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Who was the composer of Reißt euch los, bedrängte Sinnen, BWV 224? | [
"Johann Sebastian Bach",
"Bach",
"J.S. Bach",
"J. S. Bach",
"J S Bach"
] | composer | Reißt euch los, bedrängte Sinnen, BWV 224 | 2,274,098 | 67 | [
{
"id": "32325186",
"title": "Reißt euch los, bedrängte Sinnen, BWV 224",
"text": " Reißt euch los, bedrängte Sinnen (You are torn loose, afflicted sinners), BWV 224, is a cantata by Johann Sebastian Bach. He composed it in Leipzig in 1724 for an unknown occasion. The author of the text is unknown and there are only 30 measures of aria for soprano extant, copied by C. P. E. Bach.",
"score": "2.351377"
},
{
"id": "27907570",
"title": "Wer sich selbst erhöhet, der soll erniedriget werden, BWV 47",
"text": " Johann Sebastian Bach composed the church cantata Wer sich selbst erhöhet, der soll erniedriget werden (Whoever exalts himself, will be abased / KJV: For whosoever exalteth himself shall be abased), BWV47, in Leipzig for the 17th Sunday after Trinity and first performed it on 13 October 1726.",
"score": "1.6146466"
},
{
"id": "9343296",
"title": "Was mir behagt, ist nur die muntre Jagd, BWV 208",
"text": " It is Bach's earliest surviving secular cantata, composed while he was employed as court organist in Weimar. The work may have been intended as a gift from Bach's employer, William Ernest, Duke of Saxe-Weimar, for his neighbouring ruler, Duke Christian, who was a keen hunter. Bach is known to have stayed in Weißenfels in 1713 for the birthday celebrations. He went on to earn more commissions from Saxe-Weissenfels, and in 1729, Bach was appointed Royal Kapellmeister, but this position as court composer did not require residence at court.",
"score": "1.6043155"
},
{
"id": "32289131",
"title": "Laß, Fürstin, laß noch einen Strahl, BWV 198",
"text": " Laß, Fürstin, laß noch einen Strahl (Let, Princess, let still one more glance) is a secular cantata composed as a funeral ode by Johann Sebastian Bach, first performed on 17 October 1727. In Wolfgang Schmieder's catalogue of Bach's works (BWV) it was assigned the number 198. It is also known as Trauerode or as Trauerode: auf den Tod der Königin Christiane Eberhardine.",
"score": "1.6033592"
},
{
"id": "10085288",
"title": "Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis",
"text": " Herz und Munde (cantata) ; BWV 221 – Wer sucht die Pracht, wer wünscht den Glanz (cantata) ; BWV 222 – Mein Odem ist schwach (cantata) ; BWV 223 – Meine Seele soll Gott loben (cantata) ; BWV 224 – Reißt euch los, bedrängte Sinnen (cantata) ; BWV 225 – Singet dem Herrn ein neues Lied (motet) ; BWV 226 – Der Geist hilft unser Schwachheit auf (motet) ; BWV 227 – Jesu, meine Freude (motet) ; BWV 228 – Fürchte dich nicht (motet) ; BWV 229 – Komm, Jesu, komm (motet) ; BWV 230 – Lobet den Herrn, alle ",
"score": "1.5985823"
},
{
"id": "31022764",
"title": "Tönet, ihr Pauken! Erschallet, Trompeten! BWV 214",
"text": " Bach composed Tönet, ihr Pauken! in 1733, ten years after he became Thomaskantor in Leipzig, director of music in major churches in the town in the Electorate of Saxony. That year, Augustus succeeded his father as Elector of Saxony. Bach had hopes of being appointed composer to his court which was based in Dresden. He dedicated his Kyrie–Gloria Mass in B minor to the elector, a work which was to become the Kyrie and Gloria of his Mass in B minor. Bach also composed cantatas in honour of the elector's family, Laßt uns sorgen, laßt uns wachen, BWV 213, performed on 5 September 1733, the eleventh birthday of the son of the elector, and another for his wife, Maria Josepha. Bach composed Tönet, ihr Pauken! to honour the 34th birthday of Maria Josepha on 8 December. It is also known by the description Glückwunschkantate zum Geburtstage der Königin ",
"score": "1.5763589"
},
{
"id": "27677461",
"title": "Was Gott tut, das ist wohlgetan",
"text": " as cantor. Klesch used the melody for two different hymn texts—\"Brich an, verlangtes Morgenlicht\" and \"Der Tag, der ist so freudenreich\"—in the Andächtige Elends-Stimme published by his brother Christoph Klesch in 1679. The Klesch hymnbook names four of the 44 hymn melodies it contains as being known and two as being composed by a king and a count; it describes the remaining 38—without further precision—as being written by Severus Gastorius and Johann Hancken, cantor in Strehlen in Silesia. The text and melody of Rodigast's hymn were published together for the first time in 1690 in the Nürnbergische Gesangbuch, with the composer marked as \"anonymous\". Before that the melody with ",
"score": "1.5736251"
},
{
"id": "29468450",
"title": "Johann Rudolph Ahle",
"text": " 1673. His immediate successor at the church was his son Johann Georg, and then briefly Johann Sebastian Bach, who worked in Mühlhausen in 1707/08. Much of Ahle's compositional output consists of sacred choral and vocal works, instrumental music, and organ music. He is best known for motets and sacred concertos (most of them in German, some in Latin) contained in the collection Neu-gepflanzte Thüringische Lust-Garten, in welchem ... Neue Geistliche Musicalische Gewaechse mit 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10 und mehr Stimmen auf unterschiedliche Arten mit und ohne Instrument ... versetzet (1657–65). He is also known for hymn melodies, of which three remain in the common German Protestant hymnal Evangelisches Gesangbuch, including \"Liebster Jesu, wir sind hier\" and \"Morgenglanz der Ewigkeit\". The melody of the latter was used by Friedrich Dörr for the Advent song \"Kündet allen in der Not\".",
"score": "1.5693588"
},
{
"id": "15219854",
"title": "Motet",
"text": "BWV 225 Singet dem Herrn ein neues Lied (1726) ; BWV 226 Der Geist hilft unser Schwachheit auf (1729) ; BWV 227 Jesu, meine Freude (?) ; BWV 228 Fürchte dich nicht (?) ; BWV 229 Komm, Jesu, komm (1730?) ; BWV 230 Lobet den Herrn, alle Heiden (?) Johann Sebastian Bach wrote works he called motets, relatively long pieces in German on sacred themes for choir and basso continuo, with instruments playing colla parte, several of them composed for funerals. Six motets certainly composed by Bach are: The funeral cantata O Jesu Christ, meins Lebens Licht, BWV 118 (1736–37?) is regarded as a motet. The motet Sei Lob und Preis mit Ehren, BWV 231 is an arrangement of a movement from Bach's Cantata 28, and the authenticity of the arrangement is not certain. For a few more motets, such as Ich lasse dich nicht, BWV Anh 159, Bach's authorship is debated.",
"score": "1.5653443"
},
{
"id": "11560644",
"title": "Brich dem Hungrigen dein Brot, BWV 39",
"text": " Lazarus, ). Bach's first cantata for the occasion, Die Elenden sollen essen, BWV 75 (1723), had concentrated on the contrast between the rich and the poor; and the second, the chorale cantata O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort, BWV 20 (1724), concerned repentance when faced with death and eternity. In contrast the libretto of Brich dem Hungrigen dein Brot took as its theme gratitude for God's gifts and the duty to share them with the needy. The libretto used by Bach for BWV 39 comes the 1704 collection for Meiningen, entitled Sonntags- und Fest-Andachten; these religious texts have been attributed to Ernst Ludwig I, Duke of Saxe-Meiningen, ",
"score": "1.565023"
},
{
"id": "13064755",
"title": "Fallt mit Danken, fallt mit Loben, BWV 248 IV",
"text": " a festive Baroque orchestra with horns, oboes and strings. The opening chorus and the two arias are based on his earlier secular cantata Laßt uns sorgen, laßt uns wachen, BWV 213, composed for the 11th birthday of the crown prince of Saxony on 5September 1733. The tenor soloist, in the role of the Evangelist, narrates the Biblical verse in recitative style. The choir sings the elaborate opening movement and the closing chorale, a four-part setting of a stanza from Johann Rist's \"Hilf, Herr Jesu, laß gelingen\". Four solo movements reflect the name of Jesus, and life for him. Bach led the first performances at the two main churches of Leipzig in a morning service and a vespers service on 1January 1735.",
"score": "1.5625857"
},
{
"id": "30666753",
"title": "List of motets by Johann Sebastian Bach",
"text": "Singet dem Herrn ein neues Lied (Sing unto the Lord a new song), BWV 225, is a motet in B-flat major scored for two four-part choirs (SATB) which was first performed in Leipzig around 1727. This motet uses Psalm 149:1–3 for its first movement, the third stanza of \"Nun lob, mein Seel, den Herren\" (a 1530 hymn after Psalm 103 by Johann Gramann) for the second movement, and Psalm 150:2 and 6 for its third movement. ; Der Geist hilft unser Schwachheit auf (The Spirit gives aid to our weakness), BWV 226, a motet in B-flat major scored for two four-part choirs, was ",
"score": "1.5602477"
},
{
"id": "16533842",
"title": "Herrscher des Himmels, erhöre das Lallen, BWV 248 III",
"text": "In 1723, as part of his first cantata cycle: Sehet, welch eine Liebe hat uns der Vater erzeiget, BWV 64 ; In 1724, as part of his second cantata cycle: Ich freue mich in dir, BWV 133 ; In 1725, as part of his third cantata cycle: Süßer Trost, mein Jesus kömmt, BWV 151 Laßt uns sorgen, laßt uns wachen, BWV 213, also known as Hercules am Scheidewege (Hercules at the Crossroads), on a libretto by Picander, was performed on 5 September 1733, the 11th birthday of the son of the elector; ; Tönet, ihr Pauken! Erschallet, Trompeten! BWV 214 (Resound, ye drums! Ring out, ",
"score": "1.5572453"
},
{
"id": "12783371",
"title": "Mein Herze schwimmt im Blut, BWV 199",
"text": " the parable of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector. The text, which concerns a sinner seeking and finding redemption, was written by Georg Christian Lehms. Lehms was based in Darmstadt, and it is not known whether Bach knew him personally, but he may well have had access to Lehms's 1711 publication Gottgefälliges Kirchen-Opffer, which includes this text and that of another solo cantata, Widerstehe doch der Sünde, BWV 54, performed the month before. The third stanza of Johann Heermann's hymn \"Wo soll ich fliehen hin\" is integrated as the sixth movement, to the melody of \"Auf meinen lieben Gott\". The text in ",
"score": "1.5572311"
},
{
"id": "25448486",
"title": "Erfreut euch, ihr Herzen, BWV 66",
"text": " zweiten Osterfesttag\") is Bach's first composition for Easter in Leipzig, written in his first year in office. The day before, on Easter Sunday of 1724, he had performed Christ lag in Todes Banden, BWV 4, which he had composed much earlier in his career. The new cantata was derived from his earlier secular work, the Serenata Der Himmel dacht auf Anhalts Ruhm und Glück composed in Köthen. On the Third Day of Easter of 1724 he performed Ein Herz, das seinen Jesum lebend weiß, BWV 134, which he derived in a similar way from Die Zeit, die Tag und Jahre macht, BWV 134a, a cantata to celebrate the New Year's Day of 1719 in Köthen. The prescribed readings for the feast day were from the Acts of the Apostles, the ",
"score": "1.5564682"
},
{
"id": "11754108",
"title": "List of compositions by Dieterich Buxtehude",
"text": " lob, mein Seel, den Herren ; BuxWV 216 — O Lux beata, Trinitas (fragment) ; BuxWV 217 — Puer natus in Bethlehem ; BuxWV 218 — Te Deum laudamus (chorale fantasia) ; BuxWV 219 — Vater unser im Himmelreich ; BuxWV 220 — Von Gott will ich nicht lassen ; BuxWV 221 — Von Gott will ich nicht lassen ; BuxWV 222 — War Gott nicht mit uns diese Zeit ; BuxWV 223 — Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern (chorale fantasia) ; BuxWV 224 — Wir danken dir, Herr Jesu Christ Buxtehude composed chorale preludes on the following hymns:",
"score": "1.5518374"
},
{
"id": "9343303",
"title": "Was mir behagt, ist nur die muntre Jagd, BWV 208",
"text": " Bach appears to have revived the work a few years after its original performance, this time in honour of Duke Ernst August, the co-ruler of Saxe-Weimar, who was also a hunter (BWV 208.2). While he was living in Leipzig he arranged music from two arias for the church cantata Also hat Gott die Welt geliebt, BWV 68 (composed in 1725) and the final chorus for Man singet mit Freuden vom Sieg, BWV 149 (1728 or 1729). Bach further adapted the entire cantata in 1742 as a name day cantata for Augustus III (BWV 208.3).",
"score": "1.5495089"
},
{
"id": "24863",
"title": "Herzlich lieb hab ich dich, o Herr",
"text": " Several composers used the tune, some also the text. chorale preludes were composed by Johann Friedrich Alberti and Bach (BWV 340 and BWV 1115 ), among others. Heinrich Schütz composed both a Geistliches Konzert (Sacred concerto, SWV 348) and a motet (SWV 387). Dieterich Buxtehude wrote an extensive cantata (BuxWV 41), probably for a church concert at the Marienkirche in Lübeck, a work regarded as a major Baroque cantata because of its clear architecture and thoughtful interpretation of the text. Johann Ernst Bach composed a sacred cantata. Johann Sebastian Bach used the hymn in his cantatas and notably to conclude his St John Passion. In 1724, he used stanza 3, \"Ach Herr, laß dein lieb Engelein\" (Ah Lord, let thine own angels dear), in the first version of the work, and returned to it in the fourth and last version. In Es ",
"score": "1.5443823"
},
{
"id": "28168940",
"title": "Bach cantata",
"text": "1730: Jauchzet Gott in allen Landen, BWV 51 ; 1731: Wir danken dir, Gott, wir danken dir, BWV 29 * Schwingt freudig euch empor, BWV 36 ; 1732: Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ, BWV 177 * Was Gott tut, das ist wohlgetan, BWV 100 ; 1733: Kyrie–Gloria Mass, BWV 232 I (early version) * Laßt uns sorgen, laßt uns wachen, BWV 213 ; 1734: Preise dein Glücke, gesegnetes Sachsen, BWV 215 * Christmas Oratorio ; 1735: Lobet Gott in seinen Reichen, BWV 11 (Ascension Oratorio) ; 1738?: Kyrie–Gloria Masses, BWV 233–236 ; 1742: Gott, man lobet dich in der Stille, BWV 120 * Mer hahn en neue Oberkeet, BWV 212 ; 1744?: O holder Tag, erwünschte Zeit, BWV 210 ; 1745: Gloria in excelsis Deo, BWV 191 ; 1748?: Mass in B minor, BWV 232 (largely a compilation of previously composed music) Not belonging to the foregoing:",
"score": "1.543496"
},
{
"id": "29781074",
"title": "Praise to the Lord, the Almighty",
"text": " Johann Sebastian Bach used the chorale as the base for his chorale cantata Lobe den Herren, den mächtigen König der Ehren, BWV 137, in 1725. Although only the text of the outer stanzas was kept completely, he referred to the unusual melody in bar form with a Stollen of five measures and a climax at the beginning of the Abgesang in all movements but one. Conductor John Eliot Gardiner assumes, looking at the festive instrumentation and the general content of praise and thanksgiving, that the cantata was also performed that year to celebrate Ratswahl, the inauguration of the Leipzig city council. In 1729 Bach concluded his wedding cantata Herr Gott, Beherrscher aller Dinge, BWV 120a, with the final movement of the chorale cantata, transposed to D major. ",
"score": "1.5396369"
}
] | [
"Reißt euch los, bedrängte Sinnen, BWV 224\n Reißt euch los, bedrängte Sinnen (You are torn loose, afflicted sinners), BWV 224, is a cantata by Johann Sebastian Bach. He composed it in Leipzig in 1724 for an unknown occasion. The author of the text is unknown and there are only 30 measures of aria for soprano extant, copied by C. P. E. Bach.",
"Wer sich selbst erhöhet, der soll erniedriget werden, BWV 47\n Johann Sebastian Bach composed the church cantata Wer sich selbst erhöhet, der soll erniedriget werden (Whoever exalts himself, will be abased / KJV: For whosoever exalteth himself shall be abased), BWV47, in Leipzig for the 17th Sunday after Trinity and first performed it on 13 October 1726.",
"Was mir behagt, ist nur die muntre Jagd, BWV 208\n It is Bach's earliest surviving secular cantata, composed while he was employed as court organist in Weimar. The work may have been intended as a gift from Bach's employer, William Ernest, Duke of Saxe-Weimar, for his neighbouring ruler, Duke Christian, who was a keen hunter. Bach is known to have stayed in Weißenfels in 1713 for the birthday celebrations. He went on to earn more commissions from Saxe-Weissenfels, and in 1729, Bach was appointed Royal Kapellmeister, but this position as court composer did not require residence at court.",
"Laß, Fürstin, laß noch einen Strahl, BWV 198\n Laß, Fürstin, laß noch einen Strahl (Let, Princess, let still one more glance) is a secular cantata composed as a funeral ode by Johann Sebastian Bach, first performed on 17 October 1727. In Wolfgang Schmieder's catalogue of Bach's works (BWV) it was assigned the number 198. It is also known as Trauerode or as Trauerode: auf den Tod der Königin Christiane Eberhardine.",
"Bach-Werke-Verzeichnis\n Herz und Munde (cantata) ; BWV 221 – Wer sucht die Pracht, wer wünscht den Glanz (cantata) ; BWV 222 – Mein Odem ist schwach (cantata) ; BWV 223 – Meine Seele soll Gott loben (cantata) ; BWV 224 – Reißt euch los, bedrängte Sinnen (cantata) ; BWV 225 – Singet dem Herrn ein neues Lied (motet) ; BWV 226 – Der Geist hilft unser Schwachheit auf (motet) ; BWV 227 – Jesu, meine Freude (motet) ; BWV 228 – Fürchte dich nicht (motet) ; BWV 229 – Komm, Jesu, komm (motet) ; BWV 230 – Lobet den Herrn, alle ",
"Tönet, ihr Pauken! Erschallet, Trompeten! BWV 214\n Bach composed Tönet, ihr Pauken! in 1733, ten years after he became Thomaskantor in Leipzig, director of music in major churches in the town in the Electorate of Saxony. That year, Augustus succeeded his father as Elector of Saxony. Bach had hopes of being appointed composer to his court which was based in Dresden. He dedicated his Kyrie–Gloria Mass in B minor to the elector, a work which was to become the Kyrie and Gloria of his Mass in B minor. Bach also composed cantatas in honour of the elector's family, Laßt uns sorgen, laßt uns wachen, BWV 213, performed on 5 September 1733, the eleventh birthday of the son of the elector, and another for his wife, Maria Josepha. Bach composed Tönet, ihr Pauken! to honour the 34th birthday of Maria Josepha on 8 December. It is also known by the description Glückwunschkantate zum Geburtstage der Königin ",
"Was Gott tut, das ist wohlgetan\n as cantor. Klesch used the melody for two different hymn texts—\"Brich an, verlangtes Morgenlicht\" and \"Der Tag, der ist so freudenreich\"—in the Andächtige Elends-Stimme published by his brother Christoph Klesch in 1679. The Klesch hymnbook names four of the 44 hymn melodies it contains as being known and two as being composed by a king and a count; it describes the remaining 38—without further precision—as being written by Severus Gastorius and Johann Hancken, cantor in Strehlen in Silesia. The text and melody of Rodigast's hymn were published together for the first time in 1690 in the Nürnbergische Gesangbuch, with the composer marked as \"anonymous\". Before that the melody with ",
"Johann Rudolph Ahle\n 1673. His immediate successor at the church was his son Johann Georg, and then briefly Johann Sebastian Bach, who worked in Mühlhausen in 1707/08. Much of Ahle's compositional output consists of sacred choral and vocal works, instrumental music, and organ music. He is best known for motets and sacred concertos (most of them in German, some in Latin) contained in the collection Neu-gepflanzte Thüringische Lust-Garten, in welchem ... Neue Geistliche Musicalische Gewaechse mit 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10 und mehr Stimmen auf unterschiedliche Arten mit und ohne Instrument ... versetzet (1657–65). He is also known for hymn melodies, of which three remain in the common German Protestant hymnal Evangelisches Gesangbuch, including \"Liebster Jesu, wir sind hier\" and \"Morgenglanz der Ewigkeit\". The melody of the latter was used by Friedrich Dörr for the Advent song \"Kündet allen in der Not\".",
