly before she died, Riefenstahl voiced her final words on the subject of her connection to Adolf Hitler in a BBC interview: "I was one of millions who thought Hitler had all the answers. We saw only the good things; we didn't know bad things were to come."
Africa, photography, books and final film
Riefenstahl began a lifelong companionship with her cameraman Horst Kettner, who was 40 years her junior and assisted her with the photographs; they were together from the time she was 60 and he was 20.
Riefenstahl traveled to Africa, inspired by the works of George Rodger that celebrated the ceremonial wrestling matches of the Nuba. Riefenstahl's books with photographs of the Nuba tribes were published in 1974 and republished in 1976 as Die Nuba (translated as "The Last of the Nuba") and Die Nuba von Kau ("The Nuba People of Kau"). They were harshly criticized by American writer and philosopher Susan Sontag, who wrote in The New York Review of Books that they were evidence of Riefenstahl's continued adherence to "fascist aesthetics". In this review, which art critic Hilton Kramer described as "one of the most important inquiries into the relation of esthetics to ideology we have had in many years", Sontag argued that:Although the Nuba are black, not Aryan, Riefenstahl's portrait of them is consistent with some of the larger themes of Nazi ideology: the contrast between the clean and the impure, the incorruptible and the defiled, the physical and the mental, the joyful and the critical. [...] What is distinctive about the fascist version of the old idea of the Noble Savage is its contempt for all that is reflective, critical, and pluralistic. [...] In celebrating a society where the exhibition of physical skill and courage and the victory of the stronger man over the weaker have, at least as she sees it, become the unifying symbol of the communal culture—where success in fighting is the "main aspiration of a man's life"—Riefenstahl seems only to have modified the ideas of her Nazi films.In December 1974, American writer and photographer Eudora Welty reviewed Die Nuba positively for the New York Times, giving an impressionistic account of the aesthetics of Riefenstahl's book:She uses the light purposefully: the full, blinding brightness to make us see the ail‐absorbing blackness of the skin; the ray of light slanting down from the single hole, high in the wall, that is the doorway of the circular house, which tells us how secret and safe it has been made; the first dawn light streaking the face of a calf in the sleeping camp where the young men go to live, which suggests their world apart. All the pictures bring us the physical beauty of the people: a young girl, shy and mischievous of face, with a bead sewn into her lower lip like a permanent cinnamon drop; a wrestler prepared for his match, with his shaven head turned to look over the massive shoulder, all skin color taken away by a coating of ashes.Art Director's Club of Germany awarded Riefenstahl a gold medal for the best photographic achievement of 1975. She also sold some of the pictures to German magazines.
Riefenstahl photographed the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich, and rock star Mick Jagger along with his wife Bianca for The Sunday Times. Years later, Riefenstahl photographed Las Vegas entertainers Siegfried & Roy. She was guest of honour at the 1976 Olympic Games in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
In 1978, Riefenstahl published a book of her sub-aquatic photographs called Korallengärten ("Coral Gardens"), followed by the 1990 book Wunder unter Wasser ("Wonder under Water"). On 22 August 2002, her 100th birthday, she released the film Impressionen unter Wasser ("Underwater Impressions"), an idealized documentary of life in the oceans and her first film in over 25 years. Riefenstahl was a member of Greenpeace for eight years. When filming Impressionen unter Wasser, Riefenstahl lied about her age in order to be certified for scuba diving.
Riefenstahl survived a helicopter crash in Sudan in 2000 while trying to learn the fates of her Nuba friends during the Second Sudanese Civil War, and was airlifted to a Munich hospital, where she received treatment for two broken ribs.
Death
Riefenstahl celebrated her 101st birthday on 22 August 2003 at a hotel in Feldafing, on Lake Starnberg, Bavaria, near her home. The day after her birthday celebration, she became ill.
Riefenstahl had been suffering from cancer for some time, and her health rapidly deteriorated during the last weeks of her life. Kettner said in an interview in 2002, "Ms. Riefenstahl is in great pain and she has become very weak and is taking painkillers". Riefenstahl died in her sleep at around 10:00 pm on 8 September 2003 at her home in Pöcking, Germany. After her death, there was a varied response in the obituary pages of leading publications, although most recognized her technical breakthroughs in filmmaking.
Reception
Film scholar Mark Cousins notes in his book The Story of Film that, "Next to Orson Welles and Alfred Hitchcock, Leni Riefenstahl was the most technically talented Western film maker of her era".
When traveling to Hollywood, Riefenstahl was criticized by the Anti-Nazi League very harshly when wanting to showcase her film Olympia soon after its release.
Reviewer Gary Morris called Riefenstahl, "An artist of unparalleled gifts, a woman in an industry dominated by men, one of the great formalists of the cinema on a par with Eisenstein or Welles".
Film critic Hal Erickson of The New York Times states that the "Jewish Question" is mainly unmentioned in Triumph des Willens; "filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl prefers to concentrate on cheering crowds, precision marching, military bands, and Hitler's climactic speech, all orchestrated, choreographed and illuminated on a scale that makes Griffith and DeMille look like poverty-row directors".
Charles Moore of The Daily Telegraph wrote, "She was perhaps the most talented female cinema director of the 20th century; her celebration of Nazi Germany in film ensured that she was certainly the most infamous".
Film journalist Sandra Smith from The Independent remarked, "Opinions will be divided between those who see her as a young, talented and ambitious woman caught up in the tide of events which she did not fully understand, and those who believe her to be a cold and opportunist propagandist and a Nazi by association."
Critic Judith Thurman said in The New Yorker that, "Riefenstahl's genius has rarely been questioned, even by critics who despise the service to which she lent it. Riefenstahl was a consummate stylist obsessed with bodies in motion, particularly those of dancers and athletes. Riefenstahl relies heavily for her transitions on portentous cutaways to clouds, mist, statuary, foliage, and rooftops. Her reaction shots have a tedious sameness: shining, ecstatic faces—nearly all young and Aryan, except for Hitler's".
Pauline Kael, also a film reviewer employed for The New Yorker, called Triumph des Willens and Olympia, "the two greatest films ever directed by a woman".
Writer Richard Corliss wrote in Time that he was "impressed by Riefenstahl's standing as a total auteur: producer, writer, director, editor and, in the fiction films, actress. The issues her films and her career raise are as complex and they are important, and her vilifiers tend to reduce the argument to one of a director's complicity in atrocity or her criminal ignorance".
Film biographies
In 1993, Riefenstahl was the subject of the award-winning German documentary film The Wonderful, Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl, directed by Ray Müller. Riefenstahl appeared in the film and answered several questions and detailed the production of her films. The biofilm was nominated for seven Emmy Awards, winning in one category. Riefenstahl, who for some time had been working on her memoirs, decided to cooperate in the production of this documentary to tell her life story about the struggles she had gone through in her personal life, her film-making career and what people thought of her. She was also the subject of Müller's 2000 documentary film Leni Riefenstahl: Her Dream of Africa, about her return to Sudan to visit the Nuba people.
In 2000, Jodie Foster was planning a biographical drama on Riefenstahl, then seen as the last surviving member of Hitler's "inner circle", causing protests, with the Simon Wiesenthal Centre's dean Marvin Hier warning against a revisionist view that glorified the director, observing that Riefenstahl had seemed "quite infatuated" with Hitler. In 2007 British screenwriter Rupert Walters was reported to be writing a script for the movie. The project did not receive Riefenstahl's approval prior to her death, as Riefenstahl asked for a veto on any scenes to which she did not agree. Riefenstahl reportedly wanted Sharon Stone to play her rather than Foster.
In 2011, director Steven Soderbergh revealed that he had also been working on a biopic of Riefenstahl for about six months. He eventually abandoned the project over concerns of its commercial prospects.
In popular culture
Riefenstahl's filming merits are discussed between characters in the 2009 Quentin Tarantino film Inglourious Basterds.
Riefenstahl was referred to in the series finale of the television show Weeds when Nancy questions Andy for naming his daughter after a Nazi, to which he replied "she was a pioneer in film-making, I don't believe in holding grudges."
Riefenstahl was portrayed by Zdena Studenková in Leni, a 2014 Slovak drama play about her fictional participation in The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson.
Riefenstahl was portrayed by Dutch actress Carice van Houten in Race, a sports drama film directed by Stephen Hopkins about Jesse Owens. It was released in North America on 19 February 2016.
In the 2016 short film Leni. Leni., based on the play by Tom McNab and directed by Adrian Vitoria, Hildegard Neil portrays Riefenstahl.
The 2017 video game Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus (which takes place in an alternative 1961 after the Nazis won World War II) features a supporting character heavily implied to be Riefenstahl, voiced by actress Kristina Klebe. Named Lady Helene, this female director is responsible for making the vast majority of the propaganda films said to be playing (most notably a big-budget movie detailing how America was "liberated" by Nazis). Lady Helene is later met face to face and she is seen to closely resemble Riefenstahl. It also revealed that her mysterious "producer" is an aging, delusional Adolf Hitler and that the two share a close working relationship.
Riefenstahl appears in the 2019 film Hellboy portrayed again by Kristina Klebe.
in 2021 Riefenstahl was the subject of Nigel Farndale's novel The Dictator's Muse.
Filmography
As actress
1925: Wege zu Kraft und Schönheit ("Ways to Strength and Beauty") as Dancer
1926: Der heilige Berg ("The Holy Mountain") as Diotima
1927: Der große Sprung ("The Great Leap") as Gita
1928: Das Schicksal derer von Habsburg ("Fate of the House of Habsburg") as Maria Vetsera
1929: Die weiße Hölle vom Piz Palü ("The White Hell of Pitz Palu") as Maria Maioni
1930: Stürme über dem Mont Blanc ("Storm Over Mont Blanc") as Hella Armstrong
1931: Der weiße Rausch ("The White Ecstasy") as Leni
1932: Das blaue Licht ("The Blue Light") as Junta
1933: S.O.S. Eisberg ("S.O.S. Iceberg") as Hella, seine Frau
1954: Tiefland ("Lowlands") as Martha, eine spanische Betteltänzerin (final film role)
As director
1932: Das blaue Licht ("The Blue Light")
1933: Der Sieg des Glaubens ("The Victory of Faith")
1935: Triumph des Willens ("Triumph of the Will")
1935: Tag der Freiheit: Unsere Wehrmacht ("Day of Freedom: Our Armed Forces")
1937: Wilde Wasser ("Wild Water")
1938: Olympia
1954: Tiefland ("Lowlands")
1965: Allein unter den Nuba ("Alone Among the Nuba") (Unreleased)
2002: Impressionen unter Wasser ("Impressions under Water")
Books
(reviewed by bell hooks)
References
Notes
Bibliography
Printed
Online
External links
Leni Riefenstahl at Jewish Virtual Library
Leni Riefenstahl's Triumph of the Will on MoMA Learning
1902 births
2003 deaths
20th-century German actresses
20th-century German women artists
20th-century memoirists
20th-century women photographers
Actresses from Berlin
Burials at Munich Waldfriedhof
Deaths from cancer in Germany
Expatriate photographers in Sudan
Film directors from Berlin
German centenarians
German documentary film directors
German female dancers
German film actresses
German memoirists
German propagandists
German Protestants
German silent film actresses
German women film directors
German women photographers
Mountaineering film directors
Nazi propagandists
People from the Province of Brandenburg
Photographers from Berlin
Propaganda film directors
Underwater photographers
Women centenarians
Women documentary filmmakers
Women in Nazi Germany | [
"Helene Bertha Amalie \"Leni\" Riefenstahl (; 22 August 1902 – 8 September 2003) was a German film director, photographer and actress known for her seminal role in producing Nazi propaganda.",
"A talented swimmer and an artist, Riefenstahl also became interested in dancing during her childhood, taking lessons and performing across Europe.",
"After seeing a promotional poster for the 1924 film Mountain of Destiny, she was inspired to move into acting and between 1925 and 1929 starred in five successful motion pictures.",
"Riefenstahl became one of the few women in Germany to direct a film during the Weimar Period when, in 1932, she decided to try directing with her own film, Das Blaue Licht (\"The Blue Light\").",
"In the 1930s, she directed the Nazi propaganda films Triumph des Willens (\"Triumph of the Will\") and Olympia, resulting in worldwide attention and acclaim.",
"The films are widely considered two of the most effective and technically innovative propaganda films ever made.",
"Her involvement in Triumph des Willens, however, significantly damaged her career and reputation after World War II.",
"Adolf Hitler was in close collaboration with Riefenstahl during the production of at least three important Nazi films, and they formed a friendly relationship.",
"After the war, Riefenstahl was arrested, but classified as being a \"fellow traveler\" or \"Nazi sympathizer\" only and was not charged with war crimes.",
"Throughout her life, she denied having known about the Holocaust.",
"Besides directing, Riefenstahl released an autobiography and wrote several books on the Nuba people.",
"Early life\nHelene Bertha Amalie Riefenstahl was born in Berlin on 22 August 1902.",
"Her father, Alfred Theodor Paul Riefenstahl, owned a successful heating and ventilation company and wanted his daughter to follow him into the business world.",
"Since Riefenstahl was the only child for several years, Alfred wanted her to carry on the family name and secure the family fortune.",
"However, her mother, Bertha Ida (Scherlach), who had been a part-time seamstress before her marriage, had faith in Riefenstahl and believed that her daughter's future was in show business.",
"Riefenstahl had a younger brother, Heinz, who was killed at the age of 39 on the Eastern Front in Nazi Germany's war against the Soviet Union.",
"Riefenstahl fell in love with the arts in her childhood.",
"She began to paint and write poetry at the age of four.",
"She was also athletic, and at the age of twelve joined a gymnastics and swimming club.",
"Her mother was confident her daughter would grow up to be successful in the field of art and therefore gave her full support, unlike Riefenstahl's father, who was not interested in his daughter's artistic inclinations.",
"In 1918, when she was 16, Riefenstahl attended a presentation of Snow White which interested her deeply; it led her to want to be a dancer.",
"Her father instead wanted to provide his daughter with an education that could lead to a more dignified occupation.",
"His wife, however, continued to support her daughter's passion.",
"Without her husband's knowledge, she enrolled Riefenstahl in dance and ballet classes at the Grimm-Reiter Dance School in Berlin, where she quickly became a star pupil.",
"Dancing and acting careers\nRiefenstahl attended dancing academies and became well known for her self-styled interpretive dancing skills, traveling across Europe with Max Reinhardt in a show funded by Jewish producer Harry Sokal.",
"Riefenstahl often made almost 700 Reichsmarks for each performance and was so dedicated to dancing that she gave filmmaking no thought.",
"She began to suffer a series of foot injuries that led to knee surgery that threatened her dancing career.",
"It was while going to a doctor's appointment that she first saw a poster for the 1924 film Mountain of Destiny.",
"She became inspired to go into movie making, and began visiting the cinema to see films and also attended film shows.",
"On one of her adventures, Riefenstahl met Luis Trenker, an actor who had appeared in Mountain of Destiny.",
"At a meeting arranged by her friend Gunther Rahn, she met Arnold Fanck, the director of Mountain of Destiny and a pioneer of the mountain film genre.",
"Fanck was working on a film in Berlin.",
"After Riefenstahl told him how much she admired his work, she also convinced him of her acting skill.",
"She persuaded him to feature her in one of his films.",
"Riefenstahl later received a package from Fanck containing the script of the 1926 film The Holy Mountain.",
"She made a series of films for Fanck, where she learned from him acting and film editing techniques.",
"One of Fanck's films that brought Riefenstahl into the limelight was The White Hell of Pitz Palu of 1929, co-directed by G. W. Pabst.",
"Her fame spread to countries outside Germany.",
"Riefenstahl produced and directed her own work called Das Blaue Licht (\"The Blue Light\") in 1932, co-written by Carl Mayer and Béla Balázs.",
"This film won the silver medal at the Venice Film Festival, but was not universally well-received, for which Riefenstahl blamed the critics, many of whom were Jewish.",
"Upon its 1938 re-release, the names of Balázs and Sokal, both Jewish, were removed from the credits; some reports say this was at Riefenstahl's behest.",
"In the film, Riefenstahl played an innocent peasant girl who is hated by the villagers because they think she is diabolic and cast out.",
"She is protected by a glowing mountain grotto.",
"According to herself, Riefenstahl received invitations to travel to Hollywood to create films, but she refused them in favour of remaining in Germany with a boyfriend.",
"Hitler was a fan of the film, and thought Riefenstahl epitomized the perfect German female.",
"He saw talent in Riefenstahl and arranged a meeting.",
"In 1933, Riefenstahl appeared in the U.S.-German co-productions of the Arnold Fanck-directed, German-language SOS Eisberg and the Tay Garnett-directed, English-language S.O.S.",
"Iceberg.",
"The films were filmed simultaneously in English and German and produced and distributed by Universal Studios.",
"Her role as an actress in S.O.S.",
"Iceberg was her only English language role in film.",
"Directing career\n\nPropaganda films\nRiefenstahl heard Nazi Party (NSDAP) leader Adolf Hitler speak at a rally in 1932 and was mesmerized by his talent as a public speaker.",
"Describing the experience in her memoir, Riefenstahl wrote, \"I had an almost apocalyptic vision that I was never able to forget.",
"It seemed as if the Earth's surface were spreading out in front of me, like a hemisphere that suddenly splits apart in the middle, spewing out an enormous jet of water, so powerful that it touched the sky and shook the earth\".",
"Hitler was immediately captivated by Riefenstahl's work.",
"She is described as fitting in with Hitler's ideal of Aryan womanhood, a feature he had noted when he saw her starring performance in Das Blaue Licht.",
"After meeting Hitler, Riefenstahl was offered the opportunity to direct Der Sieg des Glaubens (\"The Victory of Faith\"), an hour-long propaganda film about the fifth Nuremberg Rally in 1933.",
"The opportunity that was offered was a huge surprise to Riefenstahl.",
"Hitler had ordered Goebbels' Propaganda Ministry to give the film commission to Riefenstahl, but the Ministry had never informed her.",
"Riefenstahl agreed to direct the movie even though she was only given a few days before the rally to prepare.",
"She and Hitler got on well, forming a friendly relationship.",
"The propaganda film was funded entirely by the NSDAP.",
"During the filming of Victory of Faith, Hitler had stood side by side with the leader of the Sturmabteilung (SA), Ernst Röhm, a man with whom he clearly had a close working relationship.",
"Röhm was murdered on Hitler's orders a short time later, during the purge of the SA referred to as the Night of the Long Knives.",
"It has gone on record that, immediately following the killings, Hitler ordered all copies of the film to be destroyed, although Riefenstahl disputes that this ever happened.",
"Still impressed with Riefenstahl's work, Hitler asked her to film Triumph des Willens (\"Triumph of the Will\"), a new propaganda film about the 1934 party rally in Nuremberg.",
"More than one million Germans participated in the rally.",
"The film is sometimes considered the greatest propaganda film ever made.",
"Initially, according to Riefenstahl, she resisted and did not want to create further Nazi Party films, instead wanting to direct a feature film based on Eugen d'Albert's Tiefland (\"Lowlands\"), an opera that was extremely popular in Berlin in the 1920s.",
"Riefenstahl received private funding for the production of Tiefland, but the filming in Spain was derailed and the project was cancelled.",
"(When Tiefland was eventually shot, between 1940 and 1944, it was done in black and white, and was the third most expensive film produced in Nazi Germany.",
"During the filming of Tiefland, Riefenstahl utilized Romani from internment camps for extras, who were severely mistreated on set, and when the filming completed they were sent to the death camp Auschwitz.)",
"Hitler was able to convince her to film Triumph des Willens on the condition that she would not be required to make further films for the party, according to Riefenstahl.",
"The motion picture was generally recognized as an epic, innovative work of propaganda filmmaking.",
"The film took Riefenstahl's career to a new level and gave her further international recognition.",
"In interviews for the 1993 documentary The Wonderful, Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl, Riefenstahl adamantly denied any deliberate attempt to create Nazi propaganda and said she was disgusted that Triumph des Willens was used in such a way.",
"Despite allegedly vowing not to make any more films about the Nazi Party, Riefenstahl made the 28-minute Tag der Freiheit: Unsere Wehrmacht (\"Day of Freedom: Our Armed Forces\") about the German Army in 1935.",
"Like Der Sieg des Glaubens and Triumph des Willens, this was filmed at the annual Nazi Party rally at Nuremberg.",
"Riefenstahl said this film was a sub-set of Der Sieg des Glaubens, added to mollify the German Army which felt it was not represented well in Triumph des Willens.",
"Hitler invited Riefenstahl to film the 1936 Summer Olympics scheduled to be held in Berlin, a film which Riefenstahl said had been commissioned by the International Olympic Committee.",
"She visited Greece to take footage of the route of the inaugural torch relay and the games' original site at Olympia, where she was aided by Greek photographer Nelly's.",
"This material became Olympia, a hugely successful film which has since been widely noted for its technical and aesthetic achievements.",
"Olympia was secretly funded by the Nazis.",
"She was one of the first filmmakers to use tracking shots in a documentary, placing a camera on rails to follow the athletes' movement.",
"The film is also noted for its slow motion shots.",
"Riefenstahl played with the idea of slow motion, underwater diving shots, extremely high and low shooting angles, panoramic aerial shots, and tracking system shots for allowing fast action.",
"Many of these shots were relatively unheard of at the time, but Riefenstahl's use and augmentation of them set a standard, and is the reason they are still used to this day.",
"Riefenstahl's work on Olympia has been cited as a major influence in modern sports photography.",
"Riefenstahl filmed competitors of all races, including African-American Jesse Owens in what later became famous footage.",
"Olympia premiered for Hitler's 49th birthday in 1938.",
"Its international debut led Riefenstahl to embark on an American publicity tour in an attempt to secure commercial release.",
"In February 1937, Riefenstahl enthusiastically told a reporter for the Detroit News, \"To me, Hitler is the greatest man who ever lived.",
"He truly is without fault, so simple and at the same time possessed of masculine strength\".",
"She arrived in New York City on 4 November 1938, five days before Kristallnacht (the \"Night of the Broken Glass\").",
"When news of the event reached the United States, Riefenstahl publicly defended Hitler.",
"On 18 November, she was received by Henry Ford in Detroit.",
"Olympia was shown at the Chicago Engineers Club two days later.",
"Avery Brundage, President of the International Olympic Committee, praised the film and held Riefenstahl in the highest regard.",
"She negotiated with Louis B. Mayer, and on 8 December, Walt Disney brought her on a three-hour tour showing her the ongoing production of Fantasia.",
"From the Goebbels Diaries, researchers learned that Riefenstahl had been friendly with Joseph Goebbels and his wife Magda, attending the opera with them and going to his parties.",
"Riefenstahl maintained that Goebbels was upset when she rejected his advances and was jealous of her influence on Hitler, seeing her as an internal threat.",
"She therefore insisted his diary entries could not be trusted.",
"By later accounts, Goebbels thought highly of Riefenstahl's filmmaking but was angered with what he saw as her overspending on the Nazi-provided filmmaking budgets.",
"Iconography\nIn Triumph of the Will, Tom Saunders argues that Hitler serves as the object of the camera's gaze.",
"Saunders writes, \"Without denying that \"rampant masculinity\" (the \"sexiness\" of Hitler and the SS) serves as the object of the gaze, I would suggest that desire is also directed toward the feminine.",
"This occurs not in the familiar sequences of adoring women greeting Hitler's arrival and cavalcade through Nuremberg.",
"In these Hitler clearly remains the focus of attraction, as more generally in the visual treatment of his mass following.",
"Rather, it is encoded in representation of flags and banners, which were shot in such a way as to make them visually desirable as well as potent political symbols\".",
"The flag serves as a symbol of masculinity, equated with national pride and dominance, that supposedly channels men's sexual and masculine energy.",
"Riefenstahl's cinematic framing of the flags encapsulated its iconography.",
"Saunders continues, \"The effect is a significant double transformation: the images mechanize human beings and breathe life into flags.",
"Even when the carriers are not mostly submerged under the sea of colored cloth, and when facial features are visible in profile, they attain neither character nor distinctiveness.",
"The men remain ants in a vast enterprise.",
"By contrast and paradoxically, the flags, whether a few or hundreds peopling the frame, assume distinct identities\".",
"Use of music\nRiefenstahl distorts the diegetic sound in Triumph of the Will.",
"Her distortion of sound suggests she was influenced by German art cinema.",
"Influenced by Classical Hollywood cinema's style, German art film employed music to enhance the narrative, establish a sense of grandeur, and to heighten the emotions in a scene.",
"In Triumph of the Will, Riefenstahl used traditional folk music to accompany and intensify her shots.",
"Ben Morgan comments on Riefenstahl's distortion of sound: \"In Triumph of the Will, the material world leaves no aural impression beyond the music.",
"Where the film does combine diegetic noise with the music, the effects used are human (laughter or cheering) and offer a rhythmic extension to the music rather than a contrast to it.",
"By replacing diegetic sound, Riefenstahl's film employs music to combine the documentary with the fantastic.\"",
"World War II\nWhen Germany invaded Poland on 1 September 1939, Riefenstahl was photographed in Poland wearing a military uniform and a pistol on her belt in the company of German soldiers; she had gone to Poland as a war correspondent.",
"On 12 September, she was in the town of Końskie when 30 civilians were executed in retaliation for an alleged attack on German soldiers.",
"According to her memoir, Riefenstahl tried to intervene but a furious German soldier held her at gunpoint and threatened to shoot her on the spot.",
"She said she did not realize the victims were Jews.",
"Photographs of a potentially distraught Riefenstahl survive from that day.",
"Nevertheless, by 5 October 1939, Riefenstahl was back in occupied Poland filming Hitler's victory parade in Warsaw.",
"Afterwards, she left Poland and chose not to make any more Nazi-related films.",
"On 14 June 1940, the day Paris was declared an open city by the French and occupied by German troops, Riefenstahl wrote to Hitler in a telegram, \"With indescribable joy, deeply moved and filled with burning gratitude, we share with you, my Führer, your and Germany's greatest victory, the entry of German troops into Paris.",
"You exceed anything human imagination has the power to conceive, achieving deeds without parallel in the history of mankind.",
"How can we ever thank you?\"",
"She later explained, \"Everyone thought the war was over, and in that spirit I sent the cable to Hitler\".",
"Riefenstahl was friends with Hitler for 12 years.",
"However, her relationship with Hitler severely declined in 1944 after her brother died on the Russian Front.",
"After the Nuremberg rallies trilogy and Olympia, Riefenstahl began work on the movie she had tried and failed to direct once before, namely Tiefland.",
"On Hitler's direct order, the German government paid her seven million Reichsmarks in compensation.",
"From 23 September until 13 November 1940, she filmed in Krün near Mittenwald.",
"The extras playing Spanish women and farmers were drawn from Romani detained in a camp at Salzburg-Maxglan who were forced to work with her.",
"Filming at the Babelsberg Studios near Berlin began 18 months later in April 1942.",
"This time Sinti and Roma people from the Marzahn detention camp near Berlin were compelled to work as extras.",
"Almost to the end of her life, despite overwhelming evidence that the concentration camp occupants had been forced to work on the movie unpaid, Riefenstahl continued to maintain all the film extras survived and that she had met several of them after the war.",
"Riefenstahl sued filmmaker Nina Gladitz, who said Riefenstahl personally chose the extras at their holding camp; Gladitz had found one of the Romani survivors and matched his memory with stills of the movie for a documentary Gladitz was filming.",
"The German court ruled largely in favour of Gladitz, declaring that Riefenstahl had known the extras were from a concentration camp, but they also agreed that Riefenstahl had not been informed the Romani would be sent to Auschwitz after filming was completed.",
"This issue came up again in 2002, when Riefenstahl was 100 years old and she was taken to court by a Roma group for denying the Nazis had exterminated Romani.",
"Riefenstahl apologized and said, \"I regret that Sinti and Roma [people] had to suffer during the period of National Socialism.",
"It is known today that many of them were murdered in concentration camps\".",
"In October 1944 the production of Tiefland moved to Barrandov Studios in Prague for interior filming.",
"Lavish sets made these shots some of the most costly of the film.",
"The film was not edited and released until almost ten years later.",
"The last time Riefenstahl saw Hitler was when she married Peter Jacob on 21 March 1944.",
"Riefenstahl and Jacob divorced in 1946.",
"As Germany's military situation became impossible by early 1945, Riefenstahl left Berlin and was hitchhiking with a group of men, trying to reach her mother, when she was taken into custody by American troops.",
"She walked out of a holding camp, beginning a series of escapes and arrests across the chaotic landscape.",
"At last making it back home on a bicycle, she found that American troops had seized her house.",
"She was surprised by how kindly they treated her.",
"Thwarted film projects\nMost of Riefenstahl's unfinished projects were lost towards the end of the war.",
"The French government confiscated all of her editing equipment, along with the production reels of Tiefland.",
"After years of legal wrangling, these were returned to her, but the French government had reportedly damaged some of the film stock whilst trying to develop and edit it, with a few key scenes being missing (although Riefenstahl was surprised to find the original negatives for Olympia in the same shipment).",
"During the filming of Olympia, Riefenstahl was funded by the state to create her own production company in her own name, Riefenstahl-Film GmbH, which was uninvolved with her most influential works.",
"She edited and dubbed the remaining material and Tiefland premiered on 11 February 1954 in Stuttgart.",
"However, it was denied entry into the Cannes Film Festival.",
"Although Riefenstahl lived for almost another half century, Tiefland was her last feature film.",
"Riefenstahl tried many times to make more films during the 1950s and 1960s, but was met with resistance, public protests and sharp criticism.",
"Many of her filmmaking peers in Hollywood had fled Nazi Germany and were unsympathetic to her.",
"Although both film professionals and investors were willing to support her work, most of the projects she attempted were stopped owing to ever-renewed and highly negative publicity about her past work in Nazi Germany.",
"In 1954, Jean Cocteau, who greatly admired the film, insisted on Tiefland being shown at the Cannes Film Festival, which he was running that year.",
"In 1960, Riefenstahl attempted to prevent filmmaker Erwin Leiser from juxtaposing scenes from Triumph des Willens with footage from concentration camps in his film Mein Kampf.",
"Riefenstahl had high hopes for a collaboration with Cocteau called Friedrich und Voltaire (\"Friedrich and Voltaire\"), wherein Cocteau was to play two roles.",
"They thought the film might symbolize the love-hate relationship between Germany and France.",
"Cocteau's illness and 1963 death put an end to the project.",
"A musical remake of Das Blaue Licht (\"The Blue Light\") with an English production company also fell apart.",
"In the 1960s, Riefenstahl became interested in Africa from Ernest Hemingway's Green Hills of Africa and from the photographs of George Rodger.",
"She visited Kenya for the first time in 1956 and later Sudan, where she photographed Nuba tribes with whom she sporadically lived, learning about their culture so she could photograph them more easily.",
"Even though her film project about modern slavery entitled Die Schwarze Fracht (\"The Black Cargo\") was never completed, Riefenstahl was able to sell the stills from the expedition to magazines in various parts of the world.",
"While scouting shooting locations, she almost died from injuries received in a truck accident.",
"After waking up from a coma in a Nairobi hospital, she finished writing the script, but was soon thoroughly thwarted by uncooperative locals, the Suez Canal crisis and bad weather.",
"In the end, the film project was called off.",
"Even so, Riefenstahl was granted Sudanese citizenship for her services to the country, becoming the first foreigner to receive a Sudanese passport.",
"Detention and trials\nNovelist and sports writer Budd Schulberg, assigned by the U.S. Navy to the OSS for intelligence work while attached to John Ford's documentary unit, was ordered to arrest Riefenstahl at her chalet in Kitzbühel, ostensibly to have her identify Nazi war criminals in German film footage captured by the Allied troops shortly after the war.",
"Riefenstahl said she was not aware of the nature of the internment camps.",
"According to Schulberg, \"She gave me the usual song and dance.",
"She said, 'Of course, you know, I'm really so misunderstood.",
"I'm not political'\".",
"Riefenstahl said she was fascinated by the Nazis, but also politically naive, remaining ignorant about war crimes.",
"Throughout 1945 to 1948, she was held by various Allied-controlled prison camps across Germany.",
"She was also under house arrest for a period of time.",
"She was tried four times by postwar authorities for denazification and eventually found to be a \"fellow traveller\" (Mitläufer) who sympathised with the Nazis.",
"She was never an official member of the Nazi party but was always seen in association with the propaganda films she made in Nazi Germany.",
"Over the years she filed and won over fifty libel cases against people who had accused her of complicity with Nazi crimes.",
"Riefenstahl said that her biggest regret in life was meeting Hitler, declaring, \"It was the biggest catastrophe of my life.",
"Until the day I die people will keep saying, 'Leni is a Nazi', and I'll keep saying, 'But what did she do?'\"",
"Even though she went on to win up to 50 libel cases, details about her relation to the Nazi party generally remain unclear.",
"Shortly before she died, Riefenstahl voiced her final words on the subject of her connection to Adolf Hitler in a BBC interview: \"I was one of millions who thought Hitler had all the answers.",
"We saw only the good things; we didn't know bad things were to come.\"",
"Africa, photography, books and final film \nRiefenstahl began a lifelong companionship with her cameraman Horst Kettner, who was 40 years her junior and assisted her with the photographs; they were together from the time she was 60 and he was 20.",
"Riefenstahl traveled to Africa, inspired by the works of George Rodger that celebrated the ceremonial wrestling matches of the Nuba.",
"Riefenstahl's books with photographs of the Nuba tribes were published in 1974 and republished in 1976 as Die Nuba (translated as \"The Last of the Nuba\") and Die Nuba von Kau (\"The Nuba People of Kau\").",
"They were harshly criticized by American writer and philosopher Susan Sontag, who wrote in The New York Review of Books that they were evidence of Riefenstahl's continued adherence to \"fascist aesthetics\".",
"In this review, which art critic Hilton Kramer described as \"one of the most important inquiries into the relation of esthetics to ideology we have had in many years\", Sontag argued that:Although the Nuba are black, not Aryan, Riefenstahl's portrait of them is consistent with some of the larger themes of Nazi ideology: the contrast between the clean and the impure, the incorruptible and the defiled, the physical and the mental, the joyful and the critical.",
"[...] What is distinctive about the fascist version of the old idea of the Noble Savage is its contempt for all that is reflective, critical, and pluralistic.",
"[...] In celebrating a society where the exhibition of physical skill and courage and the victory of the stronger man over the weaker have, at least as she sees it, become the unifying symbol of the communal culture—where success in fighting is the \"main aspiration of a man's life\"—Riefenstahl seems only to have modified the ideas of her Nazi films.In December 1974, American writer and photographer Eudora Welty reviewed Die Nuba positively for the New York Times, giving an impressionistic account of the aesthetics of Riefenstahl's book:She uses the light purposefully: the full, blinding brightness to make us see the ail‐absorbing blackness of the skin; the ray of light slanting down from the single hole, high in the wall, that is the doorway of the circular house, which tells us how secret and safe it has been made; the first dawn light streaking the face of a calf in the sleeping camp where the young men go to live, which suggests their world apart.",
"All the pictures bring us the physical beauty of the people: a young girl, shy and mischievous of face, with a bead sewn into her lower lip like a permanent cinnamon drop; a wrestler prepared for his match, with his shaven head turned to look over the massive shoulder, all skin color taken away by a coating of ashes.Art Director's Club of Germany awarded Riefenstahl a gold medal for the best photographic achievement of 1975.",
"She also sold some of the pictures to German magazines.",
"Riefenstahl photographed the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich, and rock star Mick Jagger along with his wife Bianca for The Sunday Times.",
"Years later, Riefenstahl photographed Las Vegas entertainers Siegfried & Roy.",
"She was guest of honour at the 1976 Olympic Games in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.",
"In 1978, Riefenstahl published a book of her sub-aquatic photographs called Korallengärten (\"Coral Gardens\"), followed by the 1990 book Wunder unter Wasser (\"Wonder under Water\").",
"On 22 August 2002, her 100th birthday, she released the film Impressionen unter Wasser (\"Underwater Impressions\"), an idealized documentary of life in the oceans and her first film in over 25 years.",
"Riefenstahl was a member of Greenpeace for eight years.",
"When filming Impressionen unter Wasser, Riefenstahl lied about her age in order to be certified for scuba diving.",
"Riefenstahl survived a helicopter crash in Sudan in 2000 while trying to learn the fates of her Nuba friends during the Second Sudanese Civil War, and was airlifted to a Munich hospital, where she received treatment for two broken ribs.",
"Death\n\nRiefenstahl celebrated her 101st birthday on 22 August 2003 at a hotel in Feldafing, on Lake Starnberg, Bavaria, near her home.",
"The day after her birthday celebration, she became ill.\n\nRiefenstahl had been suffering from cancer for some time, and her health rapidly deteriorated during the last weeks of her life.",
"Kettner said in an interview in 2002, \"Ms. Riefenstahl is in great pain and she has become very weak and is taking painkillers\".",
"Riefenstahl died in her sleep at around 10:00 pm on 8 September 2003 at her home in Pöcking, Germany.",
"After her death, there was a varied response in the obituary pages of leading publications, although most recognized her technical breakthroughs in filmmaking.",
"Reception\nFilm scholar Mark Cousins notes in his book The Story of Film that, \"Next to Orson Welles and Alfred Hitchcock, Leni Riefenstahl was the most technically talented Western film maker of her era\".",
"When traveling to Hollywood, Riefenstahl was criticized by the Anti-Nazi League very harshly when wanting to showcase her film Olympia soon after its release.",
"Reviewer Gary Morris called Riefenstahl, \"An artist of unparalleled gifts, a woman in an industry dominated by men, one of the great formalists of the cinema on a par with Eisenstein or Welles\".",
"Film critic Hal Erickson of The New York Times states that the \"Jewish Question\" is mainly unmentioned in Triumph des Willens; \"filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl prefers to concentrate on cheering crowds, precision marching, military bands, and Hitler's climactic speech, all orchestrated, choreographed and illuminated on a scale that makes Griffith and DeMille look like poverty-row directors\".",
"Charles Moore of The Daily Telegraph wrote, \"She was perhaps the most talented female cinema director of the 20th century; her celebration of Nazi Germany in film ensured that she was certainly the most infamous\".",
"Film journalist Sandra Smith from The Independent remarked, \"Opinions will be divided between those who see her as a young, talented and ambitious woman caught up in the tide of events which she did not fully understand, and those who believe her to be a cold and opportunist propagandist and a Nazi by association.\"",
"Critic Judith Thurman said in The New Yorker that, \"Riefenstahl's genius has rarely been questioned, even by critics who despise the service to which she lent it.",
"Riefenstahl was a consummate stylist obsessed with bodies in motion, particularly those of dancers and athletes.",
"Riefenstahl relies heavily for her transitions on portentous cutaways to clouds, mist, statuary, foliage, and rooftops.",
"Her reaction shots have a tedious sameness: shining, ecstatic faces—nearly all young and Aryan, except for Hitler's\".",
"Pauline Kael, also a film reviewer employed for The New Yorker, called Triumph des Willens and Olympia, \"the two greatest films ever directed by a woman\".",
"Writer Richard Corliss wrote in Time that he was \"impressed by Riefenstahl's standing as a total auteur: producer, writer, director, editor and, in the fiction films, actress.",
"The issues her films and her career raise are as complex and they are important, and her vilifiers tend to reduce the argument to one of a director's complicity in atrocity or her criminal ignorance\".",
"Film biographies\nIn 1993, Riefenstahl was the subject of the award-winning German documentary film The Wonderful, Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl, directed by Ray Müller.",
"Riefenstahl appeared in the film and answered several questions and detailed the production of her films.",
"The biofilm was nominated for seven Emmy Awards, winning in one category.",
"Riefenstahl, who for some time had been working on her memoirs, decided to cooperate in the production of this documentary to tell her life story about the struggles she had gone through in her personal life, her film-making career and what people thought of her.",
"She was also the subject of Müller's 2000 documentary film Leni Riefenstahl: Her Dream of Africa, about her return to Sudan to visit the Nuba people.",
"In 2000, Jodie Foster was planning a biographical drama on Riefenstahl, then seen as the last surviving member of Hitler's \"inner circle\", causing protests, with the Simon Wiesenthal Centre's dean Marvin Hier warning against a revisionist view that glorified the director, observing that Riefenstahl had seemed \"quite infatuated\" with Hitler.",
"In 2007 British screenwriter Rupert Walters was reported to be writing a script for the movie.",
"The project did not receive Riefenstahl's approval prior to her death, as Riefenstahl asked for a veto on any scenes to which she did not agree.",
"Riefenstahl reportedly wanted Sharon Stone to play her rather than Foster.",
"In 2011, director Steven Soderbergh revealed that he had also been working on a biopic of Riefenstahl for about six months.",
"He eventually abandoned the project over concerns of its commercial prospects.",
"In popular culture\nRiefenstahl's filming merits are discussed between characters in the 2009 Quentin Tarantino film Inglourious Basterds.",
"Riefenstahl was referred to in the series finale of the television show Weeds when Nancy questions Andy for naming his daughter after a Nazi, to which he replied \"she was a pioneer in film-making, I don't believe in holding grudges.\"",
"Riefenstahl was portrayed by Zdena Studenková in Leni, a 2014 Slovak drama play about her fictional participation in The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson.",
"Riefenstahl was portrayed by Dutch actress Carice van Houten in Race, a sports drama film directed by Stephen Hopkins about Jesse Owens.",
"It was released in North America on 19 February 2016.",
"In the 2016 short film Leni.",
"Leni., based on the play by Tom McNab and directed by Adrian Vitoria, Hildegard Neil portrays Riefenstahl.",
"The 2017 video game Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus (which takes place in an alternative 1961 after the Nazis won World War II) features a supporting character heavily implied to be Riefenstahl, voiced by actress Kristina Klebe.",
"Named Lady Helene, this female director is responsible for making the vast majority of the propaganda films said to be playing (most notably a big-budget movie detailing how America was \"liberated\" by Nazis).",
"Lady Helene is later met face to face and she is seen to closely resemble Riefenstahl.",
"It also revealed that her mysterious \"producer\" is an aging, delusional Adolf Hitler and that the two share a close working relationship.",
"Riefenstahl appears in the 2019 film Hellboy portrayed again by Kristina Klebe.",
"in 2021 Riefenstahl was the subject of Nigel Farndale's novel The Dictator's Muse.",
"Filmography\n\nAs actress\n1925: Wege zu Kraft und Schönheit (\"Ways to Strength and Beauty\") as Dancer\n1926: Der heilige Berg (\"The Holy Mountain\") as Diotima\n1927: Der große Sprung (\"The Great Leap\") as Gita\n1928: Das Schicksal derer von Habsburg (\"Fate of the House of Habsburg\") as Maria Vetsera\n1929: Die weiße Hölle vom Piz Palü (\"The White Hell of Pitz Palu\") as Maria Maioni\n1930: Stürme über dem Mont Blanc (\"Storm Over Mont Blanc\") as Hella Armstrong\n1931: Der weiße Rausch (\"The White Ecstasy\") as Leni\n1932: Das blaue Licht (\"The Blue Light\") as Junta\n1933: S.O.S.",
"Eisberg (\"S.O.S."
] | [
"Riefenstahl was known for her role in producing Nazi propaganda.",
"Riefenstahl became interested in dancing when she was a child, taking lessons and performing across Europe.",
"She was inspired to move into acting after seeing a promotional poster for a film.",
"Riefenstahl was one of the few women in Germany to direct a film during the Weimar Period.",
"She directed the Nazi propaganda films \"Triumph of the Will\" and \"Olympia\" in the 1930s.",
"Two of the most effective and technically innovative propaganda films have been made.",
"After World War II, her career and reputation were damaged by her involvement in Triumph des Willens.",
"During the production of at least three important Nazi films, Hitler and Riefenstahl formed a friendly relationship.",
"Riefenstahl was not charged with war crimes after being classified as a \"fellow traveler\" or \"Nazi sympathizer\" only.",
"She denied knowing anything about the Holocaust.",
"Riefenstahl wrote several books about the Nuba people.",
"Riefenstahl was born in Berlin in the early 20th century.",
"Alfred Theodor Paul Riefenstahl was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"Alfred wanted her to carry on the family name because Riefenstahl was the only child for a long time.",
"Her mother, who had been a part-time seamstress before her marriage, had faith in Riefenstahl and believed that her daughter's future was in show business.",
"The younger brother of Riefenstahl was killed in the war against the Soviet Union at the age of 39.",
"Riefenstahl loved the arts as a child.",
"At the age of four, she began to paint and write poetry.",
"At the age of twelve she joined a gymnastics and swimming club.",
"Riefenstahl's father was not interested in her artistic inclinations and so his full support was not given to her by her mother.",
"She wanted to be a dancer after attending a presentation of Snow White when she was 16.",
"Her father wanted to give her an education that would lead to a more dignified occupation.",
"His wife continued to support her daughter's passion.",
"Without her husband's knowledge, she enrolls Riefenstahl in dance and ballet classes at the Grimm-Reiter Dance School in Berlin.",
"Riefenstahl traveled across Europe with Max Reinhardt in a show funded by a Jewish producer and became well known for her interpretive dancing skills.",
"Riefenstahl was so dedicated to dancing that she made 700 Reichsmarks for each performance.",
"She was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"The first time she saw a poster for a film was at a doctor's appointment.",
"She was inspired to become a movie maker after seeing films at the cinema.",
"Luis Trenker, an actor who had appeared in Mountain of Destiny, met Riefenstahl on one of her adventures.",
"She met Arnold Fanck, a pioneer of the mountain film genre, at a meeting arranged by her friend.",
"Fanck was in Berlin working on a film.",
"She convinced him of her acting skill after telling him how much she liked his work.",
"She convinced him to make a film about her.",
"The script of the film The Holy Mountain was sent to Riefenstahl by Fanck.",
"She learned film editing and acting techniques from Fanck, who made a series of films for her.",
"The White Hell of Pitz Palu, co-directed by G. W. Pabst, was one of Fanck's films that brought Riefenstahl into the spotlight.",
"Her fame spread to other countries.",
"Riefenstahl produced and directed her own work called \"The Blue Light\" in 1932.",
"Riefenstahl blamed the critics, many of whom were Jewish, for the film's poor reception at the Venice Film Festival.",
"The names of Balzs and Sokal, both Jewish, were removed from the credits after the re-release.",
"Riefenstahl played an innocent peasant girl who was hated by the villagers because they thought she was crazy.",
"She is protected from the elements.",
"Riefenstahl was invited to travel to Hollywood to make films, but she chose to stay in Germany with her boyfriend.",
"Hitler thought Riefenstahl was the perfect German female because he was a fan of the film.",
"He arranged a meeting to see the talent in Riefenstahl.",
"Riefenstahl appeared in the US-German co-productions of the Arnold Fanck-directed, German-language S.O.S. and the English-language S.O.S.",
"There is a piece of ice.",
"The films were produced and distributed by Universal Studios.",
"She was an actress in S.O.S.",
"She only had an English language role in the film.",
"Riefenstahl was so enamored by Hitler's talent as a public speaker that he directed career Propaganda films.",
"In her memoir, Riefenstahl wrote, \"I had an almost apocalyptic vision that I was never able to forget.\"",
"It seemed as if the Earth's surface was spreading out in front of me, like a hemisphere that suddenly splits apart in the middle, releasing an enormous jet of water, so powerful that it touched the sky and shook the earth.",
"Hitler was enamored with Riefenstahl's work.",
"She is described as fitting in with Hitler's ideal of Aryan womanhood, a feature he noted when he saw her starring performance.",
"Riefenstahl was offered the chance to direct \"The Victory of Faith\", a propaganda film about the fifth Nuremberg Rally in 1933.",
"Riefenstahl was surprised by the opportunity.",
"The Propaganda Ministry never told Riefenstahl that Hitler had ordered them to give her the film commission.",
"Even though she was only given a few days to prepare, Riefenstahl agreed to direct the movie.",
"They formed a friendly relationship.",
"The film was funded by the organization.",
"During the filming of Victory of Faith, Hitler stood side by side with the leader of the SA, Ernst Rhm, a man with whom he clearly had a close working relationship.",
"The Night of the Long Knives was the time when Hitler ordered the murder of Rhm.",
"Riefenstahl disagrees that Hitler ordered the destruction of all copies of the film after the killings.",
"Hitler liked Riefenstahl's work so much that he asked her to film Triumph des Willens, a new propaganda film about the 1934 party rally in Nuremberg.",
"More than one million Germans attended the rally.",
"The film may be the greatest propaganda film ever made.",
"Riefenstahl said that she wanted to direct a feature film based on Tiefland, an opera that was popular in Berlin in the 1920s.",
"Private funding was received for the production of Tiefland, but the filming in Spain was stopped and the project was canceled.",
"Tiefland was the third most expensive film produced in Nazi Germany and was shot in black and white.",
"During the filming of Tiefland, Riefenstahl used Romani from internment camps for extras who were mistreated on set, and they were sent to the death camp Auschwitz.",
"According to Riefenstahl, Hitler persuaded her to film Triumph des Willens on the condition that she wouldn't be required to make any more films for the party.",
"The motion picture was considered an innovative work of propaganda filmmaking.",
"The film gave Riefenstahl further international recognition and took her career to a new level.",
"Leni Riefenstahl denied any attempt to create Nazi propaganda and said she was disgusted that Triumph des Willens was used in such a way.",
"Riefenstahl made the 28-minute Tag der Freiheit: Unsere Wehrmacht about the German Army in 1935 despite promising not to make any more films about the Nazi Party.",
"This was filmed at the annual Nazi Party rally in Nuremberg.",
"The German Army felt that it wasn't represented well in Triumph des Willens, so they added this film to make up for it.",
"Riefenstahl said that Hitler invited him to film the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, a film which was commissioned by the International Olympic Committee.",
"She traveled to Greece to film the route of the inaugural torch relay and the original site of the games, where she was aided by a Greek photographer.",
"The film became known for its technical and aesthetic achievements.",
"The Nazis funded Olympia.",
"She was one of the first filmmakers to use a camera on rails to follow athletes.",
"The film has slow motion shots.",
"Slow motion, underwater diving shots, extremely high and low shooting angles, panoramic aerial shots, and tracking system shots were some of the ideas Riefenstahl played with.",
"Riefenstahl's use and augmentation of these shots set a standard that is still used to this day.",
"A major influence in modern sports photography is Riefenstahl's work.",
"Jesse Owens was filmed in what became famous footage.",
"The movie was made for Hitler's 49th birthday.",
"Riefenstahl embarked on an American publicity tour in order to get a commercial release.",
"Riefenstahl told a reporter for the Detroit News that Hitler was the greatest man he had ever known.",
"He is simple and has masculine strength.",
"She arrived in New York City five days before Kristallnacht.",
"Riefenstahl publicly defended Hitler when news of the event reached the US.",
"Henry Ford received her in Detroit.",
"Two days later, it was shown at the Chicago Engineers Club.",
"The film was praised by the President of the International Olympic Committee.",
"On 8 December, Walt Disney brought her on a three-hour tour showing her the ongoing production of Fantasia.",
"Researchers discovered that Riefenstahl was friendly with Joseph Goebbels and his wife, and that they went to his parties.",
"Riefenstahl said that Goebbels was jealous of her influence on Hitler and was upset when she rejected his advances.",
"She said his diary entries couldn't be trusted.",
"Goebbels was angered by Riefenstahl's overspending on the Nazi-supplied film budgets, but he thought highly of her work.",
"Hitler is argued to be the object of the camera's gaze in Iconography In Triumph of the Will.",
"I would suggest that desire is also directed toward the feminine, without denying that \"rampant masculinity\" serves as the object of the gaze.",
"This doesn't happen in the famous sequence of women greeting Hitler's arrival and cavalcade through Nuremberg.",
"The visual treatment of Hitler's mass following is the focus of attraction in these.",
"It is represented by flags and banners, which were shot in such a way as to make them visually desirable as well as potent political symbols.",
"The flag is said to channel men's sexual and masculine energy.",
"Riefenstahl's film 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846",
"The images mechanize human beings and breathe life into flags.",
"When facial features are visible in profile, the carriers attain neither character nor distinctiveness.",
"The men are ants.",
"The flags, whether a few or hundreds, assume distinct identities.",
"The diegetic sound in Triumph of the Will is distorted by the use of music.",
"She may have been influenced by German art cinema.",
"Influenced by Classical Hollywood cinema's style, German art film used music to enhance the narrative, establish a sense of grandeur, and heighten the emotions in a scene.",
"Riefenstahl used traditional folk music to intensify her shots in Triumph of the Will.",
"In Triumph of the Will, the material world leaves no aural impression beyond the music.",
"Where the film does combine diegetic noise with the music, the effects used are human (laughter or cheering) and offer a rhythmic extension to the music rather than a contrast to it.",
"Riefenstahl's film uses music to combine the documentary with the fantastic.",
"Riefenstahl was a war correspondent when Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939, and she was photographed in Poland wearing a military uniform and a pistol on her belt.",
"She was in the town of Koskie when 30 people were executed in revenge for an attack on German soldiers.",
"According to her memoir, Riefenstahl tried to intervene but a German soldier held her at gun point and threatened to shoot her.",
"She said she didn't know the victims were Jews.",
"Riefenstahl's photographs survive from that day.",
"Riefenstahl was back in occupied Poland filming Hitler's victory parade.",
"She decided not to make any more Nazi-related films after leaving Poland.",
"Riefenstahl wrote a telegram to Hitler on the day Paris was declared an open city by the French.",
"You have the power to conceive without parallel in the history of mankind because of your imagination.",
"How can we say thank you?",
"She explained that she sent the cable to Hitler because everyone thought the war was over.",
"Riefenstahl was friends with Hitler.",
"After her brother died on the Russian Front, her relationship with Hitler deteriorated.",
"Riefenstahl had previously tried and failed to direct the movie Tiefland.",
"She was paid seven million Reichsmarks by the German government.",
"She filmed in Krn from September to November 1940.",
"Romani, who was forced to work for her in a camp at Salzburg-Maxglan, was brought in by the extras to play Spanish women and farmers.",
"The Babelsberg Studios began filming in April 1942.",
"People from the Marzahn detention camp were forced to work as extras.",
"Almost to the end of her life, despite overwhelming evidence that the concentration camp inhabitants had been forced to work on the movie without pay, Riefenstahl continued to maintain that all the film extras survived and that she had met several of them after the war.",
"Riefenstahl sued Gladitz, who said Riefenstahl personally chose the extras at their holding camp, and that Gladitz had found one of the Romani survivors and matched his memory with stills of the movie.",
"The German court agreed with Gladitz that Riefenstahl knew the extras were from a concentration camp, but he didn't know they would be sent to Auschwitz.",
"When Riefenstahl was 100 years old, she was taken to court by a group for denying the Nazis had killed Romani.",
"Riefenstahl apologized and said that he regretted that people had to suffer during the period of National Socialism.",
"Many of them were murdered in concentration camps.",
"The production of Tiefland moved to Barrandov Studios in the Czech Republic in 1944.",
"These shots were some of the most expensive in the film.",
"The film was not edited until ten years later.",
"Riefenstahl married Peter Jacob on 21 March 1944, the last time she saw Hitler.",
"Riefenstahl and Jacob divorced.",
"Riefenstahl was taken into custody by American troops after leaving Berlin and hitchhiking with a group of men to reach her mother.",
"A series of escapes and arrests began after she walked out of a holding camp.",
"She found out that American troops had taken her house when she returned home on a bicycle.",
"She was surprised by how nice they were to her.",
"Riefenstahl's unfinished film projects were lost towards the end of the war.",
"The production reels of Tiefland were seized by the French government.",
"After years of legal wrangling, these were returned to her, but the French government had reportedly damaged some of the film stock whilst trying to develop and edit it, with a few key scenes being missing.",
"Riefenstahl was funded by the state to create her own production company, which was not involved with her most influential works.",
"She edited and dubbed the rest of the material for Tiefland.",
"It was denied entry into the festival.",
"Tiefland was Riefenstahl's last feature film.",
"Riefenstahl tried many times to make more films, but was met with resistance, public protests and sharp criticism.",
"Many of her peers in Hollywood fled Nazi Germany.",
"Although both film professionals and investors were willing to support her work, most of the projects she attempted were stopped due to her past work in Nazi Germany.",
"Jean Cocteau, who was running the festival at the time, wanted Tiefland to be shown at the festival.",
"In 1960, Riefenstahl tried to prevent Leiser from showing scenes from Triumph des Willens with footage from concentration camps.",
"Cocteau was to play two roles in a collaboration with Riefenstahl.",
"The film might symbolize the love-hate relationship between Germany and France.",
"The project ended because of Cocteau's illness and death.",
"A musical remake of \"The Blue Light\" fell apart.",
"Riefenstahl became interested in Africa from Ernest Hemingway's Green Hills of Africa and the photographs of George Rodger.",
"She photographed the Nuba tribes in Sudan, learning about their culture so she could photograph them more easily.",
"Riefenstahl was able to sell the stills from the expedition to magazines in various parts of the world even though her film project about modern slavery was never completed.",
"She almost died from injuries she received in a truck accident while scouting shooting locations.",
"She woke up from a coma in a hospital and was able to finish her script, but the locals were not happy about it.",
"The film project was called off.",
"Riefenstahl became the first foreigner to receive a Sudanese passport when she was granted Sudanese citizenship.",
"Budd Schulberg, assigned by the U.S. Navy to the OSS for intelligence work while attached to John Ford's documentary unit, was ordered to arrest Riefenstahl at her chalet in Kitzbhel, ostensibly to have her identify Nazi.",
"Riefenstahl didn't know the nature of the internment camps.",
"She gave me a song and dance.",
"She said that she was so misunderstood.",
"I'm not a political person.",
"Riefenstahl was fascinated by the Nazis, but also naive about war crimes.",
"She was held in various Allied-controlled prison camps in Germany.",
"She was under house arrest for a period of time.",
"She was found to be a \"fellow traveller\" who sympathized with the Nazis after being tried four times for denazification.",
"She made propaganda films in Nazi Germany but was never an official member of the party.",
"She won over fifty libel cases against people who accused her of being involved in Nazi crimes.",
"Riefenstahl said that meeting Hitler was the biggest catastrophe of her life.",
"Leni is a Nazi until the day I die, and I'll keep asking, 'But what did she do?'",
"She went on to win up to 50 libel cases, but her relation to the Nazi party is not clear.",
"Riefenstahl was one of the millions who thought Hitler had all the answers.",
"We didn't know what bad things would be.",
"Riefenstahl began a lifelong relationship with her cameraman, who was 40 years her junior, when she was 60 and he was 20.",
"George Rodger's works celebrated the ceremonial wrestling matches of the Nuba.",
"\"The Last of the Nuba\" and \"Die Nuba von Kau\" were published in 1976 as Die Nuba and Die Nuba von Kau, respectively.",
"Susan Sontag wrote in The New York Review of Books that they were evidence of Riefenstahl's continued adherence to \"fascist aesthetic\".",
"Although the Nuba are black, not Aryan, Riefenstahl's portrait of them is, according to Sontag, one of the most important inquiries into the relation of esthetics to ideology we have had in many years.",
"The fascist version of the Noble Savage is contemptuous of all that is reflective, critical, and pluralistic.",
"In celebrating a society where the exhibition of physical skill and courage and the victory of the stronger man over the weaker have become the unifying symbol of the communal culture, success in fighting is the main aspiration of a man's life.",
"The pictures show the physical beauty of the people, from a young girl with a bead sewn into her lower lip like a cinnamon drop, to a wrestler with his shaven head turned to look over his massive shoulder.",
"Some of the pictures were sold to German magazines.",
"Mick Jagger and his wife Bianca were photographed for The Sunday Times.",
"Years later, Riefenstahl photographed Las Vegas entertainers.",
"The 1976 Olympic Games were held in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.",
"In 1978, Riefenstahl published a book of her sub-aquatic photographs called Korallengrten.",
"She released her first film in 25 years on her 100th birthday on August 22, 2002, and it was an idealized documentary of life in the oceans.",
"Riefenstahl was a member of the environmental group.",
"Riefenstahl lied about her age in order to be certified for scuba diving.",
"Riefenstahl survived a helicopter crash in Sudan in 2000 while trying to learn the fates of her Nuba friends during the Second Sudanese Civil War, and was flown to a hospital in Germany for treatment for two broken ribs.",
"On August 22, 2003 Death Riefenstahl celebrated her 101st birthday at a hotel near her home.",
"Riefenstahl was ill the day after she celebrated her birthday.",
"In 2002, Kettner said that Ms. Riefenstahl was in pain and was taking painkillers.",
"Riefenstahl died in her sleep at 10:00 pm on September 8, 2003 at her home in Pcking, Germany.",
"The obituary pages of leading publications varied in their responses to her death.",
"Leni Riefenstahl was the most technically talented Western film maker of her era, according to a book written by a reception film scholar.",
"Riefenstahl was criticized by the Anti-Nazi League when she wanted to showcase her film after its release.",
"Gary Morris called Riefenstahl, an artist of unparalleled gifts, a woman in an industry dominated by men, one of the great formalists of the cinema.",
"The filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl prefers to concentrate on cheering crowds, precision marching, military bands, and Hitler's final speech, all orchestrated, choreographed.",
"\"She was perhaps the most talented female cinema director of the 20th century; her celebration of Nazi Germany in film ensured that she was certainly the most infamous\", wrote Charles Moore of The Daily Telegraph.",
"There will be differing opinions on whether she is a young, talented and ambitious woman caught up in the tide of events which she did not fully understand, or a cold and opportunist propagandist and a Nazi.",
"\"Riefenstahl's genius has rarely been questioned, even by critics who despise the service to which she lent it,\" said Judith Thurman in The New Yorker.",
"Dancers and athletes were obsessed with Riefenstahl's bodies in motion.",
"Riefenstahl relies a lot on her transitions to clouds, mist, statuary, foliage, and rooftops.",
"Her reaction shots have a tedious sameness: shining, ecstatic faces, almost all young and Aryan, except for Hitler's.",
"The two greatest films ever directed by a woman are called Triumph des Willens and Olympia, according to a film reviewer employed by The New Yorker.",
"Richard Corliss wrote in Time that he was \"impressed by Riefenstahl's standing as a total auteur: producer, writer, director, editor and, in the fiction films, actress.\"",
"The issues her films and her career raise are important, and her vilifiers tend to reduce the argument to one of a director's complicity in atrocity or her criminal ignorance.",
"Leni Riefenstahl was the subject of a German documentary film called The Wonderful, Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl, directed by Ray Mller.",
"In the film, Riefenstahl answered several questions and detailed the production of her films.",
"The biofilm won in one category.",
"Riefenstahl, who had been working on her memoirs, decided to cooperate in the production of this documentary to tell her life story about the struggles she had gone through in her personal life, her film-making career and what people thought of her.",
"Leni Riefenstahl: Her Dream of Africa was a film about her return to Sudan to visit the Nuba people.",
"In 2000, Jodie Foster was planning a biographical drama on Riefenstahl, the last surviving member of Hitler's \"inner circle\", causing protests, with the Simon Wiesenthal Centre's dean warning against a revisionist view.",
"In 2007, it was reported that a British writer was writing a script for a movie.",
"Prior to her death, Riefenstahl asked for a veto on any scenes that she did not agree with.",
"Riefenstahl wanted Sharon Stone to play her.",
"Steven Soderbergh said that he had been working on a film about Riefenstahl for six months.",
"The project was abandoned due to concerns of its commercial prospects.",
"Riefenstahl's filming merits are discussed in the film Inglourious Basterds.",
"When Nancy questioned Andy about naming his daughter after a Nazi, he replied \"she was a pioneer in film-making, I don't believe in holding grudges.\"",
"Riefenstahl was portrayed by Zdena Studenkov in Leni, a Slovak drama play about her role in The Tonight Show.",
"Carice van Houten was the Dutch actress who played Riefenstahl in Race.",
"It was released in North America.",
"Leni is a short film.",
"Hildegard Neil plays Riefenstahl in the play Leni.",
"The video game Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus has a supporting character that is implied to be Riefenstahl, voiced by actress Kristina Klebe.",
"This female director is responsible for making most of the propaganda films that are said to be playing, most notably a big-budget movie detailing how America was \"liberated\" by Nazis.",
"Lady Helene is seen to closely resemble Riefenstahl when she is met face to face.",
"It was revealed that her producer is an old, delusional Hitler and that they share a close working relationship.",
"The character of Riefenstahl is portrayed by Kristina Klebe in the film.",
"The Dictator's Muse was a novel about Riefenstahl.",
"As actress 1925: Wege von Schnheit, \"Ways to Strength and Beauty\", as Dancer.",
"\"S.O.S.\" is the name of the company."
