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2018 WRFL Division 2 Grand Final
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2018 WRFL Division 2 Grand Final
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Central Union of Masons
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Central Union of Masons The Central Union of Masons () was a trade union representing bricklayers in Germany. Regular conferences of masons were held in Germany in the 1880s. With the repeal of the Anti-Socialist Laws, it was possible to form legal trade unions, and at the 8th Congress of Masons, in Gotha, in May 1891, the Central Union of Masons was established. It adopted "Der Grundstein" as its journal. The union gradually built up international contacts in the late 19th-century. In 1903, it called a conference in Berlin, to formalise these relationships by establishing the International Federation of Building Workers. The union affiliated to the General Commission of German Trade Unions, and by 1904, it was the second largest in Germany, with 128,850 members. By 1910, this had risen slightly, to 169,645. At the start of 1911, it merged with the Central Union of Construction Workers, to form the German Construction Workers' Union.
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Guillermo Tovar y de Teresa
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Guillermo Tovar y de Teresa Guillermo Tovar de Teresa (Mexico City, August 23, 1956 - "idem", November 10, 2013) was a Mexican historian and an art collector (mainly of painting, literature and ancient books, deeply knowledgeable about the work of the great photographers in Mexico), bibliographer, philanthropist, cultural promoter, and scholar. He was a constant defender of the historical and artistic Mexican heritage, mainly from his hometown, of which he was chronicler, an appointment that was originally in charge of the Presidency and to which he resigned to propose the creation of the Council of the Chronicle of the City of Mexico. He was a specialist in the New Spain/Mexican colonial period art, history and literature. He published several books about Colonial Mexican art and collaborated, among others, for the newspaper "La Jornada". He stood out for his early intelligence: he learned to read long before entering school, and at age 13 he was advisor to colonial art of the then president Gustavo Díaz Ordaz. At 23, he published his first book, "Renaissance painting and sculpture in Mexico". He was a member of the Historical Center Executive Committee, corresponding member of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts of San Fernando, in Madrid, and honorary member of the Hispanic Society of America, the latter based in New York. He was considered a candidate for the Aesthetic Research Institute of the National Autonomous University of Mexico, but never wanted to hold a public office or receive any salary. One of his brothers, Rafael Tovar and de Teresa, was since 2012 the head of National Council for Culture and the Arts and first secretary of Culture. His house became, in December 2018, a museum, and is part of the Soumaya Museum. He learned to appreciate history and art books from a very young age, thanks to his grandfather, Guillermo de Teresa y Teresa, and his father, Dr. Rafael Tovar y Villa Gordoa, his "guardian figures". He said, that "his grandfather had taught him to read in the pages of the newspaper..". Self-taught by choice ("I decided to train on my own (...) I was bored"), lived away from universities. At the age of seven he received, from then President Adolfo López Mateos, "a medal in recognition of his dedication to the study of Mexican history and art." At age 11 he was invited by the historian Jorge Gurría Lacroix to collaborate in the National Institute of Anthropology and History. At age 12 he was appointed advisor to President Díaz Ordaz in matters of colonial art. At 14, he had already given his first lectures at the Institute of Aesthetic Research of the UNAM, and at a very young age he received a distinction from the Royal Academy of Fine Arts of San Fernando in Madrid. At 16 he concluded his formal investigation into the history of Tacubaya, years later published as "Historical news of the Miguel Hidalgo Delegation". He was interested in investigating all the branches of his ancestry, passing through some of the largest and oldest families in the New Spain. In 2012, he submitted a request to succeed in the title of count of Gustarredondo, which litigated in Spain asking rights of possession. On the death of Guillermo Tovar, his nephew, Rafael Tovar y López-Portillo, son of Rafael Tovar y Teresa, director of Conaculta and grandson of the president José López-Portillo, requested the subrogation of the rights of his uncle in that title, because he is the firstborn. Guillermo Tovar was a great-grandson of Margarita López-Portillo y Rojas, in turn the sister of the lawyer, governor of the state of Jalisco, novelist, poet, playwright, journalist and language scholar José López Portillo y Rojas. Guillermo Tovar was also the maternal nephew of the writer José Bernardo Couto and maternal great-great-grandson of the writer José Joaquín Pesado. He wrote, among others, about the following topics: Constituted before a notary and registered in the Tax Administration Service, this organization received in August 14, 2007 authorization from the Directorate of Legal Affairs of National Institute of Fine Arts to start their functions. Chaired from 2012 to date by Román Sánchez Fernández. The publisher Editorial Trama, of Madrid, is formally the publisher of the Chronicle Council of Mexico City. Some of his publications are the following: He published (some co-authored, but most individually) a total of 39 works in 44 volumes, including:
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Orienteering at the 2001 World Games – Mixed relay
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Orienteering at the 2001 World Games – Mixed relay The mixed relay competition in orienteering at the 2001 World Games took place on 19 August 2001 in the Iijima Forest in Akita, Japan. A total of 15 teams of 4 athletes entered the competition. Every athlete had to check in at control points, which were located across the course.
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Richárd Jelena
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Richárd Jelena Richárd Jelena (born 8 January 1998) is a Hungarian professional footballer who plays for Kisvárda FC.