"Motet\nBWV 225 Singet dem Herrn ein neues Lied (1726) ; BWV 226 Der Geist hilft unser Schwachheit auf (1729) ; BWV 227 Jesu, meine Freude (?) ; BWV 228 Fürchte dich nicht (?) ; BWV 229 Komm, Jesu, komm (1730?) ; BWV 230 Lobet den Herrn, alle Heiden (?) Johann Sebastian Bach wrote works he called motets, relatively long pieces in German on sacred themes for choir and basso continuo, with instruments playing colla parte, several of them composed for funerals. Six motets certainly composed by Bach are: The funeral cantata O Jesu Christ, meins Lebens Licht, BWV 118 (1736–37?) is regarded as a motet. The motet Sei Lob und Preis mit Ehren, BWV 231 is an arrangement of a movement from Bach's Cantata 28, and the authenticity of the arrangement is not certain. For a few more motets, such as Ich lasse dich nicht, BWV Anh 159, Bach's authorship is debated.",
"Brich dem Hungrigen dein Brot, BWV 39\n Lazarus, ). Bach's first cantata for the occasion, Die Elenden sollen essen, BWV 75 (1723), had concentrated on the contrast between the rich and the poor; and the second, the chorale cantata O Ewigkeit, du Donnerwort, BWV 20 (1724), concerned repentance when faced with death and eternity. In contrast the libretto of Brich dem Hungrigen dein Brot took as its theme gratitude for God's gifts and the duty to share them with the needy. The libretto used by Bach for BWV 39 comes the 1704 collection for Meiningen, entitled Sonntags- und Fest-Andachten; these religious texts have been attributed to Ernst Ludwig I, Duke of Saxe-Meiningen, ",
"Fallt mit Danken, fallt mit Loben, BWV 248 IV\n a festive Baroque orchestra with horns, oboes and strings. The opening chorus and the two arias are based on his earlier secular cantata Laßt uns sorgen, laßt uns wachen, BWV 213, composed for the 11th birthday of the crown prince of Saxony on 5September 1733. The tenor soloist, in the role of the Evangelist, narrates the Biblical verse in recitative style. The choir sings the elaborate opening movement and the closing chorale, a four-part setting of a stanza from Johann Rist's \"Hilf, Herr Jesu, laß gelingen\". Four solo movements reflect the name of Jesus, and life for him. Bach led the first performances at the two main churches of Leipzig in a morning service and a vespers service on 1January 1735.",
"List of motets by Johann Sebastian Bach\nSinget dem Herrn ein neues Lied (Sing unto the Lord a new song), BWV 225, is a motet in B-flat major scored for two four-part choirs (SATB) which was first performed in Leipzig around 1727. This motet uses Psalm 149:1–3 for its first movement, the third stanza of \"Nun lob, mein Seel, den Herren\" (a 1530 hymn after Psalm 103 by Johann Gramann) for the second movement, and Psalm 150:2 and 6 for its third movement. ; Der Geist hilft unser Schwachheit auf (The Spirit gives aid to our weakness), BWV 226, a motet in B-flat major scored for two four-part choirs, was ",
"Herrscher des Himmels, erhöre das Lallen, BWV 248 III\nIn 1723, as part of his first cantata cycle: Sehet, welch eine Liebe hat uns der Vater erzeiget, BWV 64 ; In 1724, as part of his second cantata cycle: Ich freue mich in dir, BWV 133 ; In 1725, as part of his third cantata cycle: Süßer Trost, mein Jesus kömmt, BWV 151 Laßt uns sorgen, laßt uns wachen, BWV 213, also known as Hercules am Scheidewege (Hercules at the Crossroads), on a libretto by Picander, was performed on 5 September 1733, the 11th birthday of the son of the elector; ; Tönet, ihr Pauken! Erschallet, Trompeten! BWV 214 (Resound, ye drums! Ring out, ",
"Mein Herze schwimmt im Blut, BWV 199\n the parable of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector. The text, which concerns a sinner seeking and finding redemption, was written by Georg Christian Lehms. Lehms was based in Darmstadt, and it is not known whether Bach knew him personally, but he may well have had access to Lehms's 1711 publication Gottgefälliges Kirchen-Opffer, which includes this text and that of another solo cantata, Widerstehe doch der Sünde, BWV 54, performed the month before. The third stanza of Johann Heermann's hymn \"Wo soll ich fliehen hin\" is integrated as the sixth movement, to the melody of \"Auf meinen lieben Gott\". The text in ",
"Erfreut euch, ihr Herzen, BWV 66\n zweiten Osterfesttag\") is Bach's first composition for Easter in Leipzig, written in his first year in office. The day before, on Easter Sunday of 1724, he had performed Christ lag in Todes Banden, BWV 4, which he had composed much earlier in his career. The new cantata was derived from his earlier secular work, the Serenata Der Himmel dacht auf Anhalts Ruhm und Glück composed in Köthen. On the Third Day of Easter of 1724 he performed Ein Herz, das seinen Jesum lebend weiß, BWV 134, which he derived in a similar way from Die Zeit, die Tag und Jahre macht, BWV 134a, a cantata to celebrate the New Year's Day of 1719 in Köthen. The prescribed readings for the feast day were from the Acts of the Apostles, the ",
"List of compositions by Dieterich Buxtehude\n lob, mein Seel, den Herren ; BuxWV 216 — O Lux beata, Trinitas (fragment) ; BuxWV 217 — Puer natus in Bethlehem ; BuxWV 218 — Te Deum laudamus (chorale fantasia) ; BuxWV 219 — Vater unser im Himmelreich ; BuxWV 220 — Von Gott will ich nicht lassen ; BuxWV 221 — Von Gott will ich nicht lassen ; BuxWV 222 — War Gott nicht mit uns diese Zeit ; BuxWV 223 — Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern (chorale fantasia) ; BuxWV 224 — Wir danken dir, Herr Jesu Christ Buxtehude composed chorale preludes on the following hymns:",
"Was mir behagt, ist nur die muntre Jagd, BWV 208\n Bach appears to have revived the work a few years after its original performance, this time in honour of Duke Ernst August, the co-ruler of Saxe-Weimar, who was also a hunter (BWV 208.2). While he was living in Leipzig he arranged music from two arias for the church cantata Also hat Gott die Welt geliebt, BWV 68 (composed in 1725) and the final chorus for Man singet mit Freuden vom Sieg, BWV 149 (1728 or 1729). Bach further adapted the entire cantata in 1742 as a name day cantata for Augustus III (BWV 208.3).",
"Herzlich lieb hab ich dich, o Herr\n Several composers used the tune, some also the text. chorale preludes were composed by Johann Friedrich Alberti and Bach (BWV 340 and BWV 1115 ), among others. Heinrich Schütz composed both a Geistliches Konzert (Sacred concerto, SWV 348) and a motet (SWV 387). Dieterich Buxtehude wrote an extensive cantata (BuxWV 41), probably for a church concert at the Marienkirche in Lübeck, a work regarded as a major Baroque cantata because of its clear architecture and thoughtful interpretation of the text. Johann Ernst Bach composed a sacred cantata. Johann Sebastian Bach used the hymn in his cantatas and notably to conclude his St John Passion. In 1724, he used stanza 3, \"Ach Herr, laß dein lieb Engelein\" (Ah Lord, let thine own angels dear), in the first version of the work, and returned to it in the fourth and last version. In Es ",
"Bach cantata\n1730: Jauchzet Gott in allen Landen, BWV 51 ; 1731: Wir danken dir, Gott, wir danken dir, BWV 29 * Schwingt freudig euch empor, BWV 36 ; 1732: Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ, BWV 177 * Was Gott tut, das ist wohlgetan, BWV 100 ; 1733: Kyrie–Gloria Mass, BWV 232 I (early version) * Laßt uns sorgen, laßt uns wachen, BWV 213 ; 1734: Preise dein Glücke, gesegnetes Sachsen, BWV 215 * Christmas Oratorio ; 1735: Lobet Gott in seinen Reichen, BWV 11 (Ascension Oratorio) ; 1738?: Kyrie–Gloria Masses, BWV 233–236 ; 1742: Gott, man lobet dich in der Stille, BWV 120 * Mer hahn en neue Oberkeet, BWV 212 ; 1744?: O holder Tag, erwünschte Zeit, BWV 210 ; 1745: Gloria in excelsis Deo, BWV 191 ; 1748?: Mass in B minor, BWV 232 (largely a compilation of previously composed music) Not belonging to the foregoing:",
"Praise to the Lord, the Almighty\n Johann Sebastian Bach used the chorale as the base for his chorale cantata Lobe den Herren, den mächtigen König der Ehren, BWV 137, in 1725. Although only the text of the outer stanzas was kept completely, he referred to the unusual melody in bar form with a Stollen of five measures and a climax at the beginning of the Abgesang in all movements but one. Conductor John Eliot Gardiner assumes, looking at the festive instrumentation and the general content of praise and thanksgiving, that the cantata was also performed that year to celebrate Ratswahl, the inauguration of the Leipzig city council. In 1729 Bach concluded his wedding cantata Herr Gott, Beherrscher aller Dinge, BWV 120a, with the final movement of the chorale cantata, transposed to D major. "
] |
Who was the composer of Homecoming? | [
"Sammy Adams",
"Samuel Adams Wisner"
] | composer | Homecoming (EP) | 1,137,769 | 93 | [
{
"id": "8039371",
"title": "The Homecoming (album)",
"text": " The Homecoming is a 1975 album by Canadian composer, pianist, and vibraphonist Hagood Hardy. Six of the tracks were composed by Hardy. The album also contained fellow Canadian musician Gordon Lightfoot's song \"Cold on the Shoulder\" and five songs by other songwriters. It reached #21 on the RPM Magazine Top Albums chart in October, 1975. In 1976, based on the music in this collection, Hardy was named Composer of the Year at the annual Juno Awards.",
"score": "1.7251372"
},
{
"id": "5419372",
"title": "Hagood Hardy",
"text": " Hugh Hagood Hardy, (February 26, 1937 – January 1, 1997) was a Canadian composer, pianist, and vibraphonist. He played mainly jazz and easy listening music. He is best known for the 1975 single, \"The Homecoming\" from his album of the same name, and for his soundtrack to the Anne of Green Gables and Anne of Avonlea films.",
"score": "1.6713958"
},
{
"id": "7821667",
"title": "The Homecoming (painting)",
"text": " The Russian composer Sergei Rachmaninoff was inspired by The Homecoming when he wrote his Prelude No. 10 in B minor, Op. 32. Valentine Antipov believed that the title The Return was relevant to the narrative of the set of preludes. Another composition by Rachmaninoff, his symphonic poem Isle of the Dead was inspired by Bocklin's painting of the same name.",
"score": "1.6023462"
},
{
"id": "10920251",
"title": "Robert Lannoy",
"text": " the music for the documentary film Homecoming, recounting the return of prisoners after the Second World War and directed by Henri Cartier-Bresson. For the radio, and at the request of Henri Dutilleux, he composed La légende des pays alliés by Louise de Vilmorin He competed again for the Prix de Rome in 1946 and obtained a second major prize, which earned him the position of director of the Conservatoire de Lille. It was during this period that he married pianist Lola Delwarde, who had a brilliant career as a concert pianist. He conducted many concerts and introduced a whole generation of Lille students to music. Lannoy died in Lille in June 1979.",
"score": "1.5504563"
},
{
"id": "8039372",
"title": "The Homecoming (album)",
"text": " The title track, \"The Homecoming\", started out as music to a 1972 TV commercial for Salada tea. After being included in this album, it was released as a single in 1975 on the Isis label through the Toronto company, Hagood Hardy Productions. It rose to #14 on the Canadian charts, and to #41 on the pop and #6 on the easy listening US charts. It was certified Gold in Canada.",
"score": "1.5380372"
},
{
"id": "29598688",
"title": "The Homecoming (film)",
"text": " The Homecoming is a 1973 British-American drama film directed by Peter Hall based on the play of the same name by Harold Pinter. The film was produced by Ely Landau for the American Film Theatre, which presented thirteen film adaptations of plays in the United States from 1973 to 1975. The film was screened at the 1974 Cannes Film Festival, but was not entered into the main competition.",
"score": "1.5070219"
},
{
"id": "32728869",
"title": "Homecoming!",
"text": " Homecoming! is an album by jazz pianist Elmo Hope recorded in 1961 for the Riverside label.",
"score": "1.4788866"
},
{
"id": "8365847",
"title": "Homecoming's March",
"text": "Arranged by Averse Sefira ; Produced & Mixed by Averse Sefira & Stuart Lawrence ; Recording Engineer: Stuart Lawrence ; Mastered by Averse Sefira & Paul Connolly ",
"score": "1.4708135"
},
{
"id": "7821664",
"title": "The Homecoming (painting)",
"text": " The Homecoming, (German: Die Heimkehr) also known as The Return or Returning Home, is a painting by the Swiss Symbolist artist Arnold Böcklin (1827-1901). It was painted by the artist in 1887, and is currently kept in a private collection.",
"score": "1.4664919"
},
{
"id": "14949975",
"title": "Homecoming (2001 play)",
"text": " Homecoming is an Off-Broadway one-person show by Lauren Weedman that premiered at Westside Theatre on September 10, 2001. Following the September 11 attacks, Weedman announced that the show would be postponed till January 21, 2002, with the venue changed to the Arclight Theatre.",
"score": "1.4660244"
},
{
"id": "30069582",
"title": "Homecoming (1984 film)",
"text": " Homecoming (似水流年) is a 1984 Hong Kong film directed by Yim Ho. It won the Best Film Award at the 4th Hong Kong Film Awards. The film was also selected as the Hong Kong entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 57th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee.",
"score": "1.4628794"
},
{
"id": "29410965",
"title": "The Homecoming",
"text": " performed at the Trafalgar Studios, London, starring John Macmillan, Keith Allen, John Simm, Gemma Chan, Ron Cook and Gary Kemp. Directed by Jamie Lloyd. Design by Soutra Gilmour. Lighting by Richard Howell. Sound by George Dennis. Others Other productions of The Homecoming have at times been listed on the home page of Pinter's official website and through its lefthand menu of links to the \"Calendar\" (\"Worldwide Calendar\"). A film with the same name was made in the UK in 1973, featuring several actors from the London premiere. The play was chosen by Lusaka Theatre Club as its entry for the 1967 Zambia Drama Festival, and was awarded prizes for best production and best actor (Norman Williams as Lenny). The director was Trevor Eastwood.",
"score": "1.4618722"
},
{
"id": "7821668",
"title": "The Homecoming (painting)",
"text": "List of paintings by Arnold Böcklin ; Preludes, Op. 32 (Rachmaninoff) ",
"score": "1.4528838"
},
{
"id": "1561851",
"title": "Roman Mints",
"text": " MacMillan, Giacinto Scelsi and Marjan Mozetich. He has also given world premieres of over fifty works by Dobrinka Tabakova, Leonid Desyatnikov, Elena Langer, Ed Bennett, Brian Irvine, Diana Burrell, Artem Vassiliev, Alexey Kurbatov and others. In 1998, Roman Mints and oboist Dmitry Bulgakov founded the Homecoming Chamber Music Festival which takes place annually in Moscow. The core of Homecoming concert programmes are themed selections of works with one powerful underlying but not necessarily musical, idea behind them. Since the inception of the festival, Roman Mints has authored more than 60 such programmes. In April 2002, he co-directed the Suppressed Music project in Russia, which consisted of two concerts and a conference on composers whose music had been ",
"score": "1.4470645"
},
{
"id": "894680",
"title": "David Hamilton (composer)",
"text": " Choral's 150th anniversary. Serenade (2011) for SSAA choir and chamber orchestra The Necessary Rain (2012) a work for soprano, SAATBB choir, and orchestra Erebus (2015) a twenty-five minute work for baritone solo, mixed choir, percussion, two pianos and pre-recorded soundscape. Homecoming – Te Hokinga Mai (2018) for alto solo, SSATB choir, and chamber orchestra Orchestral works: Parabasis (1987) a fourteen minute work for orchestra Elysian Fields (1998) a thirteen minute work for orchestra Leukos (2000) a twenty-five minute work for large orchestra Caveat Emptor (2008) for orchestra Flight (2009) for orchestra Children of the Fire Gods (2012) for orchestra The Kingston Flyer (2013) for string orchestra ",
"score": "1.4389869"
},
{
"id": "12030809",
"title": "Fred Mollin",
"text": " (1 episode) (composer) ; 1995 - Blind Faith (composer: theme music) ; 1995 - Baby Baby (composer: theme music) (musician) ; 1995 - The Outer Limits (TV series) (2 episodes) (Composer) ; 1995 - Hangtime (TV series) (composer - 1 episode) ; 1995 - Pilot (composer: theme music) ; 1994 - Gene Autry, Melody of the West (documentary) (composer) ; 1994 - The Odyssey (TV series) (13 episodes) (composer) ; 1993 - Phenom (TV series) (1 episode) (composer) ; 1993 - Liar, Liar: Between Father and Daughter (TV movie) (composer) ; 1993 - In Advance of the Landing (documentary) (composer) ; 1993 - Survive the Night (TV movie) (composer) ; 1992 - Amy ",
"score": "1.4378803"
},
{
"id": "25906448",
"title": "American Idiot (musical)",
"text": " wanted to do the same, and drummer Tré Cool followed suit. Armstrong recalled, \"It started getting more serious as we tried to outdo one another. We kept connecting these little half-minute bits until we had something.\" This musical suite became \"Homecoming\", and the group subsequently wrote another suite, \"Jesus of Suburbia\". Green Day made the record an album-long conceptual piece which was a response to the realities of the post-9/11 era. The band took inspiration from the concept records by The Who, sources in the musical theater repertoire like The Rocky Horror Show and West Side Story, and the concept album-come-stage musical Jesus Christ Superstar. Armstrong also said the band intended \"that it would be staged or we'd create ",
"score": "1.4361784"
},
{
"id": "31419683",
"title": "Nilo Alcala",
"text": "Motion picture soundtrack for \"Homecoming\" (directed by Gil Portes) 2003 ; Animation soundtrack for \"Flower Trail\" 2004 ",
"score": "1.4344022"
},
{
"id": "31787784",
"title": "Homecoming Song",
"text": " Homecoming Song (Το Τραγούδι της Επιστροφής, translit. To tragoudi tis epistrofis) is a 1983 Greek drama film directed by Yannis Smaragdis. It was entered into the 13th Moscow International Film Festival.",
"score": "1.432375"
},
{
"id": "2239919",
"title": "Exodus (soundtrack)",
"text": " Themes. Other artists included piano player Anthony Burger for the Homecoming titled \"I Do Believe\", a disco version titled \"Exo-Disco\" by Huey Lewis & the American Express, a remix by techno-crossover pianist Maksim Mrvica, and it has even been used as the sample for the T.I. song \"Bankhead\". The original version was used as a theme song for professional wrestler Mr. Perfect, and later a takeoff of the original version would become his longtime theme song. Trey Spruance of the Secret Chiefs 3 rescored the theme for \"surf band and orchestra\" on the album 2004 Book of Horizons. The Chopsticks (a ",
"score": "1.4322643"
}
] | [
"The Homecoming (album)\n The Homecoming is a 1975 album by Canadian composer, pianist, and vibraphonist Hagood Hardy. Six of the tracks were composed by Hardy. The album also contained fellow Canadian musician Gordon Lightfoot's song \"Cold on the Shoulder\" and five songs by other songwriters. It reached #21 on the RPM Magazine Top Albums chart in October, 1975. In 1976, based on the music in this collection, Hardy was named Composer of the Year at the annual Juno Awards.",
"Hagood Hardy\n Hugh Hagood Hardy, (February 26, 1937 – January 1, 1997) was a Canadian composer, pianist, and vibraphonist. He played mainly jazz and easy listening music. He is best known for the 1975 single, \"The Homecoming\" from his album of the same name, and for his soundtrack to the Anne of Green Gables and Anne of Avonlea films.",
"The Homecoming (painting)\n The Russian composer Sergei Rachmaninoff was inspired by The Homecoming when he wrote his Prelude No. 10 in B minor, Op. 32. Valentine Antipov believed that the title The Return was relevant to the narrative of the set of preludes. Another composition by Rachmaninoff, his symphonic poem Isle of the Dead was inspired by Bocklin's painting of the same name.",