] | Helene Bertha Amalie "<mask><mask> (; 22 August 1902 – 8 September 2003) was a German film director, photographer and actress known for her seminal role in producing Nazi propaganda. A talented swimmer and an artist, Riefenstahl also became interested in dancing during her childhood, taking lessons and performing across Europe. After seeing a promotional poster for the 1924 film Mountain of Destiny, she was inspired to move into acting and between 1925 and 1929 starred in five successful motion pictures. Riefenstahl became one of the few women in Germany to direct a film during the Weimar Period when, in 1932, she decided to try directing with her own film, Das Blaue Licht ("The Blue Light"). In the 1930s, she directed the Nazi propaganda films Triumph des Willens ("Triumph of the Will") and Olympia, resulting in worldwide attention and acclaim. The films are widely considered two of the most effective and technically innovative propaganda films ever made. Her involvement in Triumph des Willens, however, significantly damaged her career and reputation after World War II.Adolf Hitler was in close collaboration with <mask> during the production of at least three important Nazi films, and they formed a friendly relationship. After the war, Riefenstahl was arrested, but classified as being a "fellow traveler" or "Nazi sympathizer" only and was not charged with war crimes. Throughout her life, she denied having known about the Holocaust. Besides directing, Riefenstahl released an autobiography and wrote several books on the Nuba people. Early life
Helene Bertha Amalie <mask> was born in Berlin on 22 August 1902. Her father, Alfred Theodor <mask>, owned a successful heating and ventilation company and wanted his daughter to follow him into the business world. Since Riefenstahl was the only child for several years, Alfred wanted her to carry on the family name and secure the family fortune.However, her mother, Bertha Ida (Scherlach), who had been a part-time seamstress before her marriage, had faith in Riefenstahl and believed that her daughter's future was in show business. Riefenstahl had a younger brother, Heinz, who was killed at the age of 39 on the Eastern Front in Nazi Germany's war against the Soviet Union. Riefenstahl fell in love with the arts in her childhood. She began to paint and write poetry at the age of four. She was also athletic, and at the age of twelve joined a gymnastics and swimming club. Her mother was confident her daughter would grow up to be successful in the field of art and therefore gave her full support, unlike Riefenstahl's father, who was not interested in his daughter's artistic inclinations. In 1918, when she was 16, Riefenstahl attended a presentation of Snow White which interested her deeply; it led her to want to be a dancer.Her father instead wanted to provide his daughter with an education that could lead to a more dignified occupation. His wife, however, continued to support her daughter's passion. Without her husband's knowledge, she enrolled Riefenstahl in dance and ballet classes at the Grimm-Reiter Dance School in Berlin, where she quickly became a star pupil. Dancing and acting careers
Riefenstahl attended dancing academies and became well known for her self-styled interpretive dancing skills, traveling across Europe with Max Reinhardt in a show funded by Jewish producer Harry Sokal. Riefenstahl often made almost 700 Reichsmarks for each performance and was so dedicated to dancing that she gave filmmaking no thought. She began to suffer a series of foot injuries that led to knee surgery that threatened her dancing career. It was while going to a doctor's appointment that she first saw a poster for the 1924 film Mountain of Destiny.She became inspired to go into movie making, and began visiting the cinema to see films and also attended film shows. On one of her adventures, Riefenstahl met Luis Trenker, an actor who had appeared in Mountain of Destiny. At a meeting arranged by her friend Gunther Rahn, she met Arnold Fanck, the director of Mountain of Destiny and a pioneer of the mountain film genre. Fanck was working on a film in Berlin. After Riefenstahl told him how much she admired his work, she also convinced him of her acting skill. She persuaded him to feature her in one of his films. Riefenstahl later received a package from Fanck containing the script of the 1926 film The Holy Mountain.She made a series of films for Fanck, where she learned from him acting and film editing techniques. One of Fanck's films that brought Riefenstahl into the limelight was The White Hell of Pitz Palu of 1929, co-directed by G. W. Pabst. Her fame spread to countries outside Germany. Riefenstahl produced and directed her own work called Das Blaue Licht ("The Blue Light") in 1932, co-written by Carl Mayer and Béla Balázs. This film won the silver medal at the Venice Film Festival, but was not universally well-received, for which Riefenstahl blamed the critics, many of whom were Jewish. Upon its 1938 re-release, the names of Balázs and Sokal, both Jewish, were removed from the credits; some reports say this was at Riefenstahl's behest. In the film, Riefenstahl played an innocent peasant girl who is hated by the villagers because they think she is diabolic and cast out.She is protected by a glowing mountain grotto. According to herself, Riefenstahl received invitations to travel to Hollywood to create films, but she refused them in favour of remaining in Germany with a boyfriend. Hitler was a fan of the film, and thought Riefenstahl epitomized the perfect German female. He saw talent in Riefenstahl and arranged a meeting. In 1933, Riefenstahl appeared in the U.S.-German co-productions of the Arnold Fanck-directed, German-language SOS Eisberg and the Tay Garnett-directed, English-language S.O.S. Iceberg. The films were filmed simultaneously in English and German and produced and distributed by Universal Studios.Her role as an actress in S.O.S. Iceberg was her only English language role in film. Directing career
Propaganda films
Riefenstahl heard Nazi Party (NSDAP) leader Adolf Hitler speak at a rally in 1932 and was mesmerized by his talent as a public speaker. Describing the experience in her memoir, Riefenstahl wrote, "I had an almost apocalyptic vision that I was never able to forget. It seemed as if the Earth's surface were spreading out in front of me, like a hemisphere that suddenly splits apart in the middle, spewing out an enormous jet of water, so powerful that it touched the sky and shook the earth". Hitler was immediately captivated by <mask>'s work. She is described as fitting in with Hitler's ideal of Aryan womanhood, a feature he had noted when he saw her starring performance in Das Blaue Licht.After meeting Hitler, <mask> was offered the opportunity to direct Der Sieg des Glaubens ("The Victory of Faith"), an hour-long propaganda film about the fifth Nuremberg Rally in 1933. The opportunity that was offered was a huge surprise to Riefenstahl. Hitler had ordered Goebbels' Propaganda Ministry to give the film commission to <mask>, but the Ministry had never informed her. Riefenstahl agreed to direct the movie even though she was only given a few days before the rally to prepare. She and Hitler got on well, forming a friendly relationship. The propaganda film was funded entirely by the NSDAP. During the filming of Victory of Faith, Hitler had stood side by side with the leader of the Sturmabteilung (SA), Ernst Röhm, a man with whom he clearly had a close working relationship.Röhm was murdered on Hitler's orders a short time later, during the purge of the SA referred to as the Night of the Long Knives. It has gone on record that, immediately following the killings, Hitler ordered all copies of the film to be destroyed, although <mask> disputes that this ever happened. Still impressed with <mask>'s work, Hitler asked her to film Triumph des Willens ("Triumph of the Will"), a new propaganda film about the 1934 party rally in Nuremberg. More than one million Germans participated in the rally. The film is sometimes considered the greatest propaganda film ever made. Initially, according to Riefenstahl, she resisted and did not want to create further Nazi Party films, instead wanting to direct a feature film based on Eugen d'Albert's Tiefland ("Lowlands"), an opera that was extremely popular in Berlin in the 1920s. Riefenstahl received private funding for the production of Tiefland, but the filming in Spain was derailed and the project was cancelled.(When Tiefland was eventually shot, between 1940 and 1944, it was done in black and white, and was the third most expensive film produced in Nazi Germany. During the filming of Tiefland, Riefenstahl utilized Romani from internment camps for extras, who were severely mistreated on set, and when the filming completed they were sent to the death camp Auschwitz.) Hitler was able to convince her to film Triumph des Willens on the condition that she would not be required to make further films for the party, according to Riefenstahl. The motion picture was generally recognized as an epic, innovative work of propaganda filmmaking. The film took Riefenstahl's career to a new level and gave her further international recognition. In interviews for the 1993 documentary The Wonderful, Horrible Life of <mask>tahl, Riefenstahl adamantly denied any deliberate attempt to create Nazi propaganda and said she was disgusted that Triumph des Willens was used in such a way. Despite allegedly vowing not to make any more films about the Nazi Party, Riefenstahl made the 28-minute Tag der Freiheit: Unsere Wehrmacht ("Day of Freedom: Our Armed Forces") about the German Army in 1935.Like Der Sieg des Glaubens and Triumph des Willens, this was filmed at the annual Nazi Party rally at Nuremberg. <mask> said this film was a sub-set of Der Sieg des Glaubens, added to mollify the German Army which felt it was not represented well in Triumph des Willens. Hitler invited <mask> to film the 1936 Summer Olympics scheduled to be held in Berlin, a film which Riefenstahl said had been commissioned by the International Olympic Committee. She visited Greece to take footage of the route of the inaugural torch relay and the games' original site at Olympia, where she was aided by Greek photographer Nelly's. This material became Olympia, a hugely successful film which has since been widely noted for its technical and aesthetic achievements. Olympia was secretly funded by the Nazis. She was one of the first filmmakers to use tracking shots in a documentary, placing a camera on rails to follow the athletes' movement.The film is also noted for its slow motion shots. Riefenstahl played with the idea of slow motion, underwater diving shots, extremely high and low shooting angles, panoramic aerial shots, and tracking system shots for allowing fast action. Many of these shots were relatively unheard of at the time, but Riefenstahl's use and augmentation of them set a standard, and is the reason they are still used to this day. <mask>'s work on Olympia has been cited as a major influence in modern sports photography. Riefenstahl filmed competitors of all races, including African-American Jesse Owens in what later became famous footage. Olympia premiered for Hitler's 49th birthday in 1938. Its international debut led Riefenstahl to embark on an American publicity tour in an attempt to secure commercial release.In February 1937, Riefenstahl enthusiastically told a reporter for the Detroit News, "To me, Hitler is the greatest man who ever lived. He truly is without fault, so simple and at the same time possessed of masculine strength". She arrived in New York City on 4 November 1938, five days before Kristallnacht (the "Night of the Broken Glass"). When news of the event reached the United States, Riefenstahl publicly defended Hitler. On 18 November, she was received by Henry Ford in Detroit. Olympia was shown at the Chicago Engineers Club two days later. Avery Brundage, President of the International Olympic Committee, praised the film and held Riefenstahl in the highest regard.She negotiated with Louis B. Mayer, and on 8 December, Walt Disney brought her on a three-hour tour showing her the ongoing production of Fantasia. From the Goebbels Diaries, researchers learned that Riefenstahl had been friendly with Joseph Goebbels and his wife Magda, attending the opera with them and going to his parties. Riefenstahl maintained that Goebbels was upset when she rejected his advances and was jealous of her influence on Hitler, seeing her as an internal threat. She therefore insisted his diary entries could not be trusted. By later accounts, Goebbels thought highly of <mask>'s filmmaking but was angered with what he saw as her overspending on the Nazi-provided filmmaking budgets. Iconography
In Triumph of the Will, Tom Saunders argues that Hitler serves as the object of the camera's gaze. Saunders writes, "Without denying that "rampant masculinity" (the "sexiness" of Hitler and the SS) serves as the object of the gaze, I would suggest that desire is also directed toward the feminine.This occurs not in the familiar sequences of adoring women greeting Hitler's arrival and cavalcade through Nuremberg. In these Hitler clearly remains the focus of attraction, as more generally in the visual treatment of his mass following. Rather, it is encoded in representation of flags and banners, which were shot in such a way as to make them visually desirable as well as potent political symbols". The flag serves as a symbol of masculinity, equated with national pride and dominance, that supposedly channels men's sexual and masculine energy. <mask>'s cinematic framing of the flags encapsulated its iconography. Saunders continues, "The effect is a significant double transformation: the images mechanize human beings and breathe life into flags. Even when the carriers are not mostly submerged under the sea of colored cloth, and when facial features are visible in profile, they attain neither character nor distinctiveness.The men remain ants in a vast enterprise. By contrast and paradoxically, the flags, whether a few or hundreds peopling the frame, assume distinct identities". Use of music
Riefenstahl distorts the diegetic sound in Triumph of the Will. Her distortion of sound suggests she was influenced by German art cinema. Influenced by Classical Hollywood cinema's style, German art film employed music to enhance the narrative, establish a sense of grandeur, and to heighten the emotions in a scene. In Triumph of the Will, Riefenstahl used traditional folk music to accompany and intensify her shots. Ben Morgan comments on Riefenstahl's distortion of sound: "In Triumph of the Will, the material world leaves no aural impression beyond the music.Where the film does combine diegetic noise with the music, the effects used are human (laughter or cheering) and offer a rhythmic extension to the music rather than a contrast to it. By replacing diegetic sound, <mask>'s film employs music to combine the documentary with the fantastic." World War II
When Germany invaded Poland on 1 September 1939, Riefenstahl was photographed in Poland wearing a military uniform and a pistol on her belt in the company of German soldiers; she had gone to Poland as a war correspondent. On 12 September, she was in the town of Końskie when 30 civilians were executed in retaliation for an alleged attack on German soldiers. According to her memoir, Riefenstahl tried to intervene but a furious German soldier held her at gunpoint and threatened to shoot her on the spot. She said she did not realize the victims were Jews. Photographs of a potentially distraught Riefenstahl survive from that day.Nevertheless, by 5 October 1939, Riefenstahl was back in occupied Poland filming Hitler's victory parade in Warsaw. Afterwards, she left Poland and chose not to make any more Nazi-related films. On 14 June 1940, the day Paris was declared an open city by the French and occupied by German troops, Riefenstahl wrote to Hitler in a telegram, "With indescribable joy, deeply moved and filled with burning gratitude, we share with you, my Führer, your and Germany's greatest victory, the entry of German troops into Paris. You exceed anything human imagination has the power to conceive, achieving deeds without parallel in the history of mankind. How can we ever thank you?" She later explained, "Everyone thought the war was over, and in that spirit I sent the cable to Hitler". Riefenstahl was friends with Hitler for 12 years.However, her relationship with Hitler severely declined in 1944 after her brother died on the Russian Front. After the Nuremberg rallies trilogy and Olympia, Riefenstahl began work on the movie she had tried and failed to direct once before, namely Tiefland. On Hitler's direct order, the German government paid her seven million Reichsmarks in compensation. From 23 September until 13 November 1940, she filmed in Krün near Mittenwald. The extras playing Spanish women and farmers were drawn from Romani detained in a camp at Salzburg-Maxglan who were forced to work with her. Filming at the Babelsberg Studios near Berlin began 18 months later in April 1942. This time Sinti and Roma people from the Marzahn detention camp near Berlin were compelled to work as extras.Almost to the end of her life, despite overwhelming evidence that the concentration camp occupants had been forced to work on the movie unpaid, Riefenstahl continued to maintain all the film extras survived and that she had met several of them after the war. Riefenstahl sued filmmaker Nina Gladitz, who said Riefenstahl personally chose the extras at their holding camp; Gladitz had found one of the Romani survivors and matched his memory with stills of the movie for a documentary Gladitz was filming. The German court ruled largely in favour of Gladitz, declaring that Riefenstahl had known the extras were from a concentration camp, but they also agreed that Riefenstahl had not been informed the Romani would be sent to Auschwitz after filming was completed. This issue came up again in 2002, when Riefenstahl was 100 years old and she was taken to court by a Roma group for denying the Nazis had exterminated Romani. Riefenstahl apologized and said, "I regret that Sinti and Roma [people] had to suffer during the period of National Socialism. It is known today that many of them were murdered in concentration camps". In October 1944 the production of Tiefland moved to Barrandov Studios in Prague for interior filming.Lavish sets made these shots some of the most costly of the film. The film was not edited and released until almost ten years later. The last time Riefenstahl saw Hitler was when she married Peter Jacob on 21 March 1944. <mask> and Jacob divorced in 1946. As Germany's military situation became impossible by early 1945, Riefenstahl left Berlin and was hitchhiking with a group of men, trying to reach her mother, when she was taken into custody by American troops. She walked out of a holding camp, beginning a series of escapes and arrests across the chaotic landscape. At last making it back home on a bicycle, she found that American troops had seized her house.She was surprised by how kindly they treated her. Thwarted film projects
Most of Riefenstahl's unfinished projects were lost towards the end of the war. The French government confiscated all of her editing equipment, along with the production reels of Tiefland. After years of legal wrangling, these were returned to her, but the French government had reportedly damaged some of the film stock whilst trying to develop and edit it, with a few key scenes being missing (although Riefenstahl was surprised to find the original negatives for Olympia in the same shipment). During the filming of Olympia, Riefenstahl was funded by the state to create her own production company in her own name, Riefenstahl-Film GmbH, which was uninvolved with her most influential works. She edited and dubbed the remaining material and Tiefland premiered on 11 February 1954 in Stuttgart. However, it was denied entry into the Cannes Film Festival.Although Riefenstahl lived for almost another half century, Tiefland was her last feature film. Riefenstahl tried many times to make more films during the 1950s and 1960s, but was met with resistance, public protests and sharp criticism. Many of her filmmaking peers in Hollywood had fled Nazi Germany and were unsympathetic to her. Although both film professionals and investors were willing to support her work, most of the projects she attempted were stopped owing to ever-renewed and highly negative publicity about her past work in Nazi Germany. In 1954, Jean Cocteau, who greatly admired the film, insisted on Tiefland being shown at the Cannes Film Festival, which he was running that year. In 1960, Riefenstahl attempted to prevent filmmaker Erwin Leiser from juxtaposing scenes from Triumph des Willens with footage from concentration camps in his film Mein Kampf. Riefenstahl had high hopes for a collaboration with Cocteau called Friedrich und Voltaire ("Friedrich and Voltaire"), wherein Cocteau was to play two roles.They thought the film might symbolize the love-hate relationship between Germany and France. Cocteau's illness and 1963 death put an end to the project. A musical remake of Das Blaue Licht ("The Blue Light") with an English production company also fell apart. In the 1960s, Riefenstahl became interested in Africa from Ernest Hemingway's Green Hills of Africa and from the photographs of George Rodger. She visited Kenya for the first time in 1956 and later Sudan, where she photographed Nuba tribes with whom she sporadically lived, learning about their culture so she could photograph them more easily. Even though her film project about modern slavery entitled Die Schwarze Fracht ("The Black Cargo") was never completed, Riefenstahl was able to sell the stills from the expedition to magazines in various parts of the world. While scouting shooting locations, she almost died from injuries received in a truck accident.After waking up from a coma in a Nairobi hospital, she finished writing the script, but was soon thoroughly thwarted by uncooperative locals, the Suez Canal crisis and bad weather. In the end, the film project was called off. Even so, Riefenstahl was granted Sudanese citizenship for her services to the country, becoming the first foreigner to receive a Sudanese passport. Detention and trials
Novelist and sports writer Budd Schulberg, assigned by the U.S. Navy to the OSS for intelligence work while attached to John Ford's documentary unit, was ordered to arrest Riefenstahl at her chalet in Kitzbühel, ostensibly to have her identify Nazi war criminals in German film footage captured by the Allied troops shortly after the war. Riefenstahl said she was not aware of the nature of the internment camps. According to Schulberg, "She gave me the usual song and dance. She said, 'Of course, you know, I'm really so misunderstood.I'm not political'". Riefenstahl said she was fascinated by the Nazis, but also politically naive, remaining ignorant about war crimes. Throughout 1945 to 1948, she was held by various Allied-controlled prison camps across Germany. She was also under house arrest for a period of time. She was tried four times by postwar authorities for denazification and eventually found to be a "fellow traveller" (Mitläufer) who sympathised with the Nazis. She was never an official member of the Nazi party but was always seen in association with the propaganda films she made in Nazi Germany. Over the years she filed and won over fifty libel cases against people who had accused her of complicity with Nazi crimes.Riefenstahl said that her biggest regret in life was meeting Hitler, declaring, "It was the biggest catastrophe of my life. Until the day I die people will keep saying, 'Leni is a Nazi', and I'll keep saying, 'But what did she do?'" Even though she went on to win up to 50 libel cases, details about her relation to the Nazi party generally remain unclear. Shortly before she died, Riefenstahl voiced her final words on the subject of her connection to Adolf Hitler in a BBC interview: "I was one of millions who thought Hitler had all the answers. We saw only the good things; we didn't know bad things were to come." Africa, photography, books and final film
Riefenstahl began a lifelong companionship with her cameraman Horst Kettner, who was 40 years her junior and assisted her with the photographs; they were together from the time she was 60 and he was 20. Riefenstahl traveled to Africa, inspired by the works of George Rodger that celebrated the ceremonial wrestling matches of the Nuba.<mask>'s books with photographs of the Nuba tribes were published in 1974 and republished in 1976 as Die Nuba (translated as "The Last of the Nuba") and Die Nuba von Kau ("The Nuba People of Kau"). They were harshly criticized by American writer and philosopher Susan Sontag, who wrote in The New York Review of Books that they were evidence of Riefenstahl's continued adherence to "fascist aesthetics". In this review, which art critic Hilton Kramer described as "one of the most important inquiries into the relation of esthetics to ideology we have had in many years", Sontag argued that:Although the Nuba are black, not Aryan, Riefenstahl's portrait of them is consistent with some of the larger themes of Nazi ideology: the contrast between the clean and the impure, the incorruptible and the defiled, the physical and the mental, the joyful and the critical. [...] What is distinctive about the fascist version of the old idea of the Noble Savage is its contempt for all that is reflective, critical, and pluralistic. [...] In celebrating a society where the exhibition of physical skill and courage and the victory of the stronger man over the weaker have, at least as she sees it, become the unifying symbol of the communal culture—where success in fighting is the "main aspiration of a man's life"—Riefenstahl seems only to have modified the ideas of her Nazi films.In December 1974, American writer and photographer Eudora Welty reviewed Die Nuba positively for the New York Times, giving an impressionistic account of the aesthetics of <mask>'s book:She uses the light purposefully: the full, blinding brightness to make us see the ail‐absorbing blackness of the skin; the ray of light slanting down from the single hole, high in the wall, that is the doorway of the circular house, which tells us how secret and safe it has been made; the first dawn light streaking the face of a calf in the sleeping camp where the young men go to live, which suggests their world apart. All the pictures bring us the physical beauty of the people: a young girl, shy and mischievous of face, with a bead sewn into her lower lip like a permanent cinnamon drop; a wrestler prepared for his match, with his shaven head turned to look over the massive shoulder, all skin color taken away by a coating of ashes.Art Director's Club of Germany awarded Riefenstahl a gold medal for the best photographic achievement of 1975. She also sold some of the pictures to German magazines.Riefenstahl photographed the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich, and rock star Mick Jagger along with his wife Bianca for The Sunday Times. Years later, Riefenstahl photographed Las Vegas entertainers Siegfried & Roy. She was guest of honour at the 1976 Olympic Games in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. In 1978, Riefenstahl published a book of her sub-aquatic photographs called Korallengärten ("Coral Gardens"), followed by the 1990 book Wunder unter Wasser ("Wonder under Water"). On 22 August 2002, her 100th birthday, she released the film Impressionen unter Wasser ("Underwater Impressions"), an idealized documentary of life in the oceans and her first film in over 25 years. Riefenstahl was a member of Greenpeace for eight years. When filming Impressionen unter Wasser, Riefenstahl lied about her age in order to be certified for scuba diving.Riefenstahl survived a helicopter crash in Sudan in 2000 while trying to learn the fates of her Nuba friends during the Second Sudanese Civil War, and was airlifted to a Munich hospital, where she received treatment for two broken ribs. Death
Riefenstahl celebrated her 101st birthday on 22 August 2003 at a hotel in Feldafing, on Lake Starnberg, Bavaria, near her home. The day after her birthday celebration, she became ill.
Riefenstahl had been suffering from cancer for some time, and her health rapidly deteriorated during the last weeks of her life. Kettner said in an interview in 2002, "Ms. Riefenstahl is in great pain and she has become very weak and is taking painkillers". Riefenstahl died in her sleep at around 10:00 pm on 8 September 2003 at her home in Pöcking, Germany. After her death, there was a varied response in the obituary pages of leading publications, although most recognized her technical breakthroughs in filmmaking. Reception
Film scholar Mark Cousins notes in his book The Story of Film that, "Next to Orson Welles and Alfred Hitchcock, <mask> Riefenstahl was the most technically talented Western film maker of her era".When traveling to Hollywood, Riefenstahl was criticized by the Anti-Nazi League very harshly when wanting to showcase her film Olympia soon after its release. Reviewer Gary Morris called Riefenstahl, "An artist of unparalleled gifts, a woman in an industry dominated by men, one of the great formalists of the cinema on a par with Eisenstein or Welles". Film critic Hal Erickson of The New York Times states that the "Jewish Question" is mainly unmentioned in Triumph des Willens; "filmmaker <mask> Riefenstahl prefers to concentrate on cheering crowds, precision marching, military bands, and Hitler's climactic speech, all orchestrated, choreographed and illuminated on a scale that makes Griffith and DeMille look like poverty-row directors". Charles Moore of The Daily Telegraph wrote, "She was perhaps the most talented female cinema director of the 20th century; her celebration of Nazi Germany in film ensured that she was certainly the most infamous". Film journalist Sandra Smith from The Independent remarked, "Opinions will be divided between those who see her as a young, talented and ambitious woman caught up in the tide of events which she did not fully understand, and those who believe her to be a cold and opportunist propagandist and a Nazi by association." Critic Judith Thurman said in The New Yorker that, "Riefenstahl's genius has rarely been questioned, even by critics who despise the service to which she lent it. Riefenstahl was a consummate stylist obsessed with bodies in motion, particularly those of dancers and athletes.Riefenstahl relies heavily for her transitions on portentous cutaways to clouds, mist, statuary, foliage, and rooftops. Her reaction shots have a tedious sameness: shining, ecstatic faces—nearly all young and Aryan, except for Hitler's". Pauline Kael, also a film reviewer employed for The New Yorker, called Triumph des Willens and Olympia, "the two greatest films ever directed by a woman". Writer Richard Corliss wrote in Time that he was "impressed by Riefenstahl's standing as a total auteur: producer, writer, director, editor and, in the fiction films, actress. The issues her films and her career raise are as complex and they are important, and her vilifiers tend to reduce the argument to one of a director's complicity in atrocity or her criminal ignorance". Film biographies
In 1993, Riefenstahl was the subject of the award-winning German documentary film The Wonderful, Horrible Life of <mask> Riefenstahl, directed by Ray Müller. Riefenstahl appeared in the film and answered several questions and detailed the production of her films.The biofilm was nominated for seven Emmy Awards, winning in one category. <mask>, who for some time had been working on her memoirs, decided to cooperate in the production of this documentary to tell her life story about the struggles she had gone through in her personal life, her film-making career and what people thought of her. She was also the subject of Müller's 2000 documentary film Leni Riefenstahl: Her Dream of Africa, about her return to Sudan to visit the Nuba people. In 2000, Jodie Foster was planning a biographical drama on Riefenstahl, then seen as the last surviving member of Hitler's "inner circle", causing protests, with the Simon Wiesenthal Centre's dean Marvin Hier warning against a revisionist view that glorified the director, observing that Riefenstahl had seemed "quite infatuated" with Hitler. In 2007 British screenwriter Rupert Walters was reported to be writing a script for the movie. The project did not receive Riefenstahl's approval prior to her death, as Riefenstahl asked for a veto on any scenes to which she did not agree. Riefenstahl reportedly wanted Sharon Stone to play her rather than Foster.In 2011, director Steven Soderbergh revealed that he had also been working on a biopic of Riefenstahl for about six months. He eventually abandoned the project over concerns of its commercial prospects. In popular culture
Riefenstahl's filming merits are discussed between characters in the 2009 Quentin Tarantino film Inglourious Basterds. Riefenstahl was referred to in the series finale of the television show Weeds when Nancy questions Andy for naming his daughter after a Nazi, to which he replied "she was a pioneer in film-making, I don't believe in holding grudges." <mask> was portrayed by Zdena Studenková in Leni, a 2014 Slovak drama play about her fictional participation in The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. Riefenstahl was portrayed by Dutch actress Carice van Houten in Race, a sports drama film directed by Stephen Hopkins about Jesse Owens. It was released in North America on 19 February 2016.In the 2016 short film Leni. Leni., based on the play by Tom McNab and directed by Adrian Vitoria, Hildegard Neil portrays Riefenstahl. The 2017 video game Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus (which takes place in an alternative 1961 after the Nazis won World War II) features a supporting character heavily implied to be <mask>, voiced by actress Kristina Klebe. Named Lady Helene, this female director is responsible for making the vast majority of the propaganda films said to be playing (most notably a big-budget movie detailing how America was "liberated" by Nazis). Lady Helene is later met face to face and she is seen to closely resemble Riefenstahl. It also revealed that her mysterious "producer" is an aging, delusional Adolf Hitler and that the two share a close working relationship. Riefenstahl appears in the 2019 film Hellboy portrayed again by Kristina Klebe.in 2021 Riefenstahl was the subject of Nigel Farndale's novel The Dictator's Muse. Filmography
As actress
1925: Wege zu Kraft und Schönheit ("Ways to Strength and Beauty") as Dancer
1926: Der heilige Berg ("The Holy Mountain") as Diotima
1927: Der große Sprung ("The Great Leap") as Gita
1928: Das Schicksal derer von Habsburg ("Fate of the House of Habsburg") as Maria Vetsera
1929: Die weiße Hölle vom Piz Palü ("The White Hell of Pitz Palu") as Maria Maioni
1930: Stürme über dem Mont Blanc ("Storm Over Mont Blanc") as Hella Armstrong
1931: Der weiße Rausch ("The White Ecstasy") as Leni
1932: Das blaue Licht ("The Blue Light") as Junta
1933: S.O.S. Eisberg ("S.O.S. | [
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] | <mask> was known for her role in producing Nazi propaganda. Riefenstahl became interested in dancing when she was a child, taking lessons and performing across Europe. She was inspired to move into acting after seeing a promotional poster for a film. <mask> was one of the few women in Germany to direct a film during the Weimar Period. She directed the Nazi propaganda films "Triumph of the Will" and "Olympia" in the 1930s. Two of the most effective and technically innovative propaganda films have been made. After World War II, her career and reputation were damaged by her involvement in Triumph des Willens.During the production of at least three important Nazi films, Hitler and Riefenstahl formed a friendly relationship. Riefenstahl was not charged with war crimes after being classified as a "fellow traveler" or "Nazi sympathizer" only. She denied knowing anything about the Holocaust. Riefenstahl wrote several books about the Nuba people. <mask> was born in Berlin in the early 20th century. Alfred Theodor Paul Riefenstahl was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 Alfred wanted her to carry on the family name because Riefenstahl was the only child for a long time.Her mother, who had been a part-time seamstress before her marriage, had faith in Riefenstahl and believed that her daughter's future was in show business. The younger brother of <mask> was killed in the war against the Soviet Union at the age of 39. Riefenstahl loved the arts as a child. At the age of four, she began to paint and write poetry. At the age of twelve she joined a gymnastics and swimming club. Riefenstahl's father was not interested in her artistic inclinations and so his full support was not given to her by her mother. She wanted to be a dancer after attending a presentation of Snow White when she was 16.Her father wanted to give her an education that would lead to a more dignified occupation. His wife continued to support her daughter's passion. Without her husband's knowledge, she enrolls Riefenstahl in dance and ballet classes at the Grimm-Reiter Dance School in Berlin. Riefenstahl traveled across Europe with Max Reinhardt in a show funded by a Jewish producer and became well known for her interpretive dancing skills. Riefenstahl was so dedicated to dancing that she made 700 Reichsmarks for each performance. She was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 The first time she saw a poster for a film was at a doctor's appointment.She was inspired to become a movie maker after seeing films at the cinema. Luis Trenker, an actor who had appeared in Mountain of Destiny, met <mask> on one of her adventures. She met Arnold Fanck, a pioneer of the mountain film genre, at a meeting arranged by her friend. Fanck was in Berlin working on a film. She convinced him of her acting skill after telling him how much she liked his work. She convinced him to make a film about her. The script of the film The Holy Mountain was sent to Riefenstahl by Fanck.She learned film editing and acting techniques from Fanck, who made a series of films for her. The White Hell of Pitz Palu, co-directed by G. W. Pabst, was one of Fanck's films that brought Riefenstahl into the spotlight. Her fame spread to other countries. Riefenstahl produced and directed her own work called "The Blue Light" in 1932. Riefenstahl blamed the critics, many of whom were Jewish, for the film's poor reception at the Venice Film Festival. The names of Balzs and Sokal, both Jewish, were removed from the credits after the re-release. Riefenstahl played an innocent peasant girl who was hated by the villagers because they thought she was crazy.She is protected from the elements. Riefenstahl was invited to travel to Hollywood to make films, but she chose to stay in Germany with her boyfriend. Hitler thought Riefenstahl was the perfect German female because he was a fan of the film. He arranged a meeting to see the talent in Riefenstahl. Riefenstahl appeared in the US-German co-productions of the Arnold Fanck-directed, German-language S.O.S. and the English-language S.O.S. There is a piece of ice. The films were produced and distributed by Universal Studios.She was an actress in S.O.S. She only had an English language role in the film. <mask> was so enamored by Hitler's talent as a public speaker that he directed career Propaganda films. In her memoir, Riefenstahl wrote, "I had an almost apocalyptic vision that I was never able to forget." It seemed as if the Earth's surface was spreading out in front of me, like a hemisphere that suddenly splits apart in the middle, releasing an enormous jet of water, so powerful that it touched the sky and shook the earth. Hitler was enamored with <mask>'s work. She is described as fitting in with Hitler's ideal of Aryan womanhood, a feature he noted when he saw her starring performance.<mask> was offered the chance to direct "The Victory of Faith", a propaganda film about the fifth Nuremberg Rally in 1933. Riefenstahl was surprised by the opportunity. The Propaganda Ministry never told <mask> that Hitler had ordered them to give her the film commission. Even though she was only given a few days to prepare, Riefenstahl agreed to direct the movie. They formed a friendly relationship. The film was funded by the organization. During the filming of Victory of Faith, Hitler stood side by side with the leader of the SA, Ernst Rhm, a man with whom he clearly had a close working relationship.The Night of the Long Knives was the time when Hitler ordered the murder of Rhm. <mask> disagrees that Hitler ordered the destruction of all copies of the film after the killings. Hitler liked <mask>'s work so much that he asked her to film Triumph des Willens, a new propaganda film about the 1934 party rally in Nuremberg. More than one million Germans attended the rally. The film may be the greatest propaganda film ever made. Riefenstahl said that she wanted to direct a feature film based on Tiefland, an opera that was popular in Berlin in the 1920s. Private funding was received for the production of Tiefland, but the filming in Spain was stopped and the project was canceled.Tiefland was the third most expensive film produced in Nazi Germany and was shot in black and white. During the filming of Tiefland, Riefenstahl used Romani from internment camps for extras who were mistreated on set, and they were sent to the death camp Auschwitz. According to Riefenstahl, Hitler persuaded her to film Triumph des Willens on the condition that she wouldn't be required to make any more films for the party. The motion picture was considered an innovative work of propaganda filmmaking. The film gave Riefenstahl further international recognition and took her career to a new level. <mask> Riefenstahl denied any attempt to create Nazi propaganda and said she was disgusted that Triumph des Willens was used in such a way. Riefenstahl made the 28-minute Tag der Freiheit: Unsere Wehrmacht about the German Army in 1935 despite promising not to make any more films about the Nazi Party.This was filmed at the annual Nazi Party rally in Nuremberg. The German Army felt that it wasn't represented well in Triumph des Willens, so they added this film to make up for it. <mask> said that Hitler invited him to film the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, a film which was commissioned by the International Olympic Committee. She traveled to Greece to film the route of the inaugural torch relay and the original site of the games, where she was aided by a Greek photographer. The film became known for its technical and aesthetic achievements. The Nazis funded Olympia. She was one of the first filmmakers to use a camera on rails to follow athletes.The film has slow motion shots. Slow motion, underwater diving shots, extremely high and low shooting angles, panoramic aerial shots, and tracking system shots were some of the ideas Riefenstahl played with. <mask>'s use and augmentation of these shots set a standard that is still used to this day. A major influence in modern sports photography is <mask>'s work. Jesse Owens was filmed in what became famous footage. The movie was made for Hitler's 49th birthday. <mask> embarked on an American publicity tour in order to get a commercial release.<mask> told a reporter for the Detroit News that Hitler was the greatest man he had ever known. He is simple and has masculine strength. She arrived in New York City five days before Kristallnacht. Riefenstahl publicly defended Hitler when news of the event reached the US. Henry Ford received her in Detroit. Two days later, it was shown at the Chicago Engineers Club. The film was praised by the President of the International Olympic Committee.On 8 December, Walt Disney brought her on a three-hour tour showing her the ongoing production of Fantasia. Researchers discovered that Riefenstahl was friendly with Joseph Goebbels and his wife, and that they went to his parties. Riefenstahl said that Goebbels was jealous of her influence on Hitler and was upset when she rejected his advances. She said his diary entries couldn't be trusted. Goebbels was angered by Riefenstahl's overspending on the Nazi-supplied film budgets, but he thought highly of her work. Hitler is argued to be the object of the camera's gaze in Iconography In Triumph of the Will. I would suggest that desire is also directed toward the feminine, without denying that "rampant masculinity" serves as the object of the gaze.This doesn't happen in the famous sequence of women greeting Hitler's arrival and cavalcade through Nuremberg. The visual treatment of Hitler's mass following is the focus of attraction in these. It is represented by flags and banners, which were shot in such a way as to make them visually desirable as well as potent political symbols. The flag is said to channel men's sexual and masculine energy. <mask>'s film 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 888-666-1846 The images mechanize human beings and breathe life into flags. When facial features are visible in profile, the carriers attain neither character nor distinctiveness.The men are ants. The flags, whether a few or hundreds, assume distinct identities. The diegetic sound in Triumph of the Will is distorted by the use of music. She may have been influenced by German art cinema. Influenced by Classical Hollywood cinema's style, German art film used music to enhance the narrative, establish a sense of grandeur, and heighten the emotions in a scene. Riefenstahl used traditional folk music to intensify her shots in Triumph of the Will. In Triumph of the Will, the material world leaves no aural impression beyond the music.Where the film does combine diegetic noise with the music, the effects used are human (laughter or cheering) and offer a rhythmic extension to the music rather than a contrast to it. <mask>'s film uses music to combine the documentary with the fantastic. <mask> was a war correspondent when Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939, and she was photographed in Poland wearing a military uniform and a pistol on her belt. She was in the town of Koskie when 30 people were executed in revenge for an attack on German soldiers. According to her memoir, Riefenstahl tried to intervene but a German soldier held her at gun point and threatened to shoot her. She said she didn't know the victims were Jews. <mask>'s photographs survive from that day.<mask> was back in occupied Poland filming Hitler's victory parade. She decided not to make any more Nazi-related films after leaving Poland. Riefenstahl wrote a telegram to Hitler on the day Paris was declared an open city by the French. You have the power to conceive without parallel in the history of mankind because of your imagination. How can we say thank you? She explained that she sent the cable to Hitler because everyone thought the war was over. Riefenstahl was friends with Hitler.After her brother died on the Russian Front, her relationship with Hitler deteriorated. <mask> had previously tried and failed to direct the movie Tiefland. She was paid seven million Reichsmarks by the German government. She filmed in Krn from September to November 1940. Romani, who was forced to work for her in a camp at Salzburg-Maxglan, was brought in by the extras to play Spanish women and farmers. The Babelsberg Studios began filming in April 1942. People from the Marzahn detention camp were forced to work as extras.Almost to the end of her life, despite overwhelming evidence that the concentration camp inhabitants had been forced to work on the movie without pay, Riefenstahl continued to maintain that all the film extras survived and that she had met several of them after the war. Riefenstahl sued Gladitz, who said Riefenstahl personally chose the extras at their holding camp, and that Gladitz had found one of the Romani survivors and matched his memory with stills of the movie. The German court agreed with Gladitz that Riefenstahl knew the extras were from a concentration camp, but he didn't know they would be sent to Auschwitz. When Riefenstahl was 100 years old, she was taken to court by a group for denying the Nazis had killed Romani. Riefenstahl apologized and said that he regretted that people had to suffer during the period of National Socialism. Many of them were murdered in concentration camps. The production of Tiefland moved to Barrandov Studios in the Czech Republic in 1944.These shots were some of the most expensive in the film. The film was not edited until ten years later. <mask> married Peter Jacob on 21 March 1944, the last time she saw Hitler. <mask> and Jacob divorced. Riefenstahl was taken into custody by American troops after leaving Berlin and hitchhiking with a group of men to reach her mother. A series of escapes and arrests began after she walked out of a holding camp. She found out that American troops had taken her house when she returned home on a bicycle.She was surprised by how nice they were to her. <mask>'s unfinished film projects were lost towards the end of the war. The production reels of Tiefland were seized by the French government. After years of legal wrangling, these were returned to her, but the French government had reportedly damaged some of the film stock whilst trying to develop and edit it, with a few key scenes being missing. <mask> was funded by the state to create her own production company, which was not involved with her most influential works. She edited and dubbed the rest of the material for Tiefland. It was denied entry into the festival.Tiefland was Riefenstahl's last feature film. Riefenstahl tried many times to make more films, but was met with resistance, public protests and sharp criticism. Many of her peers in Hollywood fled Nazi Germany. Although both film professionals and investors were willing to support her work, most of the projects she attempted were stopped due to her past work in Nazi Germany. Jean Cocteau, who was running the festival at the time, wanted Tiefland to be shown at the festival. In 1960, Riefenstahl tried to prevent Leiser from showing scenes from Triumph des Willens with footage from concentration camps. Cocteau was to play two roles in a collaboration with Riefenstahl.The film might symbolize the love-hate relationship between Germany and France. The project ended because of Cocteau's illness and death. A musical remake of "The Blue Light" fell apart. Riefenstahl became interested in Africa from Ernest Hemingway's Green Hills of Africa and the photographs of George Rodger. She photographed the Nuba tribes in Sudan, learning about their culture so she could photograph them more easily. <mask> was able to sell the stills from the expedition to magazines in various parts of the world even though her film project about modern slavery was never completed. She almost died from injuries she received in a truck accident while scouting shooting locations.She woke up from a coma in a hospital and was able to finish her script, but the locals were not happy about it. The film project was called off. Riefenstahl became the first foreigner to receive a Sudanese passport when she was granted Sudanese citizenship. Budd Schulberg, assigned by the U.S. Navy to the OSS for intelligence work while attached to John Ford's documentary unit, was ordered to arrest Riefenstahl at her chalet in Kitzbhel, ostensibly to have her identify Nazi. Riefenstahl didn't know the nature of the internment camps. She gave me a song and dance. She said that she was so misunderstood.I'm not a political person. Riefenstahl was fascinated by the Nazis, but also naive about war crimes. She was held in various Allied-controlled prison camps in Germany. She was under house arrest for a period of time. She was found to be a "fellow traveller" who sympathized with the Nazis after being tried four times for denazification. She made propaganda films in Nazi Germany but was never an official member of the party. She won over fifty libel cases against people who accused her of being involved in Nazi crimes.Riefenstahl said that meeting Hitler was the biggest catastrophe of her life. Leni is a Nazi until the day I die, and I'll keep asking, 'But what did she do?' She went on to win up to 50 libel cases, but her relation to the Nazi party is not clear. Riefenstahl was one of the millions who thought Hitler had all the answers. We didn't know what bad things would be. Riefenstahl began a lifelong relationship with her cameraman, who was 40 years her junior, when she was 60 and he was 20. George Rodger's works celebrated the ceremonial wrestling matches of the Nuba."The Last of the Nuba" and "Die Nuba von Kau" were published in 1976 as Die Nuba and Die Nuba von Kau, respectively. Susan Sontag wrote in The New York Review of Books that they were evidence of Riefenstahl's continued adherence to "fascist aesthetic". Although the Nuba are black, not Aryan, Riefenstahl's portrait of them is, according to Sontag, one of the most important inquiries into the relation of esthetics to ideology we have had in many years. The fascist version of the Noble Savage is contemptuous of all that is reflective, critical, and pluralistic. In celebrating a society where the exhibition of physical skill and courage and the victory of the stronger man over the weaker have become the unifying symbol of the communal culture, success in fighting is the main aspiration of a man's life. The pictures show the physical beauty of the people, from a young girl with a bead sewn into her lower lip like a cinnamon drop, to a wrestler with his shaven head turned to look over his massive shoulder. Some of the pictures were sold to German magazines.Mick Jagger and his wife Bianca were photographed for The Sunday Times. Years later, Riefenstahl photographed Las Vegas entertainers. The 1976 Olympic Games were held in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. In 1978, Riefenstahl published a book of her sub-aquatic photographs called Korallengrten. She released her first film in 25 years on her 100th birthday on August 22, 2002, and it was an idealized documentary of life in the oceans. Riefenstahl was a member of the environmental group. Riefenstahl lied about her age in order to be certified for scuba diving.Riefenstahl survived a helicopter crash in Sudan in 2000 while trying to learn the fates of her Nuba friends during the Second Sudanese Civil War, and was flown to a hospital in Germany for treatment for two broken ribs. On August 22, 2003 Death Riefenstahl celebrated her 101st birthday at a hotel near her home. Riefenstahl was ill the day after she celebrated her birthday. In 2002, Kettner said that Ms. Riefenstahl was in pain and was taking painkillers. Riefenstahl died in her sleep at 10:00 pm on September 8, 2003 at her home in Pcking, Germany. The obituary pages of leading publications varied in their responses to her death. <mask> Riefenstahl was the most technically talented Western film maker of her era, according to a book written by a reception film scholar.<mask> was criticized by the Anti-Nazi League when she wanted to showcase her film after its release. Gary Morris called Riefenstahl, an artist of unparalleled gifts, a woman in an industry dominated by men, one of the great formalists of the cinema. The filmmaker <mask> Riefenstahl prefers to concentrate on cheering crowds, precision marching, military bands, and Hitler's final speech, all orchestrated, choreographed. "She was perhaps the most talented female cinema director of the 20th century; her celebration of Nazi Germany in film ensured that she was certainly the most infamous", wrote Charles Moore of The Daily Telegraph. There will be differing opinions on whether she is a young, talented and ambitious woman caught up in the tide of events which she did not fully understand, or a cold and opportunist propagandist and a Nazi. "Riefenstahl's genius has rarely been questioned, even by critics who despise the service to which she lent it," said Judith Thurman in The New Yorker. Dancers and athletes were obsessed with Riefenstahl's bodies in motion.Riefenstahl relies a lot on her transitions to clouds, mist, statuary, foliage, and rooftops. Her reaction shots have a tedious sameness: shining, ecstatic faces, almost all young and Aryan, except for Hitler's. The two greatest films ever directed by a woman are called Triumph des Willens and Olympia, according to a film reviewer employed by The New Yorker. Richard Corliss wrote in Time that he was "impressed by Riefenstahl's standing as a total auteur: producer, writer, director, editor and, in the fiction films, actress." The issues her films and her career raise are important, and her vilifiers tend to reduce the argument to one of a director's complicity in atrocity or her criminal ignorance. <mask> Riefenstahl was the subject of a German documentary film called The Wonderful, Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl, directed by Ray Mller. In the film, Riefenstahl answered several questions and detailed the production of her films.The biofilm won in one category. <mask>, who had been working on her memoirs, decided to cooperate in the production of this documentary to tell her life story about the struggles she had gone through in her personal life, her film-making career and what people thought of her. <mask> <mask>: Her Dream of Africa was a film about her return to Sudan to visit the Nuba people. In 2000, Jodie Foster was planning a biographical drama on <mask>, the last surviving member of Hitler's "inner circle", causing protests, with the Simon Wiesenthal Centre's dean warning against a revisionist view. In 2007, it was reported that a British writer was writing a script for a movie. Prior to her death, Riefenstahl asked for a veto on any scenes that she did not agree with. Riefenstahl wanted Sharon Stone to play her.Steven Soderbergh said that he had been working on a film about Riefenstahl for six months. The project was abandoned due to concerns of its commercial prospects. Riefenstahl's filming merits are discussed in the film Inglourious Basterds. When Nancy questioned Andy about naming his daughter after a Nazi, he replied "she was a pioneer in film-making, I don't believe in holding grudges." <mask> was portrayed by Zdena Studenkov in Leni, a Slovak drama play about her role in The Tonight Show. Carice van Houten was the Dutch actress who played Riefenstahl in Race. It was released in North America.Leni is a short film. Hildegard Neil plays <mask> in the play Leni. The video game Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus has a supporting character that is implied to be <mask>, voiced by actress Kristina Klebe. This female director is responsible for making most of the propaganda films that are said to be playing, most notably a big-budget movie detailing how America was "liberated" by Nazis. Lady Helene is seen to closely resemble <mask> when she is met face to face. It was revealed that her producer is an old, delusional Hitler and that they share a close working relationship. The character of <mask> is portrayed by Kristina Klebe in the film.The Dictator's Muse was a novel about <mask>. As actress 1925: Wege von Schnheit, "Ways to Strength and Beauty", as Dancer. "S.O.S." is the name of the company. | [
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13128129 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ed%20Gorman%20%28writer%29 | Ed Gorman (writer) | Edward Joseph Gorman Jr. (November 2, 1941 – October 14, 2016) was an American writer and short fiction anthologist. He published in almost every genre, but is best known for his work in the crime, mystery, western, and horror fields. His non-fiction work has been published in such publications as The New York Times and Redbook.
He has contributed to many magazines and other publications, including Xero, Black Lizard, Mystery Scene, Cemetery Dance, and the anthology Tales of Zorro.
Personal life
Gorman was born and grew up in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where he spent much of his adult life as well. He lived for extended periods in Des Moines, Iowa; Minneapolis, Minnesota; and Chicago, Illinois. He was married twice, first to Catherine Anne Stevens for seven years. He next married Carol Gorman (née Maxwell), an award-winning children's and young adult author. They were married thirty-four years until his death in 2016.
Writing career
After twenty-three years in advertising, public relations, writing political speeches and producing industrial films, Gorman published his first novel Rough Cut (1984). Soon after he quit his day job and dedicated himself to writing full-time (thanks to his wife Carol's full-time teaching job).
Gorman considered himself a genre writer. In the 1970s Gorman won a short story contest sponsored by Charles Scribner & Sons. An editor there suggested he expand his winning story into a mainstream novel, but Gorman gave up after six months, saying, “I was bored out of my mind. I am a genre writer.”
Gorman’s novels and stories are often set in small Midwestern towns, such as the fictional Black River Falls, Iowa (the Sam McCain series), or Cedar Rapids, Iowa (The Night Remembers). For his Dev Conrad series, Gorman drew upon his years as a political operative.
Gorman was one of the founders of Mystery Scene magazine, and served as editor and publisher until 2002. His column, “Gormania,” continues to appear regularly in its pages.
In comics, he has written for DC, Dark Horse, and most recently Short, Scary Tales, which will be publishing adaptations of his novel Cage of Night (as Cage of Night) and the short story "Stalker" (as Gut-Shot).
Kirkus Reviews has called him "One of the most original crime writers around." The Bloomsbury Review noted: "He is the poet of dark suspense." The Oxford Book of American Crime Stories said: "His novels and stories provide fresh ideas, characters and approaches." Jon Breen at Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine once noted, "Ed Gorman has the same infallible readability as writers like Lawrence Block, Max Allan Collins, Donald E. Westlake, Ed McBain, and John D. MacDonald."
Though Gorman was long considered to be a "prolific" writer, his pace of production slowed markedly after he was diagnosed with multiple myeloma in 2002; it was incurable.
Awards
He won a Spur Award for Best Short Fiction for his short story "The Face" in 1992. His fiction collection Cages was nominated for the 1995 Bram Stoker Award for Best Fiction Collection. His collection The Dark Fantastic was nominated for the same award in 2001. Gorman won the 1994 Anthony Award for Best Critical Work for The Fine Art Of Murder. He was nominated for multiple Anthonys in short story categories.
He is a winner of the Life Achievement Award from the Private Eye Writers of America, and The International Horror Writers Award (previous winners include Stephen King and Richard Matheson). He was nominated for the Edgar Award.
Adaptations
His novel The Poker Club was adapted as a film in 2008 by director Tim McCann. His short stories “The Long Silence After” and “The Ugly File” were adapted as short films. In 2016, rights to his novel Cage of Night and short story “Stalker” were bought for adaptation as graphic novels, to be published by Short, Scary Tales.
