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8.1k
1700
Serbia_at_the_European_Athletics_Championships_5
[ [ "Medal", "Name", "Event", "Championship" ], [ "Gold", "Tatjana Jelača", "Javelin throw", "2009 Novi Sad" ], [ "Gold", "Amela Terzić", "1500m", "2011 Tallinn" ], [ "Gold", "Amela Terzić", "3000m", "2011 Tallinn" ], [ "Silver", "Olivera Jevtić", "10,000m", "1995 Nyiregyhaza" ], [ "Silver", "Sonja Stolić", "3000m", "1997 Ljubljana" ], [ "Silver", "Marija Martinović", "Triple jump", "1997 Ljubljana" ], [ "Silver", "Dušan Markešević", "5000m", "2005 Kaunas" ], [ "Silver", "Ivana Španović", "Long jump", "2009 Novi Sad" ], [ "Silver", "Mila Andrić", "400m Hurdles", "2009 Novi Sad" ], [ "Bronze", "Olivera Jevtić", "3000m", "1995 Nyiregyhaza" ], [ "Bronze", "Sonja Stolić", "3000m", "1999 Riga" ], [ "Bronze", "Azra Eminović", "1500m", "2005 Kaunas" ] ]
{ "intro": "Serbia officially has competed at the European Athletics Championships since 2006. Before Serbia has competed as part of SFR Yugoslavia and Serbia and Montenegro.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Junior -- List of Medalists", "title": "Serbia at the European Athletics Championships", "uid": "Serbia_at_the_European_Athletics_Championships_5", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serbia_at_the_European_Athletics_Championships" }
1,700
1701
Croatian_Footballer_of_the_Year_0
[ [ "Wins", "Player", "Winning years", "Clubs" ], [ "7", "Luka Modrić", "2007 , 2008 , 2011 , 2014 , 2016 , 2017 , 2018", "Dinamo Zagreb , Tottenham Hotspur , Real Madrid" ], [ "6", "Davor Šuker", "1992 , 1994 , 1995 , 1996 , 1997 , 1998", "Sevilla , Real Madrid" ], [ "3", "Dado Pršo", "2003 , 2004 , 2005", "AS Monaco , Rangers" ], [ "2", "Velimir Zajec", "1979* , 1984*", "Dinamo Zagreb , Panathinaikos" ], [ "2", "Dragan Stojković", "1988* , 1989*", "Red Star" ], [ "2", "Robert Prosinečki", "1990* , 1997", "Red Star , Dinamo Zagreb" ], [ "2", "Zvonimir Boban", "1991 , 1999", "Milan" ], [ "2", "Ivica Olić", "2009 , 2010", "Bayern Munich" ], [ "2", "Mario Mandžukić", "2012 , 2013", "Bayern Munich" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Croatian Footballer of the Year (Croatian: Nogometaš godine) is the most prestigious annual association football award in Croatia. It is awarded by the newspaper Večernji list to the best Croatian football player in the preceding year, regardless of the league they play in, based on a points system which measures their performances for both club and country. The award is usually presented in a ceremony hosted by the Croatian Football Federation. The award was established in 1972 and, until 1990, the award was given to the best Yugoslav player in the preceding year. Since the breakup of Yugoslavia in 1991, the award is given to the best Croatian player. Luka Modrić holds the record for most wins, with seven awards. Davor Šuker is second with six awards. They are followed by Dado Pršo with three wins from 2003 to 2005. In 1995, a separate award, the Hope of the Year (Croatian: Nada godine), was introduced. It is awarded to the best young Croatian player. As of 2016, only Ivica Olić and Luka Modrić have won both the Hope of the Year and Footballer of the Year awards.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Multiple winners", "title": "Croatian Footballer of the Year", "uid": "Croatian_Footballer_of_the_Year_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croatian_Footballer_of_the_Year" }
1,701
1702
Torneo_del_Litoral_1
[ [ "Season", "Champion", "Runner-up", "Score" ], [ "2000", "Duendes", "Jockey Club", "-" ], [ "2001", "Jockey Club", "Duendes", "26-25" ], [ "2002", "Duendes", "Jockey Club", "-" ], [ "2003", "Gimnasia y Esgrima ( R )", "Universitario ( R )", "17-15" ], [ "2004", "Gimnasia y Esgrima ( R )", "Jockey Club", "14-10" ], [ "2005", "Universitario ( R )", "Duendes", "30-29" ], [ "2006", "Duendes", "Jockey Club", "29-12" ], [ "2007", "Duendes", "Jockey Club", "16-12" ], [ "2008", "Santa Fe", "Ateneo Inmaculada", "21-13" ], [ "2009", "Universitario ( R )", "Jockey Club", "11-6" ], [ "2010", "Duendes", "Santa Fe", "37-21" ], [ "2011", "Duendes", "Jockey Club", "-" ], [ "2012", "Duendes", "Jockey Club", "24-19" ], [ "2013", "Duendes", "Jockey Club", "36-10" ], [ "2014", "Duendes", "Universitario ( R )", "61-12" ], [ "2015", "Duendes", "Ateneo Inmaculada", "29-16" ], [ "2016", "Duendes", "Old Resian", "40-31" ], [ "2017", "Jockey Club", "Duendes", "37-36" ], [ "2018", "Duendes", "Gimnasia y Esgrima ( R )", "27-22" ], [ "2019", "Old Resian", "Jockey Club", "13-6" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Torneo Regional del Litoral is an annual rugby union competition in Argentina. The tournament is contested by clubs from the Rosario, Santa Fe and Entre Ríos Unions, and is one of several regional competitions held in Argentina every year. The Regional del Litoral runs from May to July.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "List of champions -- Finals", "title": "Torneo del Litoral", "uid": "Torneo_del_Litoral_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torneo_del_Litoral" }
1,702
1703
List_of_closed_railway_stations_in_Ireland:_N_0
[ [ "Station ( Town , unless in station name )", "County", "Rail company", "Year opened", "Year closed" ], [ "Abbeydorney", "Kerry", "Great Southern and Western", "1880", "1963" ], [ "Abbeyfeale", "Limerick", "Great Southern and Western", "1880", "1963 ( passengers ) 1978 ( goods )" ], [ "Abbeyleix", "Laois", "Great Southern and Western", "1865", "1963" ], [ "Abohill", "Fermanagh", "Sligo , Leitrim and Northern Counties", "1886", "1957" ], [ "Achill", "Mayo", "Midland Great Western", "1895", "1937" ], [ "Acton Crossing", "Armagh", "Great Northern ( Ireland )", "1934", "1954" ], [ "Adams Crossing", "Armagh", "Great Northern ( Ireland )", "1934", "1936" ], [ "Adare", "Limerick", "Great Southern and Western", "1856", "1963" ], [ "Adavoyle", "Armagh", "Great Northern ( Ireland )", "1892", "1933" ], [ "Adoon", "Leitrim", "Cavan and Leitrim", "1887", "1959" ], [ "Aghadowey", "Londonderry", "NCC ( Midland )", "1880", "1950" ], [ "Aghavea", "Fermanagh", "Clogher Valley", "1887", "1942" ], [ "Aldergrove", "Antrim", "Great Northern ( Ireland )", "1871", "1960" ], [ "Andraid", "Antrim", "Belfast and Ballymena Railway", "1848", "1850" ], [ "Annacotty", "Limerick", "Great Southern and Western", "1858", "1963" ], [ "Annadale", "Leitrim", "Cavan and Leitrim", "1888", "1959" ], [ "Annadrumman Crossing", "Monaghan", "Great Northern ( Ireland )", "1934", "1954" ], [ "Annagh No 2 Crossing", "Clare", "West Clare Railway", "1952", "1961" ], [ "Annagher Crossing", "Tyrone", "Great Northern ( Ireland ) , Cookstown branch", "1938", "1942" ], [ "Annaghilla", "Tyrone", "Clogher Valley", "1887", "1942" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of closed railway stations in Ireland. Year of passenger closure is given if known. Stations reopened as Heritage railways or Luas stops continue to be included in this list and some have been linked. Some stations have been reopened to passenger traffic. Some lines are still in use for freight and mineral traffic.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Table of stations", "title": "List of closed railway stations in Ireland", "uid": "List_of_closed_railway_stations_in_Ireland:_N_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_closed_railway_stations_in_Ireland" }
1,703
1704
2011_London_Marathon_1
[ [ "Position", "Athlete", "Nationality", "Time" ], [ "", "Mary Keitany", "Kenya", "2:19:19" ], [ "", "Liliya Shobukhova", "Russia", "2:20:15 NR" ], [ "", "Edna Kiplagat", "Kenya", "2:20:46" ], [ "4", "Bezunesh Bekele", "Ethiopia", "2:23:42" ], [ "5", "Atsede Baysa", "Ethiopia", "2:23:50" ], [ "6", "Yukiko Akaba", "Japan", "2:24:09" ], [ "7", "Irina Mikitenko", "Germany", "2:24:24" ], [ "8", "Jéssica Augusto", "Portugal", "2:24:33" ], [ "9", "Aberu Kebede", "Ethiopia", "2:24:34" ], [ "10", "Mariya Konovalova", "Russia", "2:25:18" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 2011 London Marathon took place on Sunday, 17 April 2011. The men's elite race saw Emmanuel Mutai win in a course record time to become the fourth-fastest ever over the distance. Runner-up Martin Lel sprinted to the line to beat Patrick Makau, completing a Kenyan sweep of the podium. Mary Keitany became the fourth-fastest woman ever with her winning time, while defending champion Liliya Shobukhova came second with a Russian record time. In the elite wheelchair racing marathon, Briton David Weir beat the defending champion Josh Cassidy to claim his fifth title at the event - the most in the history of the competition. London's 2009 women's wheelchair winner Amanda McGrory won her second title in a course record time of 1:46:31 hours. Around 35,000 people took part in the mass race and 35 Guinness World Records were set at the competition. The majority of the records were for completing the fastest race in a certain costume, but others included the fastest couple and fastest parent-child pairings. German Uli Killian solved 100 Rubik's Cube puzzles whilst completing the race. Steve Chalke, a Christian social activist, improved the record for the most funds raised for charity through a marathon run, raising £2.3 million for his Oasis Trust - beating his own record set at the previous year's race. The largest age group present at the race were men in their 30s, followed by men in their 40s. The joint-youngest runners were Michael Bennett and Helen Nutter, both taking part on their eighteenth birthdays (the minimum allowable age), while the oldest participant was 87-year-old Paul Freedman.", "section_text": "Emmanuel Mutai en route to his course record win Martin Lel sprinted to take second place . Elite Men Position Athlete Nationality Time Emmanuel Mutai Kenya 2:04:40 CR Martin Lel Kenya 2:05:45 Patrick Makau Kenya 2:05:45 4 Marílson Gomes dos Santos Brazil 2:06:34 5 Tsegaye Kebede Ethiopia 2:07:48 6 Jaouad Gharib Morocco 2:08:26 7 Abderrahime Bouramdane Morocco 2:08:42 8 Dmitriy Safronov Russia 2:09:35 9 Serod Bat-Ochir Mongolia 2:11:35 NR 10 Michael Shelley Australia 2:11:38 Mary Keitany won the women 's race and became the fourth-fastest woman ever . Liliya Shobukhova was second in a Russian record time . Elite women", "section_title": "Results -- Elite races", "title": "2011 London Marathon", "uid": "2011_London_Marathon_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011_London_Marathon" }
1,704
1705
List_of_highest-grossing_Tollywood_films_4
[ [ "Rank", "Film", "Year", "Director", "Studio ( s )", "Worldwide gross" ], [ "1", "Dangal", "2016", "Nitesh Tiwari", "Aamir Khan Productions UTV Motion Pictures Walt Disney Studios India", "₹2,024 crore ( US $ 311 million )" ], [ "2", "Bajrangi Bhaijaan", "2015", "Kabir Khan", "Salman Khan Films Kabir Khan Films Eros International", "₹969.06 crore ( US $ 150 million )" ], [ "3", "Secret Superstar", "2017", "Advait Chandan", "Aamir Khan Productions", "₹966.86 crore ( US $ 154 million )" ], [ "4", "PK", "2014", "Rajkumar Hirani", "Vinod Chopra Films Rajkumar Hirani Films", "₹832 crore ( US $ 140 million )" ], [ "5", "Sultan", "2016", "Ali Abbas Zafar", "Yash Raj Films", "₹623.33 crore ( US $ 96 million )" ], [ "6", "Sanju", "2018", "Rajkumar Hirani", "Rajkumar Hirani Films Vinod Chopra Films", "₹586.85 crore ( US $ 90.12 million )" ], [ "7", "Padmaavat", "2018", "Sanjay Leela Bhansali", "Bhansali Productions Viacom 18 Motion Pictures", "₹585 crore ( US $ 90 million )" ], [ "8", "Tiger Zinda Hai", "2018", "Ali Abbas Zafar", "Yash Raj Films", "₹565.1 crore ( US $ 87.32 million )" ], [ "9", "Dhoom 3", "2013", "Vijay Krishna Acharya", "Yash Raj Films", "₹ 556 crore ( US $ 101 million )" ], [ "10", "War", "2019", "Siddharth Anand", "Yash Raj Films", "₹ 474.79 crore ( US $ 67 million )" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a ranking of the highest grossing Indian films which includes films from various languages based on the conservative global box office estimates as reported by reputable sources. There is no official tracking of domestic box office figures within India, and Indian sites publishing data are frequently pressured to increase their domestic box office estimates. Indian films have been screened in markets around the world since the early 20th century. As of 2003, there are markets in over 90 countries where films from India are screened. During the first decade of the 21st century, there was a steady rise in the ticket price, a tripling in the number of theaters and an increase in the number of prints of a film being released, which led to a large increase in the box office collections. The majority of highest-grossing Indian films are Bollywood (Hindi) films. As of 2014, Bollywood represents 43% of the net box office revenue in India, while Tamil and Telugu cinema represent 36%, and other regional industries constitute 21%. See List of highest-grossing films in India for domestic gross figures and List of highest-grossing Indian films in overseas markets for overseas gross figures.", "section_text": "See also : List of highest domestic net collection of Hindi films The Hindi language film industry , based in Mumbai , India , is frequently known as Bollywood . [ 73 ] Bollywood is the largest film producer in India and one of the largest centres of film production in the world . [ 74 ] [ 75 ] [ 76 ]", "section_title": "Highest-grossing films by language -- Hindi", "title": "List of highest-grossing Indian films", "uid": "List_of_highest-grossing_Tollywood_films_4", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_highest-grossing_Indian_films" }
1,705
1706
List_of_Baptist_churches_19
[ [ "Church", "Dates", "City , State" ], [ "Baptist Society Meeting House", "built NRHP-listed", "Arlington , Massachusetts" ], [ "Osterville Baptist Church", "built NRHP-listed", "Barnstable , Massachusetts" ], [ "North Shore Community Baptist Church", "built NRHP-listed", "Beverly , Massachusetts" ], [ "Roslindale Baptist Church", "built NRHP-listed", "Boston , Massachusetts" ], [ "First Baptist Church ( Boston , Massachusetts )", "built NRHP-listed", "Boston , Massachusetts" ], [ "Dorchester Temple Baptist Church", "built NRHP-listed", "Boston , Massachusetts" ], [ "First Baptist Church ( Cambridge , Massachusetts )", "built NRHP-listed", "Cambridge , Massachusetts" ], [ "Old Cambridge Baptist Church", "built NRHP-listed", "Cambridge , Massachusetts" ], [ "First Baptist Church ( Fall River , Massachusetts )", "built NRHP-listed", "Fall River , Massachusetts" ], [ "First Baptist Church ( Framingham , Massachusetts )", "built NRHP-listed", "Framingham , Massachusetts" ], [ "Still River Baptist Church", "built NRHP-listed", "Harvard , Massachusetts" ], [ "First Baptist Church of Medfield", "built NRHP-listed", "Medfield , Massachusetts" ], [ "First Baptist Church ( Methuen , Massachusetts )", "built NRHP-listed", "Methuen , Massachusetts" ], [ "First Baptist Church ( New Bedford , Massachusetts )", "built NRHP-listed", "New Bedford , Massachusetts" ], [ "Union Baptist Church ( New Bedford , Massachusetts )", "built NRHP-listed", "New Bedford , Massachusetts" ], [ "First Baptist Church in Newton", "built NRHP-listed", "Newton , Massachusetts" ], [ "Evangelical Baptist Church ( Newton , Massachusetts )", "built NRHP-listed", "Newton , Massachusetts" ], [ "Myrtle Baptist Church Neighborhood Historic District", "built NRHP-listed", "Newton , Massachusetts" ], [ "First Baptist Church of Wollaston", "built NRHP-listed", "Quincy , Massachusetts" ], [ "Hornbine Baptist Church", "built NRHP-listed", "Rehoboth , Massachusetts" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of Baptist churches that are notable either as congregations or as buildings. The Baptist churches here are descended from the English dissenters who broke out Baptist church from other Protestant churches in Britain in the 1700s. There is an alternative view, that earlier Anabaptist churches started the Baptist church, but this list-article does not include those. (See List of Anabaptist churches).", "section_text": "", "section_title": "United States -- Massachusetts", "title": "List of Baptist churches", "uid": "List_of_Baptist_churches_19", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Baptist_churches" }
1,706
1707
List_of_church_restorations_and_alterations_by_Anthony_Salvin_0
[ [ "Name", "Location", "Date", "Notes", "Grade" ], [ "St Nectan 's Church", "Ashcombe , Devon 50°36′20″N 3°32′19″W / 50.6056°N 3.5386°W / 50.6056 ; -3.5386 ( St Nectan 's Church , Ashcombe )", "1820s", "Restoration of a church dating from the 13th century", "I" ], [ "Norwich Cathedral", "Norwich , Norfolk 52°37′55″N 1°18′04″E / 52.6319°N 1.3011°E / 52.6319 ; 1.3011 ( Norwich Cathedral )", "c. 1830", "West front remodelled", "I" ], [ "St Mary 's Church", "Helmingham , Suffolk 52°10′24″N 1°12′09″E / 52.1734°N 1.2025°E / 52.1734 ; 1.2025 ( St Mary 's Church , Helmingham )", "c. 1840", "Remodelled", "II" ], [ "Holy Sepulchre Church", "Cambridge 52°12′30″N 0°07′08″E / 52.2084°N 0.1189°E / 52.2084 ; 0.1189 ( Holy Sepulchre Church , Cambridge )", "1841", "Restoration and partial rebuilding of a church dating from the 12th century", "I" ], [ "St Oswald 's Church", "Arncliffe , North Yorkshire 54°08′37″N 2°06′14″W / 54.1437°N 2.1039°W / 54.1437 ; -2.1039 ( St Oswald 's Church , Arncliffe )", "1841-43", "Restoration of the nave in 1841 , and rebuilding of the chancel in 1843", "II" ], [ "St Peter 's Church", "Elford , Staffordshire 52°41′34″N 1°43′39″W / 52.6928°N 1.7275°W / 52.6928 ; -1.7275 ( St Peter 's Church , Elford )", "1848-49", "Church largely rebuilt", "II*" ], [ "St Andrew 's Church", "Greystoke , Cumbria 54°40′09″N 2°51′52″W / 54.6691°N 2.8645°W / 54.6691 ; -2.8645 ( St Andrew 's Church , Greystoke )", "1848-49", "Restoration of a church dating from the 13th century", "II*" ], [ "St Lawrence 's Church", "Castle Rising , Norfolk 52°47′45″N 0°28′12″E / 52.7957°N 0.4701°E / 52.7957 ; 0.4701 ( St Lawrence 's Church , Castle Rising )", "c. 1849", "Restoration of a church dating from the 12th century", "I" ], [ "Wells Cathedral", "Wells , Somerset 51°12′37″N 2°38′37″W / 51.2104°N 2.6437°W / 51.2104 ; -2.6437 ( Wells Cathedral )", "c. 1850", "Restoration of the choir", "I" ], [ "St Oswald 's Church", "Lower Peover , Cheshire 53°15′50″N 2°23′11″W / 53.2639°N 2.3864°W / 53.2639 ; -2.3864 ( St Oswald 's Church , Lower Peover )", "1852", "Aisles altered and re-roofed", "I" ], [ "St Mary the Virgin 's Church", "Aldridge , West Midlands 52°36′16″N 1°54′45″W / 52.6044°N 1.9126°W / 52.6044 ; -1.9126 ( St Mary 's Church , Aldridge )", "1852-53", "Extensive restoration of a church dating from the 14th century , with rebuilding of the north aisle and chancel", "II*" ], [ "St Philip and St James ' Church", "Rock , Northumberland 55°28′32″N 1°40′54″W / 55.4755°N 1.6817°W / 55.4755 ; -1.6817 ( St Philip and St James ' Church , Rock )", "1855", "Restoration and rebuilding of a church dating from the 12th century , with a new bellcote , vestry and apse", "II*" ], [ "St Mary 's Church", "Weaverham , Cheshire 53°15′50″N 2°34′33″W / 53.2638°N 2.5758°W / 53.2638 ; -2.5758 ( St Mary 's Church , Weaverham )", "1855", "Restoration of a church dating from the 15th century", "I" ], [ "St Mary 's Church", "Flixton , Suffolk 52°25′45″N 1°23′58″E / 52.4293°N 1.3995°E / 52.4293 ; 1.3995 ( St Mary 's Church , Flixton )", "1856", "Replaced the tower", "II*" ], [ "Church of St Mary the Great", "Cambridge 52°12′19″N 0°07′06″E / 52.2053°N 0.1183°E / 52.2053 ; 0.1183 ( Church of St Mary the Great , Cambridge )", "1857", "Restoration of a church dating from the 14th century", "I" ], [ "All Saints Church", "Sherburn-in-Elmet , North Yorkshire 53°47′45″N 1°15′38″W / 53.7958°N 1.2606°W / 53.7958 ; -1.2606 ( All Saints Church , Sherburn-in-Elmet )", "1857", "Restoration of the east end", "I" ], [ "Durham Cathedral", "Durham 54°46′24″N 1°34′35″W / 54.7732°N 1.5765°W / 54.7732 ; -1.5765 ( Cloisters , Durham Cathedral )", "1858", "Restoration of cloisters", "I" ], [ "St Margaret 's Church", "Fernhurst , West Sussex 51°02′56″N 0°43′08″W / 51.0489°N 0.7190°W / 51.0489 ; -0.7190 ( St Margaret 's Church , Fernhurst )", "1859 ; 1881", "Restoration and rebuilding of a church dating from the 12th century . The 1881 work was one of Salvin 's last commissions", "II" ], [ "St Mary 's Church", "Whickham , Tyne and Wear 54°56′47″N 1°40′27″W / 54.9464°N 1.6741°W / 54.9464 ; -1.6741 ( St Mary 's Church , Whickham )", "1860-62", "Restoration of a church dating from the 12th century , with the addition of a second north aisle , vestry , organ chamber , and a new roof", "I" ], [ "St Mary and St Michael 's Church", "Alnwick , Northumberland 55°25′01″N 1°42′40″W / 55.4169°N 1.7112°W / 55.4169 ; -1.7112 ( St Mary and St Michael 's Church , Alnwick )", "c. 1863", "Restoration of a church dating mainly from the 15th century", "II" ] ]
{ "intro": "Anthony Salvin (1799-1881) was an English architect, born in Sunderland Bridge, County Durham. He trained under John Paterson of Edinburgh, and moved to London in 1821. His works include new churches, restoration of and additions to existing churches, and various other buildings, including schools. However, he is mainly noted for his work on existing major buildings, including castles, and for designing new substantial country houses. The castles on which he worked include Windsor Castle, Norwich Castle, Rockingham Castle, Newark Castle, Warkworth Castle, Muncaster Castle, and Warwick Castle. He also carried out work on the Tower of London, and on Trinity College, Cambridge, Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, and University College, Durham. His new country houses include Mamhead House (his first major project), Scotney Castle, Keele Hall, Thoresby Hall, and Peckforton Castle. In addition he designed the Observatory for Durham University. Thus list contains details of churches with restorations, additions and alterations by Salvin.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Works", "title": "List of church restorations and alterations by Anthony Salvin", "uid": "List_of_church_restorations_and_alterations_by_Anthony_Salvin_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_church_restorations_and_alterations_by_Anthony_Salvin" }
1,707
1708
List_of_prizes_named_after_people_19
[ [ "Award", "Named after", "Field", "Achievement" ], [ "Wade Trophy", "Margaret Wade", "Basketball", "Player of the year in Division I women 's college basketball , as chosen by the Women 's Basketball Coaches Association" ], [ "Wakker Prize", "Henri-Louis Wakker", "Architectural history", "Presented to a Swiss commune for development and preservation of architectural heritage" ], [ "Selman A. Waksman Award in Microbiology", "Selman Waksman", "Microbiology", "" ], [ "Doak Walker Award", "Doak Walker", "American football", "Outstanding running back in U.S. college football" ], [ "Walker Cup", "George Herbert Walker", "Golf", "Challenge trophy contested by men 's amateur teams representing the USA and Great Britain & Ireland" ], [ "Walkley Award", "William Gaston Walkley", "", "" ], [ "The Wally", "Wally Parks", "Auto racing", "" ], [ "Wally Lewis Medal", "Wally Lewis", "Rugby league football", "State of Origin player of the series" ], [ "Wanamaker Trophy", "Rodman Wanamaker", "Golf", "PGA Championship winner 's trophy" ], [ "Warne-Muralidaran Trophy", "Shane Warne and Muttiah Muralitharan", "Cricket", "Perpetual challenge trophy awarded to winner of Test series between Australia and Sri Lanka" ], [ "Johnny Warren Medal", "Johnny Warren", "Football ( soccer )", "Best player in the Australasian A-League , as determined by the league 's players" ], [ "James Craig Watson Medal", "James Craig Watson", "", "" ], [ "James Watt International Medal", "James Watt", "", "" ], [ "Oswald Watt Gold Medal", "Oswald Watt", "", "" ], [ "Wheatcroft Trophy", "Tom Wheatcroft", "Auto racing", "Significant contributions to motorsport in the United Kingdom" ], [ "Hermann Weyl Prize", "Hermann Weyl", "Physics", "Awarded every two years to recognize young scientists who have performed original work of significant scientific quality in the area of understanding physics through symmetries" ], [ "Whipple Award", "Fred Whipple", "Planetary science", "outstanding contributions in the field of planetary science" ], [ "Whizzer White NFL Man of the Year Award", "Byron Whizzer White", "American football", "Outstanding community service by a National Football League player . Similar to the Walter Payton Man of the Year Award , but awarded by the players ' union , the NFL Players Association , instead of the league" ], [ "Heinrich Wieland Prize", "Heinrich Wieland", "Chemistry", "Outstanding research on biologically active molecules and systems in the areas of chemistry , biochemistry and physiology" ], [ "Norbert Wiener Award for Social and Professional Responsibility", "Norbert Wiener", "", "" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of awards that are named after people.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "W", "title": "List of awards named after people", "uid": "List_of_prizes_named_after_people_19", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_awards_named_after_people" }
1,708
1709
List_of_Arabs_by_net_worth_0
[ [ "#", "Rank", "Name", "Net worth ( USD )", "Citizenship", "Sources of wealth" ], [ "1", "11", "Al Thani & Family", "$ 34 billion", "Qatar", "Diversified" ], [ "2", "89", "Al Waleed Bin Talal", "$ 32.5 billion", "Saudi Arabia", "Trading Company" ], [ "3", "115", "Alyousifi & Family", "$ 31.9 billion", "Kuwait", "Diversified" ], [ "4", "120", "Sulaiman S. Olayan", "$ 10,700", "Saudi Arabia", "Diversified" ], [ "5", "120", "Bin Laden Family", "$ 10 , 100", "Saudi Arabia", "Diversified" ], [ "6", "136", "Maan Al-Sanea", "$ 7 , 000", "Saudi Arabia", "Diversified" ], [ "7", "182", "Nassef Sawiris", "$ 5,600", "Egypt", "Orascom Construction Industries ( OCI )" ], [ "8", "310", "Naguib Sawiris", "$ 3,500", "Egypt", "" ], [ "10", "393", "Issad Rebrab", "$ 3,300", "Algeria", "Cevital" ], [ "11", "393", "Othman Benjelloun", "$ 3,100", "Morocco", "BMCE Bank" ], [ "12", "393", "Onsi Sawaris", "$ 3,000", "Egypt", "Orascom Construction Industries ( OCI )" ], [ "13", "409", "Najib Mikati", "$ 3,000", "Lebanon", "" ], [ "14", "420", "Abdul Aziz Al Ghurair and Family", "$ 2,700", "United Arab Emirates", "" ], [ "16", "459", "Bahaa Hariri", "$ 2,500", "Lebanon", "" ], [ "17", "512", "Mohammed Al Issa", "$ 2,300", "Saudi Arabia", "Diversified" ], [ "18", "428", "Saif Ahmed Belhasa", "$ 2,200", "United Arab Emirates", "" ], [ "18", "513", "Miloud Chaabi", "$ 2,100", "Morocco", "Diversified" ], [ "19", "595", "Saad Hariri", "$ 2,000", "Lebanon", "" ], [ "20", "595", "Mohamed Mansour", "$ 2,000", "Egypt", "" ], [ "21", "736", "Saleh Abdullah Kamel", "$ 1,700", "Saudi Arabia", "" ] ]
{ "intro": "The following list is the ranking of all the Arab world's U.S. dollar Arab billionaires according to the Forbes Billionaire List. March 3 2019", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Richest Arabs 2019", "title": "List of Arabs by net worth", "uid": "List_of_Arabs_by_net_worth_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Arabs_by_net_worth" }
1,709
1710
Jadran_Film_0
[ [ "Year", "Film", "Director" ], [ "1958", "H-8", "Nikola Tanhofer" ], [ "1959", "Train Without a Timetable", "Veljko Bulajić" ], [ "1960", "The Ninth Circle", "France Štiglic" ], [ "1963", "Face to Face", "Branko Bauer" ], [ "1965", "Prometheus of the Island", "Vatroslav Mimica" ], [ "1966", "Monday or Tuesday", "Vatroslav Mimica" ], [ "1970", "Handcuffs", "Krsto Papić" ], [ "1975", "The House", "Bogdan Žižić" ], [ "1977", "Do n't Lean Out the Window", "Bogdan Žižić" ], [ "1978", "Occupation in 26 Pictures", "Lordan Zafranović" ], [ "1981", "The Fall of Italy", "Lordan Zafranović" ], [ "1995", "Washed Out", "Zrinko Ogresta" ], [ "1999", "When the Dead Start Singing", "Krsto Papić" ] ]
{ "intro": "Jadran Film is a film production studio and distribution company founded in 1946 in Zagreb, Croatia. In the period between the early 1960s and late 1980s Jadran Film was one of the biggest and most notable film studios in Central Europe, with some 145 international and around 120 Yugoslav productions filmed at the studio during those three decades, including two Oscar-winning films and Orson Welles' 1962 screen adaptation of Franz Kafka's novel The Trial. The word Jadran refers to the Adriatic Sea in Croatian. During most of its existence it was one of the two main film studios in Yugoslav cinema (along with Avala Film of Belgrade) and was one of the few film companies which played a major role in the post-World War II history of Croatian cinema, along with Croatia Film and Zagreb Film (which is mainly known for animated films). In the 1990s the company experienced a sharp downturn amid the breakup of Yugoslavia and most of the company's property was either sold or fell into disrepair in the ensuing privatization. The company still continues to produce films, although Jadran Film's once voluminous output has since dwindled to only a handful of films produced every year, mainly Croatian and regional co-productions.", "section_text": "See also : Big Golden Arena for Best Film and Pula Film Festival Below is the complete list of films produced by Jadran Film which won the Golden Arena for Best Film , the main award at the Pula Film Festival . The festival served as the Yugoslav national film awards ( i.e . the local equivalent of the Academy Award ) since its establishment in 1955 until 1990 . Due to the breakup of Yugoslavia in the early 1990s the festival was re-branded as the Croatian film awards in 1992 . A total of 11 Jadran Film films won the award in Yugoslav competition , and another two won the award since 1992 .", "section_title": "Notable films -- Big Golden Arena winners", "title": "Jadran Film", "uid": "Jadran_Film_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jadran_Film" }
1,710
1711
Nishan-e-Pakistan_0
[ [ "Year", "Name", "Field", "Country" ], [ "1958", "Aslam Khattak", "Politician/chairman , Human Rights Commission of Pakistan", "Pakistan" ], [ "1959", "Abdus Salam", "Scientist and Science Advisor to the Government of Pakistan", "Pakistan" ], [ "1965", "Air Commodore Władysław Turowicz", "military scientist and engineer", "Pakistan" ], [ "1965", "Vice-Admiral Syed Mohammad Ahsan", "Naval intelligence officer and Chief of Naval Staff", "Pakistan" ], [ "1966", "A G N Kazi", "Chairman Water and Power Development Authority", "Pakistan" ], [ "1970", "Jamil Ansari", "Editor-in-Chief Dawn 1965-1972", "Pakistan" ], [ "1971", "Rear Admiral Leslie Mungavin", "Naval Officer", "Pakistan" ], [ "1972", "Chief Justice Bashiruddin Ahmed Khan", "Judge", "Pakistan" ], [ "", "Akhtar Hameed Khan", "Social scientist , he pioneered microcredit , microfinance , and rural development initiatives", "Pakistan" ], [ "", "Syed Hashim Raza", "Former Governor of East Pakistan , first administrator of Karachi ( 1948-1951 )", "Pakistan" ], [ "1998", "Himalaya SJB Rana", "First governor of Central Bank of Nepal , Former UN delegate to Pakistan - for his role in the development of Pakistan-Nepal friendship", "Nepal" ], [ "2002", "Mumtaz Tarar", "Chairman Human Rights commission", "Pakistan" ], [ "", "Habibullah Khan Khattak", "for action in Burma during World War II", "Pakistan" ], [ "", "Bronte Clucas Quayle , CB , OBE , QC ,", "for his services in drafting the 1962 Constitution of Pakistan", "Australia" ], [ "1991", "James M. Shera , MBE", "Politician , Head of the International Curriculum Support Services , Education Department", "United Kingdom" ], [ "2006", "Grace Warren", "surgeon , leprosy expert", "Australia" ], [ "2009", "Greg Mortenson", "humanitarian , Central Asia Institute - for promoting girls ' literacy and education , and establishing schools in Pakistan", "United States" ], [ "2008", "Khaled Almaeena", "journalist , Saudi Gazette - Journalism", "Saudi Arabia" ], [ "2009", "An Qiguang", "Former Counsel General of China in Karachi for his notable services in strengthening the relations between Pakistan and China", "China" ], [ "2012", "Rowan Douglas Williams", "Anglican bishop , Archbishop of Canterbury , public services to Pakistan", "United Kingdom" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Nishan-e-Pakistan (Urdu: نشان پاکستان , English: Order of Pakistan) is the highest of civil awards and decorations given by the Government of Pakistan for the highest degree of service to the country and nation of Pakistan. The award was established on 19 March 1957. The Nishan-e-Pakistan, unlike other honours, is a highly restricted and most prestigious award and is only conferred for the merit and distinguished services to the country, international community, and foreign relations. This award, like other civilian awards, is announced on 14 August each year and its investiture takes place on following 23 March. Recipients are entitled to the post-nominal NPk.", "section_text": "Sitara-e-Pakistan ( Star of Pakistan ) , stands third in hierarchy of civilian awards after the Nishan-e-Pakistan and the Hilal-e-Pakistan .", "section_title": "Recipients of the Sitara-e-Pakistan", "title": "Nishan-e-Pakistan", "uid": "Nishan-e-Pakistan_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nishan-e-Pakistan" }
1,711
1712
Home_Improvement_(TV_series)_0
[ [ "Character", "Actor/Actress", "Episodes", "Season" ], [ "Timothy Tim Taylor", "Tim Allen", "( 204 episodes , 1991-1999 )", "starring seasons 1-8" ], [ "Jillian Jill Taylor", "Patricia Richardson", "( 204 episodes , 1991-1999 )", "starring seasons 1-8" ], [ "Wilson W. Wilson , Jr", "Earl Hindman", "( 202 episodes , 1991-1999 )", "starring seasons 1-8" ], [ "Marcus Mark Taylor", "Taran Noah Smith", "( 201 episodes , 1991-1999 )", "starring seasons 1-8" ], [ "Randall William Randy Taylor", "Jonathan Taylor Thomas", "( 177 episodes , 1991-1998 )", "starring seasons 1-8 ( until episode 178 , guest star thereafter )" ], [ "Bradley Michael Brad Taylor", "Zachery Ty Bryan", "( 202 episodes , 1991-1999 )", "starring seasons 1-8" ], [ "Albert Al Borland", "Richard Karn", "( 201 episodes , 1991-1999 )", "recurring season 1 ; starring seasons 2-8" ], [ "Heidi Keppert", "Debbe Dunning", "( 148 episodes , 1993-1999 )", "recurring seasons 3-6 ; starring seasons 7-8" ] ]
{ "intro": "Home Improvement is an American television sitcom starring Tim Allen that aired on ABC from September 17, 1991 to May 25, 1999 with a total of 204 half-hour episodes spanning eight seasons. The series was created by Matt Williams, Carmen Finestra, and David McFadzean. In the 1990s, it was one of the most watched sitcoms in the United States, winning many awards. The series launched Tim Allen's acting career and was the start of the television career of Pamela Anderson, who was part of the recurring cast for the first two seasons.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Characters -- Main", "title": "Home Improvement (TV series)", "uid": "Home_Improvement_(TV_series)_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Home_Improvement_(TV_series)" }
1,712
1713
Biathlon_World_Championships_4