"Robert Lannoy\n the music for the documentary film Homecoming, recounting the return of prisoners after the Second World War and directed by Henri Cartier-Bresson. For the radio, and at the request of Henri Dutilleux, he composed La légende des pays alliés by Louise de Vilmorin He competed again for the Prix de Rome in 1946 and obtained a second major prize, which earned him the position of director of the Conservatoire de Lille. It was during this period that he married pianist Lola Delwarde, who had a brilliant career as a concert pianist. He conducted many concerts and introduced a whole generation of Lille students to music. Lannoy died in Lille in June 1979.",
"The Homecoming (album)\n The title track, \"The Homecoming\", started out as music to a 1972 TV commercial for Salada tea. After being included in this album, it was released as a single in 1975 on the Isis label through the Toronto company, Hagood Hardy Productions. It rose to #14 on the Canadian charts, and to #41 on the pop and #6 on the easy listening US charts. It was certified Gold in Canada.",
"The Homecoming (film)\n The Homecoming is a 1973 British-American drama film directed by Peter Hall based on the play of the same name by Harold Pinter. The film was produced by Ely Landau for the American Film Theatre, which presented thirteen film adaptations of plays in the United States from 1973 to 1975. The film was screened at the 1974 Cannes Film Festival, but was not entered into the main competition.",
"Homecoming!\n Homecoming! is an album by jazz pianist Elmo Hope recorded in 1961 for the Riverside label.",
"Homecoming's March\nArranged by Averse Sefira ; Produced & Mixed by Averse Sefira & Stuart Lawrence ; Recording Engineer: Stuart Lawrence ; Mastered by Averse Sefira & Paul Connolly ",
"The Homecoming (painting)\n The Homecoming, (German: Die Heimkehr) also known as The Return or Returning Home, is a painting by the Swiss Symbolist artist Arnold Böcklin (1827-1901). It was painted by the artist in 1887, and is currently kept in a private collection.",
"Homecoming (2001 play)\n Homecoming is an Off-Broadway one-person show by Lauren Weedman that premiered at Westside Theatre on September 10, 2001. Following the September 11 attacks, Weedman announced that the show would be postponed till January 21, 2002, with the venue changed to the Arclight Theatre.",
"Homecoming (1984 film)\n Homecoming (似水流年) is a 1984 Hong Kong film directed by Yim Ho. It won the Best Film Award at the 4th Hong Kong Film Awards. The film was also selected as the Hong Kong entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 57th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee.",
"The Homecoming\n performed at the Trafalgar Studios, London, starring John Macmillan, Keith Allen, John Simm, Gemma Chan, Ron Cook and Gary Kemp. Directed by Jamie Lloyd. Design by Soutra Gilmour. Lighting by Richard Howell. Sound by George Dennis. Others Other productions of The Homecoming have at times been listed on the home page of Pinter's official website and through its lefthand menu of links to the \"Calendar\" (\"Worldwide Calendar\"). A film with the same name was made in the UK in 1973, featuring several actors from the London premiere. The play was chosen by Lusaka Theatre Club as its entry for the 1967 Zambia Drama Festival, and was awarded prizes for best production and best actor (Norman Williams as Lenny). The director was Trevor Eastwood.",
"The Homecoming (painting)\nList of paintings by Arnold Böcklin ; Preludes, Op. 32 (Rachmaninoff) ",
"Roman Mints\n MacMillan, Giacinto Scelsi and Marjan Mozetich. He has also given world premieres of over fifty works by Dobrinka Tabakova, Leonid Desyatnikov, Elena Langer, Ed Bennett, Brian Irvine, Diana Burrell, Artem Vassiliev, Alexey Kurbatov and others. In 1998, Roman Mints and oboist Dmitry Bulgakov founded the Homecoming Chamber Music Festival which takes place annually in Moscow. The core of Homecoming concert programmes are themed selections of works with one powerful underlying but not necessarily musical, idea behind them. Since the inception of the festival, Roman Mints has authored more than 60 such programmes. In April 2002, he co-directed the Suppressed Music project in Russia, which consisted of two concerts and a conference on composers whose music had been ",
"David Hamilton (composer)\n Choral's 150th anniversary. Serenade (2011) for SSAA choir and chamber orchestra The Necessary Rain (2012) a work for soprano, SAATBB choir, and orchestra Erebus (2015) a twenty-five minute work for baritone solo, mixed choir, percussion, two pianos and pre-recorded soundscape. Homecoming – Te Hokinga Mai (2018) for alto solo, SSATB choir, and chamber orchestra Orchestral works: Parabasis (1987) a fourteen minute work for orchestra Elysian Fields (1998) a thirteen minute work for orchestra Leukos (2000) a twenty-five minute work for large orchestra Caveat Emptor (2008) for orchestra Flight (2009) for orchestra Children of the Fire Gods (2012) for orchestra The Kingston Flyer (2013) for string orchestra ",
"Fred Mollin\n (1 episode) (composer) ; 1995 - Blind Faith (composer: theme music) ; 1995 - Baby Baby (composer: theme music) (musician) ; 1995 - The Outer Limits (TV series) (2 episodes) (Composer) ; 1995 - Hangtime (TV series) (composer - 1 episode) ; 1995 - Pilot (composer: theme music) ; 1994 - Gene Autry, Melody of the West (documentary) (composer) ; 1994 - The Odyssey (TV series) (13 episodes) (composer) ; 1993 - Phenom (TV series) (1 episode) (composer) ; 1993 - Liar, Liar: Between Father and Daughter (TV movie) (composer) ; 1993 - In Advance of the Landing (documentary) (composer) ; 1993 - Survive the Night (TV movie) (composer) ; 1992 - Amy ",
"American Idiot (musical)\n wanted to do the same, and drummer Tré Cool followed suit. Armstrong recalled, \"It started getting more serious as we tried to outdo one another. We kept connecting these little half-minute bits until we had something.\" This musical suite became \"Homecoming\", and the group subsequently wrote another suite, \"Jesus of Suburbia\". Green Day made the record an album-long conceptual piece which was a response to the realities of the post-9/11 era. The band took inspiration from the concept records by The Who, sources in the musical theater repertoire like The Rocky Horror Show and West Side Story, and the concept album-come-stage musical Jesus Christ Superstar. Armstrong also said the band intended \"that it would be staged or we'd create ",
"Nilo Alcala\nMotion picture soundtrack for \"Homecoming\" (directed by Gil Portes) 2003 ; Animation soundtrack for \"Flower Trail\" 2004 ",
"Homecoming Song\n Homecoming Song (Το Τραγούδι της Επιστροφής, translit. To tragoudi tis epistrofis) is a 1983 Greek drama film directed by Yannis Smaragdis. It was entered into the 13th Moscow International Film Festival.",
"Exodus (soundtrack)\n Themes. Other artists included piano player Anthony Burger for the Homecoming titled \"I Do Believe\", a disco version titled \"Exo-Disco\" by Huey Lewis & the American Express, a remix by techno-crossover pianist Maksim Mrvica, and it has even been used as the sample for the T.I. song \"Bankhead\". The original version was used as a theme song for professional wrestler Mr. Perfect, and later a takeoff of the original version would become his longtime theme song. Trey Spruance of the Secret Chiefs 3 rescored the theme for \"surf band and orchestra\" on the album 2004 Book of Horizons. The Chopsticks (a "
] |
Who was the composer of The Greater Good, or the Passion of Boule de Suif? | [
"Stephen Hartke",
"Stephen Paul Hartke"
] | composer | The Greater Good, or the Passion of Boule de Suif | 1,614,550 | 80 | [
{
"id": "13413401",
"title": "The Greater Good, or the Passion of Boule de Suif",
"text": " The Greater Good, or the Passion of Boule de Suif is an opera in two acts by contemporary American composer Stephen Hartke, with an English libretto by the Philip Littell, based on the short story Boule de Suif by Guy de Maupassant. It was commissioned by the Glimmerglass Opera, and premiered on 22 July 2006 at Glimmerglass, in Cooperstown, New York.",
"score": "2.2291079"
},
{
"id": "13413403",
"title": "The Greater Good, or the Passion of Boule de Suif",
"text": " Response to the opera in 2006 was mixed. Alex Ross of The New Yorker called The Greater Good \"a tightly constructed, vividly imagined piece that may mark the emergence of a major opera composer.\" The Los Angeles Times, despite complaining that \"exploring [the characters'] inner lives leads nowhere\", praised Hartke's music for its liveliness and theatrical flair. On the other hand, the Toronto Star said that \"Hartke's music, while easy enough to listen to, became even easier to forget\".",
"score": "2.0921702"
},
{
"id": "13413404",
"title": "The Greater Good, or the Passion of Boule de Suif",
"text": "Burchett Glimmerglass Opera Orchestra Robertson Naxos ",
"score": "1.968308"
},
{
"id": "13413402",
"title": "The Greater Good, or the Passion of Boule de Suif",
"text": " The opera is set in 1871, at the end of the Franco-Prussian War. In Act I, a group of French citizens flee Rouen, which has been occupied by the Prussians, travelling to Le Havre in a stagecoach. The prostitute Boule de Suif is initially snubbed by all of the other, more \"proper\" passengers. However, Boule is the only one to have planned ahead for the trip and brought a basket of food. She takes pity on her hungry travelling companions and shares her food with them. For Boule's kindness and generosity, they are all grateful and become friendly to her. When the coach reaches the village of Tôtes, the occupants are detained at an inn by Prussian soldiers. In Act II, the travelers learn that the Prussian commandant will not permit them to continue on their way unless Boule sleeps with him. The others initially support Boule in rejecting the commandant's demand, but over time their attitude changes and they urge Boule to comply. Eventually, she complies for \"the greater good\". In the final scene, travelers resume their journey, but Boule is once again ostracized by those whom she had saved.",
"score": "1.8120706"
},
{
"id": "4597091",
"title": "Boule de Suif",
"text": " 1959 Anatole Litvak's The Journey with Deborah Kerr and Yul Brynner borrowed heavily from the plot device of a group of travellers detained by an authoritarian foreign officer with a romantic interest in an attractive passenger. ; In July 2006, the opera The Greater Good, or The Passion of Boule de Suif opened as a part of the Glimmerglass Opera Festival in Cooperstown, New York. The opera was composed by Stephen Hartke based on a libretto by Phillip Littell and directed by David Schweizer. ; In 2007, Dr. Kausar Mahmood translated Boule de Suif and many other stories into the Urdu language under the title of \" Momi Gainde\". ",
"score": "1.7962661"
},
{
"id": "2998977",
"title": "Jean Langlais",
"text": "Hymne d'actions de grâces from Three Gregorian Paraphrases ; La nativité and Les rameaux (The Palms) (Poèmes Evangeliques) ; Chant héroïque, Chant de paix, and De profundis from Nine Pieces ; Kyrie \"Orbis factor\" from Livre œcuménique ; Incantation pour un jour saint (Incantation for Easter) ; Cantilene (Suite brève) ; Suite médiévale ; Folkloric Suite ; Trois méditations sur la Sainte Trinité ; Fête, Op. 51 ; 24 Pieces for harmonium or organ, Op. 6 Langlais was a prolific composer, composing 254 works with opus numbers, the first of which was his Prelude and Fugue for organ (1927), and the last his Trio (1990), another organ piece. Although best known as a composer of organ music and sacred choral music, he also composed a ",
"score": "1.4890773"
},
{
"id": "5613973",
"title": "François Dompierre",
"text": " Jesus of Montreal, The Tin Flute and The Passion of Augustine. In 2008, Dompierre was the recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award at the Francophone SOCAN Awards held in Montreal. He was appointed a Member of the Order of Canada in 2014. Dompierre composed 24 Preludes, in remembrance of Bob Alain, a jazz pianist who influenced his early career. In 2015, the film La passion d’Augustine, scored by Dompierre, was released. That year the Prix Jutra announced that Dompierre would be given a lifetime achievement award at the 2016 awards. In 2018 the Sutton Museum mounted an exhibition of Dompierre's work, including a presentation of his composition, \"Petit Concerto de Saint-Irénée\". In 2019 Dompierre published a biography of his longtime friend and collaborator Monique Leyrac.",
"score": "1.4387225"
},
{
"id": "11392351",
"title": "Les Troyens",
"text": " finished. [I polished] the work over and over again, after giving numerous readings of the poem in different places, listening to the comments made by various listeners and benefiting from them to the best of my ability[…]\" On 3 May 1861, Berlioz wrote in a letter: \"I am sure that I have written a great work, greater and nobler than anything done hitherto.\" Elsewhere he wrote: \"The principal merit of the work is, in my view, the truthfulness of the expression.\" For Berlioz, truthful representation of passion was the highest goal of a dramatic composer, and in this respect he felt he had equalled the achievements of Gluck and Mozart.",
"score": "1.4292331"
},
{
"id": "29067042",
"title": "Antoine de Longueval",
"text": " Longueval's surviving attributed works consist of two motets, two chansons, and attribution of the famous Passion setting Passio Domini nostri Jesu Christi for four voices. He wrote at least one mass setting, which was documented as being sent to Ferrara, but it either has not survived or has survived anonymously. Passio Domini nostri is unusual for being a polyphonic setting of much of the Passion text from the Gospel of St. Matthew and the other three Gospels, especially that of St. John, with variation in texture, rhythmic character, scoring, and other musical attributes depending on the speaker and the context. It was enormously influential on ",
"score": "1.4265401"
},
{
"id": "7704575",
"title": "John Ireland (composer)",
"text": " known in numerous arrangements. He wrote songs to poems by A. E. Housman, Thomas Hardy, Christina Rossetti, John Masefield, Rupert Brooke and others. Due to his job at St Luke's Church, he also wrote hymns, carols, and other sacred choral music; among choirs he is probably best known for the anthem Greater love hath no man, often sung in services that commemorate the victims of war. The hymn tune Love Unknown is sung in churches throughout the English-speaking world, as is his Communion Service in C major. His works have been recorded and performed by Choir of Westminster Abbey, The Choir of Wells Cathedral and many others. He appears as pianist in a recording of ",
"score": "1.4252055"
},
{
"id": "2187910",
"title": "Ainsi parla Zarathoustra (Boulez)",
"text": " Jean-Louis Barrault, the director of the theatre company, created a scenic version of Nietzsche's Also sprach Zarathustra and requested music from Boulez with whom he had collaborated for years. Boulez was from 1945 to 1955 musical director of the company, arranging and conducting incidental music and writing some himself. In 1954/55 Boulez had composed incidental music for the Oresteia in three parts, directed by Barrault. The as for Ainsi parla Zarathoustra, Barrault wrote detailed instructions for the music, which Boulez considered and often followed. While the French text based on Nietzsche's work by Georges-Arthur Goldschmidt was printed in 1972, a version with Barrault's additional instructions was published by Gallimard in the series Le Manteau d'Arlequin in 1975. The production was first performed at the Théâtre d'Orsay in Paris on 6 November 1974. The music remains unpublished; sketches and scores are extant in the collection Pierre Boulez of the Foundation Paul Sacher in Basel, while images and films of the production are held in part by the Bibliothèque nationale de France.",
"score": "1.4172395"
},
{
"id": "30645457",
"title": "Magister Franciscus",
"text": " Magister Franciscus was a French composer in the ars nova style of late Medieval music. He is known for two surviving works, the three-part ballades: De Narcissus and Phiton, Phiton, beste tres venimeuse. The former was widely distributed in his lifetime.",
"score": "1.4130734"
},
{
"id": "11257757",
"title": "Henri Sauguet",
"text": " work. Internationally, however, it was considered to be short on emotion and drama. Other operatic works include La Contrebasse (1930), La Gageure Imprévue (1942), Les Caprices de Marianne (1954) and Boule de Suif (1978). The war period brought a change to Sauguet's work, which had previously been marked by his high spirits. He used his reputation during this time to help his Jewish friends but lost the oldest-established among them, Max Jacob, who died in the Drancy internment camp. At the war's end he completed his Symphony No. 1, known as Expiatoire (Expiatory), in tribute to the war's innocent victims. ",
"score": "1.411504"
},
{
"id": "576779",
"title": "Passions (Bach)",
"text": " As Thomaskantor, Johann Sebastian Bach provided Passion music for Good Friday services in Leipzig. The extant St Matthew Passion and St John Passion are Passion oratorios composed by Bach.",
"score": "1.4075986"
},
{
"id": "8255032",
"title": "The Greek Passion (opera)",
"text": " The opera exists in two versions. Martinů wrote the original version from 1954 to 1957. He offered this original version of the opera in 1957 to the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, where the music director, Rafael Kubelík, and the general administrator, David Webster, had approved the score for production. However, following intervention by Sir Arthur Bliss, the company then demurred on the production and did not stage the work at the time. The composer then produced a second version of the opera first performed, at the Zurich Opera, Zürich, on 9 June 1961, after Martinů's death in 1959. The second version was first produced in the UK at Welsh National ",
"score": "1.4068048"
},
{
"id": "3545610",
"title": "Albert Dupuis",
"text": " Bruxelles) ; More than thirty orchestral works, among them: ; two symphonies ; four Symphonic poems ; More than thirty melodies, among them: ; A collection of 12 melodies (éd. Schott, Bruxelles et éd. Katto, Bruxelles) ; Five cantatas, among them: ; La Chanson d’Halewyn (The Song of Halewyn), 1903 (éd. Eschig, Paris) ; Five oratorios ; Eight ballets ; Fifteen works for voice and orchestra ; Fifteen operas, among them: ; Jean-Michel, 1900 (éd. Breitkopf et Härtel, Leipzig) ; Fidélaine, 1908-1909 (éd. Breitkopf et Härtel, Leipzig) ; La Grande Bretèche, 1911-1912 (d’après Balzac) (éd. Eschig, Paris) ; La Passion, 1912-1914 (éd. Chouden, Paris) ",
"score": "1.406801"
},
{
"id": "3545606",
"title": "Albert Dupuis",
"text": " to devote himself to composition. But when in 1907 the council of Verviers offered him the post of director at the conservatory, he accepted and held it until his retirement in 1947. During his lifetime, his works met with some success in Brussels and in the major cities in Belgium (particularly in Flanders) and France. In particular his opera La Passion, played more than 150 times at La Monnaie and he directed it several times. He also enjoyed the esteem of his peers, as Eugène Ysaÿe, dedicated of several of his works and who made his works known in the United States.",
"score": "1.406246"
},
{
"id": "5184796",
"title": "Claude Debussy",
"text": " the slow waltz La plus que lente (The more than slow), based on the style of the gipsy violinist at a Paris hotel (to whom he gave the manuscript of the piece). In addition to the composers who influenced his own compositions, Debussy held strong views about several others. He was for the most part enthusiastic about Richard Strauss and Stravinsky, respectful of Mozart and was in awe of Bach, whom he called the \"good God of music\" (\"le Bon Dieu de la musique\"). His relationship to Beethoven was complex; he was said to refer to him as \"le vieux sourd\" (the old deaf one) and asked one young ",
"score": "1.4053254"
},
{
"id": "11310175",
"title": "John Lessard",