Selected bibliography
Novels and short story
Graves' Retreat (1989)
The Poker Club (1990)
What the Dead Men Say (1990)
Night Kills (1992)
Cage of Night (1992)
Wolf Moon (1993)
Batman: I, Werewolf (1993)
Shadow Games (1996)
Cast in Dark Waters (with Thomas Piccirilli) (2002)
Gun Truth (2003)
The Midnight Room (2009)
The Man From Nightshade Valley (with James Reasoner) (2012)
The Prodigal Gun (with James Reasoner) (2012)
Fast Track (with Bill Crider) (2014)
Backshot (2015)
Short Story Collections
Famous Blue Raincoat (Crippen & Landru, 1999)
The End of it All and Other Stories (Ramble House, 2009)
Noir 13 (Perfect Crime Books, 2010)
The Long Ride Back & Other Western Stories (Western Fictioneers Library, 2013)
Scream Queen and Other Tales of Menace (Perfect Crime Books, 2014)
A Disgrace to the Badge & Other Western Stories (2015)
Shadow Games and Other Sinister Stories of Show Business (Short, Scary Tales, 2016)
Series
Dev Conrad Series
Sleeping Dogs (Thomas Dunne Books, 2008)
Stranglehold (Minotaur Books, 2010)
Blindside (Severn House, 2012)
Flashpoint (Severn House, 2013)
Elimination (Severn House, 2015)
Jack Dwyer Series
Rough Cut (1985)
New Improved Murder (1985)
Murder Straight Up (1986)
Murder in the Wings (1986)
The Autumn Dead (1987)
A Cry of Shadows (1990)
What the Dead Men Say (1990)
The Reason Why (1992)
The Dwyer Trilogy (1994) (a collection that includes The Autumn Dead, A Cry of Shadows, and the short story "Eye of the Beholder")
Tobin Series
Murder in the Aisle (1987)
Several Deaths Later (1988)
Jack Walsh Series
The Night Remembers (1991)
Robert Payne Series
Blood Moon (UK title Blood Red Moon) (1994)
Hawk Moon (1995)
Harlot's Moon (1998)
Voodoo Moon (2000)
Sam McCain Series
The Day the Music Died (1999)
Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow (2000)
Wake Up Little Susie (2001)
Save the Last Dance for Me (2002)
Everybody's Somebody's Fool (2004)
Breaking Up Is Hard To Do (2004)
Fools Rush In (2007)
Ticket to Ride (2009)
Bad Moon Rising (2011)
Riders on the Storm (Pegasus Crime, 2014)
Dean Koontz Frankenstein series
From Dean Koontz's Frankenstein series (they are co-authored by Dean Koontz):
Book No. 2 City of Night
Pen name books
As E.J. Gorman
The Marilyn Letters
The First Lady
Daughter of Darkness
Senatorial Privilege
As Daniel Ransom
Toys in the Attic (1986)
The Forsaken (1988)
The Babysitter (1989)
Nightmare Child (1990)
The Serpent's Kiss (1992)
The Long Midnight (1992)
Night Screams (1996)
The Zone Soldiers (1996)
As Robert David Chase
Graveyard
Ghost Hunters
Werewolf: A True Story of Demonic Possession
Graphic Novels
Kolchak: Dawn of the Demons (with Ricky Sprague) (Moonstone Books, 2016)
Gut-Shot (based on the short story "Stalker," adapted by Ricky Sprague) (Short, Scary Tales, 2016)
Cage of Night (based on the novel, adapted by Ricky Sprague) (Short, Scary Tales, 2016)
Anthologies
As editor and/or contributor
The Black Lizard Anthology of Crime Fiction (Black Lizard Books, 1987)
Stalkers: 19 Original Tales By the Masters of Terror (Dark Harvest Books, 1989)
Cat Crimes (1991) with Martin H. Greenberg
Prisoners and Other Stories (1992)
Dark Crimes 1 (1991)
Dark Crimes 2 (1993)
Dark Whispers (1993)
Cages (1995)
Moonchasers (1996)
Robert Bloch's Psychos (Cemetery Dance Publications, 1997) includes the short story "Out There in the Darkness"
The Big Book of Noir (1998)
Famous Blue Raincoat (1999)
October Dreams (2000)
Such a Good Girl (2001)
The Dark Fantastic (2001)
The Long Silence After (2001)
The Long Ride Back (2004)
Different Kinds of Dead (2006)
Wolf Woman Bay and 9 More of the Finest Crime and Mystery Novellas of the Year! (2007) with Martin H. Greenberg
Tales of Zorro (2008)
Kolchak the Night Stalker: Passages of the Macabre (2016)
References
External links
Ed Gorman's blog
Dark Party Review Ed Gorman Discusses His Writing
Mystery Scene, magazine co-founded by Gorman with Robert J. Randisi.
1941 births
2016 deaths
Deaths from multiple myeloma
20th-century American novelists
21st-century American novelists
20th-century American short story writers
21st-century American short story writers
American horror writers
American male novelists
American male short story writers
Anthony Award winners
Coe College alumni
Macavity Award winners
Writers from Cedar Rapids, Iowa
20th-century American male writers
21st-century American male writers
Novelists from Iowa | [
"Edward Joseph Gorman Jr. (November 2, 1941 – October 14, 2016) was an American writer and short fiction anthologist.",
"He published in almost every genre, but is best known for his work in the crime, mystery, western, and horror fields.",
"His non-fiction work has been published in such publications as The New York Times and Redbook.",
"He has contributed to many magazines and other publications, including Xero, Black Lizard, Mystery Scene, Cemetery Dance, and the anthology Tales of Zorro.",
"Personal life \nGorman was born and grew up in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where he spent much of his adult life as well.",
"He lived for extended periods in Des Moines, Iowa; Minneapolis, Minnesota; and Chicago, Illinois.",
"He was married twice, first to Catherine Anne Stevens for seven years.",
"He next married Carol Gorman (née Maxwell), an award-winning children's and young adult author.",
"They were married thirty-four years until his death in 2016.",
"Writing career \nAfter twenty-three years in advertising, public relations, writing political speeches and producing industrial films, Gorman published his first novel Rough Cut (1984).",
"Soon after he quit his day job and dedicated himself to writing full-time (thanks to his wife Carol's full-time teaching job).",
"Gorman considered himself a genre writer.",
"In the 1970s Gorman won a short story contest sponsored by Charles Scribner & Sons.",
"An editor there suggested he expand his winning story into a mainstream novel, but Gorman gave up after six months, saying, “I was bored out of my mind.",
"I am a genre writer.”\n\nGorman’s novels and stories are often set in small Midwestern towns, such as the fictional Black River Falls, Iowa (the Sam McCain series), or Cedar Rapids, Iowa (The Night Remembers).",
"For his Dev Conrad series, Gorman drew upon his years as a political operative.",
"Gorman was one of the founders of Mystery Scene magazine, and served as editor and publisher until 2002.",
"His column, “Gormania,” continues to appear regularly in its pages.",
"In comics, he has written for DC, Dark Horse, and most recently Short, Scary Tales, which will be publishing adaptations of his novel Cage of Night (as Cage of Night) and the short story \"Stalker\" (as Gut-Shot).",
"Kirkus Reviews has called him \"One of the most original crime writers around.\"",
"The Bloomsbury Review noted: \"He is the poet of dark suspense.\"",
"The Oxford Book of American Crime Stories said: \"His novels and stories provide fresh ideas, characters and approaches.\"",
"Jon Breen at Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine once noted, \"Ed Gorman has the same infallible readability as writers like Lawrence Block, Max Allan Collins, Donald E. Westlake, Ed McBain, and John D.",
"MacDonald.\"",
"Though Gorman was long considered to be a \"prolific\" writer, his pace of production slowed markedly after he was diagnosed with multiple myeloma in 2002; it was incurable.",
"Awards \nHe won a Spur Award for Best Short Fiction for his short story \"The Face\" in 1992.",
"His fiction collection Cages was nominated for the 1995 Bram Stoker Award for Best Fiction Collection.",
"His collection The Dark Fantastic was nominated for the same award in 2001.",
"Gorman won the 1994 Anthony Award for Best Critical Work for The Fine Art Of Murder.",
"He was nominated for multiple Anthonys in short story categories.",
"He is a winner of the Life Achievement Award from the Private Eye Writers of America, and The International Horror Writers Award (previous winners include Stephen King and Richard Matheson).",
"He was nominated for the Edgar Award.",
"Adaptations \nHis novel The Poker Club was adapted as a film in 2008 by director Tim McCann.",
"His short stories “The Long Silence After” and “The Ugly File” were adapted as short films.",
"In 2016, rights to his novel Cage of Night and short story “Stalker” were bought for adaptation as graphic novels, to be published by Short, Scary Tales.",
"2 City of Night\n\nPen name books\n\nAs E.J.",
"(2007) with Martin H. Greenberg\nTales of Zorro (2008)\nKolchak the Night Stalker: Passages of the Macabre (2016)\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links \n\nEd Gorman's blog\nDark Party Review Ed Gorman Discusses His Writing\nMystery Scene, magazine co-founded by Gorman with Robert J. Randisi.",
"1941 births\n2016 deaths\nDeaths from multiple myeloma\n20th-century American novelists\n21st-century American novelists\n20th-century American short story writers\n21st-century American short story writers\nAmerican horror writers\nAmerican male novelists\nAmerican male short story writers\nAnthony Award winners\nCoe College alumni\nMacavity Award winners\nWriters from Cedar Rapids, Iowa\n20th-century American male writers\n21st-century American male writers\nNovelists from Iowa"
] | [
"Edward Joseph Gorman Jr. was an American writer and short fiction anthologist.",
"He is best known for his work in the crime, mystery, western, and horror fields.",
"His work has appeared in publications such as The New York Times and Redbook.",
"He has contributed to many publications, including the anthology Tales of Zorro.",
"He spent most of his adult life in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where he was born.",
"He lived in Des Moines, Iowa, Minneapolis, Minnesota, and Chicago, Illinois.",
"He was married to Catherine Anne Stevens for seven years.",
"Carol Gorman was an award-winning children's and young adult author.",
"They were married for 34 years before he died.",
"After 23 years in advertising, public relations, writing political speeches and producing industrial films, Gorman published his first novel.",
"Thanks to his wife Carol's full-time teaching job, he quit his day job and dedicated himself to writing full-time.",
"He considered himself a genre writer.",
"Charles Scribner & Sons sponsored a short story contest in the 70s.",
"After six months, he gave up and said he was bored out of his mind.",
"Small Midwestern towns such as Black River Falls, Iowa, or Cedar Rapids, Iowa, are set in the fictional Sam McCain series.",
"He drew upon his years as a political operative for his series.",
"He was editor and publisher of Mystery Scene magazine from 2002 to 2002.",
"His column, \"Gormania,\" continues to appear in the pages.",
"In comics, he has written for DC, Dark Horse, and most recently Short, Scary Tales, which will be publishing an adaptation of his novel Cage of Night and the short story \"Stalker\".",
"According to Kirkus Reviews, he is one of the most original crime writers around.",
"He is the poet of dark suspense.",
"The Oxford Book of American Crime Stories said that his novels and stories provide fresh ideas.",
"The same is said of writers like Lawrence Block, Max Allan Collins, Donald E. Westlake, and Ed McBain.",
"MacDonald.",
"After he was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, his pace of production slowed considerably, even though he was considered to be a \"prolific\" writer.",
"He won a Spur Award for his short story \"The Face\" in 1992.",
"His fiction collection was nominated for an award.",
"The Dark Fantastic was nominated for an award in 2001.",
"The Fine Art of Murder was the winner of the Anthony Award.",
"He was nominated for several Anthonys.",
"He won the Life Achievement Award from the Private Eye Writers of America and the International Horror Writers Award.",
"He was nominated for an award.",
"The Poker Club was adapted as a film in 2008.",
"The stories \"The Long Silence After\" and \"The Ugly File\" were made into short films.",
"Short, Scary Tales bought the rights to his novel Cage of Night and short story \"Stalker\" in order to make them into graphic novels.",
"The City of Night Pen name books are E.J.",
"Ed Gorman discusses his writing mystery scene on the Dark Party Review.",
"20th-century American novelists 21st-century American novelists 20th-century American short story writers American male novelists American male short story writers Anthony Award winners"
] | <mask>. (November 2, 1941 – October 14, 2016) was an American writer and short fiction anthologist. He published in almost every genre, but is best known for his work in the crime, mystery, western, and horror fields. His non-fiction work has been published in such publications as The New York Times and Redbook. He has contributed to many magazines and other publications, including Xero, Black Lizard, Mystery Scene, Cemetery Dance, and the anthology Tales of Zorro. Personal life
<mask> was born and grew up in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where he spent much of his adult life as well. He lived for extended periods in Des Moines, Iowa; Minneapolis, Minnesota; and Chicago, Illinois. He was married twice, first to Catherine Anne Stevens for seven years.He next married <mask> (née Maxwell), an award-winning children's and young adult author. They were married thirty-four years until his death in 2016. Writing career
After twenty-three years in advertising, public relations, writing political speeches and producing industrial films, <mask> published his first novel Rough Cut (1984). Soon after he quit his day job and dedicated himself to writing full-time (thanks to his wife Carol's full-time teaching job). <mask> considered himself a genre writer. In the 1970s <mask> won a short story contest sponsored by Charles Scribner & Sons. An editor there suggested he expand his winning story into a mainstream novel, but Gorman gave up after six months, saying, “I was bored out of my mind.I am a genre writer.”
<mask>’s novels and stories are often set in small Midwestern towns, such as the fictional Black River Falls, Iowa (the Sam McCain series), or Cedar Rapids, Iowa (The Night Remembers). For his Dev Conrad series, <mask> drew upon his years as a political operative. <mask> was one of the founders of Mystery Scene magazine, and served as editor and publisher until 2002. His column, “Gormania,” continues to appear regularly in its pages. In comics, he has written for DC, Dark Horse, and most recently Short, Scary Tales, which will be publishing adaptations of his novel Cage of Night (as Cage of Night) and the short story "Stalker" (as Gut-Shot). Kirkus Reviews has called him "One of the most original crime writers around." The Bloomsbury Review noted: "He is the poet of dark suspense."The Oxford Book of American Crime Stories said: "His novels and stories provide fresh ideas, characters and approaches." Jon Breen at Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine once noted, "<mask> has the same infallible readability as writers like Lawrence Block, Max Allan Collins, Donald E. Westlake, <mask>, and John D. MacDonald." Though <mask> was long considered to be a "prolific" writer, his pace of production slowed markedly after he was diagnosed with multiple myeloma in 2002; it was incurable. Awards
He won a Spur Award for Best Short Fiction for his short story "The Face" in 1992. His fiction collection Cages was nominated for the 1995 Bram Stoker Award for Best Fiction Collection. His collection The Dark Fantastic was nominated for the same award in 2001.<mask> won the 1994 Anthony Award for Best Critical Work for The Fine Art Of Murder. He was nominated for multiple Anthonys in short story categories. He is a winner of the Life Achievement Award from the Private Eye Writers of America, and The International Horror Writers Award (previous winners include Stephen King and Richard Matheson). He was nominated for the Edgar Award. Adaptations
His novel The Poker Club was adapted as a film in 2008 by director Tim McCann. His short stories “The Long Silence After” and “The Ugly File” were adapted as short films. In 2016, rights to his novel Cage of Night and short story “Stalker” were bought for adaptation as graphic novels, to be published by Short, Scary Tales.2 City of Night
Pen name books
As E.J. (2007) with Martin H. Greenberg
Tales of Zorro (2008)
Kolchak the Night Stalker: Passages of the Macabre (2016)
References
External links
<mask>'s blog
Dark Party Review <mask> Discusses His Writing
Mystery Scene, magazine co-founded by <mask> with Robert J. Randisi. 1941 births
2016 deaths
Deaths from multiple myeloma
20th-century American novelists
21st-century American novelists
20th-century American short story writers
21st-century American short story writers
American horror writers
American male novelists
American male short story writers
Anthony Award winners
Coe College alumni
Macavity Award winners
Writers from Cedar Rapids, Iowa
20th-century American male writers
21st-century American male writers
Novelists from Iowa | [
"Edward Joseph Gorman Jr",
"Gorman",
"Carol Gorman",
"Gorman",
"Gorman",
"Gorman",
"Gorman",
"Gorman",
"Gorman",
"Ed Gorman",
"Ed McBain",
"Gorman",
"Gorman",
"Ed Gorman",
"Ed Gorman",
"Gorman"
] | <mask>. was an American writer and short fiction anthologist. He is best known for his work in the crime, mystery, western, and horror fields. His work has appeared in publications such as The New York Times and Redbook. He has contributed to many publications, including the anthology Tales of Zorro. He spent most of his adult life in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where he was born. He lived in Des Moines, Iowa, Minneapolis, Minnesota, and Chicago, Illinois. He was married to Catherine Anne Stevens for seven years.<mask> was an award-winning children's and young adult author. They were married for 34 years before he died. After 23 years in advertising, public relations, writing political speeches and producing industrial films, <mask> published his first novel. Thanks to his wife Carol's full-time teaching job, he quit his day job and dedicated himself to writing full-time. He considered himself a genre writer. Charles Scribner & Sons sponsored a short story contest in the 70s. After six months, he gave up and said he was bored out of his mind.Small Midwestern towns such as Black River Falls, Iowa, or Cedar Rapids, Iowa, are set in the fictional Sam McCain series. He drew upon his years as a political operative for his series. He was editor and publisher of Mystery Scene magazine from 2002 to 2002. His column, "Gormania," continues to appear in the pages. In comics, he has written for DC, Dark Horse, and most recently Short, Scary Tales, which will be publishing an adaptation of his novel Cage of Night and the short story "Stalker". According to Kirkus Reviews, he is one of the most original crime writers around. He is the poet of dark suspense.The Oxford Book of American Crime Stories said that his novels and stories provide fresh ideas. The same is said of writers like Lawrence Block, Max Allan Collins, Donald E. Westlake, and <mask>. MacDonald. After he was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, his pace of production slowed considerably, even though he was considered to be a "prolific" writer. He won a Spur Award for his short story "The Face" in 1992. His fiction collection was nominated for an award. The Dark Fantastic was nominated for an award in 2001.The Fine Art of Murder was the winner of the Anthony Award. He was nominated for several Anthonys. He won the Life Achievement Award from the Private Eye Writers of America and the International Horror Writers Award. He was nominated for an award. The Poker Club was adapted as a film in 2008. The stories "The Long Silence After" and "The Ugly File" were made into short films. Short, Scary Tales bought the rights to his novel Cage of Night and short story "Stalker" in order to make them into graphic novels.The City of Night Pen name books are E.J. <mask> discusses his writing mystery scene on the Dark Party Review. 20th-century American novelists 21st-century American novelists 20th-century American short story writers American male novelists American male short story writers Anthony Award winners | [
"Edward Joseph Gorman Jr",
"Carol Gorman",
"Gorman",
"Ed McBain",
"Ed Gorman"
] |
227696 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luciano%20Pavarotti | Luciano Pavarotti | Luciano Pavarotti (, , ; 12 October 19356 September 2007) was an Italian operatic tenor who during the late part of his career crossed over into popular music, eventually becoming one of the most acclaimed and loved tenors of all time. He made numerous recordings of complete operas and individual arias, gaining worldwide fame for his tone, and achieving the honorific title "King of the High Cs".
As one of the Three Tenors, who performed their first concert during the 1990 FIFA World Cup before a global audience, Pavarotti became well known for his televised concerts and media appearances. From the beginning of his professional career as a tenor in 1961 in Italy to his final performance of "Nessun dorma" at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Pavarotti was at his best in bel canto operas, pre-Aida Verdi roles, and Puccini works such as La bohème, Tosca, Turandot and Madama Butterfly. He sold over 100 million records, and the first Three Tenors recording became the best-selling classical album of all time. Pavarotti was also noted for his charity work on behalf of refugees and the Red Cross, amongst others. He died from pancreatic cancer on 6 September 2007.
Biography
Early life and musical training
Luciano Pavarotti was born in 1935 on the outskirts of Modena in Northern Italy, the son of Fernando Pavarotti, a baker and amateur tenor, and Adele Venturi, a cigar factory worker. Although he spoke fondly of his childhood, the family had little money; its four members were crowded into a two-room apartment. According to Pavarotti, his father had a fine tenor voice but rejected the possibility of a singing career because of nervousness. World War II forced the family out of the city in 1943. For the following year they rented a single room from a farmer in the neighbouring countryside, where the young Pavarotti developed an interest in farming.
After abandoning the dream of becoming a football goalkeeper, Pavarotti spent seven years in vocal training. Pavarotti's earliest musical influences were his father's records, most of them featuring the popular tenors of the day—Beniamino Gigli, Giovanni Martinelli, Tito Schipa, and Enrico Caruso. Pavarotti's favourite tenor and idol was Giuseppe Di Stefano and he was also deeply influenced by Mario Lanza, saying: "In my teens I used to go to Mario Lanza movies and then come home and imitate him in the mirror". At around the age of nine he began singing with his father in a small local church choir.
In addition to music, as a child Pavarotti enjoyed playing football. When he graduated from the Scuola Magistrale he was interested in pursuing a career as a professional football goalkeeper, but his mother convinced him to train as a teacher. He subsequently taught in an elementary school for two years but finally decided to pursue a music career. His father, recognising the risk involved, only reluctantly gave his consent. Pavarotti began the serious study of music in 1954 at the age of 19 with Arrigo Pola, a respected teacher and professional tenor in Modena who offered to teach him without remuneration. According to conductor Richard Bonynge, Pavarotti never learned to read music.
In 1955, he experienced his first singing success when he was a member of the Corale Rossini, a male voice choir from Modena that also included his father, which won first prize at the International Eisteddfod in Llangollen, Wales. He later said that this was the most important experience of his life, and that it inspired him to become a professional singer. At about this time Pavarotti first met Adua Veroni. They married in 1961. When his teacher Arrigo Pola moved to Japan, Pavarotti became a student of Ettore Campogalliani, who at that time was also teaching Pavarotti's childhood friend, Mirella Freni, whose mother worked with Luciano's mother in the cigar factory. Like Pavarotti, Freni went on to become a successful opera singer; they would go on to collaborate in various stage performances and recordings together.
During his years of musical study, Pavarotti held part-time jobs in order to sustain himself—first as an elementary school teacher and then as an insurance salesman. The first six years of study resulted in only a few recitals, all in small towns and without pay. When a nodule developed on his vocal cords, causing a "disastrous" concert in Ferrara, he decided to give up singing. Pavarotti attributed his immediate improvement to the psychological release connected with this decision. Whatever the reason, the nodule not only disappeared but, as he related in his autobiography: "Everything I had learned came together with my natural voice to make the sound I had been struggling so hard to achieve".
Career: 1960s–1970s
Pavarotti began his career as a tenor in smaller regional Italian opera houses, making his debut as Rodolfo in La bohème at the Teatro Municipale in Reggio Emilia in April 1961. His first known recording of "Che gelida manina" was recorded during this performance. Pavarotti's first of two marriages was to his first wife Adua Veroni which lasted from 1961 to 2000 and they had three daughters: Lorenza, Cristina, and Giuliana.
He made his first international appearance in La traviata in Belgrade, Yugoslavia. Very early in his career, on 23 February 1963, he debuted at the Vienna State Opera in the same role. In March and April 1963 Vienna saw Pavarotti again as Rodolfo and as Duca di Mantova in Rigoletto. The same year saw his first concert outside Italy when he sang in Dundalk, Ireland for the St Cecilia's Gramophone Society, he was engaged by the Dublin Grand Opera Society to sing The Duke of Mantua in Verdi's Rigoletto in May and June, and his Royal Opera House debut, where he replaced an indisposed Giuseppe Di Stefano as Rodolfo.
There exist on archive.org three complete performances from Pavarotti's early career in 1964, when he was engaged by the Dublin Grand Opera Society to sing Rudolfo in Giacomo Puccini's La bohème (Audio recording of LA BOHEME Presented on May 19, 21, 27, Jun 1 1964 at the Gaiety Theatre Dublin as part of the Dublin Grand Opera Society’s Spring Season) and Alfredo in Giuseppe Verdi's La Traviata (Audio recording of LA TRAVIATA Presented on Jun 8 1964 at the Gaiety Theatre Dublin as part of the Dublin Grand Opera Society's Spring Season, Audio recording of LA TRAVIATA Presented on May 25, 1964 at the Gaiety Theatre Dublin as part of the Dublin Grand Opera Society's Spring Season). Also available are reviews of those performances in which the reviewers favorably comment on his singing (from the reviews for "La Boheme"): "sang sweetly and appealingly," "rich promise," "outstanding," "fit for the big heroic roles," and "robust;" his voice: "pure tone", "arresting quality," "unforced strength and range," "well sustained," and "lovely;" and his acting: "looked and moved well," "sang with musically-directed intelligence," "used the voice to reinforce his acting," and "chief delight of the evening."
While generally successful, Pavarotti's early roles did not immediately propel him into the stardom that he would later enjoy. An early coup involved his connection with Joan Sutherland (and her conductor husband, Richard Bonynge), who in 1963 was seeking a tenor taller than herself to take along on her 1965 tour to Australia. With his commanding physical presence, Pavarotti proved ideal. However, before the summer 1965 Australia tour Pavarotti sang with Joan Sutherland when he made his American début with the Greater Miami Opera in February 1965, singing in Donizetti's Lucia di Lammermoor on the stage of the Miami-Dade County Auditorium in Miami. The tenor scheduled to perform that night became ill with no understudy. As Sutherland had plans to travel with him on the Australia tour that summer, she recommended the young Pavarotti as he was acquainted with the role. Shortly after, on 28 April, Pavarotti made his La Scala debut in the revival of the famous Franco Zeffirelli production of La bohème, with his childhood friend Mirella Freni singing Mimi and Herbert von Karajan conducting. Karajan had requested the singer's engagement.
During the Australia tour in summer 1965 Sutherland and Pavarotti sang some forty performances over two months, and Pavarotti later credited Sutherland for the breathing technique that would sustain him over his career. After the extended Australian tour, he returned to La Scala, where he added Tebaldo from I Capuleti e i Montecchi to his repertoire on 26 March 1966, with Giacomo Aragall as Romeo. His first appearance as Tonio in Donizetti's La fille du régiment took place at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, on 2 June of that year. It was his performances of this role that would earn him the title of "King of the High Cs". He scored another major triumph in Rome on 20 November 1969 when he sang in I Lombardi opposite Renata Scotto. This was recorded on a private label and widely distributed, as were various recordings of his I Capuleti e i Montecchi, usually with Aragall. Early commercial recordings included a recital of Donizetti (the aria from Don Sebastiano were particularly highly regarded) and Verdi arias, as well as a complete L'elisir d'amore with Sutherland.
His major breakthrough in the United States came on 17 February 1972, in a production of La fille du régiment at New York's Metropolitan Opera, in which he drove the crowd into a frenzy with his nine effortless high Cs in the signature aria. He achieved a record seventeen curtain calls. Pavarotti sang his international recital début at William Jewell College in Liberty, Missouri, on 1 February 1973, as part of the college's Fine Arts Program, now known as the Harriman–Jewell Series. Perspiring due to nerves and a lingering cold, the tenor clutched a handkerchief throughout the début. The prop became a signature part of his solo performances. He began to give frequent television performances, starting with his performances as Rodolfo (La bohème) in the first Live from the Met telecast in March 1977, which attracted one of the largest audiences ever for a televised opera. He won many Grammy awards and platinum and gold discs for his performances. In addition to the previously listed titles, his La favorite with Fiorenza Cossotto and his I puritani (1975) with Sutherland stand out.
In 1976, Pavarotti debuted at the Salzburg Festival, appearing in a solo recital on 31 July, accompanied by pianist Leone Magiera. Pavarotti returned to the festival in 1978 with a recital and as the Italian singer in Der Rosenkavalier in 1983 with Idomeneo, and both in 1985 and 1988 with solo recitals. In 1979, he was profiled in a cover story in the weekly magazine Time. That same year saw Pavarotti's return to the Vienna State Opera after an absence of fourteen years. With Herbert von Karajan conducting, Pavarotti sang Manrico in Il trovatore. In 1978, he appeared in a solo recital on Live from Lincoln Center.
Career: 1980s–1990s
At the beginning of the 1980s, he set up The Pavarotti International Voice Competition for young singers, performing with the winners in 1982 in excerpts of La bohème and L'elisir d'amore. The second competition, in 1986, staged excerpts of La bohème and Un ballo in maschera. To celebrate the 25th anniversary of his career, he brought the winners of the competition to Italy for gala performances of La bohème in Modena and Genoa, and then to China where they staged performances of La bohème in Beijing (Peking). To conclude the visit, Pavarotti performed the inaugural concert in the Great Hall of the People before 10,000 people, receiving a standing ovation for nine effortless high Cs. The third competition in 1989 again staged performances of L'elisir d'amore and Un ballo in maschera. The winners of the fifth competition accompanied Pavarotti in performances in Philadelphia in 1997.
In the mid-1980s, Pavarotti returned to two opera houses that had provided him with important breakthroughs, the Vienna State Opera and La Scala. Vienna saw Pavarotti as Rodolfo in La bohème with Carlos Kleiber conducting and again Mirella Freni was Mimi; as Nemorino in L'elisir d'amore; as Radames in Aida conducted by Lorin Maazel; as Rodolfo in Luisa Miller; and as Gustavo in Un ballo in maschera conducted by Claudio Abbado. In 1996, Pavarotti appeared for the last time at the Staatsoper in Andrea Chénier. Throughout the 1980s and 90s, promoters Tibor Rudas and Harvey Goldsmith booked Pavarotti into increasingly larger venues.
In 1985, Pavarotti sang Radames at La Scala opposite Maria Chiara in a Luca Ronconi production conducted by Maazel, recorded on video. His performance of the aria "Celeste Aida" received a two-minute ovation on the opening night. He was reunited with Mirella Freni for the San Francisco Opera production of La bohème in 1988, also recorded on video. In 1992, La Scala saw Pavarotti in a new Zeffirelli production of Don Carlos, conducted by Riccardo Muti. Pavarotti's performance was heavily criticised by some observers and booed by parts of the audience.
Pavarotti became even better known throughout the world in 1990 when his rendition of the aria "Nessun dorma" from Giacomo Puccini's Turandot was taken as the theme song of BBC's coverage of the 1990 FIFA World Cup in Italy. The aria achieved pop status, became the World Cup soundtrack, and it remained his trademark song. This was followed by the first Three Tenors concert, held on the eve of the 1990 FIFA World Cup Final at the ancient Baths of Caracalla in Rome with fellow tenors Plácido Domingo and José Carreras and conductor Zubin Mehta. The performance for the World Cup closing concert captivated a global audience, and it became the biggest selling classical record of all time. A highlight of the concert, in which Pavarotti sang the opening verses using extended vocal runs for di Capua's "O Sole Mio" and which was in turn perfectly repeated note-for-note by Domingo and Carreras to the delight of the audience. The recorded album sold millions of copies, and the first Three Tenors recording became the best-selling classical album of all time. Throughout the 1990s, Pavarotti appeared in many well-attended outdoor concerts, including his televised concert in London's Hyde Park, which drew a record attendance of 150,000. In June 1993, more than 500,000 listeners gathered for his free performance on the Great Lawn of New York's Central Park, while millions more around the world watched on television. The following September, in the shadow of the Eiffel Tower in Paris, he sang for an estimated crowd of 300,000. Following on from the original 1990 concert, the Three Tenors concerts were held during the three subsequent FIFA World Cup Finals, in 1994 in Los Angeles, 1998 in Paris, and 2002 in Yokohama.
In September 1995, Pavarotti performed Schubert's Ave Maria along with Dolores O'Riordan; Diana, Princess of Wales, who attended the live performance, told O'Riordan that the song brought her to tears. In 1995, Pavarotti's friends, the singer Lara Saint Paul (as Lara Cariaggi) and her husband showman Pier Quinto Cariaggi, who had produced and organised Pavarotti's 1990 FIFA World Cup Celebration Concert at the PalaTrussardi in Milan, produced and wrote the television documentary The Best is Yet to Come, an extensive biography about the life of Pavarotti. Lara Saint Paul was the interviewer for the documentary with Pavarotti, who spoke candidly about his life and career.
Pavarotti's rise to stardom was not without occasional difficulties, however. He earned a reputation as "The King of Cancellations" by frequently backing out of performances, and his unreliable nature led to poor relationships with some opera houses. This was brought into focus in 1989 when Ardis Krainik of the Lyric Opera of Chicago severed the house's 15-year relationship with the tenor. Over an eight-year period, Pavarotti had cancelled 26 out of 41 scheduled appearances at the Lyric, and the decisive move by Krainik to ban him for life was well noted throughout the opera world, after the performer walked away from a season premiere less than two weeks before rehearsals began, saying pain from a sciatic nerve required two months of treatment. On 12 December 1998, he became the first (and, to date, only) opera singer to perform on Saturday Night Live, singing alongside Vanessa L. Williams. He also sang with U2 in the band's 1995 song "Miss Sarajevo" and with Mercedes Sosa in a big concert at the Boca Juniors arena La Bombonera in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in 1999. In 1998, Pavarotti was presented with the Grammy Legend Award.
Career: Early 2000s
In 2001, Pavarotti was acquitted in Italian court of a long standing dispute concerning his official country of residency and taxable earnings. Pavarotti long claimed Monte Carlo in the tax haven of Monaco as his official residence, but an Italian court in 1999 had rejected that claim by ruling that his Monaco address could not accommodate his entire family. In 2000 Pavarotti agreed to pay the Italian government more than $7.6 million in back taxes and penalties as a result of tax evasion charges that dated from 1989 to 1995. Pavarotti was subsequently fully acquitted by an Italian court of filing false tax returns in 2001.
On 13 December 2003, he married his second wife and former personal assistant, Nicoletta Mantovani (born 1969), with whom he already had another daughter, Alice. Alice's twin brother, Riccardo, was stillborn after complications in January 2003. At the time of his death in September 2007, he was survived by his wife, his four daughters, and one granddaughter.
In late 2003, he released his final compilation—and his first and only "crossover" album, Ti Adoro. Most of the 13 songs were written and produced by Michele Centonze, who had already helped produce the "Pavarotti & Friends" concerts between 1998 and 2000. The tenor described the album as a wedding gift to Nicoletta Mantovani. That same year he was made a Commander of Monaco's Order of Cultural Merit.
In 2004, one of Pavarotti's former managers, Herbert Breslin, published a book, The King & I. Seen by critics as bitter and sensationalistic, it is critical of the singer's acting (in opera), his inability to read music well and learn parts, and his personal conduct, although acknowledging their success together. In an interview in 2005 with Jeremy Paxman on the BBC, Pavarotti rejected the allegation that he could not read music, although he acknowledged he did not read orchestral scores.
He received an enormous number of awards and honours, including Kennedy Center Honors in 2001. He also holds two Guinness World Records: one for receiving the most curtain calls (165) and another for the best-selling classical album (Carreras Domingo Pavarotti in Concert by the Three Tenors; the latter record is thus shared by fellow tenors Plácido Domingo and José Carreras).
Final performances and health issues
Pavarotti began his farewell tour in 2004, at the age of 69, performing one last time in old and new locations, after more than four decades on the stage. On 13 March 2004, Pavarotti gave his last performance in an opera at the New York Metropolitan Opera, for which he received a long standing ovation for his role as the painter Mario Cavaradossi in Giacomo Puccini's Tosca. On 1 December 2004, he announced a 40-city farewell tour. Pavarotti and his manager, Terri Robson, commissioned impresario Harvey Goldsmith to produce the Worldwide Farewell Tour. His last full-scale performance was at the end of a two-month Australasian tour in Taiwan in December 2005.
In March 2005, Pavarotti underwent neck surgery to repair two vertebrae. In early 2006, he underwent further back surgery and contracted an infection while in the hospital in New York, forcing cancellation of concerts in the U.S., Canada, and the U.K.
On 10 February 2006, Pavarotti performed "Nessun dorma" at the 2006 Winter Olympics opening ceremony in Turin, Italy, at his final performance. In the last act of the opening ceremony, his performance received the longest and loudest ovation of the night from the international crowd. Leone Magiera, who directed the performance, revealed in his 2008 memoirs, Pavarotti Visto da Vicino, that the performance had been recorded weeks earlier. "The orchestra pretended to play for the audience, I pretended to conduct and Luciano pretended to sing. The effect was wonderful," he wrote. Pavarotti's manager, Terri Robson, said that the tenor had turned the Winter Olympic Committee's invitation down several times because it would have been impossible to sing late at night in the subzero conditions of Turin in February. The committee eventually persuaded him to take part by prerecording the song.
Death
While proceeding with an international "farewell tour", Pavarotti was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in July 2006. The tenor fought back against the implications of this diagnosis, undergoing major abdominal surgery and making plans for the resumption and conclusion of his singing commitments, but he died at his home in Modena on 6 September 2007. After his death, his manager, Terri Robson, noted in a statement, "The Maestro fought a long, tough battle against the pancreatic cancer which eventually took his life. In fitting with the approach that characterised his life and work, he remained positive until finally succumbing to the last stages of his illness".
Pavarotti's funeral was held at Modena Cathedral. The then Prime Minister Romano Prodi and Kofi Annan attended. The Frecce Tricolori, the aerobatic demonstration team of the Italian Air Force, flew overhead, leaving green-white-red smoke trails. After a funeral procession through the centre of Modena, Pavarotti's coffin was taken the final to Montale Rangone, a village part of Castelnuovo Rangone, and was interred in the Pavarotti family crypt. The funeral, in its entirety, was also telecast live on CNN. The Vienna State Opera and the Salzburg Festival Hall flew black flags in mourning. Tributes were published by many opera houses, such as London's Royal Opera House.
Other work
Film and television
Pavarotti's one venture into film was Yes, Giorgio (1982), a romantic comedy movie directed by Franklin J. Schaffner, in which he starred as the main character Giorgio Fini. The film was a critical and commercial failure, although it received an Academy Award nomination for Best Music, Original Song.
He can be seen to better advantage in Jean-Pierre Ponnelle's adaptation of Rigoletto for television, released that same year, or in his more than 20 live opera performances taped for television between 1978 and 1994, most of them with the Metropolitan Opera, and most available on DVD.
He received two Primetime Emmy Awards for his PBS variety specials Pavarotti in Philadelphia: La Boheme and Duke of Mantua, Rigoletto Great Performances.
Pavarotti, a 2019 documentary film about him, was directed by Ron Howard and produced with the cooperation of Pavarotti's estate using family archives, interviews and live music footage.
Humanitarianism
Pavarotti annually hosted the Pavarotti & Friends charity concerts in his home town of Modena Italy, joining with singers from all parts of the music industry, including B.B. King, Andrea Bocelli, Zucchero, Jon Bon Jovi, Bryan Adams, Bono, James Brown, Mariah Carey, Eric Clapton, Dolores O'Riordan, Sheryl Crow, Céline Dion, Anastacia, Elton John, Deep Purple, Meat Loaf, Queen, George Michael, Tracy Chapman, the Spice Girls, Sting and Barry White to raise money for several UN causes. Concerts were held for War Child, and victims of war and civil unrest in Bosnia, Guatemala, Kosovo and Iraq. After the war in Bosnia, he financed and established the Pavarotti Music Centre in the southern city of Mostar to offer Bosnia's artists the opportunity to develop their skills. For these contributions, the city of Sarajevo named him an honorary citizen in 2006.
He performed at benefit concerts to raise money for victims of tragedies such as the Spitak earthquake that killed 25,000 people in northern Armenia in December 1988, and sang Gounod's Ave Maria with legendary French pop music star and ethnic Armenian Charles Aznavour.
He was a close friend of Diana, Princess of Wales. They raised money for the elimination of land mines worldwide.
In 1998, he was appointed the United Nations Messenger of Peace, using his fame to raise awareness of UN issues, including the Millennium Development Goals, HIV/AIDS, child rights, urban slums and poverty.
In 1999, Pavarotti performed a charity benefit concert in Beirut, to mark Lebanon's re-emergence on the world stage after a brutal 15-year civil war. The largest concert held in Beirut since the end of the war, it was attended by 20,000 people who travelled from countries as distant as Saudi Arabia and Bulgaria. In 1999 he also hosted a charity benefit concert to build a school in Guatemala, for Guatemalan civil war orphans. It was named after him Centro Educativo Pavarotti. Now the foundation of nobel prize winner Rigoberta Menchú Tum is running the school.
In 2001, Pavarotti received the Nansen Medal from the UN High Commission for Refugees for his efforts raising money on behalf of refugees worldwide. Through benefit concerts and volunteer work, he has raised more than any other individual.
Also in 2001, Pavarotti was chosen one of that year's five recipients by the President and First Lady as an honoree for their lifetime achievements in the arts at the White House, followed by the Kennedy Center; the Kennedy Center Honors, He was surprised by the appearance of Secretary-General of the United Nations and that year's winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, Kofi Annan, who lauded him for his contribution to humankind. Six months prior, Pavarotti had held a large charity concert for Afghan refugees, particularly children in his home town of Modena, Italy.
Other honours he received include the "Freedom of London Award" and The Red Cross "Award for Services to Humanity", for his work in raising money for that organisation, and the 1998 "MusiCares Person of the Year", given to humanitarian heroes by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences.
He was a National Patron of Delta Omicron, an international professional music fraternity.
Legacy and estate assignment
His first will was opened the day after his death; a second will was opened within the same month of September. He left an estate outside his native Modena (now a museum), a villa in Pesaro, his flat in Monte Carlo, and three flats in New York City.
Pavarotti's widow's lawyers, Giorgio Bernini and Anna Maria Bernini, and manager Terri Robson announced on 30 June 2008 that his family amicably settled his estate—€300 million ($474.2 million, including $15 million in U.S. assets). Pavarotti drafted two wills before his death: one divided his assets by Italian law, giving half to his second wife, Nicoletta Mantovani, and half to his four daughters; the second gave his U.S. holdings to Mantovani. The judge confirmed the compromise by the end of July 2008. However, a Pesaro public prosecutor, Massimo di Patria, investigated allegations that Pavarotti was not of sound mind when he signed the will. Pavarotti's estate has been settled "fairly", a lawyer for Mantovani said in statements after reports of a dispute between her and his three daughters from his first marriage.
He posthumously received the Italy-USA Foundation's America Award in 2013 and the Brit Award for Outstanding Contribution to Music in 2014.
Selected discography
In addition to his very large discography of opera performances Pavarotti also made many classical crossover and pop recordings, the Pavarotti & Friends series of concerts and, for Decca, a series of studio recital albums: first six albums of opera arias and then, from 1979, six albums of Italian song.
Studio recital albums
Favourite Italian Arias – Arias from La Bohème, Tosca and Rigoletto. Orchestra of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden Edward Downes Decca Records 1966
Arias by Verdi & Donizetti – Arias from Luisa Miller, I due Foscari, Un ballo in maschera, Macbeth, Lucia di Lammermoor, Il duca d’Alba, La favorita and Don Sebastiano (with the Wiener Opernorchester under Edward Downes, 1968).
Tenor Arias from Italian Opera – Arias from Guglielmo Tell, I puritani, Il trovatore, L'arlesiana, La bohème, Mefistofele, Don Pasquale, La Gioconda and Giuseppe Pietri's :it:Maristella. Luciano Pavarotti tenor with Arleen Auger soprano. Leone Magiera (piano) Wiener Opernorchester and choir. Ambrosian Singers New Philharmonia Orchestra Nicola Rescigno 1971
The World's Favourite Tenor Arias – Tosca, Carmen, Aida, Faust, Pagliacci, Martha. Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. Wiener Volksoper Orchester. Leone Magiera. New Philharmonia Orchestra Richard Bonynge 1973
Pavarotti in Concert – Arias and songs by Bononcini, Handel, Alessandro Scarlatti, Bellini, Tosti, Respighi, Rossini. Orchestra del Teatro Comunale di Bologna. Richard Bonynge. 1973
O Holy Night – Songs and carols by Adam, Stradella, Franck, Mercadante, Schubert, Bach (arranged Gounod), Bizet, Berlioz, Pietro Yon, Alois Melichar. Wandsworth School Boys' Choir. London Voices. National Philharmonic Orchestra, Kurt Herbert Adler 1976
O Sole Mio – Favourite Neapolitan Songs 13 songs by Eduardo di Capua: O sole mio Francesco Paolo Tosti: 'A vucchella, Enrico Cannio: O surdato 'nnammurato, :it:Salvatore Gambardella: O marenariello, Traditional: Fenesta vascia, Tosti: A Marechiare, Ernesto de Curtis: Torna a Surriento, Gaetano Errico Pennino: Pecchè?, Vincenzo d'Annibale: O paese d' 'o sole, Ernesto Tagliaferri: Piscatore 'e Pusilleco, Curtis: :it:Tu ca nun chiagne, Capua: Maria, Mari, Luigi Denza: Funiculì funiculà. Orchestra del Teatro Comunale di Bologna Anton Guadagno National Philharmonic Orchestra :it:Giancarlo Chiaramello 1979
Verismo – Arias from Fedora, Mefistofele, Adriana Lecouvreur, Iris, L'Africaine, Werther, La fanciulla del West, Manon Lescaut, Andrea Chénier. National Philharmonic Orchestra Oliviero de Fabritiis (Riccardo Chailly for Andrea Chénier arias) 1979
Mattinata – 14 songs by Caldara, formerly attrib. Pergolesi, probably by Vincenzo Ciampi: Tre giorni son che Nina, Bellini, Tommaso Giordani, Rossini, Gluck, Tosti, Donizetti, Leoncavallo, Beethoven and Francesco Durante. Philharmonia Orchestra Piero Gamba National Philharmonic Orchestra. Antonio Tonini (conductor) 1983
Mamma – songs by Cesare Andrea Bixio, Ernesto de Curtis, Arturo Buzzi-Peccia, Stanislao Gastaldon, Cesare Cesarini, A. Walter Kramer, Carlo Innocenzi, Giovanni D'Anzi, Eldo di Lazzaro, Vincenzo De Crescenzo, Domenico Martuzzi, Aniello Califano, Colombino Arona. Arranged and conducted by Henry Mancini, 1984.
Passione – 12 songs by Ernesto Tagliaferri, Paolo Tosti, :it:Pasquale Mario Costa, Teodoro Cottrau, :it:Evemero Nardella, Rodolfo Falvo, De Curtis, Di Capua, E. A. Mario, Gaetano Lama and Salvatore Cardillo. Orchestra del Teatro Comunale di Bologna. Giancarlo Chiaramello 1985
Volare – 16 songs by Domenico Modugno, Luigi Denza, Cesare Andrea Bixio, Gabriele Sibella, Giovanni D'Anzi, Michael John Bonagura, Edoardo Mascheroni, Ernesto De Curtis, Ermenegildo Ruccione, Pietro Mascagni, Guido Maria Ferilli. arranged and conducted by Henry Mancini 1987
Ti Adoro – songs by Romano Musumarra, Carlo Mioli, Ornella D'Urbano, Michele Centonze, Andrea Bellantani, Daniel Vuletic, Veris Giannetti, Nino Rota/Elsa Morante, Edoardo Bennato, Hans Zimmer/Gavin Greenaway/Jeffrey Pescetto, Lucio Dalla. Royal Philharmonic Orchestra Orchestra di Roma. Bulgarian Symphony Orchestra. Romano Musumarra Giancarlo Chiaramello, 2000
Selected videography
Mozart: Idomeneo (1982), Deutsche Grammophon DVD, 00440-073-4234, 2006
The Metropolitan Opera Centennial Gala (1983), Deutsche Grammophon DVD, 00440-073-4538, 2009
The Metropolitan Opera Gala 1991, Deutsche Grammophon DVD, 00440-073-4582, 2010
Awards and honors
Grammy Awards
The Grammy Awards are awarded annually by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences.