[ [ "Season", "Winner", "Runner-up", "Third" ], [ "1966", "Norway Jon Istad Ragnar Tveiten Ivar Nordkild Olav Jordet", "Poland Józef Sobczak-Gąsienica Stanisław Szczepaniak Stanisław Łukaszczyk Józef Rubiś", "Sweden Olle Petrusson Tore Eriksson Holmfrid Olsson Sture Ohlin" ], [ "1967", "Norway Jon Istad Ragnar Tveiten Ola Wærhaug Olav Jordet", "Soviet Union Alexander Tikhonov Viktor Mamatov Rinnat Safin Nikolay Puzanov", "Sweden Olle Petrusson Tore Eriksson Holmfrid Olsson Sture Ohlin" ], [ "1969", "Soviet Union Alexander Tikhonov Viktor Mamatov Rinnat Safin Vladimir Gundartsev", "Norway Jon Istad Ragnar Tveiten Magnar Solberg Esten Gjelten", "Finland Kalevi Vähäkylä Mauri Röppänen Mauno Peltonen Esko Marttinen" ], [ "1970", "Soviet Union Alexander Tikhonov Viktor Mamatov Rinnat Safin Alexander Ushakov", "Norway Tor Svendsberget Ragnar Tveiten Magnar Solberg Esten Gjelten", "East Germany Hans-Günther Jahn Hansjörg Knauthe Dieter Speer Horst Koschka" ], [ "1971", "Soviet Union Alexander Tikhonov Viktor Mamatov Rinnat Safin Nazim Mukhitov", "Norway Tor Svendsberget Ragnar Tveiten Magnar Solberg Ivar Nordkild", "Poland Józef Roczak Andrzej Rapacz Aleksander Klima Józef Stopka" ], [ "1973", "Soviet Union Alexander Tikhonov Rinnat Safin Juri Kolmakov Gennady Kovalyev", "Norway Tor Svendsberget Esten Gjelten Ragnar Tveiten Kjell Hovda", "East Germany Dieter Speer Manfred Geyer Herbert Wiegand Günther Bartnick" ], [ "1974", "Soviet Union Alexander Tikhonov Alexander Ushakov Nikolay Kruglov Juri Kolmakov", "Finland Simo Halonen Carl-Henrik Flöjt Juhani Suutarinen Heikki Ikola", "Norway Kjell Hovda Kåre Hovda Terje Hanssen Tor Svendsberget" ], [ "1975", "Finland Carl-Henrik Flöjt Simo Halonen Juhani Suutarinen Heikki Ikola", "Soviet Union Alexander Tikhonov Aleksandr Elizarov Alexander Ushakov Nikolay Kruglov", "Poland Jan Szpunar Andrzej Rapacz Ludwig Zięba Wojciech Truchan" ], [ "1977", "Soviet Union Alexander Tikhonov ( 6 ) Aleksandr Elizarov Alexander Ushakov Nikolay Kruglov", "Finland Erkki Antila Raimo Seppänen Simo Halonen Heikki Ikola", "East Germany Manfred Beer Klaus Siebert Frank Ullrich Manfred Geyer" ], [ "1978", "East Germany Manfred Beer Frank Ullrich Klaus Siebert Eberhard Rösch", "Norway Odd Lirhus Sigleif Johansen Roar Nilsen Tor Svendsberget", "West Germany Gerhard Winkler Andreas Schweiger Hansi Estner Heinrich Mehringer" ], [ "1979", "East Germany Manfred Beer Klaus Siebert Frank Ullrich Eberhard Rösch", "Finland Simo Halonen Heikki Ikola Erkki Antila Raimo Seppänen", "Soviet Union Vladimir Alikin Vladimir Barnashov Nikolay Kruglov Alexander Tikhonov" ], [ "1981", "East Germany Mathias Jung Matthias Jacob Frank Ullrich Eberhard Rösch", "West Germany Peter Angerer Peter Schweiger Fritz Fischer Franz Bernreiter", "Soviet Union Vladimir Alikin Anatoly Alyabyev Vladimir Barnashov Vladimir Gavrikov" ], [ "1982", "East Germany Frank Ullrich Mathias Jung Matthias Jacob Bernd Helmich", "Norway Eirik Kvalfoss Kjell Søbak Odd Lirhus Rolf Storsveen", "Soviet Union Vladimir Alikin Anatoly Alyabyev Vladimir Barnashov Viktor Semyonov" ], [ "1983", "Soviet Union Algimantas Šalna Juri Kashkarov Petr Miloradov Sergei Bulygin", "East Germany Frank Ullrich Mathias Jung Matthias Jacob Frank-Peter Roetsch", "Norway Kjell Søbak Eirik Kvalfoss Odd Lirhus Øivind Nerhagen" ], [ "1985", "Soviet Union Juri Kashkarov Algimantas Šalna Sergei Bulygin Andrei Senkov", "East Germany Frank-Peter Roetsch Matthias Jacob Ralf Göthel André Sehmisch", "West Germany Peter Angerer Walter Pichler Fritz Fischer Herbert Fritzenwenger" ], [ "1986", "Soviet Union Juri Kashkarov Dmitry Vasilyev Valeriy Medvedtsev Sergei Bulygin", "East Germany Jürgen Wirth Frank-Peter Roetsch Matthias Jacob André Sehmisch", "Italy Werner Kiem Gottlieb Taschler Johann Passler Andreas Zingerle" ], [ "1987", "East Germany Frank-Peter Roetsch Matthias Jacob André Sehmisch Jürgen Wirth", "Soviet Union Dmitry Vasilyev Juri Kashkarov Alexandr Popov Valeriy Medvedtsev", "West Germany Ernst Reiter Herbert Fritzenwenger Peter Angerer Fritz Fischer" ], [ "1989", "East Germany Frank Luck André Sehmisch Birk Anders Frank-Peter Roetsch", "Soviet Union Juri Kashkarov Sergei Tchepikov Alexandr Popov Sergei Bulygin", "Norway Geir Einang Sylfest Glimsdal Gisle Fenne Eirik Kvalfoss" ], [ "1990", "Italy Pieralberto Carrara Wilfried Pallhuber Johann Passler Andreas Zingerle", "France Christian Dumont Xavier Blond Hervé Flandin Thierry Gerbier", "East Germany Frank Luck André Sehmisch Mark Kirchner Birk Anders" ], [ "1991", "Germany Ricco Groß Frank Luck Mark Kirchner Fritz Fischer", "Soviet Union Juri Kashkarov Alexandr Popov Sergei Tarasov Sergei Tchepikov", "Norway Geir Einang Eirik Kvalfoss Jon Åge Tyldum Gisle Fenne" ] ]
{ "intro": "The first Biathlon World Championships (BWCH) was held in 1958, with individual and team contests for men. The number of events has grown significantly over the years. Beginning in 1984, women biathletes had their own World Championships, and finally, from 1989, both genders have been participating in joint BWCHs. In 1978 the development was enhanced by the change from the large army rifle calibre to a small bore rifle, while the range to the target was reduced from 150 to 50 meters.", "section_text": "This event was first held unofficially in 1965 . It was a success , and replaced the team competition as an official event in 1966 .", "section_title": "Men -- Relay ( 4 × 7.5 km )", "title": "Biathlon World Championships", "uid": "Biathlon_World_Championships_4", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biathlon_World_Championships" }
1,713
1714
Gold_Coast_Sports_and_Entertainment_Precinct_0
[ [ "Team", "Sport", "Used", "Competition", "Years" ], [ "Brisbane Bears", "Australian rules football", "Carrara Stadium", "Australian Football League", "1987-92" ], [ "Gold Coast Clippers", "Baseball", "Carrara Stadium", "Australian Baseball League", "1989-90" ], [ "Gold Coast Rollers", "Basketball", "Carrara Indoor Stadium", "National Basketball League", "1990-96" ], [ "Daikyo Dolphins", "Baseball", "Carrara Stadium", "Australian Baseball League", "1992-93" ], [ "Gold Coast Cougars", "Baseball", "Carrara Stadium", "Australian Baseball League", "1993-99" ], [ "Gold Coast Chargers", "Rugby league", "Carrara Stadium", "National Rugby League", "1996-98" ], [ "Gold Coast Titans", "Rugby league", "Carrara Stadium", "National Rugby League", "2007" ], [ "East Coast Aces", "Rugby union", "Carrara Stadium", "Australian Rugby Championship", "2007" ], [ "Gold Coast Blaze", "Basketball", "Carrara Indoor Stadium ( training )", "National Basketball League", "2007-12" ], [ "Gold Coast United", "Soccer", "Western Fields ( training )", "A-League", "2011-12" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Gold Coast Sports Precinct is a series of sports facilities and venues, located on the Gold Coast, Queensland, in Australia. The precinct has hosted professional sports such as Australian rules football, baseball, basketball, cricket, rugby league and rugby union in the past. It will host the athletics, badminton, weightlifting and wrestling events in the 2018 Commonwealth Games as well as the opening and closing ceremonies.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Teams -- Former teams", "title": "Gold Coast Sports Precinct", "uid": "Gold_Coast_Sports_and_Entertainment_Precinct_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold_Coast_Sports_Precinct" }
1,714
1715
Asuka-Fujiwara_0
[ [ "Site", "Municipality", "Comments" ], [ "Ishibutai Kofun 石舞台古墳 Ishibutai kofun", "Asuka", "C7 kofun ; the largest stone weighs over seventy-five tons ; Special Historic Site" ], [ "Takamatsuzuka Tomb 高松塚古墳 Takamatsuzuka kofun", "Asuka", "Special Historic Site with National Treasure wall paintings ( detached in 2007 ) and ICP grave goods" ], [ "Kitora Tomb キトラ古墳 Kitora kofun", "Asuka", "Special Historic Site with wall paintings of the four directions and an astronomical chart , also recently detached" ], [ "Kawara-dera Site 川原寺跡 Kawaradera ato", "Asuka", "Historic Site and temple complex with roof tiles that are among the most beautiful ever made in Japan" ], [ "Daikandai-ji Site 大官大寺跡 Daikandaiji ato", "Asuka", "Historic Site and precursor to Daian-ji" ], [ "Asagaotsuka Kofun 牽牛子塚古墳 Asagaotsuka kofun", "Asuka", "Historic Site with ICP grave goods" ], [ "Nakaoyama Kofun 中尾山古墳 Nakaoyama kofun", "Asuka", "Historic Site" ], [ "Sakafune Ishi Site 酒船石遺跡 Sakafune-ishi iseki", "Asuka", "Historic Site" ], [ "Jōrin-ji Site 定林寺跡 Jōrinji ato", "Asuka", "Historic Site" ], [ "Asuka-dera Site 飛鳥寺跡 Asukadera ato", "Asuka", "Historic Site" ], [ "Tachibana-dera Precinct 橘寺 境内 Tachibanadera keidai", "Asuka", "Historic Site" ], [ "Iwayayama Kofun 岩屋山古墳 Iwayayama kofun", "Asuka", "Historic Site" ], [ "Itabuki Palace Site 伝飛鳥 板蓋宮 跡 den Asuka Itabuki no miya ato", "Asuka", "Historic Site and one of the imperial palaces while the capital was at Asuka" ], [ "Asuka Mizuochi Site 飛鳥水落遺跡 Asuka Mizuochi iseki", "Asuka", "Historic Site" ], [ "Inabuchi Palace Site 飛鳥稲淵宮殿跡 Asuka Inabuchi kyūden ato", "Asuka", "Historic Site" ], [ "Marukoyama Kofun マルコ山古墳 Marukoyama kofun", "Asuka", "Historic Site" ], [ "Asuka Pond Workshop Site 飛鳥池工房遺跡 Asuka-ike kōbō iseki", "Asuka", "Historic Site and government workshop , producing items of gold , silver , bronze , and iron , as well as lacquerware ; also a mint" ], [ "Hinokuma-dera Site 檜隈寺 跡 Hinokumadera ato", "Asuka", "Historic Site and recipient in 686 of a thirty-year maintenance grant of a hundred households , as chronicled in Nihon Shoki" ], [ "Asuka Palace Ponds 飛鳥京跡苑池 Asuka-kyō ato enchi", "Asuka", "Historic Site and Place of Scenic Beauty , a pair of ponds in gardens extending 80 metres E-W and at least 230 metres N-S and related to the Itabuki Palace" ], [ "Oka-dera Site 岡寺跡 Okadera ato", "Asuka", "Historic Site" ] ]
{ "intro": "Asuka-Fujiwara: Archaeological sites of Japans Ancient Capitals and Related Properties is a cluster of archaeological sites from in and around the late sixth- to early eighth-century capitals of Asuka and Fujiwara-kyō, Nara Prefecture, Japan. In 2007, twenty eight sites were submitted jointly for future inscription on the UNESCO World Heritage List under the ii, iii, iv, v, and vi criteria. Currently, the submission is listed on the Tentative List. Since 2011, the Cultural Landscape of the Asuka Hinterland has been protected as one of the Cultural Landscapes of Japan. An area of 60 ha is also protected within the Asuka Historical National Government Park. Related artefacts are housed at the Asuka Historical Museum.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Sites", "title": "Asuka-Fujiwara", "uid": "Asuka-Fujiwara_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asuka-Fujiwara" }
1,715
1716
1955_International_Cross_Country_Championships_2
[ [ "Rank", "Country", "Team", "Points" ], [ "1", "England", "Frank Sando Hugh Foord Ken Norris Patrick Ranger Edward Hardy Michael Maynard", "27" ], [ "2", "Belgium", "Lucien Theys Maurits van Laere Frans Herman Roger Deweer Marcel Davignon Marcel Vandewattyne", "102" ], [ "3", "Spain", "Antonio Amoros Luis García Francisco Irizar Felicito Cerezo Félix Bidegui Antonio Aguirre", "109" ], [ "4", "France", "Bakir Benaissa Jean-Louis Com Mohamed Bensaid Pierre Prat Belkacem Chikhane Serge Blusson", "116" ], [ "5", "Portugal", "Manuel Faria João Silva José Araújo Filipe Luis António Ventura Augusto Silva", "201" ], [ "6", "Wales", "David Richards Jun . Ken Huckle Phil Morgan John Disley Tony Pumfrey Norman Wilson", "212" ], [ "7", "Scotland", "Eddie Bannon Donald Henson John McLaren Willie Lindsay Andy Brown Joe McGhee", "282" ], [ "8", "Ireland", "Denis O'Gorman Charlie Owens Johnny Marshall Jim Douglas Willy Dodds Robert Hanna", "315" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 1955 International Cross Country Championships was held in San Sebastián, Spain, at the Lasarte Hippodrome on March 19, 1955. In addition, an unofficial women's championship was held one week later at Ayr, Scotland on March 26, 1955. A report on the men's event as well as the women's event was given in the Glasgow Herald. Complete results for men, and for women (unofficial), medallists, and the results of British athletes were published.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Team Results -- Men 's", "title": "1955 International Cross Country Championships", "uid": "1955_International_Cross_Country_Championships_2", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1955_International_Cross_Country_Championships" }
1,716
1717
Football_League_One_0
[ [ "Club", "Finishing position last season", "Location", "Stadium", "Capacity" ], [ "Accrington Stanley", "14th", "Accrington", "Crown Ground", "5,057 ( 2,000 seated )" ], [ "AFC Wimbledon", "20th", "London ( Kingston upon Thames )", "Kingsmeadow", "4,850 ( 2,265 seated )" ], [ "Blackpool", "10th", "Blackpool", "Bloomfield Road", "17,338" ], [ "Bolton Wanderers", "23rd in Championship ( relegated )", "Bolton", "University of Bolton Stadium", "28,723" ], [ "Bristol Rovers", "15th", "Bristol", "Memorial Stadium", "12,300" ], [ "Burton Albion", "9th", "Burton upon Trent", "Pirelli Stadium", "6,912 ( 2,034 seated )" ], [ "Coventry City", "8th", "Birmingham ( Bordesley )", "St Andrew 's", "29,409" ], [ "Doncaster Rovers", "6th", "Doncaster", "Keepmoat Stadium", "15,231" ], [ "Fleetwood Town", "11th", "Fleetwood", "Highbury Stadium", "5,311 ( 2,701 seated )" ], [ "Gillingham", "13th", "Gillingham", "Priestfield Stadium", "11,582" ], [ "Ipswich Town", "24th in Championship ( relegated )", "Ipswich", "Portman Road", "30,311" ], [ "Lincoln City", "1st in League Two ( promoted )", "Lincoln", "Sincil Bank", "10,307" ], [ "Milton Keynes Dons", "3rd in League Two ( promoted )", "Milton Keynes", "Stadium MK", "30,500" ], [ "Oxford United", "12th", "Oxford", "Kassam Stadium", "12,500" ], [ "Peterborough", "7th", "Peterborough", "London Road", "15,314" ], [ "Portsmouth", "4th", "Portsmouth", "Fratton Park", "21,100" ], [ "Rochdale", "16th", "Rochdale", "Spotland", "10,249" ], [ "Rotherham United", "22nd in Championship ( relegated )", "Rotherham", "New York Stadium", "12,021" ], [ "Shrewsbury Town", "18th", "Shrewsbury", "New Meadow", "9,875" ], [ "Southend United", "19th", "Southend-on-Sea", "Roots Hall", "12,392" ] ]
{ "intro": "The English Football League One (often referred to as League One for short or Sky Bet League One for sponsorship reasons) is the second-highest division of the English Football League and the third tier overall in the entire English football league system. League One was introduced for the 2004-05 season. It was previously known briefly as the Football League Second Division and for much longer, prior to the advent of the Premier League, as the Football League Third Division. At present (2019-20 season), Peterborough and Gillingham hold the longest tenure in League One, both last being out of the division in the 2012-13 season. There are currently six former Premier League clubs competing in League One, namely Blackpool (2010-11), Bolton (2011-12), Coventry City (2000-01), Ipswich Town (2001-02), Portsmouth (2009-10) and Sunderland (2016-17).", "section_text": "AccringtonStanleyAFC WimbledonBolton WanderersBristol RoversBlackpoolBurton AlbionCoventry CityDoncaster RoversFleetwood TownGillinghamIpswich TownLincoln CityMilton Keynes DonsOxford UnitedPeterborough UnitedPortsmouthRochdaleRotherham UnitedShrewsbury TownSouthend UnitedSunderlandTranmere RoversWycombeWanderers Locations of the 2019–20 Football League One teams The following 23 clubs competed in League One during the 2019–20 season . The 24th club , Bury , were expelled from the EFL on 27 August 2019 and did not fulfill any of their fixtures for the season . Their manager at the time was Paul Wilkinson .", "section_title": "Current members", "title": "EFL League One", "uid": "Football_League_One_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EFL_League_One" }
1,717
1718
List_of_NBA_franchise_post-season_droughts_2
[ [ "Seasons", "Team", "Last appearance in Conference Finals", "Result" ], [ "49", "Los Angeles Clippers", "0 Never", "z -" ], [ "40", "Washington Wizards", "1979", "Won vs. San Antonio" ], [ "29", "Charlotte Hornets", "0 Never", "z -" ], [ "19", "New York Knicks", "2000", "Lost vs. Indiana" ], [ "18", "Philadelphia 76ers", "2001", "Won vs. Milwaukee" ], [ "17", "Sacramento Kings", "2002", "Lost vs. Los Angeles Lakers" ], [ "17", "New Orleans Pelicans", "0 Never", "z -" ], [ "16", "Brooklyn Nets", "2003", "Won vs. Detroit" ], [ "15", "Minnesota Timberwolves", "2004", "Lost vs. Los Angeles Lakers" ], [ "12", "Utah Jazz", "2007", "Lost vs. San Antonio" ], [ "11", "Detroit Pistons", "2008", "Lost vs. Boston" ], [ "10", "Denver Nuggets", "2009", "Lost vs. Los Angeles Lakers" ], [ "9", "Orlando Magic", "2010", "Lost vs. Boston" ], [ "9", "Phoenix Suns", "2010", "Lost vs. Los Angeles Lakers" ], [ "9", "Los Angeles Lakers", "2010", "Won vs. Phoenix" ], [ "8", "Chicago Bulls", "2011", "Lost vs. Miami" ], [ "8", "Dallas Mavericks", "2011", "Won vs. Oklahoma 0 Won vs. Oklahoma City 0" ], [ "6", "Memphis Grizzlies", "2013", "Lost vs. San Antonio" ], [ "5", "Miami Heat", "2014", "Won vs. Indiana" ], [ "5", "Indiana Pacers", "2014", "Lost vs. Miami" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of National Basketball Association (NBA) franchise post-season appearance droughts. This list includes the all-time and the active consecutive non-playoffs. Aside from the NBA playoff appearance droughts, this list also includes droughts of series wins, appearances in the NBA Finals and NBA championship wins. The oldest such franchise is the Suns (51 seasons), while the Royals/Kings and the Hawks have even longer championship droughts (68 and 61 seasons, respectively). Six franchises have never been to the NBA Finals, the highest number among the major North American sports. The oldest such team is the Braves/Clippers franchise (49 seasons); the Kings and the Hawks have appearance droughts that are even longer (69 and 59 seasons, respectively). The longest a franchise has gone without appearing in the playoffs at all is 15 seasons: the Braves/Clippers franchise from 1977 to 1991. Of the 19 franchises that have won an NBA championship, 8 have droughts of 36 seasons or more, which is to say that the past 36 championships have been shared among only 11 franchises: the Lakers (8), Bulls (6), Spurs (5), Celtics (3), Pistons (3), Heat (3), Warriors (3), Rockets (2), Mavericks (1), Cavaliers (1), and Raptors (1). By contrast, the other three major North American sports have each had at least 16 franchises become champions over the same period of time.", "section_text": "^ Longest drought in team history", "section_title": "Active droughts -- NBA Conference Finals appearance droughts", "title": "List of NBA franchise post-season droughts", "uid": "List_of_NBA_franchise_post-season_droughts_2", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NBA_franchise_post-season_droughts" }
1,718
1719
2010_BBC_Sports_Personality_of_the_Year_Award_0
[ [ "Nominee", "Sport", "2010 achievement", "BBC Profile", "Votes ( percentage )" ], [ "AP McCoy", "Horse racing", "Riding Do n't Push It to win the 2010 Grand National at the 15th attempt , having won more races than any jump jockey in history", "[ 1 ]", "293,152 ( 41.98% )" ], [ "Phil Taylor", "Darts", "Becoming the World Darts Champion for a record 15th time by winning the 2010 PDC tournament in January 2010 , doing a double 9-Dart Finish in the 2010 PDC Premier League Darts and winning a further six major titles during the year", "[ 2 ]", "72,095 ( 10.33% )" ], [ "Jessica Ennis", "Athletics", "Winning the gold medal for the Women 's Heptathlon at the 2010 European Athletics Championships in Barcelona , Spain", "[ 3 ]", "62,953 ( 9.02% )" ], [ "Lee Westwood", "Golf", "Becoming the new World Number One male golfer after a successful 2010 season , replacing the long time leader Tiger Woods", "[ 4 ]", "58,640 ( 8.4% )" ], [ "Graeme McDowell", "Golf", "Becoming the first European winner of the U.S. Open since 1970 , scoring 284 at the 2010 tournament at Pebble Beach , California", "[ 5 ]", "52,108 ( 7.46% )" ], [ "Tom Daley", "Diving", "Winning two gold medals for the Men 's Diving ( 10 metre platform , team and individual ) at the 2010 Commonwealth Games in Delhi , India", "[ 6 ]", "50,763 ( 7.27% )" ], [ "Mark Cavendish", "Cycling", "Winning five stages of the Tour de France , followed by taking 3 stages and the Points Jersey in the Vuelta a España", "[ 7 ]", "44,170 ( 6.33% )" ], [ "Amy Williams", "Skeleton", "Winning the Gold Medal for the Women 's Skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver , Canada , the first British individual winter gold medal in 30 years", "[ 8 ]", "43,056 ( 6.17% )" ], [ "Graeme Swann", "Cricket", "For his spin bowling for England against Bangladesh ( May to June ) and Pakistan ( July to September ) , and in the 2010 ICC World Twenty20 competition", "[ 9 ]", "13,767 ( 1.97% )" ], [ "David Haye", "Boxing", "Making two successful defences of his WBA World Heavyweight Championship belt , against John Ruiz on 3 April , and Audley Harrison on 13 November", "[ 10 ]", "7,538 ( 1.08% )" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 2010 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award, held on 19 December, was the 57th presentation of the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Awards. Awarded annually by the BBC, the main titular award honours an individual's British sporting achievement over the past year. The winner is selected by public vote from a 10-person shortlist. Other awards presented include team, coach, and young personality of the year.", "section_text": "The nominees and their achievements in 2010 as described by the BBC , and their share of the votes cast [ 3 ] were as follows : [ 1 ]", "section_title": "Nominees", "title": "2010 BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award", "uid": "2010_BBC_Sports_Personality_of_the_Year_Award_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_BBC_Sports_Personality_of_the_Year_Award" }
1,719
1720
List_of_South_African_airports_by_passenger_movements_2
[ [ "Rank", "Airport", "Location", "Code ( IATA/ICAO )", "Total passengers", "% Change" ], [ "1", "OR Tambo International Airport", "Johannesburg , Gauteng", "JNB/FAJS", "18,664,728", "6.07%" ], [ "2", "Cape Town International Airport", "Cape Town , Western Cape", "CPT/FACT", "8,225,422", "5.32%" ], [ "3", "King Shaka International Airport", "Durban , KwaZulu-Natal", "DUR/FALE", "4,886,552", "N/A" ], [ "4", "Port Elizabeth Airport", "Port Elizabeth , Eastern Cape", "PLZ/FAPE", "1,416,922", "4.99%" ], [ "5", "East London Airport", "East London , Eastern Cape", "ELS/FAEL", "778,184", "14.95%" ], [ "6", "George Airport", "George , Western Cape", "GRJ/FAGG", "545,206", "1.41%" ], [ "7", "Bloemfontein Airport", "Bloemfontein , Free State", "BFN/FABL", "417,642", "5.14%" ], [ "8", "Kimberley Airport", "Kimberley , Northern Cape", "KIM/FAKM", "132,830", "0.72%" ], [ "9", "Upington Airport", "Upington , Northern Cape", "UTN/FAUP", "48,498", "14.8%" ] ]
{ "intro": "The following is a list of South African airports by passenger movements.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Statistics -- 2010–11", "title": "List of South African airports by passenger movements", "uid": "List_of_South_African_airports_by_passenger_movements_2", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_South_African_airports_by_passenger_movements" }
1,720
1721
North_Dakota_College_Athletic_Conference_0
[ [ "Institution", "Nickname", "Location", "First year", "Last year", "Current conference" ], [ "Jamestown College", "Jimmies", "Jamestown , North Dakota", "1922", "2000", "Dakota Athletic Conference" ], [ "Mayville State University", "Comets", "Mayville , North Dakota", "1922", "2000", "Dakota Athletic Conference" ], [ "Moorhead State Teachers College", "Dragons", "Moorhead , Minnesota", "1922", "1931", "Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference" ], [ "North Dakota State College of Science", "Wildcats", "Wahpeton , North Dakota", "1922", "1989", "Mon-Dak Conference" ], [ "North Dakota State Normal and Industrial School", "Snitchers", "Ellendale , North Dakota", "1922", "1969", "Closed 1971" ], [ "Valley City State University", "Vikings", "Valley City , North Dakota", "1922", "2000", "Dakota Athletic Conference" ], [ "Dickinson State University", "Blue Hawks", "Dickinson , North Dakota", "1931", "2000", "Dakota Athletic Conference" ], [ "Minot State University", "Beavers", "Minot , North Dakota", "1931", "2000", "Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference" ], [ "North Dakota School of Forestry", "Lumberjacks", "Bottineau , North Dakota", "1931", "1958", "Mon-Dak Conference" ], [ "Bismarck State College", "Mystics", "Bismarck , North Dakota", "1948", "1985", "Mon-Dak Conference" ], [ "University of Mary", "Marauders", "Bismarck , North Dakota", "1988", "2000", "Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference" ], [ "University of Minnesota , Crookston", "Golden Eagles", "Crookston , Minnesota", "1995", "1999", "Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference" ] ]
{ "intro": "The North Dakota College Athletic Conference (NDCAC) was an NAIA-associated collegiate athletic conference that ceased operations following the 1999-00 academic school year when it merged with the South Dakota Intercollegiate Conference to form the Dakota Athletic Conference. The conference originally started as the Interstate Athletic Conference in 1922, with five North Dakota schools and Moorhead State Teachers College from Minnesota. Moorhead State left in 1931 to help found the Northern State Teachers Conference in 1931, and the remaining members brought in more schools to regroup as the NDCAC.", "section_text": "The following is a list of historic members :", "section_title": "Members", "title": "North Dakota College Athletic Conference", "uid": "North_Dakota_College_Athletic_Conference_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Dakota_College_Athletic_Conference" }
1,721
1722
List_of_Thai_ingredients_5
[ [ "Thai name", "Thai script", "English name", "Description and use" ], [ "Bai makok", "ใบมะกอก", "Spondias mombin", "Bai makok is the leaf of the Spondias mombin , a relative of the cashew . The young leaves are served raw with certain types of Nam phrik ( Thai chilli pastes ) . The taste is sour and slightly bitter . The fruit of this tree are also eaten" ], [ "Cha-om", "ชะอม", "Acacia pennata", "Young feathery leaves of the Acacia pennata tree which are used in omelettes , soups and curries . In Northern Thai cuisine they are also eaten raw as for instance with Tam mamuang , a green mango salad" ], [ "Chiknam or Kradon", "จิกน้ำ or กระโดน", "Barringtonia acutangula", "Shoots , young leaves and flowers of the tree are eaten raw with Nam phrik . Popular in Isan" ], [ "Dala", "ดาหลา", "Etlingera elatior", "Can be eaten in Yam preparations , said to have medicinal value as well" ], [ "Dok anchan", "ดอกอัญชัน", "Clitoria ternatea", "Can be eaten raw or fried , but mostly it is used to make a blue food colouring to colour rice or sweets , like Khanom dok anchan" ], [ "Dok khae", "ดอกแค", "Sesbania grandiflora", "The flowers of the Sesbania grandiflora are often eaten steamed with Nam phrik or used in certain curries such as kaeng som" ], [ "Dok khae thale", "ดอกแคทะเล", "Dolichandrone spathacea", "The flowers are usually eaten sauteed or in kaeng som" ], [ "Dok khae hua mu", "ดอกแคหัวหมู", "Markhamia stipulata", "Often confused with Dok khae thale , as both are also known as Dok khae pa . The flowers are usually eaten sauteed or in kaeng som" ], [ "Dok salit", "ดอกสลิด", "Telosma cordata", "Mostly either boiled and eaten with Nam phrik or stir-fried in Phat dok salit" ], [ "Dok sano", "ดอกโสน", "Sesbania bispinosa", "These small yellow flowers are eaten stir-fried , in omelette or in sweets such as in Khanom dok sano" ], [ "Huapli", "หัวปลี", "Banana flower", "Banana flowers can be eaten raw , e.g . Yam hua pli ( a spicy salad with thinly sliced banana flowers ) , or steamed with a Nam phrik ( chilli dip ) . It can also feature in Som tam , in soups or deep-fried , as in Thot man huapli . The taste of the steamed flowers is somewhat similar to that of artichokes" ], [ "Lep khrut", "เล็บครุฑ", "Polyscias fruticosa", "Literally translated , the Thai name means claws of the Garuda . These slightly bitter and slightly sour leaves can be served raw together with a chilli dip . It is also used as a vegetable in certain Thai curries" ], [ "Phak liang", "ผักเหลียง", "Melinjo", "Commonly made into an omelet . Associated with Southern Thai cuisine" ], [ "Phak lueat", "ผักเลือด", "Ficus virens", "The young , slightly bitter leaves of the Ficus virens are used boiled in certain Northern Thai curries" ], [ "Pheka", "เพกา", "Oroxylum indicum", "Leaves and young pods are eaten raw . The large mature pods are grilled and the inside is scraped and eaten along with Lap" ], [ "Sadao", "สะเดา", "Neem tree", "The leaves and flowers of the neem tree ( Azadirachta indica ) are eaten blanched , often with Nam phrik" ], [ "Thong lang", "ทองหลาง", "Erythrina fusca", "This leaf is used raw as a wrapper for the Thai dish Miang kham" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of ingredients found in Thai cuisine.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Flowers and tree leaves", "title": "List of Thai ingredients", "uid": "List_of_Thai_ingredients_5", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Thai_ingredients" }
1,722
1723
List_of_GE_locomotives_3
[ [ "Model designation", "Build year", "Total produced", "AAR wheel arrangement", "Prime mover", "Power output" ], [ "U12C", "1956-1961", "153", "C-C", "Cooper Bess FVL 8ST", "1,420 hp" ], [ "UM12C", "1956,1963,1966", "20 Philippine National Railways 50 State Railway of Thailand", "C-C", "Cummins KT38-L", "1,320 hp ( 980 kW )" ], [ "U13C", "1967", "109", "C-C", "GE FDL-8", "1,420 hp" ], [ "U14C", "1979", "15", "C-C", "", "1,400 hp" ], [ "U15C", "1970-1980", "274", "C-C", "GE 7FDL-8", "1,160 kW ( 1,560 hp )" ], [ "U17C", "1973-1981", "30", "C-C", "GE 7FDL-8", "1,700 hp ( 1,270 kW )" ], [ "U18C", "1976-1998", "420", "C-C", "GE 7FDL-8", "1,950 hp ( 1,450 kW )" ], [ "U20C", "1995-2005", "984", "C-C", "GE 7FDL-8", "2,150 hp ( 1,600 kW )" ], [ "U22C", "1975-1985", "49", "C-C", "", "" ], [ "U23C", "1968-70", "223", "C-C", "GE FDL-12", "2,250 hp ( 1,680 kW )" ], [ "U25C", "1963-65", "113", "C-C", "GE FDL-16", "2,500 hp ( 1,860 kW )" ], [ "U26C", "1971-87", "392", "C-C", "GE FDL-12", "2,750 hp ( 2,050 kW )" ], [ "U28C", "1965-66", "71", "C-C", "GE FDL-16", "2,800 hp ( 2,090 kW )" ], [ "U30C", "1966-76", "600", "C-C", "GE FDL-16", "3,000 hp ( 2,240 kW )" ], [ "U33C", "1968-75", "375", "C-C", "GE FDL-16", "3,300 hp ( 2,460 kW )" ], [ "U36C", "1971-75", "238", "C-C", "GE FDL-16", "3,600 hp ( 2,700 kW )" ], [ "U50C", "1969-71", "40", "C-C", "Dual GE FDL-12", "5,000 hp ( 3,700 kW )" ] ]
{ "intro": "The following is a list of locomotives produced by GE Transportation Systems before its acquisition and takeover by Wabtec. All were/are built at Fort Worth, Texas or Erie, Pennsylvania, in the United States. Most (except the electrics, the switchers, the AC6000CW, and the Evolution series) are powered by various versions of GE's own FDL diesel prime mover, based on a Cooper Bessemer design and manufactured at Grove City, Pennsylvania. GE is one of the largest locomotive manufacturing companies.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Freight locomotives -- Universal Series ( 1956 to 1998 )", "title": "List of GE locomotives", "uid": "List_of_GE_locomotives_3", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_GE_locomotives" }
1,723
1724
2006_Coupe_Internationale_de_Nice_1
[ [ "Rank", "Name", "Nation", "Total points", "SP", "FS" ], [ "1", "Viktória Pavuk", "Hungary", "113.84", "3", "1" ], [ "2", "Henriikka Hietaniemi", "Finland", "110.11", "1", "3" ], [ "3", "Viktoria Helgesson", "Sweden", "105.15", "4", "4" ], [ "4", "Karen Venhuizen", "Netherlands", "102.71", "5", "2" ], [ "5", "Olga Ikonnikova", "Estonia", "96.08", "12", "5" ], [ "6", "Isabelle Pieman", "Belgium", "94.07", "9", "6" ], [ "7", "Anna Weinberger", "France", "93.87", "6", "7" ], [ "8", "Jelena Muhhina", "Estonia", "92.94", "2", "12" ], [ "9", "Kirsten Verbist", "Belgium", "89.17", "11", "8" ], [ "10", "Malin Hållberg-Leuf", "Sweden", "88.10", "7", "11" ], [ "11", "Federica Constantini", "Italy", "87.82", "8", "10" ], [ "12", "Katarina Gerboldt", "Russia", "87.16", "10", "9" ], [ "13", "Jacqueline Voll", "Netherlands", "74.90", "14", "13" ], [ "14", "Anna Jurkiewicz", "Poland", "74.58", "13", "14" ], [ "WD", "Maylin Hausch", "Germany", "", "", "" ], [ "WD", "Lilia Biktagirova", "Russia", "", "", "" ], [ "WD", "Alisa Kireeva", "Ukraine", "", "", "" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 2006 Coupe Internationale de Nice (English: 2006 International Cup of Nice) was the Coupe Internationale de Nice competition for the 2006-07 figure skating season. It was the 11th edition of the Coupe Internationale de Nice to be held. The Coupe Internationale de Nice is an annual international figure skating competition held in Nice, France. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and pair skating on the levels of Senior, Junior, and Novice. The 2006 Coupe Internationale de Nice was held between November 9 and 12, 2006.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Senior-level results -- Senior ladies", "title": "2006 Coupe Internationale de Nice", "uid": "2006_Coupe_Internationale_de_Nice_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_Coupe_Internationale_de_Nice" }
1,724
1725
List_of_films_about_bands_0
[ [ "Year", "Film/Title", "Director ( s )", "Cast/Leads", "Notes" ], [ "1954", "The Glenn Miller Story", "Anthony Mann", "James Stewart June Allyson", "The film tells the story of the Glenn Miller Orchestra and big band leader Glenn Miller ( 1904-1944 ) ( James Stewart ) from his early days in the music business in 1929 through to his 1944 death when the airplane he was flying in was lost over the English Channel during World War II . The film features ten songs performed by the Glenn Miller Orchestra" ], [ "1956", "Rock Around the Clock", "Fred F. Sears", "Bill Haley and his Comets Alan Freed", "Considered the first true rock and roll feature film , it is a highly fictionalized account of the origins of rock . The film features several major acts of the day , including The Platters , but largely focuses on the success of Haley and his band , whose single Rock Around the Clock is widely considered to be the first rock and roll hit" ], [ "1964", "A Hard Day 's Night", "Richard Lester", "The Beatles", "Several days in the lives of the Beatles" ], [ "1966", "Charlie Is My Darling", "Peter Whitehead", "The Rolling Stones", "The first documentary film about the Rolling Stones , shot during the band 's tour of Ireland in September 1965 . A restored edition , with additional material , was released theatrically in 2012" ], [ "1970", "Let It Be", "Neil Aspinall", "The Beatles Billy Preston", "A documentary about The Beatles rehearsing and recording songs for the album Let It Be , it was filmed in January 1969 . The film features an unannounced rooftop concert by the group , their last performance in public . Released just after the album , it was the final original Beatles release" ], [ "1970", "Gim me Shelter", "Albert and David Maysles Charlotte Zwerin", "The Rolling Stones", "A documentary film chronicling the last weeks of The Rolling Stones ' 1969 US tour which culminated in the disastrous Altamont Free Concert . The film is named after Gim me Shelter , the lead track from the group 's 1969 album Let It Bleed" ], [ "1975", "Flame", "Richard Loncraine", "Slade Tom Conti Alan Lake", "Film starring the British rock band Slade . The film charts the history of Flame , a fictitious group in the late 1960s who are picked up by a marketing company and taken to the top , only to break up at their zenith . Described as the Citizen Kane of rock musicals by BBC film critic Mark Kermode , the film went on to achieve critical acclaim years after the mixed feelings on its original release" ], [ "1977", "ABBA : The Movie", "Lasse Hallström", "ABBA Robert Hughes", "Largely filmed during ABBA 's 1977 Australian tour , the film is a record of a pop band at the peak of its global chart success . It was the first English-language feature directed by future Academy Award nominee Hallström , who also directed most of the band 's pioneering music videos . He is also credited as writer , though he has admitted that much of the story , involving a radio reporter trying to land an interview with the band , was mostly improvised on the fly . The film features 19 live performances including one song , Get on the Carousel , that has never been officially released on any other medium" ], [ "1978", "Kiss Meets the Phantom of the Park", "Gordon Hessler", "Kiss", "In this made-for-television film , Kiss use their superpowers to battle an evil inventor and to save a California amusement park from destruction" ], [ "1978", "The Last Waltz", "Martin Scorsese", "The Band", "Arranged by travel-weary Robbie Robertson as a farewell concert for The Band . Containing comments by the bandmembers and a host of notable guest performers associated with The Band , it contains concert footage and interviews taped both upon the occasion and afterward . The film drew controversy in part , as the other bandmates did not share Robertson 's eagerness to part . Other issues , according to Levon Helm , involved the lack of visibility of The Band itself , drug use both on set , ( including by Scorsese and musicians ostensibly affecting the quality of the film ) , and Helm felt the film portrayed Robertson the key player in a star role , minimizing what appeared to him as the importance of the other bandmates and their contributions" ], [ "1978", "Sgt . Pepper 's Lonely Hearts Club Band", "Michael Schultz", "Peter Frampton The Bee Gees", "The film uses the music of The Beatles to tell the story of a band as they wrangle with the music industry and battle evil forces bent on stealing their instruments and corrupting their home town of Heartland" ], [ "1979", "Rock ' n ' Roll High School", "Allan Arkush", "Ramones P.J . Soles", "A musical comedy about a high school girl and her quest to meet her rock heroes , The Ramones" ], [ "1980", "The Blues Brothers", "John Landis", "John Belushi Dan Aykroyd", "Paroled convict Jake and his brother Elwood , set out on a mission from God to save the Catholic orphanage in which they were raised from foreclosure . To do so , they must reunite their R & B band and organize a performance to earn $ 5,000 needed to pay the orphanage 's property tax bill" ], [ "1982", "Ladies and Gentlemen , The Fabulous Stains", "Lou Adler", "Diane Lane Laura Dern", "A cult classic starring about three teenage girls who form a punk rock band" ], [ "1983", "Eddie and the Cruisers", "Martin Davidson", "Ellen Barkin Tom Berenger", "A Jersey band in the 1960s rises to fame but right before their second album comes out , the master recordings and the lead singer Eddie , mysteriously disappear . Twenty years later a reporter investigates" ], [ "1984", "Purple Rain", "Albert Magnoli", "Prince Apollonia Kotero", "A singer with a trouble past , the Kid ( Prince ) is a Minneapolis musician on the rise with his band , The Revolution . While trying to avoid making the same mistakes as his father , the Kid navigates the music scene and a rocky relationship with a captivating singer . But a rival musician , Morris ( Morris Day ) , looks to steal the Kid 's spotlight -- and his girl" ], [ "1984", "This Is Spinal Tap", "Rob Reiner", "Michael McKean Christopher Guest", "A famous mockumentary about a heavy metal band trying to make a comeback while being followed around by a filmmaker" ], [ "1986", "Sid and Nancy", "Alex Cox", "Gary Oldman Chloe Webb", "( Also known as Sid and Nancy : Love Kills ) A 1986 British film which portrays the life of Sid Vicious , bassist of the seminal punk rock band the Sex Pistols . It stars Oldman as Vicious and Webb as his girlfriend , Nancy Spungen . The movie chronicles the lives of the couple and their early deaths" ], [ "1987", "La Bamba", "Luis Valdez", "Lou Diamond Phillips Esai Morales Rosanna DeSoto", "Biographical story of the rise from nowhere of early rock and roll singer Ritchie Valens who died at age 17 in a plane crash with Buddy Holly and the Big Bopper" ], [ "1987", "Rock ' n ' Roll Nightmare", "John Fasano", "Jon Mikl Thor", "The rock band Triton travels to a remote farmhouse to rehearse only to be attacked by an evil presence there" ] ]