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Otto Cribb
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Otto Cribb Otto Cribb, born Alfred Otto Simpson, (14 February 1878 - 23 July 1901) was a New Zealand boxer notable for being inducted into the Australian National Boxing Hall of Fame as a pioneer of the sport in 2014. He only boxed for three years but became the most popular boxer in the colonies due to his grit and determination during his short career. He began his boxing career in New Zealand but moved to Australia after a year where he achieved popularity and became the middleweight champion of Australia after beating Mick Dunn. He then went to America where he suffered his first defeat and returned to Australia, accusing his manager of taking advantage of him financially. Shortly after returning he suffered his second defeat in a rematch with Dunn and passed away shortly afterwards due to a concussion. Cribb was born in Dunedin, New Zealand, in 1878. His birth name was Alfred Simpson and his father was a tobacconist and hairdresser in Christchurch. He also became a tobacconist and worked for a chemist's shop in New Zealand for a time, and attained a high level of education. Cribb began boxing in New Zealand in 1898 winning several fights that year, and came to Australia in about 1899, ultimately settling in Parramatta, and earned recognition in boxing circles by sparring in a novice tournament at the Alhambra Club in Sydney in May. He joined the novice competition officially and in June 1899 he fought a fellow novice boxer Paddy Martin at the Alhambra Club and won. The fight was regarded as both entertaining and amusing by the crowd, with Otto drawing laughs for reacting to being punched in the nose by wiping it. In September he beat Joe Dunn in a semi-final of the novice competition, and in October he drew against a boxer going by the pseudonym 'The Poet'. In late October he contracted influenza and was bedridden for four days leading him to postpone a match against Jack Tuckwell, who he beat when the match finally took place in late November. In December he acted as a cornerman for the first time during a Colonial Fleet boxing championship. In January 1900 Cribb beat Harry Dawson in five minutes in a fight at the Golden Gate Club attended by 800 spectators, who were disappointed at the noncompetitive fight. After the fight he expressed the wish to box in Melbourne, but in February he boxed in Sydney again against Ned Burden at the Golden Gate club winning quickly in front of a crowd of 1,000. In March he fought Victorian light-weight Tot Higgins in Sydney, and won in thirteen rounds in what was described as his best performance yet in front of a crowd of 2,000. In April he beat Jack Broughton at the Gaiety Theatre in front of 500 people and the match was harshly criticized due to Broughton's lack of competitiveness, and it was suggested it may even kill the Sydney boxing boom. In late April 1900 Cribb made up for the lacklustre match against Broughton by fighting Queenslander Snowy Sturgeon in front of 1,500 people knocking Sturgeon out in what was described as one of the most exciting fights ever held in Sydney. In early May he briefly visited Melbourne and was present in boxing circles, stating that while he was in Melbourne for a holiday he would box if an opponent presented themselves. After returning to Sydney he fought a rematch against Snowy Sturgeon in front of a crowd which filled the Metropolitan Athletic Club Hall over capacity with over 1,500 spectators filling the hall and crowding the doors. The majority of the crowd supported Cribb and he knocked Sturgeon down to win the fight in the eighth round. Cribb was regarded as a star after the Sturgeon fights and was scheduled to face Victorian boxer Peter Murphy, but refused to fight in Melbourne while Murphy refused to fight in Sydney which prompted an offer from Brisbane to host the fight. Instead Cribb boxed Sturgeon a third time in July in Sydney and they attracted a crowd of 1,400. The fight was regarded as disappointing with neither boxer being aggressive and it went the full twenty rounds. The referee expressed that they felt Cribb had been superior, but prior to the fight it had been agreed that going the distance meant the result was a draw. In early September he fought Tot Higgins again and won in four minutes, and later in the month he was scheduled to box Mick Dunn for the Australian middleweight championship. He fought Dunn in October to a capacity crowd of approximately 1,500 at the Gaiety Athletic Club and the fight was regarded as exciting with Dunn knocking Cribb's false teeth out of his mouth with a lefthanded punch, and Cribb knocking Dunn out in the eighth round to secure the championship. In October 1900 Otto's brother Arthur made his boxing debut in Sydney but lost with critics stating he did not have his brothers fighting abilities beyond grit. Otto himself spent some of October in Melbourne and then embarked on a trip to America immediately after arriving back in Sydney, disappointing Mick Dunn who he had promised a rematch after his Melbourne trip. It was reported he intended to pursue a boxing career in the United States largely due to being frustrated by booking negotiations in Australia. Cribb sailed to America on the Maripose and by December 1900 he had settled in San Francisco. He came under the wing of a boxing promoter named Mr. James and boxed in a trial against Soldier Green to impress him, earning a booking against Frank McConnell. The booking was regarded as somewhat controversial as Cribb was completely unknown in America and his undefeated record in Australia had not been used to promote him to American boxing fans. Cribb beat McConnell in four rounds when the fight took place in January 1901, and was reportedly immediately well known in San Francisco as a result. In February he fought Charlie Thurston, the Flying Dutchman, and the match went the whole twenty rounds and ended in a draw. Cribb's match with Thurston was positively received and a rematch was organized, with some haggling over the price, and Cribb employed a large team of trainers to assist him in preparing for the rematch, prompting Thurston to remark "I guess they can't get inside the ring and help Cribb, so I don't care if he has a dozen Australians training him." They fought to a crowd of 7,000 at the end of March, and Cribb was accused of fouling with low blows early in the match, which was ignored by the referee. He tired by the end of the match, but did manage a late comeback and avoided being knocked out however Thurston was awarded the win without controversy. In May 1901 Cribb embarked on a return voyage for Australia due to feeling homesick, and he arrived in Sydney on the R.M.S. Sierra in June. When asked about America upon his arrival he remarked that "America is all right, but no