"text": " John Lessard (1920-2003) was an American composer and music educator noted among peers for his eloquent and dramatic neo-classical works for piano and voice, chamber ensembles, and orchestra, as well as for his playful pieces for mixed percussion ensembles. He was also an accomplished pianist and conductor.",
"score": "1.4048381"
},
{
"id": "9584751",
"title": "Passion (music)",
"text": " In the English repertoire, the two classics are The Crucifixion (1887) by Sir John Stainer and Olivet to Calvary (1904) by John Henry Maunder. Other works include Sir Arthur Somervell's The Passion of Christ (1914), Charles Wood's St Mark Passion (1921) and Eric Thiman's The Last Supper (1930). More recent examples include James MacMillan's Seven Last Words from the Cross (1993), the Passion According to St. Matthew (1997), by Mark Alburger, The Passion According to the Four Evangelists by Scott King, and The Passion and Resurrection According To St. Mark (2015/2017) by Christian Asplund. Andrew Lloyd Webber's Jesus Christ Superstar (book and lyrics by Tim Rice), and Stephen Schwartz's Godspell both contain elements of the traditional passion accounts. Another modern version is by Adrian Snell (1980). Peter Gabriel's score to Martin Scorsese's 1988 film the Last Temptation of Christ was released as an album under the title Passion: Music for The Last Temptation of Christ.",
"score": "1.4048306"
}
] | [
"The Greater Good, or the Passion of Boule de Suif\n The Greater Good, or the Passion of Boule de Suif is an opera in two acts by contemporary American composer Stephen Hartke, with an English libretto by the Philip Littell, based on the short story Boule de Suif by Guy de Maupassant. It was commissioned by the Glimmerglass Opera, and premiered on 22 July 2006 at Glimmerglass, in Cooperstown, New York.",
"The Greater Good, or the Passion of Boule de Suif\n Response to the opera in 2006 was mixed. Alex Ross of The New Yorker called The Greater Good \"a tightly constructed, vividly imagined piece that may mark the emergence of a major opera composer.\" The Los Angeles Times, despite complaining that \"exploring [the characters'] inner lives leads nowhere\", praised Hartke's music for its liveliness and theatrical flair. On the other hand, the Toronto Star said that \"Hartke's music, while easy enough to listen to, became even easier to forget\".",
"The Greater Good, or the Passion of Boule de Suif\nBurchett Glimmerglass Opera Orchestra Robertson Naxos ",
"The Greater Good, or the Passion of Boule de Suif\n The opera is set in 1871, at the end of the Franco-Prussian War. In Act I, a group of French citizens flee Rouen, which has been occupied by the Prussians, travelling to Le Havre in a stagecoach. The prostitute Boule de Suif is initially snubbed by all of the other, more \"proper\" passengers. However, Boule is the only one to have planned ahead for the trip and brought a basket of food. She takes pity on her hungry travelling companions and shares her food with them. For Boule's kindness and generosity, they are all grateful and become friendly to her. When the coach reaches the village of Tôtes, the occupants are detained at an inn by Prussian soldiers. In Act II, the travelers learn that the Prussian commandant will not permit them to continue on their way unless Boule sleeps with him. The others initially support Boule in rejecting the commandant's demand, but over time their attitude changes and they urge Boule to comply. Eventually, she complies for \"the greater good\". In the final scene, travelers resume their journey, but Boule is once again ostracized by those whom she had saved.",
"Boule de Suif\n 1959 Anatole Litvak's The Journey with Deborah Kerr and Yul Brynner borrowed heavily from the plot device of a group of travellers detained by an authoritarian foreign officer with a romantic interest in an attractive passenger. ; In July 2006, the opera The Greater Good, or The Passion of Boule de Suif opened as a part of the Glimmerglass Opera Festival in Cooperstown, New York. The opera was composed by Stephen Hartke based on a libretto by Phillip Littell and directed by David Schweizer. ; In 2007, Dr. Kausar Mahmood translated Boule de Suif and many other stories into the Urdu language under the title of \" Momi Gainde\". ",
"Jean Langlais\nHymne d'actions de grâces from Three Gregorian Paraphrases ; La nativité and Les rameaux (The Palms) (Poèmes Evangeliques) ; Chant héroïque, Chant de paix, and De profundis from Nine Pieces ; Kyrie \"Orbis factor\" from Livre œcuménique ; Incantation pour un jour saint (Incantation for Easter) ; Cantilene (Suite brève) ; Suite médiévale ; Folkloric Suite ; Trois méditations sur la Sainte Trinité ; Fête, Op. 51 ; 24 Pieces for harmonium or organ, Op. 6 Langlais was a prolific composer, composing 254 works with opus numbers, the first of which was his Prelude and Fugue for organ (1927), and the last his Trio (1990), another organ piece. Although best known as a composer of organ music and sacred choral music, he also composed a ",
"François Dompierre\n Jesus of Montreal, The Tin Flute and The Passion of Augustine. In 2008, Dompierre was the recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award at the Francophone SOCAN Awards held in Montreal. He was appointed a Member of the Order of Canada in 2014. Dompierre composed 24 Preludes, in remembrance of Bob Alain, a jazz pianist who influenced his early career. In 2015, the film La passion d’Augustine, scored by Dompierre, was released. That year the Prix Jutra announced that Dompierre would be given a lifetime achievement award at the 2016 awards. In 2018 the Sutton Museum mounted an exhibition of Dompierre's work, including a presentation of his composition, \"Petit Concerto de Saint-Irénée\". In 2019 Dompierre published a biography of his longtime friend and collaborator Monique Leyrac.",
"Les Troyens\n finished. [I polished] the work over and over again, after giving numerous readings of the poem in different places, listening to the comments made by various listeners and benefiting from them to the best of my ability[…]\" On 3 May 1861, Berlioz wrote in a letter: \"I am sure that I have written a great work, greater and nobler than anything done hitherto.\" Elsewhere he wrote: \"The principal merit of the work is, in my view, the truthfulness of the expression.\" For Berlioz, truthful representation of passion was the highest goal of a dramatic composer, and in this respect he felt he had equalled the achievements of Gluck and Mozart.",
"Antoine de Longueval\n Longueval's surviving attributed works consist of two motets, two chansons, and attribution of the famous Passion setting Passio Domini nostri Jesu Christi for four voices. He wrote at least one mass setting, which was documented as being sent to Ferrara, but it either has not survived or has survived anonymously. Passio Domini nostri is unusual for being a polyphonic setting of much of the Passion text from the Gospel of St. Matthew and the other three Gospels, especially that of St. John, with variation in texture, rhythmic character, scoring, and other musical attributes depending on the speaker and the context. It was enormously influential on ",
"John Ireland (composer)\n known in numerous arrangements. He wrote songs to poems by A. E. Housman, Thomas Hardy, Christina Rossetti, John Masefield, Rupert Brooke and others. Due to his job at St Luke's Church, he also wrote hymns, carols, and other sacred choral music; among choirs he is probably best known for the anthem Greater love hath no man, often sung in services that commemorate the victims of war. The hymn tune Love Unknown is sung in churches throughout the English-speaking world, as is his Communion Service in C major. His works have been recorded and performed by Choir of Westminster Abbey, The Choir of Wells Cathedral and many others. He appears as pianist in a recording of ",
"Ainsi parla Zarathoustra (Boulez)\n Jean-Louis Barrault, the director of the theatre company, created a scenic version of Nietzsche's Also sprach Zarathustra and requested music from Boulez with whom he had collaborated for years. Boulez was from 1945 to 1955 musical director of the company, arranging and conducting incidental music and writing some himself. In 1954/55 Boulez had composed incidental music for the Oresteia in three parts, directed by Barrault. The as for Ainsi parla Zarathoustra, Barrault wrote detailed instructions for the music, which Boulez considered and often followed. While the French text based on Nietzsche's work by Georges-Arthur Goldschmidt was printed in 1972, a version with Barrault's additional instructions was published by Gallimard in the series Le Manteau d'Arlequin in 1975. The production was first performed at the Théâtre d'Orsay in Paris on 6 November 1974. The music remains unpublished; sketches and scores are extant in the collection Pierre Boulez of the Foundation Paul Sacher in Basel, while images and films of the production are held in part by the Bibliothèque nationale de France.",
"Magister Franciscus\n Magister Franciscus was a French composer in the ars nova style of late Medieval music. He is known for two surviving works, the three-part ballades: De Narcissus and Phiton, Phiton, beste tres venimeuse. The former was widely distributed in his lifetime.",
"Henri Sauguet\n work. Internationally, however, it was considered to be short on emotion and drama. Other operatic works include La Contrebasse (1930), La Gageure Imprévue (1942), Les Caprices de Marianne (1954) and Boule de Suif (1978). The war period brought a change to Sauguet's work, which had previously been marked by his high spirits. He used his reputation during this time to help his Jewish friends but lost the oldest-established among them, Max Jacob, who died in the Drancy internment camp. At the war's end he completed his Symphony No. 1, known as Expiatoire (Expiatory), in tribute to the war's innocent victims. ",
"Passions (Bach)\n As Thomaskantor, Johann Sebastian Bach provided Passion music for Good Friday services in Leipzig. The extant St Matthew Passion and St John Passion are Passion oratorios composed by Bach.",
"The Greek Passion (opera)\n The opera exists in two versions. Martinů wrote the original version from 1954 to 1957. He offered this original version of the opera in 1957 to the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, where the music director, Rafael Kubelík, and the general administrator, David Webster, had approved the score for production. However, following intervention by Sir Arthur Bliss, the company then demurred on the production and did not stage the work at the time. The composer then produced a second version of the opera first performed, at the Zurich Opera, Zürich, on 9 June 1961, after Martinů's death in 1959. The second version was first produced in the UK at Welsh National ",
"Albert Dupuis\n Bruxelles) ; More than thirty orchestral works, among them: ; two symphonies ; four Symphonic poems ; More than thirty melodies, among them: ; A collection of 12 melodies (éd. Schott, Bruxelles et éd. Katto, Bruxelles) ; Five cantatas, among them: ; La Chanson d’Halewyn (The Song of Halewyn), 1903 (éd. Eschig, Paris) ; Five oratorios ; Eight ballets ; Fifteen works for voice and orchestra ; Fifteen operas, among them: ; Jean-Michel, 1900 (éd. Breitkopf et Härtel, Leipzig) ; Fidélaine, 1908-1909 (éd. Breitkopf et Härtel, Leipzig) ; La Grande Bretèche, 1911-1912 (d’après Balzac) (éd. Eschig, Paris) ; La Passion, 1912-1914 (éd. Chouden, Paris) ",
"Albert Dupuis\n to devote himself to composition. But when in 1907 the council of Verviers offered him the post of director at the conservatory, he accepted and held it until his retirement in 1947. During his lifetime, his works met with some success in Brussels and in the major cities in Belgium (particularly in Flanders) and France. In particular his opera La Passion, played more than 150 times at La Monnaie and he directed it several times. He also enjoyed the esteem of his peers, as Eugène Ysaÿe, dedicated of several of his works and who made his works known in the United States.",
"Claude Debussy\n the slow waltz La plus que lente (The more than slow), based on the style of the gipsy violinist at a Paris hotel (to whom he gave the manuscript of the piece). In addition to the composers who influenced his own compositions, Debussy held strong views about several others. He was for the most part enthusiastic about Richard Strauss and Stravinsky, respectful of Mozart and was in awe of Bach, whom he called the \"good God of music\" (\"le Bon Dieu de la musique\"). His relationship to Beethoven was complex; he was said to refer to him as \"le vieux sourd\" (the old deaf one) and asked one young ",
"John Lessard\n John Lessard (1920-2003) was an American composer and music educator noted among peers for his eloquent and dramatic neo-classical works for piano and voice, chamber ensembles, and orchestra, as well as for his playful pieces for mixed percussion ensembles. He was also an accomplished pianist and conductor.",
"Passion (music)\n In the English repertoire, the two classics are The Crucifixion (1887) by Sir John Stainer and Olivet to Calvary (1904) by John Henry Maunder. Other works include Sir Arthur Somervell's The Passion of Christ (1914), Charles Wood's St Mark Passion (1921) and Eric Thiman's The Last Supper (1930). More recent examples include James MacMillan's Seven Last Words from the Cross (1993), the Passion According to St. Matthew (1997), by Mark Alburger, The Passion According to the Four Evangelists by Scott King, and The Passion and Resurrection According To St. Mark (2015/2017) by Christian Asplund. Andrew Lloyd Webber's Jesus Christ Superstar (book and lyrics by Tim Rice), and Stephen Schwartz's Godspell both contain elements of the traditional passion accounts. Another modern version is by Adrian Snell (1980). Peter Gabriel's score to Martin Scorsese's 1988 film the Last Temptation of Christ was released as an album under the title Passion: Music for The Last Temptation of Christ."
] |
Who was the composer of Gisela!? | [
"Hans Werner Henze"
] | composer | Gisela! | 2,145,185 | 85 | [
{
"id": "6888638",
"title": "Gisela!",
"text": " Gisela! was first performed in the Maschinenhalle of the, Gladbeck, Germany, on 25 September 2010 as part of the Ruhrtriennale music and arts festival by the contemporary music ensemble musikFabrik in collaboration with local youth groups and students of the Folkwang University, Essen. The work was commissioned 2008 by the Ruhr.2010 (European Culture Capital 2010) and the Semperoper, Dresden, where it was performed on 20 November 2010. A performance lasts for about 1 hour and 15 minutes. The conductor Steven Sloane (who was also the music director of the Ruhr.2010 festival) first performed the work. Pierre Audi directed, the cast included Hanna Herfurtner as Gisela, Fausto Reinhardt as Gennaro and Michael Dahmen as Hanspeter. The Semperoper team included the conductor Erik Nielsen and the director Elisabeth Stöppler, with Nadja Mchantaf as Gisela, Giorgio Berrugi as Gennaro and Markus Butter as Hanspeter.",
"score": "1.7737122"
},
{
"id": "6888637",
"title": "Gisela!",
"text": " 'Gisela! oder: Die merk- und denkwürdigen Wege des Glücks (German for Gisela! or: The Strange and Memorable Ways of Happiness') is an opera by Hans Werner Henze.",
"score": "1.7513771"
},
{
"id": "6888643",
"title": "Gisela!",
"text": "Premiere Gladbeck, RuhrTriennale, Ruhr.2010, 25 September 2010; conductor: Steven Sloane, director: Pierre Audi ; Premiere Dresden version, Semperoper Dresden, 20 November 2010; conductor: Erik Nielsen, director: Elisabeth Stöppler ; First performance in Italy, Teatro Massimo Palermo, 21 January 2015; conductor: Constantin Trinks, director: Emma Dante ",
"score": "1.742027"
},
{
"id": "6888639",
"title": "Gisela!",
"text": " The two first productions of Gisela! at the Ruhrtriennale and in Dresden show the two possible performing options: at the Ruhrtriennale all the performers were young people, mostly teens, and in Dresden the Staatskapelle and Staatsopernchor as well as the main Ensemble performed the work. The original commission, as discussed with Hans Werner Henze, Michael Kerstan, Ruhr.2010 music director Steven Sloane and Eytan Pessen was to continue the direction of Henze's Pollicino (a work written for children performers). Gisela!'s target performers are teenagers and young singers, although the score is demanding for orchestra, chorus and soloists – it is nevertheless performable by talented young singers. The Dresden version includes a slightly expanded arietta for the role of Hanspeter, and numerous changes. It is this version that was published.",
"score": "1.6924609"
},
{
"id": "7700264",
"title": "Gerd Natschinski",
"text": "Messeschlager Gisela (1960, premiered at Metropol Theater Berlin) ; Servus Peter (1961) ; Mein Freund Bunbury (1964, premiered at Metropol Theater Berlin) based on The Importance of Being Earnest ; Casanova (1976, premiered at Metropol Theater Berlin) ; Caballero (1988) ",
"score": "1.6853843"
},
{
"id": "12063572",
"title": "Gisela Hernández",
"text": " Gisela Hernández Gonzalo (1912−1971) was a Cuban composer. Aware of political necessity, she established ties with the Castro government in return for recognition of her activities as a music teacher and composer. She was also a member of the nationalistic Grupo Minorista that led a movement to incorporate Afro-Cuban sounds into larger forms of music. Hernández taught music at the Hubert de Blanck Conservatory, and with Olga De Blanck Martín, director of the conservatory, she developed a music education system that made significant changes in Mexican music education. With de Blanck, she also co-founded Ediciones de Blanck publishing and became instrumental in publishing critical editions of Ignacio Cervantes' music.",
"score": "1.6666337"
},
{
"id": "6888641",
"title": "Gisela!",
"text": "Gisela Geldmaier, art history student (soprano) ; Gennaro Esposito (tenor) ; Hanspeter Schluckebier, vulcanology student (baritone) ; The German General Consul (bass) ; Another female tourist (soprano) ; Another male tourist (tenor) ; Antonio Scarlatti, inn keeper (baritone) ; A mime (silent) ; A female tourist (mezzo-soprano) ; Circa 12 actors and mimes, playing Hanspeter's accomplices and the Commedia dell'arte group ; Chorus ",
"score": "1.6103739"
},
{
"id": "26314333",
"title": "Gisèle Barreau",
"text": " Gisèle Barreau (born 28 February 1948) is a French composer.",
"score": "1.60589"
},
{
"id": "6888640",
"title": "Gisela!",
"text": " This opera was to be Hans Werner Henze's last. It is in some ways a parable to Henze's own life – a person from the north of Germany falling in love with Italy. The piece tells the story of a young student's love triangle, the choice Gisela has to make between her German boyfriend and the Italian alternative, as well as the difficulty of the Italian Gennaro to come to terms with life in northern Germany. It is interesting that Gisela's nightmares are based on Bach's music, eerily transformed. Gennaro chooses to express himself by singing \"Aggio Saputo\", a Neapolitan song which Henze used once before in his Neapolitan songs for baritone and orchestra.",
"score": "1.6040498"
},
{
"id": "13353402",
"title": "Marietta Piekenbrock",
"text": " She worked intensively with many important artists such as Hans Werner Henze, who wrote his last opera, Gisela! For the RUHR.2010 (an opera for and about youth, premiered at the RuhrTriennale)., the Pottfiction festival, the Odyssee Europa project which involved six theaters of the Ruhrgebiet area performing modern versions of Homer's Odyssey in two days. and artist groups like Rimini Protokoll and raumlaborberlin.",
"score": "1.5747588"
},
{
"id": "4179408",
"title": "Gisela Steineckert",