{ "intro": "Popular music and motion pictures have been linked since the dawn of the talkies and 1927's The Jazz Singer. While numerous films in the intervening years have featured popular music in their sound tracks, and many have profiled solo artists, the list of films about popular bands is much shorter. The following are significant theatrical films that tell the stories of real or imagined musical groups.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "List of motion pictures about music bands ( real or fictional )", "title": "List of films about bands", "uid": "List_of_films_about_bands_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_films_about_bands" }
1,725
1726
Urvashi_(actress)_7
[ [ "Year", "Program", "Channel", "Role", "Language" ], [ "", "Panchami", "Sun TV", "", "Tamil" ], [ "", "Asianet Channel", "Asianet", "Promo anchor", "Malayalam" ], [ "2000", "Dr. Vidya", "DD Podhigai", "Actress", "Tamil" ], [ "2002", "Take It Easy Urvashi", "Raj TV", "Anchor", "Tamil" ], [ "2003", "Bhagyalakshmi", "Kairali TV", "Anchor", "Malayalam" ], [ "2006-2007", "Swarnamazha", "Surya TV", "Anchor", "Malayalam" ], [ "2007", "Thanga Vettai", "Sun TV", "Anchor", "Tamil" ], [ "2008-2011", "Rani Maharani", "Surya TV", "Anchor", "Malayalam" ], [ "2011", "Bhima Jewels Comedy Festival", "Mazhavil Manorama", "Judge", "Malayalam" ], [ "2012", "Mummy & Me", "Surya TV", "Anchor", "Malayalam" ], [ "2012-2013", "Comedy Festival 2", "Mazhavil Manorama", "Judge", "Malayalam" ], [ "2013,2019", "Comedy Stars", "Asianet", "Judge", "Malayalam" ], [ "2013-2014", "Crazy Couple", "Zee Kannada", "Anchor", "Kannada" ], [ "2014", "Star Challenge", "Surya TV", "Participant", "Malayalam" ], [ "2014", "Back to School", "Star Vijay", "Participant", "Tamil" ], [ "2015-2017", "Jeevitham Sakshi", "Kairali TV", "Anchor", "Malayalam" ], [ "2015- 2016", "Bhairavi Aavigalukku Priyamanaval", "Sun TV", "Komalla", "Tamil" ], [ "2016,2018", "Comedy Utsavam", "Flowers TV", "Judge", "Malayalam" ], [ "2017", "Komady Circus", "Mazhavil Manorama", "Judge", "Malayalam" ], [ "2017", "Laughing Villa Season 2", "Surya TV", "Judge", "Malayalam" ] ]
{ "intro": "Kavitha Ranjini, known by the stage name Urvashi (born 25 January 1970), is an Indian film actress , Television host and producer. Urvashi was a prominent lead actress of the 1980s and 1990s, primarily in Malayalam and Tamil films. She has written the films Ulsavamelam and Pidakkozhi Koovunna Noottandu, the latter was also produced by her. She won the National Film Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance in Achuvinte Amma (2005). She has won the Kerala State Film Award for Best Actress a record five times, which includes three consecutive wins from 1989 to 1991. She has also won two Tamil Nadu State Film Awards.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Television career", "title": "Urvashi (actress)", "uid": "Urvashi_(actress)_7", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urvashi_(actress)" }
1,726
1727
2014_Collingwood_Football_Club_season_2
[ [ "No", "Name", "Position", "via" ], [ "4", "Alan Didak", "Forward / Midfielder", "delisted" ], [ "18", "Darren Jolly", "Ruckman", "delisted" ], [ "2", "Jordan Russell", "Defender", "delisted" ], [ "7", "Andrew Krakouer", "Forward", "delisted" ], [ "30", "Ben Richmond", "Forward / Defender", "delisted" ], [ "47", "Michael Hartley", "Defender", "delisted" ], [ "13", "Dale Thomas", "Midfielder / Forward", "restricted free agent" ], [ "39", "Heath Shaw", "Defender", "trade" ], [ "33", "Jackson Paine", "Forward", "trade" ], [ "44", "Corey Gault", "Defender", "delisted" ], [ "5", "Nick Maxwell", "Defender", "retired" ], [ "25", "Ben Hudson", "Ruckman", "retired" ], [ "21", "Quinten Lynch", "Utility", "retired" ], [ "12", "Luke Ball", "Midfielder", "retired" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 2014 Collingwood Football Club season was the club's 118th season of senior competition in the Australian Football League (AFL). The club also fielded its reserves team in the VFL.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Squad -- Squad changes", "title": "2014 Collingwood Football Club season", "uid": "2014_Collingwood_Football_Club_season_2", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2014_Collingwood_Football_Club_season" }
1,727
1728
Southern_United_States_4
[ [ "Rank", "Combined Statistical Area", "State ( s )", "Population ( 2017 est . )" ], [ "1", "Washington-Baltimore-Arlington", "DC - MD - VA - WV - PA", "9,764,315" ], [ "2", "Dallas-Fort Worth", "TX", "7,846,293" ], [ "3", "Houston-The Woodlands-Baytown", "TX", "7,093,190" ], [ "4", "Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Port St. Lucie", "FL", "6,828,241" ], [ "5", "Atlanta-Athens-Clarke County-Sandy Springs", "GA", "6,555,956" ], [ "6", "Orlando-Deltona-Daytona Beach", "FL", "3,284,198" ], [ "7", "Charlotte-Concord", "NC - SC", "2,684,121" ], [ "8", "Cincinnati-Wilmington-Maysville", "OH - KY - IN", "2,238,265" ], [ "9", "Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill", "NC", "2,199,459" ], [ "10", "Nashville-Davidson-Murfreesboro", "TN", "2,027,489" ], [ "11", "Virginia Beach-Norfolk", "VA - NC", "1,829,195" ], [ "12", "Greensboro-Winston-Salem-High Point", "NC", "1,663,532" ], [ "13", "Jacksonville-St. Marys-Palatka", "FL - GA", "1,631,488" ], [ "14", "Louisville/Jefferson County-Elizabethtown-Madison", "KY - IN", "1,522,112" ], [ "15", "New Orleans-Metairie-Hammond", "LA - MS", "1,510,162" ], [ "16", "Oklahoma City-Shawnee", "OK", "1,455,935" ], [ "17", "Greenville-Spartanburg-Anderson", "SC", "1,460,036" ], [ "18", "Memphis-Forrest City", "TN - MS - AR", "1,374,190" ], [ "19", "Birmingham-Hoover-Talladega", "AL", "1,364,062" ], [ "20", "Tulsa-Muskogee-Bartlesville", "OK", "1,160,612" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Southern United States, also known as the American South or simply the South, is a geographic and cultural region of the United States. It is located between the Atlantic Ocean and the Western United States, with the Midwestern United States and Northeastern United States to its north and the Gulf of Mexico and Mexico to its south. The South does not fully match the geographic south of the United States but is commonly defined as including the states that fought for the Confederate States of America in the American Civil War. The Deep South is fully located in the southeastern corner. California, Arizona and New Mexico, which are geographically in the southern part of the country, are rarely considered part, while West Virginia, which separated from Virginia in 1863, commonly is. Some scholars have proposed definitions of the South that do not coincide neatly with state boundaries. While the states of Delaware and Maryland, as well as the District of Columbia, permitted slavery prior to and during the Civil War, they remained with the Union. Since the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s, they became more culturally, economically, and politically aligned with the industrial Northern states, and are often identified as part of the Mid-Atlantic or Northeast by many residents, businesses, public institutions, and private organizations; however, the United States Census Bureau continues to define them as in the South with regard to census regions. Usually, the South is defined as including the southeastern and south-central United States. The region is known for its culture and history, having developed its own customs, musical styles, and cuisines, which have distinguished it in some ways from the rest of the United States. The Southern ethnic heritage is diverse and includes strong European (mostly English, Italian, Scottish, Scotch-Irish, Irish, German, French, Portuguese and Spanish American), African and some Native American components. Some other aspects of the historical and cultural development of the South have been influenced by the institution of slave labor on plantations in the Deep South to an extent seen nowhere else in the United States; the presence of a large proportion of African Americans in the population; support for the doctrine of states' rights, and the legacy of racism magnified by the Civil War and Reconstruction Era, as seen in thousands of lynchings (mostly from 1880 to 1930), the segregated system of separate schools and public facilities known as Jim Crow laws, that lasted until the 1960s, and the widespread use of poll taxes and other methods to frequently deny black people of the right to vote or hold office until the 1960s.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Major combined statistical areas", "title": "Southern United States", "uid": "Southern_United_States_4", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_United_States" }
1,728
1729
Ethnic_groups_in_Indonesia_1
[ [ "Ethnic group", "Population ( million )", "Percentage", "Main regions" ], [ "Javanese", "92.24", "42.00", "Central Java , East Java , Yogyakarta , Jakarta , North Sumatra , South Sumatra , Bengkulu , Lampung" ], [ "Sundanese", "30.978", "15.41", "West Java , Banten , Jakarta , Lampung" ], [ "Malay", "6.946", "3.45", "Aceh , North Sumatra , Riau , Riau Islands , Jambi , South Sumatra , Bangka-Belitung Islands , West Kalimantan" ], [ "Madurese", "6.772", "3.37", "Madura island , East Java" ], [ "Batak", "6.076", "3.02", "North Sumatra , Aceh , West Sumatra , Riau , Riau Islands , Jakarta" ], [ "Minangkabau", "5.475", "2.72", "West Sumatra , Riau , Riau Islands , Jakarta" ], [ "Betawi", "5.042", "2.51", "Jakarta , Banten , West Java" ], [ "Bugis", "5.010", "2.49", "South Sulawesi , South East Sulawesi , Central Sulawesi , East Kalimantan" ], [ "Acehnese", "4.419", "2.05", "Aceh" ], [ "Bantenese", "4.113", "2.05", "Banten" ], [ "Banjarese", "3.496", "1.74", "South Kalimantan , East Kalimantan" ], [ "Balinese", "3.028", "1.51", "Bali" ], [ "Chinese Indonesian", "2.832", "1.20", "North Sumatra , Riau , Riau Islands , West Kalimantan , Jakarta , Bangka-Belitung Islands" ], [ "Sasak", "2.611", "1.17", "West Nusa Tenggara" ], [ "Makassarese", "1.982", "0.99", "South Sulawesi" ], [ "Minahasan", "1.900", "0.96", "North Sulawesi , Gorontalo" ], [ "Cirebonese", "1.890", "0.94", "West Java , Central Java" ] ]
{ "intro": "There are 633 recognised ethnic groups in Indonesia. The vast majority of those belong to the Austronesian peoples. Based on ethnic classification, the largest ethnic group in Indonesia is the Javanese who make up about 40% of the total population. The Javanese are concentrated on the island of Java but millions have migrated to other islands throughout the archipelago because of the transmigration program. The Sundanese, Batak, Madurese, Minangkabau, and Buginese are the next largest groups in the country. Many ethnic groups, particularly in Kalimantan and Papua, have only hundreds of members. Most of the local languages belong to the Austronesian language family, although a significant number of people, particularly in eastern Indonesia, speak unrelated Papuan languages. Chinese Indonesians make up a little less than 1% of the total Indonesian population according to the 2000 census. Some of these Indonesians of Chinese descent speak various Chinese dialects, most notably Hokkien and Hakka. The classification of ethnic groups in Indonesia is not rigid and in some cases unclear due to migrations, cultural and linguistic influences; for example some may consider Bantenese and Cirebonese to be members of the Javanese people; however, some others argue that they are different ethnic groups altogether since they have their own distinct dialects. This is the same case with Baduy people that share many cultural similarities with the Sundanese people. An example of hybrid ethnicity is the Betawi people, descended not only from marriages between different peoples in Indonesia but also with Arab, Chinese and Indian migrants since the era of colonial Batavia (Jakarta).", "section_text": "Number and percentage of population of ethnic groups with more than a million members according to the 2010 census . [ 3 ] [ a ] Ethnic group Population ( millions ) Percentage Main regions Javanese 94.843 40.06 Bengkulu , East Java , East Kalimantan , Central Java , Jambi , Lampung , North Sumatra , Riau , South Sumatra , Yogyakarta Sundanese 36.705 15.51 Banten , West Java Malay 8.754 3.7 Bangka-Belitung Islands , Jambi , Riau , Riau Islands , South Sumatra , West Kalimantan Batak 8.467 3.58 North Sumatra , Riau , Riau Islands , Jakarta Madurese 7.179 3.03 East Java Betawi 6.808 2.88 Jakarta Minangkabau 6.463 2.73 Riau , West Sumatra Buginese 6.415 2.71 Central Sulawesi , East Kalimantan , North Kalimantan , South Sulawesi , Southeast Sulawesi , West Sulawesi Bantenese 4.642 1.96 Banten Banjarese 4.127 1.74 South Kalimantan , Central Kalimantan , East Kalimantan Balinese 3.925 1.66 Bali Acehnese 3.404 1.44 Aceh Dayak 3.220 1.36 Central Kalimantan , East Kalimantan , North Kalimantan , West Kalimantan Sasak 3.175 1.34 West Nusa Tenggara Chinese Indonesian 2.833 1.2 Bangka-Belitung Islands , North Sumatra , Jakarta , Riau , Riau Islands , West Kalimantan , North Coast of Central Java and East Java . Makassarese 2.673 1.13 South Sulawesi Cirebonese 1.878 0.79 West Java Lampung 1.376 0.58 Lampung Palembang 1.252 0.53 South Sumatra Gorontalo 1.252 0.53 Gorontalo Minahasan 1.240 0.52 North Sulawesi Nias 1.042 0.44 North Sumatra", "section_title": "Statistics -- 2010", "title": "Ethnic groups in Indonesia", "uid": "Ethnic_groups_in_Indonesia_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethnic_groups_in_Indonesia" }
1,729
1730
Telephone_numbers_in_Asia_0
[ [ "Country name", "Region", "Country Code", "International Call Prefix", "Main article" ], [ "Afghanistan", "9", "+93", "00", "Telephone numbers in Afghanistan" ], [ "Armenia", "3", "+374", "00", "Telephone numbers in Armenia" ], [ "Azerbaijan", "9", "+994", "00", "Telephone numbers in Azerbaijan" ], [ "Bahrain", "9", "+973", "00", "Telephone numbers in Bahrain" ], [ "Bangladesh", "8", "+880", "00", "Telephone numbers in Bangladesh" ], [ "Bhutan", "9", "+975", "00", "Telephone numbers in Bhutan" ], [ "British Indian Ocean Territory", "2", "+246", "00", "Telephone numbers in the British Indian Ocean Territory" ], [ "Brunei", "6", "+673", "00", "Telephone numbers in Brunei" ], [ "Cambodia", "8", "+855", "00", "Telephone numbers in Cambodia" ], [ "China", "8", "+86", "00", "Telephone numbers in China" ], [ "Cyprus", "3", "+357", "00", "Telephone numbers in Cyprus" ], [ "Egypt", "2", "+20", "00", "Telephone numbers in Egypt" ], [ "Georgia", "9", "+995", "00", "Telephone numbers in Georgia" ], [ "Hong Kong", "8", "+852", "001", "Telephone numbers in Hong Kong" ], [ "India", "9", "+91", "00", "Telephone numbers in India" ], [ "Indonesia", "6", "+62", "00x , 01xxx ( VoIP )", "Telephone numbers in Indonesia" ], [ "Iran", "9", "+98", "00", "Telephone numbers in Iran" ], [ "Iraq", "9", "+964", "00", "Telephone numbers in Iraq" ], [ "Israel", "9", "+972", "00 , 01x", "Telephone numbers in Israel" ], [ "Japan", "8", "+81", "010", "Telephone numbers in Japan" ] ]
{ "intro": "Telephone numbers in Asia have the most possible prefixes of any continent on Earth: 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9. Below is a list of country calling codes for various states and territories in Asia.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "States and territories with country calling codes", "title": "Telephone numbers in Asia", "uid": "Telephone_numbers_in_Asia_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telephone_numbers_in_Asia" }
1,730
1731
National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Alabama_5
[ [ "", "Name on the Register", "Date listed", "Location", "City or town" ], [ "1", "Bethlehem Baptist Church", "December 7 , 2017 ( # 100001875 )", "Southern corner of River and White 's Mill Rds . 32°47′19″N 85°10′35″W / 32.788611°N 85.176389°W / 32.788611 ; -85.176389 ( Bethlehem Baptist Church )", "Valley" ], [ "2", "Chambers County Courthouse Square Historic District", "March 27 , 1980 ( # 80000682 )", "Roughly bounded by Alabama and 2nd Aves . and 1st St. 32°53′58″N 85°24′03″W / 32.899444°N 85.400833°W / 32.899444 ; -85.400833 ( Chambers County Courthouse Square Historic District )", "La Fayette" ], [ "3", "County Line Baptist Church", "August 19 , 1982 ( # 82002001 )", "East of Dudleyville 32°55′04″N 85°35′23″W / 32.917778°N 85.589722°W / 32.917778 ; -85.589722 ( County Line Baptist Church )", "Dudleyville" ], [ "4", "Fairfax Historic District", "September 24 , 1999 ( # 99001177 )", "Roughly bounded by River Rd. , Spring St. , Lanier St. , Denson St. , Combs St. , and Cussetta Rd . 32°47′35″N 85°10′51″W / 32.793056°N 85.180833°W / 32.793056 ; -85.180833 ( Fairfax Historic District )", "Valley" ], [ "5", "Langdale Historic District", "November 12 , 1999 ( # 99001299 )", "Roughly bounded by 65th St. , 20th Ave. , 61st , 58th , and 55th Sts. , 16th Ave. , and the Chattahoochee River 32°48′43″N 85°10′13″W / 32.811944°N 85.170278°W / 32.811944 ; -85.170278 ( Langdale Historic District )", "Valley" ], [ "6", "New Hope Rosenwald School", "November 29 , 2001 ( # 01001297 )", "2.25 miles southeast of U.S. Route 431 on County Road 267 32°56′36″N 85°17′08″W / 32.943333°N 85.285556°W / 32.943333 ; -85.285556 ( New Hope Rosenwald School )", "Fredonia" ], [ "7", "Ernest McCarty Oliver House", "January 21 , 1974 ( # 74000402 )", "LaFayette St. , N./ U.S. Route 431 32°54′24″N 85°24′09″W / 32.906580°N 85.402389°W / 32.906580 ; -85.402389 ( Ernest McCarty Oliver House )", "La Fayette" ], [ "8", "Riverview Historic District", "November 12 , 1999 ( # 99001300 )", "Roughly bounded by School and G.I . Sts. , the Chattahoochee River , and along California St. 32°47′14″N 85°08′45″W / 32.787222°N 85.145833°W / 32.787222 ; -85.145833 ( Riverview Historic District )", "River View" ], [ "9", "Shawmut Historic District", "September 24 , 1999 ( # 99001176 )", "Roughly bounded by 25th Boulevard , 29th Boulevard , 20th Ave. , 35th St. , and 38th Boulevard 32°50′25″N 85°11′00″W / 32.840278°N 85.183333°W / 32.840278 ; -85.183333 ( Shawmut Historic District )", "Valley" ], [ "10", "Vines Funeral Home and Ambulance Service", "October 15 , 2008 ( # 08000434 )", "211 B St. SW. 32°53′30″N 85°24′14″W / 32.891667°N 85.403889°W / 32.891667 ; -85.403889 ( Vines Funeral Home and Ambulance Service )", "La Fayette" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of buildings, sites, districts, and objects listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Alabama.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Chambers County", "title": "National Register of Historic Places listings in Alabama", "uid": "National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Alabama_5", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Alabama" }
1,731
1732
Lee_Geung-young_0
[ [ "Year", "English title", "Korean title", "Role" ], [ "2018", "The Cyclist King", "자전차왕 엄복동", "" ], [ "2018", "Monstrum", "물괴", "Sim Woon" ], [ "2018", "Snatch Up", "머니백", "Killer Park" ], [ "2018", "Gate", "게이트", "Jang-choon" ], [ "2017", "Steel Rain", "강철비", "Kim Kyung-young" ], [ "2017", "Along With the Gods : The Two Worlds", "신과 함께", "Great King of the Senses" ], [ "2017", "Man of Will", "대장 김창수", "Lee Jae-jeong" ], [ "2017", "The Battleship Island", "군함도", "Yoon Hak-cheol" ], [ "2017", "Real", "리얼", "Noh Yeom" ], [ "2017", "The Merciless", "불한당 : 나쁜 놈들의 세상", "Byung-chul" ], [ "2017", "The Mayor", "특별시민", "Jeong Chi-in" ], [ "2017", "The Prison", "프리즌", "General manager Bae" ], [ "2017", "New Trial", "재심", "Attorney" ], [ "2017", "I 'm Doing Fine in Middle School", "중2라도 괜찮아", "Taoist Baek-woon" ], [ "2016", "Misbehavior", "여교사", "Board Chairman" ], [ "2016", "Pandora", "판도라", "Prime Minister" ], [ "2015", "Inside Men", "내부자들", "Jang Pil-woo" ], [ "2015", "The Magician", "조선마술사", "" ], [ "2015", "The Long Way Home", "서부전선", "Lieutenant Yoo" ], [ "2015", "Untouchable Lawmen", "치외법권", "Chief detective Wang" ] ]
{ "intro": "Lee Geung-young (born December 12, 1960) is a South Korean actor. He graduated from the Department of Drama in Seoul. He debuted in 1977 and after completing his mandatory military service, he debuted in 1982 as the 10th public relations actor for the Korea Broadcasting Corporation (KBS), became a voice actor for a year, and re-entered his KBS 18th career in 1983. In 1983, he debuted as an actor in the KBS drama Ordinary People. He also wrote and directed the films The Gate of Destiny (1996) and The Beauty in Dream (2002). In 2002, Lee has been blacklisted by MBC since he was arrested in 2001 for having sex with a minor. Since then, he has not appeared in a television drama on MBC or other major networks.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Filmography -- Film", "title": "Lee Geung-young", "uid": "Lee_Geung-young_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee_Geung-young" }
1,732
1733
Flower-class_corvette_13
[ [ "Ship", "Flag", "Date", "Fate" ], [ "Alysse", "Free French Naval Forces", "9 February 1942", "Torpedoed and sunk by U-654 while escorting Convoy ON-60 about 420 nautical miles ( 780 km ) E of Cape Race at 46°00′N 44°00′W / 46.000°N 44.000°W / 46.000 ; -44.000 36 crew were killed" ], [ "La Bastiaise", "Free French Naval Forces", "22 June 1940", "Mined during sea trial off Hartlepool on day of her commissioning" ], [ "Mimosa", "Free French Naval Forces", "9 June 1942", "Torpedoed and sunk by U-124 while escorting Convoy ONS 100 at 52°12′N 32°37′W / 52.200°N 32.617°W / 52.200 ; -32.617 58 French crew and 6 British crew were killed ; the French crew being largely from Saint Pierre and Miquelon . 4 survivors rescued by HMCS Assiniboine" ], [ "Alberni", "Royal Canadian Navy", "21 August 1944", "Torpedoed and sunk by U-480 while escorting a convoy in the English Channel S of St. Catherine 's Point at 50°18′N 00°51′W / 50.300°N 0.850°W / 50.300 ; -0.850 59 crew killed and 31 rescued by RN motor torpedo boats" ], [ "Charlottetown", "Royal Canadian Navy", "11 September 1942", "Torpedoed and sunk by U-517 while escorting Convoy SQ-30 in the Saint Lawrence River N of Cap-Chat at 49°10′N 66°50′W / 49.167°N 66.833°W / 49.167 ; -66.833 9 crew killed" ], [ "Levis", "Royal Canadian Navy", "19 September 1941", "Torpedoed and sunk by U-74 while escorting Convoy SC 44 E of Cape Farewell at 60°07′N 38°37′W / 60.117°N 38.617°W / 60.117 ; -38.617 18 crew killed and 91 rescued" ], [ "Louisburg", "Royal Canadian Navy", "6 February 1943", "Bombed and torpedoed by Luftwaffe aircraft while escorting Convoy KMF-8 off Cape Tenes in Mediterranean Sea at 36°15′N 00°15′E / 36.250°N 0.250°E / 36.250 ; 0.250 59 crew killed , 50 rescued" ], [ "Regina", "Royal Canadian Navy", "8 August 1944", "Torpedoed and sunk by U-667 off Trevose Head at 50°42′N 05°03′W / 50.700°N 5.050°W / 50.700 ; -5.050 30 crew were killed" ], [ "Shawinigan", "Royal Canadian Navy", "25 November 1944", "Torpedoed and sunk by U-1228 in the Cabot Strait at 47°34′N 59°11′W / 47.567°N 59.183°W / 47.567 ; -59.183 . All hands were lost" ], [ "Spikenard", "Royal Canadian Navy", "11 February 1942", "Torpedoed and sunk by U-136 while escorting Convoy SC 67 W of Malin Head at 56°10′N 21°07′W / 56.167°N 21.117°W / 56.167 ; -21.117 . 8 crew survived" ], [ "Weyburn", "Royal Canadian Navy", "22 February 1943", "Mined on 22 February 1943 off Cape Espartel at 36°46′N 06°02′W / 36.767°N 6.033°W / 36.767 ; -6.033 . 7 crew were killed" ], [ "Windflower", "Royal Canadian Navy", "7 December 1941", "Rammed and sunk while escorting Convoy SC 58 after colliding with freighter Zypenberg in dense fog on the Grand Banks at 46°19′N 49°30′W / 46.317°N 49.500°W / 46.317 ; -49.500 23 crew were killed" ], [ "Abelia", "Royal Navy", "9 January 1944", "Torpedoed and badly damaged by a U-boat" ], [ "Arbutus", "Royal Navy", "5 February 1942", "Torpedoed and sunk by U-136 W of Erris Head , Ireland at 55°05′N 18°43′W / 55.083°N 18.717°W / 55.083 ; -18.717" ], [ "Asphodel", "Royal Navy", "10 March 1944", "Torpedoed and sunk by U-575 while escorting Convoy SL-150 and Convoy MKS-41 at 45°24′N 18°09′W / 45.400°N 18.150°W / 45.400 ; -18.150 . 92 crew were killed , 5 survivors rescued by HMS Clover" ], [ "Auricula", "Royal Navy", "6 May 1942", "Mined in Courrier Bay , Madagascar at 12°12′S 49°19′E / 12.200°S 49.317°E / -12.200 ; 49.317 . Foundered the next day while under tow" ], [ "Bluebell", "Royal Navy", "17 February 1945", "Torpedoed and sunk by U-711 off the Kola Inlet at 69°36′N 35°29′E / 69.600°N 35.483°E / 69.600 ; 35.483" ], [ "Bryony", "Royal Navy", "15 April 1941", "Bombed and sunk during sea trials by the Luftwaffe . Raised and repaired . Transferred to the Royal Norwegian Navy in 1947 as HNoMS Polarfront" ], [ "Erica", "Royal Navy", "9 February 1943", "Mined and sunk while escorting a convoy in the Mediterranean Sea off Derna , Libya at 32°48′N 21°10′E / 32.800°N 21.167°E / 32.800 ; 21.167 . Entire crew rescued by HMSAS Southern Maid" ], [ "Fleur de Lys", "Royal Navy", "14 October 1941", "Torpedoed and sunk by U-206 west of Gibraltar at 36°00′N 06°30′W / 36.000°N 6.500°W / 36.000 ; -6.500 . There were 3 survivors" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Flower-class corvette (also referred to as the Gladiolus class after the lead ship) was a British class of 294 corvettes used during World War II, specifically with the Allied navies as anti-submarine convoy escorts during the Battle of the Atlantic. Royal Navy ships of this class were named after flowers, hence the name of the class. The majority served during World War II with the Royal Navy (RN) and Royal Canadian Navy (RCN). Several ships built largely in Canada were transferred from the RN to the United States Navy (USN) under the lend-lease programme, seeing service in both navies. Some corvettes transferred to the USN were manned by the US Coast Guard. The vessels serving with the US Navy were known as Temptress and Action-class patrol gunboats. Other Flower-class corvettes served with the Free French Naval Forces, the Royal Netherlands Navy, the Royal Norwegian Navy, the Royal Indian Navy, the Royal Hellenic Navy, the Royal New Zealand Navy, the Royal Yugoslav Navy, and, immediately post-war, the South African Navy. After World War II many surplus Flower-class vessels saw worldwide use in other navies, as well as civilian use. HMCS Sackville is the only member of the class to be preserved as a museum ship.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Ships -- Vessels lost in action", "title": "Flower-class corvette", "uid": "Flower-class_corvette_13", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flower-class_corvette" }
1,733
1734
List_of_Montreal_Canadiens_award_winners_2
[ [ "Player", "Position", "Season" ], [ "Chris Chelios", "Defence", "1984-85" ], [ "Kjell Dahlin", "Forward", "1985-86" ], [ "Gilbert Dionne", "Forward", "1991-92" ], [ "Brendan Gallagher", "Forward", "2012-13" ], [ "Mats Naslund", "Forward", "1982-83" ], [ "Steve Penney", "Goaltender", "1984-85" ], [ "Oleg Petrov", "Forward", "1993-94" ], [ "Carey Price", "Goaltender", "2007-08" ], [ "Patrick Roy", "Goaltender", "1985-86" ], [ "Michael Ryder", "Forward", "2003-04" ], [ "P. K. Subban", "Defence", "2010-11" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of Montreal Canadiens award winners.", "section_text": "The NHL All-Rookie Team consists of the top rookies at each position as voted on by the Professional Hockey Writers ' Association .", "section_title": "All-Stars -- NHL All-Rookie Team", "title": "List of Montreal Canadiens award winners", "uid": "List_of_Montreal_Canadiens_award_winners_2", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Montreal_Canadiens_award_winners" }
1,734
1735
List_of_basilicas_in_India_0
[ [ "Sr. No", "City/Municipality", "State", "Basilica", "Date of Designation", "Rite" ], [ "1", "Goa Velha", "Goa", "Basilica of Bom Jesus", "1946-01-11", "Latin" ], [ "2", "Mumbai", "Maharashtra", "Basilica of Our Lady of the Mount , Bandra ( Mount Mary Church )", "1954-10-04", "Latin" ], [ "3", "Chennai", "Tamil Nadu", "San Thome Basilica", "1956-03-16", "Latin" ], [ "4", "Sardhana", "Uttar Pradesh", "Basilica of Our Lady of Graces", "1961-12-13", "Latin" ], [ "5", "Velankanni", "Tamil Nadu", "Basilica of Our Lady of Good Health", "1962-11-03", "Latin" ], [ "6", "Bangalore", "Karnataka", "St Mary 's Basilica , Shivajinagar", "1973-09-02", "Latin" ], [ "7", "Kochi", "Kerala", "St Mary 's Cathedral Basilica , Ernakulam", "1974-03-20", "Syro-Malabar" ], [ "8", "Thoothukudi", "Tamil Nadu", "Our Lady of Snows Shrine Basilica", "1982-07-30", "Latin" ], [ "9", "Kochi", "Kerala", "Santa Cruz Cathedral Basilica", "1984-08-23", "Latin" ], [ "10", "Bandel", "West Bengal", "Basilica Shrine of Our Lady of the Rosary", "1988-11-25", "Latin" ], [ "11", "Thrissur", "Kerala", "Basilica of Our Lady of Dolours", "1992-04-25", "Syro-Malabar" ], [ "12", "Thiruvaiyaru", "Tamil Nadu", "Basilica of Our Lady of Lourdes , Poondi ( Poondi Madha Basilica )", "1999-08-03", "Latin" ], [ "13", "Ranchi", "Jharkhand", "Basilica of the Divine Motherhood of Our Lady , Raja Ulhatu", "2004-11-30", "Latin" ], [ "14", "Kochi", "Kerala", "Basilica of Our Lady of Ransom , Vallarpadam ( National Shrine )", "2004-12-01", "Latin" ], [ "15", "Tiruchirapalli", "Tamil Nadu", "Basilica of the Holy Redeemer", "2006-10-12", "Latin" ], [ "16", "Thiruvananthapuram", "Kerala", "Pro-Cathedral of St Mary Queen of Peace", "2008-10-13", "Syro-Malankara" ], [ "17", "Secunderabad", "Telangana", "Basilica of Our Lady of the Assumption , Secunderabad", "2008-11-07", "Latin" ], [ "18", "Angamaly", "Kerala", "St. George Basilica", "2009-06-24", "Syro-Malabar" ], [ "19", "Alleppey", "Kerala", "St Andrew 's Basilica , Arthunkal", "2010-07-09", "Latin" ], [ "20", "Pondicherry", "Puducherry", "Basilica of the Sacred Heart of Jesus", "2011-06-24", "Latin" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is the complete list of Basilicas in India. Basilica is a title given to some Roman Catholic churches. By canon law no Catholic church can be honoured with the title of basilica unless by apostolic grant or from immemorial custom. The title is bestowed upon large churches that are important as places of pilgrimage or for a specific devotion such as to a saint. Basilicas in this canonical sense are divided into major (greater) and minor basilicas. Today only four, all in Rome, are classified as major basilicas: the major basilicas of St John Lateran, St Peter, St Paul outside the Walls, and St Mary Major. The other canonical basilicas, including all the basilicas in India are minor basilicas. There are 26 basilicas in India, of which 21 are of the Latin rite, 4 are of the Syro-Malabar Catholic Church and 1 is of the Syro-Malankara Catholic Church. The state of Kerala has 9 basilicas, including all 4 non-Roman Catholic basilicas while Tamil Nadu has 6 basilicas and Karnataka has 4. All the remaining basilicas are the only ones in their respective states or union territories. India is the country with the most basilicas in Asia.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "List of basilicas", "title": "List of basilicas in India", "uid": "List_of_basilicas_in_India_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_basilicas_in_India" }
1,735
1736
2009_NCAA_Division_II_National_Football_Championship_playoffs_2
[ [ "Conference", "Total", "Schools", "Super Region" ], [ "Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association", "1", "Fayetteville State", "1" ], [ "Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference", "3", "Grand Valley State Hillsdale Saginaw Valley", "3" ], [ "Great Northwest Athletic Conference", "1", "Central Washington", "4" ], [ "Gulf South Conference", "3", "Arkansas Tech North Alabama West Alabama", "2" ], [ "Independent", "1", "UNC - Pembroke", "2" ], [ "Lone Star Conference", "4", "Abilene Christian Midwestern State Tarleton State Texas A & M - Kingsville", "4" ], [ "Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association", "1", "Northwest Missouri State", "4" ], [ "Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference", "2", "Minnesota-Duluth Minnesota-Mankato", "3" ], [ "Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference", "4", "California ( PA ) East Stroudsburg Edinboro Shippensburg", "1" ], [ "Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference", "1", "Nebraska-Kearney", "3" ], [ "Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference", "1", "Albany State University", "2" ], [ "South Atlantic Conference", "1", "Carson-Newman College", "2" ], [ "West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference", "1", "West Liberty", "1" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 2008 NCAA Division II football season, part of college football in the United States organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association at the Division II level, began on August 29, 2009, and concluded with the NCAA Division II Football Championship on December 12, 2009 at Braly Municipal Stadium in Florence, Alabama, hosted by the University of North Alabama. The Northwest Missouri State Bearcats defeated the Grand Valley State, 30-23, to win their third Division II national title. The Harlon Hill Trophy was awarded to Joique Bell, running back from Wayne State.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Participants -- Bids by conference", "title": "2009 NCAA Division II football season", "uid": "2009_NCAA_Division_II_National_Football_Championship_playoffs_2", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_NCAA_Division_II_football_season" }
1,736
1737
Azerbaijan_(Iran)_4