more Americans for me; I'll tell you all some other time." In an interview after settling in he remarked that his contract had severely limited his opportunities and he felt his manager had taken advantage of him financially and had threatened to prevent him from returning to Australia when he expressed dissatisfaction. He also reported that when he attended a fight as a spectator someone pulled a knife on him causing him to pull a gun on them, which resulted in him being assaulted by several people at the next match prompting him to run away. He expressed his desire to box again after settling in and announced he would honor his promise and give Mick Dunn a rematch as his first fight. Dunn was eager to have his rematch and approached Cribb to organize it immediately after hearing of his return. In early June 1901 Cribb sparred with Donny Maloney. He gave another interview in early June in which expressed his desire to fight everybody in his weight class before going on a business trip to New Zealand in September, which prompted Dunn to question if this meant Cribb intended to renege on their rematch again, however he was reassured when the rematch was confirmed shortly afterwards. In July a rematch with Snowy Sturgeon was organized to take place after the Dunn rematch, and New Zealand boxer Jerry Butler challenged Cribb to a match. Cribb faced Dunn on 22 July 1901 and suffered a violet defeat with Dunn knocking him out in the ninth round with a blow to the forehead and an uppercut to the jaw. Cribb appeared fine after the fight other than a cut to the cheek and shook hands with Dunn, however he died in his sleep on 23 July 1901. His trainer had advised him against continuing with the fight as shortly beforehand he had complained of severe back pain which made it difficult for him to sit, however he refused to postpone the fight or wear a plaster brace for fear of disappointing the public. Dunn noted he had no ill feelings against Cribb and that he had not had any desire to hurt him, and had intended for the fight to be his last, and had only not retired after their previous bout as he felt he performed poorly in it. Cribb's funeral was held on July 25 and attended by many members of the public. He was laid to rest in the Jewish section of a cemetery in Rookwood. It was determined the cause of death was a hemorrhage on the surface of the brain due to a concussion and Mick Dunn, the referee, the timekeeper, Cribb's trainer, and one of his cornermen were all arrested and charged on suspicion of having been involved with his death. While concussion was the cause of death some injuries to internal organs were also discovered. The arrests drew criticism from some who felt that there was no place for police involvement in an athletic contest. On 26 July 1901 the death was officially ruled accidental by an inquest.
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List of Denver Pioneers in the NFL Draft
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List of Denver Pioneers in the NFL Draft This is a list of Denver Pioneers football players in the NFL Draft. Source:
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Hisao Niura
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Hisao Niura Hisao Niura, also known as Kim Il-young (Hangul: 김일영) (born May 11, 1951, in Setagaya, Tokyo, Japan), is a Japanese former professional baseball pitcher who played Nippon Professional Baseball in Japan and KBO League baseball in South Korea. Over a 22-season career, he was a five-time champion, four times with the Yomiuri Giants and once with the Samsung Lions. He was a two-time ERA champion of Japan's Central League. A workhorse during much of his career, he had success as both a starter and a reliever. Although born in Japan, Niura is of Korean descent, part of the Zainichi community. Niura was born in Japan and attended Shizuoka Shogyo High School, but technically held Korean citizenship. As a 17-year-old in the summer of 1968, Niura announced his intention to drop out of high school and turn pro, but as a "foreign player" was ruled ineligible even though he had attended a Japanese high school. Niura then became the subject of intense bidding in excess of the draft-restricted contract bonus of ¥1,000,000, with six NPB teams and even some Major League Baseball teams involved. As a result, Niura joined the Yomiuri Giants outside of the draft. This became a key case to change the ruling on NPB draft eligibility from "those with Japanese citizenship" to "those that are registered with Japanese schools." Niura made it to the top level of NPB in 1971, and ended up pitching for the Yomiuri Giants for 13 seasons. The Giants won the Japan Series championship each of Niura's first three years in the league (this was during the Giants' record nine straight championships), although he did not pitch in any Series games. Niura's best stretch in NPB was from 1976 to 1979, when he won a total of 52 games, with a winning percentage of .619, with 32 complete games. Niura appeared in 50 games in 1976, half as a starter and half as a reliever. He tied for the league lead in shutouts with three, and finished third in ERA behind Takamasa Suzuki and Shigeru Kobayashi. That year he made his first Central League All-Star team. He finally appeared in a Japan Series game, pitching two innings in Game Two (Yomiuri ended up losing in seven games to the Hankyu Braves). In 1977, his 2.32 ERA was the best in the Central League; his nine saves also were tied for the league lead. Hisao again pitched in the Japan Series (again against the Braves), appearing in Games One, Two, and Four, and taking the loss in the clincher Game Five. Niura won 15 games and saved 15 more in 1978, both career highs; his 63 appearances led the Central League. He repeated as ERA champion with a 2.81 mark, made his second All-Star team, won both Fireman of the Year and Middle Reliever of the Year, and was given a Best Nine Award as the Central League's best pitcher. In 1979 Niura went 15–11 with 5 saves, a 3.43 ERA and 223 strikeouts in 236-1/3 innings, leading the Central League in strikeouts. He made his third All-Star team. Elbow problems in the period 1980 to 1983 reduced his workload. Niura transitioned to the Samsung Lions of the nascent KBO League in 1984, playing under his Korean name Kim Il-young. He was 16–10 with a 2.27 ERA in 1984. In 1985 Niura/Kim went 25-6 for the Lions, with a 2.79 ERA and 11 complete games to help lead the Lions to the KBO League championship. (Under the format the league played during that era, because the Lions finished first in both half-seasons, no Korean Series was played and Samsung was declared champion outright.) Kim won ten games in his first 12 starts that year, a KBO record for the fastest time to ten wins. Kim's 25 wins that year are still good for third-place in KBO single-season victories; he