"text": " Gisela Steineckert (born 13 May 1931) is a German writer known for her books and song lyrics. She has also written numerous radio plays and several film scripts. In terms of published output she was particularly prolific before 1989, but her professional career has nevertheless outlasted the German Democratic Republic. A member of the East German arts establishment, she served as national \"President of the Entertainment Committee\" following the retirement, in 1984, of Siegfried Wagner. Her unforced support for the East German system before reunification has drawn hostility from writers and artists who found themselves persecuted by the régime: Bettina Wegner dismissively opines of her supervisory duties with the October Club (state sponsored song performance association) during the 1980s that Steineckert was the chief censor (\"Das war die Oberzensorin\").",
"score": "1.5551524"
},
{
"id": "15147365",
"title": "Giselher Klebe",
"text": " Giselher Wolfgang Klebe (28 June 1925 – 5 October 2009) was a German composer, and an academic teacher. He composed more than 140 works, among them 14 operas, all based on literary works, eight symphonies, 15 solo concerts, chamber music, piano works, and sacred music.",
"score": "1.5411487"
},
{
"id": "8539114",
"title": "Gisella Delle Grazie",
"text": " Gisella Delle Grazie (born 1 June 1868; fl. 1894–95) was an Italian composer born in Trieste. Delle Grazie composed two operas, Atala (I Pellirossa), premiered at the Teatro Balbo in Turin in 1894, and La trecciaiuola di Firenze, premiered at the Teatro Filodrammatico in Trieste in 1895.",
"score": "1.540484"
},
{
"id": "2483244",
"title": "Will Meisel",
"text": " Will Meisel (17 September 1897 – 29 April 1967) was a German composer, who wrote more than fifty film scores during his career. He also wrote several operettas including A Friend So Lovely as You (1930) (Eine Freundin so goldig wie du).",
"score": "1.5379016"
},
{
"id": "8747156",
"title": "Gisela (name)",
"text": "Gisela (singer) (born 1979), Catalan singer ; Gisela Arendt (1918–1969), German swimmer ; Gisela Bleibtreu-Ehrenberg (born 1929), German sociologist, ethnologist, sexologist and writer ; Gisela Boniel (1977–2017), Filipino politician ; Gisela Depkat (born 1942), Canadian cellist and teacher ; Gisela Dulko (born 1985), Argentine tennis player ; Gisela Grothaus (born 1955), German slalom canoeist ; Gísela López (born 1968), Bolivian journalist and politician ; Gisela Richter (1882–1972), British-born archaeologist ; Gisela Steineckert (born 1931), German writer ; Gisela Storz, American microbiologist ; Gisela Stuart (born 1955), German-born British politician ; Gisela Valcárcel (born 1963), Peruvian TV host ; Gisela Wuchinger (born 1950), German Austrian singer, also known as Gilla ",
"score": "1.5331659"
},
{
"id": "4179413",
"title": "Gisela Steineckert",
"text": " articles for newspapers and magazines. While she was (briefly) married to the writer Heinz Kahlau she wrote her first screen play with him. In 1962-63 she was employed as the Culture Editor with the satirical magazine, Eulenspiegel, while continuing, through the mid 1960s, to produce more screen plays. In 1965 she became a member of the Berlin district executive of the (East) German Writers' Association. It was also in 1965 that Steinecker began a period of close involvement in the East German Song Movement, a sustained party mandated campaign to co-opt the dynamic renaissance in popular music that was a feature of the 1960s into the service of the ",
"score": "1.531106"
},
{
"id": "11065172",
"title": "Gisela João",
"text": "Gisela João (Valentim de Carvalho, 2013) ; Gisela João - Ao Vivo (Valentim de Carvalo/Exclusivo Fnac, 2015) ; Nua (Valentim de Carvalho, 2016) ; Aurora (Universal Music Portugal, 2021) ",
"score": "1.523601"
},
{
"id": "9660266",
"title": "Gisa Wurm",
"text": "Grand Duchess Alexandra (1933) ; Harvest (1936) ; Mirror of Life (1938) ; My Daughter Lives in Vienna (1940) ; Operetta (1940) ; Love Is Duty Free (1941) ; Violanta (1942) ; Two Happy People (1943) ; Gateway to Peace (1951) ; Franz Schubert (1953) ; Lavender (1953) ",
"score": "1.5235739"
},
{
"id": "29004200",
"title": "Gisela Mashayekhi-Beer",
"text": " to perform contemporary music in connection with other arts or contrasting music, opening the listener's ears in a new and different way to New Music. So there were for example concerts with contemporary Japanese composers, together with European composers who were influenced by Japanese art and traditional Japanese music; or Austrian contemporary music together with Johann Sebastian Bach's The Musical Offering, or even or a portrait of the Persian poetess Forugh Farochsad, with compositions by the Persian composer Nader Mashayekhi and recitation by the actress Hanna Schygulla, to name but a few of the projects. During this time, Mashayekhi-Beer intensified her engagement with contemporary music and its instrument-specific new techniques and profited from collaborations with composers such as Hans Zender, Toru Takemitsu, Peter Ablinger etc.",
"score": "1.5169895"
},
{
"id": "8457223",
"title": "Marcel Stern (composer)",
"text": "1935: Cantata Le Château endormi (deuxième Second Grand Prix de Rome) ; 1936: Cantata Gisèle (Premier Grand Prix de Rome) ; 1939: Divertissement for small orchestra ; 1945: Symphony La Libération in E ; 1964: Bucolique and Iberica, two pieces for flute solo ; 1968: Concerto for piano and orchestra (YouTube) ",
"score": "1.5143542"
}
] | [
"Gisela!\n Gisela! was first performed in the Maschinenhalle of the, Gladbeck, Germany, on 25 September 2010 as part of the Ruhrtriennale music and arts festival by the contemporary music ensemble musikFabrik in collaboration with local youth groups and students of the Folkwang University, Essen. The work was commissioned 2008 by the Ruhr.2010 (European Culture Capital 2010) and the Semperoper, Dresden, where it was performed on 20 November 2010. A performance lasts for about 1 hour and 15 minutes. The conductor Steven Sloane (who was also the music director of the Ruhr.2010 festival) first performed the work. Pierre Audi directed, the cast included Hanna Herfurtner as Gisela, Fausto Reinhardt as Gennaro and Michael Dahmen as Hanspeter. The Semperoper team included the conductor Erik Nielsen and the director Elisabeth Stöppler, with Nadja Mchantaf as Gisela, Giorgio Berrugi as Gennaro and Markus Butter as Hanspeter.",
"Gisela!\n 'Gisela! oder: Die merk- und denkwürdigen Wege des Glücks (German for Gisela! or: The Strange and Memorable Ways of Happiness') is an opera by Hans Werner Henze.",
"Gisela!\nPremiere Gladbeck, RuhrTriennale, Ruhr.2010, 25 September 2010; conductor: Steven Sloane, director: Pierre Audi ; Premiere Dresden version, Semperoper Dresden, 20 November 2010; conductor: Erik Nielsen, director: Elisabeth Stöppler ; First performance in Italy, Teatro Massimo Palermo, 21 January 2015; conductor: Constantin Trinks, director: Emma Dante ",
"Gisela!\n The two first productions of Gisela! at the Ruhrtriennale and in Dresden show the two possible performing options: at the Ruhrtriennale all the performers were young people, mostly teens, and in Dresden the Staatskapelle and Staatsopernchor as well as the main Ensemble performed the work. The original commission, as discussed with Hans Werner Henze, Michael Kerstan, Ruhr.2010 music director Steven Sloane and Eytan Pessen was to continue the direction of Henze's Pollicino (a work written for children performers). Gisela!'s target performers are teenagers and young singers, although the score is demanding for orchestra, chorus and soloists – it is nevertheless performable by talented young singers. The Dresden version includes a slightly expanded arietta for the role of Hanspeter, and numerous changes. It is this version that was published.",
"Gerd Natschinski\nMesseschlager Gisela (1960, premiered at Metropol Theater Berlin) ; Servus Peter (1961) ; Mein Freund Bunbury (1964, premiered at Metropol Theater Berlin) based on The Importance of Being Earnest ; Casanova (1976, premiered at Metropol Theater Berlin) ; Caballero (1988) ",
"Gisela Hernández\n Gisela Hernández Gonzalo (1912−1971) was a Cuban composer. Aware of political necessity, she established ties with the Castro government in return for recognition of her activities as a music teacher and composer. She was also a member of the nationalistic Grupo Minorista that led a movement to incorporate Afro-Cuban sounds into larger forms of music. Hernández taught music at the Hubert de Blanck Conservatory, and with Olga De Blanck Martín, director of the conservatory, she developed a music education system that made significant changes in Mexican music education. With de Blanck, she also co-founded Ediciones de Blanck publishing and became instrumental in publishing critical editions of Ignacio Cervantes' music.",
"Gisela!\nGisela Geldmaier, art history student (soprano) ; Gennaro Esposito (tenor) ; Hanspeter Schluckebier, vulcanology student (baritone) ; The German General Consul (bass) ; Another female tourist (soprano) ; Another male tourist (tenor) ; Antonio Scarlatti, inn keeper (baritone) ; A mime (silent) ; A female tourist (mezzo-soprano) ; Circa 12 actors and mimes, playing Hanspeter's accomplices and the Commedia dell'arte group ; Chorus ",
"Gisèle Barreau\n Gisèle Barreau (born 28 February 1948) is a French composer.",
"Gisela!\n This opera was to be Hans Werner Henze's last. It is in some ways a parable to Henze's own life – a person from the north of Germany falling in love with Italy. The piece tells the story of a young student's love triangle, the choice Gisela has to make between her German boyfriend and the Italian alternative, as well as the difficulty of the Italian Gennaro to come to terms with life in northern Germany. It is interesting that Gisela's nightmares are based on Bach's music, eerily transformed. Gennaro chooses to express himself by singing \"Aggio Saputo\", a Neapolitan song which Henze used once before in his Neapolitan songs for baritone and orchestra.",
"Marietta Piekenbrock\n She worked intensively with many important artists such as Hans Werner Henze, who wrote his last opera, Gisela! For the RUHR.2010 (an opera for and about youth, premiered at the RuhrTriennale)., the Pottfiction festival, the Odyssee Europa project which involved six theaters of the Ruhrgebiet area performing modern versions of Homer's Odyssey in two days. and artist groups like Rimini Protokoll and raumlaborberlin.",
"Gisela Steineckert\n Gisela Steineckert (born 13 May 1931) is a German writer known for her books and song lyrics. She has also written numerous radio plays and several film scripts. In terms of published output she was particularly prolific before 1989, but her professional career has nevertheless outlasted the German Democratic Republic. A member of the East German arts establishment, she served as national \"President of the Entertainment Committee\" following the retirement, in 1984, of Siegfried Wagner. Her unforced support for the East German system before reunification has drawn hostility from writers and artists who found themselves persecuted by the régime: Bettina Wegner dismissively opines of her supervisory duties with the October Club (state sponsored song performance association) during the 1980s that Steineckert was the chief censor (\"Das war die Oberzensorin\").",
"Giselher Klebe\n Giselher Wolfgang Klebe (28 June 1925 – 5 October 2009) was a German composer, and an academic teacher. He composed more than 140 works, among them 14 operas, all based on literary works, eight symphonies, 15 solo concerts, chamber music, piano works, and sacred music.",
"Gisella Delle Grazie\n Gisella Delle Grazie (born 1 June 1868; fl. 1894–95) was an Italian composer born in Trieste. Delle Grazie composed two operas, Atala (I Pellirossa), premiered at the Teatro Balbo in Turin in 1894, and La trecciaiuola di Firenze, premiered at the Teatro Filodrammatico in Trieste in 1895.",
"Will Meisel\n Will Meisel (17 September 1897 – 29 April 1967) was a German composer, who wrote more than fifty film scores during his career. He also wrote several operettas including A Friend So Lovely as You (1930) (Eine Freundin so goldig wie du).",
"Gisela (name)\nGisela (singer) (born 1979), Catalan singer ; Gisela Arendt (1918–1969), German swimmer ; Gisela Bleibtreu-Ehrenberg (born 1929), German sociologist, ethnologist, sexologist and writer ; Gisela Boniel (1977–2017), Filipino politician ; Gisela Depkat (born 1942), Canadian cellist and teacher ; Gisela Dulko (born 1985), Argentine tennis player ; Gisela Grothaus (born 1955), German slalom canoeist ; Gísela López (born 1968), Bolivian journalist and politician ; Gisela Richter (1882–1972), British-born archaeologist ; Gisela Steineckert (born 1931), German writer ; Gisela Storz, American microbiologist ; Gisela Stuart (born 1955), German-born British politician ; Gisela Valcárcel (born 1963), Peruvian TV host ; Gisela Wuchinger (born 1950), German Austrian singer, also known as Gilla ",
"Gisela Steineckert\n articles for newspapers and magazines. While she was (briefly) married to the writer Heinz Kahlau she wrote her first screen play with him. In 1962-63 she was employed as the Culture Editor with the satirical magazine, Eulenspiegel, while continuing, through the mid 1960s, to produce more screen plays. In 1965 she became a member of the Berlin district executive of the (East) German Writers' Association. It was also in 1965 that Steinecker began a period of close involvement in the East German Song Movement, a sustained party mandated campaign to co-opt the dynamic renaissance in popular music that was a feature of the 1960s into the service of the ",
"Gisela João\nGisela João (Valentim de Carvalho, 2013) ; Gisela João - Ao Vivo (Valentim de Carvalo/Exclusivo Fnac, 2015) ; Nua (Valentim de Carvalho, 2016) ; Aurora (Universal Music Portugal, 2021) ",
"Gisa Wurm\nGrand Duchess Alexandra (1933) ; Harvest (1936) ; Mirror of Life (1938) ; My Daughter Lives in Vienna (1940) ; Operetta (1940) ; Love Is Duty Free (1941) ; Violanta (1942) ; Two Happy People (1943) ; Gateway to Peace (1951) ; Franz Schubert (1953) ; Lavender (1953) ",
"Gisela Mashayekhi-Beer\n to perform contemporary music in connection with other arts or contrasting music, opening the listener's ears in a new and different way to New Music. So there were for example concerts with contemporary Japanese composers, together with European composers who were influenced by Japanese art and traditional Japanese music; or Austrian contemporary music together with Johann Sebastian Bach's The Musical Offering, or even or a portrait of the Persian poetess Forugh Farochsad, with compositions by the Persian composer Nader Mashayekhi and recitation by the actress Hanna Schygulla, to name but a few of the projects. During this time, Mashayekhi-Beer intensified her engagement with contemporary music and its instrument-specific new techniques and profited from collaborations with composers such as Hans Zender, Toru Takemitsu, Peter Ablinger etc.",
"Marcel Stern (composer)\n1935: Cantata Le Château endormi (deuxième Second Grand Prix de Rome) ; 1936: Cantata Gisèle (Premier Grand Prix de Rome) ; 1939: Divertissement for small orchestra ; 1945: Symphony La Libération in E ; 1964: Bucolique and Iberica, two pieces for flute solo ; 1968: Concerto for piano and orchestra (YouTube) "
] |
Who was the composer of The Giants? | [
"Joseph Koo",
"Koo Ka Fai",
"Joseph Koo Kar-Fai"
] | composer | The Giants (TV series) | 5,928,340 | 50 | [
{
"id": "4117364",
"title": "Giants in the Earth (opera)",
"text": " Giants in the Earth is a 1951 Pulitzer Prize-winning opera in three acts and four scenes by composer Douglas Moore. The work uses an English libretto by Arnold Sundgaard (1909–2006) after Ole Edvart Rølvaag's 1924-5 novel of the same name. The idea for the opera was originally conceived by Sundgaard, and depicts a story of tragedy and romance among Norwegian American settlers of Dakota Territory in 1873. Composed during 1949-1949, the work was premiered on March 28, 1951 at Columbia University's Brander Matthews Theatre by the Columbia Opera Workshop. The Pulitzer jury concluded: \"In no opera by an American is there music of such freshness, beauty, and distinctive character. The music has a life of its own apart from its appositeness to the text... Subject, text, and music avoid the cliché and commonplace and combine for an impression of strength and ",
"score": "1.63375"
},
{
"id": "10813313",
"title": "Allyn Ferguson",
"text": " The group produced \"Pictures at an Exhibition: Framed in Jazz\" in 1963, a big band-style production of the Modest Mussorgsky piano suite. He is credited, along with Hugh Heller, to writing the San Francisco \"Giants Fight Song\" in 1961. During the 1970s, he collaborated extensively with composer Jack Elliott, co-writing the themes to Barney Miller and Charlie's Angels. University of Southern California music historian Jon Burlingame called the themes \"iconic in the sense that most people who were around in that era can easily recall those tunes\". Together with Eliott, he created scores for episodes of Banacek, Fish, Police Story, Big Hawaii, Starsky & Hutch, S.W.A.T. and The Rookies. ",
"score": "1.5454072"
},
{
"id": "16224161",
"title": "Giants Are Small",
"text": " In November 2015, in co-production with Universal Music and its classical music label Deutsche Grammophon, Giants Are Small launched Peter and the Wolf in Hollywood, based on the classic 1937 work by Russian composer Sergei Prokofiev, a project appearing in app, CD, and digital album formats. Co-directed by Doug Fitch (also credited as designer and illustrator) and Edouard Getaz (also credited as producer, video director, and sound designer), the project features the Prokofiev work combined with an original prequel that’s accompanied by a selection of musical works by classical composers such as Richard Wagner, Robert Schumann, Gustav Mahler, and Eric Satie. The project is narrated in English by rock musician Alice Cooper; in German (Peter und der Wolf in Hollywood) by rock musician Campino, lead singer of the Düsseldorf band Die Toten Hosen and in Dutch (Peter En De Wolf In Hollywood) by Dutch actor/comedian Paul Haenen. Giants Are Small's co-founder Frederic Gumy is credited as producer.",
"score": "1.5264423"
},
{
"id": "29269075",
"title": "Bill Giant",
"text": " Giant grew up in New York City and was known as Bill \"Harvey\" Zimmerman. He was part of the popular songwriting team Giant, Baum and Kaye, writing songs with Bernie Baum and Florence Kaye. The majority of their work was used in Presley movies, although their most popular recording was \"(You're The) Devil in Disguise\" which reached No.3 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and No.1 on the U.K. singles chart in 1963. They were also credited with writing the American version of Osamu Tezuka's anime \"Kimba the White Lion\" (1965). Giant became a realtor in Middlesex County, New Jersey in his later years. His other memorable name was Billy Merman.",
"score": "1.5204368"
},
{
"id": "6416292",
"title": "Tom Spahn",
"text": "Battle of the Giants – by Alan Menken and Howard Ashman – Musical Director and Orchestrator ; Real Life Funnies – by Alan Menken and Howard Ashman – Musical Director and Orchestrator ; City of Light – Composer with Beverly Ross ; Cairo – Musical Director and Orchestrator ; Sam Gray – Musical Director and Orchestrator - Bonnie Sanders ; Broadway Moon – Musical Director and Orchestrator ; The Road to Hollywood, by Michael Pace & Rob Preston – Musical Director and Orchestrator Spahn functioned a Musical Director and Orchestrator or Composer on numerous musicals, including the following:",
"score": "1.492839"
},
{
"id": "15823022",
"title": "The Giants (album)",
"text": " The Giants is a 1974 album featuring Oscar Peterson, Joe Pass, and Ray Brown. At the Grammy Awards of 1978, Peterson won the Grammy Award for Best Jazz Performance by a Soloist for his performance on this album. It was reissued on CD in 1995 by Original Jazz Classics.",
"score": "1.4896166"
},
{
"id": "13284073",
"title": "Giants: Citizen Kabuto",