[ [ "type", "Number Road", "Distance ( km )", "Distance ( mi )", "City of Origin", "City of Destination" ], [ "Freeways", "Freeway 2 ( Iran )", "600", "370", "Tehran", "Tabriz ( Az )" ], [ "Highways and Roads", "Road 11 ( Iran )", "325", "202", "Jolfa ( Az )", "Baneh" ], [ "Highways and Roads", "Road 12 ( Iran )", "572", "355", "Bazargan ( Az )", "Bileh Savar ( Az )" ], [ "Highways and Roads", "Road 14 ( Iran )", "460", "290", "Razi , Ardabil ( Az )", "Salmas ( Az )" ], [ "Highways and Roads", "Road 16 ( Iran )", "428", "266", "Astara", "Serow ( Az )" ], [ "Highways and Roads", "Road 21 ( Iran )", "978", "608", "Ilam", "Jolfa ( Az )" ], [ "Highways and Roads", "Road 22 ( Iran )", "428", "266", "Sarakhs", "Khalkhal ( Az )" ], [ "Highways and Roads", "Road 23 ( Iran )", "390", "240", "Miandoab ( Az )", "Hamadan" ], [ "Highways and Roads", "Road 24 ( Iran )", "142", "88", "Hashtrud ( Az )", "Bonab ( Az )" ], [ "Highways and Roads", "Road 26 ( Iran )", "151", "94", "Miandoab ( Az )", "Piranshahr ( Az )" ], [ "Highways and Roads", "Road 27 ( Iran )", "245", "152", "Khomarlu ( Az )", "Tabriz ( Az )" ], [ "Highways and Roads", "Road 31 ( Iran )", "539", "335", "Parsabad ( Az )", "Manjil" ], [ "Highways and Roads", "Road 32 ( Iran )", "880", "550", "Tehran", "Bazargan ( Az )" ], [ "Highways and Roads", "Road 33 ( Iran )", "155", "96", "Ardabil ( Az )", "Bileh Savar ( Az )" ], [ "Highways and Roads", "Road 35 ( Iran )", "155", "96", "Zanjan ( Az )", "Khorramabad" ] ]
{ "intro": "The name Azerbaijan itself is derived from Atropates, the Persian Satrap (governor) of Medea in the Achaemenid empire, who ruled a region found in modern Iranian Azerbaijan called Atropatene. Atropates name is believed to be derived from the Old Persian roots meaning protected by fire. The name is also mentioned in the Avestan Frawardin Yasht: âterepâtahe ashaonô fravashîm ýazamaide which translates literally to: We worship the Fravashi of the holy Atare-pata. According to the Encyclopaedia of Islam: In Middle Persian the name of the province was called Āturpātākān, older new-Persian Ādharbādhagān (آذربادگان/آذرآبادگان), Ādharbāyagān, at present Āzerbāydjān/Āzarbāydjān, Greek Atropatíni (᾿Ατροπατήνη), Byzantine Greek Adravigánon (᾿Αδραβιγάνων), Armenian Atrpatakan, Syriac Adhorbāyghān. The name Atropat in Middle Persian was transformed to Adharbad and is connected with Zoroastrianism. A famous Zoroastrian priest by the name Adarbad Mahraspandan is well known for his counsels. Azerbaijan, due to its numerous fire-temples has also been quoted in a variety of historic sources as being the birthplace of the prophet Zoroaster although modern scholars have not yet reached an agreement on the location of his birth. With Qajar Iran being forced to cede to Imperial Russia its Caucasian territories north of the Aras River (that is, modern-day Georgia, Dagestan, Armenia, and the Republic of Azerbaijan) during the course of the 19th century, through the treaties of Gulistan (1813) and Turkmenchay (1828), vast amounts of soil were irrevocably lost. Following the disintegration of the Russian Empire in 1917, as well as the short-lived Transcaucasian Democratic Federative Republic, in 1918, the leading Musavat government adopted the name Azerbaijan for the newly established Azerbaijan Democratic Republic, which was proclaimed on May 27, 1918, for political reasons, even though the name of Azerbaijan had always been used to refer to the adjacent region of contemporary northwestern Iran. Thus, until 1918, when the Musavat regime decided to name the newly independent state Azerbaijan, this designation had been used exclusively to identify the Iranian province of Azerbaijan.", "section_text": "A network of Iranian national roads connects cities and populated areas of Azerbaijan to each other and to other parts of Iran . The only freeway in Azerbaijan is Freeway 2 ( Iran ) which connects Tabriz to Tehran and it is planned to construct rest of the freeway up to Iran-Turkey border at Bazargan . Other roads and highways include Road 32 ( Iran ) which connects Tehran to Tabriz and continues to Iran-Turkey border at Bazargan . Here is a list and map of roads that pass through Azerbaijan .", "section_title": "Transportation -- Roads", "title": "Azerbaijan (Iran)", "uid": "Azerbaijan_(Iran)_4", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azerbaijan_(Iran)" }
1,737
1738
Currency_union_0
[ [ "Currency", "Users", "Est", "Status", "Population" ], [ "CFA franc", "Benin Burkina Faso Côte d'Ivoire Guinea-Bissau Mali Niger Senegal Togo Cameroon Central African Republic Chad Republic of the Congo Equatorial Guinea Gabon", "1945", "Formal , common policy", "151,978,440" ], [ "CFP franc", "French Polynesia New Caledonia Wallis and Futuna", "1945", "Formal , common policy", "552,537" ], [ "Eastern Caribbean dollar", "Anguilla Antigua and Barbuda Dominica Grenada Montserrat Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Lucia Saint Vincent and the Grenadines", "1965", "Formal , common policy de facto EMU for CSME members", "625,000" ], [ "Euro", "Eurozone : Austria Belgium Cyprus Estonia Finland France Germany Greece Ireland Italy Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg Malta Netherlands Portugal Slovakia Slovenia Spain and EU special territories : Akrotiri and Dhekelia ( SBAs ) French Southern and Antarctic Lands Saint Barthélemy Saint Martin Saint Pierre and Miquelon Andorra Kosovo Monaco Montenegro San Marino Vatican City", "1999/2002", "Formal , common policy and EMU for EU members Formal for Monaco and SBAs ( those form a de facto EMU with the Eurozone ) Formal for Andorra since 2011 Informal for Kosovo , Montenegro Formal for the rest", "341,008,867" ], [ "Hong Kong dollar", "Hong Kong Macau", "1977", "Informal ; Decreto-Lei n.º 16/95/M prohibiting the refusal of the pataca by merchants and businesses", "7,775,200" ], [ "Singapore dollar Brunei dollar", "Brunei Singapore", "1967", "Formal ; currencies mutually exchangeable", "5,137,000" ], [ "Australian dollar", "Australia and external territories : Ashmore and Cartier Islands Australian Antarctic Territory Christmas Island Cocos ( Keeling ) Islands Coral Sea Islands Heard Island and McDonald Islands Norfolk Island Kiribati Nauru Tuvalu", "1966", "Informal", "24,557,000" ], [ "Pound sterling", "United Kingdom and overseas territories : British Antarctic Territory British Indian Ocean Territory Falkland Islands Gibraltar Saint Helena , Ascension and Tristan da Cunha South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands and crown dependencies : Guernsey Isle of Man Jersey", "1939", "Semi-formal . UK banknotes are legal tender in locations outside the UK . Local currencies are pegged to the GBP but not necessarily accepted in the UK : Guernsey pound , Manx pound , Jersey pound and Alderney pound , Falkland Islands pound , Gibraltar pound , Saint Helena pound", "62,321,000" ], [ "Indian rupee", "India Bhutan Nepal", "1974", "Informal Nepal minor usage", "1,352,000,000" ], [ "New Zealand dollar", "New Zealand and realm : Cook Islands Niue Pitcairn Islands", "1967", "Informal", "4,411,000" ], [ "Israeli new sheqel", "Israel Palestine", "1927/1986", "Informal", "11,738,000" ], [ "Jordanian dinar", "Jordan Palestine ( West Bank only )", "", "Informal", "8,922,000" ], [ "Russian ruble", "Russia Abkhazia South Ossetia", "2008", "Informal", "142,177,000" ], [ "South African rand", "Lesotho Namibia South Africa Eswatini", "1974", "Formal de facto customs and monetary union for SACU members", "52,924,669" ], [ "Swiss franc", "Liechtenstein Switzerland", "1920", "Informal de facto economic and monetary union - 1924 creation of a customs union , then members of the European Free Trade Association ( a common market ) , and now also part of the European Single Market", "8,547,015" ], [ "Turkish lira", "Turkey Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus", "1983", "Informal", "75,081,100" ], [ "United States dollar", "United States and insular areas : American Samoa Guam United States Minor Outlying Islands Northern Mariana Islands Puerto Rico United States Virgin Islands Ecuador El Salvador Panama Marshall Islands Federated States of Micronesia Palau Timor-Leste Turks and Caicos Islands British Virgin Islands BES islands", "1904 ( Panama only )", "Formal for insular areas and sovereign status with Compact of Free Association , informal for other areas", "339,300,000" ] ]
{ "intro": "A currency union (also known as monetary union) is an intergovernmental agreement that involves two or more states sharing the same currency. These states may not necessarily have any further integration (such as an economic and monetary union, which would have, in addition, a customs union and a single market). There are three types of currency unions:", "section_text": "", "section_title": "List of currency unions -- Existing", "title": "Currency union", "uid": "Currency_union_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Currency_union" }
1,738
1739
List_of_awards_and_nominations_received_by_S._P._Balasubrahmanyam_1
[ [ "Year", "Award", "Honouring body" ], [ "1981", "Kalaimaamani", "Government of Tamil Nadu" ], [ "1999", "Honorary Doctorate", "Potti Sreeramulu Telugu University" ], [ "2008", "Karnataka Rajyothsava Award ( Second Highest Civilian honor of Karnataka )", "Government of Karnataka" ], [ "2009", "Honorary Doctorate", "Sathyabama University , Chennai" ], [ "2009", "Kalaprapoorna ( Honorary doctorate )", "Andhra University" ], [ "2010", "Honorary Doctorate", "JNTU Anantapur" ], [ "2017", "Kala Pradarshini Ghantasala Puraskar", "The Ghantasala family & Kala Pradarshini , Chennai" ], [ "2017", "Honorary Doctorate", "The International Tamil University , United States" ] ]
{ "intro": "S. P. Balasubrahmanyam is an Indian playback singer, who is well known for his work in South Indian films. Making his playback singing debut in 1966 through the Telugu film Sri Sri Sri Maryada Ramanna, he has since recorded over 40,000 songs in multiple languages of India; he holds the record for most songs recorded by a male playback singer. During his career he has won six National Film Awards, six Filmfare Awards South and one Filmfare Award (resulting from four nominations). The first of his National Award came for his work in the 1979 musical film Sankarabharanam. Two year later he entered the Hindi film industry through Ek Duuje Ke Liye (1981), winning the award for the second time. He also received a Filmfare nomination for Best Male Playback Singer for the film. In the subsequent years, he won the National Film Awards for Saagara Sangamam (1983) and Rudraveena (1988) - both Telugu films. In 1989, he received his first Filmfare Award for Maine Pyar Kiya. He won the first of his four South Filmfare Award for Subha Sankalpam, a film which he produced. His first Filmfare Award in the playback singing category came for Sri Ramadasu (2006), followed by Mozhi (2007) and Aaptha Rakshaka (2010). Balasubrahmanyam is also a recipient of numerous state awards; 25 Nandi Awards - Best Male Playback Singer, Best Music Director, Best Male Dubbing Artist and Best Supporting Actor categories. He has also won four Tamil Nadu State Film Awards and three Karnataka State Film Awards.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Other honours", "title": "List of awards and nominations received by S. P. Balasubrahmanyam", "uid": "List_of_awards_and_nominations_received_by_S._P._Balasubrahmanyam_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_awards_and_nominations_received_by_S._P._Balasubrahmanyam" }
1,739
1740
Azerbaijan_(Iran)_0
[ [ "Type", "Name", "City", "Province" ], [ "Operational Headquarter of Army in North-West", "Northwestern Operational Headquarter of Ground Forces of Islamic Republic of Iran Army", "Urmia", "West Azerbaijan" ], [ "Division ( military ) of Army", "64th Infantry Division of Urmia", "Urmia", "West Azerbaijan" ], [ "Division ( military ) of Army", "21st Infantry Division of Azerbaijan", "Tabriz", "East Azerbaijan" ], [ "Logistic Headquarter of Army", "Maraqeh District 4 Headquarter", "Maragheh", "East Azerbaijan" ], [ "Brigade of Army", "40th Infantry Separate Brigade of Sarab", "Sarab & Ardabil", "East Azerbaijan & Ardabil Province" ], [ "Brigade of Army", "41st Infantry Separate Brigade of Qushchi", "Urmia", "West Azerbaijan" ], [ "Separate Brigade of Army", "36th Armored Separate Brigade of Mianeh", "Mianeh", "East Azerbaijan" ], [ "Army Training Centre of Army", "03 Ajabshir Recruit Training Centre", "Ajab Shir", "East Azerbaijan" ], [ "Military airbase of Islamic Republic of Iran Army Aviation", "Havanirooz Tabriz Base", "Tabriz", "East Azerbaijan" ], [ "Military airbase of Air force", "Tactical Air Base 2 , or Paygah Dovvom-e Shekari", "Tabriz", "East Azerbaijan" ], [ "Agency of Navy", "Navy Office of Tabriz", "Tabriz", "East Azerbaijan" ], [ "Provincial Corps", "Ardabil Hazrat Abbas Provincial Corps", "Ardabil", "Ardabil province" ], [ "Provincial Corps", "West Azerbaijan Shohada Provincial Corps", "Urmia", "West Azerbaijan" ], [ "Provincial Corps", "East Azerbaijan Ashura Provincial Corps", "Tabriz", "East Azerbaijan" ], [ "Provincial Corps", "Zanjan Ansar al-Mahdi Provincial Corps", "Zanjan", "Zanjan province" ] ]
{ "intro": "The name Azerbaijan itself is derived from Atropates, the Persian Satrap (governor) of Medea in the Achaemenid empire, who ruled a region found in modern Iranian Azerbaijan called Atropatene. Atropates name is believed to be derived from the Old Persian roots meaning protected by fire. The name is also mentioned in the Avestan Frawardin Yasht: âterepâtahe ashaonô fravashîm ýazamaide which translates literally to: We worship the Fravashi of the holy Atare-pata. According to the Encyclopaedia of Islam: In Middle Persian the name of the province was called Āturpātākān, older new-Persian Ādharbādhagān (آذربادگان/آذرآبادگان), Ādharbāyagān, at present Āzerbāydjān/Āzarbāydjān, Greek Atropatíni (᾿Ατροπατήνη), Byzantine Greek Adravigánon (᾿Αδραβιγάνων), Armenian Atrpatakan, Syriac Adhorbāyghān. The name Atropat in Middle Persian was transformed to Adharbad and is connected with Zoroastrianism. A famous Zoroastrian priest by the name Adarbad Mahraspandan is well known for his counsels. Azerbaijan, due to its numerous fire-temples has also been quoted in a variety of historic sources as being the birthplace of the prophet Zoroaster although modern scholars have not yet reached an agreement on the location of his birth. With Qajar Iran being forced to cede to Imperial Russia its Caucasian territories north of the Aras River (that is, modern-day Georgia, Dagestan, Armenia, and the Republic of Azerbaijan) during the course of the 19th century, through the treaties of Gulistan (1813) and Turkmenchay (1828), vast amounts of soil were irrevocably lost. Following the disintegration of the Russian Empire in 1917, as well as the short-lived Transcaucasian Democratic Federative Republic, in 1918, the leading Musavat government adopted the name Azerbaijan for the newly established Azerbaijan Democratic Republic, which was proclaimed on May 27, 1918, for political reasons, even though the name of Azerbaijan had always been used to refer to the adjacent region of contemporary northwestern Iran. Thus, until 1918, when the Musavat regime decided to name the newly independent state Azerbaijan, this designation had been used exclusively to identify the Iranian province of Azerbaijan.", "section_text": "Several Iranian Army and Sepah divisions and brigades are based in Azerbaijan , including :", "section_title": "Politics -- Military", "title": "Azerbaijan (Iran)", "uid": "Azerbaijan_(Iran)_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azerbaijan_(Iran)" }
1,740
1741
2009_Central_American_and_Caribbean_Championships_in_Athletics_0
[ [ "Name", "Event", "Country", "Record", "Type" ], [ "Yeimer López", "800 metres", "Cuba", "1:45.56 min", "CR" ], [ "Ryan Brathwaite", "110 metres hurdles", "Barbados", "13.43 s", "CR" ], [ "Javier Culson", "400 metres hurdles", "Puerto Rico", "48.51 s", "CR" ], [ "José Alberto Sánchez", "3000 metres steeplechase", "Cuba", "8:30.08 min", "CR" ], [ "Alexis Copello", "Triple jump", "Cuba", "17.33 m", "CR" ], [ "Guillermo Martínez", "Javelin throw", "Cuba", "82.16 m", "CR" ], [ "Leonel Suárez", "Decathlon", "Cuba", "8654 pts", "CR NR" ], [ "Yudileyvis Castillo", "10,000 metres", "Cuba", "33:50.68 min", "CR" ], [ "Tanika Liburd Meritzer Williams Tameka Williams Virgil Hodge", "4×100 metres relay", "Saint Kitts and Nevis", "43.53 s", "NR" ], [ "Kemar Hyman Tyrell Cuffy David Hamil Carlos Morgan", "4×100 metres relay", "Cayman Islands", "39.54 s", "NR" ], [ "Adrian Durant Tabarie Henry David Walters Calvin Dascent", "4×100 metres relay", "United States Virgin Islands", "39.89 s", "NR" ], [ "Yarisley Silva", "Pole vault", "Cuba", "4.40 m", "CR" ], [ "Yargelis Savigne", "Triple jump", "Cuba", "14.97 m", "CR" ], [ "Misleydis González", "Shot put", "Cuba", "19.13 m", "CR" ], [ "Arasay Thondike", "Hammer throw", "Cuba", "71.32 m", "CR" ], [ "Rosa Rodríguez", "Hammer throw", "Venezuela", "69.06 m", "NR" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 2009 Central American and Caribbean Championships (Spanish: XXII Campeonato CAC Atletismo) was the twenty second edition of the tournament and was held between 3 and 7 July in Havana, Cuba.", "section_text": "Cuban Alexis Copello ( above ) took the men 's triple jump gold medal establishing a new championship record . Key", "section_title": "Records", "title": "2009 Central American and Caribbean Championships in Athletics", "uid": "2009_Central_American_and_Caribbean_Championships_in_Athletics_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_Central_American_and_Caribbean_Championships_in_Athletics" }
1,741
1742
List_of_Imperial_German_artillery_regiments_0
[ [ "Regiment", "Raised", "Garrison", "Corps" ], [ "1st Guards Field Artillery", "29 February 1816", "Berlin", "Guards Corps" ], [ "2nd Guards Field Artillery", "24 October 1872", "Potsdam", "Guards Corps" ], [ "3rd Guards Field Artillery", "25 March 1899", "Berlin , Beeskow", "Guards Corps" ], [ "4th Guards Field Artillery", "25 March 1899", "Potsdam", "Guards Corps" ], [ "1st ( 1st Lithuanian ) Field Artillery Prince August of Prussia", "1 October 1772", "Gumbinnen , Insterburg", "I Army Corps" ], [ "2nd ( 1st Pomeranian ) Field Artillery", "24 November 1808", "Kolberg , Belgard", "II Army Corps" ], [ "3rd ( 1st Brandenburg ) Field Artillery General-Feldzeugmeister", "29 February 1816", "Brandenburg", "III Army Corps" ], [ "4th ( Magdeburg ) Field Artillery Prince Regent Luitpold of Bavaria", "29 February 1816", "Magdeburg", "IV Army Corps" ], [ "5th ( 1st Lower Silesian ) Field Artillery von Podbielski", "29 February 1816", "Sprottau , Sagan", "V Army Corps" ], [ "6th ( 1st Silesian ) Field Artillery von Peucker", "24 November 1808", "Breslau", "VI Army Corps" ], [ "7th ( 1st Westphalian ) Field Artillery", "29 February 1816", "Wesel , Düsseldorf", "VII Army Corps" ], [ "8th ( 1st Rhenish ) Field Artillery von Holtzendorff", "29 February 1816", "Saarbrücken , Saarlouis", "XXI Army Corps" ], [ "9th ( Schleswig ) Field Artillery General Field Marshal Graf Waldersee", "29 July 1866", "Itzehoe", "IX Army Corps" ], [ "10th ( 1st Hannover ) Field Artillery von Scharnhorst", "19 December 1803", "Hannover", "X Army Corps" ], [ "11th ( 1st Kurhessian ) Field Artillery", "22 November 1813", "Kassel , Fritzlar", "XI Army Corps" ], [ "12th ( 1st Royal Saxon ) Field Artillery", "26 June 1620", "Dresden , Königsbrück", "XII Army Corps" ], [ "13th ( 1st Württemberg ) Field Artillery King Charles", "24 March 1736", "Ulm , Cannstatt", "XIII Army Corps" ], [ "14th ( 1st Baden ) Field Artillery Grand Duke", "21 January 1850", "Karlsruhe", "XIV Army Corps" ], [ "15th ( 1st Upper Alsatian ) Field Artillery", "19 May 1871", "Saarburg , Mörchingen", "XXI Army Corps" ], [ "16th ( 1st East Prussian ) Field Artillery", "24 October 1872", "Königsberg", "I Army Corps" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of Imperial German artillery regiments before and during World War I. In peacetime, the Imperial German Army included 100 regiments of Field artillery (plus the Lehr instruction unit) and 24 regiments of Foot artillery (plus another Lehr instruction unit) who manned the heavier pieces. Some of these regiments had a history stretching back to the 17th Century, while others were only formed as late as October 1912.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Field Artillery Regiments", "title": "List of Imperial German artillery regiments", "uid": "List_of_Imperial_German_artillery_regiments_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Imperial_German_artillery_regiments" }
1,742
1743
National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Copiah_County,_Mississippi_0
[ [ "", "Name on the Register", "Date listed", "Location", "City or town" ], [ "1", "Ailes House", "April 9 , 1991 ( # 91000420 )", "Rhymes Rd . near its junction with Mississippi Highway 27 32°01′30″N 90°22′15″W / 32.025°N 90.370833°W / 32.025 ; -90.370833 ( Ailes House )", "Crystal Springs" ], [ "2", "Alford-Little House", "October 19 , 1982 ( # 82000573 )", "South of Georgetown off Mississippi Highway 27 31°47′35″N 90°08′45″W / 31.793056°N 90.145833°W / 31.793056 ; -90.145833 ( Alford-Little House )", "Georgetown" ], [ "3", "Bayou Pierre Bridge", "June 10 , 2005 ( # 05000565 )", "Mississippi Highway 18 32°00′10″N 90°41′23″W / 32.002778°N 90.689722°W / 32.002778 ; -90.689722 ( Bayou Pierre Bridge )", "Carpenter" ], [ "4", "Brewer Place", "January 19 , 2016 ( # 15000983 )", "3101 Utica Rd . 32°00′08″N 90°22′31″W / 32.002259°N 90.375290°W / 32.002259 ; -90.375290 ( Brewer Place )", "Crystal Springs" ], [ "5", "Carpenter United Methodist Church", "June 28 , 1996 ( # 96000705 )", "Carpenter Rd. , 1.1 miles north of its junction with Mississippi Highway 18 32°02′08″N 90°40′53″W / 32.035556°N 90.681389°W / 32.035556 ; -90.681389 ( Carpenter United Methodist Church )", "Utica" ], [ "6", "Cherry Grove", "August 10 , 1990 ( # 90001224 )", "Old U.S. Route 51 , north of its junction with Mississippi Highway 27 32°02′32″N 90°19′20″W / 32.042222°N 90.322222°W / 32.042222 ; -90.322222 ( Cherry Grove )", "Crystal Springs" ], [ "7", "Cook House", "December 8 , 1983 ( # 83003941 )", "222 Extension St. 31°51′32″N 90°23′48″W / 31.858889°N 90.396667°W / 31.858889 ; -90.396667 ( Cook House )", "Hazlehurst" ], [ "8", "George Washington Copley House", "March 1 , 1996 ( # 96000181 )", "210 Copley St. 31°59′07″N 90°21′43″W / 31.985278°N 90.361944°W / 31.985278 ; -90.361944 ( George Washington Copley House )", "Crystal Springs" ], [ "9", "Robert L. Covington House", "March 1 , 1984 ( # 84002139 )", "240 S. Extension St. 31°51′23″N 90°23′50″W / 31.856389°N 90.397222°W / 31.856389 ; -90.397222 ( Robert L. Covington House )", "Hazlehurst" ], [ "10", "Crystal Springs Historic District", "March 14 , 1997 ( # 97000236 )", "Roughly bounded by Independence , Pearl , Newton , and Marion Sts . 31°59′14″N 90°21′28″W / 31.987222°N 90.357778°W / 31.987222 ; -90.357778 ( Crystal Springs Historic District )", "Crystal Springs" ], [ "11", "Isaac Newton Ellis House", "November 2 , 1987 ( # 87001914 )", "258 S. Extension St. 31°51′19″N 90°23′49″W / 31.855278°N 90.396944°W / 31.855278 ; -90.396944 ( Isaac Newton Ellis House )", "Hazlehurst" ], [ "12", "Gallman Historic District", "March 31 , 1986 ( # 86000832 )", "Roughly U.S. Route 51 and Church St. 31°55′53″N 90°23′27″W / 31.931389°N 90.390833°W / 31.931389 ; -90.390833 ( Gallman Historic District )", "Gallman" ], [ "13", "Gatesville Bridge", "November 16 , 1988 ( # 88002482 )", "Spans the Pearl River on a county road east of Gatesville 31°59′46″N 90°13′26″W / 31.996111°N 90.223889°W / 31.996111 ; -90.223889 ( Gatesville Bridge )", "Gatesville" ], [ "14", "Georgetown Methodist Church", "January 19 , 2016 ( # 15000984 )", "1002 Lane Ave. 31°52′19″N 90°09′46″W / 31.871970°N 90.162709°W / 31.871970 ; -90.162709 ( Georgetown Methodist Church )", "Georgetown" ], [ "15", "Hargrave House", "April 5 , 1993 ( # 91001465 )", "Mississippi Highway 28 , 14 miles west of Hazlehurst 31°45′04″N 90°34′55″W / 31.751111°N 90.581944°W / 31.751111 ; -90.581944 ( Hargrave House )", "Hazlehurst" ], [ "16", "Hazlehurst Historic District", "November 5 , 1998 ( # 98001336 )", "Roughly bounded by S. Extension , Georgetown , Gallatin , and Monticello Sts . 31°51′40″N 90°23′41″W / 31.861111°N 90.394722°W / 31.861111 ; -90.394722 ( Hazlehurst Historic District )", "Hazlehurst" ], [ "17", "Homochitto River Bridge", "November 16 , 1988 ( # 88002491 )", "Spans the Homochitto River on a county road 31°42′48″N 90°40′01″W / 31.713333°N 90.666944°W / 31.713333 ; -90.666944 ( Homochitto River Bridge )", "Hazlehurst" ], [ "18", "Charles Morris Huber House", "November 10 , 1994 ( # 94001306 )", "199 N. Jackson St. 31°59′29″N 90°21′11″W / 31.991389°N 90.353056°W / 31.991389 ; -90.353056 ( Charles Morris Huber House )", "Crystal Springs" ], [ "19", "Illinois Central Railroad Passenger Depot", "March 1 , 1996 ( # 96000182 )", "138 N. Ragsdale Ave. 31°51′39″N 90°23′39″W / 31.860833°N 90.394167°W / 31.860833 ; -90.394167 ( Illinois Central Railroad Passenger Depot )", "Hazlehurst" ], [ "20", "Dr. William Little House", "March 4 , 1993 ( # 93000143 )", "1022 Collier St. 31°41′52″N 90°23′47″W / 31.697778°N 90.396389°W / 31.697778 ; -90.396389 ( Dr. William Little House )", "Wesson" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Copiah County, Mississippi. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Copiah County, Mississippi, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National Register properties and districts; these locations may be seen together in a map. There are 35 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the county. Another 2 properties were once listed but have been removed.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Current listings", "title": "National Register of Historic Places listings in Copiah County, Mississippi", "uid": "National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Copiah_County,_Mississippi_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Copiah_County,_Mississippi" }
1,743
1744
1951_Yugoslav_Second_League_0
[ [ "Team", "Location", "Federal subject", "Position in 1950" ], [ "Bokelj", "Kotor", "SR Montenegro", "N/A" ], [ "Budućnost", "Titograd", "SR Montenegro", "N/A" ], [ "Dinamo Pančevo", "Pančevo", "SAP Vojvodina", "N/A" ], [ "Kvarner", "Rijeka", "SR Croatia", "007 7th" ], [ "Metalac Zagreb", "Zagreb", "SR Croatia", "008 8th" ], [ "Odred Ljubljana", "Ljubljana", "SR Slovenia", "005 5th" ], [ "Proleter Osijek", "Osijek", "SR Croatia", "006 6th" ], [ "Proleter Zrenjanin", "Zrenjanin", "SAP Vojvodina", "N/A" ], [ "Rabotnički", "Skopje", "SR Macedonia", "N/A" ], [ "Radnički Belgrade", "Belgrade", "SR Serbia", "N/A" ], [ "Rudar Trbovlje", "Trbovlje", "SR Slovenia", "N/A" ], [ "Tekstilac", "Varaždin", "SR Croatia", "N/A" ], [ "Vardar", "Skopje", "SR Macedonia", "009 9th" ], [ "Velež", "Mostar", "SR Bosnia and Herzegovina", "N/A" ], [ "NK Zagreb", "Zagreb", "SR Croatia", "N/A" ], [ "Željezničar Sarajevo", "Sarajevo", "SR Bosnia and Herzegovina", "010 10th" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 1951 Yugoslav Second League season was the 5th season of the Second Federal League (Serbo-Croatian: Druga savezna liga), the second level association football competition of SFR Yugoslavia, since its establishment in 1946.", "section_text": "A total of sixteen teams contested the league , including six sides from the 1950 season , one club relegated from the 1950 Yugoslav First League and nine sides promoted from the third tier leagues played in the 1950 season . The league was contested in a double round robin format , with each club playing every other club twice , for a total of 30 rounds . Two points were awarded for a win and one point for draws . Budućnost were relegated from the 1950 Yugoslav First League after finishing in the 10th place of the league table , while 9th placed Spartak Subotica were allowed to stay in the top level after Naša Krila Zemun were dissolved . The four clubs promoted directly to the second level were Dinamo Pančevo , Radnički Belgrade , Velež and NK Zagreb , while Bokelj , Proleter Zrenjanin , Rabotnički , Rudar Trbovlje and Tekstilac achieved this through qualifications . At the end of the season there were no teams relegated as the league changed its format . BelgradeKotorLjubljanaMostarOsijekPančevoRijekaSarajevoSkopjeTitogradTrbovljeVaraždinZagrebZrenjanin Locations of teams ' home cities in the 1951 Yugoslav Second League", "section_title": "Teams", "title": "1951 Yugoslav Second League", "uid": "1951_Yugoslav_Second_League_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1951_Yugoslav_Second_League" }
1,744
1745
List_of_legislative_buildings_3
[ [ "Country", "Building", "Built", "Notes" ], [ "Albania", "Albanian Parliament Building", "1924", "A new building is currently planned for the Albanian Parliament" ], [ "Andorra", "New Parliament of Andorra", "2014", "" ], [ "Austria", "Austrian Parliament Building", "1883", "" ], [ "Belarus", "House of Government", "1934", "" ], [ "Belgium", "Palace of the Nation", "1783", "Belgian Federal Parliament ( Chamber of Representatives and Senate )" ], [ "Bosnia-Herzegovina", "Parliament Building", "1982", "" ], [ "Bulgaria", "National Assembly", "1886", "" ], [ "Croatia", "Parliament Palace", "1911", "Sabor" ], [ "Czech Republic", "Thun Palace , Malá Strana", "1726", "Chamber of Deputies" ], [ "Czech Republic", "Wallenstein Palace", "1630", "Senate" ], [ "Denmark", "Christiansborg Palace", "1928", "Folketing" ], [ "Estonia", "Toompea Castle", "1922", "Riigikogu ; the oldest parts of Toompea Castle were built in the early 13th century and the newest parts in 1935 . The Riigikogu hall building itself was added in 1922" ], [ "Finland", "Parliament House", "1931", "Parliament of Finland" ], [ "France", "Palais Bourbon", "1728", "National Assembly" ], [ "France", "Luxembourg Palace", "1615", "Senate" ], [ "Germany", "Reichstag building", "1894", "Bundestag" ], [ "Germany", "House of Lords of Prussia", "1904", "Bundesrat" ], [ "Greece", "Old Royal Palace", "1843", "Hellenic Parliament" ], [ "Hungary", "Hungarian Parliament Building", "1904", "" ], [ "Iceland", "Alþingishúsið", "1881", "Althing" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of buildings in which legislatures sit.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "National -- Europe", "title": "List of legislative buildings", "uid": "List_of_legislative_buildings_3", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_legislative_buildings" }
1,745
1746
List_of_Methodist_churches_in_the_United_States_41
[ [ "Church", "Dates", "City , State" ], [ "First United Methodist Church", "built NRHP-listed", "Aberdeen , South Dakota" ], [ "Sterling Methodist Church", "built NRHP-listed", "Bruce , South Dakota" ], [ "Esmond Methodist Episcopal Church and Township Hall", "built NRHP-listed", "Esmond , South Dakota" ], [ "Florence Methodist Church", "built NRHP-listed", "Florence , South Dakota" ], [ "Bethany United Methodist Church", "built NRHP-listed", "Lodgepole , South Dakota" ], [ "Oldham Methodist Church", "built NRHP-listed", "Oldham , South Dakota" ], [ "Methodist Episcopal Church ( Pierre , South Dakota )", "1910 built 1997 NRHP-listed", "Pierre , South Dakota" ], [ "Dunlap Methodist Episcopal Church", "built NRHP-listed", "Platte , South Dakota" ], [ "Quinn Methodist Church", "built NRHP-listed", "Quinn , South Dakota" ], [ "Methodist Episcopal Church ( Scotland , South Dakota )", "1872 built 1979 NRHP-listed", "Scotland , South Dakota" ], [ "First Methodist Episcopal Church", "built NRHP-listed", "Vermillion , South Dakota" ], [ "Methodist Episcopal Church of Wessington Springs", "built NRHP-listed", "Wessington Springs , South Dakota" ], [ "Underwood United Methodist Church", "built NRHP-listed", "White Lake , South Dakota" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of Methodist churches in the United States. It includes notable churches either where a church means a congregation (in the New Testament definition) or where a church means a building (in the colloquial sense). It also includes campgrounds and conference centers and retreats that are significant Methodist gathering places, including a number of historic sites of camp meetings. This very limited list includes only historically or architecturally significant buildings, and omits many of the currently very largest and influential congregations which do not meet that standard. Methodism was founded with a large component being a rejection of past churches and was developed by John Wesley and others in large open-air gatherings in Great Britain. In the United States, Methodists (along with Baptists and other Protestants) were major participants in the Second Great Awakening wherein people would travel from a large area to a particular site to camp out, listen to itinerant preachers, and pray. The list also includes selected notable Methodist theological buildings. In the United States, numerous Methodist churches are listed on the National Register of Historic Places and on state and local historic registers, many reflecting the values of plainness, of Gothic architecture, of simple adornment. The Greek Revival style is also simple and came to be adopted for numerous American Methodist churches.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Selected salient ones -- South Dakota", "title": "List of Methodist churches in the United States", "uid": "List_of_Methodist_churches_in_the_United_States_41", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Methodist_churches_in_the_United_States" }
1,746
1747
List_of_NHL_playoff_series_21
[ [ "Opponent", "S", "Occurrences", "GP", "Rec", "%" ], [ "New York Rangers", "11", "1974 , 1979 , 1980 , 1982 , 1983 , 1985 , 1986 , 1987 , 1995 , 1997 , 2014", "54", "6-5", ".545" ], [ "Buffalo Sabres", "9", "1975 , 1978 , 1995 , 1997 , 1998 , 2000 , 2001 , 2006 , 2011", "50", "6-3", ".667" ], [ "Pittsburgh Penguins", "7", "1989 , 1997 , 2000 , 2008 , 2009 , 2012 , 2018", "41", "4-3", ".571" ], [ "Toronto Maple Leafs", "6", "1975 , 1976 , 1977 , 1999 , 2003 , 2004", "36", "5-1", ".833" ], [ "Boston Bruins", "6", "1974 , 1976 , 1977 , 1978 , 2010 , 2011", "31", "3-3", ".500" ], [ "Montreal Canadiens", "6", "1973 , 1976 , 1987 , 1989 , 2008 , 2010", "31", "3-3", ".500" ], [ "New Jersey Devils", "6", "1978 , 1995 , 2000 , 2004 , 2010 , 2012", "30", "3-3", ".500" ], [ "Washington Capitals", "5", "1984 , 1988 , 1989 , 2008 , 2016", "29", "2-3", ".400" ], [ "New York Islanders", "4", "1975 , 1980 , 1985 , 1987", "25", "3-1", ".750" ], [ "Edmonton Oilers", "3", "1980 , 1985 , 1987", "15", "1-2", ".333" ], [ "Colorado Avalanche", "2", "1981 , 1985", "11", "2-0", "1.000" ], [ "Dallas Stars", "2", "1973 , 1980", "11", "2-0", "1.000" ], [ "Calgary Flames", "2", "1974 , 1981", "11", "1-1", ".500" ], [ "Tampa Bay Lightning", "2", "1996 , 2004", "13", "1-1", ".500" ], [ "Chicago Blackhawks", "2", "1971 , 2010", "10", "0-2", ".000" ], [ "Ottawa Senators", "2", "2002 , 2003", "11", "0-2", ".000" ], [ "St. Louis Blues", "2", "1968 , 1969", "11", "0-2", ".000" ], [ "Vancouver Canucks", "1", "1979", "3", "1-0", "1.000" ], [ "Detroit Red Wings", "1", "1997", "4", "0-1", ".000" ], [ "Florida Panthers", "1", "1996", "6", "0-1", ".000" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a complete listing of National Hockey League (NHL) playoff series, grouped by franchise. Series featuring relocated teams[nb 1] are kept with their ultimate relocation franchises. Bolded years indicate wins. Years in italics indicate series in progress. Tables are sorted first by the number of series, then the number of wins, and then alphabetically.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Philadelphia Flyers", "title": "List of NHL playoff series", "uid": "List_of_NHL_playoff_series_21", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NHL_playoff_series" }
1,747
1748
List_of_named_passenger_trains_of_Japan_2