|-
|1979
|"Luciano Pavarotti – Hits From Lincoln Center"
|Best Classical Vocal Solo
|
|-
|1980
|Luciano Pavarotti & the Bologna Orchestra for O Sole Mio – Favorite Neapolitan Songs
|Best Classical Vocal Solo
|
|-
|1982
|Marilyn Horne, Luciano Pavarotti, Joan Sutherland, Richard Bonynge (conductor) & the New York City Opera Orchestra for Live From Lincoln Center – Sutherland/Horne/Pavarotti
|Best Classical Vocal Solo
|
|-
| rowspan="3"|1989
| Luciano Pavarotti, Emerson Buckley (conductor) & the Symphony Orchestra of Amelia Romangna for Luciano Pavarotti in Concert
|Best Classical Vocal Solo
|
|-
| Bellini: Norma
| rowspan="2"|Best Opera Recording
|
|-
| Mozart: Idomeneo
|
|-
|1991
| José Carreras, Plácido Domingo, Luciano Pavarotti, Zubin Mehta (conductor) & the Orchestra Del Maggio Musicale for Carreras, Domingo, Pavarotti in Concert
|Best Classical Vocal Solo
|
|-
|rowspan="2"|1995
| rowspan="2"|José Carreras, Plácido Domingo and Luciano Pavarotti with Zubin Mehta – The Three Tenors in Concert 1994
| Best Pop Vocal Album
|
|-
| Album of the Year
|
|-
|1997
|Frank Sinatra and Luciano Pavarotti – "My Way"
|Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals
|
|-
| rowspan="2"|1998
| rowspan="2"|Luciano Pavarotti
|MusiCares Person of the Year
|
|-
| |Grammy Legend Award
|
|-
|}
Kennedy Center honors
|-
| 2001
| Himself
| Kennedy Center Honors
|
|-
|}
See also
List of best-selling music artists
Pavarotti & Friends for the Children of Bosnia
Pavarotti & Friends for the Children of Liberia
Pavarotti & Friends for Guatemala and Kosovo
Centro Educativo Pavarotti
Pavarotti, a 2019 documentary film by Ron Howard
References
External links
Official website
Casamuseo Luciano Pavarotti – Home in Modena, now a museum
Discography (Capon's Lists of Opera Recordings)
Pavarotti Video Biography by National Italian American Foundation NIAF
1935 births
2007 deaths
20th-century Italian male opera singers
Burials in Emilia-Romagna
Commanders of the Order of Cultural Merit (Monaco)
Deaths from cancer in Emilia-Romagna
Deaths from pancreatic cancer
Grammy Award winners
Grammy Legend Award winners
Italian expatriates in Monaco
Italian operatic tenors
Italian philanthropists
Italian Roman Catholics
Kennedy Center honorees
London Records artists
Musicians from Modena
Performing arts pages with videographic documentation
Primetime Emmy Award winners
Rocket Records artists
The Three Tenors | [
"Luciano Pavarotti (, , ; 12 October 19356 September 2007) was an Italian operatic tenor who during the late part of his career crossed over into popular music, eventually becoming one of the most acclaimed and loved tenors of all time.",
"He made numerous recordings of complete operas and individual arias, gaining worldwide fame for his tone, and achieving the honorific title \"King of the High Cs\".",
"As one of the Three Tenors, who performed their first concert during the 1990 FIFA World Cup before a global audience, Pavarotti became well known for his televised concerts and media appearances.",
"From the beginning of his professional career as a tenor in 1961 in Italy to his final performance of \"Nessun dorma\" at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Pavarotti was at his best in bel canto operas, pre-Aida Verdi roles, and Puccini works such as La bohème, Tosca, Turandot and Madama Butterfly.",
"He sold over 100 million records, and the first Three Tenors recording became the best-selling classical album of all time.",
"Pavarotti was also noted for his charity work on behalf of refugees and the Red Cross, amongst others.",
"He died from pancreatic cancer on 6 September 2007.",
"Biography\n\nEarly life and musical training\nLuciano Pavarotti was born in 1935 on the outskirts of Modena in Northern Italy, the son of Fernando Pavarotti, a baker and amateur tenor, and Adele Venturi, a cigar factory worker.",
"Although he spoke fondly of his childhood, the family had little money; its four members were crowded into a two-room apartment.",
"According to Pavarotti, his father had a fine tenor voice but rejected the possibility of a singing career because of nervousness.",
"World War II forced the family out of the city in 1943.",
"For the following year they rented a single room from a farmer in the neighbouring countryside, where the young Pavarotti developed an interest in farming.",
"After abandoning the dream of becoming a football goalkeeper, Pavarotti spent seven years in vocal training.",
"Pavarotti's earliest musical influences were his father's records, most of them featuring the popular tenors of the day—Beniamino Gigli, Giovanni Martinelli, Tito Schipa, and Enrico Caruso.",
"Pavarotti's favourite tenor and idol was Giuseppe Di Stefano and he was also deeply influenced by Mario Lanza, saying: \"In my teens I used to go to Mario Lanza movies and then come home and imitate him in the mirror\".",
"At around the age of nine he began singing with his father in a small local church choir.",
"In addition to music, as a child Pavarotti enjoyed playing football.",
"When he graduated from the Scuola Magistrale he was interested in pursuing a career as a professional football goalkeeper, but his mother convinced him to train as a teacher.",
"He subsequently taught in an elementary school for two years but finally decided to pursue a music career.",
"His father, recognising the risk involved, only reluctantly gave his consent.",
"Pavarotti began the serious study of music in 1954 at the age of 19 with Arrigo Pola, a respected teacher and professional tenor in Modena who offered to teach him without remuneration.",
"According to conductor Richard Bonynge, Pavarotti never learned to read music.",
"In 1955, he experienced his first singing success when he was a member of the Corale Rossini, a male voice choir from Modena that also included his father, which won first prize at the International Eisteddfod in Llangollen, Wales.",
"He later said that this was the most important experience of his life, and that it inspired him to become a professional singer.",
"At about this time Pavarotti first met Adua Veroni.",
"They married in 1961.",
"When his teacher Arrigo Pola moved to Japan, Pavarotti became a student of Ettore Campogalliani, who at that time was also teaching Pavarotti's childhood friend, Mirella Freni, whose mother worked with Luciano's mother in the cigar factory.",
"Like Pavarotti, Freni went on to become a successful opera singer; they would go on to collaborate in various stage performances and recordings together.",
"During his years of musical study, Pavarotti held part-time jobs in order to sustain himself—first as an elementary school teacher and then as an insurance salesman.",
"The first six years of study resulted in only a few recitals, all in small towns and without pay.",
"When a nodule developed on his vocal cords, causing a \"disastrous\" concert in Ferrara, he decided to give up singing.",
"Pavarotti attributed his immediate improvement to the psychological release connected with this decision.",
"Whatever the reason, the nodule not only disappeared but, as he related in his autobiography: \"Everything I had learned came together with my natural voice to make the sound I had been struggling so hard to achieve\".",
"Career: 1960s–1970s\nPavarotti began his career as a tenor in smaller regional Italian opera houses, making his debut as Rodolfo in La bohème at the Teatro Municipale in Reggio Emilia in April 1961.",
"His first known recording of \"Che gelida manina\" was recorded during this performance.",
"Pavarotti's first of two marriages was to his first wife Adua Veroni which lasted from 1961 to 2000 and they had three daughters: Lorenza, Cristina, and Giuliana.",
"He made his first international appearance in La traviata in Belgrade, Yugoslavia.",
"Very early in his career, on 23 February 1963, he debuted at the Vienna State Opera in the same role.",
"In March and April 1963 Vienna saw Pavarotti again as Rodolfo and as Duca di Mantova in Rigoletto.",
"The same year saw his first concert outside Italy when he sang in Dundalk, Ireland for the St Cecilia's Gramophone Society, he was engaged by the Dublin Grand Opera Society to sing The Duke of Mantua in Verdi's Rigoletto in May and June, and his Royal Opera House debut, where he replaced an indisposed Giuseppe Di Stefano as Rodolfo.",
"There exist on archive.org three complete performances from Pavarotti's early career in 1964, when he was engaged by the Dublin Grand Opera Society to sing Rudolfo in Giacomo Puccini's La bohème (Audio recording of LA BOHEME Presented on May 19, 21, 27, Jun 1 1964 at the Gaiety Theatre Dublin as part of the Dublin Grand Opera Society’s Spring Season) and Alfredo in Giuseppe Verdi's La Traviata (Audio recording of LA TRAVIATA Presented on Jun 8 1964 at the Gaiety Theatre Dublin as part of the Dublin Grand Opera Society's Spring Season, Audio recording of LA TRAVIATA Presented on May 25, 1964 at the Gaiety Theatre Dublin as part of the Dublin Grand Opera Society's Spring Season).",
"Also available are reviews of those performances in which the reviewers favorably comment on his singing (from the reviews for \"La Boheme\"): \"sang sweetly and appealingly,\" \"rich promise,\" \"outstanding,\" \"fit for the big heroic roles,\" and \"robust;\" his voice: \"pure tone\", \"arresting quality,\" \"unforced strength and range,\" \"well sustained,\" and \"lovely;\" and his acting: \"looked and moved well,\" \"sang with musically-directed intelligence,\" \"used the voice to reinforce his acting,\" and \"chief delight of the evening.\"",
"While generally successful, Pavarotti's early roles did not immediately propel him into the stardom that he would later enjoy.",
"An early coup involved his connection with Joan Sutherland (and her conductor husband, Richard Bonynge), who in 1963 was seeking a tenor taller than herself to take along on her 1965 tour to Australia.",
"With his commanding physical presence, Pavarotti proved ideal.",
"However, before the summer 1965 Australia tour Pavarotti sang with Joan Sutherland when he made his American début with the Greater Miami Opera in February 1965, singing in Donizetti's Lucia di Lammermoor on the stage of the Miami-Dade County Auditorium in Miami.",
"The tenor scheduled to perform that night became ill with no understudy.",
"As Sutherland had plans to travel with him on the Australia tour that summer, she recommended the young Pavarotti as he was acquainted with the role.",
"Shortly after, on 28 April, Pavarotti made his La Scala debut in the revival of the famous Franco Zeffirelli production of La bohème, with his childhood friend Mirella Freni singing Mimi and Herbert von Karajan conducting.",
"Karajan had requested the singer's engagement.",
"During the Australia tour in summer 1965 Sutherland and Pavarotti sang some forty performances over two months, and Pavarotti later credited Sutherland for the breathing technique that would sustain him over his career.",
"After the extended Australian tour, he returned to La Scala, where he added Tebaldo from I Capuleti e i Montecchi to his repertoire on 26 March 1966, with Giacomo Aragall as Romeo.",
"His first appearance as Tonio in Donizetti's La fille du régiment took place at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, on 2 June of that year.",
"It was his performances of this role that would earn him the title of \"King of the High Cs\".",
"He scored another major triumph in Rome on 20 November 1969 when he sang in I Lombardi opposite Renata Scotto.",
"This was recorded on a private label and widely distributed, as were various recordings of his I Capuleti e i Montecchi, usually with Aragall.",
"Early commercial recordings included a recital of Donizetti (the aria from Don Sebastiano were particularly highly regarded) and Verdi arias, as well as a complete L'elisir d'amore with Sutherland.",
"His major breakthrough in the United States came on 17 February 1972, in a production of La fille du régiment at New York's Metropolitan Opera, in which he drove the crowd into a frenzy with his nine effortless high Cs in the signature aria.",
"He achieved a record seventeen curtain calls.",
"Pavarotti sang his international recital début at William Jewell College in Liberty, Missouri, on 1 February 1973, as part of the college's Fine Arts Program, now known as the Harriman–Jewell Series.",
"Perspiring due to nerves and a lingering cold, the tenor clutched a handkerchief throughout the début.",
"The prop became a signature part of his solo performances.",
"He began to give frequent television performances, starting with his performances as Rodolfo (La bohème) in the first Live from the Met telecast in March 1977, which attracted one of the largest audiences ever for a televised opera.",
"He won many Grammy awards and platinum and gold discs for his performances.",
"In addition to the previously listed titles, his La favorite with Fiorenza Cossotto and his I puritani (1975) with Sutherland stand out.",
"In 1976, Pavarotti debuted at the Salzburg Festival, appearing in a solo recital on 31 July, accompanied by pianist Leone Magiera.",
"Pavarotti returned to the festival in 1978 with a recital and as the Italian singer in Der Rosenkavalier in 1983 with Idomeneo, and both in 1985 and 1988 with solo recitals.",
"In 1979, he was profiled in a cover story in the weekly magazine Time.",
"That same year saw Pavarotti's return to the Vienna State Opera after an absence of fourteen years.",
"With Herbert von Karajan conducting, Pavarotti sang Manrico in Il trovatore.",
"In 1978, he appeared in a solo recital on Live from Lincoln Center.",
"Career: 1980s–1990s\nAt the beginning of the 1980s, he set up The Pavarotti International Voice Competition for young singers, performing with the winners in 1982 in excerpts of La bohème and L'elisir d'amore.",
"The second competition, in 1986, staged excerpts of La bohème and Un ballo in maschera.",
"To celebrate the 25th anniversary of his career, he brought the winners of the competition to Italy for gala performances of La bohème in Modena and Genoa, and then to China where they staged performances of La bohème in Beijing (Peking).",
"To conclude the visit, Pavarotti performed the inaugural concert in the Great Hall of the People before 10,000 people, receiving a standing ovation for nine effortless high Cs.",
"The third competition in 1989 again staged performances of L'elisir d'amore and Un ballo in maschera.",
"The winners of the fifth competition accompanied Pavarotti in performances in Philadelphia in 1997.",
"In the mid-1980s, Pavarotti returned to two opera houses that had provided him with important breakthroughs, the Vienna State Opera and La Scala.",
"Vienna saw Pavarotti as Rodolfo in La bohème with Carlos Kleiber conducting and again Mirella Freni was Mimi; as Nemorino in L'elisir d'amore; as Radames in Aida conducted by Lorin Maazel; as Rodolfo in Luisa Miller; and as Gustavo in Un ballo in maschera conducted by Claudio Abbado.",
"In 1996, Pavarotti appeared for the last time at the Staatsoper in Andrea Chénier.",
"Throughout the 1980s and 90s, promoters Tibor Rudas and Harvey Goldsmith booked Pavarotti into increasingly larger venues.",
"In 1985, Pavarotti sang Radames at La Scala opposite Maria Chiara in a Luca Ronconi production conducted by Maazel, recorded on video.",
"His performance of the aria \"Celeste Aida\" received a two-minute ovation on the opening night.",
"He was reunited with Mirella Freni for the San Francisco Opera production of La bohème in 1988, also recorded on video.",
"In 1992, La Scala saw Pavarotti in a new Zeffirelli production of Don Carlos, conducted by Riccardo Muti.",
"Pavarotti's performance was heavily criticised by some observers and booed by parts of the audience.",
"Pavarotti became even better known throughout the world in 1990 when his rendition of the aria \"Nessun dorma\" from Giacomo Puccini's Turandot was taken as the theme song of BBC's coverage of the 1990 FIFA World Cup in Italy.",
"The aria achieved pop status, became the World Cup soundtrack, and it remained his trademark song.",
"This was followed by the first Three Tenors concert, held on the eve of the 1990 FIFA World Cup Final at the ancient Baths of Caracalla in Rome with fellow tenors Plácido Domingo and José Carreras and conductor Zubin Mehta.",
"The performance for the World Cup closing concert captivated a global audience, and it became the biggest selling classical record of all time.",
"A highlight of the concert, in which Pavarotti sang the opening verses using extended vocal runs for di Capua's \"O Sole Mio\" and which was in turn perfectly repeated note-for-note by Domingo and Carreras to the delight of the audience.",
"The recorded album sold millions of copies, and the first Three Tenors recording became the best-selling classical album of all time.",
"Throughout the 1990s, Pavarotti appeared in many well-attended outdoor concerts, including his televised concert in London's Hyde Park, which drew a record attendance of 150,000.",
"In June 1993, more than 500,000 listeners gathered for his free performance on the Great Lawn of New York's Central Park, while millions more around the world watched on television.",
"The following September, in the shadow of the Eiffel Tower in Paris, he sang for an estimated crowd of 300,000.",
"Following on from the original 1990 concert, the Three Tenors concerts were held during the three subsequent FIFA World Cup Finals, in 1994 in Los Angeles, 1998 in Paris, and 2002 in Yokohama.",
"In September 1995, Pavarotti performed Schubert's Ave Maria along with Dolores O'Riordan; Diana, Princess of Wales, who attended the live performance, told O'Riordan that the song brought her to tears.",
"In 1995, Pavarotti's friends, the singer Lara Saint Paul (as Lara Cariaggi) and her husband showman Pier Quinto Cariaggi, who had produced and organised Pavarotti's 1990 FIFA World Cup Celebration Concert at the PalaTrussardi in Milan, produced and wrote the television documentary The Best is Yet to Come, an extensive biography about the life of Pavarotti.",
"Lara Saint Paul was the interviewer for the documentary with Pavarotti, who spoke candidly about his life and career.",
"Pavarotti's rise to stardom was not without occasional difficulties, however.",
"He earned a reputation as \"The King of Cancellations\" by frequently backing out of performances, and his unreliable nature led to poor relationships with some opera houses.",
"This was brought into focus in 1989 when Ardis Krainik of the Lyric Opera of Chicago severed the house's 15-year relationship with the tenor.",
"Over an eight-year period, Pavarotti had cancelled 26 out of 41 scheduled appearances at the Lyric, and the decisive move by Krainik to ban him for life was well noted throughout the opera world, after the performer walked away from a season premiere less than two weeks before rehearsals began, saying pain from a sciatic nerve required two months of treatment.",
"On 12 December 1998, he became the first (and, to date, only) opera singer to perform on Saturday Night Live, singing alongside Vanessa L. Williams.",
"He also sang with U2 in the band's 1995 song \"Miss Sarajevo\" and with Mercedes Sosa in a big concert at the Boca Juniors arena La Bombonera in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in 1999.",
"In 1998, Pavarotti was presented with the Grammy Legend Award.",
"Career: Early 2000s\n\nIn 2001, Pavarotti was acquitted in Italian court of a long standing dispute concerning his official country of residency and taxable earnings.",
"Pavarotti long claimed Monte Carlo in the tax haven of Monaco as his official residence, but an Italian court in 1999 had rejected that claim by ruling that his Monaco address could not accommodate his entire family.",
"In 2000 Pavarotti agreed to pay the Italian government more than $7.6 million in back taxes and penalties as a result of tax evasion charges that dated from 1989 to 1995.",
"Pavarotti was subsequently fully acquitted by an Italian court of filing false tax returns in 2001.",
"On 13 December 2003, he married his second wife and former personal assistant, Nicoletta Mantovani (born 1969), with whom he already had another daughter, Alice.",
"Alice's twin brother, Riccardo, was stillborn after complications in January 2003.",
"At the time of his death in September 2007, he was survived by his wife, his four daughters, and one granddaughter.",
"In late 2003, he released his final compilation—and his first and only \"crossover\" album, Ti Adoro.",
"Most of the 13 songs were written and produced by Michele Centonze, who had already helped produce the \"Pavarotti & Friends\" concerts between 1998 and 2000.",
"The tenor described the album as a wedding gift to Nicoletta Mantovani.",
"That same year he was made a Commander of Monaco's Order of Cultural Merit.",
"In 2004, one of Pavarotti's former managers, Herbert Breslin, published a book, The King & I.",
"Seen by critics as bitter and sensationalistic, it is critical of the singer's acting (in opera), his inability to read music well and learn parts, and his personal conduct, although acknowledging their success together.",
"In an interview in 2005 with Jeremy Paxman on the BBC, Pavarotti rejected the allegation that he could not read music, although he acknowledged he did not read orchestral scores.",
"He received an enormous number of awards and honours, including Kennedy Center Honors in 2001.",
"He also holds two Guinness World Records: one for receiving the most curtain calls (165) and another for the best-selling classical album (Carreras Domingo Pavarotti in Concert by the Three Tenors; the latter record is thus shared by fellow tenors Plácido Domingo and José Carreras).",
"Final performances and health issues\n\nPavarotti began his farewell tour in 2004, at the age of 69, performing one last time in old and new locations, after more than four decades on the stage.",
"On 13 March 2004, Pavarotti gave his last performance in an opera at the New York Metropolitan Opera, for which he received a long standing ovation for his role as the painter Mario Cavaradossi in Giacomo Puccini's Tosca.",
"On 1 December 2004, he announced a 40-city farewell tour.",
"Pavarotti and his manager, Terri Robson, commissioned impresario Harvey Goldsmith to produce the Worldwide Farewell Tour.",
"His last full-scale performance was at the end of a two-month Australasian tour in Taiwan in December 2005.",
"In March 2005, Pavarotti underwent neck surgery to repair two vertebrae.",
"In early 2006, he underwent further back surgery and contracted an infection while in the hospital in New York, forcing cancellation of concerts in the U.S., Canada, and the U.K.\n\nOn 10 February 2006, Pavarotti performed \"Nessun dorma\" at the 2006 Winter Olympics opening ceremony in Turin, Italy, at his final performance.",
"In the last act of the opening ceremony, his performance received the longest and loudest ovation of the night from the international crowd.",
"Leone Magiera, who directed the performance, revealed in his 2008 memoirs, Pavarotti Visto da Vicino, that the performance had been recorded weeks earlier.",
"\"The orchestra pretended to play for the audience, I pretended to conduct and Luciano pretended to sing.",
"The effect was wonderful,\" he wrote.",
"Pavarotti's manager, Terri Robson, said that the tenor had turned the Winter Olympic Committee's invitation down several times because it would have been impossible to sing late at night in the subzero conditions of Turin in February.",
"The committee eventually persuaded him to take part by prerecording the song.",
"Death\n\nWhile proceeding with an international \"farewell tour\", Pavarotti was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in July 2006.",
"The tenor fought back against the implications of this diagnosis, undergoing major abdominal surgery and making plans for the resumption and conclusion of his singing commitments, but he died at his home in Modena on 6 September 2007.",
"After his death, his manager, Terri Robson, noted in a statement, \"The Maestro fought a long, tough battle against the pancreatic cancer which eventually took his life.",
"In fitting with the approach that characterised his life and work, he remained positive until finally succumbing to the last stages of his illness\".",
"Pavarotti's funeral was held at Modena Cathedral.",
"The then Prime Minister Romano Prodi and Kofi Annan attended.",
"The Frecce Tricolori, the aerobatic demonstration team of the Italian Air Force, flew overhead, leaving green-white-red smoke trails.",
"After a funeral procession through the centre of Modena, Pavarotti's coffin was taken the final to Montale Rangone, a village part of Castelnuovo Rangone, and was interred in the Pavarotti family crypt.",
"The funeral, in its entirety, was also telecast live on CNN.",
"The Vienna State Opera and the Salzburg Festival Hall flew black flags in mourning.",
"Tributes were published by many opera houses, such as London's Royal Opera House.",
"Other work\n\nFilm and television\n\nPavarotti's one venture into film was Yes, Giorgio (1982), a romantic comedy movie directed by Franklin J. Schaffner, in which he starred as the main character Giorgio Fini.",
"The film was a critical and commercial failure, although it received an Academy Award nomination for Best Music, Original Song.",
"He can be seen to better advantage in Jean-Pierre Ponnelle's adaptation of Rigoletto for television, released that same year, or in his more than 20 live opera performances taped for television between 1978 and 1994, most of them with the Metropolitan Opera, and most available on DVD.",
"He received two Primetime Emmy Awards for his PBS variety specials Pavarotti in Philadelphia: La Boheme and Duke of Mantua, Rigoletto Great Performances.",
"Pavarotti, a 2019 documentary film about him, was directed by Ron Howard and produced with the cooperation of Pavarotti's estate using family archives, interviews and live music footage.",
"Humanitarianism\n\nPavarotti annually hosted the Pavarotti & Friends charity concerts in his home town of Modena Italy, joining with singers from all parts of the music industry, including B.B.",
"King, Andrea Bocelli, Zucchero, Jon Bon Jovi, Bryan Adams, Bono, James Brown, Mariah Carey, Eric Clapton, Dolores O'Riordan, Sheryl Crow, Céline Dion, Anastacia, Elton John, Deep Purple, Meat Loaf, Queen, George Michael, Tracy Chapman, the Spice Girls, Sting and Barry White to raise money for several UN causes.",
"Concerts were held for War Child, and victims of war and civil unrest in Bosnia, Guatemala, Kosovo and Iraq.",
"After the war in Bosnia, he financed and established the Pavarotti Music Centre in the southern city of Mostar to offer Bosnia's artists the opportunity to develop their skills.",
"For these contributions, the city of Sarajevo named him an honorary citizen in 2006.",
"He performed at benefit concerts to raise money for victims of tragedies such as the Spitak earthquake that killed 25,000 people in northern Armenia in December 1988, and sang Gounod's Ave Maria with legendary French pop music star and ethnic Armenian Charles Aznavour.",
"He was a close friend of Diana, Princess of Wales.",
"They raised money for the elimination of land mines worldwide.",
"In 1998, he was appointed the United Nations Messenger of Peace, using his fame to raise awareness of UN issues, including the Millennium Development Goals, HIV/AIDS, child rights, urban slums and poverty.",
"In 1999, Pavarotti performed a charity benefit concert in Beirut, to mark Lebanon's re-emergence on the world stage after a brutal 15-year civil war.",
"The largest concert held in Beirut since the end of the war, it was attended by 20,000 people who travelled from countries as distant as Saudi Arabia and Bulgaria.",
"In 1999 he also hosted a charity benefit concert to build a school in Guatemala, for Guatemalan civil war orphans.",
"It was named after him Centro Educativo Pavarotti.",
"Now the foundation of nobel prize winner Rigoberta Menchú Tum is running the school.",
"In 2001, Pavarotti received the Nansen Medal from the UN High Commission for Refugees for his efforts raising money on behalf of refugees worldwide.",
"Through benefit concerts and volunteer work, he has raised more than any other individual.",
"Also in 2001, Pavarotti was chosen one of that year's five recipients by the President and First Lady as an honoree for their lifetime achievements in the arts at the White House, followed by the Kennedy Center; the Kennedy Center Honors, He was surprised by the appearance of Secretary-General of the United Nations and that year's winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, Kofi Annan, who lauded him for his contribution to humankind.",
"Six months prior, Pavarotti had held a large charity concert for Afghan refugees, particularly children in his home town of Modena, Italy.",
"Other honours he received include the \"Freedom of London Award\" and The Red Cross \"Award for Services to Humanity\", for his work in raising money for that organisation, and the 1998 \"MusiCares Person of the Year\", given to humanitarian heroes by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences.",
"He was a National Patron of Delta Omicron, an international professional music fraternity.",
"Legacy and estate assignment\nHis first will was opened the day after his death; a second will was opened within the same month of September.",
"He left an estate outside his native Modena (now a museum), a villa in Pesaro, his flat in Monte Carlo, and three flats in New York City.",
"Pavarotti's widow's lawyers, Giorgio Bernini and Anna Maria Bernini, and manager Terri Robson announced on 30 June 2008 that his family amicably settled his estate—€300 million ($474.2 million, including $15 million in U.S. assets).",
"Pavarotti drafted two wills before his death: one divided his assets by Italian law, giving half to his second wife, Nicoletta Mantovani, and half to his four daughters; the second gave his U.S. holdings to Mantovani.",
"The judge confirmed the compromise by the end of July 2008.",
"However, a Pesaro public prosecutor, Massimo di Patria, investigated allegations that Pavarotti was not of sound mind when he signed the will.",
"Pavarotti's estate has been settled \"fairly\", a lawyer for Mantovani said in statements after reports of a dispute between her and his three daughters from his first marriage.",
"He posthumously received the Italy-USA Foundation's America Award in 2013 and the Brit Award for Outstanding Contribution to Music in 2014.",
"Selected discography\n\nIn addition to his very large discography of opera performances Pavarotti also made many classical crossover and pop recordings, the Pavarotti & Friends series of concerts and, for Decca, a series of studio recital albums: first six albums of opera arias and then, from 1979, six albums of Italian song.",
"Studio recital albums\n Favourite Italian Arias – Arias from La Bohème, Tosca and Rigoletto.",
"Orchestra of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden Edward Downes Decca Records 1966\n Arias by Verdi & Donizetti – Arias from Luisa Miller, I due Foscari, Un ballo in maschera, Macbeth, Lucia di Lammermoor, Il duca d’Alba, La favorita and Don Sebastiano (with the Wiener Opernorchester under Edward Downes, 1968).",
"Tenor Arias from Italian Opera – Arias from Guglielmo Tell, I puritani, Il trovatore, L'arlesiana, La bohème, Mefistofele, Don Pasquale, La Gioconda and Giuseppe Pietri's :it:Maristella.",
"Luciano Pavarotti tenor with Arleen Auger soprano.",
"Leone Magiera (piano) Wiener Opernorchester and choir.",
"Ambrosian Singers New Philharmonia Orchestra Nicola Rescigno 1971\n The World's Favourite Tenor Arias – Tosca, Carmen, Aida, Faust, Pagliacci, Martha.",
"Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.",
"Wiener Volksoper Orchester.",
"Leone Magiera.",
"New Philharmonia Orchestra Richard Bonynge 1973\n Pavarotti in Concert – Arias and songs by Bononcini, Handel, Alessandro Scarlatti, Bellini, Tosti, Respighi, Rossini.",
"Orchestra del Teatro Comunale di Bologna.",
"Richard Bonynge.",
"1973\n O Holy Night – Songs and carols by Adam, Stradella, Franck, Mercadante, Schubert, Bach (arranged Gounod), Bizet, Berlioz, Pietro Yon, Alois Melichar.",
"Wandsworth School Boys' Choir.",
"London Voices.",
"National Philharmonic Orchestra, Kurt Herbert Adler 1976\n O Sole Mio – Favourite Neapolitan Songs 13 songs by Eduardo di Capua: O sole mio Francesco Paolo Tosti: 'A vucchella, Enrico Cannio: O surdato 'nnammurato, :it:Salvatore Gambardella: O marenariello, Traditional: Fenesta vascia, Tosti: A Marechiare, Ernesto de Curtis: Torna a Surriento, Gaetano Errico Pennino: Pecchè?, Vincenzo d'Annibale: O paese d' 'o sole, Ernesto Tagliaferri: Piscatore 'e Pusilleco, Curtis: :it:Tu ca nun chiagne, Capua: Maria, Mari, Luigi Denza: Funiculì funiculà.",
"Orchestra del Teatro Comunale di Bologna Anton Guadagno National Philharmonic Orchestra :it:Giancarlo Chiaramello 1979\n Verismo – Arias from Fedora, Mefistofele, Adriana Lecouvreur, Iris, L'Africaine, Werther, La fanciulla del West, Manon Lescaut, Andrea Chénier.",
"National Philharmonic Orchestra Oliviero de Fabritiis (Riccardo Chailly for Andrea Chénier arias) 1979\n Mattinata – 14 songs by Caldara, formerly attrib.",
"Pergolesi, probably by Vincenzo Ciampi: Tre giorni son che Nina, Bellini, Tommaso Giordani, Rossini, Gluck, Tosti, Donizetti, Leoncavallo, Beethoven and Francesco Durante.",
"Philharmonia Orchestra Piero Gamba National Philharmonic Orchestra.",
"Antonio Tonini (conductor) 1983\n Mamma – songs by Cesare Andrea Bixio, Ernesto de Curtis, Arturo Buzzi-Peccia, Stanislao Gastaldon, Cesare Cesarini, A. Walter Kramer, Carlo Innocenzi, Giovanni D'Anzi, Eldo di Lazzaro, Vincenzo De Crescenzo, Domenico Martuzzi, Aniello Califano, Colombino Arona.",
"Arranged and conducted by Henry Mancini, 1984.",
"Passione – 12 songs by Ernesto Tagliaferri, Paolo Tosti, :it:Pasquale Mario Costa, Teodoro Cottrau, :it:Evemero Nardella, Rodolfo Falvo, De Curtis, Di Capua, E. A. Mario, Gaetano Lama and Salvatore Cardillo.",
"Orchestra del Teatro Comunale di Bologna.",
"Giancarlo Chiaramello 1985\n Volare – 16 songs by Domenico Modugno, Luigi Denza, Cesare Andrea Bixio, Gabriele Sibella, Giovanni D'Anzi, Michael John Bonagura, Edoardo Mascheroni, Ernesto De Curtis, Ermenegildo Ruccione, Pietro Mascagni, Guido Maria Ferilli.",
"arranged and conducted by Henry Mancini 1987\n Ti Adoro – songs by Romano Musumarra, Carlo Mioli, Ornella D'Urbano, Michele Centonze, Andrea Bellantani, Daniel Vuletic, Veris Giannetti, Nino Rota/Elsa Morante, Edoardo Bennato, Hans Zimmer/Gavin Greenaway/Jeffrey Pescetto, Lucio Dalla.",
"Royal Philharmonic Orchestra Orchestra di Roma.",
"Bulgarian Symphony Orchestra.",
"Romano Musumarra Giancarlo Chiaramello, 2000\n\nSelected videography\n Mozart: Idomeneo (1982), Deutsche Grammophon DVD, 00440-073-4234, 2006\n The Metropolitan Opera Centennial Gala (1983), Deutsche Grammophon DVD, 00440-073-4538, 2009\n The Metropolitan Opera Gala 1991, Deutsche Grammophon DVD, 00440-073-4582, 2010\n\nAwards and honors\n\nGrammy Awards \nThe Grammy Awards are awarded annually by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences."
] | [
"Luciano Pavarotti became one of the most acclaimed and loved singers of all time after crossing over into popular music during the late part of his career.",
"He achieved the honorific title \"King of the High Cs\" by making numerous recordings of complete operas and individual arias.",
"One of the Three Tenors, Pavarotti became well known for his televised concerts and media appearances.",
"In bel canto operas, pre-Aida Verdi roles, and Puccini works, Luciano Pavarotti was at his best.",
"The first Three Tenors recording became the best-selling classical album of all time after selling over 100 million records.",
"Pavarotti was noted for his charity work on behalf of refugees.",
"He died from cancer.",
"Luciano Pavarotti was born in 1935 on the outskirts of Modena in Northern Italy, the son of a baker and a cigar factory worker.",
"The family had little money and was crowded into a two-room apartment.",
"According to Pavarotti, his father rejected the idea of a singing career because of shyness.",
"The family was forced out of the city during World War II.",
"The young Pavarotti developed an interest in farming after they rented a single room from the farmer.",
"Pavarotti spent seven years in vocal training after abandoning his dream of becoming a football goalkeeper.",
"Most of the popular singers of the day were featured on Pavarotti's father's records.",
"Giuseppe Di Stefano was Pavarotti's favourite singer and he used to imitate him in the mirror when he was younger.",
"At the age of nine, he began singing with his father in a church choir.",
"Pavarotti enjoyed playing football as a child.",
"After graduating from Scuola Magistrale, he wanted to become a professional football goalkeeper, but his mother convinced him to become a teacher.",
"After teaching in an elementary school for two years, he decided to pursue a music career.",
"His father reluctantly gave his consent.",
"Arrigo Pola, a respected teacher and professional singer in Modena, offered to teach Pavarotti without remuneration at the age of 19 when he began the serious study of music.",
"Pavarotti never learned to read music according to Richard Bonynge.",
"He experienced his first singing success in 1955 when he was a member of the Corale Rossini, a male voice choir from Modena that also included his father, which won first prize at the International Eisteddfod.",
"He said that this experience inspired him to become a professional singer.",
"Pavarotti first met Adua Veroni.",
"They were married in 1961.",
"When Arrigo Pola moved to Japan, Pavarotti became a student of Ettore Campogalliani, who was also a childhood friend of Luciano's mother.",
"They would go on to collaborate in various stage performances and recordings together after they became successful opera singers.",
"Pavarotti was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"In the first six years of study, there were only a few recitals in small towns.",
"He gave up singing after a vocal cord problem caused a disastrous concert in Ferrara.",
"Pavarotti attributed his immediate improvement to the decision.",
"He said in his autobiography that \"everything I had learned came together with my natural voice to make the sound I had been struggling so hard to achieve\".",
"In April 1961, Pavarotti made his opera debut as Rodolfo in La bohme at the Teatro Municipale in Reggio Emilia.",
"The first known recording of \"Che gelida manina\" was made during this performance.",
"The first wife of Pavarotti was Adua Veroni and they had three daughters.",
"He made his international debut in Serbia.",
"He made his debut at the Vienna State Opera in the same role.",
"In March and April 1963, Vienna saw Pavarotti as Rodolfo and Duca di Mantova in Rigoletto.",
"He was engaged by the Dublin Grand Opera Society to sing The Duke of Mantua in Verdi's Rigoletto in May and June, after he had performed for the St Cecilia's Gramophone Society in Ireland.",
"There are three complete performances from Pavarotti's early career in 1964, when he was engaged by the Dublin Grand Opera Society to sing in La bohme.",
"The reviews of those performances in which the reviewers liked his singing include \"sang sweetly and appealingly,\" \"rich promise,\" \"outstanding,\" \"fit for the big heroic roles,\" and \"robust;\" his voice.",
"Pavarotti's early roles did not immediately propel him into the stardom that he would later enjoy.",
"He had a connection with Joan and her husband, Richard Bonynge, who were looking for a taller singer to accompany them on their tour of Australia.",
"Pavarotti was ideal because of his physical presence.",
"In February 1965, Pavarotti made his American debut with the Greater Miami Opera, singing in Donizetti's Lucia di Lammermoor on the stage of the Miami-Dade County Auditorium in Miami.",
"The opera singer became ill with no understudy.",
"She recommended the young Pavarotti as he was familiar with the role, as he was going to travel with him on the Australia tour.",
"The revival of the famous Franco Zeffirelli production of La bohme had Pavarotti singing and Herbert von Karajan conducting.",
"The singer's engagement was requested by Karajan.",
"During the Australia tour in summer 1965, Pavarotti credited Sutherland with the breathing technique that would sustain him over the course of his career.",
"He added Tebaldo from I Capuleti e i Montecchi to his collection on March 26, 1966, with the help of Giacomo Aragall.",
"The Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, hosted his first appearance as Tonio in Donizetti's La fille du regiment on 2 June of that year.",
"His performances in this role earned him the title of \"King of the High Cs\".",
"He won a major victory in Rome on 20 November 1969 when he sang in I Lombardi.",
"Various recordings of his I Capuleti e i Montecchi, usually with Aragall, were recorded on a private label and widely distributed.",
"A complete L'elisir d'amore was included on the early recordings, as well as a recital of Donizetti and Verdi arias.",
"On 17 February 1972, in a production of La fille du régiment at New York's Metropolitan Opera, he drove the crowd into a frenzy with his nine effortless high Cs in the signature aria.",
"He made a record seventeen curtain calls.",
"On 1 February 1973, Pavarotti performed at William Jewell College in Liberty, Missouri, as part of the college's Fine Arts Program.",
"The tenor clutched a handkerchief throughout the début due to nerves and a cold.",
"The prop was a signature part of his performances.",
"One of the largest audiences ever for a televised opera was attracted by his performance as Rodolfo in the first Live from the Met telecast in March 1977.",
"He won many awards for his performances.",
"His La favorite with Cossotto and Ipuritani are two titles that stand out.",
"Pavarotti appeared in a solo recital on July 31, 1976, at the Salzburg Festival.",
"Pavarotti returned to the festival in 1978 with a recital, and in 1983 with Idomeneo, and in 1985 and 1988 with solo recitals.",
"He was profiled in a magazine in 1979.",
"Pavarotti returned to the Vienna State Opera after fourteen years.",
"Manrico was sung by Pavarotti with Herbert von Karajan conducting.",
"He appeared on Live from Lincoln Center in 1978.",
"At the beginning of the 1980s, he set up The Pavarotti International Voice Competition for young singers, performing with the winners in excerpts of La bohme and L'elisir d'amore.",
"In 1986, excerpts of La bohme and Un ballo in maschera were staged.",
"To celebrate the 25th anniversary of his career, he brought the winners of the competition to Italy for a performance of La bohme, and then to China for a performance of La bohme.",
"Pavarotti received a standing ovation when he performed in the Great Hall of the People.",
"The performances of L'elisir d'amore and Un ballo in maschera were staged again in 1989.",
"Pavarotti performed in Philadelphia in 1997 with the winners of the fifth competition.",
"The Vienna State Opera and La Scala provided Pavarotti with important breakthrough in his career.",
"In Vienna, Pavarotti was Rodolfo in La bohme with Carlos Kleiber conducting, as well as in Aida and L'elisir d'amore.",
"The last time Pavarotti was at the opera was in 1996.",
"Pavarotti was booked into larger venues by Rudas and Goldsmith.",
"In 1985, Pavarotti sang at La Scala in a Luca Ronconi production.",
"His performance of the aria \"Celeste Aida\" received a two-minute applause.",
"The San Francisco Opera production of La bohme was recorded on video.",
"Pavarotti appeared in a new Zeffirelli production of Don Carlos in 1992.",
"Pavarotti's performance was booed by some in the audience.",
"The aria \"Nessun dorma\" from Turandot was taken as the theme song of the 1990 FIFA World Cup in Italy and became even better known throughout the world.",
"His trademark song was the aria, which became the World Cup soundtrack.",
"The first Three Tenors concert was held on the eve of the 1990 World Cup Final at the ancient Baths of Caracalla in Rome, with Placido Domingo and José Carreras in attendance.",
"The performance for the World Cup closing concert became the biggest selling classical record of all time.",
"The highlight of the concert was when Pavarotti used extended vocal runs for di Capua's \"O Sole Mio\" and Domingo and Carreras used perfectly repeated note-for-note to delight the audience.",
"The recorded album sold millions of copies, and the first Three Tenors recording became the best-selling classical album of all time.",
"During the 1990s, Pavarotti appeared in many outdoor concerts, including his televised concert in London's Hyde Park, which drew a record attendance of 150,000.",
"More than half a million people listened to his performance on the Great Lawn of New York's Central Park, while millions more watched on television.",
"He performed in front of 300,000 people in the shadow of the Eiffel Tower in Paris.",
"In 1994 in Los Angeles, 1998 in Paris, and 2002 in Yokohama, the Three Tenors concerts were held, following on from the original 1990 concert.",
"Diana, Princess of Wales, who attended the live performance, told O'Riordan that the song brought her to tears.",
"The concert produced by Pavarotti's friends, the singer and her husband showman Pier Quinto Cariaggi, was held at the PalaTrussardi in Milan in 1995.",
"Pavarotti spoke candidly about his life and career in the documentary.",
"There were occasional difficulties in Pavarotti's rise to fame.",
"He was known as \"The King of Cancellations\" due to his unreliable nature and poor relationships with some opera houses.",
"Ardis Krainik of the Lyric Opera of Chicago severed the house's 15-year relationship with the singer in 1989.",
"The decision by Krainik to ban Pavarotti for life, after he walked away from a season premiere less than two weeks before rehearsals began, was well known throughout the opera world.",
"He was the first opera singer to perform on Saturday Night Live.",
"In 1995 he sang with U2 in their song \"Miss Sarajevo\" and in 1999 he performed with Mercedes Sosa at the La Bombonera arena.",
"Pavarotti received a Legend Award.",
"In 2001, Pavarotti was acquitted in an Italian court of a long standing dispute about his official country of residency.",
"An Italian court ruled in 1999 that Pavarotti's Monaco address couldn't accommodate his entire family and that he should not have claimed Monte Carlo as his official residence.",
"In 2000 Pavarotti agreed to pay the Italian government more than $7 million in back taxes and penalties as a result of tax evasion charges from 1989 to 1995.",
"The Italian court found Pavarotti not guilty of filing false tax returns.",
"He married his second wife, Nicoletta Mantovani, on December 13, 2003 with whom he already had another daughter, Alice.",
"The twin brother of Alice was stillborn.",
"He was survived by his wife, four daughters, and one granddaughter.",
"Ti Adoro was his first and only \"crossover\" album.",
"Most of the songs were written and produced by Centonze, who helped produce the \"Pavarotti & Friends\" concerts between 1998 and 2000.",
"The album was a wedding gift.",
"He was made a Commander of Monaco's Order of Cultural Merit.",
"Herbert Breslin, one of Pavarotti's former managers, published a book in 2004.",
"It is critical of the singer's acting in opera, his inability to read music well and learn parts, and his personal conduct, although acknowledging their success together.",
"In an interview with Jeremy Paxman in 2005, Pavarotti denied that he couldn't read music.",
"He was honoured by the Kennedy Center in 2001.",
"He holds two Guinness World Records, one for receiving the most curtain calls and the other for the best-selling classical album.",
"After more than four decades on the stage, Pavarotti began his farewell tour in 2004, at the age of 69, performing one last time in old and new locations.",
"On 13 March 2004, Pavarotti gave his last performance in an opera at the New York Metropolitan Opera, for which he received a long standing ovation.",
"On December 1, 2004, he announced a farewell tour.",
"Harvey Goldsmith was commissioned by Pavarotti and his manager to produce the Worldwide Farewell Tour.",
"His last full-scale performance was at the end of a two-month tour in Taiwan.",
"In March 2005, Pavarotti had neck surgery.",
"He had back surgery in New York in early 2006 and had to cancel concerts in the US, Canada, and the UK.",
"His performance received the longest and loudest applause of the night from the international crowd.",
"In his 2008 memoirs, Pavarotti Visto da Vicino, Leone Magiera revealed that the performance had been recorded weeks earlier.",
"The orchestra pretended to play for the audience, I pretended to conduct and Luciano pretended to sing.",
"He wrote that the effect was wonderful.",
"Pavarotti turned down several invitations from the Winter Olympic Committee because it would have been difficult to sing in the cold in February, according to his manager.",
"He was persuaded to prerecord the song by the committee.",
"Pavarotti was diagnosed with cancer in July of 2006 while he was on a farewell tour.",
"He died at his home in Modena on 6 September 2007, after undergoing major abdominal surgery and making plans for the restart and conclusion of his singing commitments.",
"After his death, his manager stated, \"The Maestro fought a long, tough battle against the cancer which eventually took his life.\"",
"He remained positive until he succumbed to the last stages of his illness.",
"The funeral of Pavarotti was held at the cathedral.",
"The Prime Minister and the Secretary of State attended.",
"The Italian Air Force's Frecce Tricolori flew overhead, leaving green-white-red smoke trails.",
"The Pavarotti family crypt was the final resting place of Pavarotti after a funeral procession through the centre of Modena.",
"CNN broadcasted the funeral in its entirety.",
"Black flags were flown at the Vienna State Opera and the Salzburg Festival Hall.",
"The Royal Opera House in London published a tribute.",
"Pavarotti starred as Giorgio Fini in Yes, Giorgio, a romantic comedy movie directed by Franklin J. Schaffner.",
"The film received an Academy Award nomination for Best Music, Original Song, but it was a failure.",
"He can be seen to better advantage in Jean-Pierre Ponnelle's adaptation of Rigoletto for television, released that same year, or in his more than 20 live opera performances taped for television between 1978 and 1994, most of them with the Metropolitan Opera.",
"He received two Primetime Emmy Awards for his PBS variety specials.",
"The documentary film about Pavarotti was directed by Ron Howard and produced with the cooperation of Pavarotti's estate using family archives, interviews and live music footage.",
"The Pavarotti & Friends charity concerts were hosted by Pavarotti in his home town of Modena Italy.",
"King, Zucchero, Jon Bon Jovi, Bryan Adams, Bono, James Brown, and more.",
"War Child and victims of war and civil unrest in Bosnia, Kosovo, and Iraq were the subject of concerts.",
"After the war in Bosnia, he financed and established the Pavarotti Music Centre in the southern city of Mostar to give Bosnia's artists the opportunity to develop their skills.",
"The city of Sarajevo named him an \"honorary citizen\" for his contributions.",
"He performed at benefit concerts to raise money for victims of tragedies such as the Spitak earthquake that killed 25,000 people in northern Armenia in December 1988, and sang Gounod's Ave Maria with Charles Aznavour.",
"He was a close friend of Diana.",
"They raised money to rid the world of land mines.",
"He used his fame to raise awareness of UN issues, including the Millennium Development Goals, HIV/AIDS, child rights, urban slums and poverty.",
"In 1999, Pavarotti performed a charity benefit concert in Lebanon to celebrate the end of the civil war.",
"The largest concert held in Lebanon since the end of the war was attended by 20,000 people who traveled from all over the world.",
"He hosted a charity benefit concert in 1999 to build a school for civil war orphans.",
"It was named after him.",
"The school is being run by the foundation of nobel prize winner Rigoberta Mench Tum.",
"The UN High Commission for Refugees gave Pavarotti a medal for raising money for refugees.",
"He has raised more than any other person.",
"The President and First Lady of the United States chose Pavarotti as one of five recipients for their lifetime achievements in the arts in 2001, and he was surprised by the Secretary-General's appearance.",
"In the summer of 2015, Pavarotti held a charity concert for Afghan refugees in his home town of Modena, Italy.",
"He received the \"Freedom of London Award\" and The Red Cross \"Award for Services to Humanity\", as well as the 1998 \"MusiCares Person of the Year\" by the National Academy of Recording Arts.",
"He was a national patron of Delta Omicron.",
"His first will was opened the day after he died, and a second one a month later.",
"He left an estate outside his native Modena, a villa in Pesaro, a flat in Monte Carlo, and three flats in New York City.",
"On June 30, 2008, Giorgio Bernini and Anna Maria Bernini announced that Pavarotti's family had amicably settled his estate for 300 million.",
"Pavarotti split his assets according to Italian law, giving half to his second wife, Nicoletta Mantovani, and the other half to his four daughters.",
"The compromise was confirmed by the judge by the end of July.",
"There were allegations that Pavarotti wasn't sound mind when he signed the will.",
"A lawyer for Mantovani said that Pavarotti's estate has been settled fairly after reports of a dispute between her and his three daughters from his first marriage.",
"He received the Italy-USA Foundation's America Award and the Brit Award for Outstanding Contribution to Music posthumously.",
"In addition to his large discography of opera performances, Pavarotti made many classical crossover and pop recordings, the Pavarotti & Friends series of concerts and a series of studio recital albums.",
"The studio recital albums have some of the best Italian operas.",
"Edward Downes Decca Records has an Orchestra of the Royal Opera House.",
"Giuseppe Pietri's operas include Guglielmo Tell, I puritani, Il trovatore, L'arlesiana, La bohme, Mefistofele and Don Pasquale.",
"Luciano Pavarotti has a Soprano.",
"There is a choir and a piano.",
"The world's favourite opera is The World's favourite opera is The World's favourite opera is The World's favourite opera is The World's favourite opera is The World's favourite opera is The World's favourite opera is The World's favourite opera is The World",
"The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra plays music.",
"The Orchester Volksoper.",
"The person is Leone Magiera.",
"The Pavarotti in Concert was performed by the New Philharmonia Orchestra Richard Bonynge.",
"The Teatro Comunale di Bologna has an orchestra.",
"The man is Richard Bonynge.",
"The O Holy Night is a collection of songs and carols.",
"The choir is from the Wandsworth School.",
"London voices.",
"Eduardo di Capua wrote 13 songs for the National Philharmonic Orchestra.",
"The Teatro Comunale di Bologna has a National Philharmonic Orchestra.",
"Mattinata is 14 songs by Caldara, formerly attrib.",
"Vincenzo Ciampi is probably the author of Pergolesi.",
"The Piero Gamba National Philharmonic Orchestra is part of the Philharmonia Orchestra.",
"Cesare Cesarini and Stanislao Gastaldon wrote the songs for the movie.",
"It was conducted by Henry Mancini.",
":it:Pasquale Mario Costa, Teodoro Cottrau, Rodolfo Falvo, Di Capua, E. A. Mario.",
"The Teatro Comunale di Bologna has an orchestra.",
"There are 16 songs by Domenico Modugno, Luigi Denza, Cesare Bixio, Gabriele Sibella, Giovanni D'Anzi, Michael John Bonagura, Edoardo Mascheroni, and Ermenegildo Rucci.",
"Ti Adoro was arranged and conducted by Henry Mancini.",
"The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra is based in Rome.",
"The orchestra is from Bulgaria.",
"The Metropolitan Opera Gala 1991,Deutsche Grammophon DVD, and Mozart: Idomeneo are examples of selected videography."
] | <mask> (, , ; 12 October 19356 September 2007) was an Italian operatic tenor who during the late part of his career crossed over into popular music, eventually becoming one of the most acclaimed and loved tenors of all time. He made numerous recordings of complete operas and individual arias, gaining worldwide fame for his tone, and achieving the honorific title "King of the High Cs". As one of the Three Tenors, who performed their first concert during the 1990 FIFA World Cup before a global audience, <mask> became well known for his televised concerts and media appearances. From the beginning of his professional career as a tenor in 1961 in Italy to his final performance of "Nessun dorma" at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Pavarotti was at his best in bel canto operas, pre-Aida Verdi roles, and Puccini works such as La bohème, Tosca, Turandot and Madama Butterfly. He sold over 100 million records, and the first Three Tenors recording became the best-selling classical album of all time. <mask> was also noted for his charity work on behalf of refugees and the Red Cross, amongst others. He died from pancreatic cancer on 6 September 2007.Biography
Early life and musical training
<mask> was born in 1935 on the outskirts of Modena in Northern Italy, the son of <mask>, a baker and amateur tenor, and Adele Venturi, a cigar factory worker. Although he spoke fondly of his childhood, the family had little money; its four members were crowded into a two-room apartment. According to Pavarotti, his father had a fine tenor voice but rejected the possibility of a singing career because of nervousness. World War II forced the family out of the city in 1943. For the following year they rented a single room from a farmer in the neighbouring countryside, where the young Pavarotti developed an interest in farming. After abandoning the dream of becoming a football goalkeeper, Pavarotti spent seven years in vocal training. Pavarotti's earliest musical influences were his father's records, most of them featuring the popular tenors of the day—Beniamino Gigli, Giovanni Martinelli, Tito Schipa, and Enrico Caruso.Pavarotti's favourite tenor and idol was Giuseppe Di Stefano and he was also deeply influenced by Mario Lanza, saying: "In my teens I used to go to Mario Lanza movies and then come home and imitate him in the mirror". At around the age of nine he began singing with his father in a small local church choir. In addition to music, as a child Pavarotti enjoyed playing football. When he graduated from the Scuola Magistrale he was interested in pursuing a career as a professional football goalkeeper, but his mother convinced him to train as a teacher. He subsequently taught in an elementary school for two years but finally decided to pursue a music career. His father, recognising the risk involved, only reluctantly gave his consent. Pavarotti began the serious study of music in 1954 at the age of 19 with Arrigo Pola, a respected teacher and professional tenor in Modena who offered to teach him without remuneration.According to conductor Richard Bonynge, Pavarotti never learned to read music. In 1955, he experienced his first singing success when he was a member of the Corale Rossini, a male voice choir from Modena that also included his father, which won first prize at the International Eisteddfod in Llangollen, Wales. He later said that this was the most important experience of his life, and that it inspired him to become a professional singer. At about this time Pavarotti first met Adua Veroni. They married in 1961. When his teacher Arrigo Pola moved to Japan, Pavarotti became a student of Ettore Campogalliani, who at that time was also teaching Pavarotti's childhood friend, Mirella Freni, whose mother worked with <mask>'s mother in the cigar factory. Like Pavarotti, Freni went on to become a successful opera singer; they would go on to collaborate in various stage performances and recordings together.During his years of musical study, <mask> held part-time jobs in order to sustain himself—first as an elementary school teacher and then as an insurance salesman. The first six years of study resulted in only a few recitals, all in small towns and without pay. When a nodule developed on his vocal cords, causing a "disastrous" concert in Ferrara, he decided to give up singing. Pavarotti attributed his immediate improvement to the psychological release connected with this decision. Whatever the reason, the nodule not only disappeared but, as he related in his autobiography: "Everything I had learned came together with my natural voice to make the sound I had been struggling so hard to achieve". Career: 1960s–1970s
<mask> began his career as a tenor in smaller regional Italian opera houses, making his debut as Rodolfo in La bohème at the Teatro Municipale in Reggio Emilia in April 1961. His first known recording of "Che gelida manina" was recorded during this performance.Pavarotti's first of two marriages was to his first wife Adua Veroni which lasted from 1961 to 2000 and they had three daughters: Lorenza, Cristina, and Giuliana. He made his first international appearance in La traviata in Belgrade, Yugoslavia. Very early in his career, on 23 February 1963, he debuted at the Vienna State Opera in the same role. In March and April 1963 Vienna saw <mask> again as Rodolfo and as Duca di Mantova in Rigoletto. The same year saw his first concert outside Italy when he sang in Dundalk, Ireland for the St Cecilia's Gramophone Society, he was engaged by the Dublin Grand Opera Society to sing The Duke of Mantua in Verdi's Rigoletto in May and June, and his Royal Opera House debut, where he replaced an indisposed Giuseppe Di Stefano as Rodolfo. There exist on archive.org three complete performances from <mask>'s early career in 1964, when he was engaged by the Dublin Grand Opera Society to sing Rudolfo in Giacomo Puccini's La bohème (Audio recording of LA BOHEME Presented on May 19, 21, 27, Jun 1 1964 at the Gaiety Theatre Dublin as part of the Dublin Grand Opera Society’s Spring Season) and Alfredo in Giuseppe Verdi's La Traviata (Audio recording of LA TRAVIATA Presented on Jun 8 1964 at the Gaiety Theatre Dublin as part of the Dublin Grand Opera Society's Spring Season, Audio recording of LA TRAVIATA Presented on May 25, 1964 at the Gaiety Theatre Dublin as part of the Dublin Grand Opera Society's Spring Season). Also available are reviews of those performances in which the reviewers favorably comment on his singing (from the reviews for "La Boheme"): "sang sweetly and appealingly," "rich promise," "outstanding," "fit for the big heroic roles," and "robust;" his voice: "pure tone", "arresting quality," "unforced strength and range," "well sustained," and "lovely;" and his acting: "looked and moved well," "sang with musically-directed intelligence," "used the voice to reinforce his acting," and "chief delight of the evening."While generally successful, Pavarotti's early roles did not immediately propel him into the stardom that he would later enjoy. An early coup involved his connection with Joan Sutherland (and her conductor husband, Richard Bonynge), who in 1963 was seeking a tenor taller than herself to take along on her 1965 tour to Australia. With his commanding physical presence, Pavarotti proved ideal. However, before the summer 1965 Australia tour Pavarotti sang with Joan Sutherland when he made his American début with the Greater Miami Opera in February 1965, singing in Donizetti's Lucia di Lammermoor on the stage of the Miami-Dade County Auditorium in Miami. The tenor scheduled to perform that night became ill with no understudy. As Sutherland had plans to travel with him on the Australia tour that summer, she recommended the young Pavarotti as he was acquainted with the role. Shortly after, on 28 April, <mask> made his La Scala debut in the revival of the famous Franco Zeffirelli production of La bohème, with his childhood friend Mirella Freni singing Mimi and Herbert von Karajan conducting.Karajan had requested the singer's engagement. During the Australia tour in summer 1965 Sutherland and <mask> sang some forty performances over two months, and Pavarotti later credited Sutherland for the breathing technique that would sustain him over his career. After the extended Australian tour, he returned to La Scala, where he added Tebaldo from I Capuleti e i Montecchi to his repertoire on 26 March 1966, with Giacomo Aragall as Romeo. His first appearance as Tonio in Donizetti's La fille du régiment took place at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, on 2 June of that year. It was his performances of this role that would earn him the title of "King of the High Cs". He scored another major triumph in Rome on 20 November 1969 when he sang in I Lombardi opposite Renata Scotto. This was recorded on a private label and widely distributed, as were various recordings of his I Capuleti e i Montecchi, usually with Aragall.Early commercial recordings included a recital of Donizetti (the aria from Don Sebastiano were particularly highly regarded) and Verdi arias, as well as a complete L'elisir d'amore with Sutherland. His major breakthrough in the United States came on 17 February 1972, in a production of La fille du régiment at New York's Metropolitan Opera, in which he drove the crowd into a frenzy with his nine effortless high Cs in the signature aria. He achieved a record seventeen curtain calls. <mask> sang his international recital début at William Jewell College in Liberty, Missouri, on 1 February 1973, as part of the college's Fine Arts Program, now known as the Harriman–Jewell Series. Perspiring due to nerves and a lingering cold, the tenor clutched a handkerchief throughout the début. The prop became a signature part of his solo performances. He began to give frequent television performances, starting with his performances as Rodolfo (La bohème) in the first Live from the Met telecast in March 1977, which attracted one of the largest audiences ever for a televised opera.He won many Grammy awards and platinum and gold discs for his performances. In addition to the previously listed titles, his La favorite with Fiorenza Cossotto and his I puritani (1975) with Sutherland stand out. In 1976, <mask> debuted at the Salzburg Festival, appearing in a solo recital on 31 July, accompanied by pianist Leone Magiera. Pavarotti returned to the festival in 1978 with a recital and as the Italian singer in Der Rosenkavalier in 1983 with Idomeneo, and both in 1985 and 1988 with solo recitals. In 1979, he was profiled in a cover story in the weekly magazine Time. That same year saw <mask>'s return to the Vienna State Opera after an absence of fourteen years. With Herbert von Karajan conducting, Pavarotti sang Manrico in Il trovatore.In 1978, he appeared in a solo recital on Live from Lincoln Center. Career: 1980s–1990s
At the beginning of the 1980s, he set up The Pavarotti International Voice Competition for young singers, performing with the winners in 1982 in excerpts of La bohème and L'elisir d'amore. The second competition, in 1986, staged excerpts of La bohème and Un ballo in maschera. To celebrate the 25th anniversary of his career, he brought the winners of the competition to Italy for gala performances of La bohème in Modena and Genoa, and then to China where they staged performances of La bohème in Beijing (Peking). To conclude the visit, Pavarotti performed the inaugural concert in the Great Hall of the People before 10,000 people, receiving a standing ovation for nine effortless high Cs. The third competition in 1989 again staged performances of L'elisir d'amore and Un ballo in maschera. The winners of the fifth competition accompanied Pavarotti in performances in Philadelphia in 1997.In the mid-1980s, Pavarotti returned to two opera houses that had provided him with important breakthroughs, the Vienna State Opera and La Scala. Vienna saw Pavarotti as Rodolfo in La bohème with Carlos Kleiber conducting and again Mirella Freni was Mimi; as Nemorino in L'elisir d'amore; as Radames in Aida conducted by Lorin Maazel; as Rodolfo in Luisa Miller; and as Gustavo in Un ballo in maschera conducted by Claudio Abbado. In 1996, Pavarotti appeared for the last time at the Staatsoper in Andrea Chénier. Throughout the 1980s and 90s, promoters Tibor Rudas and Harvey Goldsmith booked Pavarotti into increasingly larger venues. In 1985, Pavarotti sang Radames at La Scala opposite Maria Chiara in a Luca Ronconi production conducted by Maazel, recorded on video. His performance of the aria "Celeste Aida" received a two-minute ovation on the opening night. He was reunited with Mirella Freni for the San Francisco Opera production of La bohème in 1988, also recorded on video.In 1992, La Scala saw <mask> in a new Zeffirelli production of Don Carlos, conducted by Riccardo Muti. <mask>'s performance was heavily criticised by some observers and booed by parts of the audience. <mask> became even better known throughout the world in 1990 when his rendition of the aria "Nessun dorma" from Giacomo Puccini's Turandot was taken as the theme song of BBC's coverage of the 1990 FIFA World Cup in Italy. The aria achieved pop status, became the World Cup soundtrack, and it remained his trademark song. This was followed by the first Three Tenors concert, held on the eve of the 1990 FIFA World Cup Final at the ancient Baths of Caracalla in Rome with fellow tenors Plácido Domingo and José Carreras and conductor Zubin Mehta. The performance for the World Cup closing concert captivated a global audience, and it became the biggest selling classical record of all time. A highlight of the concert, in which <mask> sang the opening verses using extended vocal runs for di Capua's "O Sole Mio" and which was in turn perfectly repeated note-for-note by Domingo and Carreras to the delight of the audience.The recorded album sold millions of copies, and the first Three Tenors recording became the best-selling classical album of all time. Throughout the 1990s, <mask> appeared in many well-attended outdoor concerts, including his televised concert in London's Hyde Park, which drew a record attendance of 150,000. In June 1993, more than 500,000 listeners gathered for his free performance on the Great Lawn of New York's Central Park, while millions more around the world watched on television. The following September, in the shadow of the Eiffel Tower in Paris, he sang for an estimated crowd of 300,000. Following on from the original 1990 concert, the Three Tenors concerts were held during the three subsequent FIFA World Cup Finals, in 1994 in Los Angeles, 1998 in Paris, and 2002 in Yokohama. In September 1995, Pavarotti performed Schubert's Ave Maria along with Dolores O'Riordan; Diana, Princess of Wales, who attended the live performance, told O'Riordan that the song brought her to tears. In 1995, Pavarotti's friends, the singer Lara Saint Paul (as Lara Cariaggi) and her husband showman Pier Quinto Cariaggi, who had produced and organised <mask>'s 1990 FIFA World Cup Celebration Concert at the PalaTrussardi in Milan, produced and wrote the television documentary The Best is Yet to Come, an extensive biography about the life of Pavarotti.Lara Saint Paul was the interviewer for the documentary with <mask>, who spoke candidly about his life and career. <mask>'s rise to stardom was not without occasional difficulties, however. He earned a reputation as "The King of Cancellations" by frequently backing out of performances, and his unreliable nature led to poor relationships with some opera houses. This was brought into focus in 1989 when Ardis Krainik of the Lyric Opera of Chicago severed the house's 15-year relationship with the tenor. Over an eight-year period, <mask> had cancelled 26 out of 41 scheduled appearances at the Lyric, and the decisive move by Krainik to ban him for life was well noted throughout the opera world, after the performer walked away from a season premiere less than two weeks before rehearsals began, saying pain from a sciatic nerve required two months of treatment. On 12 December 1998, he became the first (and, to date, only) opera singer to perform on Saturday Night Live, singing alongside Vanessa L. Williams. He also sang with U2 in the band's 1995 song "Miss Sarajevo" and with Mercedes Sosa in a big concert at the Boca Juniors arena La Bombonera in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in 1999.In 1998, <mask> was presented with the Grammy Legend Award. Career: Early 2000s
In 2001, <mask> was acquitted in Italian court of a long standing dispute concerning his official country of residency and taxable earnings. Pavarotti long claimed Monte Carlo in the tax haven of Monaco as his official residence, but an Italian court in 1999 had rejected that claim by ruling that his Monaco address could not accommodate his entire family. In 2000 Pavarotti agreed to pay the Italian government more than $7.6 million in back taxes and penalties as a result of tax evasion charges that dated from 1989 to 1995. Pavarotti was subsequently fully acquitted by an Italian court of filing false tax returns in 2001. On 13 December 2003, he married his second wife and former personal assistant, Nicoletta Mantovani (born 1969), with whom he already had another daughter, Alice. Alice's twin brother, Riccardo, was stillborn after complications in January 2003.At the time of his death in September 2007, he was survived by his wife, his four daughters, and one granddaughter. In late 2003, he released his final compilation—and his first and only "crossover" album, Ti Adoro. Most of the 13 songs were written and produced by Michele Centonze, who had already helped produce the "Pavarotti & Friends" concerts between 1998 and 2000. The tenor described the album as a wedding gift to Nicoletta Mantovani. That same year he was made a Commander of Monaco's Order of Cultural Merit. In 2004, one of <mask>'s former managers, Herbert Breslin, published a book, The King & I. Seen by critics as bitter and sensationalistic, it is critical of the singer's acting (in opera), his inability to read music well and learn parts, and his personal conduct, although acknowledging their success together.In an interview in 2005 with Jeremy Paxman on the BBC, Pavarotti rejected the allegation that he could not read music, although he acknowledged he did not read orchestral scores. He received an enormous number of awards and honours, including Kennedy Center Honors in 2001. He also holds two Guinness World Records: one for receiving the most curtain calls (165) and another for the best-selling classical album (Carreras Domingo Pavarotti in Concert by the Three Tenors; the latter record is thus shared by fellow tenors Plácido Domingo and José Carreras). Final performances and health issues
Pavarotti began his farewell tour in 2004, at the age of 69, performing one last time in old and new locations, after more than four decades on the stage. On 13 March 2004, Pavarotti gave his last performance in an opera at the New York Metropolitan Opera, for which he received a long standing ovation for his role as the painter Mario Cavaradossi in Giacomo Puccini's Tosca. On 1 December 2004, he announced a 40-city farewell tour. <mask> and his manager, Terri Robson, commissioned impresario Harvey Goldsmith to produce the Worldwide Farewell Tour.His last full-scale performance was at the end of a two-month Australasian tour in Taiwan in December 2005. In March 2005, Pavarotti underwent neck surgery to repair two vertebrae. In early 2006, he underwent further back surgery and contracted an infection while in the hospital in New York, forcing cancellation of concerts in the U.S., Canada, and the U.K.