"text": " involved in the music for Giants. Interplay hired Morgan to compose the scores, although reports showed they initially hired Snow for the task. Morgan, however, could not fully concentrate on the task due to personal reasons and handed it over to Soule. Closing credits of the game listed only Morgan and Soule, and Soule compiled their works onto the original soundtrack of the game. Soule originally offered to autograph the soundtrack on its release in the United States; however, he stopped his offer when email feedback revealed many were intending to pirate his work through the peer-to-peer file sharing software Napster instead of buying it.",
"score": "1.4671898"
},
{
"id": "27231978",
"title": "La caduta de' giganti",
"text": " La caduta de' giganti (The Fall of the Giants) is an opera by the composer Christoph Willibald Gluck. It takes the form of a dramma per musica in two acts. The Italian-language libretto is by Francesco Vanneschi. The opera premiered on 7 January 1746 at the King's Theatre, Haymarket in London.",
"score": "1.4612583"
},
{
"id": "15823024",
"title": "The Giants (album)",
"text": "Oscar Peterson – piano & organ ; Joe Pass – guitar ; Ray Brown - double bass ",
"score": "1.4571371"
},
{
"id": "7347084",
"title": "Sarah Angliss",
"text": " by Richard Jones, at the Almedia, London). This included working with the compositions of Bernard Herrmann, Marius Constant, Nathan van Cleave, Fred Steiner and others. This included the creation of new sonic effects that blended with the original orchestral material. In October 2018, Angliss began writing a chamber opera, Giant, supported by a Jerwood Opera Writing Fellowship and Snape Music (now Britten Pears Arts). Giant tells the story of the Charles Byrne, known as The Irish Giant, who lived in fear that his remains would go on public display, against his wishes. The piece blends voices with viola da gamba, clavicymbalum and electronics.",
"score": "1.4544575"
},
{
"id": "13077298",
"title": "The Giant (opera)",
"text": " The Giant (Великан, Velikan) is an opera in three acts by Sergei Prokofiev. The 12 page work was written for performance by the nine-year-old composer's family.",
"score": "1.4540043"
},
{
"id": "4117365",
"title": "Giants in the Earth (opera)",
"text": " Moore's compositional style is highly vocal and features a speech-like, through-composed, \"lack of melodic repetition,\" with a, \"fluidity and natural feel [to] the vocal lines.\" Contrastingly, the lack of character development and liveliness, the almost complete lack of attention grabbing motifs, the length, and the premiere performance have all been criticized. Olin Downes wrote that the opera was mostly, \"recitative of little inherent significance.\" The premiere cast included soprano Brenda Miller Cooper as the central figure Beret, along with Josh Wheeler, Roy Johnson, Vivian Bauer, Sam Bertsche, Helen Dautrich, James Cosenza, Frances Paige, Raymond Sharp, and Edward Black. In 1963 Moore improved the orchestration and depiction of Beret at the request of Carl Fischer Music. The runners up for the Pulitzer that year were Quincy Porter's String Quartet No. 8, Peter Mennin's Symphony No. 5, and David Diamond's Symphony No. 3.",
"score": "1.4518578"
},
{
"id": "13077299",
"title": "The Giant (opera)",
"text": " In 1899, at the age of eight, Prokofiev, who had already evinced remarkable musical abilities and had composed some piano pieces, was taken by his parents to Moscow, where he heard opera for the first time, (including Alexander Borodin's Prince Igor and Charles Gounod's Faust). Keen to write an opera of his own, he wrote out a libretto in three acts and six scenes. With the help of his mother, the music he devised for this was transcribed. The plot was elaborated from the children's games he played with his friends Egorka and Stenya, whose names are preserved in those of the characters. In the following year, the first act of the opera was given a premiere by the family at the estate of one of Prokofiev's uncles near Kaluga, with his aunt Tatiyana taking the title part, and the composer and his cousins taking the other leading roles. There is no record of further performances.",
"score": "1.4509497"
},
{
"id": "32519722",
"title": "The Happy Prince and Other Tales",
"text": "English singer and composer Liza Lehmann wrote the recitation The Selfish Giant in 1911. ; English light music composer Eric Coates wrote the orchestral Phantasy The Selfish Giant in 1925. In 1933–1934, violinist-composer Jenő Hubay adapted the story into a Hungarian language opera, Az önző óriás (Der selbstsüchtige Riese), Op. 124. The libretto was written by László Márkus and Jenő Mohácsi. ; A record album was produced in the 1940s by American Decca, narrated by Fredric March, with a full unnamed supporting cast. ; In 1971, Peter Sander wrote and produced an animated version of The Selfish Giant for CTV in Canada. The music was by ",
"score": "1.4500192"
},
{
"id": "16224159",
"title": "Giants Are Small",
"text": " A film based on Giants Are Small’s production of A Dancer’s Dream for the New York Philharmonic's program, A Dancer's Dream: Two Works by Stravinsky was distributed in cinemas in the US by SpectiCast beginning September 2013. The film, directed by Habib Azar, features the complete production and behind-the-scenes footage, as well as an intermission feature on Stravinsky's history with the New York Philharmonic, including material from the New York Philharmonic Digital Archives.",
"score": "1.4473685"
},
{
"id": "3579773",
"title": "Giants of the Prairies",
"text": " \"Giants of the Prairies\" is a song by the Canadian polka band the Kubasonics. It tells the story of the numerous \"world's biggest\" roadside attractions to be found in Western Canada, especially in small towns populated mostly by Ukrainian Canadians. Brian Cherwick, the leader of the Kubasonics, has a Ph.D. from the Centre for Ukrainian Canadian Studies at the University of Alberta, titled \"Polkas on the Prairies: Ukrainian Music and the Construction of Identity\".",
"score": "1.4443762"
},
{
"id": "9902927",
"title": "The Selfish Giant (folk opera)",
"text": " The Selfish Giant is a folk opera composed and adapted by English songwriter Guy Chambers, based on the short story by Oscar Wilde (as part of The Happy Prince and Other Tales).",
"score": "1.4429636"
},
{
"id": "13077300",
"title": "The Giant (opera)",
"text": " The opera is apparently nearly entirely lost, although Nestyev quotes some musical extracts. A terrible Giant tries to kidnap the little girl Ustinya, who is rescued by her friends Sergeyev and Yegorov with the assistance of a good King. However, according to Prokofiev's mother, the opera ended with the defeat of the King by the Giant. She wrote, \"Now at the time of extremely strict monarchy, this idea was not approved of by the paternal authority, and the young composer, very much put out by this censorship, would not consent to write an ending involving a reconciliation.\". Perhaps this refers to an earlier version, but scholarship has not advanced on this tricky point.",
"score": "1.4354944"
},
{
"id": "3505180",
"title": "Giants (Chicane album)",
"text": " Giants is the fourth studio album by British electronic music artist Chicane. It was released in the United Kingdom on 2 August 2010. The album's first official single, \"Middledistancerunner\", featuring the vocals of Adam Young was released on the same day. The tracks \"Poppiholla\", \"Hiding All the Stars\" and \"Come Back\", which were supposed to be released on a Re-work EP in 2009, are also included on the album. The album debuted at #35 on the UK Albums Chart and at #2 on the UK Dance Albums Chart on 8 August 2010.",
"score": "1.4348311"
},
{
"id": "5713292",
"title": "Giants (Dermot Kennedy song)",
"text": " \"Giants\" is a song by Irish singer-songwriter and musician Dermot Kennedy. It was released as a digital download on 24 June 2020 by Riggins, Interscope and Island. The track is credited for peaking at Number 12 in the UK Chart, being the lead single from Dermot Kennedy's Number 1 Album (UK, Scottish and Irish Charts) 'Without Fear' and being his only single on vinyl - released on a blue 7\" in 2020. The song peaked at number one on the Irish Singles Chart. The song was written by Stephen Kozmeniuk, Scott Harris and Dermot Kennedy.",
"score": "1.4257109"
}
] | [
"Giants in the Earth (opera)\n Giants in the Earth is a 1951 Pulitzer Prize-winning opera in three acts and four scenes by composer Douglas Moore. The work uses an English libretto by Arnold Sundgaard (1909–2006) after Ole Edvart Rølvaag's 1924-5 novel of the same name. The idea for the opera was originally conceived by Sundgaard, and depicts a story of tragedy and romance among Norwegian American settlers of Dakota Territory in 1873. Composed during 1949-1949, the work was premiered on March 28, 1951 at Columbia University's Brander Matthews Theatre by the Columbia Opera Workshop. The Pulitzer jury concluded: \"In no opera by an American is there music of such freshness, beauty, and distinctive character. The music has a life of its own apart from its appositeness to the text... Subject, text, and music avoid the cliché and commonplace and combine for an impression of strength and ",
"Allyn Ferguson\n The group produced \"Pictures at an Exhibition: Framed in Jazz\" in 1963, a big band-style production of the Modest Mussorgsky piano suite. He is credited, along with Hugh Heller, to writing the San Francisco \"Giants Fight Song\" in 1961. During the 1970s, he collaborated extensively with composer Jack Elliott, co-writing the themes to Barney Miller and Charlie's Angels. University of Southern California music historian Jon Burlingame called the themes \"iconic in the sense that most people who were around in that era can easily recall those tunes\". Together with Eliott, he created scores for episodes of Banacek, Fish, Police Story, Big Hawaii, Starsky & Hutch, S.W.A.T. and The Rookies. ",
"Giants Are Small\n In November 2015, in co-production with Universal Music and its classical music label Deutsche Grammophon, Giants Are Small launched Peter and the Wolf in Hollywood, based on the classic 1937 work by Russian composer Sergei Prokofiev, a project appearing in app, CD, and digital album formats. Co-directed by Doug Fitch (also credited as designer and illustrator) and Edouard Getaz (also credited as producer, video director, and sound designer), the project features the Prokofiev work combined with an original prequel that’s accompanied by a selection of musical works by classical composers such as Richard Wagner, Robert Schumann, Gustav Mahler, and Eric Satie. The project is narrated in English by rock musician Alice Cooper; in German (Peter und der Wolf in Hollywood) by rock musician Campino, lead singer of the Düsseldorf band Die Toten Hosen and in Dutch (Peter En De Wolf In Hollywood) by Dutch actor/comedian Paul Haenen. Giants Are Small's co-founder Frederic Gumy is credited as producer.",
"Bill Giant\n Giant grew up in New York City and was known as Bill \"Harvey\" Zimmerman. He was part of the popular songwriting team Giant, Baum and Kaye, writing songs with Bernie Baum and Florence Kaye. The majority of their work was used in Presley movies, although their most popular recording was \"(You're The) Devil in Disguise\" which reached No.3 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and No.1 on the U.K. singles chart in 1963. They were also credited with writing the American version of Osamu Tezuka's anime \"Kimba the White Lion\" (1965). Giant became a realtor in Middlesex County, New Jersey in his later years. His other memorable name was Billy Merman.",
"Tom Spahn\nBattle of the Giants – by Alan Menken and Howard Ashman – Musical Director and Orchestrator ; Real Life Funnies – by Alan Menken and Howard Ashman – Musical Director and Orchestrator ; City of Light – Composer with Beverly Ross ; Cairo – Musical Director and Orchestrator ; Sam Gray – Musical Director and Orchestrator - Bonnie Sanders ; Broadway Moon – Musical Director and Orchestrator ; The Road to Hollywood, by Michael Pace & Rob Preston – Musical Director and Orchestrator Spahn functioned a Musical Director and Orchestrator or Composer on numerous musicals, including the following:",
"The Giants (album)\n The Giants is a 1974 album featuring Oscar Peterson, Joe Pass, and Ray Brown. At the Grammy Awards of 1978, Peterson won the Grammy Award for Best Jazz Performance by a Soloist for his performance on this album. It was reissued on CD in 1995 by Original Jazz Classics.",
"Giants: Citizen Kabuto\n involved in the music for Giants. Interplay hired Morgan to compose the scores, although reports showed they initially hired Snow for the task. Morgan, however, could not fully concentrate on the task due to personal reasons and handed it over to Soule. Closing credits of the game listed only Morgan and Soule, and Soule compiled their works onto the original soundtrack of the game. Soule originally offered to autograph the soundtrack on its release in the United States; however, he stopped his offer when email feedback revealed many were intending to pirate his work through the peer-to-peer file sharing software Napster instead of buying it.",
"La caduta de' giganti\n La caduta de' giganti (The Fall of the Giants) is an opera by the composer Christoph Willibald Gluck. It takes the form of a dramma per musica in two acts. The Italian-language libretto is by Francesco Vanneschi. The opera premiered on 7 January 1746 at the King's Theatre, Haymarket in London.",
"The Giants (album)\nOscar Peterson – piano & organ ; Joe Pass – guitar ; Ray Brown - double bass ",
"Sarah Angliss\n by Richard Jones, at the Almedia, London). This included working with the compositions of Bernard Herrmann, Marius Constant, Nathan van Cleave, Fred Steiner and others. This included the creation of new sonic effects that blended with the original orchestral material. In October 2018, Angliss began writing a chamber opera, Giant, supported by a Jerwood Opera Writing Fellowship and Snape Music (now Britten Pears Arts). Giant tells the story of the Charles Byrne, known as The Irish Giant, who lived in fear that his remains would go on public display, against his wishes. The piece blends voices with viola da gamba, clavicymbalum and electronics.",
"The Giant (opera)\n The Giant (Великан, Velikan) is an opera in three acts by Sergei Prokofiev. The 12 page work was written for performance by the nine-year-old composer's family.",
"Giants in the Earth (opera)\n Moore's compositional style is highly vocal and features a speech-like, through-composed, \"lack of melodic repetition,\" with a, \"fluidity and natural feel [to] the vocal lines.\" Contrastingly, the lack of character development and liveliness, the almost complete lack of attention grabbing motifs, the length, and the premiere performance have all been criticized. Olin Downes wrote that the opera was mostly, \"recitative of little inherent significance.\" The premiere cast included soprano Brenda Miller Cooper as the central figure Beret, along with Josh Wheeler, Roy Johnson, Vivian Bauer, Sam Bertsche, Helen Dautrich, James Cosenza, Frances Paige, Raymond Sharp, and Edward Black. In 1963 Moore improved the orchestration and depiction of Beret at the request of Carl Fischer Music. The runners up for the Pulitzer that year were Quincy Porter's String Quartet No. 8, Peter Mennin's Symphony No. 5, and David Diamond's Symphony No. 3.",
"The Giant (opera)\n In 1899, at the age of eight, Prokofiev, who had already evinced remarkable musical abilities and had composed some piano pieces, was taken by his parents to Moscow, where he heard opera for the first time, (including Alexander Borodin's Prince Igor and Charles Gounod's Faust). Keen to write an opera of his own, he wrote out a libretto in three acts and six scenes. With the help of his mother, the music he devised for this was transcribed. The plot was elaborated from the children's games he played with his friends Egorka and Stenya, whose names are preserved in those of the characters. In the following year, the first act of the opera was given a premiere by the family at the estate of one of Prokofiev's uncles near Kaluga, with his aunt Tatiyana taking the title part, and the composer and his cousins taking the other leading roles. There is no record of further performances.",
"The Happy Prince and Other Tales\nEnglish singer and composer Liza Lehmann wrote the recitation The Selfish Giant in 1911. ; English light music composer Eric Coates wrote the orchestral Phantasy The Selfish Giant in 1925. In 1933–1934, violinist-composer Jenő Hubay adapted the story into a Hungarian language opera, Az önző óriás (Der selbstsüchtige Riese), Op. 124. The libretto was written by László Márkus and Jenő Mohácsi. ; A record album was produced in the 1940s by American Decca, narrated by Fredric March, with a full unnamed supporting cast. ; In 1971, Peter Sander wrote and produced an animated version of The Selfish Giant for CTV in Canada. The music was by ",
"Giants Are Small\n A film based on Giants Are Small’s production of A Dancer’s Dream for the New York Philharmonic's program, A Dancer's Dream: Two Works by Stravinsky was distributed in cinemas in the US by SpectiCast beginning September 2013. The film, directed by Habib Azar, features the complete production and behind-the-scenes footage, as well as an intermission feature on Stravinsky's history with the New York Philharmonic, including material from the New York Philharmonic Digital Archives.",
"Giants of the Prairies\n \"Giants of the Prairies\" is a song by the Canadian polka band the Kubasonics. It tells the story of the numerous \"world's biggest\" roadside attractions to be found in Western Canada, especially in small towns populated mostly by Ukrainian Canadians. Brian Cherwick, the leader of the Kubasonics, has a Ph.D. from the Centre for Ukrainian Canadian Studies at the University of Alberta, titled \"Polkas on the Prairies: Ukrainian Music and the Construction of Identity\".",
"The Selfish Giant (folk opera)\n The Selfish Giant is a folk opera composed and adapted by English songwriter Guy Chambers, based on the short story by Oscar Wilde (as part of The Happy Prince and Other Tales).",
"The Giant (opera)\n The opera is apparently nearly entirely lost, although Nestyev quotes some musical extracts. A terrible Giant tries to kidnap the little girl Ustinya, who is rescued by her friends Sergeyev and Yegorov with the assistance of a good King. However, according to Prokofiev's mother, the opera ended with the defeat of the King by the Giant. She wrote, \"Now at the time of extremely strict monarchy, this idea was not approved of by the paternal authority, and the young composer, very much put out by this censorship, would not consent to write an ending involving a reconciliation.\". Perhaps this refers to an earlier version, but scholarship has not advanced on this tricky point.",
"Giants (Chicane album)\n Giants is the fourth studio album by British electronic music artist Chicane. It was released in the United Kingdom on 2 August 2010. The album's first official single, \"Middledistancerunner\", featuring the vocals of Adam Young was released on the same day. The tracks \"Poppiholla\", \"Hiding All the Stars\" and \"Come Back\", which were supposed to be released on a Re-work EP in 2009, are also included on the album. The album debuted at #35 on the UK Albums Chart and at #2 on the UK Dance Albums Chart on 8 August 2010.",
"Giants (Dermot Kennedy song)\n \"Giants\" is a song by Irish singer-songwriter and musician Dermot Kennedy. It was released as a digital download on 24 June 2020 by Riggins, Interscope and Island. The track is credited for peaking at Number 12 in the UK Chart, being the lead single from Dermot Kennedy's Number 1 Album (UK, Scottish and Irish Charts) 'Without Fear' and being his only single on vinyl - released on a blue 7\" in 2020. The song peaked at number one on the Irish Singles Chart. The song was written by Stephen Kozmeniuk, Scott Harris and Dermot Kennedy."