[ [ "Train name", "Operator", "Train endpoints", "Operated" ], [ "Acty [ ja ]", "JR East", "Tokyo - Atami", "1989-" ], [ "Airport [ ja ]", "JR Hokkaido", "Otaru , Sapporo - New Chitose Airport", "1992-" ], [ "Aqua Liner [ ja ]", "JR-West", "Yonago - Masuda", "2001-" ], [ "Aterui", "JR East", "Mizusawa - Morioka", "2001-" ], [ "Central Liner [ ja ]", "JR Central", "Nagoya - Nakatsugawa", "1999-2013" ], [ "Hamayuri [ ja ]", "JR East", "Morioka - Kamaishi ( via Kamaishi Line )", "2002-" ], [ "Kansai Airport Rapid Service [ ja ]", "JR-West", "Tennōji - Kansai Airport ( via Ōsaka )", "1994-" ], [ "Karikachi [ ja ]", "JR Hokkaido", "Takikawa , Asahikawa - Obihiro", "1990-" ], [ "Kishuji Rapid Service [ ja ]", "JR-West", "Tennōji - Wakayama , Kainan , Gobō , Kii-Tanabe ( via Ōsaka )", "1999-" ], [ "Kitami", "JR Hokkaido", "Asahikawa - Kitami", "1998-" ], [ "Kubikino", "JR East", "Arai - Niigata", "2002-2015" ], [ "Marine Liner", "JR-West / JR Shikoku", "Okayama - Takamatsu", "1988-" ], [ "Mie [ ja ]", "JR Central / Ise Tetsudo", "Nagoya - Toba", "1990-" ], [ "Nayoro [ ja ]", "JR Hokkaido", "Asahikawa - Nayoro", "1965-" ], [ "Rabbit [ ja ]", "JR East", "Tokyo - Utsunomiya , Kuroiso", "1988-" ], [ "Rias [ ja ]", "JR East", "Morioka - Miyako ( via Yamada Line )", "1988-" ], [ "Shōnan Liner", "JR East", "Tokyo - Odawara ( Some of trains pass Tōkaidō Freight Line )", "1986-" ], [ "Tambaji Rapid Service [ ja ]", "JR-West", "Ōsaka - Sasayamaguchi", "2000-" ], [ "Tottori Liner [ ja ]", "JR-West", "Tottori - Yonago , Izumoshi", "2001-" ], [ "Urban [ ja ]", "JR East", "Tokyo - Takasaki , Maebashi", "1989-" ] ]
{ "intro": "This article contains lists of named passenger trains in Japan.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Daytime trains -- Rapid", "title": "List of named passenger trains of Japan", "uid": "List_of_named_passenger_trains_of_Japan_2", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_named_passenger_trains_of_Japan" }
1,748
1749
Skip_Prosser_Man_of_the_Year_Award_0
[ [ "Year", "Coach", "School", "Record" ], [ "2007-08", "Mike Brey", "Notre Dame", "25-8" ], [ "2008-09", "Ed Conroy", "The Citadel", "20-13" ], [ "2009-10", "Bob Marlin", "Sam Houston State", "25-8" ], [ "2010-11", "Chris Mack", "Xavier", "24-8" ], [ "2011-12", "Jimmy Patsos", "Loyola ( MD )", "24-9" ], [ "2012-13", "Joe Mihalich", "Niagara", "19-14" ], [ "2013-14", "Brian Wardle", "Green Bay", "24-7" ], [ "2014-15", "Keno Davis", "Central Michigan", "23-9" ], [ "2015-16", "Zach Spiker", "Army", "19-14" ], [ "2016-17", "Danny Manning", "Wake Forest", "19-14" ], [ "2017-18", "Casey Alexander", "Lipscomb", "23-10" ], [ "2018-19", "Robert Jones", "Norfolk State", "22-14" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Skip Prosser Man of the Year Award is an award given annually to the nation's men's head basketball coach in NCAA Division I competition who also exhibits strong moral character. The award was established in 2008 and is named for head coach Skip Prosser, who spent most of his coaching tenure at Xavier and Wake Forest. Prosser is the only coach in NCAA history to lead three separate teams to the NCAA Tournament in his first season with the team. Prosser died from a heart attack on July 26, 2007, at age 56.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Winners", "title": "Skip Prosser Man of the Year Award", "uid": "Skip_Prosser_Man_of_the_Year_Award_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skip_Prosser_Man_of_the_Year_Award" }
1,749
1750
Fame_Academy_discography_0
[ [ "Artist", "Series", "Position in show", "Song title", "Release date", "UK peak chart position" ], [ "David Sneddon", "1", "Winner", "Stop Living the Lie", "13 January 2003", "1" ], [ "Sinéad Quinn", "1", "Runner-up", "I Ca n't Break Down", "10 February 2003", "2" ], [ "Ainslie Henderson", "1", "4th", "Keep Me a Secret", "24 February 2003", "5" ], [ "Malachi Cush", "1", "5th", "Just Say You Love Me", "14 April 2003", "49" ], [ "David Sneddon", "1", "Winner", "Do n't Let Go", "21 April 2003", "3" ], [ "Sinéad Quinn", "1", "Runner-up", "What You Need Is", "30 June 2003", "19" ], [ "David Sneddon", "1", "Winner", "Best of Order", "11 August 2003", "18" ], [ "Lemar", "1", "3rd", "Dance ( With U )", "18 August 2003", "2" ], [ "David Sneddon", "1", "Winner", "Baby Get Higher", "27 October 2003", "38" ], [ "Lemar", "1", "3rd", "50/50 / Lullaby", "17 November 2003", "5" ], [ "Alex Parks", "2", "Winner", "Maybe That 's What It Takes", "17 November 2003", "3" ], [ "Alistair Griffin", "2", "Runner-up", "Bring It On / My Lover 's Prayer", "29 December 2003", "5" ], [ "Lemar", "1", "3rd", "Another Day", "23 February 2004", "9" ], [ "Alex Parks", "2", "Winner", "Cry", "16 February 2004", "13" ], [ "Alistair Griffin", "2", "Runner-up", "You and Me ( Tonight )", "15 March 2004", "18" ], [ "James Fox", "2", "5th", "Hold Onto Our Love", "19 April 2004", "13" ], [ "Lemar", "1", "3rd", "If There 's Any Justice", "15 November 2004", "3" ], [ "Lemar", "1", "3rd", "Time to Grow", "28 March 2005", "9" ], [ "Lemar", "1", "3rd", "Do n't Give It Up", "1 August 2005", "21" ], [ "Alex Parks", "2", "Winner", "Honesty", "23 January 2006", "56" ] ]
{ "intro": "Fame Academy is a British television programme that ran for two series, in 2002 and 2004. The show was produced for the BBC in a reality television format. The winners of the show, David Sneddon and Alex Parks, were awarded music recording contracts to allow them to release music and live like top recording artists for a year. Sneddon had a run of three top-20 hits, including his debut single Stop Living the Lie, which peaked at number one on the UK Singles Chart in January 2003. David Sneddon signed to major music publisher Sony/ATV Music Publishing in 2009 as a songwriter. Parks' debut single Maybe That's What It Takes charted at number three in November 2003. In addition to Sneddon and Parks, several other contestants have gone on to have successful music careers, while others were given record deals and released several songs before leaving the music industry. [deprecated source] The runner-up from the first series, Sinéad Quinn, signed a record deal with Mercury Records, the same company as Sneddon, and released her debut single I Can't Break Down in February 2003. The song charted at number two on the UK Singles Chart. Her second single, What You Need Is. peaked in top 20 in June 2003. Ainslie Henderson's debut, and thus far only single Keep Me a Secret ranked number five in February 2003.", "section_text": "David Sneddon won the first series of Fame Academy . His debut single , `` Stop Living the Lie '' , was a number-one single while his album charted in the top ten . Lemar , who finished third in the first series of Fame Academy , has had ten top-40 singles . Alistair Griffin 's `` Bring It On/My Lover 's Prayer '' charted in the top five .", "section_title": "Singles", "title": "Fame Academy discography", "uid": "Fame_Academy_discography_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fame_Academy_discography" }
1,750
1751
Mr._Basketball_of_Michigan_1
[ [ "Year", "Winner", "High school", "University" ], [ "1980", "Tim McCormick", "Clarkston", "Michigan" ], [ "1979", "Jay Smith", "Mio AuSable High School", "Bowling Green , Saginaw Valley State" ], [ "1978", "Trent Tucker", "Flint Northwestern", "Minnesota" ], [ "1977", "Earvin Magic Johnson", "Lansing Everett", "Michigan State" ], [ "1976", "Stuart House", "Detroit Denby", "Washington State" ], [ "1975", "Bruce Flowers", "Berkley", "Notre Dame" ], [ "1974", "Tony Smith", "Saginaw", "Nevada-Las Vegas" ], [ "1973", "Tom LaGarde", "Detroit Catholic Central", "North Carolina" ], [ "1972", "Larry Fogle", "Detroit Cooley", "Canisius" ], [ "1971", "Michael Campy Russell", "Pontiac Central", "Michigan" ], [ "1970", "Rick Drewitz", "Garden City West", "Kentucky" ], [ "1969", "Ernie Johnson", "Grand Rapids Ottawa Hills", "Michigan" ], [ "1968", "Ralph Simpson", "Detroit Pershing", "Michigan State" ], [ "1967", "Spencer Haywood", "Detroit Pershing", "University of Detroit" ], [ "1966", "Rudy Tomjanovich", "Hamtramck", "Michigan" ], [ "1965", "L. C. Bowen", "Benton Harbor", "Bradley" ], [ "1964", "Willie Betts", "River Rouge", "Bradley" ], [ "1963", "Craig Dill", "Saginaw Arthur Hill", "Michigan" ], [ "1962", "Ernie Thompson", "Saginaw", "Bradley" ], [ "1961", "Reggie Harding", "Detroit Eastern", "None" ] ]
{ "intro": "Each year the Hal Schram Mr. Basketball award is given to the person chosen as the best high school senior boys basketball player in the U.S. state of Michigan. The award is named in honor of the late Hal Schram, a sports writer at the Detroit Free Press who covered high school sports for 40 years before retiring in 1983. The award has been given since 1981 by the Basketball Coaches Association of Michigan (BCAM). Most of the award winners have gone on to play at the highest levels of college basketball, and many have gone on to play in the National Basketball Association. Voting is done on a points system. Each voter selects first, second, and third-place votes. A player receives five points for each first-place vote, three points for each second-place vote, and one point for a third-place vote. The player who receives the most points receives the award. Only actively coaching BCAM members can vote. Beginning for the 2007 award, votes may only be cast for a predetermined group of five finalists, whereas in the past, the pool was unlimited.", "section_text": "In 2010 , the BCAM began a 10-year project to honor basketball players from the period prior to the inception of the Mr. Basketball award . Each season for the next 10 years , `` Retro '' Mr. Basketball award winners will be announced . The initial awards were given to players from the years 1920 , 1930 , 1940 , 1950 , 1960 , 1970 and 1980 . Next year , awards will be announced for the seasons xxx8 from each decade . This pattern will be continued through the year 2019 when the final award winners will be selected for the seasons xxx9 from each decade . [ 4 ]", "section_title": "Retro Mr. Basketball winners", "title": "Mr. Basketball of Michigan", "uid": "Mr._Basketball_of_Michigan_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mr._Basketball_of_Michigan" }
1,751
1752
Golden_sombrero_0
[ [ "Player", "Games", "Major teams" ], [ "Ryan Howard", "27", "Philadelphia Phillies" ], [ "Reggie Jackson", "23", "Oakland Athletics , New York Yankees , California Angels" ], [ "Chris Davis", "22", "Texas Rangers , Baltimore Orioles" ], [ "Jim Thome", "20", "Cleveland Indians , Philadelphia Phillies , Chicago White Sox" ], [ "Adam Dunn", "19", "Chicago White Sox , Cincinnati Reds" ], [ "Bo Jackson", "19", "Kansas City Royals , Chicago White Sox" ], [ "Rob Deer", "17", "Milwaukee Brewers , Detroit Tigers" ], [ "Sammy Sosa", "17", "Chicago Cubs , Texas Rangers" ], [ "Jose Canseco", "16", "Texas Rangers , Oakland Athletics" ], [ "Mark Reynolds", "16", "Arizona Diamondbacks , St. Louis Cardinals" ], [ "Dick Allen", "15", "Philadelphia Phillies , Chicago White Sox" ], [ "Andrés Galarraga", "15", "Montreal Expos , Colorado Rockies" ], [ "Dave Kingman", "15", "New York Mets , San Francisco Giants" ] ]
{ "intro": "In baseball, a golden sombrero is a player's inglorious feat of striking out four times in a single game.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Major League Baseball -- Notable four-strikeout games", "title": "Golden sombrero", "uid": "Golden_sombrero_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_sombrero" }
1,752
1753
130th_Ohio_General_Assembly_1
[ [ "District", "Representative", "Party", "Residence", "First Elected", "Term Limited" ], [ "1", "Ron Amstutz", "Republican", "Wooster", "2008", "2016" ], [ "2", "Mark Romanchuk", "Republican", "Mansfield", "2012", "2020" ], [ "3", "Tim Brown", "Republican", "Bowling Green", "2012", "2020" ], [ "4", "Matt Huffman", "Republican", "Lima", "2006", "2014" ], [ "5", "Nick Barborak", "Democratic", "Lisbon", "2012", "2020" ], [ "6", "Marlene Anielski", "Republican", "Walton Hills", "2010", "2018" ], [ "7", "Mike Dovilla", "Republican", "Berea", "2010", "2018" ], [ "8", "Armond Budish", "Democratic", "Beachwood", "2006", "2014" ], [ "9", "Barbara Boyd", "Democratic", "Cleveland Heights", "2006", "2014" ], [ "10", "Bill Patmon", "Democratic", "Cleveland", "2010", "2018" ], [ "11", "Sandra Williams", "Democratic", "Cleveland", "2006", "2014" ], [ "12", "John E. Barnes , Jr", "Democratic", "Cleveland", "2010", "2018" ], [ "13", "Nickie Antonio", "Democratic", "Lakewood", "2010", "2018" ], [ "14", "Michael Foley", "Democratic", "Cleveland", "2006 ( Appt . )", "2014" ], [ "15", "Nicholas J. Celebrezze", "Democratic", "Parma", "2012 ( Appt . )", "2020" ], [ "16", "Nan Baker", "Republican", "Westlake", "2008", "2016" ], [ "17", "Michael Curtin", "Democratic", "Columbus", "2012", "2020" ], [ "18", "Michael Stinziano", "Democratic", "Columbus", "2010", "2018" ], [ "19", "Anne Gonzales", "Republican", "Columbus", "2010", "2018" ], [ "20", "Heather Bishoff", "Democratic", "Blacklick", "2012", "2020" ] ]
{ "intro": "The One Hundred Thirtieth Ohio General Assembly was a meeting of the Ohio state legislature, composed of the Ohio State Senate and the Ohio House of Representatives. It convened in Columbus, Ohio on January 7, 2013 and adjourned December 30, 2014. This General Assembly coincided with the last two years of John Kasich's first term as Ohio Governor. The apportionment of legislative districts was based on the 2010 United States Census and 2011 redistricting. Both the Ohio Senate and Ohio House of Representatives were retained by the Ohio Republican Party.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Membership -- House of Representatives", "title": "130th Ohio General Assembly", "uid": "130th_Ohio_General_Assembly_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/130th_Ohio_General_Assembly" }
1,753
1754
List_of_airports_in_Nova_Scotia_0
[ [ "Community", "Airport name", "TC LID" ], [ "Amherst", "Amherst Heliport", "CCB3" ], [ "Antigonish", "Antigonish ( St. Martha 's Regional Hospital ) Heliport", "CDY5" ], [ "Arichat", "Arichat ( St. Anne Ladies Auxiliary Hospital ) Heliport", "CDT3" ], [ "Baddeck", "Baddeck ( Guneden ) Aerodrome", "CDW2" ], [ "Bridgewater", "Bridgewater/Dayspring Airpark", "CDY6" ], [ "Bridgewater", "Bridgewater ( South Shore Regional Hospital ) Heliport", "CDT6" ], [ "Canso", "Canso ( Eastern Memorial Hospital ) Heliport", "CCE5" ], [ "Carleton", "Mink Lake Water Aerodrome", "CML3" ], [ "Centredale", "Centredale Aerodrome", "CDL8" ], [ "Church Lake", "Church Lake Water Aerodrome", "CHL3" ], [ "Debert", "Debert Airport", "CCQ3" ], [ "Digby", "Digby/Annapolis Regional Airport", "" ], [ "Digby", "Digby ( General Hospital ) Heliport", "CDG2" ], [ "East Gore", "East Gore Eco Airpark", "CCY4" ], [ "Fall River", "Fall River Water Aerodrome", "CFR3" ], [ "Finlay", "Finlay Air Park", "CDH3" ], [ "Fox Harbour", "Fox Harbour Airport", "CFH4" ], [ "Greenwood", "CFB Greenwood ( Greenwood Airport )", "" ], [ "Halifax", "Halifax ( IWK Health Centre ) Heliport", "CIW2" ], [ "Halifax", "Halifax ( QE II Health Sciences Centre ) Heliport", "CHQE" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a complete list of airports, water aerodromes and heliports in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia.", "section_text": "The list is sorted by the name of the community served , click the sort buttons in the table header to switch listing order .", "section_title": "List of airports and heliports", "title": "List of airports in Nova Scotia", "uid": "List_of_airports_in_Nova_Scotia_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_airports_in_Nova_Scotia" }
1,754
1755
List_of_Canadian_writers_14
[ [ "Name", "Born", "Genre", "Notable works" ], [ "Sheldon Oberman", "1949", "children 's literature", "The Shaman 's Nephew" ], [ "Theodore Odrach", "1912", "novelist", "Wave of Terror" ], [ "Rohan O'Grady", "1922", "novelist", "Let 's Kill Uncle , Pippin 's Journal" ], [ "Alix Ohlin", "", "novelist , short stories", "Inside , Signs and Wonders" ], [ "Alexandra Oliver", "", "poet", "Meeting the Tormentors in Safeway" ], [ "Bryan Lee O'Malley", "1979", "graphic novelist", "Scott Pilgrim" ], [ "Heather O'Neill", "", "novelist", "Lullabies for Little Criminals" ], [ "Michael Ondaatje", "1943", "novelist , poet", "The English Patient , In the Skin of a Lion , Anil 's Ghost" ], [ "Christopher Ondaatje", "1933", "writer , publisher", "The Prime Ministers of Canada , 1867-1967 , The Man-eater of Punanai - a Journey of Discovery to the Jungles of Old Ceylon , Sindh Revisited : A Journey in the Footsteps of Captain Sir Richard Francis Burton" ], [ "Kenneth Oppel", "1967", "children 's literature", "Airborn Series , Silverwing saga" ], [ "Stephen Osborne", "1947", "journalist", "Ice & Fire : Dispatches from the New World" ], [ "Martha Ostenso", "1900", "novelist , screenwriter", "Wild Geese" ], [ "Lawrence O'Toole", "", "film critic , memoirist", "Heart 's Longing : Newfoundland , New York and the Distance Home" ], [ "Fernand Ouellette", "1930", "poet , novelist", "Lucie ou un midi en novembre , Les Heures" ], [ "Susan Ouriou", "", "novelist , short stories , translator", "Damselfish" ], [ "James Macdonald Oxley", "1855", "novelist ( juvenile )", "" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of Canadian literary figures, including poets, novelists, children's writers, essayists, and scholars.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "O", "title": "List of Canadian writers", "uid": "List_of_Canadian_writers_14", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Canadian_writers" }
1,755
1756
List_of_NASCAR_seasons_1
[ [ "Season", "Races", "Drivers ' champion", "Manufacturers ' champion" ], [ "1982", "29", "Jack Ingram", "Pontiac" ], [ "1983", "35", "Sam Ard", "Oldsmobile" ], [ "1984", "29", "Sam Ard", "Pontiac" ], [ "1985", "27", "Jack Ingram", "Pontiac" ], [ "1986", "31", "Larry Pearson", "Pontiac" ], [ "1987", "27", "Larry Pearson", "Chevrolet" ], [ "1988", "30", "Tommy Ellis", "Buick" ], [ "1989", "29", "Rob Moroso", "Buick" ], [ "1990", "31", "Chuck Bown", "Buick" ], [ "1991", "31", "Bobby Labonte", "Oldsmobile" ], [ "1992", "31", "Joe Nemechek", "Chevrolet" ], [ "1993", "28", "Steve Grissom", "Chevrolet" ], [ "1994", "28", "David Green", "Chevrolet" ], [ "1995", "26", "Johnny Benson Jr", "Ford" ], [ "1996", "26", "Randy LaJoie", "Chevrolet" ], [ "1997", "30", "Randy LaJoie", "Chevrolet" ], [ "1998", "31", "Dale Earnhardt Jr", "Chevrolet" ], [ "1999", "32", "Dale Earnhardt Jr", "Chevrolet" ], [ "2000", "32", "Jeff Green", "Chevrolet" ], [ "2001", "33", "Kevin Harvick", "Chevrolet" ] ]
{ "intro": "Seventy seasons of NASCAR, the highest class of stock car auto racing in the United States. The NASCAR championship season consists of a series of races held usually on purpose-built tracks. The results of each race are combined to determine two annual championships in each of the top series, one for drivers and one for manufacturer. The Drivers' Championship is awarded to the most successful NASCAR driver over a season, as determined by a points system based on race results, and has been awarded since the first NASCAR season in 1949. The Manufacturers' Championship is awarded to the most successful NASCAR manufacturer over a season, also determined by a points system based on race results. The Manufacturers' Championship was first awarded in 1952.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Xfinity Series", "title": "List of NASCAR seasons", "uid": "List_of_NASCAR_seasons_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NASCAR_seasons" }
1,756
1757
Usage_share_of_instant_messaging_clients_1
[ [ "Instant messenger client", "Company", "Usage" ], [ "BlackBerry Messenger", "BlackBerry", "91 million total users ( October 2014 )" ], [ "Hike Messenger", "Hike Messenger", "70 million active users ( October 2015 )" ], [ "Gadu-Gadu", "GG Network S.A", "6.5 million users active daily ( majority in Poland ) ( June 2010 )" ], [ "IBM Sametime", "IBM Corp", "20 million users ( February 2006 )" ], [ "ICQ", "ICQ LLC", "11 million total users ( July 2014 )" ], [ "IMVU", "IMVU , inc", "1 million users ( June 2007 )" ], [ "Paltalk", "Paltalk.com", "5.5 million monthly unique users ( August 2013 )" ], [ "Signal", "Signal Foundation", "" ], [ "XMPP ( Protocol used by multiple clients )", "XMPP Standards Foundation", "1200+ million ( September 2011 )" ] ]
{ "intro": "Instant messaging (IM) technology is a type of online chat that offers real-time text transmission over the Internet. A LAN messenger operates in a similar way over a local area network. Short messages are typically transmitted between two parties, when each user chooses to complete a thought and select send. Some IM applications can use push technology to provide real-time text, which transmits messages character by character, as they are composed. More advanced instant messaging can add file transfer, clickable hyperlinks, Voice over IP, or video chat. Non-IM types of chat include multicast transmission, usually referred to as chat rooms, where participants might be anonymous or might be previously known to each other (for example collaborators on a project that is using chat to facilitate communication). Instant messaging systems tend to facilitate connections between specified known users (often using a contact list also known as a buddy list or friend list). Depending on the IM protocol, the technical architecture can be peer-to-peer (direct point-to-point transmission) or client-server (an Instant message service center retransmits messages from the sender to the communication device). By 2010, instant messaging over the Web was already in sharp decline, in favor of messaging features on social networks. The most popular IM platforms, such as AIM, closed in 2017, and Windows Live Messenger was merged into Skype. Today, most instant messaging takes place on messaging apps which by 2014 had more users than social networks.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "User base -- Other platforms", "title": "Instant messaging", "uid": "Usage_share_of_instant_messaging_clients_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instant_messaging" }
1,757
1758
List_of_Virtual_Console_games_for_Wii_(South_Korea)_0
[ [ "Title", "Publisher", "Release Date", "Language" ], [ "Donkey Kong", "Nintendo", "April 26 , 2008", "English" ], [ "Kekkyoku Nankyoku Daibouken", "Konami", "April 26 , 2008", "Japanese" ], [ "Kirby 's Adventure", "Nintendo", "April 26 , 2008", "English" ], [ "Super Mario Bros", "Nintendo", "April 26 , 2008", "Japanese" ], [ "Downtown Nekketsu Monogatari", "Windysoft", "May 26 , 2008", "Japanese" ], [ "Super Mario Bros. 3", "Nintendo", "May 26 , 2008", "Japanese" ], [ "Bubble Bobble", "Taito", "June 10 , 2008", "English" ], [ "Galaga", "Bandai Namco", "July 15 , 2008", "English" ], [ "Super Mario USA", "Nintendo", "July 15 , 2008", "Japanese" ], [ "Xevious", "Bandai Namco", "July 29 , 2008", "English" ], [ "Yoshi", "Nintendo", "August 12 , 2008", "English" ], [ "NES Open Tournament Golf", "Nintendo", "August 26 , 2008", "English" ], [ "Pac-Man", "Bandai Namco", "August 26 , 2008", "English" ], [ "Hudson 's Adventure Island", "Hudson Soft", "September 16 , 2008", "English" ], [ "Urban Champion", "Nintendo", "September 30 , 2008", "English" ], [ "Downtown Nekketsu Kōshinkyoku : Soreyuke Daiundōkai", "Windysoft", "October 14 , 2008", "Japanese" ], [ "Kid Icarus", "Nintendo", "October 28 , 2008", "English" ], [ "Yoshi 's Cookie", "Nintendo", "November 11 , 2008", "English" ], [ "Mario Bros", "Nintendo", "December 30 , 2008", "Japanese" ], [ "Nekketsu Kōkō Dodgeball Bu : Soccer Hen", "Windysoft", "January 28 , 2009", "Japanese" ] ]
{ "intro": "New titles were released on the 2nd and 4th Tuesdays of a four-week month, or 3rd and 5th Tuesdays of a five-week month. If the Tuesday was a public holiday, the update will be on Wednesday instead. The games were announced by Nintendo of Korea one week prior to release. This service stopped getting new games in April 2009. Nintendo discontinued the Wii Shop Channel on January 31, 2019, with the purchase of Wii points for new games having ended on March 26, 2018.", "section_text": "There were 23 games available .", "section_title": "Available titles -- Nintendo Entertainment System", "title": "List of Virtual Console games for Wii (South Korea)", "uid": "List_of_Virtual_Console_games_for_Wii_(South_Korea)_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Virtual_Console_games_for_Wii_(South_Korea)" }
1,758
1759
Deloitte_Football_Money_League_20
[ [ "Rank", "Club", "Income ( £ million )", "Country" ], [ "1", "Manchester United", "87.9", "England" ], [ "2", "Real Madrid", "72.2", "Spain" ], [ "3", "Bayern Munich", "66.2", "Germany" ], [ "4", "Juventus", "55.3", "Italy" ], [ "5", "Newcastle United", "49.2", "England" ], [ "6", "Barcelona", "48.57", "Spain" ], [ "7", "Milan", "48.55", "Italy" ], [ "8", "Internazionale", "48.2", "Italy" ], [ "9", "Chelsea", "47.5", "England" ], [ "10", "Liverpool", "45.5", "England" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Deloitte Football Money League is a ranking of football clubs by revenue generated from football operations. It is produced annually by the accountancy firm Deloitte and released in early February of each year, describing the season most recently finished.", "section_text": "[ 1 ]", "section_title": "Rankings by season -- 1997–98", "title": "Deloitte Football Money League", "uid": "Deloitte_Football_Money_League_20", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deloitte_Football_Money_League" }
1,759
1760
List_of_soccer_clubs_in_Australia_2
[ [ "Club", "League/Division", "Lvl", "State", "City" ], [ "Cairnlea", "Victorian State League Division 2", "5", "Victoria", "Melbourne" ], [ "Cairns FC", "National Premier Leagues Queensland", "2", "Queensland", "Cairns" ], [ "Camden Tigers", "National Premier Leagues NSW 4", "5", "New South Wales", "Sydney" ], [ "Campbellfield Lions", "Victorian State League Division 5", "8", "Victoria", "Melbourne" ], [ "Campbelltown City", "National Premier Leagues South Australia", "2", "South Australia", "Adelaide" ], [ "Canberra City", "State League Division 2", "5", "Australian Capital Territory", "Canberra" ], [ "Canberra FC", "National Premier Leagues Capital Football", "2", "Australian Capital Territory", "Canberra" ], [ "Canberra Olympic FC", "National Premier Leagues Capital Football", "2", "Australian Capital Territory", "Canberra" ], [ "Canberra White Eagles", "Capital League", "3", "Australian Capital Territory", "Canberra" ], [ "Canning City", "Football West State League Division 1", "3", "Western Australia", "Perth" ], [ "Capalaba", "Football Queensland Premier League", "3", "Queensland", "Brisbane" ], [ "Casey Comets", "Victorian State League Division 1", "4", "Victoria", "Melbourne" ], [ "Casey Panthers", "Victorian State League Division 5", "8", "Victoria", "Melbourne" ], [ "Casuarina", "NorZone Premier League", "2", "Northern Territory", "Darwin" ], [ "Caulfield United Cobras", "Victorian State League Division 2", "5", "Victoria", "Melbourne" ], [ "Cessnock City Hornets", "Northern NSW State League Division 1", "3", "New South Wales", "Cessnock" ], [ "Charlestown City Blues", "National Premier Leagues Northern NSW", "2", "New South Wales", "Lake Macquarie" ], [ "Chelsea", "Victorian State League Division 5", "8", "Victoria", "Melbourne" ], [ "Clarence United", "National Premier Leagues Tasmania", "2", "Tasmania", "Hobart" ], [ "Clifton Hill", "Victorian State League Division 1", "4", "Victoria", "Melbourne" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of soccer clubs in Australia. The Australian soccer league system consists of a national league - A-League (men) and W-League (women) - a state/territory-based second tier National Premier Leagues (NPL) structure and other state-based leagues. Promotion and relegation exists in some states between NPL and state leagues, however not between the A-League and the NPL. Included are all clubs playing in state (or territory)-wide leagues, or where states are split into two separate leagues.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Alphabetically -- C", "title": "List of soccer clubs in Australia", "uid": "List_of_soccer_clubs_in_Australia_2", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_soccer_clubs_in_Australia" }
1,760
1761
List_of_former_territorial_authorities_in_New_Zealand_0
[ [ "Council", "Established", "Disestablished", "Area", "Notes" ], [ "Alexandra", "1867", "1989", "1.92 km ( 470 acres ) ( 1986 )", "Merged into Central Otago District" ], [ "Arrowtown", "10 May 1877", "1989", "170 acres ( 0.69 km ) ( 1877 ) 1.92 km ( 470 acres ) ( 1986 )", "Merged into Queenstown-Lakes District" ], [ "Ashburton", "9 September 1878", "1989", "12.27 km ( 4.74 sq mi ) ( 1986 )", "Merged into Ashburton District" ], [ "Auckland", "1851", "1871", "", "Declared a city" ], [ "Avenal", "1876", "1909", "", "Amalgamated with Invercargill Borough" ], [ "Avondale", "1922", "1927", "", "Amalgamated with Auckland City" ], [ "Balclutha", "1870", "1989", "568 acres ( 2.30 km ) ( 1877 ) 5.26 km ( 1,300 acres ) ( 1986 )", "Merged into Clutha District" ], [ "Birkenhead", "1888", "1978", "", "Proclaimed a city on 15 March 1978" ], [ "Blenheim", "1869", "1989", "17.68 km ( 6.83 sq mi ) ( 1986 )", "Merged into Marlborough District" ], [ "Bluff", "1917", "1989", "8.67 km", "Merged into Invercargill city . See Campbelltown below" ], [ "Brunner", "1887", "1925", "", "Amalgamated with Grey County" ], [ "Cambridge", "1886", "1989", "9.65 km", "Merged into Waipa District" ], [ "Caversham", "1877", "1904", "4.34 km", "Amalgamated with Dunedin city" ], [ "Campbelltown", "1878", "1917", "8.67 km", "Formally renamed Bluff ( see above )" ], [ "Carterton", "1887", "1989", "39.81 km", "Grew into Carterton District" ], [ "Cromwell", "1866", "1989", "33.3 km", "Merged into Central Otago District" ], [ "Dannevirke", "1892", "1989", "5.62 km", "Merged into Tararua District" ], [ "Dargaville", "1908", "1989", "11.33 km", "Merged into Kaipara District" ], [ "Devonport", "1886", "1989", "5.79 km", "Merged into North Shore City" ] ]
{ "intro": "Territorial authority is the generic term used for local government entities in New Zealand. Local government has gone through three principal phases with different structures: the provincial era, from 1853 to 1876; the counties and boroughs system from 1876 until 1989; and the current system of regions, cities and districts. This article attempts to list all territorial authorities which have been disestablished.", "section_text": "New Zealand formerly used the term borough to designate self-governing towns of more than 1,000 people , although 19th century census records show many boroughs with populations as low as 200 . [ 4 ] See also Borough # New Zealand", "section_title": "Post-provincial era ( 1876–1989 ) -- Borough councils", "title": "List of former territorial authorities in New Zealand", "uid": "List_of_former_territorial_authorities_in_New_Zealand_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_former_territorial_authorities_in_New_Zealand" }
1,761
1762
List_of_tallest_twin_buildings_and_structures_in_the_world_1
[ [ "Name", "City", "Country", "Height ( max . )", "Floors ( T1/T2 )", "Status" ], [ "Twin Towers II", "New York City", "United States", "450 m ( 1,476 ft )", "115/115", "Never built" ], [ "World Trade Center", "New York City", "United States", "417 m ( 1,368 ft )", "110/110", "Destroyed" ], [ "Three Sixty West", "Mumbai", "India", "372 m ( 1,220 ft )", "53/85", "Under construction" ], [ "Gateway Towers", "Gandhinagar", "India", "362 m ( 1,188 ft )", "27/27", "Under construction" ], [ "Rustomjee Crown", "Mumbai", "India", "337 m ( 1,106 ft )", "75/75/75", "Under construction" ], [ "Orchid Heights", "Mumbai", "India", "328 m ( 1,076 ft )", "80/80", "On-hold" ], [ "Hermitage Towers", "Paris", "France", "320 m ( 1,050 ft )", "86/85", "Proposed" ], [ "Lokhandwala Minerva", "Mumbai", "India", "310 m ( 1,017 ft )", "85/85", "Under construction" ], [ "Lamar Towers", "Jeddah", "Saudi Arabia", "310 m ( 1,017 ft )", "73/73", "Under construction" ], [ "Indonesia One Towers", "Jakarta", "Indonesia", "303 m ( 994 ft )", "64/60", "Under construction" ], [ "Sky link", "Mumbai", "India", "301 m ( 988 ft )", "85/85", "Approved" ], [ "Vida Za'abeel", "Dubai", "United Arab Emirates", "329 m ( 1,079 ft )", "73/64", "Proposed" ], [ "Broadway Corridor Twin Towers", "Portland", "United States", "296 m ( 971 ft )", "? ? ?", "Never built" ], [ "India Bulls Sky Forest Tower", "Mumbai", "India", "276 m ( 906 ft )", "80/60", "Under construction" ], [ "Capital Towers", "Moscow", "Russia", "266 m ( 873 ft )", "61/61/61", "Under construction" ], [ "One Avighna Park", "Mumbai", "India", "260 m ( 853 ft )", "64/64", "Under construction" ], [ "NEB Towers", "Kotte", "Sri Lanka", "256 m ( 840 ft )", "70/70", "On hold" ], [ "The Destiny ( Tower )", "Colombo", "Sri Lanka", "", "44/44", "Under construction" ], [ "Oberoi Esquire Towers", "Mumbai", "India", "", "50/50/50", "Under construction" ], [ "Bhoomi Celestia", "Mumbai", "India", "250 m ( 820 ft )", "40/40", "Under construction" ] ]
{ "intro": "The term twin towers in architecture refers to two tall structures with nearly identical characteristics and similar height, usually constructed close to each other and part of a single complex. The charts below lists most twin and other multi-column structures with similar characteristics. Buildings and structures shorter than 100 m (330 ft) are not included.", "section_text": "The original World Trade Center in New York City pictured in March 2001 , six months before they were destroyed .", "section_title": "Twin buildings -- Proposed , under construction , or destroyed", "title": "List of tallest twin buildings and structures", "uid": "List_of_tallest_twin_buildings_and_structures_in_the_world_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tallest_twin_buildings_and_structures" }
1,762
1763
77th_United_States_Congress_0
[ [ "State ( class )", "Vacator", "Reason for change", "Successor", "Date of successor 's formal installation" ], [ "West Virginia ( 2 )", "Matthew M. Neely ( D )", "Resigned January 12 , 1941 , after being elected Governor of West Virginia . Successor was appointed to serve until a special election , which he subsequently lost . In addition , successor took oath of office after the Senate resolved a challenge to the appointment", "Joseph Rosier ( D )", "January 13 , 1941" ], [ "Arkansas ( 2 )", "John E. Miller ( D )", "Resigned March 31 , 1941 , after being appointed judge for the US District Court for the Western District of Arkansas . Successor was appointed to finish the term", "G. Lloyd Spencer ( D )", "April 1 , 1941" ], [ "Texas ( 2 )", "Morris Sheppard ( D )", "Died April 9 , 1941 . Successor was appointed to serve until a special election", "Andrew Jackson Houston ( D )", "April 21 , 1941" ], [ "Mississippi ( 2 )", "Pat Harrison ( D )", "Died June 22 , 1941 . Successor was appointed to serve until a special election", "James Eastland ( D )", "June 30 , 1941" ], [ "Texas ( 2 )", "Andrew Jackson Houston ( D )", "Died June 26 , 1941 . Successor was elected to finish term", "W. Lee O'Daniel ( D )", "June 28 , 1941" ], [ "South Carolina ( 2 )", "James F. Byrnes ( D )", "Resigned July 17 , 1941 , after being appointed Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States . Successor was appointed to serve until a special election", "Alva M. Lumpkin ( D )", "July 22 , 1941" ], [ "South Carolina ( 2 )", "Alva M. Lumpkin ( D )", "Died August 1 , 1941 . Successor was appointed to serve until a special election", "Roger C. Peace ( D )", "August 5 , 1941" ], [ "Mississippi ( 2 )", "James Eastland ( D )", "Appointee did not seek election to finish term . Successor was elected September 28 , 1941 , to finish term", "Wall Doxey ( D )", "September 29 , 1941" ], [ "South Carolina ( 2 )", "Roger C. Peace ( D )", "Appointee did not seek election to finish term . Successor was elected November 4 , 1941 , to finish term", "Burnet R. Maybank ( D )", "November 5 , 1941" ], [ "Colorado ( 3 )", "Alva B. Adams ( D )", "Died December 1 , 1941 . Successor was appointed to serve until the November 3 , 1942 , special election , which he won", "Eugene Millikin ( R )", "December 20 , 1941" ], [ "West Virginia ( 2 )", "Joseph Rosier ( D )", "Appointee lost election November 17 , 1942 , to finish the term . Successor was elected to finish term", "Hugh Shott ( R )", "November 18 , 1942" ], [ "Minnesota ( 2 )", "Joseph H. Ball ( R )", "Appointee did not seek election to finish term . Successor was elected November 17 , 1942 , to finish term", "Arthur E. Nelson ( R )", "November 18 , 1942" ], [ "Nevada ( 1 )", "Berkeley L. Bunker ( D )", "Appointee lost election December 7 , 1942 , to finish the term . Successor was elected to finish term", "James G. Scrugham ( D )", "December 7 , 1942" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Seventy-seventh United States Congress was a meeting of the legislative branch of the United States federal government, composed of the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives. It met in Washington, DC from January 3, 1941, to January 3, 1943, during the ninth and tenth years of Franklin D. Roosevelt's presidency. The apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives was based on the Sixteenth Census of the United States in 1940. Both chambers had a Democratic majority. This was the first Congress to have more than one Senate President (the Vice President of the United States), John Garner and Henry Wallace, due to the passage of the 20th amendment in 1933.", "section_text": "See also : List of special elections to the United States Senate", "section_title": "Changes in membership -- Senate", "title": "77th United States Congress", "uid": "77th_United_States_Congress_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/77th_United_States_Congress" }