On 10 February 2006, Pavarotti performed "Nessun dorma" at the 2006 Winter Olympics opening ceremony in Turin, Italy, at his final performance. In the last act of the opening ceremony, his performance received the longest and loudest ovation of the night from the international crowd. Leone Magiera, who directed the performance, revealed in his 2008 memoirs, Pavarotti Visto da Vicino, that the performance had been recorded weeks earlier. "The orchestra pretended to play for the audience, I pretended to conduct and <mask> pretended to sing. The effect was wonderful," he wrote.<mask>'s manager, Terri Robson, said that the tenor had turned the Winter Olympic Committee's invitation down several times because it would have been impossible to sing late at night in the subzero conditions of Turin in February. The committee eventually persuaded him to take part by prerecording the song. Death
While proceeding with an international "farewell tour", <mask> was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in July 2006. The tenor fought back against the implications of this diagnosis, undergoing major abdominal surgery and making plans for the resumption and conclusion of his singing commitments, but he died at his home in Modena on 6 September 2007. After his death, his manager, Terri Robson, noted in a statement, "The Maestro fought a long, tough battle against the pancreatic cancer which eventually took his life. In fitting with the approach that characterised his life and work, he remained positive until finally succumbing to the last stages of his illness". <mask>'s funeral was held at Modena Cathedral.The then Prime Minister Romano Prodi and Kofi Annan attended. The Frecce Tricolori, the aerobatic demonstration team of the Italian Air Force, flew overhead, leaving green-white-red smoke trails. After a funeral procession through the centre of Modena, <mask>'s coffin was taken the final to Montale Rangone, a village part of Castelnuovo Rangone, and was interred in the Pavarotti family crypt. The funeral, in its entirety, was also telecast live on CNN. The Vienna State Opera and the Salzburg Festival Hall flew black flags in mourning. Tributes were published by many opera houses, such as London's Royal Opera House. Other work
Film and television
Pavarotti's one venture into film was Yes, Giorgio (1982), a romantic comedy movie directed by Franklin J. Schaffner, in which he starred as the main character Giorgio Fini.The film was a critical and commercial failure, although it received an Academy Award nomination for Best Music, Original Song. He can be seen to better advantage in Jean-Pierre Ponnelle's adaptation of Rigoletto for television, released that same year, or in his more than 20 live opera performances taped for television between 1978 and 1994, most of them with the Metropolitan Opera, and most available on DVD. He received two Primetime Emmy Awards for his PBS variety specials Pavarotti in Philadelphia: La Boheme and Duke of Mantua, Rigoletto Great Performances. Pavarotti, a 2019 documentary film about him, was directed by Ron Howard and produced with the cooperation of Pavarotti's estate using family archives, interviews and live music footage. Humanitarianism
Pavarotti annually hosted the Pavarotti & Friends charity concerts in his home town of Modena Italy, joining with singers from all parts of the music industry, including B.B. King, Andrea Bocelli, Zucchero, Jon Bon Jovi, Bryan Adams, Bono, James Brown, Mariah Carey, Eric Clapton, Dolores O'Riordan, Sheryl Crow, Céline Dion, Anastacia, Elton John, Deep Purple, Meat Loaf, Queen, George Michael, Tracy Chapman, the Spice Girls, Sting and Barry White to raise money for several UN causes. Concerts were held for War Child, and victims of war and civil unrest in Bosnia, Guatemala, Kosovo and Iraq.After the war in Bosnia, he financed and established the Pavarotti Music Centre in the southern city of Mostar to offer Bosnia's artists the opportunity to develop their skills. For these contributions, the city of Sarajevo named him an honorary citizen in 2006. He performed at benefit concerts to raise money for victims of tragedies such as the Spitak earthquake that killed 25,000 people in northern Armenia in December 1988, and sang Gounod's Ave Maria with legendary French pop music star and ethnic Armenian Charles Aznavour. He was a close friend of Diana, Princess of Wales. They raised money for the elimination of land mines worldwide. In 1998, he was appointed the United Nations Messenger of Peace, using his fame to raise awareness of UN issues, including the Millennium Development Goals, HIV/AIDS, child rights, urban slums and poverty. In 1999, Pavarotti performed a charity benefit concert in Beirut, to mark Lebanon's re-emergence on the world stage after a brutal 15-year civil war.The largest concert held in Beirut since the end of the war, it was attended by 20,000 people who travelled from countries as distant as Saudi Arabia and Bulgaria. In 1999 he also hosted a charity benefit concert to build a school in Guatemala, for Guatemalan civil war orphans. It was named after him Centro Educativo Pavarotti. Now the foundation of nobel prize winner Rigoberta Menchú Tum is running the school. In 2001, <mask> received the Nansen Medal from the UN High Commission for Refugees for his efforts raising money on behalf of refugees worldwide. Through benefit concerts and volunteer work, he has raised more than any other individual. Also in 2001, <mask> was chosen one of that year's five recipients by the President and First Lady as an honoree for their lifetime achievements in the arts at the White House, followed by the Kennedy Center; the Kennedy Center Honors, He was surprised by the appearance of Secretary-General of the United Nations and that year's winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, Kofi Annan, who lauded him for his contribution to humankind.Six months prior, Pavarotti had held a large charity concert for Afghan refugees, particularly children in his home town of Modena, Italy. Other honours he received include the "Freedom of London Award" and The Red Cross "Award for Services to Humanity", for his work in raising money for that organisation, and the 1998 "MusiCares Person of the Year", given to humanitarian heroes by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. He was a National Patron of Delta Omicron, an international professional music fraternity. Legacy and estate assignment
His first will was opened the day after his death; a second will was opened within the same month of September. He left an estate outside his native Modena (now a museum), a villa in Pesaro, his flat in Monte Carlo, and three flats in New York City. <mask>'s widow's lawyers, Giorgio Bernini and Anna Maria Bernini, and manager Terri Robson announced on 30 June 2008 that his family amicably settled his estate—€300 million ($474.2 million, including $15 million in U.S. assets). Pavarotti drafted two wills before his death: one divided his assets by Italian law, giving half to his second wife, Nicoletta Mantovani, and half to his four daughters; the second gave his U.S. holdings to Mantovani.The judge confirmed the compromise by the end of July 2008. However, a Pesaro public prosecutor, Massimo di Patria, investigated allegations that Pavarotti was not of sound mind when he signed the will. <mask>'s estate has been settled "fairly", a lawyer for Mantovani said in statements after reports of a dispute between her and his three daughters from his first marriage. He posthumously received the Italy-USA Foundation's America Award in 2013 and the Brit Award for Outstanding Contribution to Music in 2014. Selected discography
In addition to his very large discography of opera performances Pavarotti also made many classical crossover and pop recordings, the Pavarotti & Friends series of concerts and, for Decca, a series of studio recital albums: first six albums of opera arias and then, from 1979, six albums of Italian song. Studio recital albums
Favourite Italian Arias – Arias from La Bohème, Tosca and Rigoletto. Orchestra of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden Edward Downes Decca Records 1966
Arias by Verdi & Donizetti – Arias from Luisa Miller, I due Foscari, Un ballo in maschera, Macbeth, Lucia di Lammermoor, Il duca d’Alba, La favorita and Don Sebastiano (with the Wiener Opernorchester under Edward Downes, 1968).Tenor Arias from Italian Opera – Arias from Guglielmo Tell, I puritani, Il trovatore, L'arlesiana, La bohème, Mefistofele, Don Pasquale, La Gioconda and Giuseppe Pietri's :it:Maristella. <mask> tenor with Arleen Auger soprano. Leone Magiera (piano) Wiener Opernorchester and choir. Ambrosian Singers New Philharmonia Orchestra Nicola Rescigno 1971
The World's Favourite Tenor Arias – Tosca, Carmen, Aida, Faust, Pagliacci, Martha. Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. Wiener Volksoper Orchester. Leone Magiera.New Philharmonia Orchestra Richard Bonynge 1973
<mask> in Concert – Arias and songs by Bononcini, Handel, Alessandro Scarlatti, Bellini, Tosti, Respighi, Rossini. Orchestra del Teatro Comunale di Bologna. Richard Bonynge. 1973
O Holy Night – Songs and carols by Adam, Stradella, Franck, Mercadante, Schubert, Bach (arranged Gounod), Bizet, Berlioz, Pietro Yon, Alois Melichar. Wandsworth School Boys' Choir. London Voices. National Philharmonic Orchestra, Kurt Herbert Adler 1976
O Sole Mio – Favourite Neapolitan Songs 13 songs by Eduardo di Capua: O sole mio Francesco Paolo Tosti: 'A vucchella, Enrico Cannio: O surdato 'nnammurato, :it:Salvatore Gambardella: O marenariello, Traditional: Fenesta vascia, Tosti: A Marechiare, Ernesto de Curtis: Torna a Surriento, Gaetano Errico Pennino: Pecchè?, Vincenzo d'Annibale: O paese d' 'o sole, Ernesto Tagliaferri: Piscatore 'e Pusilleco, Curtis: :it:Tu ca nun chiagne, Capua: Maria, Mari, Luigi Denza: Funiculì funiculà.Orchestra del Teatro Comunale di Bologna Anton Guadagno National Philharmonic Orchestra :it:Giancarlo Chiaramello 1979
Verismo – Arias from Fedora, Mefistofele, Adriana Lecouvreur, Iris, L'Africaine, Werther, La fanciulla del West, Manon Lescaut, Andrea Chénier. National Philharmonic Orchestra Oliviero de Fabritiis (Riccardo Chailly for Andrea Chénier arias) 1979
Mattinata – 14 songs by Caldara, formerly attrib. Pergolesi, probably by Vincenzo Ciampi: Tre giorni son che Nina, Bellini, Tommaso Giordani, Rossini, Gluck, Tosti, Donizetti, Leoncavallo, Beethoven and Francesco Durante. Philharmonia Orchestra Piero Gamba National Philharmonic Orchestra. Antonio Tonini (conductor) 1983
Mamma – songs by Cesare Andrea Bixio, Ernesto de Curtis, Arturo Buzzi-Peccia, Stanislao Gastaldon, Cesare Cesarini, A. Walter Kramer, Carlo Innocenzi, Giovanni D'Anzi, Eldo di Lazzaro, Vincenzo De Crescenzo, Domenico Martuzzi, Aniello Califano, Colombino Arona. Arranged and conducted by Henry Mancini, 1984. Passione – 12 songs by Ernesto Tagliaferri, Paolo Tosti, :it:Pasquale Mario Costa, Teodoro Cottrau, :it:Evemero Nardella, Rodolfo Falvo, De Curtis, Di Capua, E. A. Mario, Gaetano Lama and Salvatore Cardillo.Orchestra del Teatro Comunale di Bologna. Giancarlo Chiaramello 1985
Volare – 16 songs by Domenico Modugno, Luigi Denza, Cesare Andrea Bixio, Gabriele Sibella, Giovanni D'Anzi, Michael John Bonagura, Edoardo Mascheroni, Ernesto De Curtis, Ermenegildo Ruccione, Pietro Mascagni, Guido Maria Ferilli. arranged and conducted by Henry Mancini 1987
Ti Adoro – songs by Romano Musumarra, Carlo Mioli, Ornella D'Urbano, Michele Centonze, Andrea Bellantani, Daniel Vuletic, Veris Giannetti, Nino Rota/Elsa Morante, Edoardo Bennato, Hans Zimmer/Gavin Greenaway/Jeffrey Pescetto, Lucio Dalla. Royal Philharmonic Orchestra Orchestra di Roma. Bulgarian Symphony Orchestra. Romano Musumarra Giancarlo Chiaramello, 2000
Selected videography
Mozart: Idomeneo (1982), Deutsche Grammophon DVD, 00440-073-4234, 2006
The Metropolitan Opera Centennial Gala (1983), Deutsche Grammophon DVD, 00440-073-4538, 2009
The Metropolitan Opera Gala 1991, Deutsche Grammophon DVD, 00440-073-4582, 2010
Awards and honors
Grammy Awards
The Grammy Awards are awarded annually by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. | [
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] | <mask> became one of the most acclaimed and loved singers of all time after crossing over into popular music during the late part of his career. He achieved the honorific title "King of the High Cs" by making numerous recordings of complete operas and individual arias. One of the Three Tenors, Pavarotti became well known for his televised concerts and media appearances. In bel canto operas, pre-Aida Verdi roles, and Puccini works, <mask> was at his best. The first Three Tenors recording became the best-selling classical album of all time after selling over 100 million records. <mask> was noted for his charity work on behalf of refugees. He died from cancer.<mask> was born in 1935 on the outskirts of Modena in Northern Italy, the son of a baker and a cigar factory worker. The family had little money and was crowded into a two-room apartment. According to Pavarotti, his father rejected the idea of a singing career because of shyness. The family was forced out of the city during World War II. The young Pavarotti developed an interest in farming after they rented a single room from the farmer. Pavarotti spent seven years in vocal training after abandoning his dream of becoming a football goalkeeper. Most of the popular singers of the day were featured on Pavarotti's father's records.Giuseppe Di Stefano was Pavarotti's favourite singer and he used to imitate him in the mirror when he was younger. At the age of nine, he began singing with his father in a church choir. Pavarotti enjoyed playing football as a child. After graduating from Scuola Magistrale, he wanted to become a professional football goalkeeper, but his mother convinced him to become a teacher. After teaching in an elementary school for two years, he decided to pursue a music career. His father reluctantly gave his consent. Arrigo Pola, a respected teacher and professional singer in Modena, offered to teach Pavarotti without remuneration at the age of 19 when he began the serious study of music.Pavarotti never learned to read music according to Richard Bonynge. He experienced his first singing success in 1955 when he was a member of the Corale Rossini, a male voice choir from Modena that also included his father, which won first prize at the International Eisteddfod. He said that this experience inspired him to become a professional singer. Pavarotti first met Adua Veroni. They were married in 1961. When Arrigo Pola moved to Japan, Pavarotti became a student of Ettore Campogalliani, who was also a childhood friend of <mask>tti was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 In the first six years of study, there were only a few recitals in small towns. He gave up singing after a vocal cord problem caused a disastrous concert in Ferrara. Pavarotti attributed his immediate improvement to the decision. He said in his autobiography that "everything I had learned came together with my natural voice to make the sound I had been struggling so hard to achieve". In April 1961, Pavarotti made his opera debut as Rodolfo in La bohme at the Teatro Municipale in Reggio Emilia. The first known recording of "Che gelida manina" was made during this performance.The first wife of Pavarotti was Adua Veroni and they had three daughters. He made his international debut in Serbia. He made his debut at the Vienna State Opera in the same role. In March and April 1963, Vienna saw <mask> as Rodolfo and Duca di Mantova in Rigoletto. He was engaged by the Dublin Grand Opera Society to sing The Duke of Mantua in Verdi's Rigoletto in May and June, after he had performed for the St Cecilia's Gramophone Society in Ireland. There are three complete performances from <mask>'s early career in 1964, when he was engaged by the Dublin Grand Opera Society to sing in La bohme. The reviews of those performances in which the reviewers liked his singing include "sang sweetly and appealingly," "rich promise," "outstanding," "fit for the big heroic roles," and "robust;" his voice.Pavarotti's early roles did not immediately propel him into the stardom that he would later enjoy. He had a connection with Joan and her husband, Richard Bonynge, who were looking for a taller singer to accompany them on their tour of Australia. Pavarotti was ideal because of his physical presence. In February 1965, Pavarotti made his American debut with the Greater Miami Opera, singing in Donizetti's Lucia di Lammermoor on the stage of the Miami-Dade County Auditorium in Miami. The opera singer became ill with no understudy. She recommended the young Pavarotti as he was familiar with the role, as he was going to travel with him on the Australia tour. The revival of the famous Franco Zeffirelli production of La bohme had Pavarotti singing and Herbert von Karajan conducting.The singer's engagement was requested by Karajan. During the Australia tour in summer 1965, <mask> credited Sutherland with the breathing technique that would sustain him over the course of his career. He added Tebaldo from I Capuleti e i Montecchi to his collection on March 26, 1966, with the help of Giacomo Aragall. The Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, hosted his first appearance as Tonio in Donizetti's La fille du regiment on 2 June of that year. His performances in this role earned him the title of "King of the High Cs". He won a major victory in Rome on 20 November 1969 when he sang in I Lombardi. Various recordings of his I Capuleti e i Montecchi, usually with Aragall, were recorded on a private label and widely distributed.A complete L'elisir d'amore was included on the early recordings, as well as a recital of Donizetti and Verdi arias. On 17 February 1972, in a production of La fille du régiment at New York's Metropolitan Opera, he drove the crowd into a frenzy with his nine effortless high Cs in the signature aria. He made a record seventeen curtain calls. On 1 February 1973, <mask> performed at William Jewell College in Liberty, Missouri, as part of the college's Fine Arts Program. The tenor clutched a handkerchief throughout the début due to nerves and a cold. The prop was a signature part of his performances. One of the largest audiences ever for a televised opera was attracted by his performance as Rodolfo in the first Live from the Met telecast in March 1977.He won many awards for his performances. His La favorite with Cossotto and Ipuritani are two titles that stand out. <mask> appeared in a solo recital on July 31, 1976, at the Salzburg Festival. <mask> returned to the festival in 1978 with a recital, and in 1983 with Idomeneo, and in 1985 and 1988 with solo recitals. He was profiled in a magazine in 1979. <mask> returned to the Vienna State Opera after fourteen years. Manrico was sung by <mask> with Herbert von Karajan conducting.He appeared on Live from Lincoln Center in 1978. At the beginning of the 1980s, he set up The Pavarotti International Voice Competition for young singers, performing with the winners in excerpts of La bohme and L'elisir d'amore. In 1986, excerpts of La bohme and Un ballo in maschera were staged. To celebrate the 25th anniversary of his career, he brought the winners of the competition to Italy for a performance of La bohme, and then to China for a performance of La bohme. <mask> received a standing ovation when he performed in the Great Hall of the People. The performances of L'elisir d'amore and Un ballo in maschera were staged again in 1989. Pavarotti performed in Philadelphia in 1997 with the winners of the fifth competition.The Vienna State Opera and La Scala provided <mask> with important breakthrough in his career. In Vienna, Pavarotti was Rodolfo in La bohme with Carlos Kleiber conducting, as well as in Aida and L'elisir d'amore. The last time Pavarotti was at the opera was in 1996. Pavarotti was booked into larger venues by Rudas and Goldsmith. In 1985, <mask> sang at La Scala in a Luca Ronconi production. His performance of the aria "Celeste Aida" received a two-minute applause. The San Francisco Opera production of La bohme was recorded on video.<mask> appeared in a new Zeffirelli production of Don Carlos in 1992. <mask>'s performance was booed by some in the audience. The aria "Nessun dorma" from Turandot was taken as the theme song of the 1990 FIFA World Cup in Italy and became even better known throughout the world. His trademark song was the aria, which became the World Cup soundtrack. The first Three Tenors concert was held on the eve of the 1990 World Cup Final at the ancient Baths of Caracalla in Rome, with Placido Domingo and José Carreras in attendance. The performance for the World Cup closing concert became the biggest selling classical record of all time. The highlight of the concert was when <mask> used extended vocal runs for di Capua's "O Sole Mio" and Domingo and Carreras used perfectly repeated note-for-note to delight the audience.The recorded album sold millions of copies, and the first Three Tenors recording became the best-selling classical album of all time. During the 1990s, <mask> appeared in many outdoor concerts, including his televised concert in London's Hyde Park, which drew a record attendance of 150,000. More than half a million people listened to his performance on the Great Lawn of New York's Central Park, while millions more watched on television. He performed in front of 300,000 people in the shadow of the Eiffel Tower in Paris. In 1994 in Los Angeles, 1998 in Paris, and 2002 in Yokohama, the Three Tenors concerts were held, following on from the original 1990 concert. Diana, Princess of Wales, who attended the live performance, told O'Riordan that the song brought her to tears. The concert produced by Pavarotti's friends, the singer and her husband showman Pier Quinto Cariaggi, was held at the PalaTrussardi in Milan in 1995.<mask> spoke candidly about his life and career in the documentary. There were occasional difficulties in <mask>'s rise to fame. He was known as "The King of Cancellations" due to his unreliable nature and poor relationships with some opera houses. Ardis Krainik of the Lyric Opera of Chicago severed the house's 15-year relationship with the singer in 1989. The decision by Krainik to ban <mask> for life, after he walked away from a season premiere less than two weeks before rehearsals began, was well known throughout the opera world. He was the first opera singer to perform on Saturday Night Live. In 1995 he sang with U2 in their song "Miss Sarajevo" and in 1999 he performed with Mercedes Sosa at the La Bombonera arena.<mask> received a Legend Award. In 2001, <mask> was acquitted in an Italian court of a long standing dispute about his official country of residency. An Italian court ruled in 1999 that <mask>'s Monaco address couldn't accommodate his entire family and that he should not have claimed Monte Carlo as his official residence. In 2000 Pavarotti agreed to pay the Italian government more than $7 million in back taxes and penalties as a result of tax evasion charges from 1989 to 1995. The Italian court found <mask> not guilty of filing false tax returns. He married his second wife, Nicoletta Mantovani, on December 13, 2003 with whom he already had another daughter, Alice. The twin brother of Alice was stillborn.He was survived by his wife, four daughters, and one granddaughter. Ti Adoro was his first and only "crossover" album. Most of the songs were written and produced by Centonze, who helped produce the "Pavarotti & Friends" concerts between 1998 and 2000. The album was a wedding gift. He was made a Commander of Monaco's Order of Cultural Merit. Herbert Breslin, one of Pavarotti's former managers, published a book in 2004. It is critical of the singer's acting in opera, his inability to read music well and learn parts, and his personal conduct, although acknowledging their success together.In an interview with Jeremy Paxman in 2005, <mask> denied that he couldn't read music. He was honoured by the Kennedy Center in 2001. He holds two Guinness World Records, one for receiving the most curtain calls and the other for the best-selling classical album. After more than four decades on the stage, Pavarotti began his farewell tour in 2004, at the age of 69, performing one last time in old and new locations. On 13 March 2004, Pavarotti gave his last performance in an opera at the New York Metropolitan Opera, for which he received a long standing ovation. On December 1, 2004, he announced a farewell tour. Harvey Goldsmith was commissioned by Pavarotti and his manager to produce the Worldwide Farewell Tour.His last full-scale performance was at the end of a two-month tour in Taiwan. In March 2005, Pavarotti had neck surgery. He had back surgery in New York in early 2006 and had to cancel concerts in the US, Canada, and the UK. His performance received the longest and loudest applause of the night from the international crowd. In his 2008 memoirs, Pavarotti Visto da Vicino, Leone Magiera revealed that the performance had been recorded weeks earlier. The orchestra pretended to play for the audience, I pretended to conduct and <mask> pretended to sing. He wrote that the effect was wonderful.<mask> turned down several invitations from the Winter Olympic Committee because it would have been difficult to sing in the cold in February, according to his manager. He was persuaded to prerecord the song by the committee. <mask> was diagnosed with cancer in July of 2006 while he was on a farewell tour. He died at his home in Modena on 6 September 2007, after undergoing major abdominal surgery and making plans for the restart and conclusion of his singing commitments. After his death, his manager stated, "The Maestro fought a long, tough battle against the cancer which eventually took his life." He remained positive until he succumbed to the last stages of his illness. The funeral of <mask> was held at the cathedral.The Prime Minister and the Secretary of State attended. The Italian Air Force's Frecce Tricolori flew overhead, leaving green-white-red smoke trails. The <mask> family crypt was the final resting place of Pavarotti after a funeral procession through the centre of Modena. CNN broadcasted the funeral in its entirety. Black flags were flown at the Vienna State Opera and the Salzburg Festival Hall. The Royal Opera House in London published a tribute. <mask> starred as Giorgio Fini in Yes, Giorgio, a romantic comedy movie directed by Franklin J. Schaffner.The film received an Academy Award nomination for Best Music, Original Song, but it was a failure. He can be seen to better advantage in Jean-Pierre Ponnelle's adaptation of Rigoletto for television, released that same year, or in his more than 20 live opera performances taped for television between 1978 and 1994, most of them with the Metropolitan Opera. He received two Primetime Emmy Awards for his PBS variety specials. The documentary film about <mask> was directed by Ron Howard and produced with the cooperation of Pavarotti's estate using family archives, interviews and live music footage. The Pavarotti & Friends charity concerts were hosted by Pavarotti in his home town of Modena Italy. King, Zucchero, Jon Bon Jovi, Bryan Adams, Bono, James Brown, and more. War Child and victims of war and civil unrest in Bosnia, Kosovo, and Iraq were the subject of concerts.After the war in Bosnia, he financed and established the Pavarotti Music Centre in the southern city of Mostar to give Bosnia's artists the opportunity to develop their skills. The city of Sarajevo named him an "honorary citizen" for his contributions. He performed at benefit concerts to raise money for victims of tragedies such as the Spitak earthquake that killed 25,000 people in northern Armenia in December 1988, and sang Gounod's Ave Maria with Charles Aznavour. He was a close friend of Diana. They raised money to rid the world of land mines. He used his fame to raise awareness of UN issues, including the Millennium Development Goals, HIV/AIDS, child rights, urban slums and poverty. In 1999, Pavarotti performed a charity benefit concert in Lebanon to celebrate the end of the civil war.The largest concert held in Lebanon since the end of the war was attended by 20,000 people who traveled from all over the world. He hosted a charity benefit concert in 1999 to build a school for civil war orphans. It was named after him. The school is being run by the foundation of nobel prize winner Rigoberta Mench Tum. The UN High Commission for Refugees gave Pavarotti a medal for raising money for refugees. He has raised more than any other person. The President and First Lady of the United States chose <mask> as one of five recipients for their lifetime achievements in the arts in 2001, and he was surprised by the Secretary-General's appearance.In the summer of 2015, Pavarotti held a charity concert for Afghan refugees in his home town of Modena, Italy. He received the "Freedom of London Award" and The Red Cross "Award for Services to Humanity", as well as the 1998 "MusiCares Person of the Year" by the National Academy of Recording Arts. He was a national patron of Delta Omicron. His first will was opened the day after he died, and a second one a month later. He left an estate outside his native Modena, a villa in Pesaro, a flat in Monte Carlo, and three flats in New York City. On June 30, 2008, Giorgio Bernini and Anna Maria Bernini announced that <mask>'s family had amicably settled his estate for 300 million. Pavarotti split his assets according to Italian law, giving half to his second wife, Nicoletta Mantovani, and the other half to his four daughters.The compromise was confirmed by the judge by the end of July. There were allegations that <mask> wasn't sound mind when he signed the will. A lawyer for Mantovani said that Pavarotti's estate has been settled fairly after reports of a dispute between her and his three daughters from his first marriage. He received the Italy-USA Foundation's America Award and the Brit Award for Outstanding Contribution to Music posthumously. In addition to his large discography of opera performances, Pavarotti made many classical crossover and pop recordings, the Pavarotti & Friends series of concerts and a series of studio recital albums. The studio recital albums have some of the best Italian operas. Edward Downes Decca Records has an Orchestra of the Royal Opera House.Giuseppe Pietri's operas include Guglielmo Tell, I puritani, Il trovatore, L'arlesiana, La bohme, Mefistofele and Don Pasquale. <mask> has a Soprano. There is a choir and a piano. The world's favourite opera is The World's favourite opera is The World's favourite opera is The World's favourite opera is The World's favourite opera is The World's favourite opera is The World's favourite opera is The World's favourite opera is The World The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra plays music. The Orchester Volksoper. The person is Leone Magiera.The Pavarotti in Concert was performed by the New Philharmonia Orchestra Richard Bonynge. The Teatro Comunale di Bologna has an orchestra. The man is Richard Bonynge. The O Holy Night is a collection of songs and carols. The choir is from the Wandsworth School. London voices. Eduardo di Capua wrote 13 songs for the National Philharmonic Orchestra.The Teatro Comunale di Bologna has a National Philharmonic Orchestra. Mattinata is 14 songs by Caldara, formerly attrib. Vincenzo Ciampi is probably the author of Pergolesi. The Piero Gamba National Philharmonic Orchestra is part of the Philharmonia Orchestra. Cesare Cesarini and Stanislao Gastaldon wrote the songs for the movie. It was conducted by Henry Mancini. :it:Pasquale Mario Costa, Teodoro Cottrau, Rodolfo Falvo, Di Capua, E. A. Mario.The Teatro Comunale di Bologna has an orchestra. There are 16 songs by Domenico Modugno, Luigi Denza, Cesare Bixio, Gabriele Sibella, Giovanni D'Anzi, Michael John Bonagura, Edoardo Mascheroni, and Ermenegildo Rucci. Ti Adoro was arranged and conducted by Henry Mancini. The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra is based in Rome. The orchestra is from Bulgaria. The Metropolitan Opera Gala 1991,Deutsche Grammophon DVD, and Mozart: Idomeneo are examples of selected videography. | [
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15759655 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jos%C3%A9%20Locs%C3%ADn | José Locsín | José Certeza Locsín (August 27, 1891 – May 1, 1977) was a Philippine doctor and senator.
Early life and education
Dr. José Corteza Locsín was born on August 27, 1891 in Silay, Negros Occidental. He was the third child among the five siblings of Domingo Locsín and Enriqueta Corteza. His family, who was originally from Molo, Iloilo, was among the most prominent when they settled in Silay. They acquired lands and engaged in sugarcane farming. They were devout Roman Catholics.
Locsín finished his primary education in Silay. Thereafter, his parents sent him to Manila to study, first at Liceo de Manila and afterwards at the Universidad de Santo Tomas, where he graduated with the degree of Doctor of Medicine, receiving the honor “Meritissimus.”
Medical practice
He started his medical profession in Silay, where he established the Maternity and Children’s Hospital which later became the Silay General Hospital. He was also responsible for the establishment of a Rest and Resettlement Center for Tuberculosis in Patag, Silay’s mountain barangay. He also organized several women's clubs to run puericulture centers. Apart from his initiatives in Silay, he was also responsible for the establishment of the Negros Occidental Provincial Hospital and later its School of Nursing.
Political career
Although Dr. Locsín was a doctor by profession, he inclined politics. Due to his service to the people of Silay, he was elected as Municipal Councilor when he first decided to run for public office. After that, he was elected as provincial member of Negros Occidental. In 1925, he became Governor of Negros Occidental. In his three years as governor, he focused on building roads and bridges throughout the province further establishing a waterworks system. Along with the Provincial Board, he initiated the development of the provincial government building. He also placed a high priority on improving the province’s educational system and for having had more schools built during his term than all the governors before him combined.
After his term as governor, he ran for Congress and was elected representative of the first district of Negros Occidental in 1928. As a representative of a district whose primary means of livelihood depend upon the sugar industry, he worked for the modernization of sugar centrals, increasing the share of sugarcane planters within the sugar produced, and raising the wages of farm laborers. As Chairman of the Committee on Public Instruction, he worked on the establishment of faculties in remote barrios and well plazas in towns to market cultural events.
In 1935, he became a delegate to the Constitutional Convention. One of his outstanding contributions as a delegate to the convention was the inclusion of social justice within the Constitution’s declaration of principles. Dr. Locsín was a member of the Nacionalista Party, and a fanatical advocate of its principles, and a loyal supporter of its members. When Ferdinand Marcos switched allegiance and ran for president in 1965 under Nationalista, he supported Marcos’ candidacy, being members of the said party. But when Marcos declared martial law in 1972, he was disheartened and regretted having given his support to Marcos’ presidency. Although he was no longer active in politics during the time of Martial Law, Dr. Locsín wore a black ribbon as a sign of protest against Marcos. Even on his deathbed, he wore with him the black ribbon symbolizing his mourning of the death of democracy.
At the Senate
Dr. Locsín was the first post-war cabinet member under President Sergio Osmena in 1945 to 1946, serving as Secretary of the Department of Health and Public Welfare to help people recuperate from the ravages of World War II. From 1951 to 1957, he served the country as a senator and dedicated himself to addressing a wide range of issues. As Chairman of the Health Committee, he worked for the approval of various measures to ensure and promote the health and safety of people through the establishment of Rural Health Units, the standardization of hospital services, and the National Campaign Against Tuberculosis. In addition, he also secured appropriations for the construction of new hospitals, health centers, clinics and other health care facilities. At the same time, he also worked for the improvement of salary levels of public health care personnel, especially doctors. As Chairman of the Committee on Accounts, he strived to maintain the annual appropriation in order to prevent any deficiency during his term. His other achievements as a Senator include sponsorship of the Rural Banks Act; authorship of the Flag Ceremony Law which gave importance to recognizing and respecting the Philippine flag; increase of the salary of public school teachers; and passage of a measure to celebrate the centennial of the birth of Dr. Jose Rizal in an appropriate manner. Senator Locsín was a member of the Philippine economic mission headed by Senator Laurel which worked for the Laurel-Langley Trade Agreement of 1945.
The Filipino First Policy
Perhaps the greatest contribution of Dr. Locsín to the upliftment of the Filipino people is his authorship of the bill popularly known as the “Filipino First Policy” during his term as Chairman of the National Economic Council (NEC, now the National Economic and Development Authority, or NEDA) from 1958 to 1961. As an effect of the Filipino First Policy, agro-industrial development was given impetus and encouragement. This resulted in the establishment of more cement factories, flour mills, and FILOIL–the first of the Filipino-owned gasoline companies. It also led to the banning of importation of plywood, the financing of irrigation and fertilizer programs, and the construction of artesian wells and hydro-electric power plants in different parts of the Philippines. Another major result was the development of new industries through the Industrial Dispersal Program, and the program for social and economic development of the Mindanao Region.
At the same time that he was Chairman of NEC, he headed the National Productivity Board of the Philippines. As such, he contributed to the establishment of the Asian Productivity Organization (APO) of which he was unanimously elected its first Chairman in May 1961 during its inaugural meeting in Tokyo, Japan, an honour not only to himself but to the Philippines which he represented. When his term as NEC Chairman ended in 1961, he was appointed as Acting Secretary of the Department of Agriculture and Natural Resources. During this short assignment, he had the licensing of forest concessions investigated which led to a marked reduction in the granting of such licenses and the filing of legal cases against illegal logging in the country.
Legacy
In 1974, Dr. Locsín suffered a stroke which some people say was brought about by his frustration with not being able to directly do anything about abolishing Martial Law. From then on, he underwent several surgical procedures due to problems with his gallbladder and prostate. Because of complications brought about by old age and his illnesses, he became bedridden in 1976. On May 1, 1977, he died at the age of 88. He left a legacy of dedicated and principled public service. Before his death, it was proposed that the city of Silay be renamed after him, but he refused. After his death, the hospital in Silay was renamed after him in honor and gratitude for his service to the Silaynons. The Rizal Cultural and Civic Center in his hometown, Silay was also built in his honor and named after him. However, in spite of these recognitions, many of the younger Silaynons do not know who he really was and what he had accomplished. Recently, the Dr. Jose C. Locsín Memorial Provincial Hospital, which he had established, was closed down and all its services were transferred to the new Teresita L. Jalandoni Provincial Hospital.
Personal life
He married Salvacion Montelibano and had eighteen children. One of his sons died of typhoid at the age of four. He experienced another loss in 1959 when his wife died of cardiac arrest at the age of 61. In 1962, at the age of 70, he remarried. His second wife, Delia Ediltrudes Santiago, a social worker from Bacolod, bore him a son and a daughter.
Notes
References
External links
Official Senate site
Senators of the 3rd Congress of the Philippines
Senators of the 2nd Congress of the Philippines
Secretaries of Agriculture of the Philippines
Secretaries of Environment and Natural Resources of the Philippines
Secretaries of Health of the Philippines
Secretaries of Social Welfare and Development of the Philippines
People from Silay
Governors of Negros Occidental
Nacionalista Party politicians
20th-century Filipino medical doctors
1891 births
1977 deaths
Osmeña Administration cabinet members
Garcia Administration cabinet members
Macapagal Administration cabinet members
University of Santo Tomas alumni
Members of the Philippine Legislature
Members of the House of Representatives of the Philippines from Negros Occidental
Visayan people | [
"José Certeza Locsín (August 27, 1891 – May 1, 1977) was a Philippine doctor and senator.",
"Early life and education\nDr. José Corteza Locsín was born on August 27, 1891 in Silay, Negros Occidental.",
"He was the third child among the five siblings of Domingo Locsín and Enriqueta Corteza.",
"His family, who was originally from Molo, Iloilo, was among the most prominent when they settled in Silay.",
"They acquired lands and engaged in sugarcane farming.",
"They were devout Roman Catholics.",
"Locsín finished his primary education in Silay.",
"Thereafter, his parents sent him to Manila to study, first at Liceo de Manila and afterwards at the Universidad de Santo Tomas, where he graduated with the degree of Doctor of Medicine, receiving the honor “Meritissimus.”\n\nMedical practice \nHe started his medical profession in Silay, where he established the Maternity and Children’s Hospital which later became the Silay General Hospital.",
"He was also responsible for the establishment of a Rest and Resettlement Center for Tuberculosis in Patag, Silay’s mountain barangay.",
"He also organized several women's clubs to run puericulture centers.",
"Apart from his initiatives in Silay, he was also responsible for the establishment of the Negros Occidental Provincial Hospital and later its School of Nursing.",
"Political career \nAlthough Dr. Locsín was a doctor by profession, he inclined politics.",
"Due to his service to the people of Silay, he was elected as Municipal Councilor when he first decided to run for public office.",
"After that, he was elected as provincial member of Negros Occidental.",
"In 1925, he became Governor of Negros Occidental.",
"In his three years as governor, he focused on building roads and bridges throughout the province further establishing a waterworks system.",
"Along with the Provincial Board, he initiated the development of the provincial government building.",
"He also placed a high priority on improving the province’s educational system and for having had more schools built during his term than all the governors before him combined.",
"After his term as governor, he ran for Congress and was elected representative of the first district of Negros Occidental in 1928.",
"As a representative of a district whose primary means of livelihood depend upon the sugar industry, he worked for the modernization of sugar centrals, increasing the share of sugarcane planters within the sugar produced, and raising the wages of farm laborers.",
"As Chairman of the Committee on Public Instruction, he worked on the establishment of faculties in remote barrios and well plazas in towns to market cultural events.",
"In 1935, he became a delegate to the Constitutional Convention.",
"One of his outstanding contributions as a delegate to the convention was the inclusion of social justice within the Constitution’s declaration of principles.",
"Dr. Locsín was a member of the Nacionalista Party, and a fanatical advocate of its principles, and a loyal supporter of its members.",
"When Ferdinand Marcos switched allegiance and ran for president in 1965 under Nationalista, he supported Marcos’ candidacy, being members of the said party.",
"But when Marcos declared martial law in 1972, he was disheartened and regretted having given his support to Marcos’ presidency.",
"Although he was no longer active in politics during the time of Martial Law, Dr. Locsín wore a black ribbon as a sign of protest against Marcos.",
"Even on his deathbed, he wore with him the black ribbon symbolizing his mourning of the death of democracy.",
"At the Senate \nDr. Locsín was the first post-war cabinet member under President Sergio Osmena in 1945 to 1946, serving as Secretary of the Department of Health and Public Welfare to help people recuperate from the ravages of World War II.",
"From 1951 to 1957, he served the country as a senator and dedicated himself to addressing a wide range of issues.",
"As Chairman of the Health Committee, he worked for the approval of various measures to ensure and promote the health and safety of people through the establishment of Rural Health Units, the standardization of hospital services, and the National Campaign Against Tuberculosis.",
"In addition, he also secured appropriations for the construction of new hospitals, health centers, clinics and other health care facilities.",
"At the same time, he also worked for the improvement of salary levels of public health care personnel, especially doctors.",
"As Chairman of the Committee on Accounts, he strived to maintain the annual appropriation in order to prevent any deficiency during his term.",
"His other achievements as a Senator include sponsorship of the Rural Banks Act; authorship of the Flag Ceremony Law which gave importance to recognizing and respecting the Philippine flag; increase of the salary of public school teachers; and passage of a measure to celebrate the centennial of the birth of Dr. Jose Rizal in an appropriate manner.",
"Senator Locsín was a member of the Philippine economic mission headed by Senator Laurel which worked for the Laurel-Langley Trade Agreement of 1945.",
"The Filipino First Policy \nPerhaps the greatest contribution of Dr. Locsín to the upliftment of the Filipino people is his authorship of the bill popularly known as the “Filipino First Policy” during his term as Chairman of the National Economic Council (NEC, now the National Economic and Development Authority, or NEDA) from 1958 to 1961.",
"As an effect of the Filipino First Policy, agro-industrial development was given impetus and encouragement.",
"This resulted in the establishment of more cement factories, flour mills, and FILOIL–the first of the Filipino-owned gasoline companies.",
"It also led to the banning of importation of plywood, the financing of irrigation and fertilizer programs, and the construction of artesian wells and hydro-electric power plants in different parts of the Philippines.",
"Another major result was the development of new industries through the Industrial Dispersal Program, and the program for social and economic development of the Mindanao Region.",
"At the same time that he was Chairman of NEC, he headed the National Productivity Board of the Philippines.",
"As such, he contributed to the establishment of the Asian Productivity Organization (APO) of which he was unanimously elected its first Chairman in May 1961 during its inaugural meeting in Tokyo, Japan, an honour not only to himself but to the Philippines which he represented.",
"When his term as NEC Chairman ended in 1961, he was appointed as Acting Secretary of the Department of Agriculture and Natural Resources.",
"During this short assignment, he had the licensing of forest concessions investigated which led to a marked reduction in the granting of such licenses and the filing of legal cases against illegal logging in the country.",
"Legacy \nIn 1974, Dr. Locsín suffered a stroke which some people say was brought about by his frustration with not being able to directly do anything about abolishing Martial Law.",
"From then on, he underwent several surgical procedures due to problems with his gallbladder and prostate.",
"Because of complications brought about by old age and his illnesses, he became bedridden in 1976.",
"On May 1, 1977, he died at the age of 88.",
"He left a legacy of dedicated and principled public service.",
"Before his death, it was proposed that the city of Silay be renamed after him, but he refused.",
"After his death, the hospital in Silay was renamed after him in honor and gratitude for his service to the Silaynons.",
"The Rizal Cultural and Civic Center in his hometown, Silay was also built in his honor and named after him.",
"However, in spite of these recognitions, many of the younger Silaynons do not know who he really was and what he had accomplished.",
"Recently, the Dr. Jose C. Locsín Memorial Provincial Hospital, which he had established, was closed down and all its services were transferred to the new Teresita L. Jalandoni Provincial Hospital.",
"Personal life\nHe married Salvacion Montelibano and had eighteen children.",
"One of his sons died of typhoid at the age of four.",
"He experienced another loss in 1959 when his wife died of cardiac arrest at the age of 61.",
"In 1962, at the age of 70, he remarried.",
"His second wife, Delia Ediltrudes Santiago, a social worker from Bacolod, bore him a son and a daughter.",
"Notes\n\nReferences\n\nExternal links\nOfficial Senate site\n\nSenators of the 3rd Congress of the Philippines\nSenators of the 2nd Congress of the Philippines\nSecretaries of Agriculture of the Philippines\nSecretaries of Environment and Natural Resources of the Philippines\nSecretaries of Health of the Philippines\nSecretaries of Social Welfare and Development of the Philippines\nPeople from Silay\nGovernors of Negros Occidental\nNacionalista Party politicians\n20th-century Filipino medical doctors\n1891 births\n1977 deaths\nOsmeña Administration cabinet members\nGarcia Administration cabinet members\nMacapagal Administration cabinet members\nUniversity of Santo Tomas alumni\nMembers of the Philippine Legislature\nMembers of the House of Representatives of the Philippines from Negros Occidental\nVisayan people"
] | [
"A doctor and senator, José Certeza Locsn was from the Philippines.",
"Dr. José Corteza Locsn was born on August 27, 1891 in Silay.",
"He was one of the five siblings of Domingo Locsn.",
"His family was one of the most prominent when they settled in Silay.",
"They were engaged in farming cane.",
"They were Roman Catholics.",
"Locsn finished school in Silay.",
"He received the honor \"Meritissimus\" after graduating with the degree of Doctor of Medicine from the Universidad de Santo Tomas.",
"The Rest and Resettlement Center for Tuberculosis was established by him.",
"Several women's clubs were organized by him.",
"He was responsible for the establishment of the Negros Occidental Provincial Hospital and the School of Nursing.",
"Dr. Locsn had a political career.",
"When he first decided to run for public office, he was elected as Municipal Councilor due to his service to the people of Silay.",
"He was elected as a provincial member.",
"He became the Governor of Negros Occidental in 1925.",
"In his three years as governor, he focused on building roads and bridges throughout the province.",
"The development of the provincial government building was initiated by him.",
"He placed a high priority on improving the province's educational system and for having had more schools built during his term than all the governors before him combined.",
"He was elected representative of the first district of Negros Occidental in 1928 after running for Congress.",
"He worked for the modernization of sugar centrals, increasing the share of sugarcane planters within the sugar produced, and raising the wages of farm laborers as a representative of a district whose primary means of livelihood depend upon the sugar industry.",
"The establishment of faculties in remote barrios and well plazas in towns was one of the things he worked on as Chairman of the Committee on Public Instruction.",
"He was a delegate to the Constitutional Convention in 1935.",
"The inclusion of social justice within the Constitution's declaration of principles was one of his outstanding contributions as a delegate.",
"Dr. Locsn was a loyal supporter of the party and a fanatical advocate of its principles.",
"Ferdinand Marcos was a member of the Nationalista party when he switched his loyalties and ran for president.",
"When Marcos declared martial law in 1972, he regretted giving his support to the presidency.",
"During Martial Law, Dr. Locsn wore a black ribbon to protest against Marcos.",
"He wore a black ribbon on his deathbed to symbolize his mourning of democracy.",
"The first post-war cabinet member under President Osmena was Dr. Locsn, who was Secretary of the Department of Health and Public Welfare.",
"He dedicated himself to addressing a wide range of issues while he was a senator.",
"He worked for the approval of various measures to ensure and promote the health and safety of people through the establishment of Rural Health Units, the standardization of hospital services, and the National Campaign Against Tuberculosis.",
"He secured appropriations for the construction of new hospitals, health centers, clinics and other health care facilities.",
"He worked to improve the salaries of public health care personnel.",
"In order to prevent any deficiency during his term as Chairman of the Committee on Accounts, he tried to maintain the annual appropriation.",
"His other achievements as a Senator include sponsorship of the Rural Banks Act, authorship of the flag ceremony law, and increase of the salary of public school teachers.",
"Senator Locsn was a member of the Philippine economic mission which was headed by Senator Laurel.",
"The Filipino First Policy was authored by Dr. Locsn when he was the Chairman of the National Economic Council.",
"The Filipino First Policy gave a boost to the development of agriculture.",
"The establishment of more cement factories, flour mills, and FILOIL resulted from this.",
"It led to the construction of artesian wells and hydro-electric power plants in different parts of the Philippines.",
"Another major result was the development of new industries through the Industrial Dispersal Program.",
"The National Productivity Board of the Philippines was headed by him while he was Chairman of NEC.",
"He was elected the first Chairman of the Asian Productivity Organization in May 1961, an honor not only to himself but to the Philippines which he represented.",
"He became the acting Secretary of the Department of Agriculture and Natural Resources after his term as NEC Chairman ended.",
"He had the licensing of forest concessions investigated which led to a reduction in the granting of such licenses and the filing of legal cases against illegal logging in the country.",
"Dr. Locsn had a stroke in 1974 because he wasn't able to do anything about abolishing Martial Law.",
"He had problems with his bladder and gallbladder.",
"He became bedridden in 1976 because of his illnesses and old age.",
"He died on May 1, 1977.",
"He was a dedicated and principled public servant.",
"He refused to allow the city of Silay to be renamed after him.",
"The hospital in Silay was renamed after him in honor of his service to the Silaynons.",
"The Silay Cultural and Civic Center in his hometown was named after him.",
"Many of the younger Silaynons don't know who he really was and what he did.",
"The Dr. Jose C. Locsn Memorial Provincial Hospital was closed and all of its services were transferred to the new Teresita L. Jalandoni Provincial Hospital.",
"He had eighteen children and was married to a woman.",
"At the age of four, one of his sons died of typhoid.",
"He lost his wife in 1959 at the age of 61.",
"He married again at the age of 70.",
"He had two children with his second wife, a social worker from Bacolod.",
"The 3rd Congress of the Philippines Senators of the 2nd Congress of the Philippines Secretaries of Agriculture of the Philippines Secretaries of Environment and Natural Resources of the Philippines Secretaries of Health of the Philippines Secretaries of Social Welfare and Development of the Philippines People from Silay"
] | <mask> (August 27, 1891 – May 1, 1977) was a Philippine doctor and senator. Early life and education
Dr. <mask> was born on August 27, 1891 in Silay, Negros Occidental. He was the third child among the five siblings of <mask> and Enriqueta Corteza. His family, who was originally from Molo, Iloilo, was among the most prominent when they settled in Silay. They acquired lands and engaged in sugarcane farming. They were devout Roman Catholics. <mask> finished his primary education in Silay.Thereafter, his parents sent him to Manila to study, first at Liceo de Manila and afterwards at the Universidad de Santo Tomas, where he graduated with the degree of Doctor of Medicine, receiving the honor “Meritissimus.”
Medical practice
He started his medical profession in Silay, where he established the Maternity and Children’s Hospital which later became the Silay General Hospital. He was also responsible for the establishment of a Rest and Resettlement Center for Tuberculosis in Patag, Silay’s mountain barangay. He also organized several women's clubs to run puericulture centers. Apart from his initiatives in Silay, he was also responsible for the establishment of the Negros Occidental Provincial Hospital and later its School of Nursing. Political career
Although Dr. Locsín was a doctor by profession, he inclined politics. Due to his service to the people of Silay, he was elected as Municipal Councilor when he first decided to run for public office. After that, he was elected as provincial member of Negros Occidental.In 1925, he became Governor of Negros Occidental. In his three years as governor, he focused on building roads and bridges throughout the province further establishing a waterworks system. Along with the Provincial Board, he initiated the development of the provincial government building. He also placed a high priority on improving the province’s educational system and for having had more schools built during his term than all the governors before him combined. After his term as governor, he ran for Congress and was elected representative of the first district of Negros Occidental in 1928. As a representative of a district whose primary means of livelihood depend upon the sugar industry, he worked for the modernization of sugar centrals, increasing the share of sugarcane planters within the sugar produced, and raising the wages of farm laborers. As Chairman of the Committee on Public Instruction, he worked on the establishment of faculties in remote barrios and well plazas in towns to market cultural events.In 1935, he became a delegate to the Constitutional Convention. One of his outstanding contributions as a delegate to the convention was the inclusion of social justice within the Constitution’s declaration of principles. Dr. <mask> was a member of the Nacionalista Party, and a fanatical advocate of its principles, and a loyal supporter of its members. When Ferdinand Marcos switched allegiance and ran for president in 1965 under Nationalista, he supported Marcos’ candidacy, being members of the said party. But when Marcos declared martial law in 1972, he was disheartened and regretted having given his support to Marcos’ presidency. Although he was no longer active in politics during the time of Martial Law, Dr. <mask> wore a black ribbon as a sign of protest against Marcos. Even on his deathbed, he wore with him the black ribbon symbolizing his mourning of the death of democracy.At the Senate
Dr. <mask> was the first post-war cabinet member under President Sergio Osmena in 1945 to 1946, serving as Secretary of the Department of Health and Public Welfare to help people recuperate from the ravages of World War II. From 1951 to 1957, he served the country as a senator and dedicated himself to addressing a wide range of issues. As Chairman of the Health Committee, he worked for the approval of various measures to ensure and promote the health and safety of people through the establishment of Rural Health Units, the standardization of hospital services, and the National Campaign Against Tuberculosis. In addition, he also secured appropriations for the construction of new hospitals, health centers, clinics and other health care facilities. At the same time, he also worked for the improvement of salary levels of public health care personnel, especially doctors. As Chairman of the Committee on Accounts, he strived to maintain the annual appropriation in order to prevent any deficiency during his term. His other achievements as a Senator include sponsorship of the Rural Banks Act; authorship of the Flag Ceremony Law which gave importance to recognizing and respecting the Philippine flag; increase of the salary of public school teachers; and passage of a measure to celebrate the centennial of the birth of Dr. Jose Rizal in an appropriate manner.Senator <mask> was a member of the Philippine economic mission headed by Senator Laurel which worked for the Laurel-Langley Trade Agreement of 1945. The Filipino First Policy
Perhaps the greatest contribution of Dr. <mask> to the upliftment of the Filipino people is his authorship of the bill popularly known as the “Filipino First Policy” during his term as Chairman of the National Economic Council (NEC, now the National Economic and Development Authority, or NEDA) from 1958 to 1961. As an effect of the Filipino First Policy, agro-industrial development was given impetus and encouragement. This resulted in the establishment of more cement factories, flour mills, and FILOIL–the first of the Filipino-owned gasoline companies. It also led to the banning of importation of plywood, the financing of irrigation and fertilizer programs, and the construction of artesian wells and hydro-electric power plants in different parts of the Philippines. Another major result was the development of new industries through the Industrial Dispersal Program, and the program for social and economic development of the Mindanao Region. At the same time that he was Chairman of NEC, he headed the National Productivity Board of the Philippines.As such, he contributed to the establishment of the Asian Productivity Organization (APO) of which he was unanimously elected its first Chairman in May 1961 during its inaugural meeting in Tokyo, Japan, an honour not only to himself but to the Philippines which he represented. When his term as NEC Chairman ended in 1961, he was appointed as Acting Secretary of the Department of Agriculture and Natural Resources. During this short assignment, he had the licensing of forest concessions investigated which led to a marked reduction in the granting of such licenses and the filing of legal cases against illegal logging in the country. Legacy
In 1974, Dr. Locsín suffered a stroke which some people say was brought about by his frustration with not being able to directly do anything about abolishing Martial Law. From then on, he underwent several surgical procedures due to problems with his gallbladder and prostate. Because of complications brought about by old age and his illnesses, he became bedridden in 1976. On May 1, 1977, he died at the age of 88.He left a legacy of dedicated and principled public service. Before his death, it was proposed that the city of Silay be renamed after him, but he refused. After his death, the hospital in Silay was renamed after him in honor and gratitude for his service to the Silaynons. The Rizal Cultural and Civic Center in his hometown, Silay was also built in his honor and named after him. However, in spite of these recognitions, many of the younger Silaynons do not know who he really was and what he had accomplished. Recently, the Dr. Jose C. Locsín Memorial Provincial Hospital, which he had established, was closed down and all its services were transferred to the new Teresita L. Jalandoni Provincial Hospital. Personal life
He married Salvacion Montelibano and had eighteen children.One of his sons died of typhoid at the age of four. He experienced another loss in 1959 when his wife died of cardiac arrest at the age of 61. In 1962, at the age of 70, he remarried. His second wife, Delia Ediltrudes Santiago, a social worker from Bacolod, bore him a son and a daughter. Notes
References
External links
Official Senate site
Senators of the 3rd Congress of the Philippines
Senators of the 2nd Congress of the Philippines
Secretaries of Agriculture of the Philippines
Secretaries of Environment and Natural Resources of the Philippines
Secretaries of Health of the Philippines
Secretaries of Social Welfare and Development of the Philippines
People from Silay
Governors of Negros Occidental
Nacionalista Party politicians
20th-century Filipino medical doctors
1891 births
1977 deaths
Osmeña Administration cabinet members
Garcia Administration cabinet members
Macapagal Administration cabinet members
University of Santo Tomas alumni
Members of the Philippine Legislature
Members of the House of Representatives of the Philippines from Negros Occidental
Visayan people | [
"José Certeza Locsín",
"José Corteza Locsín",
"Domingo Locsín",
"Locsín",
"Locsín",
"Locsín",
"Locsín",
"Locsín",
"Locsín"
] | A doctor and senator, <mask> was from the Philippines. Dr. <mask> was born on August 27, 1891 in Silay. He was one of the five siblings of Domingo Locsn. His family was one of the most prominent when they settled in Silay. They were engaged in farming cane. They were Roman Catholics. Locsn finished school in Silay.He received the honor "Meritissimus" after graduating with the degree of Doctor of Medicine from the Universidad de Santo Tomas. The Rest and Resettlement Center for Tuberculosis was established by him. Several women's clubs were organized by him. He was responsible for the establishment of the Negros Occidental Provincial Hospital and the School of Nursing. Dr. Locsn had a political career. When he first decided to run for public office, he was elected as Municipal Councilor due to his service to the people of Silay. He was elected as a provincial member.He became the Governor of Negros Occidental in 1925. In his three years as governor, he focused on building roads and bridges throughout the province. The development of the provincial government building was initiated by him. He placed a high priority on improving the province's educational system and for having had more schools built during his term than all the governors before him combined. He was elected representative of the first district of Negros Occidental in 1928 after running for Congress. He worked for the modernization of sugar centrals, increasing the share of sugarcane planters within the sugar produced, and raising the wages of farm laborers as a representative of a district whose primary means of livelihood depend upon the sugar industry. The establishment of faculties in remote barrios and well plazas in towns was one of the things he worked on as Chairman of the Committee on Public Instruction.He was a delegate to the Constitutional Convention in 1935. The inclusion of social justice within the Constitution's declaration of principles was one of his outstanding contributions as a delegate. Dr. Locsn was a loyal supporter of the party and a fanatical advocate of its principles. Ferdinand Marcos was a member of the Nationalista party when he switched his loyalties and ran for president. When Marcos declared martial law in 1972, he regretted giving his support to the presidency. During Martial Law, Dr. Locsn wore a black ribbon to protest against Marcos. He wore a black ribbon on his deathbed to symbolize his mourning of democracy.The first post-war cabinet member under President Osmena was Dr. Locsn, who was Secretary of the Department of Health and Public Welfare. He dedicated himself to addressing a wide range of issues while he was a senator. He worked for the approval of various measures to ensure and promote the health and safety of people through the establishment of Rural Health Units, the standardization of hospital services, and the National Campaign Against Tuberculosis. He secured appropriations for the construction of new hospitals, health centers, clinics and other health care facilities. He worked to improve the salaries of public health care personnel. In order to prevent any deficiency during his term as Chairman of the Committee on Accounts, he tried to maintain the annual appropriation. His other achievements as a Senator include sponsorship of the Rural Banks Act, authorship of the flag ceremony law, and increase of the salary of public school teachers.Senator Locsn was a member of the Philippine economic mission which was headed by Senator Laurel. The Filipino First Policy was authored by Dr. Locsn when he was the Chairman of the National Economic Council. The Filipino First Policy gave a boost to the development of agriculture. The establishment of more cement factories, flour mills, and FILOIL resulted from this. It led to the construction of artesian wells and hydro-electric power plants in different parts of the Philippines. Another major result was the development of new industries through the Industrial Dispersal Program. The National Productivity Board of the Philippines was headed by him while he was Chairman of NEC.He was elected the first Chairman of the Asian Productivity Organization in May 1961, an honor not only to himself but to the Philippines which he represented. He became the acting Secretary of the Department of Agriculture and Natural Resources after his term as NEC Chairman ended. He had the licensing of forest concessions investigated which led to a reduction in the granting of such licenses and the filing of legal cases against illegal logging in the country. Dr. Locsn had a stroke in 1974 because he wasn't able to do anything about abolishing Martial Law. He had problems with his bladder and gallbladder. He became bedridden in 1976 because of his illnesses and old age. He died on May 1, 1977.He was a dedicated and principled public servant. He refused to allow the city of Silay to be renamed after him. The hospital in Silay was renamed after him in honor of his service to the Silaynons. The Silay Cultural and Civic Center in his hometown was named after him. Many of the younger Silaynons don't know who he really was and what he did. The Dr. Jose C. Locsn Memorial Provincial Hospital was closed and all of its services were transferred to the new Teresita L. Jalandoni Provincial Hospital. He had eighteen children and was married to a woman.At the age of four, one of his sons died of typhoid. He lost his wife in 1959 at the age of 61. He married again at the age of 70. He had two children with his second wife, a social worker from Bacolod. The 3rd Congress of the Philippines Senators of the 2nd Congress of the Philippines Secretaries of Agriculture of the Philippines Secretaries of Environment and Natural Resources of the Philippines Secretaries of Health of the Philippines Secretaries of Social Welfare and Development of the Philippines People from Silay | [
"José Certeza Locsn",
"José Corteza Locsn"
] |
382054 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ptolemy%20VIII%20Physcon | Ptolemy VIII Physcon | Ptolemy VIII Euergetes II Tryphon (, Ptolemaĩos Euergétēs Tryphon "Ptolemy the Benefactor, the luxurious"; c. 184 BC – 28 June 116 BC), nicknamed Physcon ( "Fatty"), was a king of the Ptolemaic dynasty in Egypt. He was the younger son of Ptolemy V Epiphanes and Cleopatra I Syra. His reign was characterised by fierce political and military conflict with his older brother Ptolemy VI Philometor and his sister Cleopatra II.
Ptolemy VIII was originally made co-ruler with his older siblings in the run-up to the Sixth Syrian War. In the course of that war, Ptolemy VI was captured and Ptolemy VIII became sole king of Egypt. When the war ended and Ptolemy VI was restored to the throne in 168 BC, the two brothers continued to quarrel. In 164 BC Ptolemy VIII drove out his brother and became sole king of the Ptolemaic empire, but he was expelled in turn in 163 BC. As a result of Roman intervention, Ptolemy VIII was awarded control of Cyrenaica. From there he repeatedly tried to capture Cyprus, which had also been promised to him by the Romans, from his brother.
After Ptolemy VI's death in 145 BC, Ptolemy VIII returned to Egypt as co-ruler with his sister. His cruel treatment of opposition and his decision to marry his niece Cleopatra III and promote her to the status of co-regent led to a civil war from 132 to 126 BC, in which Cleopatra II controlled Alexandria and enjoyed the support of the Greek population of the country, while Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III controlled most of the rest of Egypt and were supported by the native Egyptians. During this war, native Egyptians were promoted to the highest echelons of the Ptolemaic government for the first time. Ptolemy was victorious and ruled alongside Cleopatra II and Cleopatra III until his death in 116 BC.
The ancient Greek sources on Ptolemy VIII are extremely hostile, characterising him as cruel and mocking him as fat and degenerate, as part of a contrast with Ptolemy VI, whom they present extremely positively. The historian Günther Hölbl calls him "one of the most brutal and at the same time one of the shrewdest politicians of the Hellenistic Age."
Background and early life
Ptolemy was the younger son of Ptolemy V Epiphanes, who reigned from 204 to 180 BC. Ptolemy V's reign had been dominated by the Fifth Syrian War (204–198 BC), in which the Ptolemaic realm fought against the Seleucid king Antiochus III, who ruled the Near East and Asia Minor. In that war, Antiochus III had completely defeated the Ptolemaic forces, had annexed Coele-Syria and Judaea to his empire, and reduced Egypt to a subordinate position. The new situation was solidified with a peace treaty, in which Ptolemy V married Antiochus' daughter Cleopatra I in 194 BC. Ptolemy VI Philometor was the eldest son of the couple, born in 186 BC, and was the heir to the throne from birth. The exact date of Ptolemy VIII's birth is unknown, but it was probably around 184 BC. He also had an elder sister, Cleopatra II, who was probably born between 186 and 184 BC.