] |
Who was the composer of To the Sky? | [
"Darko Dimitrov"
] | composer | To the Sky (Tijana song) | 778,998 | 94 | [
{
"id": "13929124",
"title": "To Shiver the Sky",
"text": " To Shiver the Sky is the third studio album by the American composer Christopher Tin. Released in 2020, it features texts about the history of flight ranging from Leonardo da Vinci's writings on flight to John F. Kennedy's \"We choose to go to the Moon\" speech. Creation of the album was funded by a Kickstarter campaign. The campaign met its goal in the first 36 hours, and went on to raise $221,415 (over 4 times the initial goal), making it the highest funded classical music Kickstarter project ever. The song \"Sogno di Volare\" was composed as a main theme for the 2016 video game Civilization VI.",
"score": "1.619129"
},
{
"id": "29781790",
"title": "Owl City",
"text": " is entitled An Airplane Carried Me to Bed, and was released July 13, 2010, via iTunes. In May 2010, Young collaborated with high-profile British electronic composer, producer, musician, and songwriter Nick Bracegirdle. Under his Chicane alias, Bracegirdle released the single \"Middledistancerunner\" on August 1, 2010, featuring Adam Young on vocals. This is the first single from the fourth Chicane album Giants. He also worked with famed Dutch producer Armin van Buuren, appearing on a track called 'Youtopia' from the van Buuren album Mirage. In September, \"To the Sky\" was officially released via iTunes on the soundtrack for Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'hoole. On ",
"score": "1.5706505"
},
{
"id": "13116122",
"title": "To the Sky (Tijana song)",
"text": " \"To the Sky\" is a song by Macedonian Serbian singer Tijana. It was composed by Darko Dimitrov and Lazar Cvetkovski, while the lyrics were written by Dimitrov and Elena Risteska Ivanovska. It was internally selected to represent Macedonia at the Eurovision Song Contest 2014 in Denmark. The song was revealed on 22 February 2014, and was made available for digital download the next day through the iTunes Store.",
"score": "1.5652573"
},
{
"id": "32021372",
"title": "Roger Nixon",
"text": "Stage ; The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky, Opera in 4 scenes (1967); libretto by Ray Benedict West, Jr. adapted from the short story by Stephen Crane Orchestra ; Air for Strings for string orchestra (1948) ; Mooney's Grove Suite (1964, revised 1967) ; Three Dances (1962) ; Overture Concertante ; Concerto for violin and orchestra (1950s) ; Reflections for flute and band (1965) ; Elegiac Rhapsody for viola and orchestra; initially composed as a separate work, used as movement II of the Viola Concerto ; Concerto for viola and orchestra (1969) ; Two Elegies for solo cello and cello ensemble ",
"score": "1.5633726"
},
{
"id": "31258919",
"title": "Kevin Puts",
"text": " and premiered by the University of Texas Wind Ensemble, Jerry Junkin, conductor ; Millennium Canons (band version arr. Mark Spede) (2003), commissioned and premiered by The University of Texas Wind Ensemble, Jerry Junkin, conductor ; SATB Choir ; To Touch the Sky (2012), SSAATTBB, commissioned by the Thelma Hunter Fund of the American Composers Forum and Conspirare, Craig Hella Johnson, conductor ; If I Were A Swan (2012), SSAATTBB, commissioned by the Thelma Hunter Fund of the American Composers Forum and Conspirare, Craig Hella Johnson, conductor ; Concertos ; Concerto for Marimba and Orchestra (1997), commissioned by the Vermont Symphony Orchestra and the Kobe Ensemble of Japan, Makoto Nakura, marimba ; Concerto ",
"score": "1.5426241"
},
{
"id": "29220347",
"title": "Sicmonic",
"text": " The band's debut album, Look to the Skies, was released on August 11, 2006. The album's first single, \"Fist to Throat\" featured a Fallen Films released music video and was shot behind their rehearsal studio in Phoenix, Arizona. The video was directed and edited by Freddy Allen. The album features a cover of the Charlie Daniels Band's \"The Devil Went Down to Georgia\". Soon, Look to the Skies caught the interest of Italian label Aural Music, and brought forth the second album, Somnambulist. Before the writing of Somnambulist, Douglas Berry left the band.",
"score": "1.5385954"
},
{
"id": "30702952",
"title": "Head to the Sky",
"text": " Head to the Sky was produced by Joe Wissert with bandleader Maurice White serving as a musical director on the album. The LP was also recorded at Clover Recorders Studios, Hollywood, California.",
"score": "1.5254257"
},
{
"id": "6979787",
"title": "Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow",
"text": " The composer Edward Shearmur wrote the film's orchestral score in the style of Hollywood's golden-age composers, and the film's end-title sequence featured a new recording of the song \"Over the Rainbow\" sung by the American jazz singer Jane Monheit, which were all featured on Sony Classical's original motion picture soundtrack recording. La-La Land Records released a limited edition 2-disc set in 2017 with the complete score.",
"score": "1.5183518"
},
{
"id": "877668",
"title": "Richard Arnell",
"text": " Schwartz), and at Hofstra University, New York, from 1968 to 1970, he taught at Trinity College of Music in London between 1947 and 1987, where his students included Peter Tahourdin (1949–52), electronic composer David Hewson, who worked with him on films including Dilemma (1981), Doctor in the Sky (1984), Toulouse-Lautrec (1986), and The Light of the World (1989), was one of his pupils. Arnell composed the music for The Land (1942), a 45-minute documentary film directed by Robert J. Flaherty for the US Department of Agriculture. He was also commissioned by the Ford Motor Company to compose a symphonic suite inspired by the workers in the factory at Dagenham. The resulting work ",
"score": "1.5176333"
},
{
"id": "8032333",
"title": "Alexander Perls",
"text": "Sky Fighters (2005) Les Chevaliers du ciel (original title) ; Return2Sender (2005) - Composer ; Suicide Room (2011) Sala samobójców (original title) - Soundtrack Lyricist ",
"score": "1.5107682"
},
{
"id": "13195286",
"title": "Face to the Sky",
"text": " \"Face to the Sky\" is a song by Welsh musician and composer John Cale. It was released as a digital single on 29 August 2012 and as 7\" vinyl record on 25 September 2012. It was the second single from Cale's new album Shifty Adventures in Nookie Wood. Music and lyrics was written by Cale himself. As B-side of this single is \"Living with You (Organic Mix)\". Video for this song, directed by Tom Scholefield (a.k.a. Kon Om Pax), was premiered at Stereogum. The original studio version of the song \"Face to the Sky\" featured alongside Cale (vocals, piano, percussion) also Dustin Boyer (electric guitar), Michael Jerome Moore (cajón) and Joey Maramba (bass guitar).",
"score": "1.5035381"
},
{
"id": "32661192",
"title": "Marjan Mozetich",
"text": "A Dance Toward Heaven (1994) for orchestra ; L’esprit Chantant (1995) for violin and piano, written for the Montreal International Music Competition ; The passion of Angels (1995) for two harps and orchestra ; Postcards from the Sky (1996), a three-movement work for string orchestra written for and premiered by the Thirteen Strings of Ottawa ; Time to Leave (1997) for violin, clarinet, trumpet, bass, marimba and piano, written for Array's 25th anniversary concert ; Hymn of Ascension (1998) for harmonium and string quartet, premiered at the Ottawa Chamber Music Festival ; Songline to Heaven and a Dance to Earth (1999) for string orchestra, premiered at ",
"score": "1.5034893"
},
{
"id": "5382147",
"title": "Musicians of the Sky",
"text": " Musicians of the Sky (French:Les Musiciens du ciel) is a 1940 French language motion picture drama directed by Georges Lacombe, based on novel \"Musiciens Du Ceil\" by René Lefèvre who co-wrote screenplay with Jean Ferry. The music score is by Arthur Honegger and Arthur Hoérée. The film stars Michèle Morgan, Michel Simon and René Lefèvre. The principal actors Michèle Morgan and Michel Simon, had earlier appeared together in Port of Shadows (1938), but then they had not been comrades.",
"score": "1.502639"
},
{
"id": "11963587",
"title": "Allan Rae (composer)",
"text": "Listen to the Wind (Chorus and Orchestra) 1973 ; Keltic Suite (SATB unaccompanied) 1993 ; Transition (SATB and Orchestra) 1993 ; Pacific Suite (SATB and String Orchestra) 1994 ; Gaia – Earth Images 2009 ",
"score": "1.5025122"
},
{
"id": "12612252",
"title": "Look Up to the Sky",
"text": " Oginome had the idea of collaborating with Shinichi Osawa after listening to a CD of Ōsawa's band Mondo Grosso, and she wanted a similar groove to her next musical project. \"Look Up to the Sky\" was written by Ua, who was pregnant with her first son Nijirō Murakami at the time.",
"score": "1.4865983"
},
{
"id": "32008680",
"title": "Aaron Jay Kernis",
"text": " Aaron Kernis found immediate success as a composer when his work Dream of the Morning Sky was premiered in 1983 by the New York Philharmonic with Zubin Mehta conducting. He was only 23 at the time but won unanimous praise for an incident that took place. In an open rehearsal, in front of an audience, Zubin Mehta stopped the orchestra to complain loudly about the vagueness of the score. Rather than being cowed by the strong-willed conductor, Aaron Jay Kernis simply replied, \"Just read what's there.\" The audience applauded young Kernis for sticking up for his work, and within weeks the story received national attention. Kernis has written over 30 works for orchestra including concertos for cello, english horn, violin, viola, flute, horn, and toy piano. His key orchestral works include Musica Celestis, New Era Dance, Lament and Prayer, Newly Drawn Sky, and Colored Field.",
"score": "1.4795692"
},
{
"id": "8235572",
"title": "Christopher Bond (composer)",
"text": " locally and nationally on BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 3 and Classic FM. In 2012, his work 'Islands in the Sky' was premiered at the International Tuba Euphonium Conference in Linz, Austria. In the same year, 'The Diamond Jubilee Fanfare' was commissioned and performed in the presence of Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. More recently in 2015, his work 'Aristotle's Air' won the Composition Prize at Brass in Concert, held at Sage Gateshead. The same work was performed by Brassband Willebroek and the National Band of New Zealand at the 2017 World Music Contest in Kerkrade. Christopher wrote and compiled the soundtrack for 'Magic in the Skies', the annual summer season of firework displays held at Land's End in Cornwall, featuring the voice of Miriam ",
"score": "1.4772468"
},
{
"id": "13960068",
"title": "To Fly!",
"text": " and experienced symphonic\" 49-piece orchestra in California at The Burbank Studios. Segall was chosen because he was considered a great classical composer whose works have \"an air of sophistication and elegance, which would maintain the steady rhythm and pulse of the film.\" The score was the first in history to use a keyed bugle, which is also depicted in the film's opening sequence: during the gathering for Ezekiel's ascent, a small instrumental team plays a fife, drum, clarinet, and B♭ keyed bugle. The score was later edited by Richard R. McCurdy and mixed by Dan Wallin; the latter was assisted by ",
"score": "1.476264"
},
{
"id": "5369024",
"title": "Julian Wachner",
"text": " premiered by the Back Bay Chorale in 2009, weaves together poems by John Clare, Emily Dickinson and Sara Teasdale in a libretto compiled by soprano Marie-Ève Munger. Originally a companion piece for Brahms's Ein Deutsches Requiem, the work charts the \"life and death of two lovers\" in eight movements. In 2012, Wachner collaborated with visual artist Erika Harrsch to create a work for The River to River Festival. The resulting installation, titled Inverted Sky, featured a solo flute score with live electronic processing. This accompanied a collection of kites built from various world currencies that were released into the air in time with the music.",
"score": "1.4762089"
},
{
"id": "3023880",
"title": "The Vision (film)",
"text": " Bill Connor wrote the original music for the film. The film features the sound track Watch the Skies by Ken Howard.",
"score": "1.4745355"
}
] | [
"To Shiver the Sky\n To Shiver the Sky is the third studio album by the American composer Christopher Tin. Released in 2020, it features texts about the history of flight ranging from Leonardo da Vinci's writings on flight to John F. Kennedy's \"We choose to go to the Moon\" speech. Creation of the album was funded by a Kickstarter campaign. The campaign met its goal in the first 36 hours, and went on to raise $221,415 (over 4 times the initial goal), making it the highest funded classical music Kickstarter project ever. The song \"Sogno di Volare\" was composed as a main theme for the 2016 video game Civilization VI.",
"Owl City\n is entitled An Airplane Carried Me to Bed, and was released July 13, 2010, via iTunes. In May 2010, Young collaborated with high-profile British electronic composer, producer, musician, and songwriter Nick Bracegirdle. Under his Chicane alias, Bracegirdle released the single \"Middledistancerunner\" on August 1, 2010, featuring Adam Young on vocals. This is the first single from the fourth Chicane album Giants. He also worked with famed Dutch producer Armin van Buuren, appearing on a track called 'Youtopia' from the van Buuren album Mirage. In September, \"To the Sky\" was officially released via iTunes on the soundtrack for Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'hoole. On ",
"To the Sky (Tijana song)\n \"To the Sky\" is a song by Macedonian Serbian singer Tijana. It was composed by Darko Dimitrov and Lazar Cvetkovski, while the lyrics were written by Dimitrov and Elena Risteska Ivanovska. It was internally selected to represent Macedonia at the Eurovision Song Contest 2014 in Denmark. The song was revealed on 22 February 2014, and was made available for digital download the next day through the iTunes Store.",
"Roger Nixon\nStage ; The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky, Opera in 4 scenes (1967); libretto by Ray Benedict West, Jr. adapted from the short story by Stephen Crane Orchestra ; Air for Strings for string orchestra (1948) ; Mooney's Grove Suite (1964, revised 1967) ; Three Dances (1962) ; Overture Concertante ; Concerto for violin and orchestra (1950s) ; Reflections for flute and band (1965) ; Elegiac Rhapsody for viola and orchestra; initially composed as a separate work, used as movement II of the Viola Concerto ; Concerto for viola and orchestra (1969) ; Two Elegies for solo cello and cello ensemble ",
"Kevin Puts\n and premiered by the University of Texas Wind Ensemble, Jerry Junkin, conductor ; Millennium Canons (band version arr. Mark Spede) (2003), commissioned and premiered by The University of Texas Wind Ensemble, Jerry Junkin, conductor ; SATB Choir ; To Touch the Sky (2012), SSAATTBB, commissioned by the Thelma Hunter Fund of the American Composers Forum and Conspirare, Craig Hella Johnson, conductor ; If I Were A Swan (2012), SSAATTBB, commissioned by the Thelma Hunter Fund of the American Composers Forum and Conspirare, Craig Hella Johnson, conductor ; Concertos ; Concerto for Marimba and Orchestra (1997), commissioned by the Vermont Symphony Orchestra and the Kobe Ensemble of Japan, Makoto Nakura, marimba ; Concerto ",
"Sicmonic\n The band's debut album, Look to the Skies, was released on August 11, 2006. The album's first single, \"Fist to Throat\" featured a Fallen Films released music video and was shot behind their rehearsal studio in Phoenix, Arizona. The video was directed and edited by Freddy Allen. The album features a cover of the Charlie Daniels Band's \"The Devil Went Down to Georgia\". Soon, Look to the Skies caught the interest of Italian label Aural Music, and brought forth the second album, Somnambulist. Before the writing of Somnambulist, Douglas Berry left the band.",
"Head to the Sky\n Head to the Sky was produced by Joe Wissert with bandleader Maurice White serving as a musical director on the album. The LP was also recorded at Clover Recorders Studios, Hollywood, California.",
"Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow\n The composer Edward Shearmur wrote the film's orchestral score in the style of Hollywood's golden-age composers, and the film's end-title sequence featured a new recording of the song \"Over the Rainbow\" sung by the American jazz singer Jane Monheit, which were all featured on Sony Classical's original motion picture soundtrack recording. La-La Land Records released a limited edition 2-disc set in 2017 with the complete score.",
"Richard Arnell\n Schwartz), and at Hofstra University, New York, from 1968 to 1970, he taught at Trinity College of Music in London between 1947 and 1987, where his students included Peter Tahourdin (1949–52), electronic composer David Hewson, who worked with him on films including Dilemma (1981), Doctor in the Sky (1984), Toulouse-Lautrec (1986), and The Light of the World (1989), was one of his pupils. Arnell composed the music for The Land (1942), a 45-minute documentary film directed by Robert J. Flaherty for the US Department of Agriculture. He was also commissioned by the Ford Motor Company to compose a symphonic suite inspired by the workers in the factory at Dagenham. The resulting work ",
"Alexander Perls\nSky Fighters (2005) Les Chevaliers du ciel (original title) ; Return2Sender (2005) - Composer ; Suicide Room (2011) Sala samobójców (original title) - Soundtrack Lyricist ",
"Face to the Sky\n \"Face to the Sky\" is a song by Welsh musician and composer John Cale. It was released as a digital single on 29 August 2012 and as 7\" vinyl record on 25 September 2012. It was the second single from Cale's new album Shifty Adventures in Nookie Wood. Music and lyrics was written by Cale himself. As B-side of this single is \"Living with You (Organic Mix)\". Video for this song, directed by Tom Scholefield (a.k.a. Kon Om Pax), was premiered at Stereogum. The original studio version of the song \"Face to the Sky\" featured alongside Cale (vocals, piano, percussion) also Dustin Boyer (electric guitar), Michael Jerome Moore (cajón) and Joey Maramba (bass guitar).",
"Marjan Mozetich\nA Dance Toward Heaven (1994) for orchestra ; L’esprit Chantant (1995) for violin and piano, written for the Montreal International Music Competition ; The passion of Angels (1995) for two harps and orchestra ; Postcards from the Sky (1996), a three-movement work for string orchestra written for and premiered by the Thirteen Strings of Ottawa ; Time to Leave (1997) for violin, clarinet, trumpet, bass, marimba and piano, written for Array's 25th anniversary concert ; Hymn of Ascension (1998) for harmonium and string quartet, premiered at the Ottawa Chamber Music Festival ; Songline to Heaven and a Dance to Earth (1999) for string orchestra, premiered at ",
"Musicians of the Sky\n Musicians of the Sky (French:Les Musiciens du ciel) is a 1940 French language motion picture drama directed by Georges Lacombe, based on novel \"Musiciens Du Ceil\" by René Lefèvre who co-wrote screenplay with Jean Ferry. The music score is by Arthur Honegger and Arthur Hoérée. The film stars Michèle Morgan, Michel Simon and René Lefèvre. The principal actors Michèle Morgan and Michel Simon, had earlier appeared together in Port of Shadows (1938), but then they had not been comrades.",
"Allan Rae (composer)\nListen to the Wind (Chorus and Orchestra) 1973 ; Keltic Suite (SATB unaccompanied) 1993 ; Transition (SATB and Orchestra) 1993 ; Pacific Suite (SATB and String Orchestra) 1994 ; Gaia – Earth Images 2009 ",
"Look Up to the Sky\n Oginome had the idea of collaborating with Shinichi Osawa after listening to a CD of Ōsawa's band Mondo Grosso, and she wanted a similar groove to her next musical project. \"Look Up to the Sky\" was written by Ua, who was pregnant with her first son Nijirō Murakami at the time.",
"Aaron Jay Kernis\n Aaron Kernis found immediate success as a composer when his work Dream of the Morning Sky was premiered in 1983 by the New York Philharmonic with Zubin Mehta conducting. He was only 23 at the time but won unanimous praise for an incident that took place. In an open rehearsal, in front of an audience, Zubin Mehta stopped the orchestra to complain loudly about the vagueness of the score. Rather than being cowed by the strong-willed conductor, Aaron Jay Kernis simply replied, \"Just read what's there.\" The audience applauded young Kernis for sticking up for his work, and within weeks the story received national attention. Kernis has written over 30 works for orchestra including concertos for cello, english horn, violin, viola, flute, horn, and toy piano. His key orchestral works include Musica Celestis, New Era Dance, Lament and Prayer, Newly Drawn Sky, and Colored Field.",
"Christopher Bond (composer)\n locally and nationally on BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 3 and Classic FM. In 2012, his work 'Islands in the Sky' was premiered at the International Tuba Euphonium Conference in Linz, Austria. In the same year, 'The Diamond Jubilee Fanfare' was commissioned and performed in the presence of Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. More recently in 2015, his work 'Aristotle's Air' won the Composition Prize at Brass in Concert, held at Sage Gateshead. The same work was performed by Brassband Willebroek and the National Band of New Zealand at the 2017 World Music Contest in Kerkrade. Christopher wrote and compiled the soundtrack for 'Magic in the Skies', the annual summer season of firework displays held at Land's End in Cornwall, featuring the voice of Miriam ",
"To Fly!\n and experienced symphonic\" 49-piece orchestra in California at The Burbank Studios. Segall was chosen because he was considered a great classical composer whose works have \"an air of sophistication and elegance, which would maintain the steady rhythm and pulse of the film.\" The score was the first in history to use a keyed bugle, which is also depicted in the film's opening sequence: during the gathering for Ezekiel's ascent, a small instrumental team plays a fife, drum, clarinet, and B♭ keyed bugle. The score was later edited by Richard R. McCurdy and mixed by Dan Wallin; the latter was assisted by ",
"Julian Wachner\n premiered by the Back Bay Chorale in 2009, weaves together poems by John Clare, Emily Dickinson and Sara Teasdale in a libretto compiled by soprano Marie-Ève Munger. Originally a companion piece for Brahms's Ein Deutsches Requiem, the work charts the \"life and death of two lovers\" in eight movements. In 2012, Wachner collaborated with visual artist Erika Harrsch to create a work for The River to River Festival. The resulting installation, titled Inverted Sky, featured a solo flute score with live electronic processing. This accompanied a collection of kites built from various world currencies that were released into the air in time with the music.",
"The Vision (film)\n Bill Connor wrote the original music for the film. The film features the sound track Watch the Skies by Ken Howard."