1,763
1764
List_of_United_States_stations_available_in_Canada_5
[ [ "Market /city", "Call sign", "Affiliation", "Available ?", "Notes" ], [ "Watertown , New York", "WWNY-TV", "CBS", "Yes", "Carried in Kingston-Brockville , where it is easily available over-the-air . Was formerly carried in Ottawa , dropped due to signal quality issues from distance . WNYF/Fox 7.2 digital subchannel OTA-only ; Watertown digital subchannels are not on cable and not listed in Kingston local TV listings" ], [ "Watertown , New York", "WWTI-TV", "ABC", "Yes", "Carried in Kingston ; The CW Plus WWTI 50.2 digital subchannel available over-the-air only/not in local TV listings" ], [ "Watertown , New York", "WNYF-CD", "Fox", "No", "Low-power HDTV signal only available with full-size rooftop antenna , but a standard-definition WWNY-DT2 digital subchannel provides solid A-grade coverage over-the-air in Kingston , Ontario . More-distant Syracuse and ( later ) Buffalo signals are distributed by Kingston 's Cogeco cable system instead of the more local Watertown affiliate" ], [ "Watertown , New York", "WPBS-DT", "PBS", "Yes", "Carried in Ottawa and Pembroke ( via WNPI-TV ) , Kingston directly ( as WPBS-DT ) . Digital subchannels ( Create / ThinkBright , PBS-HD ) not carried by cable operators but readily available over-the-air in Kingston" ], [ "Syracuse , New York", "WTVH-TV", "CBS", "dropped", "Was carried in Kingston ; had been bumped to higher cable converter channels in favour of WWNY-TV , before being dropped altogether after the United States ' digital transition" ], [ "Syracuse , New York", "WSYR-TV", "ABC", "dropped", "Was carried in Kingston ; had been bumped to higher cable converter channels in favour of commonly owned WWTI-TV , which now occupies the cable 9 position . Station was dropped altogether after the digital transition , like WTVH , above" ], [ "Syracuse , New York", "WSTM-TV", "NBC", "dropped", "Was carried in Kingston ; OTA signal was fringe analogue reception , main channel only . Syracuse locals were dropped in favour of Buffalo NY after 2009 's digital transition" ], [ "Syracuse , New York", "WSYT", "Fox", "dropped", "Was carried in Kingston , although over-the-air availability is weak to limited compared to WWNY-DT2 . Despite the ready availability of a Watertown -based Fox TV affiliate , the Syracuse locals were dropped in favour of Buffalo NY after 2009 's digital transition" ], [ "Syracuse , New York", "WCNY-TV", "PBS", "No", "Intermittently viewable over-the-air in the Kingston- Watertown , New York market but notable by its absence from cable systems , which instead carry WPBS-DT ( for Kingston and Ottawa ) or WTVS-TV PBS Detroit ( for Brockville , Ontario )" ], [ "Rochester , New York", "WROC-TV", "CBS", "Yes", "Carried on cable systems in Belleville , Cobourg , and along the northern shore of Lake Ontario . Bumped from Ottawa-area cable systems" ], [ "Rochester , New York", "WHAM-TV", "ABC", "Yes", "Carried on cable systems in Belleville , Cobourg , and along the northern shore of Lake Ontario . Bumped from Ottawa-area cable systems" ], [ "Rochester , New York", "WHEC-TV", "NBC", "Yes", "Carried on cable systems in Belleville , Cobourg , and along the northern shore of Lake Ontario . Bumped from Ottawa-area cable systems" ], [ "Rochester , New York", "WUHF", "Fox", "Yes", "Carried on cable systems in Belleville , Cobourg , and along the northern shore of Lake Ontario . Bumped from Ottawa-area cable systems" ], [ "Rochester , New York", "WXXI-TV", "PBS", "Yes", "Carried on cable systems in Belleville , Cobourg , and along the northern shore of Lake Ontario . Was never available on cable in the Ottawa area , due to WPBS-DT" ], [ "Buffalo , New York", "WNYO-TV", "MyNet", "Yes", "Carried on cable systems in Brockville and Cornwall , as well as much of Southern Ontario" ] ]
{ "intro": "This page lists all of the local over-the-air television stations in the United States that are carried in Canada via cable/digital cable or satellite. This list also includes stations that were formerly carried, but have since been dropped. The stations are organized by market, starting in the east (Maine) and ending in the west (California). Not all stations are available in all areas. A station that has the word bumped next to it means that the station has been replaced by one of the stations from the CANCOM services, most likely either a Buffalo or Detroit local station in the east, or a Spokane or Seattle local station in the west.", "section_text": "Main article : Watertown TV , Ontario TV , and Ottawa-Gatineau TV These stations are or were carried in the National Capital Region , Pembroke , Ontario , Ottawa , and Kingston , Ontario . This region also includes Peterborough , Ontario , and towns along the northern shore of Lake Ontario .", "section_title": "Other stations / local coverage -- Eastern Ontario", "title": "List of United States television stations available in Canada", "uid": "List_of_United_States_stations_available_in_Canada_5", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_television_stations_available_in_Canada" }
1,764
1765
New_York_metropolitan_area_2
[ [ "Station", "Railroad ( s )", "State", "County", "Type" ], [ "New York Pennsylvania Station", "Amtrak , LIRR , NJT", "NY", "New York", "Terminal and Transfer" ], [ "Grand Central Terminal", "MNRR", "NY", "New York", "Terminal" ], [ "Newark Pennsylvania Station", "Amtrak , NJT , PATH", "NJ", "Essex", "Transfer" ], [ "Hoboken Terminal", "NJT , MNRR , PATH", "NJ", "Hudson", "Terminal" ], [ "Atlantic Terminal", "LIRR", "NY", "Kings", "Terminal" ], [ "Hunterspoint Avenue", "LIRR", "NY", "Queens", "Terminal" ], [ "Woodside Station", "LIRR", "NY", "Queens", "Transfer" ], [ "Jamaica Station", "LIRR", "NY", "Queens", "Transfer" ], [ "Secaucus Junction", "NJT , MNRR", "NJ", "Hudson", "Transfer" ], [ "New Haven Union Station", "Amtrak , MNRR , Shore Line East", "CT", "New Haven", "Terminal and Transfer" ], [ "Trenton Station", "Amtrak , NJT , SEPTA", "NJ", "Mercer", "Terminal and Transfer" ] ]
{ "intro": "The New York metropolitan area is the largest metropolitan area in the world by urban landmass, at 4,585 sq mi (11,880 km2). The metropolitan area includes New York City (the most populous city in the United States), Long Island, and the Mid and Lower Hudson Valley in the state of New York; the five largest cities in New Jersey: Newark, Jersey City, Paterson, Elizabeth, and Edison, and their vicinities; and six of the seven largest cities in Connecticut: Bridgeport, New Haven, Stamford, Waterbury, Norwalk, and Danbury, and their vicinities. The New York metropolitan area remains, by a significant margin, the most populous in the United States, as defined by both the Metropolitan Statistical Area (20.3 million residents in 2017) and the Combined Statistical Area (23.7 million residents in 2016). It is the largest urban agglomeration in the Americas and the tenth largest in the world. The New York metropolitan area continues to be the premier gateway for legal immigration to the United States, with the largest foreign-born population of any metropolitan region in the world. The MSA covers 6,720 sq mi (17,405 km2), while the CSA area is 13,318 sq mi (34,493 km2), encompassing an ethnically and geographically diverse region. The New York metropolitan area's population is larger than that of the state of New York, and the metropolitan airspace accommodated over 130 million passengers in 2016. As a center of many industries, including finance, fintech, international trade, news and traditional media, real estate, education, fashion, entertainment, tourism, biotechnology, law, and manufacturing, the New York City metropolitan region is one of the most important economic regions in the world; in 2015, the MSA produced a gross metropolitan product (GMP) of nearly US$1.60 trillion, while in 2015, the CSA had a GMP of over US$1.83 trillion, both ranking first nationally by a wide margin and behind the GDP of only nine nations and seven nations, respectively. In 2012, the New York metropolitan area was also home to seven of the 25 wealthiest counties in the United States by median household income, according to the American Community Survey. According to Forbes, in 2014, the New York City metropolitan area was home to eight of the top ten ZIP codes in the United States by median housing price, with six in Manhattan alone. The New York Metropolitan Area also houses five of the top ten richest places in America, according to Bloomberg. These are Scarsdale, NY; Short Hills, NJ; Old Greenwich, CT; Bronxville, NY; and Darien, CT.", "section_text": "The metropolitan area is also fundamentally defined by the areas from which people commute into New York City . The city is served by three primary commuter rail systems plus Amtrak . The Long Island Rail Road ( LIRR ) , the busiest commuter railroad in the United States as of 2015 , [ 239 ] is operated by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority ( MTA ) , an agency of the State Government of New York that focuses on New York City-area transit ) . It has two major terminals at Pennsylvania Station in Midtown Manhattan and Atlantic Terminal in Downtown Brooklyn , with a minor terminal at the Long Island City station and a major transfer point at the Jamaica station in Queens . New Jersey Transit ( NJT ) , the second busiest commuter railroad in the United States as of 2015 , [ 239 ] is operated by the New Jersey Transit Corporation , an agency of the state of New Jersey , in conjunction with Metro-North Railroad and Amtrak . It has major terminals at Pennsylvania Station in Manhattan , Hoboken Terminal , and Newark Pennsylvania Station , with a major transfer point at Secaucus Junction in Hudson County , New Jersey . New Jersey Transit also operates the Hudson–Bergen Light Rail through Hudson County , the Newark City Subway , and the River Line that runs along tracks shared with Conrail Shared Assets Operations from Trenton to Camden in southern New Jersey . NJ Transit also has commuter buses operating in and out of Manhattan . Metro-North Railroad ( MNRR ) , the third busiest commuter railroad in the United States as of 2015 , [ 239 ] is also operated by the MTA , in conjunction with the Connecticut Department of Transportation and New Jersey Transit . Its major terminal is Grand Central Terminal . Trains on the Port Jervis Line and Pascack Valley Line terminate at Hoboken Terminal in Hoboken , New Jersey ; commuters may transfer at either Secaucus Junction for New Jersey Transit trains to New York Pennsylvania Station or at Hoboken Terminal for PATH trains into Manhattan . Amtrak 's Northeast Corridor offers service to Philadelphia , New Haven , and other points between and including Boston and Washington , D.C . Major stations in the metropolitan area include :", "section_title": "Transportation -- Rail", "title": "New York metropolitan area", "uid": "New_York_metropolitan_area_2", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_metropolitan_area" }
1,765
1766
1996_World_Artistic_Gymnastics_Championships_5
[ [ "Rank", "Gymnast", "Total" ], [ "1", "Jesús Carballo ( ESP )", "9.800" ], [ "2", "Krasimir Dunev ( BUL )", "9.775" ], [ "3", "Vitaly Scherbo ( BLR )", "9.762" ], [ "4", "Aljaz Pegan ( SLO )", "9.750" ], [ "5", "Chainey Umphrey ( USA )", "9.712" ], [ "6", "Sergei Fedorchenko ( KAZ )", "9.475" ], [ "7", "Zoltán Supola ( HUN )", "9.375" ], [ "8", "Richard Ikeda ( CAN )", "8.075" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Artistic Gymnastics World Championships were held in San Juan, Puerto Rico, in 1996. The team and all around events were not contested at the 1996 Artistic Gymnastics World Championships. The format was similar to that of the 1992 and 2002 Worlds, with medals being awarded for the individual WAG and MAG apparatus. There were three rounds of competition: the preliminary round open to everyone; the semi-finals open to the top sixteen qualifiers; and the finals for the top eight gymnasts. The 1996 Artistic Gymnastics World Championships were also the last be held in the same year as a Summer Olympics.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Men -- Horizontal Bar", "title": "1996 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships", "uid": "1996_World_Artistic_Gymnastics_Championships_5", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1996_World_Artistic_Gymnastics_Championships" }
1,766
1767
Gimhae_International_Airport_3
[ [ "Rank", "Airport", "Passengers 2018", "Flight", "Top carriers" ], [ "1", "Osaka-Kansai", "1,200,457", "8,016", "Air Busan , Eastar Jet , Jeju Air , Jin Air , Korean Air , Peach Aviation , T'way Air" ], [ "2", "Fukuoka", "1,101,085", "6,296", "Air Busan , Jeju Air , Korean Air" ], [ "3", "Taipei-Taoyuan", "769,407", "4,917", "Air Busan , China Airlines , Jeju Air , Korean Air , Tigerair Taiwan" ], [ "4", "Tokyo-Narita", "751,791", "5,089", "Air Busan , Japan Airlines , Jeju Air , Korean Air" ], [ "5", "Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi", "632,993", "3,377", "Eastar Jet , Jeju Air , Jin Air , Korean Air , Thai Airways International , T'way Air" ], [ "6", "Da Nang", "630,273", "3,996", "Air Busan , Asiana Airlines , Jin Air , Korean Air , T'way Air" ], [ "7", "Hong Kong", "371,133", "2,431", "Air Busan , Cathay Dragon , Hong Kong Express Airways , Korean Air" ], [ "8", "Shanghai-Pudong", "364,181", "2,808", "Asiana Airlines , China Eastern Airlines , Korean Air , Shanghai Airlines" ], [ "9", "Guam", "357,604", "2,298", "Air Busan , Jeju Air , Jin Air" ], [ "10", "Cebu", "332,786", "2,074", "Air Busan , Jeju Air , Jin Air" ], [ "11", "Hanoi", "329,713", "1,608", "Air Busan , Korean Air , T'way Air , Vietnam Airlines , VietJet Air" ], [ "12", "Beijing-Capital", "281,802", "2,432", "Air China , Asiana Airlines , Korean Air" ], [ "13", "Qingdao", "226,679", "1,454", "Air Busan , Korean Air" ], [ "14", "Sapporo-Chitose", "207,424", "1,469", "Air Busan , Eastar Jet , Jin Air , Korean Air" ], [ "15", "Ho Chi Minh City", "189,098", "747", "Vietnam Airlines , VietJet Air" ], [ "16", "Manila", "186,941", "896", "Asiana Airlines , Philippine Airlines" ], [ "17", "Okinawa-Naha", "163,505", "1,107", "Asiana Airlines , Jeju Air , Jin Air" ], [ "18", "Kuala Lumpur-International", "156,970", "574", "AirAsia X" ], [ "19", "Nagoya-Chūbu Centrair", "153,557", "1,110", "Air Busan , Korean Air" ], [ "20", "Kota Kinabalu", "116,101", "729", "Eastar Jet" ] ]
{ "intro": "Gimhae International Airport (Korean: 김해국제공항; Hanja: 金海國際空港), commonly known as Gimhae Airport (IATA: PUS, ICAO: RKPK) (formerly Kimhae International Airport) is located on the western end of Busan, South Korea. The name Gimhae comes from the nearby city of Gimhae. It opened in 1976. A new international terminal opened on October 31, 2007. Gimhae International Airport is the main hub for Air Busan, Asiana Airlines and Korean Air. Runway 18L/36R is used for military purposes only for Gimhae Air Base, but due to increasing traffic, there are plans to open the runway for airliners. In 2018, 17,064,613 passengers used the airport. As the airport is now beyond its design capacity, it is embarking on a major expansion project to add a new runway and new terminal facilities. Construction is due to begin in 2021 for an estimated 2026 completion.", "section_text": "Busiest domestic routes ( 2018 ) Rank Airport Passengers 2018 Flight Top carriers 1 Jeju 4,101,909 22,965 Air Busan , Asiana Airlines , Eastar Jet , Jeju Air , Jin Air , Korean Air 2 Seoul–Gimpo 2,633,199 20,354 Air Busan , Eastar Jet , Jeju Air , Korean Air 3 Seoul–Incheon 462,504 4,122 Air Busan , Asiana Airlines , Jeju Air , Korean Air 4 Cheongju 122 1 Korean Air", "section_title": "Traffic and statistics -- Top destinations", "title": "Gimhae International Airport", "uid": "Gimhae_International_Airport_3", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gimhae_International_Airport" }
1,767
1768
List_of_Scheduled_Monuments_in_Greater_Manchester_8
[ [ "Name", "Remains", "Date", "Location", "Description" ], [ "Astley Green Colliery", "Mining site", "k 1908", "Astley 53°29′43″N 2°26′41″W / 53.495311°N 2.444649°W / 53.495311 ; -2.444649 ( Astley Green Colliery )", "The Pilkington Colliery Company began construction of the colliery in 1908 , and the site opened for coal production in 1912 . The colliery was closed in 1970 and is now Astley Green Colliery Museum . Most of the buildings associated with the colliery have been destroyed as has one of the mine shafts" ], [ "Cross base", "Cross base", "a Medieval", "Junction of Green Lane , Standish Wood Lane and Beech Walk , Standish 53°34′49″N 2°39′43″W / 53.580335°N 2.662006°W / 53.580335 ; -2.662006 ( Cross base )", "The stone cross was one of four known crosses that marked the medieval route from Wigan to Chorley . The cross base is no longer in its original place , having been moved when the road was widened" ], [ "Cross base", "Cross base", "b Medieval", "Green Lane , Standish 53°34′52″N 2°39′38″W / 53.581062°N 2.660506°W / 53.581062 ; -2.660506 ( Cross base )", "The stone cross was one of four known crosses that marked the medieval route from Wigan to Chorley . It is protected as a Grade II listed building" ], [ "Cross base", "Cross base", "c Medieval", "Standish Wood Lane , Standish 53°34′25″N 2°39′38″W / 53.573511°N 2.66054°W / 53.573511 ; -2.66054 ( Cross base )", "The stone cross was one of four known crosses that marked the medieval route from Wigan to Chorley" ], [ "Gidlow Hall", "Standing building", "h 1574", "Aspull 53°33′31″N 2°33′59″W / 53.558532°N 2.566397°W / 53.558532 ; -2.566397 ( Gidlow Hall )", "The present structure dates from around 1574 , although it is thought to have replaced an earlier building . In 1840 , the hall was rebuilt in the Gothic Revival style . Gidlow Hall is protected as a Grade II listed building" ], [ "The Great Haigh Sough Portal", "Brick drainage", "i 1653", "Haigh 53°33′33″N 2°37′03″W / 53.559088°N 2.617436°W / 53.559088 ; -2.617436 ( Haigh Sough drainage )", "Between 1653 and 1670 , the Haigh Sough drainage system was under construction ; its purpose was to drain the local collieries . The system extends for 936 m ( 3,071 ft ) and has only one entrance . It was in use until 1929 and the entrance is now covered by a steel grille to prevent access" ], [ "Mab 's Cross", "Stub of stone cross", "f 13th century", "Standishgate , Wigan 53°33′04″N 2°37′34″W / 53.551132°N 2.626076°W / 53.551132 ; -2.626076 ( Mab 's Cross )", "Mab 's Cross was one of four known crosses that marked the medieval route from Wigan to Chorley . In 1922 , the cross was moved from its original position when the road was widened and is protected as a Grade II* listed building" ], [ "Standish Market Cross", "Stone cross", "d Medieval", "Market place , Standish 53°35′12″N 2°39′38″W / 53.586545°N 2.660592°W / 53.586545 ; -2.660592 ( Standish Market Cross )", "The base of the stone cross is medieval , but the cross shaft is modern . It is protected as a Grade II listed building" ], [ "Moat of Moat House", "Dried-up moat", "j 18th century", "Haigh 53°34′36″N 2°36′13″W / 53.576598°N 2.603644°W / 53.576598 ; -2.603644 ( Moat House )", "All that remains is a dried-up square moat surrounding the 18th-century Moat House" ], [ "Morleys Hall", "Standing building", "e Medieval", "Astley 53°29′20″N 2°28′04″W / 53.489019°N 2.467796°W / 53.489019 ; -2.467796 ( Morleys Hall )", "The current hall was built in the 19th century , however some 16th and 17th century timber framing is incorporated into the structure . In 1641 , it was the home of Ambrose Barlow . The site is surrounded by a 12-15 m ( 39-49 ft ) wide and 3 m ( 9.8 ft ) deep waterlogged medieval moat , and Morleys Hall is a Grade II* listed building" ], [ "New Hall moated site", "Moat", "g 16th century", "Astley , Tyldesley 53°30′21″N 2°27′12″W / 53.505706°N 2.453352°W / 53.505706 ; -2.453352 ( New Hall )", "The moat surrounds the site of the original medieval building , which was replaced a by a post-medieval farmhouse . The moat is filled with water , however the ruined farmhouse is not part of the scheduled monument" ], [ "Winstanley Hall", "Standing building", "h 1560s", "Winstanley 53°31′21″N 2°41′14″W / 53.522389°N 2.68735°W / 53.522389 ; -2.68735 ( Winstanley Hall )", "Winstanley hall was built in the 1560s for the Winstanley family of Wigan , who were Lords of the Manor . It is linked with the neighbouring halls of Bispham Hall ( built in 1573 ) , Birchley Hall ( 1594 ) , and Hacking Hall ( 1607 ) . Winstanley Hall was extended in the 17th and 18th centuries , and further work was done in the 19th century including work by architect Lewis Wyatt in the Jacobean style . The building is currently in a decayed state , and lies unoccupied . It is also a Grade II* listed building" ] ]
{ "intro": "There are 37 scheduled monuments in Greater Manchester, a metropolitan county in North West England. In the United Kingdom, a scheduled monument is a nationally important archaeological site or historic building that has been given protection against unauthorised change by being placed on a list (or schedule) by the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport; English Heritage takes the leading role in identifying such sites. Scheduled monuments are defined in the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979 and the National Heritage Act 1983. They are also referred to as scheduled ancient monuments. There are about 18,300 scheduled monument entries on the list, which is maintained by English Heritage; more than one site can be included in a single entry. While a scheduled monument can also be recognised as a listed building, English Heritage considers listed building status as a better way of protecting buildings than scheduled monument status. If a monument is considered by English Heritage to no longer merit scheduling it can be descheduled. The metropolitan county of Greater Manchester is composed of 10 metropolitan boroughs: Bolton, Bury, Manchester, Oldham, Rochdale, Salford, Stockport, Tameside, Trafford and Wigan. Rochdale has no scheduled monuments; those in the other boroughs are listed separately. They range from prehistoric structures - the oldest of which date from the Bronze Age - to more modern structures such as the Astley Green Colliery, from 1908. Greater Manchester has seven prehistoric monuments (i.e. Bronze or Iron Age), found in Bury, Oldham, Salford, Stockport, and Tameside.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Wigan", "title": "Scheduled monuments in Greater Manchester", "uid": "List_of_Scheduled_Monuments_in_Greater_Manchester_8", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scheduled_monuments_in_Greater_Manchester" }
1,768
1769
2012_Allsvenskan_0
[ [ "Team", "Location", "Stadium", "Turf", "Stadium capacity" ], [ "AIK", "Stockholm", "Råsunda Stadium", "Natural", "36,608" ], [ "Djurgårdens IF", "Stockholm", "Stockholm Stadion", "Natural", "14,700" ], [ "IF Elfsborg", "Borås", "Borås Arena", "Artificial", "16,899" ], [ "GAIS", "Gothenburg", "Gamla Ullevi", "Natural", "18,416" ], [ "Gefle IF", "Gävle", "Strömvallen", "Artificial", "6,711" ], [ "IFK Göteborg", "Gothenburg", "Gamla Ullevi", "Natural", "18,416" ], [ "Helsingborgs IF", "Helsingborg", "Olympia", "Natural", "16,500" ], [ "BK Häcken", "Gothenburg", "Rambergsvallen", "Natural", "6,000" ], [ "Kalmar FF", "Kalmar", "Guldfågeln Arena", "Natural", "12,000" ], [ "Malmö FF", "Malmö", "Swedbank Stadion", "Natural", "24,000" ], [ "Mjällby AIF", "Mjällby", "Strandvallen", "Natural", "7,000" ], [ "IFK Norrköping", "Norrköping", "Idrottsparken", "Artificial", "17,234" ], [ "GIF Sundsvall", "Sundsvall", "Norrporten Arena", "Artificial", "7,700" ], [ "Syrianska FC", "Södertälje", "Södertälje Fotbollsarena", "Artificial", "6,400" ], [ "Åtvidabergs FF", "Åtvidaberg", "Kopparvallen", "Artificial", "8,300" ], [ "Örebro SK", "Örebro", "Behrn Arena", "Artificial", "13,129" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 2012 Allsvenskan, part of the 2012 Swedish football season, was the 88th season of Allsvenskan since its establishment in 1924. The 2012 fixtures were released on 12 December 2011. The season started on 31 March 2012 and ended on 4 November 2012. There was a five-week-long break between 24 May and 30 June during the UEFA Euro 2012. Helsingborgs IF were the defending champions, having won their fifth Swedish championship and their seventh Allsvenskan title the previous season. IF Elfsborg won the Swedish championship this season, their sixth one, in the 30th and last round on 4 November 2012 by drawing with Åtvidabergs FF 1-1 at home, and by the only other title contender in the last round Malmö FF losing 2-0 against AIK at the last Allsvenskan match at Råsunda. This was Elfsborg's second Swedish championship of the 21st century having won their last title in the 2006 Allsvenskan season. A total of 16 teams contested the league; 14 returned from the 2011 season and two had been promoted from Superettan.", "section_text": "AIKIF ElfsborgHelsingborgs IFBK HäckenGAISIFK GöteborgMalmö FFKalmar FFGefle IFÖrebro SKMjällby AIFDjurgårdens IFIFK NorrköpingÅtvidabergs FFGIF SundsvallSyrianska FC Locations of the 2012 Allsvenskan teams", "section_title": "Teams -- Stadia and locations", "title": "2012 Allsvenskan", "uid": "2012_Allsvenskan_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012_Allsvenskan" }
1,769
1770
List_of_best-selling_books_2
[ [ "Book", "Author ( s )", "Original language", "First published", "Approximate sales" ], [ "The Tale of Peter Rabbit", "Beatrix Potter", "English", "1902", "45 million" ], [ "Jonathan Livingston Seagull", "Richard Bach", "English", "1970", "44 million" ], [ "The Very Hungry Caterpillar", "Eric Carle", "English", "1969", "43 million" ], [ "Cosmos", "Carl Sagan", "English", "1980", "40 million < https : //www.nationalgeographicpartners.com/press/2020/1/cosmos -- possible-worlds/ >" ], [ "A Message to Garcia", "Elbert Hubbard", "English", "1899", "40 million" ], [ "Sophie 's World ( Sofies verden )", "Jostein Gaarder", "Norwegian", "1991", "40 million" ], [ "Flowers in the Attic", "V. C. Andrews", "English", "1979", "40 million" ], [ "To Kill a Mockingbird", "Harper Lee", "English", "1960", "40 million" ], [ "Angels & Demons", "Dan Brown", "English", "2000", "39 million" ], [ "Kane and Abel", "Jeffrey Archer", "English", "1979", "37 million" ], [ "How the Steel Was Tempered ( Как закалялась сталь )", "Nikolai Ostrovsky", "Russian", "1932", "36.4 million copies in USSR" ], [ "War and Peace ( Война и мир )", "Leo Tolstoy", "Russian", "1869", "36.0 million copies in USSR" ], [ "The Diary of Anne Frank ( Het Achterhuis )", "Anne Frank", "Dutch", "1947", "35 million" ], [ "Your Erroneous Zones", "Wayne Dyer", "English", "1976", "35 million" ], [ "The Purpose Driven Life", "Rick Warren", "English", "2002", "33 million" ], [ "The Thorn Birds", "Colleen McCullough", "English", "1977", "33 million" ], [ "The Kite Runner", "Khaled Hosseini", "English", "2003", "31.5 million" ], [ "Valley of the Dolls", "Jacqueline Susann", "English", "1966", "31 million" ], [ "The Lost Symbol", "Dan Brown", "English", "2009", "30 million" ], [ "Gone with the Wind", "Margaret Mitchell", "English", "1936", "30 million" ] ]
{ "intro": "This page provides lists of best-selling individual books and book series to date and in any language. Best selling refers to the estimated number of copies sold of each book, rather than the number of books printed or currently owned. Comics and textbooks are not included in this list. The books are listed according to the highest sales estimate as reported in reliable, independent sources. This list is incomplete because there are many books, such as The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas, or A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens, that are commonly cited as best-selling books yet have no reliable sales figures. Similarly, many notable book series that sold very widely are poorly documented (Land of Oz) or consist of multiple sub-series (Tom Swift). According to Guinness World Records as of 1995, the Bible is the best-selling book of all time, with an estimated 5 billion copies sold and distributed. The Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-tung, also known as the Little Red Book, has produced a wide array of sales and distribution figures - with estimates ranging from 800 million to over 6.5 billion printed volumes, with some claiming the distribution ran into the billions and some citing over a billion official volumes between 1966 and 1969 alone as well as untold numbers of unofficial local reprints and unofficial translations. Exact print figures for these and other books may also be missing or unreliable since these kinds of books may be produced by many different and unrelated publishers, in some cases over many centuries. All books of a religious, ideological, philosophical or political nature have thus been excluded from the below lists of best-selling books for these reasons. Having sold more than 500 million copies worldwide, Harry Potter by J. K. Rowling is the best-selling book series in history. The first novel in the series, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, has sold in excess of 120 million copies, making it one of the best-selling books of all time.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "List of best-selling individual books -- Between 30 million and 50 million copies", "title": "List of best-selling books", "uid": "List_of_best-selling_books_2", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_best-selling_books" }
1,770
1771
List_of_stratigraphic_units_with_ornithischian_tracks_2
[ [ "Name", "Location", "Description" ], [ "Akaiwa Formation", "Japan", "Description" ], [ "Alacón Formation", "Spain", "Description" ], [ "Antenor Navarro Formation", "Brazil", "Description" ], [ "Arapahoe Formation", "USA", "Description" ], [ "Aréen Formation", "Spain", "Description" ], [ "Argiles de l'Irhazer", "Niger", "Description" ], [ "Banos del Flaco Formation", "Chile", "Description" ], [ "Blackhawk Formation", "USA", "Description" ], [ "Broome Sandstone", "Australia", "Description" ], [ "Bruckeburg Formation", "Germany", "" ], [ "Cadomin Formation", "Canada", "Description" ], [ "Cal Orcko", "Bolivia", "" ], [ "Castellar Formation", "Spain", "Description" ], [ "Morrison Formation", "USA", "Description" ], [ "Calcare di Altamura Formation", "Italy", "Description" ], [ "Calcari Grigi di Noriglio Formation", "Italy", "Description" ], [ "Cedar Mountain Formation", "USA", "Description" ], [ "Cerroa del Pueblo Formation", "Mexico", "Description" ], [ "Chacarilla Formation", "Chile", "Description" ], [ "Chandler Formation", "Canada", "Description" ] ]
{ "intro": "List of dinosaur-bearing rock formations", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Ornithopods", "title": "List of stratigraphic units with ornithischian tracks", "uid": "List_of_stratigraphic_units_with_ornithischian_tracks_2", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_stratigraphic_units_with_ornithischian_tracks" }
1,771
1772
Switzerland_men's_national_junior_ice_hockey_team_0
[ [ "#", "Name", "Pos", "Date of Birth", "Club" ], [ "1", "Gianluca Zaetta", "G", "18 December 1999", "EV Zug" ], [ "29", "Akira Schmid", "G", "12 May 2000", "Omaha Lancers" ], [ "30", "Luca Hollenstein", "G", "5 March 2000", "EV Zug" ], [ "4", "Simon le Coultre", "D", "9 August 1999", "Moncton Wildcats" ], [ "7", "Gianluca Burger", "D", "27 April 1999", "GCK Lions" ], [ "8", "Janis Jérôme Moser", "D", "6 June 2000", "EHC Biel" ], [ "16", "Nico Gross", "D", "26 January 2000", "Oshawa Generals" ], [ "19", "Davyd Barandun", "D", "2 January 2000", "HC Davos" ], [ "21", "Tim Berni", "D", "11 February 2000", "ZSC Lions" ], [ "26", "David Aebischer", "D", "26 September 2000", "Gatineau Olympiques" ], [ "6", "Marco Lehmann", "F", "19 March 1999", "EHC Kloten" ], [ "9", "Nicolas Müller", "F", "21 June 1999", "Modo Hockey J20" ], [ "10", "Yannick Bruschweiler", "F", "29 August 1999", "GCK Lions" ], [ "11", "Sven Leuenberger", "F", "18 February 1999", "EV Zug" ], [ "12", "Jeremi Gerber", "F", "1 March 2000", "SC Bern" ], [ "13", "Justin Sigrist", "F", "20 April 1999", "GCK Lions" ], [ "14", "Sandro Schmid", "F", "3 June 2000", "Malmö Redhawks J20" ], [ "15", "Matthew Verboon", "F", "23 February 2000", "Salmon Arm Silverbacks" ], [ "18", "Valentin Nussbaumer", "F", "25 September 2000", "Shawinigan Cataractes" ], [ "20", "Ramon Tanner", "F", "28 August 1999", "EHC Biel" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Switzerland men's national under 20 ice hockey team is the national under-20 ice hockey team of Switzerland. The team is controlled by the Schweizerischer Eishockeyverband, a member of the International Ice Hockey Federation.", "section_text": "From the 2019 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships [ 5 ]", "section_title": "Team roster", "title": "Switzerland men's national junior ice hockey team", "uid": "Switzerland_men's_national_junior_ice_hockey_team_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Switzerland_men's_national_junior_ice_hockey_team" }
1,772
1773
National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Cass_County,_Nebraska_0
[ [ "", "Name on the Register", "Date listed", "Location", "City or town" ], [ "1", "Ashland Archeological Site", "February 10 , 1975 ( # 75001090 )", "Both sides of a small stream that meets Salt Creek immediately above its confluence with the Platte River 41°01′54″N 96°18′59″W / 41.031722°N 96.316389°W / 41.031722 ; -96.316389 ( Ashland Archeological Site )", "Ashland" ], [ "2", "Bridge", "June 29 , 1992 ( # 92000707 )", "County road over an unnamed stream , 4.7 miles ( 7.6 km ) southeast of Louisville 40°58′22″N 96°04′55″W / 40.972778°N 96.081944°W / 40.972778 ; -96.081944 ( Bridge )", "Louisville" ], [ "3", "Cass County Courthouse", "January 10 , 1990 ( # 89002248 )", "Main St. between 3rd and 4th Sts . 41°00′42″N 95°53′01″W / 41.011667°N 95.8835°W / 41.011667 ; -95.8835 ( Cass County Courthouse )", "Plattsmouth" ], [ "4", "Theodore Davis Site", "May 19 , 1972 ( # 72000743 )", "Address Restricted", "Weeping Water" ], [ "5", "George E. Dovey House", "November 5 , 2018 ( # 100003091 )", "423 N 4th St. 41°00′54″N 95°53′02″W / 41.0151°N 95.8838°W / 41.0151 ; -95.8838 ( George E. Dovey House )", "Plattsmouth" ], [ "6", "The Elms", "March 24 , 1977 ( # 77000824 )", "204 East F Street 40°50′39″N 96°17′31″W / 40.844206°N 96.291825°W / 40.844206 ; -96.291825 ( The Elms )", "Elmwood" ], [ "7", "Paul Fitzgerald House", "March 2 , 2006 ( # 06000100 )", "513 E. 2nd St. 41°00′05″N 96°09′23″W / 41.00125°N 96.1565°W / 41.00125 ; -96.1565 ( Paul Fitzgerald House )", "Louisville" ], [ "8", "Paul Gering House", "July 12 , 2006 ( # 06000604 )", "423 N. 6th St. 41°00′54″N 95°53′09″W / 41.01506°N 95.88586°W / 41.01506 ; -95.88586 ( Paul Gering House )", "Plattsmouth" ], [ "9", "Gibson House", "March 20 , 1986 ( # 86000471 )", "107 Clinton 40°52′15″N 96°08′41″W / 40.87072°N 96.14475°W / 40.87072 ; -96.14475 ( Gibson House )", "Weeping Water" ], [ "10", "Walker Gilmore Site ( 22CC28 )", "October 15 , 1966 ( # 66000441 )", "Northeastern quarter of the northeastern quarter of Section 28 , Township 11 North , Range 14 East 40°53′59″N 95°50′14″W / 40.899722°N 95.837222°W / 40.899722 ; -95.837222 ( Walker Gilmore Site ( 22CC28 ) )", "Murray" ], [ "11", "James and Margaret Greer Farmstead", "March 21 , 2011 ( # 11000103 )", "6315 202nd St. 40°53′18″N 96°26′49″W / 40.888333°N 96.446944°W / 40.888333 ; -96.446944 ( James and Margaret Greer Farmstead )", "Alvo" ], [ "12", "Kehlbeck Farmstead", "September 26 , 1985 ( # 85002577 )", "Address Restricted", "Avoca" ], [ "13", "Christian Kupke Farmstead", "December 19 , 2012 ( # 12001073 )", "32618 Church Rd . 40°57′27″N 96°14′54″W / 40.957507°N 96.248392°W / 40.957507 ; -96.248392 ( Christian Kupke Farmstead )", "Murdock" ], [ "14", "Velosco V. Leonard House", "November 5 , 2018 ( # 100003092 )", "323 N 6th St. 41°00′51″N 95°53′10″W / 41.0142°N 95.8862°W / 41.0142 ; -95.8862 ( Velosco V. Leonard House )", "Plattsmouth" ], [ "15", "Manley School", "December 30 , 2004 ( # 04001414 )", "115 Cherry St. 40°55′14″N 96°10′04″W / 40.9205°N 96.16772°W / 40.9205 ; -96.16772 ( Manley School )", "Manley" ], [ "16", "McLaughlin-Waugh-Dovey House", "October 14 , 1980 ( # 80002443 )", "414 B Ave. 41°00′49″N 95°53′05″W / 41.01353°N 95.88464°W / 41.01353 ; -95.88464 ( McLaughlin-Waugh-Dovey House )", "Plattsmouth" ], [ "17", "Naomi Institute", "March 24 , 1977 ( # 77000825 )", "3 miles ( 4.8 km ) east of Murray 40°55′46″N 95°51′10″W / 40.92933°N 95.85289°W / 40.92933 ; -95.85289 ( Naomi Institute )", "Murray" ], [ "18", "Nehawka Flint Quarries", "January 26 , 1970 ( # 70000368 )", "Address Restricted", "Nehawka" ], [ "19", "Nehawka Public Library", "December 5 , 2002 ( # 02001481 )", "Southeast corner of Elm and Maple Streets . 40°49′45″N 95°59′19″W / 40.82906°N 95.98853°W / 40.82906 ; -95.98853 ( Nehawka Public Library )", "Nehawka" ], [ "20", "Capt . John O'Rourke House", "March 2 , 2006 ( # 06000102 )", "424 N. 6th St. 41°00′54″N 95°53′11″W / 41.01508°N 95.8865°W / 41.01508 ; -95.8865 ( Capt . John O'Rourke House )", "Plattsmouth" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Cass County, Nebraska. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Cass County, Nebraska, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map. There are 29 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the county, including 1 National Historic Landmark.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Current listings", "title": "National Register of Historic Places listings in Cass County, Nebraska", "uid": "National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Cass_County,_Nebraska_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Register_of_Historic_Places_listings_in_Cass_County,_Nebraska" }