was beaten out for the 1985 KBO League Golden Glove Award by his teammate Kim Si-jin, who also won 25 games. He continued his KBO success in 1986, going 13–4 with a 2.53 ERA. Niura was diagnosed with diabetes in 1986; that combined with the language barrier (Niura did not speak Korean), led to him returning to Japan. Niura's three years in the KBO resulted in a 54–20 record (a .730 winning percentage), a 2.53 ERA, 32 complete games, and 8 shutouts. Niura returned to NPB in 1987, having added a screwball and changeup to his pitching repertoire, which previously had been limited to a fastball and a curveball. Now playing for the Yokohama Taiyō Whales, Niura ended up winning 11 games in 1987, along with 7 complete games and 4 shutouts, and won the NPB Comeback Player of the Year Award (an honor he shared with Tōru Sugiura of the Yakult Swallows). He made his fourth All-Star team in 1987 and his fifth (and final) one in 1988. On August 4, 1989, he shut out his old team Yomiuri on 13 hits, the most hits ever allowed by an NPB pitcher in a shutout. Niura's 22-season career ended in 1992, playing with the Yakult Swallows. (Hisao Niura)
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Trapherinae
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Trapherinae Trapherinae is a subfamily of flies (Diptera) in the family Platystomatidae (Signal flies), which currently includes 11 genera. The Platystomatidae were comprehensively divided into five subfamilies, but more recent reviews of morphology suggest that some aspects of this classification are unsatisfactory. This led to reducing the number of subfamilies to four, being the Plastotephritinae, Platystomatinae, Trapherinae and Trapherinae - Angitulinae being subsumed into Platystomatinae. Nonetheless, definition of the subfamily Trapherinae is still open to debate and requires phylogenetic confirmation. At present, genera assigned to the subfamily are considered as having the following subset of characters: distiphallus terminating in terminal filaments, but no glans, tergites 4 and 5 unreduced in female and tergite 6 in the female abdomen well developed. Although McAlpine rejected the use of the presence of an anepisternal (=sternopleural) seta, Whittington more recently continued to use it as it provides an additional character besides those given above, all of which are transitional to some extent in the other subfamilies of the Platystomatidae. In particular, head and genitalic morphology, and perhaps larval biology once more of this is known, should play a role in the definition of the subfamilies, the debate for which remains open. Seven of the eleven genera in the Trapherinae are monotypic: "Aglaioptera", "Eopiara", "Phasiamya", "Phlyax", "Piara", "Traphera" and "Xiriella".  Little is known of the biology of Trapherinae. Larvae of "Poecilotraphera" were recorded from guava, sugar cane, rice and maize. and adults have been observed on the under surface of leaves.. Without doubt, the largest concentration of species of Trapherinae occurs in the Oriental region.The subfamily is entirely absent from the Americas and the Palaearctic and by only one genus ("Phlyax") in Australasia. There are four genera known from the Afrotropical region, only one of which also occurs in the Oriental region ("Lule").
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SS Aghios Nectarios
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SS Aghios Nectarios Aghios Nectarios was a Hansa A Type cargo ship which was built as Kalliope in 1944 by NV Koninklijk Maatschappij de Schelde, Vlissingen, Netherlands for Neptun Line, Bremen, Germany. She was seized as a prize of war in 1945, passing to the Ministry of War Transport and renamed Empire Garrison. She was sold in 1947 and was renamed Bengore Head. She was sold to Greece in 1967 and renamed "Aghios Nectarios". following a sale to Cyprus in 1971, she served until 1974, when she was scrapped. The ship was long, with a beam of . She had a depth of . She was assessed as , , . The ship was propelled by a compound steam engine, which had two cylinders of and two cylinders of diameter by inches stroke. The engine was built by NV Koninklijk Maatschappij de Schelde. Rated at 1,200IHP, it drove a single screw propeller and could propel the ship at . "Kalliope" was a Hansa A Type cargo ship built in 1944 as yard number 249 by NV Koninklijk Maatschappij de Schelde, Vlissingen, Netherlands for Neptun Line, Bremen, Germany. She was launched in on 15 April and delivered in August. Her port of registry was Bremen. In May 1945, "Kalliope" was seized as a prize of war at Kiel. She was passed to the Ministry of War Transport and was renamed "Empire Garrison". The Code Letters GMRP and United Kingdom Official Number 180668 were allocated. Her port of registry was London and she was operated under the management of G Heyn & Sons Ltd. In 1947, "Empire Garrison" was sold to the Ulster Steamship Co. and was renamed "Bengore Head". She was operated under the management of G Heyn & Sons. With their introduction in the 1960s, "Bengore Head" was allocated the IMO Number 5040988. In 1967, "Bengore Head" was sold to Kyrle Compagnia Naviera SA, Piraeus, Greece and was renamed "Aghios Nektarios". She was operated under the management of Canopus Shipping SA. She was sold to Aldebaran Shipping Co., Famagusta, Cyprus in 1971. She served until January 1974, when she was scrapped in Spain.
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Alexander Etkind
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Alexander Etkind Alexander Etkind (born 1955, St. Petersburg, Russia) is a historian and cultural scientist. He is a professor of history and the Chair of Russia-Europe relations at the European University Institute. He completed his B.A. and M.A. in 1978 in Psychology and English at Leningrad State University.  In 1985, he completed a PhD in Psychology at Bekhterev Institute, Leningrad and, 1998, completed an additional PhD (Habilitation) in Slavonic Studies at the University of Helsinki. Etkind taught at both the European University at St. Petersburg then at Cambridge University where he was also a fellow of King's College. He was a visiting fellow at New York University, Wissenschaftskolleg in Berlin, and other places. Etkind's research focuses on European and Russian intellectual history, memory studies, natural resources and the history of political economy, empire and colonies in Europe, and Russian politics, novels and film in the 21st century. From 2010 to 2013 he led the international research project “Memory at War: Cultural Dynamics in Poland, Russia, and Ukraine”. The project studied the role of cultural memory of the Soviet era in Russia, Ukraine and Poland and received funding from Humanities in the European Research Area (HERA). Etkind has publications in Russian and English, and speaks both languages.