The defeat in the Fifth Syrian War cast a shadow over the rest of Ptolemy V's reign. One prominent faction within the Ptolemaic court agitated for a return to war in order to restore Egyptian prestige, while another faction resisted the expense involved in rebuilding and remilitarising the realm. When Ptolemy V died unexpectedly in September 180 BC, at the age of only 30, he was succeeded by Ptolemy VI. Since the new king was only six years old, actual power rested with the regents - first Cleopatra I (180–178/7 BC) and then Eulaeus and Lenaeus (178/7–170 BC). These regents were more closely associated with the peaceful faction and, as a result, members of the warhawk faction seem to have begun to look to the young Ptolemy VIII as a potential figurehead for their movement.
First reign (170–163 BC)
Accession and the Sixth Syrian War (170–168 BC)
The Seleucid king Seleucus IV, who had followed a generally peaceful policy, was murdered in 175 BC and after two months of conflict his brother Antiochus IV Epiphanes secured the throne. The unsettled situation empowered the warhawks in the Ptolemaic court and Eulaeus and Lenaeus made efforts to conciliate them. By 172 BC, they seem to have embraced the warhawks' position.
In October 170 BC, Ptolemy VIII, now about sixteen, was promoted to the status of co-regent and incorporated into the Ptolemaic dynastic cult as one of the Theoi Philometores (Mother-loving gods) alongside his brother and sister, who had now been married to one another. The current year was declared the first year of a new era. John Grainger argues that these ceremonies were intended to paper over the factional differences that had developed in the court and to promote unity in the run-up to war. Ptolemy VI remained the senior king, as demonstrated later in 170 BC by the declaration of Ptolemy VI's adulthood and the celebration of his coming-of-age ceremony (the anakleteria), marking the formal end of the regency government. In practice, however, the regents Eulaeus and Lenaeus remained in charge of the government.
The Sixth Syrian War broke out shortly after this, probably in early 169 BC. Ptolemy VIII probably remained in Alexandria, while the Ptolemaic army set out from the border fort of Pelusium to invade Palestine. The Ptolemaic army was intercepted and decimated by Antiochus IV's army in the Sinai. The defeated army withdrew to the Nile Delta, while Antiochus seized Pelusium and then moved on the Delta.
As a result of this defeat, Eulaeus and Lenaeus were toppled by a military coup and replaced with two prominent Ptolemaic generals, Comanus and Cineas. As Antiochus advanced on Alexandria, Ptolemy VI went out to meet him. They negotiated an agreement of friendship, which in effect reduced Egypt to a Seleucid client state. When news of the agreement reached Alexandria, the people of the city rioted. Comanus and Cineas rejected the agreement, rejected Ptolemy VI's authority and declared Ptolemy VIII the sole king (Cleopatra II's position remained unchanged). Antiochus responded by placing Alexandria under siege, but he was unable to take the city and withdrew from Egypt in September 169 BC, as winter approached, leaving Ptolemy VI as his puppet king in Memphis and retaining a garrison in Pelusium.
Within two months, Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra II reconciled with Ptolemy VI and he returned to Alexandria as their co-regent. The restored government repudiated the agreement that Ptolemy VI had made with Antiochus and began to recruit new troops from Greece. In response, in spring 168 BC, Antiochus invaded Egypt for a second time. Officially, this invasion was justified by the claim that Ptolemy VIII had unjustly appropriated his older brother's authority. Antiochus quickly occupied Memphis and was crowned king of Egypt and advanced on Alexandria. However, the Ptolemies had appealed to Rome for help over the winter and a Roman embassy led by Gaius Popillius Laenas confronted Antiochus at the town of Eleusis and forced him to agree to a settlement, bringing the war to an end.
From joint rule to sole rule (168–163 BC)
Initially, the joint rule of the two brothers and Cleopatra II, which had been established during the war, continued. But the complete failure of the Egyptian forces in the Sixth Syrian War had left the Ptolemaic monarchy's prestige seriously diminished and it caused a permanent rift between Ptolemy VI and Ptolemy VIII.
In 165 BC, Dionysius Petosarapis, a prominent courtier who appears to have been of native Egyptian origin, attempted to take advantage of the conflict between the brothers in order to take control of the government. He announced to the people of Alexandria that Ptolemy VI had tried to get him to assassinate Ptolemy VIII and tried to whip up a mob to support him. Ptolemy VI managed to convince Ptolemy VIII that the charges were untrue and the two brothers appeared publicly together in the stadium, defusing the crisis. Dionysius fled the city and convinced some military contingents to mutiny. Heavy fighting took place in the Fayyum over the next year. This and another revolt in the Thebaid – the latest in a series of rebellions that had attempted to overthrow the Ptolemies and re-establish native Egyptian rule. Ptolemy VI successfully suppressed the rebellion after a bitter siege at Panopolis.
Late in 164 BC, probably not long after Ptolemy VI had returned from the south, Ptolemy VIII, who was now about twenty years old, somehow expelled Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II from power. Ptolemy VI fled to Rome and then Cyprus. The exact course of events is not known, but Diodorus Siculus reports that the instigator of the expulsion was a man named Timotheus, who then became the dominant minister. Ptolemy VIII now assumed the epithet Euergetes ('benefactor'), which recalled his ancestor Ptolemy III Euergetes and distinguished him from Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II who both bore the epithet Philometor. Ptolemy VIII is said to have behaved tyrannically, and his minister Timotheus used torture and arbitrary executions to eliminate his enemies. In summer 163 BC, the people of Alexandria rioted against Ptolemy VIII, expelling him in turn and recalling Ptolemy VI.
Reign in Cyrenaica (163–145 BC)
On his return to power, a pair of Roman agents convinced Ptolemy VI to grant Ptolemy VIII control of Cyrenaica. Ptolemy VIII departed for Cyrene, but he was not satisfied. In late 163 or early 162 BC, he went to Rome to request help. The Senate was convinced that the division was unfair, declaring that Ptolemy VIII ought to receive Cyprus as well. The ancient historian Polybius believed that the Senate made this decision with the conscious goal of weakening Ptolemaic power. Titus Manlius Torquatus and Gnaeus Cornelius Merula were sent as envoys to force Ptolemy VI to concede this. From Rome, Ptolemy VIII went to Greece where he recruited soldiers in preparation for an expedition to seize Cyprus by force. He had sailed to Rhodes with this fleet when he encountered Torquatus and Merula, who convinced him to discharge his troops and return to Cyrene. He went to the border between Egypt and Cyrene, waiting with a force of 1,000 Cretan mercenaries at a small town just west of Paraetonium for the results of the Roman negotiations with Ptolemy VI. Ptolemy VIII had been waiting there for forty days when Ptolemy Sempetesis, the governor that Ptolemy VIII had left in charge of Cyrene in his absence, suddenly raised a revolt. Ptolemy marched to suppress the revolt and was defeated in battle. He regained control over Cyrene by the end of 162 BC, but it is not known whether he achieved this by negotiation or military action.
However, when Torquatus and Merula arrived in Alexandria, Ptolemy VI successfully put them off until he heard about the revolt, at which point he refused their demands. They had to return to Rome without achieving their goal. In winter 162/61 BC, the Roman Senate responded to this by breaking off relations with Ptolemy VI and to grant Ptolemy VIII permission to use force to take control of Cyprus, but they offered him no tangible support. He launched a military expedition to Cyprus in 161 BC. This expedition lasted up to a year, before fierce Cypriot resistance forced him to abandon the enterprise.
In 156 or 155 BC, Ptolemy VIII faced a failed assassination attempt, which he attributed to his older brother. Ptolemy VIII went to Rome and displaying the scars he had received in the attempt to the Senate. As a result of the embassy, the Roman Senate agreed to send a second embassy in 154 BC, led by Gnaeus Cornelius Merula and Lucius Minucius Thermus, with an honour guard of troops, in order to enforce the transfer of Cyprus to Ptolemy VIII's control. Ptolemy VIII was besieged by his older brother at Lapethus and was captured. Ptolemy VIII was persuaded to withdraw from Cyprus, in exchange for continued possession of Cyrenaica, an annual payment of grain, and a promise of marriage to one of Ptolemy VI's infant daughters (probably Cleopatra Thea) once she came of age.
Relations with Rome
Throughout his time as king in Cyrene, Ptolemy VIII maintained extremely close relations with Rome. From 162 BC, he was an official amicus et socius (friend and ally) of the Roman Republic. During his time in Rome he is said to have met Cornelia. In 152 BC, after the death of her husband, Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, Ptolemy VIII allegedly asked for her hand in marriage, which she refused. This encounter was popular in neoclassical art, but it is unlikely that it ever actually took place. Even if untrue, the story may reflect close ties between Ptolemy VIII and the gentes Cornelia and Sempronia. By contrast, Ptolemy VI seems to have maintained ties with Cato the Elder.
An inscription of 155 BC, set up in the aftermath of the assassination attempt records Ptolemy VIII's will, in which he bequeaths Cyrenaica to Rome if he died childless. This act is not mentioned by any literary source but it fits with the very close alignment between Ptolemy VIII and the Romans that is attested in the literary sources. Similar testaments are known from other contemporary monarchs, notably Attalus III of Pergamum. They were often used by monarchs as an attempt to protect themselves from assassination or coup. Ptolemy VIII's will would be the earliest example of this practice. However, L. Criscuolo has argued that the inscription of Ptolemy's will is actually a forgery produced by the Romans after they gained control of Cyrenaica in 96 BC.
Spectacle and construction
As king of Cyrene, Ptolemy VIII attempted to display the Hellenistic royal virtue of tryphe (luxury). The main priesthood in Cyrene was the position of the priest of Apollo. Ptolemy assumed this position and discharged his duties, especially the hosting of feasts, extremely sumptuously. He also engaged in a wide-ranging construction project in the city. A large tomb west of Ptolemais seems to have been intended as his final resting place.
Second reign (145–132 BC)
Ptolemy VI died on campaign in Syria in 145 BC. Ptolemy VI seems to have intended for his seven-year-old son, also called Ptolemy, to succeed him, but after three weeks, the Alexandrians called on Ptolemy VIII to return from Cyrene, assume the kingship and marry his older sister, Cleopatra II. The royal couple were incorporated into the dynastic cult as the Theoi Euergetai ('benefactor gods') - Cleopatra having previously been one of the Theoi Philometores with Ptolemy VI. Ptolemy was proclaimed pharaoh in Memphis in 144 or 143 BC, during which the couple's first and only child, Ptolemy Memphites, was born.
On his return to Alexandria in 145 BC, Ptolemy VIII is reported to have launched a purge of those who had opposed him and supported Ptolemy VI. This purge is luridly described in the literary sources, though it is sometimes difficult to determine whether specific anecdotes belong to this event or his later reconquest of Alexandria in 126 BC. Justin reports that Ptolemy let his soldiers rampage through the streets of Alexandria, murdering indiscriminately, until he was "left alone with his soldiers in so large a city, and found himself a king, not of men, but of empty houses." Valerius Maximus says that when the young men of Alexandria took refuge in the gymnasion, Ptolemy set the building on fire. It is probably in this period that Ptolemy gained a number of pejorative nicknames, including Physcon (fatty) and Kakergetes (malefactor) - a pun on his official epithet Euergetes (benefactor). Ptolemy's accession also marked the end of Ptolemaic presence in the Aegean Sea. Within months of his accession, he had withdrawn all troops from Itanos, Thera, and Methana, the last remaining Ptolemaic bases in the Aegean. The Ptolemaic empire was now limited to Egypt, Cyprus, and Cyrene.
Ptolemy VIII probably also had the young son of Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II, who was also called Ptolemy, murdered. According to Justin, Ptolemy VIII did the deed personally, on the night of his wedding to Cleopatra in 145 BC, and the boy died in his mother's arms. Documentary evidence from papyri indicates that in reality, the boy was initially maintained as heir and only removed after the birth of Ptolemy Memphites. By the late 140s BC, Ptolemy Memphites had been promoted to co-regent.
Around 140 BC, Ptolemy VIII married his niece Cleopatra III (daughter of Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II) and made her a co-ruler, without divorcing his older sister, Cleopatra II. According to Livy, Ptolemy VIII had initiated a relationship with her shortly after his accession which he now made official. Daniel Ogden has argued that the marriage may not have been planned from the outset, but a measure taken to prevent her from being married to someone else who might use that marriage in order to claim the throne. However, the new arrangement led to conflict with Cleopatra II.
Apparently in response to this new marriage and with the support of Cleopatra II, a former Ptolemaic officer called Galaestes initiated a revolt. Galaestes had been a trusted official under Ptolemy VI but had been forced into exile in 145 BC. In Greece, he gathered an army of other Ptolemaic exiles, then announced that he had a young son of Ptolemy VI in his care and crowned this boy as king. Galaestes then invaded Egypt, intending to put this child on the throne. Ptolemy VIII's mercenaries, whose pay was in arrears, nearly defected to the rebellion, but their commander, Hierax, prevented this by paying their wages from his own money. By February 139 BC, Galaestes had been defeated and Ptolemy had issued a decree affirming the rights and privileges of the Egyptian priesthood, in which he represented himself, Cleopatra II, and Cleopatra III as harmoniously ruling together.
In the same year, Ptolemy VIII received a Roman embassy, led by Scipio Aemilianus, which was intended to effect a peaceful settlement of all affairs in the Eastern Mediterranean. The ancient sources emphasise the sumptuous greeting that the Romans received, mostly in order to contrast it with the austere behaviour of the Romans. By this point he was apparently enormously fat and was transported everywhere in a litter.
Civil war (132–126 BC)
In late 132 BC, the conflict between the royal siblings finally erupted into open warfare, with Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III on one side opposing Cleopatra II on the other. At first, Ptolemy retained control of Alexandria, but in late 131 BC the people of Alexandria rioted in favour of Cleopatra II and set fire to the royal palace. Ptolemy VIII, Cleopatra III, and their children escaped to Cyprus. Cleopatra II meanwhile had herself crowned as sole queen - the first time that a Ptolemaic woman had done this - and assumed the title of Thea Philometor Soteira (Mother-loving, Saviour Goddess), which served to link her to her deceased husband Ptolemy VI Philometor and to the dynastic founder, Ptolemy I Soter
Although Alexandria had sided with Cleopatra II and she tended to be supported by Greeks and Jews throughout the country, Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III were more popular with the native Egyptian population. Most of Egypt continued to acknowledge Ptolemy VIII as king. In the south of the country, however, a man named Harsiesi took advantage of the chaos to rebel - following in the footsteps of the rebellion of Hugronaphor and Ankhmakis (206-185 BC). Harsiesi probably declared himself Pharaoh and managed to seize control of Thebes in August or September of 131 BC. He was expelled in November and pursued by Paos, the strategos of the Thebaid, who was also an Egyptian.
Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III had returned from Cyprus to Egypt by the beginning of 130 BC. By spring, they were in charge of Memphis. Impressed by Paos' success against Harsiesi, they promoted him to command over the whole of Upper Egypt and put him in charge of the whole military apparatus - the first time that a native Egyptian had held such a prominent position. Harsiesi was finally captured and executed in September 130 BC. Alexandria was placed under siege but Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III were unable to capture it. Cleopatra II also maintained strongholds throughout the country – Harmonthis in the Thebaid was still under her control in October 130 BC. Cleopatra II had planned to have her son Ptolemy Memphites, who was now twelve years old and residing in Cyrene, recalled to Alexandria and acclaimed as king. Ptolemy VIII was able to get hold of the boy in 130 BC, killed him, and sent the dismembered pieces back to Cleopatra II on her birthday. Both parties appealed to Rome, but the Senate did not intervene in the conflict.
Growing desperate, in 129 BC Cleopatra II offered the throne of Egypt to the Seleucid king Demetrius II Nicator. He had just returned to power in the Seleucid realm after years in Parthian captivity and was the husband of Cleopatra Thea (daughter of Cleopatra II and Ptolemy VI). Accordingly, Demetrius II launched an invasion of Egypt in 128 BC, but his forces were still in the eastern desert, besieging the border fortress of Pelusium, when news arrived that Cleopatra Thea had installed their son, the future Antiochus VIII as king of Syria. The Seleucid troops mutinied and Demetrius II had to return to Syria.
In order to prevent Demetrius from returning once he had dealt with these revolts, Ptolemy VIII agreed to a request that he had received from a group of rebels in Syria, who had asked him to send them a royal pretender to lead them. Ptolemy selected Alexander II Zabinas, whom he presented as the son of an earlier Seleucid king, Alexander I Balas ( BC). The resulting conflict in the Seleucid realm continued for years and meant that Seleucid intervention in opposition to Ptolemy VIII was no longer possible.
In 127 BC, Cleopatra II took her treasury and fled Alexandria for the court of Demetrius II. In her absence, Ptolemy VIII finally reconquered Alexandria in 126 BC. This reconquest was accompanied by a bloody purge of the supporters of Cleopatra II. It is difficult to tell whether various anecdotes recording the bloody slaughter that Ptolemy VIII presided over belong to this event or to the earlier purge of 145 BC.
Third reign (126–116 BC)
After this, Ptolemy began negotiations to reconcile with Cleopatra II and the Seleucid court. In 124 BC, Ptolemy VIII abandoned his support for Alexander II Zabinas and agreed to support Demetrius II's son and successor, Antiochus VIII Philometor instead. He sealed the agreement by sending his second daughter by Cleopatra III, Tryphaena, to marry the Seleucid king. Cleopatra II returned to Egypt from the Seleucid court and was once more acknowledged as co-regent with Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III. She appears along with them in papyrus documents from July 124 BC onwards.
The reconciliation of Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III with Cleopatra II was nevertheless a long process. To solidify their reconciliation and restore peace and prosperity to Egypt, the royal trio issued the Amnesty Decree in April 118 BC, which survives in a number of papyrus copies. This decree pardoned all crimes other than murder and temple robbing committed before 118 BC, encouraged refugees to return home and reclaim their property, waived all back-taxes, confirmed land grants made to soldiers during the civil war, affirmed temple land holdings and tax privileges, and instructed tax officials to use standardised weights and measures on pain of death. In addition, the decree established the jurisdiction of courts in legal disputes between Egyptians and Greeks. Henceforth, this would be determined by the language that the documents at the heart of the legal dispute were written in: the chrematistai (money-judges) would decide disputes over Greek documents, while the laokritai (folk-judges) would resolve disputes over Egyptian documents. The chrematistai were no longer allowed to drag Egyptians into their courts, as had apparently been occurring previously.
Ptolemy VIII died on 28 June 116 BC. He was succeeded by his eldest surviving son, Ptolemy IX, alongside Cleopatra II and Cleopatra III. Justin reports that he left the throne to Cleopatra III and whichever of her sons she preferred. Although she preferred her younger son, Ptolemy X, the people of Alexandria forced her to choose Ptolemy IX. This account is probably a false one, invented after Ptolemy IX was deposed by Ptolemy X.
Regime
Ptolemaic dynastic cult
Ptolemaic Egypt had a dynastic cult, which centred on the Ptolemaia festival and the annual Priest of Alexander the Great, whose full title included the names of all the Ptolemaic ruling couples and appeared in official documents as part of the date formula. In October 170 BC when Ptolemy VIII first became co-regent with his brother and sister, who were already worshipped as the Theoi Philometores (Mother-loving gods), he was simply added to their cult as a third Mother-loving God. When he seized sole power in 164 BC, he seems to have assumed the new epithet Euergetes, but it is not clear what the implications of this were for the dynastic cult. After his expulsion from Alexandria in 163 BC, the Theoi Philometores are attested once more.
At the start of Ptolemy VIII's second reign in 145 BC, he was definitely incorporated into the dynastic cult, with him and Cleopatra II becoming the Theoi Euergetai ('benefactor gods'). Cleopatra III was added as a third Benefactor god in 142 or 141 BC, some time before she married Ptolemy VIII and was promoted to the status of co-regent. During the period of the civil war, Cleopatra II removed the Theoi Euergetai from the dynastic cult in Alexandria, but Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III maintained their own rival priest of Alexander from 130 BC until they recovered Alexandria in 127 BC. He is distinguished in documents as the 'Priest of Alexander... in the king's camp.' The situation before the civil war was restored in 124 BC after the reconciliation of the siblings and it continued until Ptolemy VIII's death.
From May 118 BC, shortly after the final reconciliation of the royal trio, a new king was incorporated into the dynastic cult, Theos Neos Philopator (New Father-loving God). This appears to have been a posthumous cult for one of the princes killed by Ptolemy VIII, either Ptolemy Eupator (son of Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II) or Ptolemy Memphites (son of Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra II). Ptolemy Memphites is generally the preferred candidate, with the deification serving as an indication that the prince had posthumously reconciled with his father and murderer.
Since the death of Arsinoe II, deceased Ptolemaic queens had been honoured with a separate dynastic cult of their own, including a separate priestess who marched in religious processions in Alexandria behind the priest of Alexander the Great and whose names also appeared in dating formulae. In 131 or 130 BC, Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III took advantage of this tradition, in their conflict against Cleopatra II, by establishing a new priesthood in honour of Cleopatra III. This new position was called the 'Hieros Polos (sacred foal) of Isis, Great Mother of the Gods' and was placed immediately after the priest of Alexander and ahead of all the priestesses of the previous queens in the order of precedence. The position was unlike the previous priesthoods in that it was established for a living queen rather than a deceased one and because the holder was a priest rather than a priestess. The position is not attested after 105 BC.
Pharaonic ideology and traditional Egyptian religion
From the beginning of the Ptolemaic dynasty, the Ptolemies had taken on the traditional role of the Egyptian Pharaoh and pursued a symbiotic alliance with the Egyptian priestly elite. The degree of investment of the Ptolemies in this aspect of their rulership steadily increased over the third and second centuries BC. Ptolemy VIII nevertheless represents a new stage in this process, since in the conflict with Cleopatra II he proved more popular among the Egyptians as their Pharaoh than among the Greeks as their king.
In the Amnesty decree that announced the reconciliation of Ptolemy VIII, Cleopatra III, and Cleopatra II in 118 BC, the royal trio undertook to support reconstruction and repair work at temples throughout Egypt. They also promised to pay for the mummification and entombment of the Apis and Mnevis bulls.
Alexandrian Scholarship
Ptolemy VIII was an active participant in Greek scholarship, especially philology. He is reported to have written a study of Homer at some point before 145 BC and twenty-four books of Hypomnemata ('Notes'), a miscellaneous collection of paradoxography, including stories about historical and contemporary monarchs, as well as exotic wildlife, and other topics. The surviving fragments are collected in Felix Jacoby's Fragmente der griechischen Historiker
Despite this interest, Ptolemy's reign saw a serious decline in the importance of Alexandria as an intellectual centre, in part due to the massacres that he carried out on taking control of the city in 145 BC and again in 126 BC. Among his victims on the first occasion were a number of prominent intellectuals, including Aristarchus of Samothrace and Apollodorus of Athens. The rest of the Alexandrian intellectuals appear to have been sent into exile, mostly relocating to Athens or Rhodes.
Indian Ocean trade
The Ptolemies had long retained a network of trading stations throughout the Red Sea, which enabled them to acquire gold, ivory, and elephants from the Horn of Africa. In the very last years of Ptolemy VIII's reign these sailors discovered that the annual reversal of the Indian Monsoon Current made it possible to cross the Indian Ocean by sea in summer and then return in winter. The first Greek to make this journey was Eudoxus of Cyzicus, who is reported to have travelled to India in 118 BC and again in 116 BC. The discovery opened up the possibility of direct seaborne trade with India. Previously, trade between the Mediterranean region and India had relied on intermediaries - sailors from the Arabian centres in the Gulf of Aden and the Persian Gulf and then desert caravans led by the Nabataeans to carry goods across the Arabian desert to the Mediterranean coast. Henceforth sailors from Ptolemaic Egypt began to make the full journey themselves. This marks the beginning of the Indian Ocean trade, which would become a major part of the Eurasian economic world system that operated from the first century BC until the fourth century AD.
Marriage and issue
Ptolemy VIII Euergetes married his older sister, Cleopatra II, on his accession in 145 BC and she bore him one son:
In 142 or 141 BC, Ptolemy also married his niece, Cleopatra III, daughter of Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II. They had a number of children:
By a concubine, perhaps Eirene, Ptolemy had further issue:
Notes
References
Bibliography
Peter Green, Alexander to Actium (University of California Press, 1990)
Peter Nadig, Zwischen König und Karikatur: Das Bild Ptolemaios’ VIII. im Spannungsfeld der Überlieferung (C.H. Beck, 2007)
External links
Ptolemy Euergetes II at LacusCurtius — (Chapter X of E. R Bevan's House of Ptolemy, 1923)
The Will of Ptolemy VIII
2nd-century BC Pharaohs
Pharaohs of the Ptolemaic dynasty
2nd-century BC Greek people
Kings of Cyrene
Ancient child rulers
2nd-century BC rulers
2nd-century BC Egyptian people
180s BC births
116 BC deaths | [
"Ptolemy VIII Euergetes II Tryphon (, Ptolemaĩos Euergétēs Tryphon \"Ptolemy the Benefactor, the luxurious\"; c. 184 BC – 28 June 116 BC), nicknamed Physcon ( \"Fatty\"), was a king of the Ptolemaic dynasty in Egypt.",
"He was the younger son of Ptolemy V Epiphanes and Cleopatra I Syra.",
"His reign was characterised by fierce political and military conflict with his older brother Ptolemy VI Philometor and his sister Cleopatra II.",
"Ptolemy VIII was originally made co-ruler with his older siblings in the run-up to the Sixth Syrian War.",
"In the course of that war, Ptolemy VI was captured and Ptolemy VIII became sole king of Egypt.",
"When the war ended and Ptolemy VI was restored to the throne in 168 BC, the two brothers continued to quarrel.",
"In 164 BC Ptolemy VIII drove out his brother and became sole king of the Ptolemaic empire, but he was expelled in turn in 163 BC.",
"As a result of Roman intervention, Ptolemy VIII was awarded control of Cyrenaica.",
"From there he repeatedly tried to capture Cyprus, which had also been promised to him by the Romans, from his brother.",
"After Ptolemy VI's death in 145 BC, Ptolemy VIII returned to Egypt as co-ruler with his sister.",
"His cruel treatment of opposition and his decision to marry his niece Cleopatra III and promote her to the status of co-regent led to a civil war from 132 to 126 BC, in which Cleopatra II controlled Alexandria and enjoyed the support of the Greek population of the country, while Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III controlled most of the rest of Egypt and were supported by the native Egyptians.",
"During this war, native Egyptians were promoted to the highest echelons of the Ptolemaic government for the first time.",
"Ptolemy was victorious and ruled alongside Cleopatra II and Cleopatra III until his death in 116 BC.",
"The ancient Greek sources on Ptolemy VIII are extremely hostile, characterising him as cruel and mocking him as fat and degenerate, as part of a contrast with Ptolemy VI, whom they present extremely positively.",
"The historian Günther Hölbl calls him \"one of the most brutal and at the same time one of the shrewdest politicians of the Hellenistic Age.\"",
"Background and early life\n\nPtolemy was the younger son of Ptolemy V Epiphanes, who reigned from 204 to 180 BC.",
"Ptolemy V's reign had been dominated by the Fifth Syrian War (204–198 BC), in which the Ptolemaic realm fought against the Seleucid king Antiochus III, who ruled the Near East and Asia Minor.",
"In that war, Antiochus III had completely defeated the Ptolemaic forces, had annexed Coele-Syria and Judaea to his empire, and reduced Egypt to a subordinate position.",
"The new situation was solidified with a peace treaty, in which Ptolemy V married Antiochus' daughter Cleopatra I in 194 BC.",
"Ptolemy VI Philometor was the eldest son of the couple, born in 186 BC, and was the heir to the throne from birth.",
"The exact date of Ptolemy VIII's birth is unknown, but it was probably around 184 BC.",
"He also had an elder sister, Cleopatra II, who was probably born between 186 and 184 BC.",
"The defeat in the Fifth Syrian War cast a shadow over the rest of Ptolemy V's reign.",
"One prominent faction within the Ptolemaic court agitated for a return to war in order to restore Egyptian prestige, while another faction resisted the expense involved in rebuilding and remilitarising the realm.",
"When Ptolemy V died unexpectedly in September 180 BC, at the age of only 30, he was succeeded by Ptolemy VI.",
"Since the new king was only six years old, actual power rested with the regents - first Cleopatra I (180–178/7 BC) and then Eulaeus and Lenaeus (178/7–170 BC).",
"These regents were more closely associated with the peaceful faction and, as a result, members of the warhawk faction seem to have begun to look to the young Ptolemy VIII as a potential figurehead for their movement.",
"First reign (170–163 BC)\n\nAccession and the Sixth Syrian War (170–168 BC)\n\n \nThe Seleucid king Seleucus IV, who had followed a generally peaceful policy, was murdered in 175 BC and after two months of conflict his brother Antiochus IV Epiphanes secured the throne.",
"The unsettled situation empowered the warhawks in the Ptolemaic court and Eulaeus and Lenaeus made efforts to conciliate them.",
"By 172 BC, they seem to have embraced the warhawks' position.",
"In October 170 BC, Ptolemy VIII, now about sixteen, was promoted to the status of co-regent and incorporated into the Ptolemaic dynastic cult as one of the Theoi Philometores (Mother-loving gods) alongside his brother and sister, who had now been married to one another.",
"The current year was declared the first year of a new era.",
"John Grainger argues that these ceremonies were intended to paper over the factional differences that had developed in the court and to promote unity in the run-up to war.",
"Ptolemy VI remained the senior king, as demonstrated later in 170 BC by the declaration of Ptolemy VI's adulthood and the celebration of his coming-of-age ceremony (the anakleteria), marking the formal end of the regency government.",
"In practice, however, the regents Eulaeus and Lenaeus remained in charge of the government.",
"The Sixth Syrian War broke out shortly after this, probably in early 169 BC.",
"Ptolemy VIII probably remained in Alexandria, while the Ptolemaic army set out from the border fort of Pelusium to invade Palestine.",
"The Ptolemaic army was intercepted and decimated by Antiochus IV's army in the Sinai.",
"The defeated army withdrew to the Nile Delta, while Antiochus seized Pelusium and then moved on the Delta.",
"As a result of this defeat, Eulaeus and Lenaeus were toppled by a military coup and replaced with two prominent Ptolemaic generals, Comanus and Cineas.",
"As Antiochus advanced on Alexandria, Ptolemy VI went out to meet him.",
"They negotiated an agreement of friendship, which in effect reduced Egypt to a Seleucid client state.",
"When news of the agreement reached Alexandria, the people of the city rioted.",
"Comanus and Cineas rejected the agreement, rejected Ptolemy VI's authority and declared Ptolemy VIII the sole king (Cleopatra II's position remained unchanged).",
"Antiochus responded by placing Alexandria under siege, but he was unable to take the city and withdrew from Egypt in September 169 BC, as winter approached, leaving Ptolemy VI as his puppet king in Memphis and retaining a garrison in Pelusium.",
"Within two months, Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra II reconciled with Ptolemy VI and he returned to Alexandria as their co-regent.",
"The restored government repudiated the agreement that Ptolemy VI had made with Antiochus and began to recruit new troops from Greece.",
"In response, in spring 168 BC, Antiochus invaded Egypt for a second time.",
"Officially, this invasion was justified by the claim that Ptolemy VIII had unjustly appropriated his older brother's authority.",
"Antiochus quickly occupied Memphis and was crowned king of Egypt and advanced on Alexandria.",
"However, the Ptolemies had appealed to Rome for help over the winter and a Roman embassy led by Gaius Popillius Laenas confronted Antiochus at the town of Eleusis and forced him to agree to a settlement, bringing the war to an end.",
"From joint rule to sole rule (168–163 BC)\n\nInitially, the joint rule of the two brothers and Cleopatra II, which had been established during the war, continued.",
"But the complete failure of the Egyptian forces in the Sixth Syrian War had left the Ptolemaic monarchy's prestige seriously diminished and it caused a permanent rift between Ptolemy VI and Ptolemy VIII.",
"In 165 BC, Dionysius Petosarapis, a prominent courtier who appears to have been of native Egyptian origin, attempted to take advantage of the conflict between the brothers in order to take control of the government.",
"He announced to the people of Alexandria that Ptolemy VI had tried to get him to assassinate Ptolemy VIII and tried to whip up a mob to support him.",
"Ptolemy VI managed to convince Ptolemy VIII that the charges were untrue and the two brothers appeared publicly together in the stadium, defusing the crisis.",
"Dionysius fled the city and convinced some military contingents to mutiny.",
"Heavy fighting took place in the Fayyum over the next year.",
"This and another revolt in the Thebaid – the latest in a series of rebellions that had attempted to overthrow the Ptolemies and re-establish native Egyptian rule.",
"Ptolemy VI successfully suppressed the rebellion after a bitter siege at Panopolis.",
"Late in 164 BC, probably not long after Ptolemy VI had returned from the south, Ptolemy VIII, who was now about twenty years old, somehow expelled Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II from power.",
"Ptolemy VI fled to Rome and then Cyprus.",
"The exact course of events is not known, but Diodorus Siculus reports that the instigator of the expulsion was a man named Timotheus, who then became the dominant minister.",
"Ptolemy VIII now assumed the epithet Euergetes ('benefactor'), which recalled his ancestor Ptolemy III Euergetes and distinguished him from Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II who both bore the epithet Philometor.",
"Ptolemy VIII is said to have behaved tyrannically, and his minister Timotheus used torture and arbitrary executions to eliminate his enemies.",
"In summer 163 BC, the people of Alexandria rioted against Ptolemy VIII, expelling him in turn and recalling Ptolemy VI.",
"Reign in Cyrenaica (163–145 BC)\nOn his return to power, a pair of Roman agents convinced Ptolemy VI to grant Ptolemy VIII control of Cyrenaica.",
"Ptolemy VIII departed for Cyrene, but he was not satisfied.",
"In late 163 or early 162 BC, he went to Rome to request help.",
"The Senate was convinced that the division was unfair, declaring that Ptolemy VIII ought to receive Cyprus as well.",
"The ancient historian Polybius believed that the Senate made this decision with the conscious goal of weakening Ptolemaic power.",
"Titus Manlius Torquatus and Gnaeus Cornelius Merula were sent as envoys to force Ptolemy VI to concede this.",
"From Rome, Ptolemy VIII went to Greece where he recruited soldiers in preparation for an expedition to seize Cyprus by force.",
"He had sailed to Rhodes with this fleet when he encountered Torquatus and Merula, who convinced him to discharge his troops and return to Cyrene.",
"He went to the border between Egypt and Cyrene, waiting with a force of 1,000 Cretan mercenaries at a small town just west of Paraetonium for the results of the Roman negotiations with Ptolemy VI.",
"Ptolemy VIII had been waiting there for forty days when Ptolemy Sempetesis, the governor that Ptolemy VIII had left in charge of Cyrene in his absence, suddenly raised a revolt.",
"Ptolemy marched to suppress the revolt and was defeated in battle.",
"He regained control over Cyrene by the end of 162 BC, but it is not known whether he achieved this by negotiation or military action.",
"However, when Torquatus and Merula arrived in Alexandria, Ptolemy VI successfully put them off until he heard about the revolt, at which point he refused their demands.",
"They had to return to Rome without achieving their goal.",
"In winter 162/61 BC, the Roman Senate responded to this by breaking off relations with Ptolemy VI and to grant Ptolemy VIII permission to use force to take control of Cyprus, but they offered him no tangible support.",
"He launched a military expedition to Cyprus in 161 BC.",
"This expedition lasted up to a year, before fierce Cypriot resistance forced him to abandon the enterprise.",
"In 156 or 155 BC, Ptolemy VIII faced a failed assassination attempt, which he attributed to his older brother.",
"Ptolemy VIII went to Rome and displaying the scars he had received in the attempt to the Senate.",
"As a result of the embassy, the Roman Senate agreed to send a second embassy in 154 BC, led by Gnaeus Cornelius Merula and Lucius Minucius Thermus, with an honour guard of troops, in order to enforce the transfer of Cyprus to Ptolemy VIII's control.",
"Ptolemy VIII was besieged by his older brother at Lapethus and was captured.",
"Ptolemy VIII was persuaded to withdraw from Cyprus, in exchange for continued possession of Cyrenaica, an annual payment of grain, and a promise of marriage to one of Ptolemy VI's infant daughters (probably Cleopatra Thea) once she came of age.",
"Relations with Rome\n\nThroughout his time as king in Cyrene, Ptolemy VIII maintained extremely close relations with Rome.",
"From 162 BC, he was an official amicus et socius (friend and ally) of the Roman Republic.",
"During his time in Rome he is said to have met Cornelia.",
"In 152 BC, after the death of her husband, Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, Ptolemy VIII allegedly asked for her hand in marriage, which she refused.",
"This encounter was popular in neoclassical art, but it is unlikely that it ever actually took place.",
"Even if untrue, the story may reflect close ties between Ptolemy VIII and the gentes Cornelia and Sempronia.",
"By contrast, Ptolemy VI seems to have maintained ties with Cato the Elder.",
"An inscription of 155 BC, set up in the aftermath of the assassination attempt records Ptolemy VIII's will, in which he bequeaths Cyrenaica to Rome if he died childless.",
"This act is not mentioned by any literary source but it fits with the very close alignment between Ptolemy VIII and the Romans that is attested in the literary sources.",
"Similar testaments are known from other contemporary monarchs, notably Attalus III of Pergamum.",
"They were often used by monarchs as an attempt to protect themselves from assassination or coup.",
"Ptolemy VIII's will would be the earliest example of this practice.",
"However, L. Criscuolo has argued that the inscription of Ptolemy's will is actually a forgery produced by the Romans after they gained control of Cyrenaica in 96 BC.",
"Spectacle and construction\nAs king of Cyrene, Ptolemy VIII attempted to display the Hellenistic royal virtue of tryphe (luxury).",
"The main priesthood in Cyrene was the position of the priest of Apollo.",
"Ptolemy assumed this position and discharged his duties, especially the hosting of feasts, extremely sumptuously.",
"He also engaged in a wide-ranging construction project in the city.",
"A large tomb west of Ptolemais seems to have been intended as his final resting place.",
"Second reign (145–132 BC)\n\nPtolemy VI died on campaign in Syria in 145 BC.",
"Ptolemy VI seems to have intended for his seven-year-old son, also called Ptolemy, to succeed him, but after three weeks, the Alexandrians called on Ptolemy VIII to return from Cyrene, assume the kingship and marry his older sister, Cleopatra II.",
"The royal couple were incorporated into the dynastic cult as the Theoi Euergetai ('benefactor gods') - Cleopatra having previously been one of the Theoi Philometores with Ptolemy VI.",
"Ptolemy was proclaimed pharaoh in Memphis in 144 or 143 BC, during which the couple's first and only child, Ptolemy Memphites, was born.",
"On his return to Alexandria in 145 BC, Ptolemy VIII is reported to have launched a purge of those who had opposed him and supported Ptolemy VI.",
"This purge is luridly described in the literary sources, though it is sometimes difficult to determine whether specific anecdotes belong to this event or his later reconquest of Alexandria in 126 BC.",
"Justin reports that Ptolemy let his soldiers rampage through the streets of Alexandria, murdering indiscriminately, until he was \"left alone with his soldiers in so large a city, and found himself a king, not of men, but of empty houses.\"",
"Valerius Maximus says that when the young men of Alexandria took refuge in the gymnasion, Ptolemy set the building on fire.",
"It is probably in this period that Ptolemy gained a number of pejorative nicknames, including Physcon (fatty) and Kakergetes (malefactor) - a pun on his official epithet Euergetes (benefactor).",
"Ptolemy's accession also marked the end of Ptolemaic presence in the Aegean Sea.",
"Within months of his accession, he had withdrawn all troops from Itanos, Thera, and Methana, the last remaining Ptolemaic bases in the Aegean.",
"The Ptolemaic empire was now limited to Egypt, Cyprus, and Cyrene.",
"Ptolemy VIII probably also had the young son of Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II, who was also called Ptolemy, murdered.",
"According to Justin, Ptolemy VIII did the deed personally, on the night of his wedding to Cleopatra in 145 BC, and the boy died in his mother's arms.",
"Documentary evidence from papyri indicates that in reality, the boy was initially maintained as heir and only removed after the birth of Ptolemy Memphites.",
"By the late 140s BC, Ptolemy Memphites had been promoted to co-regent.",
"Around 140 BC, Ptolemy VIII married his niece Cleopatra III (daughter of Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II) and made her a co-ruler, without divorcing his older sister, Cleopatra II.",
"According to Livy, Ptolemy VIII had initiated a relationship with her shortly after his accession which he now made official.",
"Daniel Ogden has argued that the marriage may not have been planned from the outset, but a measure taken to prevent her from being married to someone else who might use that marriage in order to claim the throne.",
"However, the new arrangement led to conflict with Cleopatra II.",
"Apparently in response to this new marriage and with the support of Cleopatra II, a former Ptolemaic officer called Galaestes initiated a revolt.",
"Galaestes had been a trusted official under Ptolemy VI but had been forced into exile in 145 BC.",
"In Greece, he gathered an army of other Ptolemaic exiles, then announced that he had a young son of Ptolemy VI in his care and crowned this boy as king.",
"Galaestes then invaded Egypt, intending to put this child on the throne.",
"Ptolemy VIII's mercenaries, whose pay was in arrears, nearly defected to the rebellion, but their commander, Hierax, prevented this by paying their wages from his own money.",
"By February 139 BC, Galaestes had been defeated and Ptolemy had issued a decree affirming the rights and privileges of the Egyptian priesthood, in which he represented himself, Cleopatra II, and Cleopatra III as harmoniously ruling together.",
"In the same year, Ptolemy VIII received a Roman embassy, led by Scipio Aemilianus, which was intended to effect a peaceful settlement of all affairs in the Eastern Mediterranean.",
"The ancient sources emphasise the sumptuous greeting that the Romans received, mostly in order to contrast it with the austere behaviour of the Romans.",
"By this point he was apparently enormously fat and was transported everywhere in a litter.",
"Civil war (132–126 BC)\nIn late 132 BC, the conflict between the royal siblings finally erupted into open warfare, with Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III on one side opposing Cleopatra II on the other.",
"At first, Ptolemy retained control of Alexandria, but in late 131 BC the people of Alexandria rioted in favour of Cleopatra II and set fire to the royal palace.",
"Ptolemy VIII, Cleopatra III, and their children escaped to Cyprus.",
"Cleopatra II meanwhile had herself crowned as sole queen - the first time that a Ptolemaic woman had done this - and assumed the title of Thea Philometor Soteira (Mother-loving, Saviour Goddess), which served to link her to her deceased husband Ptolemy VI Philometor and to the dynastic founder, Ptolemy I Soter\n\nAlthough Alexandria had sided with Cleopatra II and she tended to be supported by Greeks and Jews throughout the country, Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III were more popular with the native Egyptian population.",
"Most of Egypt continued to acknowledge Ptolemy VIII as king.",
"In the south of the country, however, a man named Harsiesi took advantage of the chaos to rebel - following in the footsteps of the rebellion of Hugronaphor and Ankhmakis (206-185 BC).",
"Harsiesi probably declared himself Pharaoh and managed to seize control of Thebes in August or September of 131 BC.",
"He was expelled in November and pursued by Paos, the strategos of the Thebaid, who was also an Egyptian.",
"Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III had returned from Cyprus to Egypt by the beginning of 130 BC.",
"By spring, they were in charge of Memphis.",
"Impressed by Paos' success against Harsiesi, they promoted him to command over the whole of Upper Egypt and put him in charge of the whole military apparatus - the first time that a native Egyptian had held such a prominent position.",
"Harsiesi was finally captured and executed in September 130 BC.",
"Alexandria was placed under siege but Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III were unable to capture it.",
"Cleopatra II also maintained strongholds throughout the country – Harmonthis in the Thebaid was still under her control in October 130 BC.",
"Cleopatra II had planned to have her son Ptolemy Memphites, who was now twelve years old and residing in Cyrene, recalled to Alexandria and acclaimed as king.",
"Ptolemy VIII was able to get hold of the boy in 130 BC, killed him, and sent the dismembered pieces back to Cleopatra II on her birthday.",
"Both parties appealed to Rome, but the Senate did not intervene in the conflict.",
"Growing desperate, in 129 BC Cleopatra II offered the throne of Egypt to the Seleucid king Demetrius II Nicator.",
"He had just returned to power in the Seleucid realm after years in Parthian captivity and was the husband of Cleopatra Thea (daughter of Cleopatra II and Ptolemy VI).",
"Accordingly, Demetrius II launched an invasion of Egypt in 128 BC, but his forces were still in the eastern desert, besieging the border fortress of Pelusium, when news arrived that Cleopatra Thea had installed their son, the future Antiochus VIII as king of Syria.",
"The Seleucid troops mutinied and Demetrius II had to return to Syria.",
"In order to prevent Demetrius from returning once he had dealt with these revolts, Ptolemy VIII agreed to a request that he had received from a group of rebels in Syria, who had asked him to send them a royal pretender to lead them.",
"Ptolemy selected Alexander II Zabinas, whom he presented as the son of an earlier Seleucid king, Alexander I Balas ( BC).",
"The resulting conflict in the Seleucid realm continued for years and meant that Seleucid intervention in opposition to Ptolemy VIII was no longer possible.",
"In 127 BC, Cleopatra II took her treasury and fled Alexandria for the court of Demetrius II.",
"In her absence, Ptolemy VIII finally reconquered Alexandria in 126 BC.",
"This reconquest was accompanied by a bloody purge of the supporters of Cleopatra II.",
"It is difficult to tell whether various anecdotes recording the bloody slaughter that Ptolemy VIII presided over belong to this event or to the earlier purge of 145 BC.",
"Third reign (126–116 BC)\n\nAfter this, Ptolemy began negotiations to reconcile with Cleopatra II and the Seleucid court.",
"In 124 BC, Ptolemy VIII abandoned his support for Alexander II Zabinas and agreed to support Demetrius II's son and successor, Antiochus VIII Philometor instead.",
"He sealed the agreement by sending his second daughter by Cleopatra III, Tryphaena, to marry the Seleucid king.",
"Cleopatra II returned to Egypt from the Seleucid court and was once more acknowledged as co-regent with Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III.",
"She appears along with them in papyrus documents from July 124 BC onwards.",
"The reconciliation of Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III with Cleopatra II was nevertheless a long process.",
"To solidify their reconciliation and restore peace and prosperity to Egypt, the royal trio issued the Amnesty Decree in April 118 BC, which survives in a number of papyrus copies.",
"This decree pardoned all crimes other than murder and temple robbing committed before 118 BC, encouraged refugees to return home and reclaim their property, waived all back-taxes, confirmed land grants made to soldiers during the civil war, affirmed temple land holdings and tax privileges, and instructed tax officials to use standardised weights and measures on pain of death.",
"In addition, the decree established the jurisdiction of courts in legal disputes between Egyptians and Greeks.",
"Henceforth, this would be determined by the language that the documents at the heart of the legal dispute were written in: the chrematistai (money-judges) would decide disputes over Greek documents, while the laokritai (folk-judges) would resolve disputes over Egyptian documents.",
"The chrematistai were no longer allowed to drag Egyptians into their courts, as had apparently been occurring previously.",
"Ptolemy VIII died on 28 June 116 BC.",
"He was succeeded by his eldest surviving son, Ptolemy IX, alongside Cleopatra II and Cleopatra III.",
"Justin reports that he left the throne to Cleopatra III and whichever of her sons she preferred.",
"Although she preferred her younger son, Ptolemy X, the people of Alexandria forced her to choose Ptolemy IX.",
"This account is probably a false one, invented after Ptolemy IX was deposed by Ptolemy X.",
"Regime\n\nPtolemaic dynastic cult\nPtolemaic Egypt had a dynastic cult, which centred on the Ptolemaia festival and the annual Priest of Alexander the Great, whose full title included the names of all the Ptolemaic ruling couples and appeared in official documents as part of the date formula.",
"In October 170 BC when Ptolemy VIII first became co-regent with his brother and sister, who were already worshipped as the Theoi Philometores (Mother-loving gods), he was simply added to their cult as a third Mother-loving God.",
"When he seized sole power in 164 BC, he seems to have assumed the new epithet Euergetes, but it is not clear what the implications of this were for the dynastic cult.",
"After his expulsion from Alexandria in 163 BC, the Theoi Philometores are attested once more.",
"At the start of Ptolemy VIII's second reign in 145 BC, he was definitely incorporated into the dynastic cult, with him and Cleopatra II becoming the Theoi Euergetai ('benefactor gods').",
"Cleopatra III was added as a third Benefactor god in 142 or 141 BC, some time before she married Ptolemy VIII and was promoted to the status of co-regent.",
"During the period of the civil war, Cleopatra II removed the Theoi Euergetai from the dynastic cult in Alexandria, but Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III maintained their own rival priest of Alexander from 130 BC until they recovered Alexandria in 127 BC.",
"He is distinguished in documents as the 'Priest of Alexander... in the king's camp.'",
"The situation before the civil war was restored in 124 BC after the reconciliation of the siblings and it continued until Ptolemy VIII's death.",
"From May 118 BC, shortly after the final reconciliation of the royal trio, a new king was incorporated into the dynastic cult, Theos Neos Philopator (New Father-loving God).",
"This appears to have been a posthumous cult for one of the princes killed by Ptolemy VIII, either Ptolemy Eupator (son of Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II) or Ptolemy Memphites (son of Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra II).",
"Ptolemy Memphites is generally the preferred candidate, with the deification serving as an indication that the prince had posthumously reconciled with his father and murderer.",
"Since the death of Arsinoe II, deceased Ptolemaic queens had been honoured with a separate dynastic cult of their own, including a separate priestess who marched in religious processions in Alexandria behind the priest of Alexander the Great and whose names also appeared in dating formulae.",
"In 131 or 130 BC, Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III took advantage of this tradition, in their conflict against Cleopatra II, by establishing a new priesthood in honour of Cleopatra III.",
"This new position was called the 'Hieros Polos (sacred foal) of Isis, Great Mother of the Gods' and was placed immediately after the priest of Alexander and ahead of all the priestesses of the previous queens in the order of precedence.",
"The position was unlike the previous priesthoods in that it was established for a living queen rather than a deceased one and because the holder was a priest rather than a priestess.",
"The position is not attested after 105 BC.",
"Pharaonic ideology and traditional Egyptian religion\n\nFrom the beginning of the Ptolemaic dynasty, the Ptolemies had taken on the traditional role of the Egyptian Pharaoh and pursued a symbiotic alliance with the Egyptian priestly elite.",
"The degree of investment of the Ptolemies in this aspect of their rulership steadily increased over the third and second centuries BC.",
"Ptolemy VIII nevertheless represents a new stage in this process, since in the conflict with Cleopatra II he proved more popular among the Egyptians as their Pharaoh than among the Greeks as their king.",
"In the Amnesty decree that announced the reconciliation of Ptolemy VIII, Cleopatra III, and Cleopatra II in 118 BC, the royal trio undertook to support reconstruction and repair work at temples throughout Egypt.",
"They also promised to pay for the mummification and entombment of the Apis and Mnevis bulls.",
"Alexandrian Scholarship\nPtolemy VIII was an active participant in Greek scholarship, especially philology.",
"He is reported to have written a study of Homer at some point before 145 BC and twenty-four books of Hypomnemata ('Notes'), a miscellaneous collection of paradoxography, including stories about historical and contemporary monarchs, as well as exotic wildlife, and other topics.",
"The surviving fragments are collected in Felix Jacoby's Fragmente der griechischen Historiker\n\nDespite this interest, Ptolemy's reign saw a serious decline in the importance of Alexandria as an intellectual centre, in part due to the massacres that he carried out on taking control of the city in 145 BC and again in 126 BC.",
"Among his victims on the first occasion were a number of prominent intellectuals, including Aristarchus of Samothrace and Apollodorus of Athens.",
"The rest of the Alexandrian intellectuals appear to have been sent into exile, mostly relocating to Athens or Rhodes.",
"Indian Ocean trade\n\nThe Ptolemies had long retained a network of trading stations throughout the Red Sea, which enabled them to acquire gold, ivory, and elephants from the Horn of Africa.",
"In the very last years of Ptolemy VIII's reign these sailors discovered that the annual reversal of the Indian Monsoon Current made it possible to cross the Indian Ocean by sea in summer and then return in winter.",
"The first Greek to make this journey was Eudoxus of Cyzicus, who is reported to have travelled to India in 118 BC and again in 116 BC.",
"The discovery opened up the possibility of direct seaborne trade with India.",
"Previously, trade between the Mediterranean region and India had relied on intermediaries - sailors from the Arabian centres in the Gulf of Aden and the Persian Gulf and then desert caravans led by the Nabataeans to carry goods across the Arabian desert to the Mediterranean coast.",
"Henceforth sailors from Ptolemaic Egypt began to make the full journey themselves.",
"This marks the beginning of the Indian Ocean trade, which would become a major part of the Eurasian economic world system that operated from the first century BC until the fourth century AD.",
"Marriage and issue\nPtolemy VIII Euergetes married his older sister, Cleopatra II, on his accession in 145 BC and she bore him one son:\n\nIn 142 or 141 BC, Ptolemy also married his niece, Cleopatra III, daughter of Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II.",
"They had a number of children:\n\nBy a concubine, perhaps Eirene, Ptolemy had further issue:\n\nNotes\n\nReferences\n\nBibliography\n\n Peter Green, Alexander to Actium (University of California Press, 1990) \n\n Peter Nadig, Zwischen König und Karikatur: Das Bild Ptolemaios’ VIII.",
"im Spannungsfeld der Überlieferung (C.H.",
"Beck, 2007)\n\nExternal links\nPtolemy Euergetes II at LacusCurtius — (Chapter X of E. R Bevan's House of Ptolemy, 1923)\n The Will of Ptolemy VIII\n\n2nd-century BC Pharaohs\nPharaohs of the Ptolemaic dynasty\n2nd-century BC Greek people\nKings of Cyrene\nAncient child rulers\n2nd-century BC rulers\n2nd-century BC Egyptian people\n180s BC births\n116 BC deaths"
] | [
"Ptolemy VIII Euergetes II Tryphon (, Ptolemaos Euergéts Tryphon \"Ptolemy the Benefactor, the luxurious\") was a king.",
"He was the son of Ptolemy V Epiphanes.",
"His reign was marked by political and military conflict with his siblings.",
"Ptolemy VIII was made co-ruler with his siblings in the run-up to the Sixth Syrian War.",
"Ptolemy VIII became the sole king of Egypt after Ptolemy VI was captured.",
"Ptolemy VI was restored to the throne in 168 BC after the war ended, and the two brothers continued to argue.",
"Ptolemy VIII was expelled from the Ptolemaic empire in 163 BC after he drove out his brother.",
"Ptolemy VIII was given control of Cyrenaica after the Roman intervention.",
"Cyprus was promised to him by the Romans and he tried to capture it multiple times.",
"Ptolemy VIII returned to Egypt as co-ruler with his sister after Ptolemy VI's death.",
"His cruel treatment of opposition and his decision to marry his niece Cleopatra III and promote her to the status of co-regent led to a civil war from 132 to 126 BC, in which Cleopatra II controlled Alexandria and enjoyed the support of the Greek population of the country.",
"native Egyptians were promoted to the highest levels of the Ptolemaic government for the first time during this war.",
"Ptolemy ruled with Cleopatra II and Cleopatra III until his death in 116 BC.",
"Ptolemy VIII is portrayed as cruel and fat by the ancient Greek sources as part of a contrast with Ptolemy VI.",
"He was one of the shrewdest politicians of the Hellenistic Age, according to the historian Gnther Hlbl.",
"Ptolemy was the younger son of Ptolemy V Epiphanes, who ruled from 204 to 180 BC.",
"Ptolemy V's reign was dominated by the Fifth Syrian War, in which the Ptolemaic realm fought against the king of the Near East and Asia Minor.",
"In that war, the Ptolemaic forces were completely defeated, Coele-Syria and Judaea were annexed to the empire of Antiochus III, and Egypt was reduced to a subordinate position.",
"In 194 BC, Ptolemy V married Cleopatra I in a peace treaty.",
"The heir to the throne was Ptolemy VI Philometor, who was born in 186 BC.",
"The exact date of Ptolemy VIII's birth is not known.",
"He had a younger sister, Cleopatra II, who was born between 186 and 184 BC.",
"Ptolemy V's reign was shadowed by the defeat in the Fifth Syrian War.",
"One prominent group within the Ptolemaic court wanted a return to war in order to restore Egyptian prestige, while another group resisted the expense of rebuilding and remilitarising the realm.",
"Ptolemy VI succeeded Ptolemy V when he died at the age of 30.",
"The regents had power since the new king was only six years old.",
"The regents were more associated with the peaceful group and, as a result, members of the warhawk group have begun to look at the young Ptolemy VIII as a potential figurehead for their movement.",
"The Seleucid king Seleucus IV, who had followed a generally peaceful policy, was murdered in 175 BC and after two months of conflict his brother Antiochus IV Epiphanes secured the throne.",
"The warhawks in the Ptolemaic court were given the power by the situation.",
"They seem to have accepted the warhawk's position by 172 BC.",
"Ptolemy VIII was promoted to co-regent and incorporated into the Ptolemaic cult along with his brother and sister in 170 BC.",
"The first year of a new era was declared in the current year.",
"The purpose of the ceremonies was to paper over the factional differences that had developed in the court and to promote unity in the run-up to war.",
"In 170 BC, Ptolemy VI's adulthood and the celebration of his coming-of-age ceremony marked the formal end of the regency government.",
"The regents remained in charge of the government.",
"In early 169 BC, the Sixth Syrian War broke out.",
"The Ptolemaic army set out from the border fort of Pelusium to invade Palestine, while Ptolemy VIII stayed in Alexandria.",
"The Ptolemaic army was destroyed in the Sinai.",
"The army was defeated and moved to the Delta.",
"Two Ptolemaic generals, Comanus and Cineas, replaced Eulaeus and Lenaeus after they were deposed by a military coup.",
"Ptolemy VI went to meet Antiochus after he advanced on Alexandria.",
"Egypt was reduced to a Seleucid client state because of an agreement of friendship.",
"The people of Alexandria rioted when they heard of the agreement.",
"Comanus and Cineas declared Ptolemy VIII the sole king after rejecting the agreement.",
"After placing Alexandria under siege, he withdrew from Egypt in September 169 BC, leaving Ptolemy VI as his puppet king in Memphis and a garrison in Pelusium.",
"Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra II reconciled with Ptolemy VI and he returned to Alexandria as their co-regent.",
"The agreement that Ptolemy VI had made with Antiochus was repudiated by the restored government.",
"In the spring of 168 BC, Antiochus invaded Egypt again.",
"The invasion was justified by the claim that Ptolemy VIII had appropriated his older brother's authority.",
"Antiochus was crowned king of Egypt and advanced on Alexandria.",
"After the Ptolemies appealed to Rome for help over the winter, a Roman embassy led by Laenas confronted Antiochus at the town of Eleusis and forced him to agree to a settlement, bringing the war to an end.",
"The joint rule of the two brothers and Cleopatra II continued after the war ended.",
"The failure of the Egyptian forces in the Sixth Syrian War caused a permanent rift between Ptolemy VI and Ptolemy VIII and left the Ptolemaic monarchy's prestige seriously diminished.",
"Dionysius Petosarapis tried to take control of the government in 165 BC by taking advantage of the conflict between the brothers.",
"He told the people of Alexandria that Ptolemy VI tried to get him to assassinate Ptolemy VIII and that a mob was going to support him.",
"Ptolemy VI succeeded in defusing the crisis by convincing Ptolemy VIII that the charges were not true.",
"Dionysius persuaded some military contingents to revolt.",
"There was a lot of fighting in the next year.",
"This is the latest in a series of rebellions that attempted to overthrow the Ptolemies and reestablish native Egyptian rule.",
"The rebellion was suppressed by Ptolemy VI.",
"After Ptolemy VI had returned from the south, Ptolemy VIII expelled Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II from power.",
"Ptolemy VI fled to Cyprus.",
"According to Diodorus Siculus, the instigator of the expulsion was a man named Timotheus, who became the dominant minister.",
"Ptolemy VIII was distinguished from Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II who both bore the epithet Philometor because he assumed the epithet Euergetes.",
"The minister of Ptolemy VIII used torture and arbitrary executions to eliminate his enemies.",
"The people of Alexandria rioted against Ptolemy VIII and recalled Ptolemy VI.",
"Ptolemy VI granted Ptolemy VIII control of Cyrenaica after Roman agents convinced him to do so.",
"Ptolemy VIII didn't like what he saw when he left for Cyrene.",
"He went to Rome to ask for help.",
"The Senate believed that Ptolemy VIII should be given Cyprus as well.",
"Polybius believed that the Senate wanted to weaken Ptolemaic power.",
"The envoys were sent to force Ptolemy VI to concede.",
"Ptolemy VIII went to Greece to recruit soldiers for an expedition to seize Cyprus.",
"He was persuaded to leave his troops and return to Cyrene by the two men.",
"He went to the border between Egypt and Cyrene with a force of 1,000 Cretan mercenaries to wait for the results of the Roman negotiations with Ptolemy VI.",
"The governor that Ptolemy VIII had left in charge of Cyrene suddenly raised a revolt when he was waiting there for forty days.",
"Ptolemy was defeated in battle.",
"It is not known if he regained control over Cyrene through negotiation or military action.",
"When they arrived in Alexandria, Ptolemy VI put them off until he heard about the revolt.",
"They had to return to Rome.",
"The Roman Senate broke off relations with Ptolemy VI and gave Ptolemy VIII permission to use force to take control of Cyprus, but they didn't give him any support.",
"In 161 BC, he launched a military expedition to Cyprus.",
"The expedition lasted up to a year before he abandoned it.",
"Ptolemy VIII blamed his older brother for a failed assassination attempt.",
"Ptolemy VIII went to Rome to show his scars from the attempt to the Senate.",
"The Roman Senate agreed to send a second embassy in 154 BC in order to enforce the transfer of Cyprus to Ptolemy VIII's control.",
"Ptolemy VIII was captured after being besieged by his brother.",
"Ptolemy VIII was persuaded to leave Cyprus in exchange for continued possession of Cyrenaica, an annual payment of grain, and a promise of marriage to one of Ptolemy VI's infant daughters.",
"Ptolemy VIII had close relations with Rome during his time as king in Cyrene.",
"He was a friend and ally of the Roman Republic.",
"He is said to have met a woman in Rome.",
"After the death of her husband, Ptolemy VIII asked for her hand in marriage, but she refused.",
"It is unlikely that this encounter ever took place.",
"The story may reflect close ties between Ptolemy VIII and the ladies.",
"Ptolemy VI seems to have kept in touch with the Elder.",
"In the aftermath of the assassination attempt, an inscription was set up to record Ptolemy VIII's will, in which he left Cyrenaica to Rome if he died childless.",
"The very close alignment between Ptolemy VIII and the Romans is attested in the literary sources.",
"There are similar testaments from other monarchs.",
"They were used by monarchs to protect themselves from assassination.",
"The earliest example of this practice would be Ptolemy VIII's.",
"The inscription of Ptolemy's will is thought to be a forgery by the Romans after they gained control of Cyrenaica.",
"Ptolemy VIII tried to show the Hellenistic royal virtue of tryphe.",
"The priest of Apollo was the main priest in Cyrene.",
"Ptolemy hosted feasts extremely sumptuously when he assumed this position.",
"He was involved in a large construction project in the city.",
"His final resting place seems to have been a large tomb west of Ptolemais.",
"Ptolemy VI died on a campaign in Syria.",
"After three weeks, the Alexandrians called on Ptolemy VIII to return from Cyrene, assume the kingship and marry his sister, Cleopatra II.",
"The royal couple were included in the cult as the Theoi Euergetai, which means 'benefactor gods'.",
"The first child of the couple, Ptolemy Memphites, was born after Ptolemy was proclaimed in Memphis.",
"Ptolemy VIII is said to have launched a purge of those who supported Ptolemy VI.",
"This purge is luridly described in the literary sources, though it is sometimes difficult to determine whether specific anecdotes belong to this event or his later reconquest of Alexandria in 126 BC.",
"Ptolemy let his soldiers rampage through the streets of Alexandria, murdering indiscriminately, until he was left alone with his soldiers in so large a city, and found himself a king, not of men, but of empty houses.",
"The young men of Alexandria took refuge in the gymnasion and Ptolemy set the building on fire.",
"In this period, Ptolemy gained a number of pejorative nicknames, including Physcon (fatty) and Kakergetes (malefactor), a pun on his official epithet Euergetes.",
"The end of Ptolemaic presence in the Aegean Sea was marked by Ptolemy's accession.",
"The last remaining Ptolemaic bases in the Aegean were withdrawn within months of his accession.",
"The Ptolemaic empire was limited to Egypt, Cyprus, and Cyrene.",
"The young son of Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II was murdered by Ptolemy VIII.",
"The boy died in his mother's arms on the night of Ptolemy VIII's wedding to Cleopatra.",
"The boy was the heir until the birth of Ptolemy Memphites, according to documentary evidence.",
"Ptolemy Memphites was promoted to co-regent by the late 140s BC.",
"Ptolemy VIII married his niece Cleopatra III and made her a co-ruler without divorcing his older sister, Cleopatra II.",
"After his accession, Ptolemy VIII started a relationship with Livy.",
"The marriage may not have been planned from the beginning, but a measure taken to prevent her from being married to someone else who might use that marriage to claim the throne.",
"The new arrangement led to a conflict with Cleopatra II.",
"Galaestes, a former Ptolemaic officer, started a revolt in response to the new marriage and the support of Cleopatra II.",
"Ptolemy VI forced Galaestes into exile after he had been a trusted official.",
"In Greece, he gathered an army of other Ptolemaic exiles and announced that he had a young son of Ptolemy VI in his care.",
"Galaestes wanted to put this child on the throne.",
"The mercenaries of Ptolemy VIII almost defected to the rebellion, but their commander prevented this by paying their wages from his own money.",
"Ptolemy issued a decree affirming the rights and privileges of the Egyptian priesthood after Galaestes was defeated.",
"The Roman embassy received by Ptolemy VIII was intended to effect a peaceful settlement of all affairs in the Eastern Mediterranean.",
"The ancient sources emphasize the sumptuous greeting that the Romans received in order to contrast it with the austere behavior of the Romans.",
"He was so fat that he was transported everywhere in a litter.",
"The war between Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III began in late 132 BC, with Ptolemy VIII on one side and Cleopatra II on the other.",
"The people of Alexandria rioted in favor of Cleopatra II and set fire to the royal palace after Ptolemy retained control of Alexandria.",
"Ptolemy VIII, Cleopatra III, and their children fled to Cyprus.",
"It was the first time that a Ptolemaic woman had done this and it linked her to her dead husband.",
"Ptolemy VIII was acknowledged as king by most of Egypt.",
"In the south of the country, a man named Harsiesi took advantage of the chaos to rebel.",
"Thebes were taken over by Harsiesi in August or September of 131 BC.",
"He was expelled in November by the Thebaid, who was also an Egyptian.",
"By the beginning of 130 BC, Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III had returned from Cyprus to Egypt.",
"They were in charge of Memphis by the spring.",
"They promoted him to command over the whole of Upper Egypt and put him in charge of the military apparatus, the first time that a native Egyptian had held such a prominent position.",
"The execution of Harsiesi took place in September 130 BC.",
"Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III were unable to capture Alexandria.",
"In October 130 BC, Cleopatra II's strongholds were still under her control.",
"Cleopatra II wanted to have her son Ptolemy Memphites, who was twelve years old at the time, recalled to Alexandria and crowned as king.",
"After killing the boy in 130 BC, Ptolemy VIII sent the dismembered pieces back to Cleopatra II on her birthday.",
"The Senate did not intervene in the conflict.",
"In 129 BC Cleopatra II offered the throne of Egypt to the Seleucid king.",
"He was the husband of Cleopatra Thea, who was the daughter of Cleopatra II and Ptolemy VI.",
"When news arrived that Cleopatra Thea had installed their son, the future Antiochus VIII as king of Syria, his forces were still in the eastern desert, besieging the border fortress of Pelusium.",
"The Seleucid troops had to return to Syria.",
"After dealing with the revolts in Syria, Ptolemy VIII agreed to a request from a group of rebels that he send a royal pretender to lead them.",
"Ptolemy presented Alexander II Zabinas as the son of an earlier Seleucid king.",
"Seleucid intervention in opposition to Ptolemy VIII was no longer possible because of the conflict in the Seleucid realm.",
"Cleopatra II fled Alexandria for the court of Demetrius II in 127 BC.",
"Alexandria was reconquered by Ptolemy VIII in 126 BC.",
"There was a bloody purge of the supporters of Cleopatra II.",
"The bloody slaughter that Ptolemy VIII presided over may or may not be related to the earlier purge of 145 BC.",
"Ptolemy began negotiations to reconcile with Cleopatra II and the Seleucid court.",
"Ptolemy VIII abandoned his support for Alexander II Zabinas in order to support the son and successor of Demetrius II.",
"He sealed the agreement by sending his second daughter to marry the Seleucid king.",
"After returning to Egypt from the Seleucid court, Cleopatra II was once more acknowledged as co-regent with Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III.",
"She appears with them in documents from July 124 BC.",
"The reconciliation of Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III took a long time.",
"The royal trio issued theAmnesty decree in April 118 BC to solidify their reconciliation and restore peace and prosperity to Egypt.",
"The decree pardoned all crimes other than murder and temple robbing, encouraged refugees to return home and waive back taxes, affirmed temple land holdings and tax privileges, and instructed tax officials to use.",
"The jurisdiction of courts in legal disputes between Egyptians and Greeks was established by the decree.",
"The chrematistai would decide the disputes over Greek documents, while the laokritai would resolve the disputes.",
"The chrematistai was no longer allowed to drag Egyptians into their courts.",
"On June 28, 116 BC, Ptolemy VIII died.",
"His sons were Ptolemy IX, Cleopatra II and Cleopatra III.",
"He left the throne to Cleopatra III or one of her sons.",
"The people of Alexandria forced her to choose between Ptolemy IX and Ptolemy X.",
"After Ptolemy IX was deposed by Ptolemy X, this account was invented.",
"The annual Priest of Alexander the Great, whose full title included the names of all the Ptolemaic ruling couples, appeared in official documents as part of the Ptolemaic cult.",
"Ptolemy VIII became co-regent with his brother and sister in October 170 BC and was added to their cult as a third Mother-loving God.",
"He assumed the new epithet Euergetes when he took sole power in 164 BC, but it's not clear what the implications were for the cult.",
"He was expelled from Alexandria in 163 BC.",
"At the start of Ptolemy VIII's second reign in 145 BC, he and Cleopatra II became the Theoi Euerge (tai \"benefactor gods\").",
"After she married Ptolemy VIII, Cleopatra III was promoted to the status of co-regent and added as a third Benefactor god.",
"During the civil war, Cleopatra II removed the Theoi Euergetai from Alexandria, but Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III maintained their own rival priest of Alexander from 130 BC until they recovered Alexandria in 127 BC.",
"He is considered to be the 'Priest of Alexander' in the king's camp.",
"After the reconciliation of the siblings in 124 BC, the situation was restored and it continued until Ptolemy VIII's death.",
"After the final reconciliation of the royal trio, a new king was incorporated into the cult of Theos Neos Philopator.",
"Ptolemy Eupator is the son of Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II, and Ptolemy Memphites is the son of Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra II.",
"The deification of Ptolemy Memphites serves as an indication that the prince had reconciled with his father and murderer.",
"Since the death of Arsinoe II, Ptolemaic queens have been honoured with a separate cult of their own, including a separate priestess who marched in religious processions in Alexandria behind the priest of Alexander the Great.",
"In 131 or 130 BC, Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra III established a new priesthood to honor Cleopatra III.",
"This new position was called the 'Hieros Polos' of Isis, Great Mother of the Gods' and was placed immediately after the priest of Alexander and ahead of all the priestesses of the previous queens in the order of precedence.",
"The position was established for a living queen rather than a dead one, and the holder was a priest rather than a priestess.",
"The position was not recorded after 105 BC.",
"The Ptolemies had taken on the traditional role of the Egyptian Pharaoh and pursued an alliance with the Egyptian priestly elite.",
"The Ptolemies invested more in this aspect of their rulership in the third and second centuries BC.",
"In the conflict with Cleopatra II, Ptolemy VIII became more popular among the Egyptians as their Pharaoh than among the Greeks.",
"In the wake of the reconciliation of Ptolemy VIII, Cleopatra III, and Cleopatra II in 118 BC, the royal trio undertook to support reconstruction and repair work at temples throughout Egypt.",
"They promised to pay for the mummification of the bulls.",
"Alexandrian Scholarship Ptolemy VIII was involved in philology.",
"He is reported to have written a study of Homer at some point before 145 BC and twenty-four books of Hypomnemata, a collection of paradoxes, including stories about historical and contemporary monarchs, as well as exotic wildlife.",
"Ptolemy's reign saw a decline in the importance of Alexandria as an intellectual centre due to the massacres that he carried out on taking control.",
"A number of prominent intellectuals, including Apollodorus of Athens and Aristarchus of Samothrace, were victims on the first occasion.",
"Most of the intellectuals from Alexandria have moved to Athens or Rhodes.",
"The Ptolemies were able to acquire gold, ivory, and elephants from the Horn of Africa because they had a network of trading stations throughout the Red Sea.",
"During the last years of Ptolemy VIII's reign, sailors discovered that it was possible to cross the Indian Ocean in the summer and return in the winter.",
"Eudoxus of Cyzicus is said to have traveled to India in 118 BC and again in 116 BC.",
"Direct seaborne trade with India was opened up by the discovery.",
"The trade between the Mediterranean region and India used to be done by sailors from the Arabian centers in the Gulf of Aden and the Persian Gulf as well as desert caravans led by the Nabataeans.",
"Sailors from Ptolemaic Egypt began to travel on their own.",
"This marks the beginning of the Indian Ocean trade, which would become a major part of the economic world system that operated from the first century BC until the fourth century AD.",
"Marriage and issue Ptolemy VIII Euergetes married his older sister, Cleopatra II, on his accession in 145 BC and she bore him one son: In 142 or 141 BC, Ptolemy also married his niece, Cleopatra III, daughter of Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II.",
"There were a number of children by a concubine, Ptolemy had further issue.",
"The berlieferung is in the Spannungsfeld.",
"The Will of Ptolemy VIII 2nd-century BC Pharaohs of the Ptolemaic dynasty can be found in Chapter X of E. R Bevan's House of Ptolemy."