1,773
1774
List_of_ship_launches_in_1944_1
[ [ "Date", "Ship", "Country", "Builder", "Location", "Class / type" ], [ "1 February", "Daniel G. Reid", "United States", "Permanente Metals , # 2 Yard", "Richmond , California", "Liberty ship" ], [ "2 February", "Cornelius Vanderbilt", "United States", "Permanente Metals , # 2 Yard", "Richmond , California", "Liberty ship" ], [ "2 February", "Morris Sigman", "United States", "Bethlehem-Fairfield Shipyards", "Baltimore", "Liberty ship" ], [ "2 February", "William D. Byron", "United States", "Bethlehem-Fairfield Shipyards", "Baltimore", "Liberty ship" ], [ "2 February", "Pittsburgh", "United States", "Bethlehem Steel Company", "Quincy , Massachusetts", "Baltimore -class cruiser" ], [ "3 February", "Frank Gilbreth", "United States", "Walsh-Kaiser Company", "Providence , Rhode Island", "Liberty ship" ], [ "3 February", "Greece Victory", "United States", "California Shipbuilding Corporation", "Los Angeles", "Victory ship" ], [ "3 February", "Morris Sheppard", "United States", "Todd Houston Shipbuilding Corporation", "Houston , Texas", "Liberty ship" ], [ "4 February", "Britain Victory", "United States", "Oregon Shipbuilding Company", "Portland", "Victory ship" ], [ "4 February", "Sherman O. Houghton", "United States", "California Shipbuilding Corporation", "Los Angeles", "Liberty ship" ], [ "4 February", "Shamrock Bay", "United States", "Kaiser Shipyards", "Vancouver , Washington", "Casablanca -class escort carrier" ], [ "5 February", "James Devereux", "United States", "Permanente Metals , # 2 Yard", "Richmond , California", "Liberty ship" ], [ "5 February", "John H. Thomas", "United States", "Permanente Metals , # 2 Yard", "Richmond , California", "Liberty ship" ], [ "5 February", "Samhorn", "United States", "Southeastern Shipbuilding Corporation", "Savannah , Georgia", "Liberty ship" ], [ "5 February", "Samstrule", "United States", "Bethlehem-Fairfield Shipyards", "Baltimore", "Liberty ship" ], [ "6 February", "Atlanta", "United States", "New York Shipbuilding Corporation", "Camden , New Jersey", "Cleveland -class cruiser" ], [ "7 February", "Benjamin H. Hill", "United States", "J . A. Jones Construction Company", "Brunswick , Georgia", "Liberty ship" ], [ "7 February", "Samlyth", "United States", "Bethlehem-Fairfield Shipyards", "Baltimore", "Liberty ship" ], [ "7 February", "Ticonderoga", "United States", "Newport News Shipbuilding", "Newport News , Virginia", "Essex -class aircraft carrier" ], [ "8 February", "Andrew Turnbull", "United States", "St. Johns River Shipbuilding Company", "Jacksonville , Florida", "Liberty ship" ] ]
{ "intro": "This list of ship launches in 1944 is a list of some of the ships launched in 1944.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "February", "title": "List of ship launches in 1944", "uid": "List_of_ship_launches_in_1944_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ship_launches_in_1944" }
1,774
1775
CMLL_Super_Viernes_(September_2012)_1
[ [ "Order", "Wrestler", "Eliminated by" ], [ "1", "Namajague", "Valiente" ], [ "2", "Black Warrior", "Taichi" ], [ "3", "Valiente", "Okumura" ], [ "4", "Okumura", "Negro Casas" ], [ "5", "Negro Casas", "Hiroshi Tanahashi" ], [ "6", "Taichi", "La Mascara" ], [ "7", "La Mascara", "Hiroshi Tanahashi" ], [ "8", "Hiroshi Tanahashi", "Winner" ] ]
{ "intro": "In September 2012 the Mexican professional wrestling promotion Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL) held three CMLL Super Viernes shows, all of which took place in Arena México on Friday nights. On Friday September 14, CMLL held their annual Anniversary Show, replacing the regular Super Viernes show. Some of the matches from Super Viernes are taped for CMLL's weekly shows that air in Mexico the week following the Super Viernes show. The shows features various professional wrestling matches with different wrestlers involved in pre-existing scripted feuds or storylines. Wrestlers portray either villains (referred to as rudos in Mexico) or fan favorites (technicos in Mexico) as they follow a series of tension-building events, which culminate in a wrestling match or series of matches. Being professional wrestling events matches are not won legitimately; they are instead won via predetermined outcomes to the matches that is kept secret from the general public.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "September 7 , 2012 -- Torneo Cibernetico order of elimination", "title": "CMLL Super Viernes (September 2012)", "uid": "CMLL_Super_Viernes_(September_2012)_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CMLL_Super_Viernes_(September_2012)" }
1,775
1776
Media_in_Calgary_0
[ [ "Frequency", "Call sign", "Branding", "Format", "Owner" ], [ "AM 660", "CFFR", "660 News", "news", "Rogers Media" ], [ "AM 700", "CJLI", "AM 700 The Light", "Christian music and talk", "Touch Canada Broadcasting" ], [ "AM 770", "CHQR", "AM 770", "talk radio", "Corus Entertainment" ], [ "AM 910", "CKDQ", "Q91", "country music", "Newcap Broadcasting" ], [ "AM 960", "CFAC", "Sportsnet Radio Fan 960", "sports", "Rogers Media" ], [ "AM 1010", "CBR", "CBC Radio One", "news / talk", "Canadian Broadcasting Corporation" ], [ "AM 1060", "CKMX", "Funny 1060", "comedy", "Bell Media" ], [ "AM 1140", "CHRB", "AM 1140", "news / sports and community", "Golden West Broadcasting" ], [ "FM 88.1", "CKAV-FM-3", "Aboriginal Voices", "First Nations", "Aboriginal Voices Radio" ], [ "FM 88.9", "CJSI-FM", "Shine FM", "Christian music", "Touch Canada Broadcasting" ], [ "FM 89.7", "CBCX-FM", "Ici Musique", "public music", "Canadian Broadcasting Corporation" ], [ "FM 90.3", "CKMP-FM", "Amp Radio 90.3", "contemporary hit radio", "Newcap Broadcasting" ], [ "FM 90.9", "CJSW-FM", "CJSW 90.9", "campus radio", "University of Calgary" ], [ "FM 92.1", "CJAY-FM", "CJAY92", "active rock", "Bell Media" ], [ "FM 92.9", "CFEX-FM", "X92.9", "modern rock", "Harvard Broadcasting" ], [ "FM 93.7", "CKUA-FM-1", "CKUA Radio Network", "public broadcasting", "CKUA Radio Foundation" ], [ "FM 94.7", "CHKF-FM", "FM 94.7", "Asian Canadian community", "Fairchild Media Group" ], [ "FM 95.3", "CHPK-FM", "Wild 95.3", "Country", "Jim Pattison Group" ], [ "FM 95.9", "CHFM-FM", "95.9 CHFM", "adult contemporary", "Rogers Media" ], [ "FM 96.9", "CJAQ-FM", "Jack FM", "adult hits", "Rogers Media" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of media outlets in the city of Calgary, Alberta, Canada.", "section_text": "The city of Calgary has 33 terrestrial radio stations in which 8 are on the AM frequency and 25 on the FM frequency .", "section_title": "Radio", "title": "Media in Calgary", "uid": "Media_in_Calgary_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Media_in_Calgary" }
1,776
1777
1993_Major_League_Baseball_Draft_1
[ [ "Pick", "Player", "Team", "Position", "School" ], [ "29", "Kevin Orie", "Chicago Cubs", "Shortstop", "Indiana University" ], [ "30", "Mike Bell", "Texas Rangers", "Third Base", "Moeller High School" ], [ "31", "Josue Estrada", "Montreal Expos", "Outfield", "Medardo Carazo High School" ], [ "32", "Pat Watkins", "Cincinnati Reds", "Outfield", "East Carolina University" ], [ "33", "Marc Barcelo", "Minnesota Twins", "Pitcher", "Arizona State University" ], [ "34", "Jermaine Allensworth", "Pittsburgh Pirates", "Outfield", "Purdue University" ], [ "35", "Todd Dunn", "Milwaukee Brewers", "Outfield", "University of North Florida" ], [ "36", "Willie Adams", "Oakland Athletics", "Pitcher", "Stanford University" ], [ "37", "Matt Farner", "Toronto Blue Jays", "Outfield", "East Pennsboro High School" ], [ "38", "Kelcey Mucker", "Minnesota Twins", "Outfield", "Lawrenceburg High School" ], [ "39", "Joe Wagner", "Milwaukee Brewers", "Pitcher", "University of Central Florida" ], [ "40", "Jeremy Lee", "Toronto Blue Jays", "Pitcher", "Galesburg High School" ], [ "41", "Mark Lukasiewicz", "Toronto Blue Jays", "Pitcher", "Brevard Community College" ], [ "42", "Charles Rice", "Pittsburgh Pirates", "First Base", "Parker High School" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 1993 Major League Baseball draft began with first round selections on June 3, 1993. Alex Rodriguez was selected first overall by the Seattle Mariners. Other notable draftees included Chris Carpenter, Torii Hunter, Jason Varitek, Scott Rolen, future NFL Hall of Famer Marshall Faulk, and Heisman Trophy winner Charlie Ward.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Compensation picks", "title": "1993 Major League Baseball draft", "uid": "1993_Major_League_Baseball_Draft_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1993_Major_League_Baseball_draft" }
1,777
1778
Wicca_0
[ [ "Sabbat", "Northern Hemisphere", "Southern Hemisphere", "Origin of Name", "Associations" ], [ "Samhain , a.k.a . Halloween", "31 October to 1 November", "30 April to 1 May", "Celtic polytheism", "Death and the ancestors" ], [ "Yuletide", "21 or 22 December", "21 June", "Germanic paganism", "Winter solstice and the rebirth of the Sun" ], [ "Imbolc , a.k.a . Candlemas", "1 or 2 February", "1 August", "Celtic polytheism", "First signs of spring" ], [ "Ostara", "21 or 22 March", "21 or 22 September", "Germanic paganism", "Vernal equinox and the beginning of spring" ], [ "Beltane , a.k.a . May Eve or May Day", "30 April to 1 May", "31 October to 1 November", "Celtic polytheism", "The full flowering of spring ; fairy folk" ], [ "Litha", "21 or 22 June", "21 December", "Possibly Neolithic", "Summer solstice" ], [ "Lughnasadh , a.k.a . Lammas", "31 July or 1 August", "1 February", "Celtic polytheism", "First fruits" ], [ "Mabon , a.k.a . Modron", "21 or 22 September", "21 March", "No historical pagan equivalent", "Autumnal equinox ; the harvest of grain" ] ]
{ "intro": "Wicca (English: /ˈwɪkə/), also termed Pagan Witchcraft, is a modern Pagan religion. Scholars of religion categorise it as both a new religious movement and as part of the occultist stream of Western esotericism. It was developed in England during the first half of the 20th century and was introduced to the public in 1954 by Gerald Gardner, a retired British civil servant. Wicca draws upon a diverse set of ancient pagan and 20th-century hermetic motifs for its theological structure and ritual practices. Wicca has no central authority figure. Its traditional core beliefs, principles and practices were originally outlined in the 1940s and 1950s by Gardner and Doreen Valiente, both in published books and in secret written and oral teachings passed along to their initiates. There are many variations on the core structure, and the religion grows and evolves over time. It is divided into a number of diverse lineages, sects and denominations, referred to as traditions, each with its own organisational structure and level of centralisation. Due to its decentralized nature, there is some disagreement over what actually constitutes Wicca. Some traditions, collectively referred to as British Traditional Wicca, strictly follow the initiatory lineage of Gardner and consider the term Wicca to apply only to similar traditions, but not to newer, eclectic traditions. Wicca is typically duotheistic, worshipping a Goddess and a God. These are traditionally viewed as the Moon Goddess and the Horned God, respectively.", "section_text": "Painted Wheel of the Year at the Museum of Witchcraft , Boscastle , Cornwall , displaying all eight of the Sabbats Main article : Wheel of the Year Wiccans celebrate several seasonal festivals of the year , commonly known as Sabbats . Collectively , these occasions are termed the Wheel of the Year . [ 84 ] Most Wiccans celebrate a set of eight of these Sabbats ; however , other groups such as those associated with the Clan of Tubal Cain only follow four . In the rare case of the Ros an Bucca group from Cornwall , only six are adhered to . [ 115 ] The four Sabbats that are common to all British derived groups are the cross-quarter days , sometimes referred to as Greater Sabbats . The names of these festivals are in some cases taken from the Old Irish fire festivals , [ 116 ] though in most traditional Wiccan covens the only commonality with the Celtic festival is the name . Gardner himself made use of the English names of these holidays , stating that `` the four great Sabbats are Candlemass [ sic ] , May Eve , Lammas , and Halloween ; the equinoxes and solstices are celebrated also . `` [ 117 ] In the Egyptologist Margaret Murray 's The Witch-Cult in Western Europe ( 1921 ) and The God of the Witches ( 1933 ) , in which she dealt with what she believed had been a historical Witch-Cult , she stated that the four main festivals had survived Christianisation and had been celebrated in the pagan Witchcraft religion . Subsequently , when Wicca was first developing in the 1930s through to the 1960s , many of the early groups , such as Robert Cochrane 's Clan of Tubal Cain and Gerald Gardner 's Bricket Wood coven adopted the commemoration of these four Sabbats as described by Murray . [ citation needed ] The other four festivals commemorated by many Wiccans are known as Lesser Sabbats . They are the solstices and the equinoxes , and they were only adopted in 1958 by members of the Bricket Wood coven , [ 118 ] before they were subsequently adopted by other followers of the Gardnerian tradition . They were eventually adopted by followers of other traditions like Alexandrian Wicca and the Dianic tradition . The names of these holidays that are commonly used today are often taken from Germanic pagan holidays . However , the festivals are not reconstructive in nature nor do they often resemble their historical counterparts , instead they exhibit a form of universalism . The rituals that are observed may display cultural influences from the holidays from which they take their names as well as influences from other unrelated cultures . [ 119 ]", "section_title": "Practices -- Wheel of the Year", "title": "Wicca", "uid": "Wicca_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wicca" }
1,778
1779
1998_IAAF_World_Half_Marathon_Championships_1
[ [ "Rank", "Athlete", "Nationality", "Time" ], [ "1", "Tegla Loroupe", "Kenya", "1:08:29" ], [ "2", "Elana Meyer", "South Africa", "1:08:32" ], [ "3", "Lidia Simon", "Romania", "1:08:58" ], [ "4", "Olivera Jevtić", "FR Yugoslavia", "1:10:02" ], [ "5", "Annemari Sandell", "Finland", "1:10:04" ], [ "6", "Joyce Chepchumba", "Kenya", "1:10:10" ], [ "7", "Julia Vaquero", "Spain", "1:10:33" ], [ "8", "Cristina Pomacu", "Romania", "1:10:39" ], [ "9", "Yukiko Okamoto", "Japan", "1:10:50" ], [ "10", "Leah Malot", "Kenya", "1:11:04" ], [ "11", "Albertina Dias", "Portugal", "1:11:08" ], [ "12", "Alina Ivanova", "Russia", "1:11:18" ], [ "13", "Svetlana Zakharova", "Russia", "1:11:26" ], [ "14", "María Luisa Lárraga", "Spain", "1:11:30" ], [ "15", "Maria Guida", "Italy", "1:11:31" ], [ "16", "Irma Heeren", "Netherlands", "1:11:35" ], [ "17", "Rakiya Maraoui", "France", "1:11:44" ], [ "18", "Franziska Rochat", "Switzerland", "1:11:47" ], [ "19", "Asha Gigi", "Ethiopia", "1:11:49" ], [ "20", "Firiya Sultanova-Zhdanova", "Russia", "1:11:53" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 7th IAAF World Half Marathon Championships was held on September 27, 1998, in the city of Uster, Switzerland. A total of 236 athletes, 139 men and 97 women, from 54 countries took part. Detailed reports on the event and an appraisal of the results was given. Complete results were published.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Race Results -- Women 's", "title": "1998 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships", "uid": "1998_IAAF_World_Half_Marathon_Championships_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1998_IAAF_World_Half_Marathon_Championships" }
1,779
1780
List_of_cruise_ships_21
[ [ "Name", "Operator", "Began operation", "Tonnage", "Status" ], [ "Van Gogh", "Travelscope / Van Gogh Cruises", "1999", "15,402", "Operating . Formerly : Club I , Odessa Sky , Gruziya" ], [ "Veendam", "Holland America Line", "1996", "55,451", "Operating" ], [ "Ventura", "P & O Cruises", "2008", "116,017", "Operating" ], [ "Vidanta Elegant", "Vidanta Cruises", "1990", "15,396", "Formerly : Voyager , Crown Monarch , Cunard Crown Monarch , Nautican , Walrus , Havens Star , Neptune , Rembrandt II , Jules Verne , Alexander Von Humboldt II" ], [ "Viking Sea", "Viking Ocean Cruises", "2016", "47,842", "Operating" ], [ "Viking Sky", "Viking Ocean Cruises", "2017", "47,800", "Operating" ], [ "Viking Star", "Viking Ocean Cruises", "2015", "47842", "Operating" ], [ "Vision of the Seas", "Royal Caribbean International", "1998", "78,340", "Operating" ], [ "Vistamar", "Plantours & Partner", "1989", "7,500", "Operating ; since 2012 Orient Queen II ( Abou Merhi Cruises )" ], [ "Volendam", "Holland America Line", "1999", "60,906", "Operating" ], [ "Voyager of the Seas", "Royal Caribbean International", "1999", "138,194", "Operating" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of cruise ships, both those in service and those that have ceased to operate. Ocean liners are included on this list only if they also functioned as cruise ships. (See: list of ocean liners.) As some cruise ships have operated under multiple names, all names will be listed in the Status section, along with the history of the vessel, under the vessel's current or most recent name. If a vessel is not currently operating as a cruise ship, only the most recent operation will be listed here. Likewise, if a vessel fulfilled another role before becoming a cruise ship, the first entry for the vessel will occur when the vessel began its career as a cruise ship.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "V", "title": "List of cruise ships", "uid": "List_of_cruise_ships_21", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cruise_ships" }
1,780
1781
List_of_American_Civil_War_Generals_(Union)_21
[ [ "Name", "Substantive Rank", "Notes" ], [ "Van Alen , James Henry", "Brigadier general , USV ( April 15 , 1862 )", "Resigned July 14 , 1863" ], [ "Van Cleve , Horatio Phillips", "Brigadier general , USV ( March 21 , 1862 )", "USMA , 1831" ], [ "Van Derveer , Ferdinand", "Brigadier general , USV ( October 4 , 1864 )", "Resigned June 7 , 1865" ], [ "Van Vliet , Stewart", "Major , USA ( August , 1861 ) Brigadier general , USV ( March 13 , 1865 )", "USMA , 1840 Earlier appointment as brigadier general , USV ( September 23 , 1861 ) expired July 17 , 1862" ], [ "Van Wyck , Charles H", "Brigadier general , USV ( September 27 , 1865 )", "U.S . Congressman from New York ( 1859-1863 , 1867-1871 ) U.S . Senator from Nebraska ( 1881-1887 )" ], [ "Vandever , William", "Brigadier General ( November 29 , 1862 )", "U.S . Congressman from Iowa ( 1859-1861 ) U.S . Congressman from California ( 1887-1891 )" ], [ "Veatch , James C", "Brigadier general , USV ( April 28 , 1862 )", "" ], [ "Viele , Egbert Ludovicus", "Brigadier general , USV ( August 17 , 1861 )", "USMA , 1847 Resigned October 23. , 1863 U.S . Congressman from New York ( 1885-1887 )" ], [ "Vincent , Strong", "Brigadier general , USV ( July 3 , 1863 )", "DOW , Battle of Gettysburg ( July 2 , 1863 , d. July 7 , 1863 )" ], [ "Vinton , Francis Laurens", "Captain , USA ( October , 1861 ) Brigadier general , USV ( March 13 , 1863 )", "USMA , 1856 Earlier appointment as brigadier general , USV ( September 19 , 1862 ) expired March 4 , 1863 Resigned May 5 , 1863" ], [ "Vogdes , Israel", "Colonel , USA ( 1863 ) Brigadier general , USV ( November 29 , 1862 )", "USMA , 1837" ], [ "Von Steinwehr , Adolph Wilhelm August Friedrich , Baron", "Brigadier general , USV ( October 12 , 1861 )", "Resigned July 3 , 1865" ] ]
{ "intro": "The following lists show the names, substantive ranks, and brevet ranks (if applicable) of all general officers who served in the United States Army during the Civil War, in addition to a small selection of lower-ranked officers who received brevets as general officers; while some 1,600 officers received or were nominated for brevets as general officers in the course of the war (or immediately following it for service during the war), only a small selection is listed here; only those who were killed in action, served as department heads within the army, had revoked or incomplete appointments or became U.S. President are listed here. In addition to their names and ranks, there is a small set of notes after every entry listing Medal of Honor or Thanks of Congress citations, West Point graduation dates, important political or Army offices held, retirements or deaths during the war (whether in action or other means), notable relations, rejections or expiration of appointments, or unique facts pertaining to this article (i.e. youngest general, last surviving general, etc. ); for all other information on their lives and accomplishments, please refer to their individual entries. If available, ranks are followed by the to rank from dates (i.e. the date on which the commission is effective) rather than the date of appointment or confirmation, which were generally months if not years later; this is particularly true in the case of brevets, most of which were granted after the war between 1866 and 1869. Note on abbreviations:", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Union generals -- V", "title": "List of American Civil War generals (Union)", "uid": "List_of_American_Civil_War_Generals_(Union)_21", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_American_Civil_War_generals_(Union)" }
1,781
1782
Li_Xuerui_0
[ [ "Year", "Tournament", "Opponent in final", "Score" ], [ "2012", "Olympic Games", "Wang Yihan", "21-15 , 21-23 , 21-17" ], [ "2012", "Badminton Asia Championships", "Wang Yihan", "21-16 , 16-21 , 21-9" ], [ "2010", "Badminton Asia Championships", "Liu Xin", "21-13 , 18-21 , 21-19" ], [ "2015", "China Open", "Saina Nehwal", "21-12 , 21-15" ], [ "2015", "Denmark Open", "P. V. Sindhu", "21-19 , 21-12" ], [ "2014", "Denmark Open", "Wang Yihan", "21-17 , 22-20" ], [ "2014", "Indonesia Open", "Ratchanok Intanon", "21-13 , 21-13" ], [ "2014", "Malaysia Open", "Wang Shixian", "21-16 , 21-17" ], [ "2013", "Super Series Masters Finals", "Tai Tzu-ying", "21-8 , 21-14" ], [ "2013", "China Open", "Wang Shixian", "16-21 , 21-17 , 21-19" ], [ "2013", "Indonesia Open", "Juliane Schenk", "21-16 , 18-21 , 21-17" ], [ "2012", "Super Series Masters Finals", "Wang Shixian", "21-9 , 15-4" ], [ "2012", "China Open", "Ratchanok Inthanon", "21-12 , 21-9" ], [ "2012", "All England Open", "Wang Yihan", "21-13 , 21-19" ], [ "2012", "Hong Kong Open", "Wang Yihan", "21-12 , 11-3" ], [ "2014", "Japan Open", "Tai Tzu-ying", "21-16 , 21-6" ], [ "2012", "India Open", "Juliane Schenk", "14-21 , 21-17 , 21-8" ], [ "2016", "China Masters", "Sun Yu", "21-16 , 19-21 , 21-6" ], [ "2016", "German Open", "Wang Shixian", "21-14 , 21-17" ], [ "2012", "German Open", "Juliane Schenk", "21-19 , 21-16" ] ]
{ "intro": "Li Xuerui (born 24 January 1991) is a retired Chinese professional badminton player, she is one of the most successful players of her time. She was a gold medalist at 2012 London Olympic in the women's singles event and was the silver medalists in the 2013 and 2014 World Championships. Li Xuerui had won fourteen Superseries titles, confirmed her name as China's second most successful player after Wang Yihan. She reached a career high of no. 1 in the women's singles for 124 weeks. Li graduated with a BA from Huaqiao University.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Achievements -- Individual titles ( 27 )", "title": "Li Xuerui", "uid": "Li_Xuerui_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Li_Xuerui" }
1,782
1783
List_of_schools_in_Illawarra_and_the_South_East_(New_South_Wales)_1
[ [ "Name", "Suburb", "LGA", "Opened", "Website" ], [ "Albion Park High School", "Albion Park", "Shellharbour", "1991", "Website" ], [ "Batemans Bay High School", "Batemans Bay", "Eurobodalla", "1988", "Website" ], [ "Bega High School", "Bega", "Bega Valley", "1952", "Website" ], [ "Bomaderry High School", "Bomaderry", "Shoalhaven", "1968", "Website" ], [ "Bombala High School", "Bombala", "Snowy Monaro", "1973", "Website" ], [ "Bowral High School", "Bowral", "Wingecarribee", "1930", "Website" ], [ "Bulli High School", "Bulli", "Wollongong", "1956", "Website" ], [ "Corrimal High School", "East Corrimal", "Wollongong", "1951", "Website" ], [ "Crookwell High School", "Crookwell", "Upper Lachlan", "1968", "Website" ], [ "Dapto High School", "Dapto", "Wollongong", "1958", "Website" ], [ "Eden Marine High School", "Eden", "Bega Valley", "1972", "Website" ], [ "Figtree High School", "Figtree", "Wollongong", "1969", "Website" ], [ "Goulburn High School", "Goulburn", "Goulburn", "1913", "Website" ], [ "Illawarra Senior College", "Port Kembla", "Wollongong", "1961", "Website" ], [ "Illawarra Sports High School", "Berkeley", "Wollongong", "1957", "Website" ], [ "Kanahooka High School", "Kanahooka", "Wollongong", "1973", "Website" ], [ "Karabar High School", "Queanbeyan", "Queanbeyan-Palerang", "1977", "Website" ], [ "Keira Technology High School", "North Wollongong", "Wollongong", "1944", "Website" ], [ "Kiama High School", "Kiama", "Kiama", "1954", "Website" ], [ "Lake Illawarra High School", "Lake Illawarra", "Shellharbour", "1972", "Website" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of schools in the Illawarra, South Coast, Southern Highlands, Southern Tablelands, Monaro and Snowy Mountains regions of the Australian state of New South Wales. The New South Wales education system traditionally consists of primary schools, which accommodate students from kindergarten to Year 6 (ages 5-12), and high schools, which accommodate students from Years 7 to 12 (ages 12-18).", "section_text": "In New South Wales , a high school generally covers Years 7 to 12 in the education system , and a central or community school , intended to provide comprehensive education in a rural district , covers Kindergarten to Year 12 . An additional class of high schools has emerged in recent years as a result of amalgamations which have produced multi-campus colleges consisting of Junior and Senior campuses . While most schools are comprehensive and take in all students of high school age living within the defined school boundaries , some schools are either specialist in a given Key Learning Area , or selective in that they set examinations or other performance criteria for entrance . In the Illawarra and South East regions , Karabar ( in Queanbeyan ) and Smith 's Hill ( in Wollongong ) are selective , whilst Wollongong High School of the Performing Arts and Illawarra Sports High School are specialist . Approximately 2,000 New South Wales students attend schools in the Australian Capital Territory . The Territory has its own education system separate from the New South Wales system . Students who take this option may still apply to enrol in a New South Wales university through the University Admissions Centre upon completing year 12 .", "section_title": "Public schools -- High schools", "title": "List of schools in Illawarra and the South East (New South Wales)", "uid": "List_of_schools_in_Illawarra_and_the_South_East_(New_South_Wales)_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_schools_in_Illawarra_and_the_South_East_(New_South_Wales)" }
1,783
1784
Goya_Award_for_Best_European_Film_0
[ [ "Country", "Awards", "Nominations" ], [ "France", "8", "31" ], [ "United Kingdom", "7", "41" ], [ "Germany", "3", "10" ], [ "Italy", "2", "5" ], [ "Poland", "2", "3" ], [ "Sweden", "1", "6" ], [ "Denmark", "1", "5" ], [ "Ireland", "1", "2" ], [ "Austria", "1", "1" ], [ "Romania", "1", "1" ], [ "Hungary", "0", "2" ], [ "Russia", "0", "2" ], [ "Belgium", "0", "2" ], [ "Greece", "0", "1" ], [ "Netherlands", "0", "1" ], [ "Norway", "0", "1" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Goya Award for Best European Film (Spanish: Premio Goya a la mejor película europea) is one of the Goya Awards, Spain's principal national film awards.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Awards by nation", "title": "Goya Award for Best European Film", "uid": "Goya_Award_for_Best_European_Film_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goya_Award_for_Best_European_Film" }
1,784
1785
List_of_the_busiest_airports_in_Brazil_1
[ [ "Rank", "Airport", "Location", "Movements", "Annual change", "Rank change" ], [ "1", "Guarulhos International Airport", "São Paulo", "270,601", "8.03%", "" ], [ "2", "Congonhas Airport", "São Paulo", "209,156", "2.05%", "" ], [ "3", "Brasília International Airport", "Brasília", "189,570", "7.51%", "" ], [ "4", "Galeão International Airport", "Rio de Janeiro", "139,441", "13.42%", "2" ], [ "5", "Campo de Marte Airport", "São Paulo", "133,524", "8.55%", "" ], [ "6", "Santos Dumont Airport", "Rio de Janeiro", "130,026", "2.77%", "2" ], [ "7", "Deputado Luís Eduardo Magalhães International Airport", "Salvador", "125,992", "9.61%", "" ], [ "8", "Tancredo Neves International Airport", "Belo Horizonte", "108,130", "27.43%", "2" ], [ "9", "Viracopos International Airport", "Campinas", "99,982", "34.25%", "4" ], [ "10", "Salgado Filho International Airport", "Porto Alegre", "99,584", "9.88%", "2" ], [ "11", "Afonso Pena International Airport", "Curitiba", "94,143", "6.72%", "2" ], [ "12", "Guararapes-Gilberto Freyre International Airport", "Recife", "83,638", "8.17%", "" ], [ "13", "Rolim Adolfo Amaro Airport", "Jundiaí", "80,598", "3.20%", "2" ], [ "14", "Jacarepaguá Airport", "Rio de Janeiro", "72,316", "1.88%", "" ], [ "15", "Macaé Airport", "Macaé", "70,716", "8.54%", "2" ], [ "16", "Santa Genoveva Airport", "Goiânia", "70,128", "8.42%", "2" ], [ "17", "Pampulha - Carlos Drummond de Andrade Airport", "Belo Horizonte", "65,862", "1.18%", "2" ], [ "18", "Pinto Martins International Airport", "Fortaleza", "65,853", "5.25%", "1" ], [ "19", "Sorocaba Airport", "Sorocaba", "65,395", "54.18%", "6" ], [ "20", "Campo dos Amarais Airport", "Campinas", "65,380", "37.77%", "4" ] ]
{ "intro": "The following is a list of the busiest airports in Brazil by aircraft movements (how busy the runways are) and passengers traffic (how busy the terminals are). For each airport, the lists cite the principal city associated with the airport, not (necessarily) the municipality where the airport is physically located. The tables consider only airports operated by Infraero, DAESP and Terminais Aéreos de Maringá - SBMG S.A.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "2011 -- Brazil 's 25 busiest airports by aircraft movements [ 17 ] [ 18 ]", "title": "List of the busiest airports in Brazil", "uid": "List_of_the_busiest_airports_in_Brazil_1", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_the_busiest_airports_in_Brazil" }
1,785
1786
List_of_lemur_species_0
[ [ "Scientific name", "Common name", "Classified", "Average size", "Conservation status" ], [ "Allocebus trichotis", "Hairy-eared dwarf lemur", "1875 , Günther", "65-90 g ( 2.3-3.2 oz )", "Vulnerable" ], [ "Cheirogaleus andysabini", "Montagne d'Ambre dwarf lemur", "2015 , Lei et al", "282 ± 61 g ( 9.9 ± 2.2 oz )", "Not Evaluated" ], [ "Cheirogaleus crossleyi", "Furry-eared dwarf lemur", "1870 , A. Grandidier", "250-500 g ( 8.8-17.6 oz )", "Data Deficient" ], [ "Cheirogaleus grovesi", "Groves ' dwarf lemur", "2017 , McLain et al", "410 g ( 14 oz )", "Not Evaluated" ], [ "Cheirogaleus lavasoensis", "Lavasoa dwarf lemur", "2013 , Thiele et al", "300 g ( 11 oz )", "Not Evaluated" ], [ "Cheirogaleus major", "Greater dwarf lemur", "1812 , É. Geoffroy", "350-400 g ( 12-14 oz )", "Data Deficient" ], [ "Cheirogaleus medius", "Fat-tailed dwarf lemur", "1812 , É. Geoffroy", "120-270 g ( 4.2-9.5 oz )", "Least Concern" ], [ "Cheirogaleus minusculus", "Lesser iron-gray dwarf lemur", "2000 , Groves", "unknown", "Data Deficient" ], [ "Cheirogaleus shethi", "Ankarana dwarf lemur", "2016 , Frasier et al", "115 ± 11 g ( 4.06 ± 0.39 oz )", "Not Evaluated" ], [ "Cheirogaleus sibreei", "Sibree 's dwarf lemur", "1896 , Forsyth Major", "unknown", "Critically Endangered" ], [ "Microcebus arnholdi", "Arnhold 's mouse lemur", "2008 , E. Lewis , Jr. et al", "49.7 g ( 1.75 oz )", "Endangered" ], [ "Microcebus berthae", "Madame Berthe 's mouse lemur", "2000 , Rasoloarison et al", "30 g ( 1.1 oz )", "Endangered" ], [ "Microcebus bongolavensis", "Bongolava mouse lemur", "2007 , Olivieri et al", "54 g ( 1.9 oz )", "Endangered" ], [ "Microcebus boraha", "Boraha mouse lemur", "2016 , Hotaling et al", "", "" ], [ "Microcebus danfossi", "Danfoss ' mouse lemur", "2007 , Olivieri et al", "63 g ( 2.2 oz )", "Endangered" ], [ "Microcebus ganzhorni", "Ganzhorn 's mouse lemur", "2016 , Hotaling et al", "", "" ], [ "Microcebus gerpi", "Gerp 's mouse lemur", "2012 , Radespiel et al", "68 g ( 2.4 oz )", "Critically Endangered" ], [ "Microcebus griseorufus", "Reddish-gray mouse lemur", "1910 , Kollman", "46-79 g ( 1.6-2.8 oz )", "Least Concern" ], [ "Microcebus jollyae", "Jolly 's mouse lemur", "2006 , Louis et al", "60 g ( 2.1 oz )", "Endangered" ], [ "Microcebus lehilahytsara", "Goodman 's mouse lemur", "2005 , Roos and Kappeler", "45-48 g ( 1.6-1.7 oz )", "Vulnerable" ] ]
{ "intro": "Lemurs are strepsirrhine primates, all species of which are endemic to Madagascar. They include the smallest primate in the world, Madame Berthe's mouse lemur, which weighs 30 grams (1.1 oz), and range up to the size of the indri, which can weigh as much as 9.5 kilograms (21 lb). However, recently extinct species grew much larger. As of 2010, five families, 15 genera, and 101 species and subspecies of lemur were formally recognized. From 2000 through 2008, 39 new species were described and nine other taxa resurrected. By 2014, the number of species and subspecies recognized had increased to 113; of these, the IUCN classified 24 as Critically Endangered, 49 as Endangered, 20 as Vulnerable, three as Near Threatened, three as Least Concern and four as Data Deficient; two were yet to be evaluated. The number of lemur species is likely to continue growing in the coming years, as field studies, cytogenetic and molecular genetic research continues. There is not complete agreement over the latest revisions to lemur taxonomy, with some experts preferring an estimated 50 lemur species. The debates are likely to continue, as some scholars label the explosive growth of species numbers as taxonomic inflation. In many cases, classifications will ultimately depend upon which species concept is used. In the case of the lemurs of Madagascar, which have suffered extensively from deforestation and habitat fragmentation, nearly 25% of all species are either Endangered or Critically Endangered, most have yet to be extensively studied, and nearly all populations are in decline. For these reasons, taxonomists and conservationists favor splitting them into separate species to develop an effective strategy for the conservation of the full range of lemur diversity.", "section_text": "Family Cheirogaleidae consists of the mouse lemurs ( smallest of all primates ) , the dwarf lemurs , and the fork-marked lemurs and their allies . There are 37 extant species . The gray mouse lemur is one of as many as 21 tiny , nocturnal mouse lemur species . Fork-marked lemurs are the among the largest of the cheirogaleids .", "section_title": "Extant species -- Family : Cheirogaleidae", "title": "List of lemur species", "uid": "List_of_lemur_species_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_lemur_species" }