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Hogar de HGTV
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Hogar de HGTV Hogar de HGTV is an upcoming American Spanish-language cable network owned by Discovery, Inc. Scheduled to launch on June 30, 2020, the network will primarily carry lifestyle programming drawn from the Food Network and HGTV brands. Cox Cable will carry the network on launch. Charter Communications plans to add the channel by August.
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Rhythmic gymnastics at the 2001 World Games
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Rhythmic gymnastics at the 2001 World Games The rhythmic gymnastics events at the 2001 World Games in Akita was played between 22 and 23 August. 24 rhythmic gymnastics competitors, from 16 nations, participated in the tournament. The rhythmic gymnastics competition took place at Akita City Gymnasium.
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Emergency (1962 film)
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Emergency (1962 film) Emergency is a 1962 British drama film directed by Francis Searle and starring Glyn Houston, Zena Walker and Dermot Walsh. The film is a remake of the 1952 film "Emergency Call" directed by Lewis Gilbert. While that had been made as a first feature to top the double bill, the remake was produced as a second feature. It was shot at Twickenham Studios and on location around West London. The film's sets were designed by the art director Duncan Sutherland. After a small girl is hit by a truck, police desperately try to find members of her rare blood group in order to get a transfusion.
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Arif Gürdenlı
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Arif Gürdenlı Arif Gürdenlı (born 7 September 1966) is a Turkish sailor. He competed in the Finn event at the 1992 Summer Olympics.
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2011 Canarian Island Cabildo elections
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2011 Canarian Island Cabildo elections The 2011 Canarian Island Cabildo elections were held on Sunday, 22 May 2011, to elect the 9th Island Cabildos of El Hierro, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, La Gomera, La Palma, Lanzarote and Tenerife. All 157 seats in the seven Island Cabildos were up for election. The following table lists party control in the Island Cabildos. Gains for a party are displayed with the cell's background shaded in that party's colour.
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2007 Canarian Island Cabildo elections
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2007 Canarian Island Cabildo elections The 2007 Canarian Island Cabildo elections were held on Sunday, 27 May 2007, to elect the 8th Island Cabildos of El Hierro, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, La Gomera, La Palma, Lanzarote and Tenerife. All 153 seats in the seven Island Cabildos were up for election. The following table lists party control in the Island Cabildos. Gains for a party are displayed with the cell's background shaded in that party's colour.
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2003 Canarian Island Cabildo elections
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2003 Canarian Island Cabildo elections The 2003 Canarian Island Cabildo elections were held on Sunday, 25 May 2003, to elect the 7th Island Cabildos of El Hierro, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, La Gomera, La Palma, Lanzarote and Tenerife. All 149 seats in the seven Island Cabildos were up for election. The following table lists party control in the Island Cabildos. Gains for a party are displayed with the cell's background shaded in that party's colour.
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1999 Canarian Island Cabildo elections
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1999 Canarian Island Cabildo elections The 1999 Canarian Island Cabildo elections were held on Sunday, 13 June 1999, to elect the 6th Island Cabildos of El Hierro, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, La Gomera, La Palma, Lanzarote and Tenerife. All 139 seats in the seven Island Cabildos were up for election. The following table lists party control in the Island Cabildos. Gains for a party are displayed with the cell's background shaded in that party's colour.
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1995 Canarian Island Cabildo elections
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1995 Canarian Island Cabildo elections The 1995 Canarian Island Cabildo elections were held on Sunday, 28 May 1995, to elect the 5th Island Cabildos of El Hierro, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, La Gomera, La Palma, Lanzarote and Tenerife. All 139 seats in the seven Island Cabildos were up for election. The following table lists party control in the Island Cabildos. Gains for a party are displayed with the cell's background shaded in that party's colour.
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SS Kalliope
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SS Kalliope A number of steamships have been named Kalliope, including:
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G. Dupoitt
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G. Dupoitt G. Dupoitt (fl. ca. 1420–1430) was a composer, presumed to be French, about whom little is known. His only known work is the three-voice motet "Salve mater misericordie, stella maris," found in the Trent Codices (I-TRbc 92, 135v–136). There the piece is attributed to G. Dupoitt, but the name has often been misread as G. Dupont. It is possible the name is a corruption or alternative spelling of Dubois. The motet text also appears in a 13th-century English conductus found in Oxford Bodleian Library manuscripts GB-Ob 489 and 591. According to musicologist Peter Wright, Dupoitt's setting is awkward in its melodic and harmonic writing, though its mensural usage is of interest.
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Bia (season 2)
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Bia (season 2) The second season of Argentine television series "Bia" was produced by Non Stop Producciones and Pegsa Group, and directed by Jorge Bechara and Daniel De Filippo, the season was first announced in October 2019. It premiered in Disney Channel Latin America on 16 March 2020.
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João Neto (sailor)
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João Neto (sailor) João Neto (born 11 March 1958) is an Angolan sailor. He competed in the Finn event at the 1992 Summer Olympics.
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João Neto João Neto can refer to:
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Nick Klessing
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Nick Klessing Nick Klessing is a German artistic gymnast. He competed at both the 2018 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships and 2019 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships. In 2019, he finished in 8th place in the rings. In 2016, he won the gold medal in the junior rings event at the 2016 European Men's Artistic Gymnastics Championships held in Bern, Switzerland.