] | <mask> VIII Euergetes II Tryphon (, Ptolemaĩos Euergétēs Tryphon "<mask> the Benefactor, the luxurious"; c. 184 BC – 28 June 116 BC), nicknamed Physcon ( "Fatty"), was a king of the Ptolemaic dynasty in Egypt. He was the younger son of <mask> V Epiphanes and Cleopatra I Syra. His reign was characterised by fierce political and military conflict with his older brother <mask> VI Philometor and his sister Cleopatra II. <mask> was originally made co-ruler with his older siblings in the run-up to the Sixth Syrian War. In the course of that war, <mask> was captured and <mask> became sole king of Egypt. When the war ended and <mask> was restored to the throne in 168 BC, the two brothers continued to quarrel. In 164 BC <mask> drove out his brother and became sole king of the Ptolemaic empire, but he was expelled in turn in 163 BC.As a result of Roman intervention, <mask> was awarded control of Cyrenaica. From there he repeatedly tried to capture Cyprus, which had also been promised to him by the Romans, from his brother. After <mask>'s death in 145 BC, <mask> returned to Egypt as co-ruler with his sister. His cruel treatment of opposition and his decision to marry his niece Cleopatra III and promote her to the status of co-regent led to a civil war from 132 to 126 BC, in which Cleopatra II controlled Alexandria and enjoyed the support of the Greek population of the country, while <mask> and Cleopatra III controlled most of the rest of Egypt and were supported by the native Egyptians. During this war, native Egyptians were promoted to the highest echelons of the Ptolemaic government for the first time. <mask> was victorious and ruled alongside Cleopatra II and Cleopatra III until his death in 116 BC. The ancient Greek sources on <mask> are extremely hostile, characterising him as cruel and mocking him as fat and degenerate, as part of a contrast with <mask>, whom they present extremely positively.The historian Günther Hölbl calls him "one of the most brutal and at the same time one of the shrewdest politicians of the Hellenistic Age." Background and early life
<mask> was the younger son of <mask> V Epiphanes, who reigned from 204 to 180 BC. <mask>'s reign had been dominated by the Fifth Syrian War (204–198 BC), in which the Ptolemaic realm fought against the Seleucid king Antiochus III, who ruled the Near East and Asia Minor. In that war, Antiochus III had completely defeated the Ptolemaic forces, had annexed Coele-Syria and Judaea to his empire, and reduced Egypt to a subordinate position. The new situation was solidified with a peace treaty, in which <mask> married Antiochus' daughter Cleopatra I in 194 BC. <mask> Philometor was the eldest son of the couple, born in 186 BC, and was the heir to the throne from birth. The exact date of <mask>'s birth is unknown, but it was probably around 184 BC.He also had an elder sister, Cleopatra II, who was probably born between 186 and 184 BC. The defeat in the Fifth Syrian War cast a shadow over the rest of <mask>'s reign. One prominent faction within the Ptolemaic court agitated for a return to war in order to restore Egyptian prestige, while another faction resisted the expense involved in rebuilding and remilitarising the realm. When <mask> died unexpectedly in September 180 BC, at the age of only 30, he was succeeded by <mask> VI. Since the new king was only six years old, actual power rested with the regents - first Cleopatra I (180–178/7 BC) and then Eulaeus and Lenaeus (178/7–170 BC). These regents were more closely associated with the peaceful faction and, as a result, members of the warhawk faction seem to have begun to look to the young <mask> VIII as a potential figurehead for their movement. First reign (170–163 BC)
Accession and the Sixth Syrian War (170–168 BC)
The Seleucid king Seleucus IV, who had followed a generally peaceful policy, was murdered in 175 BC and after two months of conflict his brother Antiochus IV Epiphanes secured the throne.The unsettled situation empowered the warhawks in the Ptolemaic court and Eulaeus and Lenaeus made efforts to conciliate them. By 172 BC, they seem to have embraced the warhawks' position. In October 170 BC, <mask>, now about sixteen, was promoted to the status of co-regent and incorporated into the Ptolemaic dynastic cult as one of the Theoi Philometores (Mother-loving gods) alongside his brother and sister, who had now been married to one another. The current year was declared the first year of a new era. John Grainger argues that these ceremonies were intended to paper over the factional differences that had developed in the court and to promote unity in the run-up to war. <mask> remained the senior king, as demonstrated later in 170 BC by the declaration of <mask>'s adulthood and the celebration of his coming-of-age ceremony (the anakleteria), marking the formal end of the regency government. In practice, however, the regents Eulaeus and Lenaeus remained in charge of the government.The Sixth Syrian War broke out shortly after this, probably in early 169 BC. <mask> probably remained in Alexandria, while the Ptolemaic army set out from the border fort of Pelusium to invade Palestine. The Ptolemaic army was intercepted and decimated by Antiochus IV's army in the Sinai. The defeated army withdrew to the Nile Delta, while Antiochus seized Pelusium and then moved on the Delta. As a result of this defeat, Eulaeus and Lenaeus were toppled by a military coup and replaced with two prominent Ptolemaic generals, Comanus and Cineas. As Antiochus advanced on Alexandria, <mask> VI went out to meet him. They negotiated an agreement of friendship, which in effect reduced Egypt to a Seleucid client state.When news of the agreement reached Alexandria, the people of the city rioted. Comanus and Cineas rejected the agreement, rejected <mask>'s authority and declared <mask> the sole king (Cleopatra II's position remained unchanged). Antiochus responded by placing Alexandria under siege, but he was unable to take the city and withdrew from Egypt in September 169 BC, as winter approached, leaving <mask> as his puppet king in Memphis and retaining a garrison in Pelusium. Within two months, <mask> and Cleopatra II reconciled with <mask> VI and he returned to Alexandria as their co-regent. The restored government repudiated the agreement that <mask> had made with Antiochus and began to recruit new troops from Greece. In response, in spring 168 BC, Antiochus invaded Egypt for a second time. Officially, this invasion was justified by the claim that <mask> had unjustly appropriated his older brother's authority.Antiochus quickly occupied Memphis and was crowned king of Egypt and advanced on Alexandria. However, the Ptolemies had appealed to Rome for help over the winter and a Roman embassy led by Gaius Popillius Laenas confronted Antiochus at the town of Eleusis and forced him to agree to a settlement, bringing the war to an end. From joint rule to sole rule (168–163 BC)
Initially, the joint rule of the two brothers and Cleopatra II, which had been established during the war, continued. But the complete failure of the Egyptian forces in the Sixth Syrian War had left the Ptolemaic monarchy's prestige seriously diminished and it caused a permanent rift between <mask> VI and <mask> VIII. In 165 BC, Dionysius Petosarapis, a prominent courtier who appears to have been of native Egyptian origin, attempted to take advantage of the conflict between the brothers in order to take control of the government. He announced to the people of Alexandria that <mask> had tried to get him to assassinate <mask> VIII and tried to whip up a mob to support him. <mask> VI managed to convince <mask> VIII that the charges were untrue and the two brothers appeared publicly together in the stadium, defusing the crisis.Dionysius fled the city and convinced some military contingents to mutiny. Heavy fighting took place in the Fayyum over the next year. This and another revolt in the Thebaid – the latest in a series of rebellions that had attempted to overthrow the Ptolemies and re-establish native Egyptian rule. <mask> VI successfully suppressed the rebellion after a bitter siege at Panopolis. Late in 164 BC, probably not long after <mask> had returned from the south, <mask>, who was now about twenty years old, somehow expelled <mask> and Cleopatra II from power. <mask> fled to Rome and then Cyprus. The exact course of events is not known, but Diodorus Siculus reports that the instigator of the expulsion was a man named Timotheus, who then became the dominant minister.<mask> now assumed the epithet Euergetes ('benefactor'), which recalled his ancestor <mask> Euergetes and distinguished him from <mask> and Cleopatra II who both bore the epithet Philometor. <mask> is said to have behaved tyrannically, and his minister Timotheus used torture and arbitrary executions to eliminate his enemies. In summer 163 BC, the people of Alexandria rioted against <mask>, expelling him in turn and recalling <mask> VI. Reign in Cyrenaica (163–145 BC)
On his return to power, a pair of Roman agents convinced <mask> to grant <mask> control of Cyrenaica. <mask> departed for Cyrene, but he was not satisfied. In late 163 or early 162 BC, he went to Rome to request help. The Senate was convinced that the division was unfair, declaring that <mask> ought to receive Cyprus as well.The ancient historian Polybius believed that the Senate made this decision with the conscious goal of weakening Ptolemaic power. Titus Manlius Torquatus and Gnaeus Cornelius Merula were sent as envoys to force <mask> to concede this. From Rome, <mask> went to Greece where he recruited soldiers in preparation for an expedition to seize Cyprus by force. He had sailed to Rhodes with this fleet when he encountered Torquatus and Merula, who convinced him to discharge his troops and return to Cyrene. He went to the border between Egypt and Cyrene, waiting with a force of 1,000 Cretan mercenaries at a small town just west of Paraetonium for the results of the Roman negotiations with <mask> VI. <mask> had been waiting there for forty days when <mask>, the governor that <mask> had left in charge of Cyrene in his absence, suddenly raised a revolt. <mask> marched to suppress the revolt and was defeated in battle.He regained control over Cyrene by the end of 162 BC, but it is not known whether he achieved this by negotiation or military action. However, when Torquatus and Merula arrived in Alexandria, <mask> VI successfully put them off until he heard about the revolt, at which point he refused their demands. They had to return to Rome without achieving their goal. In winter 162/61 BC, the Roman Senate responded to this by breaking off relations with <mask> and to grant <mask> VIII permission to use force to take control of Cyprus, but they offered him no tangible support. He launched a military expedition to Cyprus in 161 BC. This expedition lasted up to a year, before fierce Cypriot resistance forced him to abandon the enterprise. In 156 or 155 BC, <mask> faced a failed assassination attempt, which he attributed to his older brother.<mask> went to Rome and displaying the scars he had received in the attempt to the Senate. As a result of the embassy, the Roman Senate agreed to send a second embassy in 154 BC, led by Gnaeus Cornelius Merula and Lucius Minucius Thermus, with an honour guard of troops, in order to enforce the transfer of Cyprus to <mask>'s control. <mask> was besieged by his older brother at Lapethus and was captured. <mask> was persuaded to withdraw from Cyprus, in exchange for continued possession of Cyrenaica, an annual payment of grain, and a promise of marriage to one of <mask>'s infant daughters (probably Cleopatra Thea) once she came of age. Relations with Rome
Throughout his time as king in Cyrene, <mask> maintained extremely close relations with Rome. From 162 BC, he was an official amicus et socius (friend and ally) of the Roman Republic. During his time in Rome he is said to have met Cornelia.In 152 BC, after the death of her husband, Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, <mask> VIII allegedly asked for her hand in marriage, which she refused. This encounter was popular in neoclassical art, but it is unlikely that it ever actually took place. Even if untrue, the story may reflect close ties between <mask> and the gentes Cornelia and Sempronia. By contrast, <mask> VI seems to have maintained ties with Cato the Elder. An inscription of 155 BC, set up in the aftermath of the assassination attempt records <mask>'s will, in which he bequeaths Cyrenaica to Rome if he died childless. This act is not mentioned by any literary source but it fits with the very close alignment between <mask> and the Romans that is attested in the literary sources. Similar testaments are known from other contemporary monarchs, notably Attalus III of Pergamum.They were often used by monarchs as an attempt to protect themselves from assassination or coup. <mask>'s will would be the earliest example of this practice. However, L. Criscuolo has argued that the inscription of <mask>'s will is actually a forgery produced by the Romans after they gained control of Cyrenaica in 96 BC. Spectacle and construction
As king of Cyrene, <mask> VIII attempted to display the Hellenistic royal virtue of tryphe (luxury). The main priesthood in Cyrene was the position of the priest of Apollo. <mask> assumed this position and discharged his duties, especially the hosting of feasts, extremely sumptuously. He also engaged in a wide-ranging construction project in the city.A large tomb west of Ptolemais seems to have been intended as his final resting place. Second reign (145–132 BC)
<mask> died on campaign in Syria in 145 BC. <mask> seems to have intended for his seven-year-old son, also called <mask>, to succeed him, but after three weeks, the Alexandrians called on <mask> to return from Cyrene, assume the kingship and marry his older sister, Cleopatra II. The royal couple were incorporated into the dynastic cult as the Theoi Euergetai ('benefactor gods') - Cleopatra having previously been one of the Theoi Philometores with <mask>. <mask> was proclaimed pharaoh in Memphis in 144 or 143 BC, during which the couple's first and only child, <mask>, was born. On his return to Alexandria in 145 BC, <mask> is reported to have launched a purge of those who had opposed him and supported <mask>. This purge is luridly described in the literary sources, though it is sometimes difficult to determine whether specific anecdotes belong to this event or his later reconquest of Alexandria in 126 BC.Justin reports that <mask> let his soldiers rampage through the streets of Alexandria, murdering indiscriminately, until he was "left alone with his soldiers in so large a city, and found himself a king, not of men, but of empty houses." Valerius Maximus says that when the young men of Alexandria took refuge in the gymnasion, <mask> set the building on fire. It is probably in this period that <mask> gained a number of pejorative nicknames, including Physcon (fatty) and Kakergetes (malefactor) - a pun on his official epithet Euergetes (benefactor). <mask>'s accession also marked the end of Ptolemaic presence in the Aegean Sea. Within months of his accession, he had withdrawn all troops from Itanos, Thera, and Methana, the last remaining Ptolemaic bases in the Aegean. The Ptolemaic empire was now limited to Egypt, Cyprus, and Cyrene. <mask> VIII probably also had the young son of <mask> VI and Cleopatra II, who was also called <mask>, murdered.According to Justin, <mask> did the deed personally, on the night of his wedding to Cleopatra in 145 BC, and the boy died in his mother's arms. Documentary evidence from papyri indicates that in reality, the boy was initially maintained as heir and only removed after the birth of <mask>. By the late 140s BC, <mask> had been promoted to co-regent. Around 140 BC, <mask> married his niece Cleopatra III (daughter of <mask> VI and Cleopatra II) and made her a co-ruler, without divorcing his older sister, Cleopatra II. According to Livy, <mask> had initiated a relationship with her shortly after his accession which he now made official. Daniel Ogden has argued that the marriage may not have been planned from the outset, but a measure taken to prevent her from being married to someone else who might use that marriage in order to claim the throne. However, the new arrangement led to conflict with Cleopatra II.Apparently in response to this new marriage and with the support of Cleopatra II, a former Ptolemaic officer called Galaestes initiated a revolt. Galaestes had been a trusted official under <mask> but had been forced into exile in 145 BC. In Greece, he gathered an army of other Ptolemaic exiles, then announced that he had a young son of <mask> VI in his care and crowned this boy as king. Galaestes then invaded Egypt, intending to put this child on the throne. <mask>'s mercenaries, whose pay was in arrears, nearly defected to the rebellion, but their commander, Hierax, prevented this by paying their wages from his own money. By February 139 BC, Galaestes had been defeated and <mask> had issued a decree affirming the rights and privileges of the Egyptian priesthood, in which he represented himself, Cleopatra II, and Cleopatra III as harmoniously ruling together. In the same year, <mask> VIII received a Roman embassy, led by Scipio Aemilianus, which was intended to effect a peaceful settlement of all affairs in the Eastern Mediterranean.The ancient sources emphasise the sumptuous greeting that the Romans received, mostly in order to contrast it with the austere behaviour of the Romans. By this point he was apparently enormously fat and was transported everywhere in a litter. Civil war (132–126 BC)
In late 132 BC, the conflict between the royal siblings finally erupted into open warfare, with <mask> and Cleopatra III on one side opposing Cleopatra II on the other. At first, <mask> retained control of Alexandria, but in late 131 BC the people of Alexandria rioted in favour of Cleopatra II and set fire to the royal palace. <mask>, Cleopatra III, and their children escaped to Cyprus. Cleopatra II meanwhile had herself crowned as sole queen - the first time that a Ptolemaic woman had done this - and assumed the title of Thea Philometor Soteira (Mother-loving, Saviour Goddess), which served to link her to her deceased husband <mask> VI Philometor and to the dynastic founder, <mask> Soter
Although Alexandria had sided with Cleopatra II and she tended to be supported by Greeks and Jews throughout the country, <mask> and Cleopatra III were more popular with the native Egyptian population. Most of Egypt continued to acknowledge <mask> VIII as king.In the south of the country, however, a man named Harsiesi took advantage of the chaos to rebel - following in the footsteps of the rebellion of Hugronaphor and Ankhmakis (206-185 BC). Harsiesi probably declared himself Pharaoh and managed to seize control of Thebes in August or September of 131 BC. He was expelled in November and pursued by Paos, the strategos of the Thebaid, who was also an Egyptian. <mask> and Cleopatra III had returned from Cyprus to Egypt by the beginning of 130 BC. By spring, they were in charge of Memphis. Impressed by Paos' success against Harsiesi, they promoted him to command over the whole of Upper Egypt and put him in charge of the whole military apparatus - the first time that a native Egyptian had held such a prominent position. Harsiesi was finally captured and executed in September 130 BC.Alexandria was placed under siege but <mask> and Cleopatra III were unable to capture it. Cleopatra II also maintained strongholds throughout the country – Harmonthis in the Thebaid was still under her control in October 130 BC. Cleopatra II had planned to have her son <mask>, who was now twelve years old and residing in Cyrene, recalled to Alexandria and acclaimed as king. <mask> was able to get hold of the boy in 130 BC, killed him, and sent the dismembered pieces back to Cleopatra II on her birthday. Both parties appealed to Rome, but the Senate did not intervene in the conflict. Growing desperate, in 129 BC Cleopatra II offered the throne of Egypt to the Seleucid king Demetrius II Nicator. He had just returned to power in the Seleucid realm after years in Parthian captivity and was the husband of Cleopatra Thea (daughter of Cleopatra II and <mask> VI).Accordingly, Demetrius II launched an invasion of Egypt in 128 BC, but his forces were still in the eastern desert, besieging the border fortress of Pelusium, when news arrived that Cleopatra Thea had installed their son, the future Antiochus <mask> as king of Syria. The Seleucid troops mutinied and Demetrius II had to return to Syria. In order to prevent Demetrius from returning once he had dealt with these revolts, <mask> agreed to a request that he had received from a group of rebels in Syria, who had asked him to send them a royal pretender to lead them. <mask> selected Alexander II Zabinas, whom he presented as the son of an earlier Seleucid king, Alexander I Balas ( BC). The resulting conflict in the Seleucid realm continued for years and meant that Seleucid intervention in opposition to <mask> was no longer possible. In 127 BC, Cleopatra II took her treasury and fled Alexandria for the court of Demetrius II. In her absence, <mask> finally reconquered Alexandria in 126 BC.This reconquest was accompanied by a bloody purge of the supporters of Cleopatra II. It is difficult to tell whether various anecdotes recording the bloody slaughter that <mask> presided over belong to this event or to the earlier purge of 145 BC. Third reign (126–116 BC)
After this, <mask> began negotiations to reconcile with Cleopatra II and the Seleucid court. In 124 BC, <mask> abandoned his support for Alexander II Zabinas and agreed to support Demetrius II's son and successor, Antiochus <mask>tor instead. He sealed the agreement by sending his second daughter by Cleopatra III, Tryphaena, to marry the Seleucid king. Cleopatra II returned to Egypt from the Seleucid court and was once more acknowledged as co-regent with <mask> and Cleopatra III. She appears along with them in papyrus documents from July 124 BC onwards.The reconciliation of <mask> VIII and Cleopatra III with Cleopatra II was nevertheless a long process. To solidify their reconciliation and restore peace and prosperity to Egypt, the royal trio issued the Amnesty Decree in April 118 BC, which survives in a number of papyrus copies. This decree pardoned all crimes other than murder and temple robbing committed before 118 BC, encouraged refugees to return home and reclaim their property, waived all back-taxes, confirmed land grants made to soldiers during the civil war, affirmed temple land holdings and tax privileges, and instructed tax officials to use standardised weights and measures on pain of death. In addition, the decree established the jurisdiction of courts in legal disputes between Egyptians and Greeks. Henceforth, this would be determined by the language that the documents at the heart of the legal dispute were written in: the chrematistai (money-judges) would decide disputes over Greek documents, while the laokritai (folk-judges) would resolve disputes over Egyptian documents. The chrematistai were no longer allowed to drag Egyptians into their courts, as had apparently been occurring previously. <mask> died on 28 June 116 BC.He was succeeded by his eldest surviving son, <mask>, alongside Cleopatra II and Cleopatra III. Justin reports that he left the throne to Cleopatra III and whichever of her sons she preferred. Although she preferred her younger son, <mask>, the people of Alexandria forced her to choose <mask> IX. This account is probably a false one, invented after <mask> was deposed by <mask>. Regime
Ptolemaic dynastic cult
Ptolemaic Egypt had a dynastic cult, which centred on the Ptolemaia festival and the annual Priest of Alexander the Great, whose full title included the names of all the Ptolemaic ruling couples and appeared in official documents as part of the date formula. In October 170 BC when <mask> VIII first became co-regent with his brother and sister, who were already worshipped as the Theoi Philometores (Mother-loving gods), he was simply added to their cult as a third Mother-loving God. When he seized sole power in 164 BC, he seems to have assumed the new epithet Euergetes, but it is not clear what the implications of this were for the dynastic cult.After his expulsion from Alexandria in 163 BC, the Theoi Philometores are attested once more. At the start of <mask>'s second reign in 145 BC, he was definitely incorporated into the dynastic cult, with him and Cleopatra II becoming the Theoi Euergetai ('benefactor gods'). Cleopatra III was added as a third Benefactor god in 142 or 141 BC, some time before she married <mask> and was promoted to the status of co-regent. During the period of the civil war, Cleopatra II removed the Theoi Euergetai from the dynastic cult in Alexandria, but <mask> and Cleopatra III maintained their own rival priest of Alexander from 130 BC until they recovered Alexandria in 127 BC. He is distinguished in documents as the 'Priest of Alexander... in the king's camp.' The situation before the civil war was restored in 124 BC after the reconciliation of the siblings and it continued until <mask>'s death. From May 118 BC, shortly after the final reconciliation of the royal trio, a new king was incorporated into the dynastic cult, Theos Neos Philopator (New Father-loving God).This appears to have been a posthumous cult for one of the princes killed by <mask> VIII, either <mask> (son of <mask> VI and Cleopatra II) or <mask> (son of <mask> VIII and Cleopatra II). <mask> is generally the preferred candidate, with the deification serving as an indication that the prince had posthumously reconciled with his father and murderer. Since the death of Arsinoe II, deceased Ptolemaic queens had been honoured with a separate dynastic cult of their own, including a separate priestess who marched in religious processions in Alexandria behind the priest of Alexander the Great and whose names also appeared in dating formulae. In 131 or 130 BC, <mask> and Cleopatra III took advantage of this tradition, in their conflict against Cleopatra II, by establishing a new priesthood in honour of Cleopatra III. This new position was called the 'Hieros Polos (sacred foal) of Isis, Great Mother of the Gods' and was placed immediately after the priest of Alexander and ahead of all the priestesses of the previous queens in the order of precedence. The position was unlike the previous priesthoods in that it was established for a living queen rather than a deceased one and because the holder was a priest rather than a priestess. The position is not attested after 105 BC.Pharaonic ideology and traditional Egyptian religion
From the beginning of the Ptolemaic dynasty, the Ptolemies had taken on the traditional role of the Egyptian Pharaoh and pursued a symbiotic alliance with the Egyptian priestly elite. The degree of investment of the Ptolemies in this aspect of their rulership steadily increased over the third and second centuries BC. <mask> VIII nevertheless represents a new stage in this process, since in the conflict with Cleopatra II he proved more popular among the Egyptians as their Pharaoh than among the Greeks as their king. In the Amnesty decree that announced the reconciliation of <mask>, Cleopatra III, and Cleopatra II in 118 BC, the royal trio undertook to support reconstruction and repair work at temples throughout Egypt. They also promised to pay for the mummification and entombment of the Apis and Mnevis bulls. Alexandrian Scholarship
<mask> was an active participant in Greek scholarship, especially philology. He is reported to have written a study of Homer at some point before 145 BC and twenty-four books of Hypomnemata ('Notes'), a miscellaneous collection of paradoxography, including stories about historical and contemporary monarchs, as well as exotic wildlife, and other topics.The surviving fragments are collected in Felix Jacoby's Fragmente der griechischen Historiker
Despite this interest, <mask>'s reign saw a serious decline in the importance of Alexandria as an intellectual centre, in part due to the massacres that he carried out on taking control of the city in 145 BC and again in 126 BC. Among his victims on the first occasion were a number of prominent intellectuals, including Aristarchus of Samothrace and Apollodorus of Athens. The rest of the Alexandrian intellectuals appear to have been sent into exile, mostly relocating to Athens or Rhodes. Indian Ocean trade
The Ptolemies had long retained a network of trading stations throughout the Red Sea, which enabled them to acquire gold, ivory, and elephants from the Horn of Africa. In the very last years of <mask> VIII's reign these sailors discovered that the annual reversal of the Indian Monsoon Current made it possible to cross the Indian Ocean by sea in summer and then return in winter. The first Greek to make this journey was Eudoxus of Cyzicus, who is reported to have travelled to India in 118 BC and again in 116 BC. The discovery opened up the possibility of direct seaborne trade with India.Previously, trade between the Mediterranean region and India had relied on intermediaries - sailors from the Arabian centres in the Gulf of Aden and the Persian Gulf and then desert caravans led by the Nabataeans to carry goods across the Arabian desert to the Mediterranean coast. Henceforth sailors from Ptolemaic Egypt began to make the full journey themselves. This marks the beginning of the Indian Ocean trade, which would become a major part of the Eurasian economic world system that operated from the first century BC until the fourth century AD. Marriage and issue
<mask> VIII Euergetes married his older sister, Cleopatra II, on his accession in 145 BC and she bore him one son:
In 142 or 141 BC, <mask> also married his niece, Cleopatra III, daughter of <mask> VI and Cleopatra II. They had a number of children:
By a concubine, perhaps Eirene, <mask> had further issue:
Notes
References
Bibliography
Peter Green, Alexander to Actium (University of California Press, 1990)
Peter Nadig, Zwischen König und Karikatur: Das Bild Ptolemaios’ VIII. im Spannungsfeld der Überlieferung (C.H. Beck, 2007)
External links
<mask>getes II at LacusCurtius — (Chapter X of E. R Bevan's House of Ptolemy, 1923)
The Will of <mask> VIII
2nd-century BC Pharaohs
Pharaohs of the Ptolemaic dynasty
2nd-century BC Greek people
Kings of Cyrene
Ancient child rulers
2nd-century BC rulers
2nd-century BC Egyptian people
180s BC births
116 BC deaths | [
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] | <mask> VIII Euergetes II Tryphon (, Ptolemaos Euergéts Tryphon "<mask> the Benefactor, the luxurious") was a king. He was the son of <mask> V Epiphanes. His reign was marked by political and military conflict with his siblings. <mask> was made co-ruler with his siblings in the run-up to the Sixth Syrian War. <mask> became the sole king of Egypt after <mask> was captured. <mask> was restored to the throne in 168 BC after the war ended, and the two brothers continued to argue. <mask> was expelled from the Ptolemaic empire in 163 BC after he drove out his brother.<mask> was given control of Cyrenaica after the Roman intervention. Cyprus was promised to him by the Romans and he tried to capture it multiple times. <mask> returned to Egypt as co-ruler with his sister after <mask>'s death. His cruel treatment of opposition and his decision to marry his niece Cleopatra III and promote her to the status of co-regent led to a civil war from 132 to 126 BC, in which Cleopatra II controlled Alexandria and enjoyed the support of the Greek population of the country. native Egyptians were promoted to the highest levels of the Ptolemaic government for the first time during this war. <mask> ruled with Cleopatra II and Cleopatra III until his death in 116 BC. <mask> is portrayed as cruel and fat by the ancient Greek sources as part of a contrast with <mask>.He was one of the shrewdest politicians of the Hellenistic Age, according to the historian Gnther Hlbl. <mask> was the younger son of <mask> V Epiphanes, who ruled from 204 to 180 BC. <mask>'s reign was dominated by the Fifth Syrian War, in which the Ptolemaic realm fought against the king of the Near East and Asia Minor. In that war, the Ptolemaic forces were completely defeated, Coele-Syria and Judaea were annexed to the empire of Antiochus III, and Egypt was reduced to a subordinate position. In 194 BC, <mask> married Cleopatra I in a peace treaty. The heir to the throne was <mask> Philometor, who was born in 186 BC. The exact date of <mask>'s birth is not known.He had a younger sister, Cleopatra II, who was born between 186 and 184 BC. <mask>'s reign was shadowed by the defeat in the Fifth Syrian War. One prominent group within the Ptolemaic court wanted a return to war in order to restore Egyptian prestige, while another group resisted the expense of rebuilding and remilitarising the realm. <mask> succeeded <mask> when he died at the age of 30. The regents had power since the new king was only six years old. The regents were more associated with the peaceful group and, as a result, members of the warhawk group have begun to look at the young <mask> VIII as a potential figurehead for their movement. The Seleucid king Seleucus IV, who had followed a generally peaceful policy, was murdered in 175 BC and after two months of conflict his brother Antiochus IV Epiphanes secured the throne.The warhawks in the Ptolemaic court were given the power by the situation. They seem to have accepted the warhawk's position by 172 BC. <mask> was promoted to co-regent and incorporated into the Ptolemaic cult along with his brother and sister in 170 BC. The first year of a new era was declared in the current year. The purpose of the ceremonies was to paper over the factional differences that had developed in the court and to promote unity in the run-up to war. In 170 BC, <mask> VI's adulthood and the celebration of his coming-of-age ceremony marked the formal end of the regency government. The regents remained in charge of the government.In early 169 BC, the Sixth Syrian War broke out. The Ptolemaic army set out from the border fort of Pelusium to invade Palestine, while <mask> stayed in Alexandria. The Ptolemaic army was destroyed in the Sinai. The army was defeated and moved to the Delta. Two Ptolemaic generals, Comanus and Cineas, replaced Eulaeus and Lenaeus after they were deposed by a military coup. <mask> went to meet Antiochus after he advanced on Alexandria. Egypt was reduced to a Seleucid client state because of an agreement of friendship.The people of Alexandria rioted when they heard of the agreement. Comanus and Cineas declared <mask> the sole king after rejecting the agreement. After placing Alexandria under siege, he withdrew from Egypt in September 169 BC, leaving <mask> as his puppet king in Memphis and a garrison in Pelusium. <mask> and Cleopatra II reconciled with <mask> and he returned to Alexandria as their co-regent. The agreement that <mask> had made with Antiochus was repudiated by the restored government. In the spring of 168 BC, Antiochus invaded Egypt again. The invasion was justified by the claim that <mask> had appropriated his older brother's authority.Antiochus was crowned king of Egypt and advanced on Alexandria. After the Ptolemies appealed to Rome for help over the winter, a Roman embassy led by Laenas confronted Antiochus at the town of Eleusis and forced him to agree to a settlement, bringing the war to an end. The joint rule of the two brothers and Cleopatra II continued after the war ended. The failure of the Egyptian forces in the Sixth Syrian War caused a permanent rift between <mask> and <mask> VIII and left the Ptolemaic monarchy's prestige seriously diminished. Dionysius Petosarapis tried to take control of the government in 165 BC by taking advantage of the conflict between the brothers. He told the people of Alexandria that <mask> tried to get him to assassinate <mask> VIII and that a mob was going to support him. <mask> succeeded in defusing the crisis by convincing <mask> VIII that the charges were not true.Dionysius persuaded some military contingents to revolt. There was a lot of fighting in the next year. This is the latest in a series of rebellions that attempted to overthrow the Ptolemies and reestablish native Egyptian rule. The rebellion was suppressed by <mask> VI. After <mask> VI had returned from the south, <mask> VIII expelled <mask> and Cleopatra II from power. <mask> VI fled to Cyprus. According to Diodorus Siculus, the instigator of the expulsion was a man named Timotheus, who became the dominant minister.<mask> was distinguished from <mask> and Cleopatra II who both bore the epithet Philometor because he assumed the epithet Euergetes. The minister of <mask> VIII used torture and arbitrary executions to eliminate his enemies. The people of Alexandria rioted against <mask> VIII and recalled <mask> VI. <mask> VI granted <mask> VIII control of Cyrenaica after Roman agents convinced him to do so. <mask> didn't like what he saw when he left for Cyrene. He went to Rome to ask for help. The Senate believed that <mask> should be given Cyprus as well.Polybius believed that the Senate wanted to weaken Ptolemaic power. The envoys were sent to force <mask> to concede. <mask> VIII went to Greece to recruit soldiers for an expedition to seize Cyprus. He was persuaded to leave his troops and return to Cyrene by the two men. He went to the border between Egypt and Cyrene with a force of 1,000 Cretan mercenaries to wait for the results of the Roman negotiations with <mask>. The governor that <mask> had left in charge of Cyrene suddenly raised a revolt when he was waiting there for forty days. <mask> was defeated in battle.It is not known if he regained control over Cyrene through negotiation or military action. When they arrived in Alexandria, <mask> VI put them off until he heard about the revolt. They had to return to Rome. The Roman Senate broke off relations with <mask> and gave <mask> permission to use force to take control of Cyprus, but they didn't give him any support. In 161 BC, he launched a military expedition to Cyprus. The expedition lasted up to a year before he abandoned it. <mask> VIII blamed his older brother for a failed assassination attempt.<mask> went to Rome to show his scars from the attempt to the Senate. The Roman Senate agreed to send a second embassy in 154 BC in order to enforce the transfer of Cyprus to <mask>'s control. <mask> was captured after being besieged by his brother. <mask> was persuaded to leave Cyprus in exchange for continued possession of Cyrenaica, an annual payment of grain, and a promise of marriage to one of <mask>'s infant daughters. <mask> had close relations with Rome during his time as king in Cyrene. He was a friend and ally of the Roman Republic. He is said to have met a woman in Rome.After the death of her husband, <mask> VIII asked for her hand in marriage, but she refused. It is unlikely that this encounter ever took place. The story may reflect close ties between <mask> VIII and the ladies. <mask> VI seems to have kept in touch with the Elder. In the aftermath of the assassination attempt, an inscription was set up to record <mask>'s will, in which he left Cyrenaica to Rome if he died childless. The very close alignment between <mask> VIII and the Romans is attested in the literary sources. There are similar testaments from other monarchs.They were used by monarchs to protect themselves from assassination. The earliest example of this practice would be <mask>'s. The inscription of <mask>'s will is thought to be a forgery by the Romans after they gained control of Cyrenaica. <mask> tried to show the Hellenistic royal virtue of tryphe. The priest of Apollo was the main priest in Cyrene. <mask> hosted feasts extremely sumptuously when he assumed this position. He was involved in a large construction project in the city.His final resting place seems to have been a large tomb west of Ptolemais. <mask> died on a campaign in Syria. After three weeks, the Alexandrians called on <mask> to return from Cyrene, assume the kingship and marry his sister, Cleopatra II. The royal couple were included in the cult as the Theoi Euergetai, which means 'benefactor gods'. The first child of the couple, <mask>, was born after <mask> was proclaimed in Memphis. <mask> is said to have launched a purge of those who supported <mask> VI. This purge is luridly described in the literary sources, though it is sometimes difficult to determine whether specific anecdotes belong to this event or his later reconquest of Alexandria in 126 BC.<mask> let his soldiers rampage through the streets of Alexandria, murdering indiscriminately, until he was left alone with his soldiers in so large a city, and found himself a king, not of men, but of empty houses. The young men of Alexandria took refuge in the gymnasion and <mask> set the building on fire. In this period, <mask> gained a number of pejorative nicknames, including Physcon (fatty) and Kakergetes (malefactor), a pun on his official epithet Euergetes. The end of Ptolemaic presence in the Aegean Sea was marked by <mask>'s accession. The last remaining Ptolemaic bases in the Aegean were withdrawn within months of his accession. The Ptolemaic empire was limited to Egypt, Cyprus, and Cyrene. The young son of <mask> VI and Cleopatra II was murdered by <mask> VIII.The boy died in his mother's arms on the night of <mask>'s wedding to Cleopatra. The boy was the heir until the birth of <mask>, according to documentary evidence. <mask> was promoted to co-regent by the late 140s BC. <mask> married his niece Cleopatra III and made her a co-ruler without divorcing his older sister, Cleopatra II. After his accession, <mask> started a relationship with Livy. The marriage may not have been planned from the beginning, but a measure taken to prevent her from being married to someone else who might use that marriage to claim the throne. The new arrangement led to a conflict with Cleopatra II.Galaestes, a former Ptolemaic officer, started a revolt in response to the new marriage and the support of Cleopatra II. <mask> VI forced Galaestes into exile after he had been a trusted official. In Greece, he gathered an army of other Ptolemaic exiles and announced that he had a young son of <mask> VI in his care. Galaestes wanted to put this child on the throne. The mercenaries of <mask> VIII almost defected to the rebellion, but their commander prevented this by paying their wages from his own money. <mask> issued a decree affirming the rights and privileges of the Egyptian priesthood after Galaestes was defeated. The Roman embassy received by <mask> VIII was intended to effect a peaceful settlement of all affairs in the Eastern Mediterranean.The ancient sources emphasize the sumptuous greeting that the Romans received in order to contrast it with the austere behavior of the Romans. He was so fat that he was transported everywhere in a litter. The war between <mask> and Cleopatra III began in late 132 BC, with <mask> on one side and Cleopatra II on the other. The people of Alexandria rioted in favor of Cleopatra II and set fire to the royal palace after <mask> retained control of Alexandria. <mask>, Cleopatra III, and their children fled to Cyprus. It was the first time that a Ptolemaic woman had done this and it linked her to her dead husband. <mask> was acknowledged as king by most of Egypt.In the south of the country, a man named Harsiesi took advantage of the chaos to rebel. Thebes were taken over by Harsiesi in August or September of 131 BC. He was expelled in November by the Thebaid, who was also an Egyptian. By the beginning of 130 BC, <mask> VIII and Cleopatra III had returned from Cyprus to Egypt. They were in charge of Memphis by the spring. They promoted him to command over the whole of Upper Egypt and put him in charge of the military apparatus, the first time that a native Egyptian had held such a prominent position. The execution of Harsiesi took place in September 130 BC.<mask> and Cleopatra III were unable to capture Alexandria. In October 130 BC, Cleopatra II's strongholds were still under her control. Cleopatra II wanted to have her son <mask>, who was twelve years old at the time, recalled to Alexandria and crowned as king. After killing the boy in 130 BC, <mask> sent the dismembered pieces back to Cleopatra II on her birthday. The Senate did not intervene in the conflict. In 129 BC Cleopatra II offered the throne of Egypt to the Seleucid king. He was the husband of Cleopatra Thea, who was the daughter of Cleopatra II and <mask> VI.When news arrived that Cleopatra Thea had installed their son, the future Antiochus VIII as king of Syria, his forces were still in the eastern desert, besieging the border fortress of Pelusium. The Seleucid troops had to return to Syria. After dealing with the revolts in Syria, <mask> agreed to a request from a group of rebels that he send a royal pretender to lead them. <mask> presented Alexander II Zabinas as the son of an earlier Seleucid king. Seleucid intervention in opposition to <mask> was no longer possible because of the conflict in the Seleucid realm. Cleopatra II fled Alexandria for the court of Demetrius II in 127 BC. Alexandria was reconquered by <mask> in 126 BC.There was a bloody purge of the supporters of Cleopatra II. The bloody slaughter that <mask> presided over may or may not be related to the earlier purge of 145 BC. <mask> began negotiations to reconcile with Cleopatra II and the Seleucid court. <mask> abandoned his support for Alexander II Zabinas in order to support the son and successor of Demetrius II. He sealed the agreement by sending his second daughter to marry the Seleucid king. After returning to Egypt from the Seleucid court, Cleopatra II was once more acknowledged as co-regent with <mask> and Cleopatra III. She appears with them in documents from July 124 BC.The reconciliation of <mask> and Cleopatra III took a long time. The royal trio issued theAmnesty decree in April 118 BC to solidify their reconciliation and restore peace and prosperity to Egypt. The decree pardoned all crimes other than murder and temple robbing, encouraged refugees to return home and waive back taxes, affirmed temple land holdings and tax privileges, and instructed tax officials to use. The jurisdiction of courts in legal disputes between Egyptians and Greeks was established by the decree. The chrematistai would decide the disputes over Greek documents, while the laokritai would resolve the disputes. The chrematistai was no longer allowed to drag Egyptians into their courts. On June 28, 116 BC, <mask> VIII died.His sons were <mask>, Cleopatra II and Cleopatra III. He left the throne to Cleopatra III or one of her sons. The people of Alexandria forced her to choose between <mask> and <mask>. After <mask> was deposed by <mask>, this account was invented. The annual Priest of Alexander the Great, whose full title included the names of all the Ptolemaic ruling couples, appeared in official documents as part of the Ptolemaic cult. <mask> became co-regent with his brother and sister in October 170 BC and was added to their cult as a third Mother-loving God. He assumed the new epithet Euergetes when he took sole power in 164 BC, but it's not clear what the implications were for the cult.He was expelled from Alexandria in 163 BC. At the start of <mask>'s second reign in 145 BC, he and Cleopatra II became the Theoi Euerge (tai "benefactor gods"). After she married <mask> VIII, Cleopatra III was promoted to the status of co-regent and added as a third Benefactor god. During the civil war, Cleopatra II removed the Theoi Euergetai from Alexandria, but <mask> and Cleopatra III maintained their own rival priest of Alexander from 130 BC until they recovered Alexandria in 127 BC. He is considered to be the 'Priest of Alexander' in the king's camp. After the reconciliation of the siblings in 124 BC, the situation was restored and it continued until <mask>'s death. After the final reconciliation of the royal trio, a new king was incorporated into the cult of Theos Neos Philopator.<mask> is the son of <mask> VI and Cleopatra II, and <mask> is the son of <mask> VIII and Cleopatra II. The deification of <mask> serves as an indication that the prince had reconciled with his father and murderer. Since the death of Arsinoe II, Ptolemaic queens have been honoured with a separate cult of their own, including a separate priestess who marched in religious processions in Alexandria behind the priest of Alexander the Great. In 131 or 130 BC, <mask> and Cleopatra III established a new priesthood to honor Cleopatra III. This new position was called the 'Hieros Polos' of Isis, Great Mother of the Gods' and was placed immediately after the priest of Alexander and ahead of all the priestesses of the previous queens in the order of precedence. The position was established for a living queen rather than a dead one, and the holder was a priest rather than a priestess. The position was not recorded after 105 BC.The Ptolemies had taken on the traditional role of the Egyptian Pharaoh and pursued an alliance with the Egyptian priestly elite. The Ptolemies invested more in this aspect of their rulership in the third and second centuries BC. In the conflict with Cleopatra II, <mask> VIII became more popular among the Egyptians as their Pharaoh than among the Greeks. In the wake of the reconciliation of <mask> VIII, Cleopatra III, and Cleopatra II in 118 BC, the royal trio undertook to support reconstruction and repair work at temples throughout Egypt. They promised to pay for the mummification of the bulls. Alexandrian Scholarship <mask> VIII was involved in philology. He is reported to have written a study of Homer at some point before 145 BC and twenty-four books of Hypomnemata, a collection of paradoxes, including stories about historical and contemporary monarchs, as well as exotic wildlife.<mask>'s reign saw a decline in the importance of Alexandria as an intellectual centre due to the massacres that he carried out on taking control. A number of prominent intellectuals, including Apollodorus of Athens and Aristarchus of Samothrace, were victims on the first occasion. Most of the intellectuals from Alexandria have moved to Athens or Rhodes. The Ptolemies were able to acquire gold, ivory, and elephants from the Horn of Africa because they had a network of trading stations throughout the Red Sea. During the last years of <mask> VIII's reign, sailors discovered that it was possible to cross the Indian Ocean in the summer and return in the winter. Eudoxus of Cyzicus is said to have traveled to India in 118 BC and again in 116 BC. Direct seaborne trade with India was opened up by the discovery.The trade between the Mediterranean region and India used to be done by sailors from the Arabian centers in the Gulf of Aden and the Persian Gulf as well as desert caravans led by the Nabataeans. Sailors from Ptolemaic Egypt began to travel on their own. This marks the beginning of the Indian Ocean trade, which would become a major part of the economic world system that operated from the first century BC until the fourth century AD. Marriage and issue <mask> VIII Euergetes married his older sister, Cleopatra II, on his accession in 145 BC and she bore him one son: In 142 or 141 BC, <mask> also married his niece, Cleopatra III, daughter of <mask> VI and Cleopatra II. There were a number of children by a concubine, <mask> had further issue. The berlieferung is in the Spannungsfeld. The Will of <mask> VIII 2nd-century BC Pharaohs of the Ptolemaic dynasty can be found in Chapter X of E. R Bevan's House of Ptolemy. | [
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18776332 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R.%20A.%20B.%20Mynors | R. A. B. Mynors | Sir Roger Aubrey Baskerville Mynors (28 July 190317 October 1989) was an English classicist and medievalist who held the senior chairs of Latin at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge. A textual critic, he was an expert in the study of manuscripts and their role in the reconstruction of classical texts.