1,786
1787
Bollywood_highest_grossing_films_by_month_4
[ [ "Rank", "Film", "Year", "Director", "Studio ( s )", "Worldwide gross" ], [ "1", "Dangal", "2016", "Nitesh Tiwari", "Aamir Khan Productions UTV Motion Pictures Walt Disney Studios India", "₹2,024 crore ( US $ 311 million )" ], [ "2", "Bajrangi Bhaijaan", "2015", "Kabir Khan", "Salman Khan Films Kabir Khan Films Eros International", "₹969.06 crore ( US $ 150 million )" ], [ "3", "Secret Superstar", "2017", "Advait Chandan", "Aamir Khan Productions", "₹966.86 crore ( US $ 154 million )" ], [ "4", "PK", "2014", "Rajkumar Hirani", "Vinod Chopra Films Rajkumar Hirani Films", "₹832 crore ( US $ 140 million )" ], [ "5", "Sultan", "2016", "Ali Abbas Zafar", "Yash Raj Films", "₹623.33 crore ( US $ 96 million )" ], [ "6", "Sanju", "2018", "Rajkumar Hirani", "Rajkumar Hirani Films Vinod Chopra Films", "₹586.85 crore ( US $ 90.12 million )" ], [ "7", "Padmaavat", "2018", "Sanjay Leela Bhansali", "Bhansali Productions Viacom 18 Motion Pictures", "₹585 crore ( US $ 90 million )" ], [ "8", "Tiger Zinda Hai", "2018", "Ali Abbas Zafar", "Yash Raj Films", "₹565.1 crore ( US $ 87.32 million )" ], [ "9", "Dhoom 3", "2013", "Vijay Krishna Acharya", "Yash Raj Films", "₹ 556 crore ( US $ 101 million )" ], [ "10", "War", "2019", "Siddharth Anand", "Yash Raj Films", "₹ 474.79 crore ( US $ 67 million )" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a ranking of the highest grossing Indian films which includes films from various languages based on the conservative global box office estimates as reported by reputable sources. There is no official tracking of domestic box office figures within India, and Indian sites publishing data are frequently pressured to increase their domestic box office estimates. Indian films have been screened in markets around the world since the early 20th century. As of 2003, there are markets in over 90 countries where films from India are screened. During the first decade of the 21st century, there was a steady rise in the ticket price, a tripling in the number of theaters and an increase in the number of prints of a film being released, which led to a large increase in the box office collections. The majority of highest-grossing Indian films are Bollywood (Hindi) films. As of 2014, Bollywood represents 43% of the net box office revenue in India, while Tamil and Telugu cinema represent 36%, and other regional industries constitute 21%. See List of highest-grossing films in India for domestic gross figures and List of highest-grossing Indian films in overseas markets for overseas gross figures.", "section_text": "See also : List of highest domestic net collection of Hindi films The Hindi language film industry , based in Mumbai , India , is frequently known as Bollywood . [ 73 ] Bollywood is the largest film producer in India and one of the largest centres of film production in the world . [ 74 ] [ 75 ] [ 76 ]", "section_title": "Highest-grossing films by language -- Hindi", "title": "List of highest-grossing Indian films", "uid": "Bollywood_highest_grossing_films_by_month_4", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_highest-grossing_Indian_films" }
1,787
1788
2013_French_Road_Cycling_Cup_2
[ [ "Pos", "Rider", "Team", "Points" ], [ "1", "Bryan Coquard ( FRA )", "Team Europcar", "149" ], [ "2", "Yannick Martinez ( FRA )", "La Pomme Marseille", "111" ], [ "3", "Arnaud Démare ( FRA )", "FDJ.fr", "100" ], [ "4", "Nacer Bouhanni ( FRA )", "FDJ.fr", "75" ], [ "5", "José Gonçalves ( POR )", "La Pomme Marseille", "50" ], [ "6", "Armindo Fonseca ( FRA )", "Bretagne-Séché Environnement", "49" ], [ "7", "Johan Le Bon ( FRA )", "FDJ.fr", "35" ], [ "8", "Vegard Stake Laengen ( NOR )", "Bretagne-Séché Environnement", "28" ], [ "9", "Thomas Damuseau ( FRA )", "Argos-Shimano", "25" ], [ "10", "Arthur Vichot ( FRA )", "FDJ.fr", "25" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 2013 French Road Cycling Cup was the 22nd edition of the French Road Cycling Cup. Compared to the previous edition, the Flèche d'Emeraude was replaced by the Tour de la Somme. The defending champion from 2012 was Samuel Dumoulin, who won for a second consecutive time after a third place in the final event allowed him to overtake Bryan Coquard and Anthony Geslin in the overall standings. Bryan Coquard still won the youth classification, while FDJ.fr won the teams competition.", "section_text": "In order to be eligible for the classification , riders had to be younger than 25 and either had to be French or competed for a French-licensed team .", "section_title": "Points standings -- Young rider classification", "title": "2013 French Road Cycling Cup", "uid": "2013_French_Road_Cycling_Cup_2", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013_French_Road_Cycling_Cup" }
1,788
1789
2012_Aerobic_Gymnastics_World_Championships_0
[ [ "Rank", "Gymnast", "Country", "Score" ], [ "1", "Sara Moreno", "Spain", "21.650" ], [ "2", "Aurelie Joly", "France", "21.350" ], [ "3", "Lubov Gazov", "Austria", "21.250" ], [ "4", "Oana Corina Constantin", "Romania", "21.150" ], [ "5", "Giulia Bianchi", "Italy", "20.850" ], [ "6", "Denitsa Parichkova", "Bulgaria", "20.800" ], [ "6", "Hyun Kung Shin", "South Korea", "20.800" ], [ "8", "Maria Luisa Pavel", "Romania", "20.700" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 12th Aerobic Gymnastics World Championships were held in Sofia, Bulgaria June 1 to June 3, 2012.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Results -- Women 's Individual", "title": "2012 Aerobic Gymnastics World Championships", "uid": "2012_Aerobic_Gymnastics_World_Championships_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012_Aerobic_Gymnastics_World_Championships" }
1,789
1790
List_of_soccer_clubs_in_Australia_17
[ [ "Club", "League/Division", "Lvl", "State", "City" ], [ "Redlands United", "National Premier Leagues Queensland", "2", "Queensland", "Brisbane" ], [ "Reservoir Yeti", "Victorian State League Division 5", "8", "Victoria", "Melbourne" ], [ "Richmond", "National Premier Leagues Victoria 2", "3", "Victoria", "Melbourne" ], [ "Ringwood City", "Victorian State League Division 4", "7", "Victoria", "Melbourne" ], [ "Riverina Rhinos", "National Premier Leagues Capital Football", "2", "Australian Capital Territory", "Griffith" ], [ "Riversdale", "Victorian State League Division 3", "6", "Victoria", "Melbourne" ], [ "Riverside Olympic", "Northern Championship", "3", "Tasmania", "Launceston" ], [ "RMIT FC", "Victorian State League Division 4", "7", "Victoria", "Melbourne" ], [ "Rochedale Rovers", "Football Queensland Premier League", "3", "Queensland", "Brisbane" ], [ "Rockdale City Suns", "National Premier Leagues NSW", "2", "New South Wales", "Sydney" ], [ "Rockingham City", "Football West State League Division 1", "3", "Western Australia", "Rockingham" ], [ "Rosebud Heart", "Victorian State League Division 4", "7", "Victoria", "Rye" ], [ "Rowville Eagles", "Victorian State League Division 5", "8", "Victoria", "Melbourne" ], [ "Rydalmere Lions", "National Premier Leagues NSW 3", "4", "New South Wales", "Sydney" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of soccer clubs in Australia. The Australian soccer league system consists of a national league - A-League (men) and W-League (women) - a state/territory-based second tier National Premier Leagues (NPL) structure and other state-based leagues. Promotion and relegation exists in some states between NPL and state leagues, however not between the A-League and the NPL. Included are all clubs playing in state (or territory)-wide leagues, or where states are split into two separate leagues.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Alphabetically -- R", "title": "List of soccer clubs in Australia", "uid": "List_of_soccer_clubs_in_Australia_17", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_soccer_clubs_in_Australia" }
1,790
1791
List_of_football_clubs_in_the_German_national_championship_3
[ [ "Club", "Qualified", "Champions", "Runners-up", "Seasons" ], [ "BuEV Danzig", "1", "0", "0", "1912" ], [ "LSV Danzig", "1", "0", "0", "1944" ], [ "Preußen Danzig", "2", "0", "0", "1934 , 1941" ], [ "Preußen Dellbrück", "1", "0", "0", "1950" ], [ "SV Dessau 05", "6", "0", "0", "1937 , 1938 , 1939 , 1942 , 1943 , 1944" ], [ "Borussia Dortmund", "7", "3", "2", "1949 , 1950 , 1953 , 1956 , 1957 , 1961 , 1963" ], [ "Guts Muths Dresden", "1", "0", "0", "1923" ], [ "Dresdner SC", "13", "2", "1", "1905 , 1926 , 1928 , 1929 , 1930 , 1931 , 1933 , 1934 , 1939 , 1940 , 1941 , 1943 , 1944" ], [ "FV Stadt Düdelingen", "1", "0", "0", "1942" ], [ "KSG Duisburg", "1", "0", "0", "1944" ], [ "MSV Duisburg", "2", "0", "0", "1929 , 1931" ], [ "Duisburger SV", "13", "0", "1", "1904 , 1905 , 1908 , 1910 , 1911 , 1913 , 1914 , 1921 , 1924 , 1925 , 1926 , 1927 , 1957" ], [ "Fortuna Düsseldorf", "9", "1", "1", "1927 , 1928 , 1931 , 1933 , 1936 , 1937 , 1938 , 1939 , 1940" ], [ "Düsseldorfer FC 99", "1", "0", "0", "1907" ], [ "TuRU Düsseldorf", "1", "0", "0", "1925" ] ]
{ "intro": "This is a list of all clubs that have taken part in the German football championship from 1903 to 1963, in the era when the national championship was decided by a finals round with a national title game at the end. The German football championship was first held in 1903 and won by VfB Leipzig. In 1904, the championship was not completed due to a protest by Karlsruher FV about a technicality, with all games but the final played. The competition was held again in 1905 and, from then on, annually. The championship was interrupted by the World War I, and not held from 1915 to 1920, when football returned to more organised fashion after the disruptions caused by the war. In 1922, the final was inconclusive and Hamburger SV was declared champions but declined the honor. After this, a championship was held every season until 1944. With the expansion of Nazi Germany, clubs from occupied territories or annexed countries took part in the competition, including teams from Austria, France, Luxembourg, Poland, and Czechoslovakia.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "List -- D", "title": "List of clubs in the German football championship", "uid": "List_of_football_clubs_in_the_German_national_championship_3", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_clubs_in_the_German_football_championship" }
1,791
1792
Dancing_with_the_Stars_(U.S._season_9)_2
[ [ "Dance", "Highest scored dancer ( s )", "Highest score", "Lowest scored dancer ( s )", "Lowest score" ], [ "Cha-cha-cha relay", "Mýa Mýa", "29 10", "Michael Irvin Macy Gray", "13 4" ], [ "Jive", "Aaron Carter", "29", "Melissa Joan Hart Louie Vito", "19" ], [ "Rumba", "Mýa Joanna Krupa", "27", "Mark Dacascos", "18" ], [ "Tango", "Kelly Osbourne Joanna Krupa Donny Osmond", "28", "Tom DeLay", "18" ], [ "Paso doble", "Mýa", "30", "Michael Irvin", "21" ], [ "Samba", "Mýa", "30", "Michael Irvin", "14" ], [ "Waltz", "Mýa", "28", "Melissa Joan Hart Michael Irvin", "20" ], [ "Quickstep", "Mýa", "29", "Kathy Ireland", "18" ], [ "Foxtrot relay", "Mýa Kelly Osbourne Joanna Krupa", "25 10", "Ashley Hamilton Kathy Ireland", "15 4" ], [ "Argentine tango", "Donny Osmond", "30", "Louie Vito", "22" ], [ "Viennese Waltz Relay", "Joanna Krupa Aaron Carter", "27 10", "Macy Gray Tom DeLay", "15 4" ], [ "Salsa relay", "Mýa Donny Osmond", "30 10", "Debi Mazar Kathy Ireland Ashley Hamilton", "16 4" ], [ "Jitterbug", "Donny Osmond", "27", "Kelly Osbourne", "20" ], [ "Bolero", "Natalie Coughlin", "24", "Michael Irvin", "16" ], [ "Lambada", "Mýa", "28", "Aaron Carter", "18" ], [ "Two-step", "Mark Dacascos", "22", "Louie Vito", "16" ], [ "Charleston", "Melissa Joan Hart", "28", "Kelly Osbourne", "23" ], [ "Mambo marathon", "Joanna Krupa", "10", "Michael Irvin", "2" ], [ "Freestyle", "Donny Osmond", "30", "Kelly Osbourne", "24" ] ]
{ "intro": "Season nine of Dancing with the Stars premiered on September 21, 2009. Executive producer Conrad Green confirmed to Entertainment Tonight that the season would start off with 16 celebrities, with 3 double-eliminations halfway through the season. Former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay withdrew from the competition in week three; however, Debi Mazar was also eliminated on the same night, replacing the double elimination planned for week five. Some changes were added this season including a larger cast and relay dances. Four new dances were introduced to complement the large cast. Those dances were the bolero, lambada, two-step, and the Charleston. The cast was unveiled on the Monday, August 17, 2009, edition of Good Morning America, returning to the announcement format of most seasons past. Tom Bergeron and Samantha Harris returned as the show's hosts. Len Goodman, Bruno Tonioli, and Carrie Ann Inaba continue as the judges this season, with Baz Luhrmann appearing as a guest judge in week two, temporarily replacing Len Goodman. Pro pairings were officially announced on August 24, 2009. This was Samantha Harris' last season as co-host. Donny Osmond, was the winner in the competition, with singer Mýa as runner-up, and reality star and singer, Kelly Osbourne in third place.", "section_text": "The best and worst performances in each dance according to the judges ' marks are as follows :", "section_title": "Highest and lowest scoring performances", "title": "Dancing with the Stars (American season 9)", "uid": "Dancing_with_the_Stars_(U.S._season_9)_2", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dancing_with_the_Stars_(American_season_9)" }
1,792
1793
List_of_tallest_Gopurams_0
[ [ "S.No", "Temple", "Height ft", "Consecration Year", "Notes", "Location" ], [ "1", "Sri Ranganathaswamy Temple", "239.501", "1987 CE", "The Srirangam Temple is the largest temple and tallest temple tower in India . The temple occupies an area of 156 acres ( 63 ha )", "Srirangam , Tamil Nadu , India" ], [ "2", "Murdeshwara Temple", "237", "2008 CE", "The temple is popular among travellers for the pretty high Siva temple , which is towered over an immense 40m high idol of the deity . The gopuram is now the second tallest in India . This is also the only one where one can take a lift to top floor of the gopuram", "Murdeshwara , Karnataka , India" ], [ "3", "Annamalaiyar Temple Eastern Gopuram ( Raja Gopuram )", "216.5", "9th Century CE", "The temple covers some 10 hectares , this vast temple is one of the largest of India . Four large unpainted gopurams , one of each cardinal point , front of approaches , with the eastern side rising 13 storeys and an astonishing 66m", "Tiruvannamalai , Tamil Nadu , India" ], [ "4", "Srivilliputhur Andal Temple", "193.5", "CE", "The 11-storied gopuram has a height of 59m , making it the tallest gopuram of the era . During the period of Madurai Nayaks , the lesser figures sponsored religious projects , including large scale campus . The temple is the emblem of the Government of Tamil Nadu", "Srivilliputhur , Tamil Nadu , India" ], [ "5", "Ulagalantha Perumal Temple", "192", "AD", "This temple is dedicated to Sri Trivikrama - Ulagalanda Perumal , the fifth incarnation of Lord Vishnu . This temple tower is one of the tallest , measuring 192 feet ( 59 m ) in height . The Alwars Poigai Alvar , Bhoothathalvar & Peyalvar sang in praise of Lord Vishnu which formed the integral part of the Nalayira Divya Prabandham . One of the special features is that one idol contains the forms of two Gods - front side as Chakratalwar with sixteen hands and the back side as Narasimhar", "Tirukoilur , Tamil Nadu , India" ], [ "6", "Ekambareswarar Temple", "190", "CE", "This is Kanchipuram 's largest temple with its tall gopuram , a highly visible symbol of Vijayanagar dynasty . The entire complex covers an area of 10 hectares and has five courtyards", "Kanchipuram , Tamil Nadu , India" ], [ "7", "Azhagar Kovil", "187", "CE", "Azhagar Koyil is a temple dedicated to Lord Vishnu . In the outer gateway of the temple , there is a massive door that is rarely opened . Behind the door , Karupannaswamy , the subordinate of Lord Vishnu , although no image of Karuppanaswamy is present . The shrine is dedicated to Karupannaswamy", "Madurai , Tamil Nadu , India" ], [ "8", "Kasi Viswanathar temple , Tenkasi", "180", "15th Century CE", "Built by the Pandya Kings , the massive gopura of the temple is the second largest in Tamil Nadu . This temple is also known as Ulagamman Temple . This temple boasts beautiful sculptures and also has musical stone pillars that produce different sounds when tapped with fingers . Name of the town is derived from this temple and known as Kasi of South . The nearby river Chittar is considered equivalent to Ganga", "Tenkasi , Tamil Nadu" ], [ "8", "Annamalaiyar Temple Northern Gopuram ( Ammani Amman Gopuram )", "171", "15th Century CE", "The temple covers some 10 hectares , this vast temple is one of the largest of India . Four large unpainted gopurams , one of each cardinal point , front of approaches , with the eastern side rising 13 storeys and an astonishing 66m", "Tiruvannamalai , Tamil Nadu , India" ], [ "9", "Meenakshi Amman Temple", "170", "870 CE", "The complex houses 14 gopurams ( gateway towers ) ranging from 45-50m in height , the tallest being the southern tower , 51.9 metres ( 170 ft ) high The temple has some very old sections but the largest part dates back to 17th century . The four gopurams are decorated with many figures from the Hindu pantheon ; they can be seen from great distances", "Madurai , Tamil Nadu , India" ], [ "10", "Virupaksha Temple , Main Entrance Gopuram", "166", "15th Century CE", "Built during the time of Vijayanagara Empire", "Hampi , Karnataka" ], [ "11", "Sarangapani Temple", "164", "12th Century CE", "The temple is the largest Vishnu temple in Kumbakonam . The temple shrine , in the form of chariot was the work of the Chola kings during the 12th century", "Kumbakonam , Tamil Nadu , India" ], [ "12", "Annamalaiyar Temple Southern Gopuram ( Tirumanjana Gopuram )", "157", "9th century CE", "The temple covers some 10 hectares , this vast temple is one of the largest of India . Four large unpainted gopurams , one of each cardinal point , front of approaches , with the eastern side rising 13 storeys and an astonishing 66m", "Tiruvannamalai , Tamil Nadu , India" ], [ "13", "Rajagopalaswamy Temple", "154", "1523-1575 CE", "Kings Cholas , Vijayaragava Naik built the main gopuram , the thousand pillar hall and the big compound encircling the temple . The details of all these are available in the inscriptions within the temple", "Mannargudi , Tamil Nadu , India" ], [ "14", "Annamalaiyar Temple Northern Gopuram ( Pei Gopuram )", "144", "9th century CE", "The temple covers some 10 hectares , this vast temple is one of the largest of India . Four large unpainted gopurams , one of each cardinal point , front of approaches , with the eastern side rising 13 storeys and an astonishing 66m", "Tiruvannamalai , Tamil Nadu , India" ], [ "15", "Lakshmi Narasimha Temple , Mangalagiri", "153", "1809 CE", "Mangalagiri means The Auspicious Hill . This place is one of the 8 important Mahakshetrams ( sacred places ) in India", "Mangalagiri , Andhra Pradesh , India" ], [ "16", "Sankaranayinarkoil , Sankarankovil", "127", "11th Century CE", "Sankarankovil is home to the famous Sankaranarayanan Swamy temple . Sankarankovil is the second largest town in the district . It is very famous for Adi Thabasu festival . In older times , the city was called as Sankaranayinarkoil . Even now it is called as Sankarankovil", "Sankarankovil , Tamil Nadu , India" ], [ "17", "Nanjundeshwara Temple", "120", "9th Century CE", "This is known as Dakshin Kashi or Kashi of South", "Nanjundeshwara Temple , Karnataka , India" ] ]
{ "intro": "A Gopuram or Gopura is a monumental tower, usually ornate, at the entrance of any temple, especially in Southern India. This forms a prominent feature of Koils, Hindu temples of the Dravidian style. They are topped by the kalasam, a bulbous stone finial. They function as gateways through the walls that surround the temple complex. The gopuram's origins can be traced back to early structures of the Tamil kings Pallavas, Cholas and by the twelfth century under the Pandya rulers these gateways became a dominant feature of a temple's outer appearance, eventually overshadowing the inner sanctuary which became obscured from view by the gopuram's colossal size. It also dominated the inner sanctum in amount of ornamentation. Often a shrine has more than one gopuram. A koil may have multiple gopurams, typically constructed into multiple walls in tiers around the main shrine.puri temple is 214 feet height.", "section_text": "Gopurams are widespread in south Indian temples , predominantly in Tamil Nadu . [ 5 ]", "section_title": "Tallest Gopurams", "title": "List of tallest Gopurams", "uid": "List_of_tallest_Gopurams_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tallest_Gopurams" }
1,793
1794
Counties_of_Albania_0
[ [ "County ( Qark )", "Municipalities ( Bashki )", "Area km² ( sq mi )", "NUTS Region", "Population ( 2019 )", "Prefect" ], [ "Berat", "Berat , Kuçovë , Poliçan , Skrapar , Ura Vajgurore", "1,798 km ( 694 sq mi )", "South", "125,157", "Harilla Dafa" ], [ "Dibër", "Bulqizë , Dibër , Klos , Mat", "2,586 km ( 998 sq mi )", "North", "118,948", "Abedin Shehu" ], [ "Durrës", "Durrës , Krujë , Shijak", "766 km ( 296 sq mi )", "North", "290,126", "Roland Nasto" ], [ "Elbasan", "Belsh , Cërrik , Elbasan , Gramsh , Librazhd , Peqin , Prrenjas", "3,199 km ( 1,235 sq mi )", "Central", "274,982", "Maksim Malaj" ], [ "Fier", "Divjakë , Fier , Lushnjë , Mallakastër , Patos , Roskovec", "1,890 km ( 730 sq mi )", "South", "294,747", "Baki Bala" ], [ "Gjirokastër", "Dropull , Gjirokastër , Këlcyrë , Libohovë , Memaliaj , Përmet , Tepelenë", "2,884 km ( 1,114 sq mi )", "South", "61,423", "Astrit Aliaj" ], [ "Korçë", "Devoll , Kolonjë , Korçë , Maliq , Pogradec , Pustec", "3,711 km ( 1,433 sq mi )", "South", "207,889", "Dhori Spirollari" ], [ "Kukës", "Has , Kukës , Tropojë", "2,374 km ( 917 sq mi )", "North", "76,594", "Zenel Kucana" ], [ "Lezhë", "Kurbin , Lezhë , Mirditë", "1,620 km ( 630 sq mi )", "North", "125,195", "Gjergj Prendi" ], [ "Shkodër", "Fushë-Arrëz , Malësi e Madhe , Pukë , Shkodër , Vau i Dejës", "3,562 km ( 1,375 sq mi )", "North", "202,895", "Çesk Millja" ], [ "Tiranë", "Kamëz , Kavajë , Rrogozhinë , Tiranë , Vorë", "1,652 km ( 638 sq mi )", "Central", "895,160", "Suzana Jahollari" ], [ "Vlorë", "Delvinë , Finiq , Himarë , Konispol , Sarandë , Selenicë , Vlorë", "2,706 km ( 1,045 sq mi )", "South", "189,311", "Flamur Mamaj" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Counties of Albania (Albanian: qark or qarqe, pronounced [caɾk] or [carcɛ]) are first-level administrative divisions in the Republic of Albania. The government structure is based on the 1998 constitution, while the reform was made effective on 31 July 2000. The country has been divided into twelve counties. The twelve counties replaced the former districts (Rrethe).", "section_text": "", "section_title": "List of counties of Albania", "title": "Counties of Albania", "uid": "Counties_of_Albania_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counties_of_Albania" }
1,794
1795
Southwest_Conference_Men's_Basketball_Tournament_0
[ [ "Year", "SWC Champion", "Score", "Runner-up", "Most Outstanding Player", "Venue ( and city )" ], [ "1976", "Texas Tech", "74-72", "Texas A & M", "Rick Bullock , Texas Tech", "Moody Coliseum ( Dallas , Texas )" ], [ "1977", "Arkansas", "80-74", "Houston", "Ron Brewer , Arkansas", "The Summit ( Houston , Texas )" ], [ "1978", "Houston", "92-90", "Texas", "Mike Schultz , Houston", "The Summit ( Houston , Texas )" ], [ "1979", "Arkansas", "39-38", "Texas", "Sidney Moncrief , Arkansas", "The Summit ( Houston , Texas )" ], [ "1980", "Texas A & M", "52-50", "Arkansas", "David Britton , Texas A & M", "HemisFair Arena ( San Antonio , Texas )" ], [ "1981", "Houston", "84-59", "Texas", "Rob Williams , Houston", "HemisFair Arena ( San Antonio , Texas )" ], [ "1982", "Arkansas", "84-69", "Houston", "Alvin Robertson , Arkansas", "Reunion Arena ( Dallas , Texas )" ], [ "1983", "Houston", "62-59", "TCU", "Michael Young , Houston", "Reunion Arena ( Dallas , Texas )" ], [ "1984", "Houston", "57-56", "Arkansas", "Akeem Olajuwon , Houston", "The Summit ( Houston , Texas )" ], [ "1985", "Texas Tech", "67-64", "Arkansas", "Joe Kleine , Arkansas", "Reunion Arena ( Dallas , Texas )" ], [ "1986", "Texas Tech", "67-63", "Texas A & M", "Tony Benford , Texas Tech", "Reunion Arena ( Dallas , Texas )" ], [ "1987", "Texas A & M", "71-46", "Baylor", "Winston Crite , Texas A & M", "Reunion Arena ( Dallas , Texas )" ], [ "1988", "SMU", "75-64", "Baylor", "Micheal Williams , Baylor", "Reunion Arena ( Dallas , Texas )" ], [ "1989", "Arkansas", "100-76", "Texas", "Lenzie Howell , Arkansas", "Reunion Arena ( Dallas , Texas )" ], [ "1990", "Arkansas", "96-84", "Houston", "Todd Day , Arkansas", "Reunion Arena ( Dallas , Texas )" ], [ "1991", "Arkansas", "120-89", "Texas", "Oliver Miller , Arkansas", "Reunion Arena ( Dallas , Texas )" ], [ "1992", "Houston", "91-72", "Texas", "Dexter Cambridge , Texas", "Reunion Arena ( Dallas , Texas )" ], [ "1993", "Texas Tech", "88-76", "Houston", "Lance Hughes , Texas Tech", "Reunion Arena ( Dallas , Texas )" ], [ "1994", "Texas", "87-62", "Texas A & M", "B. J. Tyler , Texas", "Reunion Arena ( Dallas , Texas )" ], [ "1995", "Texas", "107-104 ( OT )", "Texas Tech", "Terrence Rencher , Texas", "Reunion Arena ( Dallas , Texas )" ] ]
{ "intro": "The Southwest Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, also called the SWC Classic, was the conference championship tournament in men's basketball for the Southwest Conference. The tournament was held annually between 1976 and 1996, after which the Southwest Conference was dissolved. The winner of the tournament was guaranteed a spot in the NCAA Basketball Tournament each year.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Tournament champions by year", "title": "Southwest Conference Men's Basketball Tournament", "uid": "Southwest_Conference_Men's_Basketball_Tournament_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southwest_Conference_Men's_Basketball_Tournament" }
1,795
1796
1982_Tampa_Bay_Buccaneers_season_0
[ [ "Round", "Pick", "Player", "Position", "School" ], [ "1", "17", "Sean Farrell", "Guard", "Penn State" ], [ "2", "32 ( from Chicago )", "Booker Reese", "Defensive end", "Bethune-Cookman" ], [ "3", "74", "Jerry Bell", "Tight end", "Arizona State" ], [ "3", "83 ( from San Diego )", "John Cannon", "Defensive end", "William and Mary" ], [ "4", "103 ( from San Diego )", "Dave Barrett", "Running nack", "Houston" ], [ "5", "128", "Jeff Davis", "Linebacker", "Clemson" ], [ "6", "158", "Andre Tyler", "Wide receiver", "Stanford" ], [ "7", "185", "Tom Morris", "Defensive back", "Michigan State" ], [ "8", "212", "Kelvin Atkins", "Linebacker", "Illinois" ], [ "9", "242", "Bob Lane", "Quarterback", "Northeast Louisiana" ], [ "12", "325", "Michael Morton", "Running back", "UNLV" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 1982 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season was the franchise's 7th season in the National Football League the 7th playing their home games at Tampa Stadium and the 7th under head coach John McKay. The Bucs were regarded for the first time as a regular playoff contender. They were considered by some to be the best Buccaneer team yet, despite a mediocre offensive line and the lack of a feature running back. The team played only two games before the players union called a labor strike, which resulted in a nine-game season. The season began with a three-game losing streak, as the Buccaneers outplayed their opponent statistically in each game, but showed a tendency for mental errors at crucial moments. The first game in which they were outgained by their opponent was their first win, a franchise-first victory over the Miami Dolphins on Monday Night Football. The team made a playoff run against a difficult schedule, facing only two opponents with losing records. Their schedule included all four eventual Conference Championship participants. They overcame double-digit deficits to win on last-minute field goals in their final two games (kicker Bill Capece was the NFC's second-leading scorer), and had to survive opponents last-minute rallies in all five of their victories. In the strike-season playoff format in which the top eight conference teams made the playoffs, the Buccaneers seventh-place finish gave them a first-round matchup with the Dallas Cowboys. Despite a poor performance by the offense, the Buccaneers carried a 17-16 lead into the fourth quarter, before the Cowboys rallied for a 30-17 victory following a controversial penalty call. This would be the last playoff appearance of the John McKay era, and was followed by fourteen consecutive losing seasons.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Offseason -- NFL Draft", "title": "1982 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season", "uid": "1982_Tampa_Bay_Buccaneers_season_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1982_Tampa_Bay_Buccaneers_season" }
1,796
1797
Alexander_Siddig_0
[ [ "Year", "Film", "Role" ], [ "1987", "Sammy and Rosie Get Laid", "Partygoer" ], [ "1992", "A Dangerous Man : Lawrence After Arabia", "Emir Feisal I" ], [ "2000", "Vertical Limit", "Kareem Nazir" ], [ "2002", "Reign of Fire", "Ajay" ], [ "2004", "The Hamburg Cell", "Khalid Sheikh Mohammed" ], [ "2005", "Kingdom of Heaven", "Imad ad-Din al-Isfahani" ], [ "2005", "Syriana", "Prince Nasir Al-Subaai" ], [ "2006", "Hannibal", "Hannibal" ], [ "2007", "The Nativity Story", "Angel Gabriel" ], [ "2007", "The Last Legion", "Theodorus Andronikus" ], [ "2008", "A Lost Man", "Fouad Saleh" ], [ "2008", "Doomsday", "Hatcher" ], [ "2008", "Espion ( s )", "Malik" ], [ "2009", "Cairo Time", "Tareq Khalifa" ], [ "2010", "Miral", "Jamal" ], [ "2010", "4.3.2.1", "Robert" ], [ "2010", "Clash of the Titans", "Hermes" ], [ "2012", "Inescapable", "Adib Abdel-Kareem" ], [ "2013", "The Fifth Estate", "Dr. Tarek Haliseh" ], [ "2013", "May in the Summer", "Ziad" ] ]
{ "intro": "Siddig El Tahir El Fadil El Siddig Abderrahman Mohammed Ahmed Abdel Karim El Mahdi (Arabic: صدّيق الطاهر الفاضل الصدّيق عبدالرحمن محمد أحمد عبدالكريم المهدي Ṣiddīq aṭ-Ṭāhir al-Fāḍil aṣ-Ṣiddīq ʿAbd ar-Raḥman Muḥammad ʾAḥmad ʿAbd al-Karīm al-Mahdī; born 21 November 1965) is a Sudanese-born English actor. He is known by the stage names Siddig El Fadil through the mid-1990s and Alexander Siddig since. A graduate of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts, Siddig is known for playing Dr. Julian Bashir in the television series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Philip Burton in Primeval, Carthaginian general Hannibal in Hannibal (2006), and King Minos in Atlantis. He also has an appearance in the sixth season of 24 as Hamri Al-Assad, and in Gotham as Ra's al Ghul. In film he played Prince Nasir Al-Subaai in Syriana (2005), Imad ad-Din al-Isfahani in Kingdom of Heaven (2005), Tareq Khalifa in Cairo Time.", "section_text": "At TrekExpo in Tulsa , Oklahoma , on 25 June 2005", "section_title": "Filmography -- Film", "title": "Alexander Siddig", "uid": "Alexander_Siddig_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Siddig" }
1,797
1798
2006_NBA_Development_League_Draft_0
[ [ "Pick", "Player", "Position", "Nationality", "Team", "College/From" ], [ "1", "Corsley Edwards", "C-PF", "United States", "Anaheim Arsenal", "CB Granada Spain" ], [ "2", "Andre Brown", "C-PF", "United States", "Sioux Falls Skyforce", "Inchon ET Land Black Slamer" ], [ "3", "Mike Harris", "SF", "United States", "Colorado 14ers", "Milwaukee Bucks ( preseason )" ], [ "4", "Kevin Burleson", "PG", "United States", "Fort Worth Flyers", "Charlotte Bobcats" ], [ "5", "Justin Williams", "PF-C", "United States", "Dakota Wizards", "Wyoming" ], [ "6", "Matt Haryasz", "C-PF", "United States", "Arkansas RimRockers", "Stanford" ], [ "7", "Devin Green", "SG-SF", "United States", "Los Angeles D-Fenders", "Los Angeles Lakers" ], [ "8", "Denham Brown", "SG-SF", "Canada", "Tulsa 66ers", "Connecticut" ], [ "9", "PJ Ramos", "C", "Puerto Rico", "Idaho Stampede", "Roanoke Dazzle ( NBA D-League )" ], [ "10", "Darius Washington , Jr", "PG/SG", "United States", "Austin Toros", "ČEZ Nymburk" ], [ "11", "Brandon Bowman", "SF", "United States", "Bakersfield Jam", "Georgetown" ], [ "12", "Troy Bell", "PG", "United States", "New Mexico Thunderbirds", "Skyliners Frankfurt ( Germany )" ] ]
{ "intro": "The 2006 NBA Development League Draft was the sixth annual draft by the NBA Development League. It was held on November 2, 2006.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Draft -- Round 1", "title": "2006 NBA Development League draft", "uid": "2006_NBA_Development_League_Draft_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_NBA_Development_League_draft" }
1,798
1799
American_Champion_Two-Year-Old_Filly_0
[ [ "Year", "Horse", "Trainer", "Owner" ], [ "2018", "Jaywalk", "John Servis", "D. J . Stable and Cash is King" ], [ "2017", "Caledonia Road", "Ralph Nicks", "Zoom and Fish Stable , Spiring , Charlie and Newtown Anner Stud" ], [ "2016", "Champagne Room", "Peter Eurton", "Ciaglia , Exline-Border , et al" ], [ "2015", "Songbird", "Jerry Hollendorfer", "Fox Hill Farm Inc" ], [ "2014", "Take Charge Brandi", "D. Wayne Lukas", "Willis Horton" ], [ "2013", "She 's a Tiger", "Jeff Bonde", "Mark Dedomenico , Allen J Aldrich et al" ], [ "2012", "Beholder", "Richard E. Mandella", "Spendthrift Farm" ], [ "2011", "My Miss Aurelia", "Steve Asmussen", "Stonestreet Stables" ], [ "2010", "Awesome Feather", "Stanley I . Gold", "Jacks or Better Farms , Inc" ], [ "2009", "She Be Wild", "Wayne M. Catalano", "Nancy Mazzoni" ], [ "2008", "Stardom Bound", "Christopher Paasch", "IEAH Stables & Charles Cono" ], [ "2007", "Indian Blessing", "Bob Baffert", "Patti & Hal J. Earnhardt III" ], [ "2006", "Dreaming of Anna", "Wayne M. Catalano", "Frank C. Calabrese" ], [ "2005", "Folklore", "D. Wayne Lukas", "Bob & Beverly Lewis" ], [ "2004", "Sweet Catomine", "Julio C. Canani", "Pam & Martin Wygod" ], [ "2003", "Halfbridled", "Richard E. Mandella", "Wertheimer et Frere" ], [ "2002", "Storm Flag Flying", "Claude R. McGaughey III", "Ogden Mills Phipps" ], [ "2001", "Tempera", "Eoin G. Harty", "Godolphin Racing" ], [ "2000", "Caressing", "David R. Vance", "Carl F. Pollard" ], [ "1999", "Chilukki", "Bob Baffert", "Stonerside Stable" ] ]
{ "intro": "The American Champion Two-Year-Old Filly is an American Thoroughbred horse racing honor awarded annually to a female horse in Thoroughbred flat racing. It became part of the Eclipse Awards program in 1971. The award originated in 1936 when both the Daily Racing Form (DRF) and Turf and Sports Digest (TSD) magazine began naming an annual champion. Starting in 1950, the Thoroughbred Racing Associations (TRA) began naming its own champion. The following list provides the name of the horses chosen by both of these organizations. There were several disagreements, with more than one champion being recognized on seven occasions. The Daily Racing Form, the Thoroughbred Racing Associations, and the National Turf Writers Association all joined forces in 1971 to create the Eclipse Award. In 1978, the voting resulted in a tie between two fillies. Champions from 1887 through 1935 were selected retrospectively by a panel of experts as published by The Blood-Horse magazine.", "section_text": "", "section_title": "Honorees -- Eclipse Awards", "title": "American Champion Two-Year-Old Filly", "uid": "American_Champion_Two-Year-Old_Filly_0", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Champion_Two-Year-Old_Filly" }
1,799