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Museo Vostell Malpartida
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Museo Vostell Malpartida The Museo Vostell Malpartida in the Spanish village Malpartida de Cáceres west of the provincial capital Cáceres in the Autonomous Community of Extremadura is dedicated to the work of the German painter, sculptor, Fluxus and Happening artist Wolf Vostell. The museum is under the artistic direction of Mercedes Vostell and under the general direction of José Antonio Agúndez García.. The Museo Vostell Malpartida was founded by Wolf Vostell and Mercedes Vostell in 1976. In 1976 Wolf Vostell created a sculpture in Los Barruecos with his automobile, a black Opel Admiral from 1970 with which he had travelled with his family through Extremadura. The title of the sculpture is "VOAEX (Journey in the Upper Extremadura)" and in 1978 he created the sculpture "The dead who is thirsty (El Muerto que tiene Sed)". The 30th of october 1976 was the inauguration of the "VOAEX" sculpture and the foundation of the Museo Vostell Malpartida. The floor space of the museum is about 14.000 m². The washhouse was operated in the 18th and 19th centuries; it is an interesting trade in which the wool was washed by the animals of the migratory herds with water from the pond Barruecos de Abajo of Extremadura. The house consists of several rooms in which different activities were carried out: Shearing sheep and weighing. Since 1988 the german Goethe-Institut is collaborating with the museum. The collaboration started when Manuel Heredia (former Head of Technology of the Goethe-Institut Madrid) supported Wolf Vostell in the 1980s in finding the 20 motorcycles of the brand Sanglas for Salvador Dalí's sculpture "The end of the Parzival (El fin de Parzival)". Since then the Goethe-Institut is part of selected exhibitions, concerts and book releases. In 1994 the government of Extremadura took over the complete renovation of the buildings. After Vostell's death in 1998, Mercedes Vostell became the artistic director of the museum. In 2005 the state government acquired the Vostell-archive for the museum. The Vostell-archive became an integral part of the Museo Vostell Malpartida. It serves art historians, journalists, students and all other people interested in art as a source of information. The Museo Vostell Malpartida had 47,376 visitors in 2016 and was number 10 of 30 must-see museums in Spain, according to the National Geographic Society in Spain 2017. The Museo Vostell Malpartida was awarded the Gold Medal of Merit in the Fine Arts in 2018 by the Spanish Government. The museum consists primarily of four parts. Three parts are permanent exhibitions from the collection of Wolf and Mercedes Vostell, as well as from the collection of the Italian art collector Gino Di Maggio, who specifically collected the art of the Fluxus artists. The third part contains temporary exhibitions of changing conceptual artists. The museum also includes the outdoor exhibition in the nature reserve Los Barruecos. The outdoor exhibition includes the sculptures "VOAEX" (1976) and in "El muerto que tiene Sed" (1978). The opening collection Wolf and Mercedes Vostell offers an extensive and varied tour through the selection of cycles by the founding artist. It consists of five works, which make up the special reference of this museum: "Automobile-Fever (Auto-Fieber)" (1973), "Fluxus-Buick-Piano" (1988)", Endogene Depression" (1975 - 1978), "Requiem for the forgotten (Réquiem por los olvidados)" (1986), "The Breakfast of Leonardo da Vinci in Berlin (Das Frühstück von Leonardo da Vinci in Berlin)" (1998) As objects, most of these parts contain elements of the fetishistic symbolism of the 20th century. To all this belong five sculptures "The Concrete Bulls (Los Toros de Hormigón)" (1990), four large reliefs ("Trashumancia") (1993) and paintings such as "The Burial of the Sardine (El Entierro de la Sardina)" (1985), "The Billard Girls (Las Chicas del Billar") (1986), "Mythos Berlin" (1987) and "Estrella Seelenfreund" (1994). In addition, the Wolf and Mercedes Vostell Collection has a large number of paintings like the cycles "El muerto que tiene Sed" and "VOAEX" and the sculpture projects "Icarus" and Tanit", which attempt to offer a comprehensive tour of a selection of the artist's cycles. Also worth mentioning are the works "Transmigration III" (1958-1959), in which a television set is integrated, and "Foreign mountain" (Montaña extranjera)" (1958), with which Wolf Vostell began his production in Extremadura. In the garden of the museum there is a 16 meter high sculpture by Wolf Vostell with the title "Why did the process between Pilate and Jesus take only two minutes? (Por qué el proceso entre Jesús y Pilatos duró solamente dos minutos?)" (1996), consisting of the fuselage of a Russian Mig-21 airplane, two automobiles, computer monitors and three pianos. The Fluxus collection was donated to the museum by the Italian art collector "Gino Di Maggio" in october 1996. Di Maggio established a personal relationship with the Fluxus artists, took care of their works and exhibited them first in the multipurpose room "Multhipla" and later in the "Mudima Foundation". The donation consists of a series of works, most of which are Fluxus actions and interventions, so that the photographs, videos, manifestos and various texts are the necessary additions to these bundles of files. The exhibition comprises 250 works, installations, paintings and sculptures by 31 artists of European, North American and Asian origin who, since the late 1950s and 1960s, have synthesized the upheavals in all areas of culture in the Happening and Fluxus movements in favour of a renewal of the artistic field in an interdisciplinary and intermediary manner, transcending everyday life and as the seed of a fundamental social transformation.
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Ogilvie (name)
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Ogilvie (name) Ogilvie () is a surname with origins in the Barony of Ogilvy in Angus, Scotland. Notable people with the surname include:
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Franklyn Braithwaite
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Franklyn Braithwaite Franklyn Braithwaite (born 2 February 1961) is an Antigua and Barbudasailor. He competed in the Finn event at the 1992 Summer Olympics.
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Statistics of the COVID-19 pandemic in Poland
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Statistics of the COVID-19 pandemic in Poland See COVID-19 pandemic in Poland for the cumulative lab-confirmed case count/deaths/recoveries graph shown as a horizontal bar graph; and for a daily cases/deaths/recoveries graph.
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Andrew Burke (sailor)
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Andrew Burke (sailor) Andrew Burke (25 March 1949 – 5 April 2009) was a Barbadian sailor. He competed in the Finn event at the 1992 Summer Olympics.