Mynors's career spanned most of the 20th century and straddled two of England's leading universities, Oxford and Cambridge. Educated at Eton College, he read Literae Humaniores at Balliol College, Oxford, and spent the early years of his career as a Fellow of that college. He was Kennedy Professor of Latin at Cambridge from 1944 to 1953 and Corpus Christi Professor of Latin at Oxford from 1953 until his retirement in 1970. He died in a car accident in 1989, aged 86, while travelling to his country residence, Treago Castle.
Mynors's reputation is that of one of Britain's foremost classicists. He was an expert on palaeography, and has been credited with unravelling a number of highly complex manuscript relationships in his catalogues of the Balliol and Durham Cathedral libraries. His publications on classical subjects include critical editions of Vergil, Catullus, and Pliny the Younger. The final achievement of his scholarly career, a comprehensive commentary on Vergil's Georgics, was published posthumously. In addition to honorary degrees and fellowships from various institutions, Mynors was created Knight Bachelor in 1963.
Early life and secondary education
Roger Aubrey Baskerville Mynors was born in Langley Burrell, Wiltshire, into a family of Herefordshire gentry. The Mynors family had owned the estate of Treago Castle since the 15th century, and he resided there in later life. His mother was Margery Musgrave, and his father, Aubrey Baskerville Mynors, was an Anglican clergyman and rector of Langley Burrell, who had been secretary to the Pan-Anglican Congress, held in London in 1908. Among his four siblings was his identical twin brother Humphrey Mynors, who went on to become Deputy Governor of the Bank of England. The brothers shared a close friendship and lived together in their ancestral home after Roger's retirement.
Mynors attended Summer Fields School in Oxford, and in 1916 entered Eton College as a King's Scholar. At Eton, he was part of a generation of pupils that included the historian Steven Runciman and the author George Orwell. His precocious interest in Latin literature and its transmission was fostered by the encouragement of two of his teachers, Cyril Alington and M. R. James. Alington became an influential mentor and friend since he, like Mynors, was fascinated with the manuscript traditions of medieval Europe.
Academic career
Balliol College, Oxford
In 1922, Mynors won the Domus exhibition, a scholarship to study Classics at Balliol College, Oxford. Attending the college at the same time as the literary critic Cyril Connolly, the musicologist Jack Westrup, the future Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford, Walter Fraser Oakeshott, and the historian Richard Pares, he was highly successful in his academic studies. Graduating with a Bachelor of Arts in 1926, he won the Hertford (1924), Craven (1924), and Derby (1926) scholarships. He was elected to a fellowship at Balliol and became a tutor in Classics. In 1935 he was elevated to a University Lecturership. At the time of his appointment, much of Mynors's teaching focused on the poet Vergil, whose complete works he edited in the following decades.
His tenure at Oxford University saw the beginning of his comprehensive work on medieval manuscripts. From the late 1920s onwards, Mynors was drawn more to matters of codicology than to purely classical questions. He prepared an edition of the 6th-century scholar Cassiodorus, for which he travelled extensively in continental Europe; a critical edition was published in 1937. In 1929, he was appointed librarian of Balliol College. This position gave impetus to create a catalogue of the college's medieval manuscripts. A similar project, a catalogue of the manuscripts housed at Durham Cathedral, was compiled in the 1930s. Mynors's interest in codicology gave rise to a close co-operation with the medievalists Richard William Hunt and Neil Ripley Ker.
In 1936, towards the end of his tenure at Balliol, Mynors met Eduard Fraenkel, then holder of a chair in Latin at Oxford. Having relocated to England because of the increasing discrimination against German Jews, Fraenkel was a leading exponent of Germany's scholarly tradition. His mentorship contributed to Mynors's transformation from amateur scholar to a professional critic of Latin texts. They maintained a close friendship, which exposed Mynors to other German philologists, including Rudolf Pfeiffer and Otto Skutsch.
Mynors spent the winter of 1938 as a visiting scholar at Harvard University. In 1940, after a brief return to Balliol, British involvement in the Second World War led to his being employed at the Exchange Control Department of Her Majesty's Treasury responsible for the administration of foreign currency transactions. At Balliol, Mynors taught from 1926 until 1944, a time during which he mentored a number of future scholars, including the Wittgenstein expert David Pears and the classicist Donald Russell.
Pembroke College, Cambridge
In 1944, encouraged by Fraenkel, Mynors took up an offer to assume the Kennedy Professorship of Latin at the University of Cambridge. He also became a fellow of Pembroke College. In 1945, shortly after moving to Cambridge, he married Lavinia Alington, a medical researcher and daughter of his former teacher and Eton headmaster, Cyril Alington. The couple had no children. The move to Cambridge meant an advancement of his academic career, but he soon came to contemplate a return to Oxford. He applied unsuccessfully to become master of Balliol College after the position had been vacated by Sandie Lindsay in 1949. The historian David Keir was elected in his stead.
His post at Cambridge caused changes to Mynors's profile as an academic. His duties at Balliol had centred on the supervision of undergraduates, while he was free to focus on palaeographical topics in his research. At Cambridge, Mynors was required to lecture extensively on Latin literature and to supervise research students, a task of which he had little experience. The duties of his university post left little time to get involved in the activities of the college, which led Mynors to regret his departure from Oxford, going so far as to describe the decision as a "fundamental error" in a personal letter.
Although his post was chiefly that of a Latinist, his involvement in the publication of medieval texts intensified during the 1940s. After he was approached by V. H. Galbraith, a historian of the Middle Ages, Mynors became an editor on Nelson's Medieval Texts series in 1946. Working on the series first as a joint editor, and from 1962 as an advisory editor, he edited the Latin text for a number of volumes. He was the principal author of editions of Walter Map's De nugis curialium and of Bede's Ecclesiastical History. In 1947, he collaborated with the Oxford historian Alfred Brotherston Emden, who consulted Mynors for his own work on the history of the University of Oxford while assisting, in turn, with the Balliol catalogue.
Corpus Christi College, Oxford
In 1953, Mynors was appointed Corpus Christi Professor of Latin and could thus return to Oxford to succeed Eduard Fraenkel. At the time, there was no precedent for such a move between senior chairs at Oxford and Cambridge. Most of his work as an editor of Latin texts took place during this second period at Oxford. Working for the Oxford Classical Texts series, he produced critical editions of the complete works of Catullus (1958) and Vergil (1969), and of Pliny the Younger's Epistulae (1963). Though focusing on classical subjects, he continued to work on manuscripts as a curator at the Bodleian Library. In the 17 years he spent at the college, Mynors sought to maintain its position as a centre of excellence in the Classics and fostered contacts with a new generation of Latinists, including E. J. Kenney, Wendell Clausen, Leighton Durham Reynolds, R. J. Tarrant and Michael Winterbottom.
Retirement and death
In 1970, Mynors retired from his teaching duties and relocated to his estate at Treago Castle. In addition to an intense dedication to arboriculture, his retirement saw work on a commentary on Vergil's Georgics, which was published posthumously in 1990. He translated the correspondence of the humanist Desiderius Erasmus for the University of Toronto Press, and maintained an interest in the nearby Hereford Cathedral, serving as the chairman of the Friends of the Cathedral from 1979 to 1984. In 1980, the cathedral's parish set up a fund in Mynors's name to acquire a collection of rare books.
On 17 October 1989, Mynors was killed in a road accident outside Hereford on his way back from a day working on the cathedral's manuscripts. He was buried at St Weonards. Meryl Jancey, the cathedral's Honorary Archivist, later revealed that Mynors had on the same day expressed his delight about his own scholarly work on the death of Bede: "He told me he was glad that he had translated for the Oxford Medieval Texts the account of Bede's death, and that Bede had not ceased in what he saw as his work for God until the very end."
Contributions to scholarship
Cataloguing manuscripts
Mynors's chief interest lay in palaeography, the study of pre-modern manuscripts. He is credited with unravelling a number of complex manuscript relationships in his catalogues of the Balliol and Durham Cathedral libraries. He had particular interest in the physical state of manuscripts, including examining blots and rulings. For the Balliol archivist Bethany Hamblen, this interest typifies the importance Mynors gave to formal features when evaluating hand-written books.
Critical editions
A series of critical editions on Latin authors constitutes the entirety of Mynors's purely classical scholarship. Because of his reluctance to emend beyond the transmitted readings, Mynors has been described as a conservative textual critic. This approach is thought to have originated in his tendency to ascribe great historical value to manuscripts and their scribes.
The first of his critical editions is of the Institutiones of Cassiodorus, the first produced since 1679. In the introduction, Mynors offered new insights into the complex manuscript tradition without resolving the fundamental question of how the original text was expanded in later copies. The edition was praised by the reviewer Stephen Gaselee in The Classical Review, who said that it would provide solid foundations for a commentary; writing for the Journal of Theological Studies, Alexander Souter described it as a "definitive edition" and praised Mynors's classification of the manuscripts.
In 1958, Mynors published an edition of the poems of Catullus. His text followed two recent editions by Moritz Schuster (1949) and Ignazio Cazzaniga (1956), with which he had to compete. Taking a conservative stance on the problems posed by Catullus's text, Mynors did not print any modern emendations unless they corrected obvious scribal errors. Contrary to his conservative instincts, he rejected the traditional archaising orthography of the manuscripts in favour of normalised Latin spelling. This intervention was termed by the philologist Revilo Oliver as "the victory of common sense" in Catullan criticism. For the reviewer Philip Levine, Mynors's edition sets itself apart from previous texts by its scrutiny of a "large bulk" of unexamined manuscripts. Writing in 2000, the Latinist Stephen Harrison criticised Mynors's text for the "omission of many important conjectures from the text", while lauding it for its handling of the manuscript tradition.
His edition of Pliny's Epistulae employed a similar method but aimed to be an intermediate step rather than an overhaul of the text. Mynors's edition of the complete works of Vergil revamped the text constructed by F. A. Hirtzel in 1900 which had become outdated. He enlarged the manuscript base by drawing on 13 minor witnesses from the ninth century and added an index of personal names. Its judgement of these minor manuscripts, in particular, is described by the Latinist W. S. Maguinness as the edition's strength. Given the incomplete state of the Aeneid, Vergil's epic poem on the wanderings of Aeneas, Mynors departed from his cautious editorial stance by printing a small number of modern conjectures.
Mynors established a new text of Bede's Ecclesiastical History for the edition he published together with the historian Bertram Colgrave. His edition of this text followed that of Charles Plummer published in 1896. Collation of the Saint Petersburg Bede, an 8th-century manuscript unknown to Plummer, allowed Mynors to construct a new version of the M tradition. Although he did not append a detailed critical apparatus and exegetical notes, his analysis of the textual history was praised by the Church historian Gerald Bonner as "lucid" and "excellently done". Mynors himself considered the edition superficial and felt that its publication had been premature. Winterbottom voices a similar opinion, writing that the text "hardly differ[ed] from Plummer's".
Commentary on the Georgics
His scholarly legacy was enhanced by his posthumously published commentary on Vergil's Georgics. A comprehensive guide to Vergil's didactic poem on agriculture, the commentary has been lauded for its meticulous attention to technical detail and for Mynors's profound knowledge of agricultural practice. In spite of its accomplishments, the classicist Patricia Johnston has noted that the commentary fails to engage seriously with contemporary scholarship on the text, such as the tension between optimistic and pessimistic readings. In this regard, Mynors's last work reflects his lifelong scepticism towards literary criticism of any persuasion.
Legacy
During his career, Mynors gained a reputation as "one of the leading classical scholars of his generation". He drew praise from the scholarly community for his textual work. The Latinist Harold Gotoff states that he was an "extraordinary scholar", while Winterbottom describes his critical editions as "distinguished". His Oxford editions of the poets Catullus and Vergil in particular are singled out by Gotoff as "excellent"; they still serve as the standard editions of their texts in the early 21st century.
Honours
Mynors was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1944 and made a Knight Bachelor in 1963. He was granted honorary fellowships by Balliol College, Oxford (1963), Pembroke College, Cambridge (1965), and Corpus Christi College, Oxford (1970). The Warburg Institute honoured him in the same way. Mynors was also an honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Philosophical Society, and the Istituto Nazionale di Studi Romani (it). He held honorary degrees from the universities of Cambridge, Durham, Edinburgh, Sheffield, and Toronto. In 1983, on his 80th birthday, Mynors's service to the study of Latin texts was honoured by the publication of Texts and Transmission: A Survey of the Latin Classics, edited by the Oxford Latinist L. D. Reynolds. In 2020, an exhibition was held at Balliol to commemorate his scholarship on the college library.
Publications
The following books were authored by Mynors:
Notes
References
Bibliography
1903 births
1989 deaths
People educated at Eton College
People educated at Summer Fields School
Alumni of Balliol College, Oxford
Members of the University of Cambridge faculty of classics
Fellows of Balliol College, Oxford
Knights Bachelor
British classical scholars
Anglo-Saxon studies scholars
Road incident deaths in England
Corpus Christi Professors of Latin
Scholars of Latin literature
Fellows of the British Academy
Codicologists
twin people from England
British medievalists
English palaeographers
Burials in Herefordshire
Latin–English translators | [
"Sir Roger Aubrey Baskerville Mynors (28 July 190317 October 1989) was an English classicist and medievalist who held the senior chairs of Latin at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge.",
"A textual critic, he was an expert in the study of manuscripts and their role in the reconstruction of classical texts.",
"Mynors's career spanned most of the 20th century and straddled two of England's leading universities, Oxford and Cambridge.",
"Educated at Eton College, he read Literae Humaniores at Balliol College, Oxford, and spent the early years of his career as a Fellow of that college.",
"He was Kennedy Professor of Latin at Cambridge from 1944 to 1953 and Corpus Christi Professor of Latin at Oxford from 1953 until his retirement in 1970.",
"He died in a car accident in 1989, aged 86, while travelling to his country residence, Treago Castle.",
"Mynors's reputation is that of one of Britain's foremost classicists.",
"He was an expert on palaeography, and has been credited with unravelling a number of highly complex manuscript relationships in his catalogues of the Balliol and Durham Cathedral libraries.",
"His publications on classical subjects include critical editions of Vergil, Catullus, and Pliny the Younger.",
"The final achievement of his scholarly career, a comprehensive commentary on Vergil's Georgics, was published posthumously.",
"In addition to honorary degrees and fellowships from various institutions, Mynors was created Knight Bachelor in 1963.",
"Early life and secondary education\nRoger Aubrey Baskerville Mynors was born in Langley Burrell, Wiltshire, into a family of Herefordshire gentry.",
"The Mynors family had owned the estate of Treago Castle since the 15th century, and he resided there in later life.",
"His mother was Margery Musgrave, and his father, Aubrey Baskerville Mynors, was an Anglican clergyman and rector of Langley Burrell, who had been secretary to the Pan-Anglican Congress, held in London in 1908.",
"Among his four siblings was his identical twin brother Humphrey Mynors, who went on to become Deputy Governor of the Bank of England.",
"The brothers shared a close friendship and lived together in their ancestral home after Roger's retirement.",
"Mynors attended Summer Fields School in Oxford, and in 1916 entered Eton College as a King's Scholar.",
"At Eton, he was part of a generation of pupils that included the historian Steven Runciman and the author George Orwell.",
"His precocious interest in Latin literature and its transmission was fostered by the encouragement of two of his teachers, Cyril Alington and M. R. James.",
"Alington became an influential mentor and friend since he, like Mynors, was fascinated with the manuscript traditions of medieval Europe.",
"Academic career\n\nBalliol College, Oxford\n\nIn 1922, Mynors won the Domus exhibition, a scholarship to study Classics at Balliol College, Oxford.",
"Attending the college at the same time as the literary critic Cyril Connolly, the musicologist Jack Westrup, the future Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford, Walter Fraser Oakeshott, and the historian Richard Pares, he was highly successful in his academic studies.",
"Graduating with a Bachelor of Arts in 1926, he won the Hertford (1924), Craven (1924), and Derby (1926) scholarships.",
"He was elected to a fellowship at Balliol and became a tutor in Classics.",
"In 1935 he was elevated to a University Lecturership.",
"At the time of his appointment, much of Mynors's teaching focused on the poet Vergil, whose complete works he edited in the following decades.",
"His tenure at Oxford University saw the beginning of his comprehensive work on medieval manuscripts.",
"From the late 1920s onwards, Mynors was drawn more to matters of codicology than to purely classical questions.",
"He prepared an edition of the 6th-century scholar Cassiodorus, for which he travelled extensively in continental Europe; a critical edition was published in 1937.",
"In 1929, he was appointed librarian of Balliol College.",
"This position gave impetus to create a catalogue of the college's medieval manuscripts.",
"A similar project, a catalogue of the manuscripts housed at Durham Cathedral, was compiled in the 1930s.",
"Mynors's interest in codicology gave rise to a close co-operation with the medievalists Richard William Hunt and Neil Ripley Ker.",
"In 1936, towards the end of his tenure at Balliol, Mynors met Eduard Fraenkel, then holder of a chair in Latin at Oxford.",
"Having relocated to England because of the increasing discrimination against German Jews, Fraenkel was a leading exponent of Germany's scholarly tradition.",
"His mentorship contributed to Mynors's transformation from amateur scholar to a professional critic of Latin texts.",
"They maintained a close friendship, which exposed Mynors to other German philologists, including Rudolf Pfeiffer and Otto Skutsch.",
"Mynors spent the winter of 1938 as a visiting scholar at Harvard University.",
"In 1940, after a brief return to Balliol, British involvement in the Second World War led to his being employed at the Exchange Control Department of Her Majesty's Treasury responsible for the administration of foreign currency transactions.",
"At Balliol, Mynors taught from 1926 until 1944, a time during which he mentored a number of future scholars, including the Wittgenstein expert David Pears and the classicist Donald Russell.",
"Pembroke College, Cambridge\n\nIn 1944, encouraged by Fraenkel, Mynors took up an offer to assume the Kennedy Professorship of Latin at the University of Cambridge.",
"He also became a fellow of Pembroke College.",
"In 1945, shortly after moving to Cambridge, he married Lavinia Alington, a medical researcher and daughter of his former teacher and Eton headmaster, Cyril Alington.",
"The couple had no children.",
"The move to Cambridge meant an advancement of his academic career, but he soon came to contemplate a return to Oxford.",
"He applied unsuccessfully to become master of Balliol College after the position had been vacated by Sandie Lindsay in 1949.",
"The historian David Keir was elected in his stead.",
"His post at Cambridge caused changes to Mynors's profile as an academic.",
"His duties at Balliol had centred on the supervision of undergraduates, while he was free to focus on palaeographical topics in his research.",
"At Cambridge, Mynors was required to lecture extensively on Latin literature and to supervise research students, a task of which he had little experience.",
"The duties of his university post left little time to get involved in the activities of the college, which led Mynors to regret his departure from Oxford, going so far as to describe the decision as a \"fundamental error\" in a personal letter.",
"Although his post was chiefly that of a Latinist, his involvement in the publication of medieval texts intensified during the 1940s.",
"After he was approached by V. H. Galbraith, a historian of the Middle Ages, Mynors became an editor on Nelson's Medieval Texts series in 1946.",
"Working on the series first as a joint editor, and from 1962 as an advisory editor, he edited the Latin text for a number of volumes.",
"He was the principal author of editions of Walter Map's De nugis curialium and of Bede's Ecclesiastical History.",
"In 1947, he collaborated with the Oxford historian Alfred Brotherston Emden, who consulted Mynors for his own work on the history of the University of Oxford while assisting, in turn, with the Balliol catalogue.",
"Corpus Christi College, Oxford\nIn 1953, Mynors was appointed Corpus Christi Professor of Latin and could thus return to Oxford to succeed Eduard Fraenkel.",
"At the time, there was no precedent for such a move between senior chairs at Oxford and Cambridge.",
"Most of his work as an editor of Latin texts took place during this second period at Oxford.",
"Working for the Oxford Classical Texts series, he produced critical editions of the complete works of Catullus (1958) and Vergil (1969), and of Pliny the Younger's Epistulae (1963).",
"Though focusing on classical subjects, he continued to work on manuscripts as a curator at the Bodleian Library.",
"In the 17 years he spent at the college, Mynors sought to maintain its position as a centre of excellence in the Classics and fostered contacts with a new generation of Latinists, including E. J. Kenney, Wendell Clausen, Leighton Durham Reynolds, R. J. Tarrant and Michael Winterbottom.",
"Retirement and death\nIn 1970, Mynors retired from his teaching duties and relocated to his estate at Treago Castle.",
"In addition to an intense dedication to arboriculture, his retirement saw work on a commentary on Vergil's Georgics, which was published posthumously in 1990.",
"He translated the correspondence of the humanist Desiderius Erasmus for the University of Toronto Press, and maintained an interest in the nearby Hereford Cathedral, serving as the chairman of the Friends of the Cathedral from 1979 to 1984.",
"In 1980, the cathedral's parish set up a fund in Mynors's name to acquire a collection of rare books.",
"On 17 October 1989, Mynors was killed in a road accident outside Hereford on his way back from a day working on the cathedral's manuscripts.",
"He was buried at St Weonards.",
"Meryl Jancey, the cathedral's Honorary Archivist, later revealed that Mynors had on the same day expressed his delight about his own scholarly work on the death of Bede: \"He told me he was glad that he had translated for the Oxford Medieval Texts the account of Bede's death, and that Bede had not ceased in what he saw as his work for God until the very end.\"",
"Contributions to scholarship\n\nCataloguing manuscripts \nMynors's chief interest lay in palaeography, the study of pre-modern manuscripts.",
"He is credited with unravelling a number of complex manuscript relationships in his catalogues of the Balliol and Durham Cathedral libraries.",
"He had particular interest in the physical state of manuscripts, including examining blots and rulings.",
"For the Balliol archivist Bethany Hamblen, this interest typifies the importance Mynors gave to formal features when evaluating hand-written books.",
"Critical editions \nA series of critical editions on Latin authors constitutes the entirety of Mynors's purely classical scholarship.",
"Because of his reluctance to emend beyond the transmitted readings, Mynors has been described as a conservative textual critic.",
"This approach is thought to have originated in his tendency to ascribe great historical value to manuscripts and their scribes.",
"The first of his critical editions is of the Institutiones of Cassiodorus, the first produced since 1679.",
"In the introduction, Mynors offered new insights into the complex manuscript tradition without resolving the fundamental question of how the original text was expanded in later copies.",
"The edition was praised by the reviewer Stephen Gaselee in The Classical Review, who said that it would provide solid foundations for a commentary; writing for the Journal of Theological Studies, Alexander Souter described it as a \"definitive edition\" and praised Mynors's classification of the manuscripts.",
"In 1958, Mynors published an edition of the poems of Catullus.",
"His text followed two recent editions by Moritz Schuster (1949) and Ignazio Cazzaniga (1956), with which he had to compete.",
"Taking a conservative stance on the problems posed by Catullus's text, Mynors did not print any modern emendations unless they corrected obvious scribal errors.",
"Contrary to his conservative instincts, he rejected the traditional archaising orthography of the manuscripts in favour of normalised Latin spelling.",
"This intervention was termed by the philologist Revilo Oliver as \"the victory of common sense\" in Catullan criticism.",
"For the reviewer Philip Levine, Mynors's edition sets itself apart from previous texts by its scrutiny of a \"large bulk\" of unexamined manuscripts.",
"Writing in 2000, the Latinist Stephen Harrison criticised Mynors's text for the \"omission of many important conjectures from the text\", while lauding it for its handling of the manuscript tradition.",
"His edition of Pliny's Epistulae employed a similar method but aimed to be an intermediate step rather than an overhaul of the text.",
"Mynors's edition of the complete works of Vergil revamped the text constructed by F. A. Hirtzel in 1900 which had become outdated.",
"He enlarged the manuscript base by drawing on 13 minor witnesses from the ninth century and added an index of personal names.",
"Its judgement of these minor manuscripts, in particular, is described by the Latinist W. S. Maguinness as the edition's strength.",
"Given the incomplete state of the Aeneid, Vergil's epic poem on the wanderings of Aeneas, Mynors departed from his cautious editorial stance by printing a small number of modern conjectures.",
"Mynors established a new text of Bede's Ecclesiastical History for the edition he published together with the historian Bertram Colgrave.",
"His edition of this text followed that of Charles Plummer published in 1896.",
"Collation of the Saint Petersburg Bede, an 8th-century manuscript unknown to Plummer, allowed Mynors to construct a new version of the M tradition.",
"Although he did not append a detailed critical apparatus and exegetical notes, his analysis of the textual history was praised by the Church historian Gerald Bonner as \"lucid\" and \"excellently done\".",
"Mynors himself considered the edition superficial and felt that its publication had been premature.",
"Winterbottom voices a similar opinion, writing that the text \"hardly differ[ed] from Plummer's\".",
"Commentary on the Georgics \nHis scholarly legacy was enhanced by his posthumously published commentary on Vergil's Georgics.",
"A comprehensive guide to Vergil's didactic poem on agriculture, the commentary has been lauded for its meticulous attention to technical detail and for Mynors's profound knowledge of agricultural practice.",
"In spite of its accomplishments, the classicist Patricia Johnston has noted that the commentary fails to engage seriously with contemporary scholarship on the text, such as the tension between optimistic and pessimistic readings.",
"In this regard, Mynors's last work reflects his lifelong scepticism towards literary criticism of any persuasion.",
"Legacy\n\nDuring his career, Mynors gained a reputation as \"one of the leading classical scholars of his generation\".",
"He drew praise from the scholarly community for his textual work.",
"The Latinist Harold Gotoff states that he was an \"extraordinary scholar\", while Winterbottom describes his critical editions as \"distinguished\".",
"His Oxford editions of the poets Catullus and Vergil in particular are singled out by Gotoff as \"excellent\"; they still serve as the standard editions of their texts in the early 21st century.",
"Honours\nMynors was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1944 and made a Knight Bachelor in 1963.",
"He was granted honorary fellowships by Balliol College, Oxford (1963), Pembroke College, Cambridge (1965), and Corpus Christi College, Oxford (1970).",
"The Warburg Institute honoured him in the same way.",
"Mynors was also an honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Philosophical Society, and the Istituto Nazionale di Studi Romani (it).",
"He held honorary degrees from the universities of Cambridge, Durham, Edinburgh, Sheffield, and Toronto.",
"In 1983, on his 80th birthday, Mynors's service to the study of Latin texts was honoured by the publication of Texts and Transmission: A Survey of the Latin Classics, edited by the Oxford Latinist L. D. Reynolds.",
"In 2020, an exhibition was held at Balliol to commemorate his scholarship on the college library.",
"Publications\nThe following books were authored by Mynors:\n\nNotes\n\nReferences\n\nBibliography\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\n1903 births\n1989 deaths\nPeople educated at Eton College\nPeople educated at Summer Fields School\nAlumni of Balliol College, Oxford\nMembers of the University of Cambridge faculty of classics\nFellows of Balliol College, Oxford\nKnights Bachelor\nBritish classical scholars\nAnglo-Saxon studies scholars\nRoad incident deaths in England\nCorpus Christi Professors of Latin\nScholars of Latin literature\nFellows of the British Academy\nCodicologists\n twin people from England\nBritish medievalists\nEnglish palaeographers\nBurials in Herefordshire\nLatin–English translators"
] | [
"Sir Roger Mynors held the senior chairs of Latin at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge and was an English classicist and medievalist.",
"He was an expert in the study of manuscripts and their role in the reconstruction of classical texts.",
"Mynors's career spanned most of the 20th century and spanned two of England's leading universities, Oxford and Cambridge.",
"He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217",
"He was the Kennedy Professor of Latin at Cambridge from 1944 to 1953 and the Oxford Professor of Latin from 1953 to 1970.",
"He died in a car accident in 1989 while travelling to his country residence.",
"One of Britain's foremost classicists is Mynors.",
"He has been credited with unraveling a number of complex manuscript relationships in his catalogues of the Balliol and Durham Cathedral libraries.",
"Critical editions of Vergil, Catullus, and Pliny the Younger have been published by him.",
"His commentary on Vergil's Georgics was published posthumously.",
"Knight Bachelor was created by Mynors in 1963.",
"Roger Mynors was born into a family of Herefordshire gentry.",
"The estate of Treago Castle was owned by the Mynors family since the 15th century.",
"The Pan-Anglican Congress was held in London in 1908 and his father was the secretary.",
"His identical twin brother, Humphrey Mynors, went on to become the deputy governor of the Bank of England.",
"After Roger's retirement, the brothers lived together in their ancestral home.",
"Mynors was a King's Scholar in 1916 and attended Summer Fields School in Oxford.",
"He was part of a generation of students that included the historian Steven Runciman and the author George Orwell.",
"His teachers, Cyril Alington and M. R. James, encouraged his interest in Latin literature.",
"Alington and Mynors were both fascinated with the manuscript traditions of medieval Europe.",
"In 1922, Mynors won a scholarship to study Classics at Balliol College, Oxford.",
"At the same time as the literary critic Cyril Connolly, the musicologist Jack Westrup, the future Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford, Walter Fraser Oakeshott, and the historian Richard Pares, he excelled in his academic studies.",
"He won three scholarships after graduating with a Bachelor of Arts.",
"He became a tutor in Classics after being elected to a fellowship at Balliol.",
"He became a University Lecturer in 1935.",
"At the time of his appointment, Mynors's teaching focused on the poet Vergil, whose complete works he edited in the following decades.",
"His work on medieval manuscripts began during his time at Oxford University.",
"Mynors was more interested in matters of codicology than in classical questions.",
"A critical edition of the 6th-century scholar Cassiodorus was published in 1937.",
"He was appointed the librarian of Balliol College in 1929.",
"A catalogue of the college's medieval manuscripts was created by this position.",
"The manuscripts housed at Durham Cathedral were catalogued in the 1930s.",
"Richard William Hunt and Neil Ripley Ker collaborated with Mynors on codicology.",
"Mynors met Fraenkel at the end of his tenure at Balliol.",
"Fraenkel moved to England because of the discrimination against German Jews.",
"Mynors became a professional critic of Latin texts because of his mentorship.",
"They had a close friendship, which exposed Mynors to other German philosophers.",
"Mynors was a visiting scholar at Harvard University in the winter of 1938.",
"After a brief return to Balliol, British involvement in the Second World War led to his being employed at the Exchange Control Department of Her Majesty's Treasury responsible for the administration of foreign currency transactions.",
"During his time at Balliol, Mynors mentored a number of future scholars, including David Pears and Donald Russell.",
"Fraenkel encouraged Mynors to assume the Kennedy Professorship of Latin at the University of Cambridge.",
"He became a fellow of the college.",
"He married Lavinia Alington, daughter of Cyril Alington, after moving to Cambridge in 1945.",
"The couple did not have any children.",
"He came to consider a return to Oxford after moving to Cambridge.",
"He tried to become master of Balliol College after Sandie Lindsay left.",
"David Keir was elected as the new historian.",
"Mynors's profile as an academic changed because of his post at Cambridge.",
"While he was free to focus on his research at Balliol, his duties had centred on the supervision of undergraduates.",
"At Cambridge, Mynors was required to lecture extensively on Latin literature and to supervise research students, a task of which he had little experience.",
"The duties of his university post left little time to get involved in the activities of the college, which led Mynors to regret his departure from Oxford, going so far as to describe the decision as a \"fundamental error\" in a personal letter.",
"His involvement in the publication of medieval texts increased during the 1940s, despite his post being primarily that of a Latinist.",
"Nelson's Medieval Texts series was edited by Mynors after he was approached by V.H. Galbraith.",
"He edited the Latin text for a number of volumes as an advisory editor and as a joint editor.",
"Bede's Ecclesiastical History and Walter Map's De nugis Curialium were written by him.",
"In 1947, he collaborated with the Oxford historian Alfred Brotherston Emden, who consulted Mynors for his own work on the history of the University of Oxford.",
"Mynors returned to Oxford to succeed Fraenkel as Professor of Latin.",
"There was no precedent for such a move between Oxford and Cambridge.",
"During the second period at Oxford, most of his work as an editor of Latin texts took place.",
"He produced critical editions of the complete works of Catullus and Vergil for the Oxford Classical Texts series.",
"He worked on manuscripts as a curator at the Bodleian Library.",
"In the 17 years he spent at the college, Mynors sought to maintain its position as a centre of excellence in the Classics and fostered contacts with a new generation of Latinists.",
"In 1970, Mynors retired from teaching and moved to his estate.",
"His retirement saw work on a commentary on Vergil's Georgics, which was published posthumously in 1990.",
"He was the chairman of the Friends of the Cathedral from 1979 to 1984 and worked as a translator for the University of Toronto Press.",
"The cathedral's parish set up a fund in Mynors's name to acquire rare books.",
"Mynors was killed in a road accident on his way back from working on the cathedral's manuscripts.",
"St Weonards is where he was buried.",
"Mynors was happy to hear that he had translated the account of Bede into Oxford Medieval Texts.",
"Mynors's main interest was in the study of pre-modern manuscripts.",
"He was credited with unraveling a number of complex manuscript relationships in his catalogues of the Balliol and Durham Cathedral libraries.",
"He was interested in the physical state of manuscripts.",
"This interest typifies the importance Mynors gave to formal features when evaluating hand-written books.",
"The entirety of Mynors's classical scholarship can be found in a series of critical editions on Latin authors.",
"Mynors has been described as a conservative textual critic because of his reluctance to emend beyond the transmitted readings.",
"He tends to ascribe great historical value to manuscripts and their sholders.",
"The first critical edition to be produced since 1679.",
"The introduction offered new insights into the manuscript tradition, but did not address the fundamental question of how the original text was expanded in later copies.",
"Stephen Gaselee wrote in The Classical Review that the edition would provide solid foundations for a commentary and Alexander Souter wrote in the Journal of Theological Studies that it was a \"definitive edition\".",
"The poems of Catullus were published by Mynors.",
"He had to compete with two recent editions by Schuster and Cazzaniga.",
"Mynors did not print modern emendations unless they corrected obvious scribal errors.",
"He rejected the traditional archaising orthography of the manuscripts in favor of normalised Latin spelling.",
"Revilo Oliver called this intervention the victory of common sense.",
"Philip Levine said that Mynors's edition set itself apart from previous texts by its scrutiny of a large bulk of unexamined manuscripts.",
"Stephen Harrison praised Mynors's text for its handling of the manuscript tradition, even though he critiqued it for the \"omission of many important conjectures from the text\".",
"His version of Epistulae was an intermediate step rather than an update of the text.",
"The text of the complete works of Vergil was changed by Mynors's edition.",
"The manuscript base was enlarged by drawing on 13 minor witnesses from the ninth century.",
"The edition's strength is described by the Latinist W. S. Maguinness as its judgement of these minor manuscripts.",
"Vergil's epic poem on the wanderings of Aeneas was incomplete and Mynors left his cautious editorial stance by printing a small number of modern conjectures.",
"The Bede's Ecclesiastical History edition was published with a new text by Mynors.",
"His edition of the text was published in 1896.",
"Mynors was able to create a new version of the M tradition with the help of the Saint Petersburg Bede.",
"His analysis of the textual history was praised by the Church historian Gerald Bonner as \"lucid\" and \"excellently done\".",
"The edition was superficial and Mynors felt that it was premature.",
"Winterbottom wrote that the text differed from that of Plummer's.",
"His scholarly legacy was enhanced by his commentary on Vergil's Georgics.",
"The commentary has been praised for its attention to technical detail and for Mynors's knowledge of agricultural practice.",
"Despite its accomplishments, the commentary fails to engage seriously with contemporary scholarship on the text, such as the tension between optimistic and pessimistic readings.",
"Mynors's last work shows his lifelong scepticism towards literary criticism.",
"Mynors gained a reputation as one of the leading classical scholars of his generation.",
"He was praised by the scholarly community for his work.",
"The Latinist Harold Gotoff states that he was an \"extraordinary scholar\", while Winterbottom describes his critical editions as \"distinguished\".",
"Catullus and Vergil's Oxford editions are still the standard editions of their texts in the early 21st century.",
"Mynors was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1944 and made a Knight Bachelor in 1963.",
"He received awards from Balliol College, Oxford, Cambridge, and Corpus Christi College, Oxford.",
"He was honoured by the Warburg Institute in the same way.",
"The American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Philosophical Society, and the Istituto Nazionale di Studi Romani were all founded by Mynors.",
"He received degrees from universities in Cambridge, Durham, Edinburgh, and Toronto.",
"Texts and Transmission: A Survey of the Latin Classics, edited by the Oxford Latinist L. D. Reynolds, was published on Mynors's 80th birthday.",
"An exhibition was held at Balliol in 2020 to commemorate his scholarship.",
"The following books were written by Mynors:"
] | Sir <mask> (28 July 190317 October 1989) was an English classicist and medievalist who held the senior chairs of Latin at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge. A textual critic, he was an expert in the study of manuscripts and their role in the reconstruction of classical texts. Mynors's career spanned most of the 20th century and straddled two of England's leading universities, Oxford and Cambridge. Educated at Eton College, he read Literae Humaniores at Balliol College, Oxford, and spent the early years of his career as a Fellow of that college. He was Kennedy Professor of Latin at Cambridge from 1944 to 1953 and Corpus Christi Professor of Latin at Oxford from 1953 until his retirement in 1970. He died in a car accident in 1989, aged 86, while travelling to his country residence, Treago Castle. Mynors's reputation is that of one of Britain's foremost classicists.He was an expert on palaeography, and has been credited with unravelling a number of highly complex manuscript relationships in his catalogues of the Balliol and Durham Cathedral libraries. His publications on classical subjects include critical editions of Vergil, Catullus, and Pliny the Younger. The final achievement of his scholarly career, a comprehensive commentary on Vergil's Georgics, was published posthumously. In addition to honorary degrees and fellowships from various institutions, Mynors was created Knight Bachelor in 1963. Early life and secondary education
<mask> <mask> <mask> was born in Langley Burrell, Wiltshire, into a family of Herefordshire gentry. The Mynors family had owned the estate of Treago Castle since the 15th century, and he resided there in later life. His mother was Margery Musgrave, and his father, <mask> <mask>, was an Anglican clergyman and rector of Langley Burrell, who had been secretary to the Pan-Anglican Congress, held in London in 1908.Among his four siblings was his identical twin brother <mask>, who went on to become Deputy Governor of the Bank of England. The brothers shared a close friendship and lived together in their ancestral home after <mask>'s retirement. Mynors attended Summer Fields School in Oxford, and in 1916 entered Eton College as a King's Scholar. At Eton, he was part of a generation of pupils that included the historian <mask>man and the author George Orwell. His precocious interest in Latin literature and its transmission was fostered by the encouragement of two of his teachers, <mask> and M. R. James. <mask> became an influential mentor and friend since he, like Mynors, was fascinated with the manuscript traditions of medieval Europe. Academic career
Balliol College, Oxford
In 1922, Mynors won the Domus exhibition, a scholarship to study Classics at Balliol College, Oxford.Attending the college at the same time as the literary critic Cyril Connolly, the musicologist Jack Westrup, the future Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford, Walter Fraser Oakeshott, and the historian <mask>, he was highly successful in his academic studies. Graduating with a Bachelor of Arts in 1926, he won the Hertford (1924), Craven (1924), and Derby (1926) scholarships. He was elected to a fellowship at Balliol and became a tutor in Classics. In 1935 he was elevated to a University Lecturership. At the time of his appointment, much of Mynors's teaching focused on the poet Vergil, whose complete works he edited in the following decades. His tenure at Oxford University saw the beginning of his comprehensive work on medieval manuscripts. From the late 1920s onwards, Mynors was drawn more to matters of codicology than to purely classical questions.He prepared an edition of the 6th-century scholar Cassiodorus, for which he travelled extensively in continental Europe; a critical edition was published in 1937. In 1929, he was appointed librarian of Balliol College. This position gave impetus to create a catalogue of the college's medieval manuscripts. A similar project, a catalogue of the manuscripts housed at Durham Cathedral, was compiled in the 1930s. Mynors's interest in codicology gave rise to a close co-operation with the medievalists <mask> Hunt and <mask> Ker. In 1936, towards the end of his tenure at Balliol, Mynors met Eduard Fraenkel, then holder of a chair in Latin at Oxford. Having relocated to England because of the increasing discrimination against German Jews, Fraenkel was a leading exponent of Germany's scholarly tradition.His mentorship contributed to Mynors's transformation from amateur scholar to a professional critic of Latin texts. They maintained a close friendship, which exposed Mynors to other German philologists, including <mask> and Otto Skutsch. Mynors spent the winter of 1938 as a visiting scholar at Harvard University. In 1940, after a brief return to Balliol, British involvement in the Second World War led to his being employed at the Exchange Control Department of Her Majesty's Treasury responsible for the administration of foreign currency transactions. At Balliol, Mynors taught from 1926 until 1944, a time during which he mentored a number of future scholars, including the Wittgenstein expert David Pears and the classicist <mask>. Pembroke College, Cambridge
In 1944, encouraged by Fraenkel, Mynors took up an offer to assume the Kennedy Professorship of Latin at the University of Cambridge. He also became a fellow of Pembroke College.In 1945, shortly after moving to Cambridge, he married Lavinia <mask>, a medical researcher and daughter of his former teacher and Eton headmaster, <mask>. The couple had no children. The move to Cambridge meant an advancement of his academic career, but he soon came to contemplate a return to Oxford. He applied unsuccessfully to become master of Balliol College after the position had been vacated by Sandie Lindsay in 1949. The historian David Keir was elected in his stead. His post at Cambridge caused changes to <mask>'s profile as an academic. His duties at Balliol had centred on the supervision of undergraduates, while he was free to focus on palaeographical topics in his research.At Cambridge, Mynors was required to lecture extensively on Latin literature and to supervise research students, a task of which he had little experience. The duties of his university post left little time to get involved in the activities of the college, which led Mynors to regret his departure from Oxford, going so far as to describe the decision as a "fundamental error" in a personal letter. Although his post was chiefly that of a Latinist, his involvement in the publication of medieval texts intensified during the 1940s. After he was approached by V. H. Galbraith, a historian of the Middle Ages, Mynors became an editor on Nelson's Medieval Texts series in 1946. Working on the series first as a joint editor, and from 1962 as an advisory editor, he edited the Latin text for a number of volumes. He was the principal author of editions of Walter Map's De nugis curialium and of <mask>e's Ecclesiastical History. In 1947, he collaborated with the Oxford historian <mask> Emden, who consulted Mynors for his own work on the history of the University of Oxford while assisting, in turn, with the Balliol catalogue.Corpus Christi College, Oxford
In 1953, <mask> was appointed Corpus Christi Professor of Latin and could thus return to Oxford to succeed Eduard Fraenkel. At the time, there was no precedent for such a move between senior chairs at Oxford and Cambridge. Most of his work as an editor of Latin texts took place during this second period at Oxford. Working for the Oxford Classical Texts series, he produced critical editions of the complete works of Catullus (1958) and Vergil (1969), and of Pliny the Younger's Epistulae (1963). Though focusing on classical subjects, he continued to work on manuscripts as a curator at the Bodleian Library. In the 17 years he spent at the college, Mynors sought to maintain its position as a centre of excellence in the Classics and fostered contacts with a new generation of Latinists, including E. J. Kenney, Wendell Clausen, Leighton <mask>, R. J. Tarrant and Michael Winterbottom. Retirement and death
In 1970, Mynors retired from his teaching duties and relocated to his estate at Treago Castle.In addition to an intense dedication to arboriculture, his retirement saw work on a commentary on Vergil's Georgics, which was published posthumously in 1990. He translated the correspondence of the humanist Desiderius Erasmus for the University of Toronto Press, and maintained an interest in the nearby Hereford Cathedral, serving as the chairman of the Friends of the Cathedral from 1979 to 1984. In 1980, the cathedral's parish set up a fund in Mynors's name to acquire a collection of rare books. On 17 October 1989, Mynors was killed in a road accident outside Hereford on his way back from a day working on the cathedral's manuscripts. He was buried at St Weonards. Meryl Jancey, the cathedral's Honorary Archivist, later revealed that Mynors had on the same day expressed his delight about his own scholarly work on the death of <mask>e: "He told me he was glad that he had translated for the Oxford Medieval Texts the account of <mask>e's death, and that <mask>e had not ceased in what he saw as his work for God until the very end." Contributions to scholarship
Cataloguing manuscripts
Mynors's chief interest lay in palaeography, the study of pre-modern manuscripts.He is credited with unravelling a number of complex manuscript relationships in his catalogues of the Balliol and Durham Cathedral libraries. He had particular interest in the physical state of manuscripts, including examining blots and rulings. For the Balliol archivist <mask>, this interest typifies the importance Mynors gave to formal features when evaluating hand-written books. Critical editions
A series of critical editions on Latin authors constitutes the entirety of Mynors's purely classical scholarship. Because of his reluctance to emend beyond the transmitted readings, Mynors has been described as a conservative textual critic. This approach is thought to have originated in his tendency to ascribe great historical value to manuscripts and their scribes. The first of his critical editions is of the Institutiones of Cassiodorus, the first produced since 1679.In the introduction, Mynors offered new insights into the complex manuscript tradition without resolving the fundamental question of how the original text was expanded in later copies. The edition was praised by the reviewer Stephen Gaselee in The Classical Review, who said that it would provide solid foundations for a commentary; writing for the Journal of Theological Studies, <mask> described it as a "definitive edition" and praised Mynors's classification of the manuscripts. In 1958, Mynors published an edition of the poems of Catullus. His text followed two recent editions by Moritz Schuster (1949) and Ignazio Cazzaniga (1956), with which he had to compete. Taking a conservative stance on the problems posed by Catullus's text, Mynors did not print any modern emendations unless they corrected obvious scribal errors. Contrary to his conservative instincts, he rejected the traditional archaising orthography of the manuscripts in favour of normalised Latin spelling. This intervention was termed by the philologist <mask> Oliver as "the victory of common sense" in Catullan criticism.For the reviewer Philip Levine, Mynors's edition sets itself apart from previous texts by its scrutiny of a "large bulk" of unexamined manuscripts. Writing in 2000, the Latinist Stephen Harrison criticised Mynors's text for the "omission of many important conjectures from the text", while lauding it for its handling of the manuscript tradition. His edition of Pliny's Epistulae employed a similar method but aimed to be an intermediate step rather than an overhaul of the text. Mynors's edition of the complete works of Vergil revamped the text constructed by F. A. Hirtzel in 1900 which had become outdated. He enlarged the manuscript base by drawing on 13 minor witnesses from the ninth century and added an index of personal names. Its judgement of these minor manuscripts, in particular, is described by the Latinist W. S. Maguinness as the edition's strength. Given the incomplete state of the Aeneid, Vergil's epic poem on the wanderings of <mask>, Mynors departed from his cautious editorial stance by printing a small number of modern conjectures.Mynors established a new text of <mask>'s Ecclesiastical History for the edition he published together with the historian <mask> Colgrave. His edition of this text followed that of Charles Plummer published in 1896. Collation of the Saint Petersburg Bede, an 8th-century manuscript unknown to Plummer, allowed Mynors to construct a new version of the M tradition. Although he did not append a detailed critical apparatus and exegetical notes, his analysis of the textual history was praised by the Church historian <mask> as "lucid" and "excellently done". Mynors himself considered the edition superficial and felt that its publication had been premature. Winterbottom voices a similar opinion, writing that the text "hardly differ[ed] from Plummer's". Commentary on the Georgics
His scholarly legacy was enhanced by his posthumously published commentary on Vergil's Georgics.A comprehensive guide to Vergil's didactic poem on agriculture, the commentary has been lauded for its meticulous attention to technical detail and for Mynors's profound knowledge of agricultural practice. In spite of its accomplishments, the classicist Patricia Johnston has noted that the commentary fails to engage seriously with contemporary scholarship on the text, such as the tension between optimistic and pessimistic readings. In this regard, Mynors's last work reflects his lifelong scepticism towards literary criticism of any persuasion. Legacy
During his career, Mynors gained a reputation as "one of the leading classical scholars of his generation". He drew praise from the scholarly community for his textual work. The Latinist Harold Gotoff states that he was an "extraordinary scholar", while Winterbottom describes his critical editions as "distinguished". His Oxford editions of the poets Catullus and Vergil in particular are singled out by Gotoff as "excellent"; they still serve as the standard editions of their texts in the early 21st century.Honours
<mask> was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1944 and made a Knight Bachelor in 1963. He was granted honorary fellowships by Balliol College, Oxford (1963), Pembroke College, Cambridge (1965), and Corpus Christi College, Oxford (1970). The Warburg Institute honoured him in the same way. Mynors was also an honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Philosophical Society, and the Istituto Nazionale di Studi Romani (it). He held honorary degrees from the universities of Cambridge, Durham, Edinburgh, Sheffield, and Toronto. In 1983, on his 80th birthday, Mynors's service to the study of Latin texts was honoured by the publication of Texts and Transmission: A Survey of the Latin Classics, edited by the Oxford Latinist L. D<mask>. In 2020, an exhibition was held at Balliol to commemorate his scholarship on the college library.Publications
The following books were authored by Mynors:
Notes
References
Bibliography
1903 births
1989 deaths
People educated at Eton College
People educated at Summer Fields School
Alumni of Balliol College, Oxford
Members of the University of Cambridge faculty of classics
Fellows of Balliol College, Oxford
Knights Bachelor
British classical scholars
Anglo-Saxon studies scholars
Road incident deaths in England
Corpus Christi Professors of Latin
Scholars of Latin literature
Fellows of the British Academy
Codicologists
twin people from England
British medievalists
English palaeographers
Burials in Herefordshire
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] | Sir <mask> held the senior chairs of Latin at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge and was an English classicist and medievalist. He was an expert in the study of manuscripts and their role in the reconstruction of classical texts. Mynors's career spanned most of the 20th century and spanned two of England's leading universities, Oxford and Cambridge. He was 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 800-273-3217 He was the Kennedy Professor of Latin at Cambridge from 1944 to 1953 and the Oxford Professor of Latin from 1953 to 1970. He died in a car accident in 1989 while travelling to his country residence. One of Britain's foremost classicists is Mynors.He has been credited with unraveling a number of complex manuscript relationships in his catalogues of the Balliol and Durham Cathedral libraries. Critical editions of Vergil, Catullus, and Pliny the Younger have been published by him. His commentary on Vergil's Georgics was published posthumously. Knight Bachelor was created by Mynors in 1963. <mask>s was born into a family of Herefordshire gentry. The estate of Treago Castle was owned by the Mynors family since the 15th century. The Pan-Anglican Congress was held in London in 1908 and his father was the secretary.His identical twin brother, <mask>, went on to become the deputy governor of the Bank of England. After <mask>'s retirement, the brothers lived together in their ancestral home. Mynors was a King's Scholar in 1916 and attended Summer Fields School in Oxford. He was part of a generation of students that included the historian <mask> and the author George Orwell. His teachers, <mask> and M. R. James, encouraged his interest in Latin literature. <mask> and Mynors were both fascinated with the manuscript traditions of medieval Europe. In 1922, Mynors won a scholarship to study Classics at Balliol College, Oxford.At the same time as the literary critic Cyril Connolly, the musicologist Jack Westrup, the future Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford, Walter Fraser Oakeshott, and the historian <mask>, he excelled in his academic studies. He won three scholarships after graduating with a Bachelor of Arts. He became a tutor in Classics after being elected to a fellowship at Balliol. He became a University Lecturer in 1935. At the time of his appointment, <mask>'s teaching focused on the poet Vergil, whose complete works he edited in the following decades. His work on medieval manuscripts began during his time at Oxford University. Mynors was more interested in matters of codicology than in classical questions.A critical edition of the 6th-century scholar Cassiodorus was published in 1937. He was appointed the librarian of Balliol College in 1929. A catalogue of the college's medieval manuscripts was created by this position. The manuscripts housed at Durham Cathedral were catalogued in the 1930s. <mask> Hunt and <mask> Ker collaborated with Mynors on codicology. Mynors met Fraenkel at the end of his tenure at Balliol. Fraenkel moved to England because of the discrimination against German Jews.Mynors became a professional critic of Latin texts because of his mentorship. They had a close friendship, which exposed Mynors to other German philosophers. Mynors was a visiting scholar at Harvard University in the winter of 1938. After a brief return to Balliol, British involvement in the Second World War led to his being employed at the Exchange Control Department of Her Majesty's Treasury responsible for the administration of foreign currency transactions. During his time at Balliol, Mynors mentored a number of future scholars, including David Pears and <mask>. Fraenkel encouraged Mynors to assume the Kennedy Professorship of Latin at the University of Cambridge. He became a fellow of the college.He married Lavinia <mask>, daughter of <mask>, after moving to Cambridge in 1945. The couple did not have any children. He came to consider a return to Oxford after moving to Cambridge. He tried to become master of Balliol College after Sandie Lindsay left. David Keir was elected as the new historian. <mask>'s profile as an academic changed because of his post at Cambridge. While he was free to focus on his research at Balliol, his duties had centred on the supervision of undergraduates.At Cambridge, Mynors was required to lecture extensively on Latin literature and to supervise research students, a task of which he had little experience. The duties of his university post left little time to get involved in the activities of the college, which led Mynors to regret his departure from Oxford, going so far as to describe the decision as a "fundamental error" in a personal letter. His involvement in the publication of medieval texts increased during the 1940s, despite his post being primarily that of a Latinist. Nelson's Medieval Texts series was edited by Mynors after he was approached by V.H. Galbraith. He edited the Latin text for a number of volumes as an advisory editor and as a joint editor. <mask>e's Ecclesiastical History and Walter Map's De nugis Curialium were written by him. In 1947, he collaborated with the Oxford historian <mask> Emden, who consulted Mynors for his own work on the history of the University of Oxford.<mask> returned to Oxford to succeed Fraenkel as Professor of Latin. There was no precedent for such a move between Oxford and Cambridge. During the second period at Oxford, most of his work as an editor of Latin texts took place. He produced critical editions of the complete works of Catullus and Vergil for the Oxford Classical Texts series. He worked on manuscripts as a curator at the Bodleian Library. In the 17 years he spent at the college, Mynors sought to maintain its position as a centre of excellence in the Classics and fostered contacts with a new generation of Latinists. In 1970, Mynors retired from teaching and moved to his estate.His retirement saw work on a commentary on Vergil's Georgics, which was published posthumously in 1990. He was the chairman of the Friends of the Cathedral from 1979 to 1984 and worked as a translator for the University of Toronto Press. The cathedral's parish set up a fund in Mynors's name to acquire rare books. Mynors was killed in a road accident on his way back from working on the cathedral's manuscripts. St Weonards is where he was buried. Mynors was happy to hear that he had translated the account of <mask>e into Oxford Medieval Texts. Mynors's main interest was in the study of pre-modern manuscripts.He was credited with unraveling a number of complex manuscript relationships in his catalogues of the Balliol and Durham Cathedral libraries. He was interested in the physical state of manuscripts. This interest typifies the importance Mynors gave to formal features when evaluating hand-written books. The entirety of Mynors's classical scholarship can be found in a series of critical editions on Latin authors. Mynors has been described as a conservative textual critic because of his reluctance to emend beyond the transmitted readings. He tends to ascribe great historical value to manuscripts and their sholders. The first critical edition to be produced since 1679.The introduction offered new insights into the manuscript tradition, but did not address the fundamental question of how the original text was expanded in later copies. Stephen Gaselee wrote in The Classical Review that the edition would provide solid foundations for a commentary and <mask> wrote in the Journal of Theological Studies that it was a "definitive edition". The poems of Catullus were published by Mynors. He had to compete with two recent editions by Schuster and Cazzaniga. Mynors did not print modern emendations unless they corrected obvious scribal errors. He rejected the traditional archaising orthography of the manuscripts in favor of normalised Latin spelling. <mask> Oliver called this intervention the victory of common sense.Philip Levine said that Mynors's edition set itself apart from previous texts by its scrutiny of a large bulk of unexamined manuscripts. Stephen Harrison praised Mynors's text for its handling of the manuscript tradition, even though he critiqued it for the "omission of many important conjectures from the text". His version of Epistulae was an intermediate step rather than an update of the text. The text of the complete works of Vergil was changed by Mynors's edition. The manuscript base was enlarged by drawing on 13 minor witnesses from the ninth century. The edition's strength is described by the Latinist W. S. Maguinness as its judgement of these minor manuscripts. Vergil's epic poem on the wanderings of Aeneas was incomplete and Mynors left his cautious editorial stance by printing a small number of modern conjectures.The <mask>e's Ecclesiastical History edition was published with a new text by Mynors. His edition of the text was published in 1896. Mynors was able to create a new version of the M tradition with the help of the Saint Petersburg Bede. His analysis of the textual history was praised by the Church historian <mask> as "lucid" and "excellently done". The edition was superficial and Mynors felt that it was premature. Winterbottom wrote that the text differed from that of Plummer's. His scholarly legacy was enhanced by his commentary on Vergil's Georgics.The commentary has been praised for its attention to technical detail and for Mynors's knowledge of agricultural practice. Despite its accomplishments, the commentary fails to engage seriously with contemporary scholarship on the text, such as the tension between optimistic and pessimistic readings. Mynors's last work shows his lifelong scepticism towards literary criticism. Mynors gained a reputation as one of the leading classical scholars of his generation. He was praised by the scholarly community for his work. The Latinist Harold Gotoff states that he was an "extraordinary scholar", while Winterbottom describes his critical editions as "distinguished". Catullus and Vergil's Oxford editions are still the standard editions of their texts in the early 21st century.<mask> was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1944 and made a Knight Bachelor in 1963. He received awards from Balliol College, Oxford, Cambridge, and Corpus Christi College, Oxford. He was honoured by the Warburg Institute in the same way. The American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Philosophical Society, and the Istituto Nazionale di Studi Romani were all founded by Mynors. He received degrees from universities in Cambridge, Durham, Edinburgh, and Toronto. Texts and Transmission: A Survey of the Latin Classics, edited by the Oxford Latinist L. D<mask>, was published on Mynors's 80th birthday. An exhibition was held at Balliol in 2020 to commemorate his scholarship.The following books were written by Mynors: | [
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