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Evesham Road Crossing Halt railway station
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Evesham Road Crossing Halt railway station Evesham Road Crossing Halt railway station served the town of Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, England from 1904 to 1916 on the Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway. The station opened as Evesham Road Crossing Halte on 17 October 1904 by the Great Western Railway. The spelling of the suffix 'halte' was corrected to 'halt' in April 1905. Being a halt, it was unmanned beside the nearby signal box which opened circa 1891 and operated the level crossing. The station closed on 14 July 1916, closing as a wartime economy measure but never opening again.
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Mark Clarke (sailor)
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Mark Clarke (sailor) Mark Clarke (1 October 1950 – 22 October 2013) was a Caymanian sailor. He competed at the 1992 Summer Olympics and the 1996 Summer Olympics. In 2013, Clarke went missing off the Cayman Islands in his boat, with his body never found.
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Wahab Khar
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Wahab Khar Abdul Wahab Khar ( c. 1912), also appears as Wahab Khar, was the nineteenth century's Kashmiri Sufi mystic poet and saint. He is sometimes referred to as "scholar" for his contribution to the literature of Kashmir. He was actively engaged in writing sufi devotional poems and used to attend musical gatherings throughout his life. From the poetry's perspective, he is primarily known for his devotional poetic book titled "Verses of Wahab Khar", comprising Kashmiri language poems which was later published by the Kashmir Jay Kay Books in 2007. Wahan was born around 1842, however, some news media have cited his birth as 1910. He had not received any formal education, but was believed to had psychological abilities and conceptual approach such as moral reasoning and eclectic. After covering Sufism in his poetry, he was then regarded as a saint, and his "Urs" (death anniversary) is celebrated evey year in the month of April inside the promises of his dargah (sufi shrine) at Pampore, Jammu and Kashmir. Besides Sufi Muslims, his shrine is frequently visited by the devotees from the different religious, including Christians, Sikhs and Hindus. Wahab is claimed was "able to shoot out a hot water spring from amid a forest on his own". The spring he shoot out still flows in the Kashmir Valley.
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Rhythmic gymnastics at the 2001 World Games – Rope
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Rhythmic gymnastics at the 2001 World Games – Rope The rope event in rhythmic gymnastics at the 2001 World Games in Akita was played from 22 to 23 August. The competition took place at Akita City Gymnasium. A total of 24 athletes entered the competition. The best eight athletes from preliminary round advances to the final.
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Harleston, Norfolk
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Harleston, Norfolk Harleston is a town from Norwich, in the civil parish of Redenhall with Harleston, in the South Norfolk district, in the county of Norfolk, England. In 2018 it had an estimated population of 5067. Harleston is on the Norfolk/Suffolk border, close to the River Waveney. Harleston has 2 markets every Wednesday. Harleston is an electoral ward comprising the civil parishes of Needham, Redenhall with Harleston, and Wortwell. At the last election, in May 2019, two Conservative councillors were elected to South Norfolk Council. Harleston has a high school called Archbishop Sancroft High School on Wilderness Lane, a primary school called Harleston C.E. Primary Academy on School Lane, a football club called Harleston Town F.C. on Wilderness Lane, a library on Swan Lane, a museum called Harleston Museum, a police station on 12 Swan Lane and a church called St John the Baptist. Harleston once had a railway station that closed in 1953, the nearest is now Diss which is 10 miles away. The name "Harleston" possibly means "Heoruwulf" or "Harolds Stone". Harleston was recorded in the Domesday Book as "Heroluestuna". Harleston was a chapelry in Reddenhall parish. Many Georgian residences and much earlier buildings, with Georgian frontages, line the streets of Harleston. Although there is no record of a royal charter, Harleston has been a market town since at least 1369 and still holds a Wednesday market. One of the plots to assassinate Queen Elizabeth I was to be launched on Midsummer Day 1570 at the Harleston Fair by proclamations and the sound of trumpets and drums. The Elizabethan play "Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay" features this in one of its scenes. The right to hold an eight-day fair during the period of the Beheading of St. John the Baptist was granted to Roger Bigod, 4th Earl of Norfolk by Henry III in 1259.
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José Sambolin
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José Sambolin José Sambolin (born 16 July 1958) is a Puerto Rican sailor. He competed in the Finn event at the 1992 Summer Olympics.
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1934 Campeonato Carioca
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1934 Campeonato Carioca In the 1934 season of the Campeonato Carioca, two championships were disputed, each by a different league. The edition of the Campeonato Carioca organized by AMEA started on April 8, 1934. The championship began with all the ten teams that had finished the championship of the previous year, but in early June, a series of events that resulted on half the teams leaving the championship began. the severely reduced championship only ended on January 13, 1935. Botafogo won the championship for the 7th time. no teams were relegated. The tournament would be disputed in a double round-robin format, with the team with the most points winning the title. Due to the unbalanced amount of matches that the remaining teams had, for title awarding purposes, it was decided that the team with less points lost would win the title and that the matches against the five teams that had abandoned the championship wouldn't be annulled. The edition of the Campeonato Carioca organized by LCF ("Liga Carioca de Football", or Carioca Football League) kicked off on April 1, 1934 and ended on August 12, 1934. Six teams participated. Vasco da Gama won the championship for the 4th time. no teams were relegated. The tournament would be disputed in a double round-robin format, with the team with the most points winning the title.
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Mark Swanson
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Mark Swanson Mark Swanson (born September 21, 1952) is a sailor who represented the United States Virgin Islands. He competed in the Finn event at the 1992 Summer Olympics.
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Michael Palin in North Korea
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Michael Palin in North Korea Michael Palin in North Korea is a travel documentary presented by Michael Palin and first aired in the UK on Channel 5 on 20 September 2018.
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James Daniel Lynch
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James Daniel Lynch James Daniel Lynch (January 6, 1836 – July 19, 1903) was an American lawyer, farmer, judge, poet, and writer. His poem "Columbia Saluting the Nations" was chosen as the official salutation for the Chicago World's Fair in 1893. He lived in Mississippi. He served in the Confederate Army. He was an opponent of Reconstruction. He was born in Mecklenburg County, Virginia, and studied at the University of North Carolina. He moved to Columbus, Mississippi in 1860 and taught at Franklin Academy. His legal career became a struggle due to hearing impairment and he turned to writing. His book "Kemper County vindicated, and a peep at radical rule in Mississippi" was a response to criticisms by Radical Republican James M. Wells (author) over the Chisolm Massacre in "The Chisolm massacre;: A picture of "home rule" in Mississippi" (1877).
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Anne Fernandez de Corres
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Anne Fernandez de Corres Anne Fernandez de Corres Del Rio (born 30 May 1998 Vitoria) is a Spanish rugby player. She played with the Spanish national team. She played at the 2017 Women's Rugby World Cup, 2016 Rugby Europe Women's Championship, and 2018 Rugby Europe Women's Championship. She has played for Gaztedi and Cisneros.
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Karlo Kuret
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Karlo Kuret Karlo Kuret (born 28 February 1970) is a Croatian sailor. He competed at the 1992, 1996, 2000, and the 2004 Summer Olympics.
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Le schiave di Cartagine
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Le schiave di Cartagine The Sword and the cross () is a 1956 sword and sandal film directed by Guido Brignone starring Gianna Maria Canale, Jorge Mistral, Marisa Allasio and Ana Luisa Peluffo. The film, a coproduction between Italy, Spain, and Mexico, was and shot in widescreen (Cinetotalscope) in Italian in Cinecittà, Rome. Set in Tarsus, in the Roman province of Cilicia, 120 CE, the plot follows two Christian sisters who are sold as slaves in a story of love, vengeance, religious persecution, and martyrdom. Beautiful and proud, Julia Marcia, is the spoiled daughter of Julius Tiberius, the Roman Proconsul of the province of Cilicia in the city of Tarsus. Julia's ailing father wants to betroth her to Flavius Metellus, a member of the Senate who is in love with her. This would leave Julia's future settle and Flavius could succeed his future father in law as governor of the province. However, Julia is reluctant to comply with her father's wishes. She is in love, but unrequited, with her friend the tribune Marco Valerio. While together on an excursion through town, Julia and Marcus come across to an auction where two sisters of Carthaginian origin are sold as slaves. Marco is immediately smitten with the blond sister, Lea, while his friend, Tullius, a Roman soldier, is attracted to the other sister, Esther, a brunette. These beautiful and educated slaves command a high asking price so Marco Valerio buys the sisters for Julia Marcia who pays for the transaction. During a dinner party at her father's opulent palace in Tarsus, Julia Marcia has Lea sung for her guest, but her Carthaginian aria displeases Julia who orders Lea to be harshly punished. Marco Valerio's obvious interest in Lea's beauty and sweetness drives Julia to cruelty. She orders her main servant, Afra, herself a former slave, to lash Lea frequently. Meanwhile, Esther is befriended by a fellow slave, Stephen, who is a Christian like the two sisters. Gradually, Esther and Stephen fall in love. The greedy and unscrupulous chief treasurer, Publio Cornelio, plots in the Senate to conquer power. With this aim, he convinces the weak-minded Flavius Metellus to assassinate the proconsul and accuse the Christians of the crime leaving a cross on the scene to implicate them. The plan succeeds. After her father's assassination, Julia Marcia, in order to maintain her status and fortune, marries Flavio Metello, the new proconsul. Believing the Christians were responsible for her father's death, Julia orders to persecute them. This is not a difficult task as most of them are already slaves. The Christian, including Lea, Esther, and Stephen are arrested and sent to forced labor in the mills. Marco Valerio is ordered to carry out the campaign of persecuting the Christian, but he is soon convinced of their innocence as his friendship with the pious Lea allows him to see their courage and faith. After trying to defend them before the senate, Marco is forced to flee. The Christian are sent to the dungeons waiting to be put to death. Furious of Marco's escape, Julia Marcia interrogates Lea about his whereabouts. Lea actually does not know where he is. In revenge, Julia orders Lea to be blinded by a white-hot sword. Marco Valerio finds refuge with fellow soldiers on abandoned caves outside the city and through his friend, Tullius rally up his supporters in the region including the powerful Praetor Licinius and the senators Faustus Domitius and Horace Tiberius. They all plan to remove Flavius Metellus and the corrupt Publio Cornelio from power taking the city military from two sides. They agree to finance the plan. However, Marco Valerio is arrested after a shepherd reveals his location. He joins the two sisters and the Christian in the dungeons. He is outraged finding that Lea is now blind. Esther and Stephen are married in the dungeon by their deacon but all Christian are sentenced to death. They are going to be crucified on the hill and then burned alive. Marco Valerio is freed by his supporters headed by his friend Tullius. In the bloody battle that follows Marco rescues Lea from the crux but while freeing Esther, Tullios is killed by an arrow. Julia Marcia and her husband, Flavius Metellus try to flee with their lives, but in her escape, Julia falls and is being trampled to death by the horses. Publio Cornelio, very unpopular for raising taxes, is killed when he arrives in the city. Marco Valerio and Flavio Metolius face each other on a chariot race by the beach where hero and villain fight it out to the death on the sands. During the duel, Flavio admitting his guilt, and to expiate his crime, stabs himself with Marco's dagger. Lea and Marco are married and Christianity becomes accepted. The film was released in Italy on 12 November 1956 in Italy and on 21 September 1957 in Spain.
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