] |
Who was the composer of Say When? | [
"Ray Henderson",
"Raymond Brost"
] | composer | Say When (musical) | 5,700,988 | 69 | [
{
"id": "7027810",
"title": "Say When (musical)",
"text": " Say When is an American musical with music by Ray Henderson, lyrics by Ted Koehler, and a musical book by Jack McGowan. Directed by Bertram Harrison, the production opened on Broadway at the Imperial Theatre where it ran from November 8, 1934, through January 12, 1935 for a total of 76 performances.",
"score": "1.6548967"
},
{
"id": "3813557",
"title": "Bruce Saylor",
"text": " Bruce Saylor (born April 24, 1946, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is an American composer.",
"score": "1.5900533"
},
{
"id": "492591",
"title": "Samuel Say",
"text": "Attribution ",
"score": "1.5450238"
},
{
"id": "31382938",
"title": "Kopatchinskaja-Say",
"text": " Kopatchinskaja-Say is the first studio album by violinist Patricia Kopatchinskaja (1977) from Moldova, and the 16th for pianist and composer Fazıl Say (1970) from Turkey. Recorded in October 2007 in Köln, Germany, it was released by Naïve Classique on September 15, 2008. Kopatchinskaja-Say features the music of Beethoven, Ravel, Bartók, and an original composition by Say.",
"score": "1.5142579"
},
{
"id": "10140170",
"title": "Paul Stanley (composer)",
"text": " Paul Stanley (né Sonnenberg) (February 8, 1848 – March 14, 1909) was a German-born American composer and vaudeville comedian who some credit (but most do not) with writing the music for the ditty Ta-ra-ra Boom-de-ay for Henry F. Sayers' 1891 musical entertainment, Tuxedo.",
"score": "1.481257"
},
{
"id": "3257788",
"title": "Say Say Say",
"text": " \"Say Say Say\" is a song written and performed by English musician Paul McCartney and American singer Michael Jackson, released in October 1983 as the lead single to McCartney's 1983 album Pipes of Peace. Produced by George Martin, the song was recorded during production of McCartney's 1982 Tug of War album, about a year before the release of \"The Girl Is Mine\", the pair's first duet from Jackson's album Thriller (1982). After its release in October 1983, \"Say Say Say\" became Jackson's seventh top-ten hit inside a year. It was a number one hit in the United States (his sixth number-one single there), Canada, Norway, Sweden and several other countries, reached number ",
"score": "1.4719356"
},
{
"id": "11821343",
"title": "...Say When",
"text": " ...Say When is the fifth studio album by American singer Nicolette Larson. It was produced by Emory Gordy Jr. and Tony Brown, and released by MCA Records in 1985.",
"score": "1.4655827"
},
{
"id": "611448",
"title": "People Will Say We're in Love",
"text": " In 1959 the British composer Peter Dickinson used part of the music in his Monologue for string orchestra, principally the melodic line under the lyric \"People will say we're in...\".",
"score": "1.4581232"
},
{
"id": "877665",
"title": "Richard Arnell",
"text": " Richard Anthony Sayer Arnell (15 September 1917 – 10 April 2009) was an English composer of classical music. Arnell composed in all the established genres for the concert stage, and his list of works includes six completed symphonies (a seventh was realised by Martin Yates) and six string quartets. At the Trinity College of Music, he \"promoted a pioneering interest in film scores and electronic music\" and jazz.",
"score": "1.4571438"
},
{
"id": "32897587",
"title": "Ted Koehler",
"text": "Earl Carroll's Vanities of 1932 (1932) – revue – co-composer and co-lyricist with Harold Arlen ; Say When (1934) – Musical – lyricist ; Now I Know (1944) – Musical – lyricist ",
"score": "1.4476693"
},
{
"id": "3257793",
"title": "Say Say Say",
"text": " Following the release of Thriller and most of its singles, \"Say Say Say\" was released on 3 October 1983 by Parlophone in the UK and Columbia Records in the US. It remained atop Billboards Hot 100 for six weeks and became Jackson's seventh top ten hit of 1983, breaking a record that until then was held jointly by The Beatles and Elvis Presley. Also in the US, \"Say Say Say\" reached number two on the R&B chart (behind \"Time Will Reveal\" by DeBarge) and number three on the Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks chart. Billboard also stated that the recording earned \"top spot as Jackson's best-performing Hot 100 chart single\" after leading the US charts for six ",
"score": "1.4382441"
},
{
"id": "26542178",
"title": "Arthur Gershwin",
"text": " Arthur composed the two-act musical A Lady Says Yes (1945), which is set in 1545 and 1945 and takes place in Venice, Washington D.C., and China. It ran on Broadway from January 10 to March 25, 1945, at the Broadhurst Theatre and had 87 performances. His song Invitation to the Blues with lyrics by Doris Fisher, was used in the film Tootsie (1982) and has been recorded by Julie London.",
"score": "1.429693"
},
{
"id": "329003",
"title": "Wally Harper",
"text": " Harper was born in Akron, Ohio. His mother was a music teacher, and by age 12 he played the piano in church. He was a graduate of the New England Conservatory and the Juilliard School of Music, and first worked preparing vocal arrangements for the Broadway musical Half a Sixpence in 1965. Harper composed two musicals with book and lyrics by Sherman Yellen. The first was Say Yes! which was produced at the Berkshire Theatre Festival, Stockbridge, Massachusetts in 2000. The second was Josephine Tonight!, which was produced (posthumously) by Theatre Building Chicago in 2006, and received praise from The Chicago Sun Times for ",
"score": "1.4169767"
},
{
"id": "3813562",
"title": "Bruce Saylor",
"text": " He has also been composer in residence at The Yard, an artists’ colony for dancers and choreographers on Martha's Vineyard. Additionally, Saylor has composed numerous works for religious or ceremonial occasions in a tonal idiom: O Freedom! for President Bill Clinton’s Second Inaugural, Grand Central for the rededication of Grand Central Terminal, Fanfares and Echoes for the Bibliothèque Nationale de France, In Praise of Jerusalem (Psalm 122) for Pope John Paul II’s visit to New York City, two Christmas recordings for soprano Jessye Norman, and concert arrangements of sacred music by Duke Ellington for Norman’s Honor! festival for Carnegie Hall in 2009. Saylor has written dozens of anthems, hymn tunes, and service music for church and concert use.",
"score": "1.413445"
},
{
"id": "8909926",
"title": "Lambert de Sayve",
"text": " Lambert de Sayve, also Saive or Seave (Saive, near Liège 1548 or 1549 – Linz 1614), was a Flemish composer.",
"score": "1.4126346"
},
{
"id": "33024280",
"title": "Saya Tin",
"text": " Saya Tin (ဆရာတင်, ; 12 February 1894 – 8 August 1950) was a Burmese composer. He was one of three well known pre-war composers with the name Saya Tin. The others were Nandawshae Saya Tin and Thahaya Saya Tin. He is best known for composing \"Kaba Ma Kyei\", the national anthem of Burma (Myanmar).",
"score": "1.407521"
},
{
"id": "10140172",
"title": "Paul Stanley (composer)",
"text": " at Boston's Lyceum Theatre; and performances billed as \"Paul Stanley, the international comedian\" at the Atlantic Garden in Brooklyn, New York. Stanley's claims to be the writer of the music for Henry F. Sayer's production of Tuxedo are discussed and rejected in several sources that conclude that he was not the writer. Stanley's health began to fail after the 1906 San Francisco earthquake left him near destitute. He and his wife later moved to Denver, where he died in 1909 at the age of sixty-one. News of his death was carried in newspapers nationwide, including The New York Times, Chicago Daily Tribune and Los Angeles Times. In a column printed some two months after his death, a musician friend ",
"score": "1.4050558"
},
{
"id": "9643945",
"title": "List of composers by nationality",
"text": " 1956) • Mabel Wheeler Daniels (1878–1971) • Michael Daugherty (born 1954) • Mario Davidovsky (1934–2019) • Don Davis (born 1957) • Katherine K. Davis (1892–1980) • Reginald De Koven (1859–1920) • Edmond Dédé (1827–1903) • David Del Tredici (born 1937) • Norman Dello Joio (1913–2008) • Stuart Dempster (born 1936) • James Di Pasquale (born 1941) • Rocco Di Pietro (born 1949) • David Diamond (1915–2005) • Clarence Dickinson (1873–1969) • Emma Lou Diemer (born 1927) • Fannie Charles Dillon (1881–1947) • Lawrence Dillon (born 1959) • Charles Dodge (born 1942) • Daniel Dorff (born 1956) • Celius Dougherty (1902–1986) • ",
"score": "1.4001747"
},
{
"id": "3257792",
"title": "Say Say Say",
"text": " what he wants in music and he has very firm ideas.\" Jackson also spoke of the experience in his autobiography, Moonwalk. The younger singer revealed that the collaboration boosted his confidence, as Quincy Jones—producer of Thriller—was not present to correct his mistakes. Jackson added that he and McCartney worked as equals, stating, \"Paul never had to carry me in that studio.\" According to Musicnotes.com by Alfred Music Publishing, \"Say Say Say\" was performed in common time, with a dance beat of 116 beats per minute. It is in the key of B minor and sung in a vocal range from F3 to B4. The lyrics to \"Say Say Say\" reflect an attempt to \"win back\" a girl's affection; Deseret News considered the song to be a \"pleading kind of love song\".",
"score": "1.3975903"
},
{
"id": "3257791",
"title": "Say Say Say",
"text": " in live performances, I get paid.\" McCartney's words influenced Jackson's later purchase of ATV Music Publishing in 1985. McCartney played several instruments on \"Say Say Say\", including percussion, synthesizer, guitar, and bass guitar. The harmonica was played by Chris Smith and the rhythm guitar was played by David Williams. The song was engineered by former Beatles sound engineer, Geoff Emerick. The production of \"Say Say Say\" was completed in February 1983, after it had been refined and overdubbed at Cherokee Studios in California. George Martin, who had worked with the Beatles, produced the song. He said of his experience with Jackson: \"He actually does radiate an aura when he comes into the studio, there's no question about it. He's not a musician in the sense that Paul is ... but he does ",
"score": "1.389112"
}
] | [
"Say When (musical)\n Say When is an American musical with music by Ray Henderson, lyrics by Ted Koehler, and a musical book by Jack McGowan. Directed by Bertram Harrison, the production opened on Broadway at the Imperial Theatre where it ran from November 8, 1934, through January 12, 1935 for a total of 76 performances.",
"Bruce Saylor\n Bruce Saylor (born April 24, 1946, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is an American composer.",
"Samuel Say\nAttribution ",
"Kopatchinskaja-Say\n Kopatchinskaja-Say is the first studio album by violinist Patricia Kopatchinskaja (1977) from Moldova, and the 16th for pianist and composer Fazıl Say (1970) from Turkey. Recorded in October 2007 in Köln, Germany, it was released by Naïve Classique on September 15, 2008. Kopatchinskaja-Say features the music of Beethoven, Ravel, Bartók, and an original composition by Say.",
"Paul Stanley (composer)\n Paul Stanley (né Sonnenberg) (February 8, 1848 – March 14, 1909) was a German-born American composer and vaudeville comedian who some credit (but most do not) with writing the music for the ditty Ta-ra-ra Boom-de-ay for Henry F. Sayers' 1891 musical entertainment, Tuxedo.",
"Say Say Say\n \"Say Say Say\" is a song written and performed by English musician Paul McCartney and American singer Michael Jackson, released in October 1983 as the lead single to McCartney's 1983 album Pipes of Peace. Produced by George Martin, the song was recorded during production of McCartney's 1982 Tug of War album, about a year before the release of \"The Girl Is Mine\", the pair's first duet from Jackson's album Thriller (1982). After its release in October 1983, \"Say Say Say\" became Jackson's seventh top-ten hit inside a year. It was a number one hit in the United States (his sixth number-one single there), Canada, Norway, Sweden and several other countries, reached number ",
"...Say When\n ...Say When is the fifth studio album by American singer Nicolette Larson. It was produced by Emory Gordy Jr. and Tony Brown, and released by MCA Records in 1985.",
"People Will Say We're in Love\n In 1959 the British composer Peter Dickinson used part of the music in his Monologue for string orchestra, principally the melodic line under the lyric \"People will say we're in...\".",
"Richard Arnell\n Richard Anthony Sayer Arnell (15 September 1917 – 10 April 2009) was an English composer of classical music. Arnell composed in all the established genres for the concert stage, and his list of works includes six completed symphonies (a seventh was realised by Martin Yates) and six string quartets. At the Trinity College of Music, he \"promoted a pioneering interest in film scores and electronic music\" and jazz.",
"Ted Koehler\nEarl Carroll's Vanities of 1932 (1932) – revue – co-composer and co-lyricist with Harold Arlen ; Say When (1934) – Musical – lyricist ; Now I Know (1944) – Musical – lyricist ",
"Say Say Say\n Following the release of Thriller and most of its singles, \"Say Say Say\" was released on 3 October 1983 by Parlophone in the UK and Columbia Records in the US. It remained atop Billboards Hot 100 for six weeks and became Jackson's seventh top ten hit of 1983, breaking a record that until then was held jointly by The Beatles and Elvis Presley. Also in the US, \"Say Say Say\" reached number two on the R&B chart (behind \"Time Will Reveal\" by DeBarge) and number three on the Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks chart. Billboard also stated that the recording earned \"top spot as Jackson's best-performing Hot 100 chart single\" after leading the US charts for six ",
"Arthur Gershwin\n Arthur composed the two-act musical A Lady Says Yes (1945), which is set in 1545 and 1945 and takes place in Venice, Washington D.C., and China. It ran on Broadway from January 10 to March 25, 1945, at the Broadhurst Theatre and had 87 performances. His song Invitation to the Blues with lyrics by Doris Fisher, was used in the film Tootsie (1982) and has been recorded by Julie London.",
"Wally Harper\n Harper was born in Akron, Ohio. His mother was a music teacher, and by age 12 he played the piano in church. He was a graduate of the New England Conservatory and the Juilliard School of Music, and first worked preparing vocal arrangements for the Broadway musical Half a Sixpence in 1965. Harper composed two musicals with book and lyrics by Sherman Yellen. The first was Say Yes! which was produced at the Berkshire Theatre Festival, Stockbridge, Massachusetts in 2000. The second was Josephine Tonight!, which was produced (posthumously) by Theatre Building Chicago in 2006, and received praise from The Chicago Sun Times for ",
"Bruce Saylor\n He has also been composer in residence at The Yard, an artists’ colony for dancers and choreographers on Martha's Vineyard. Additionally, Saylor has composed numerous works for religious or ceremonial occasions in a tonal idiom: O Freedom! for President Bill Clinton’s Second Inaugural, Grand Central for the rededication of Grand Central Terminal, Fanfares and Echoes for the Bibliothèque Nationale de France, In Praise of Jerusalem (Psalm 122) for Pope John Paul II’s visit to New York City, two Christmas recordings for soprano Jessye Norman, and concert arrangements of sacred music by Duke Ellington for Norman’s Honor! festival for Carnegie Hall in 2009. Saylor has written dozens of anthems, hymn tunes, and service music for church and concert use.",
"Lambert de Sayve\n Lambert de Sayve, also Saive or Seave (Saive, near Liège 1548 or 1549 – Linz 1614), was a Flemish composer.",
"Saya Tin\n Saya Tin (ဆရာတင်, ; 12 February 1894 – 8 August 1950) was a Burmese composer. He was one of three well known pre-war composers with the name Saya Tin. The others were Nandawshae Saya Tin and Thahaya Saya Tin. He is best known for composing \"Kaba Ma Kyei\", the national anthem of Burma (Myanmar).",
"Paul Stanley (composer)\n at Boston's Lyceum Theatre; and performances billed as \"Paul Stanley, the international comedian\" at the Atlantic Garden in Brooklyn, New York. Stanley's claims to be the writer of the music for Henry F. Sayer's production of Tuxedo are discussed and rejected in several sources that conclude that he was not the writer. Stanley's health began to fail after the 1906 San Francisco earthquake left him near destitute. He and his wife later moved to Denver, where he died in 1909 at the age of sixty-one. News of his death was carried in newspapers nationwide, including The New York Times, Chicago Daily Tribune and Los Angeles Times. In a column printed some two months after his death, a musician friend ",
"List of composers by nationality\n 1956) • Mabel Wheeler Daniels (1878–1971) • Michael Daugherty (born 1954) • Mario Davidovsky (1934–2019) • Don Davis (born 1957) • Katherine K. Davis (1892–1980) • Reginald De Koven (1859–1920) • Edmond Dédé (1827–1903) • David Del Tredici (born 1937) • Norman Dello Joio (1913–2008) • Stuart Dempster (born 1936) • James Di Pasquale (born 1941) • Rocco Di Pietro (born 1949) • David Diamond (1915–2005) • Clarence Dickinson (1873–1969) • Emma Lou Diemer (born 1927) • Fannie Charles Dillon (1881–1947) • Lawrence Dillon (born 1959) • Charles Dodge (born 1942) • Daniel Dorff (born 1956) • Celius Dougherty (1902–1986) • ",
"Say Say Say\n what he wants in music and he has very firm ideas.\" Jackson also spoke of the experience in his autobiography, Moonwalk. The younger singer revealed that the collaboration boosted his confidence, as Quincy Jones—producer of Thriller—was not present to correct his mistakes. Jackson added that he and McCartney worked as equals, stating, \"Paul never had to carry me in that studio.\" According to Musicnotes.com by Alfred Music Publishing, \"Say Say Say\" was performed in common time, with a dance beat of 116 beats per minute. It is in the key of B minor and sung in a vocal range from F3 to B4. The lyrics to \"Say Say Say\" reflect an attempt to \"win back\" a girl's affection; Deseret News considered the song to be a \"pleading kind of love song\".",
"Say Say Say\n in live performances, I get paid.\" McCartney's words influenced Jackson's later purchase of ATV Music Publishing in 1985. McCartney played several instruments on \"Say Say Say\", including percussion, synthesizer, guitar, and bass guitar. The harmonica was played by Chris Smith and the rhythm guitar was played by David Williams. The song was engineered by former Beatles sound engineer, Geoff Emerick. The production of \"Say Say Say\" was completed in February 1983, after it had been refined and overdubbed at Cherokee Studios in California. George Martin, who had worked with the Beatles, produced the song. He said of his experience with Jackson: \"He actually does radiate an aura when he comes into the studio, there's no question about it. He's not a musician in the sense that Paul is ... but he does "
] |
Who was the composer of Alone? | [
"Evan Brewer"
] | composer | Alone (Evan Brewer album) | 2,162,041 | 87 | [
{
"id": "14973844",
"title": "Gary Carpenter (composer)",
"text": "The One Alone (1987), verse drama by Iris Murdoch ",
"score": "1.6062787"
},
{
"id": "26748485",
"title": "Dominic Chad",
"text": "Composed alone Composed with Paul Draper (and others) ",
"score": "1.5870972"
},
{
"id": "30308307",
"title": "Alone Together (1932 song)",
"text": " \"Alone Together\" is a song composed by Arthur Schwartz with lyrics by Howard Dietz. It was introduced in the Broadway musical Flying Colors in 1932 by Jean Sargent. The song soon became a hit, with Leo Reisman and His Orchestra's 1932 recording (vocal by Frank Luther) being the first to reach the charts. It has become a jazz standard. The first jazz musician to record the song was Artie Shaw in 1939.",
"score": "1.5364333"
},
{
"id": "3566979",
"title": "Alone Together (Clare Fischer album)",
"text": " Alone Together is a studio album by American composer/arranger/pianist Clare Fischer, recorded in October 1975 and released in 1977 on the German label, MPS, and in the US by Discovery Records in 1980 (catalogue number DS 820). Its 1997 reissue on CD accompanied a volume created by pianist, composer and educator Bill Dobbins, containing transcriptions of four of Alone Together 's tracks and five from Fischer's 1995 solo piano CD, Just Me, and described by saxophonist and longtime Fischer colleague Gary Foster as \"among the very best materials published in the field of jazz pedagogy.\" Of the 1975 recording, Dobbins wrote: \"If I had to make a list of the ten most important solo jazz piano recordings of all time, this recording would definitely be on the list.\"",
"score": "1.5207062"
},
{
"id": "33175730",
"title": "Alone (i-Ten song)",
"text": " \"Alone\" is a song composed by Billy Steinberg and Tom Kelly, who recorded it under the name i-Ten on their 1983 album Taking a Cold Look. It was later recorded by actress Valerie Stevenson and actor John Stamos on the original soundtrack of the CBS sitcom Dreams in 1984. American rock band Heart covered it on their 1987 album Bad Animals, and this version reached number one in the US and Canada. In 2007 Celine Dion recorded it for her album Taking Chances. In 2010 Alyssa Reid used the music and lyrics for the chorus of her song Alone Again.",
"score": "1.5142603"
},
{
"id": "30565782",
"title": "Alone. (2014 film)",
"text": " Lucashenko challenged Hilbert with actualizing the project in November. The two had previously collaborated on the creation of an original score for Hilbert's 2011 film Ikland, which Hilbert had assembled from footage shot in a similarly spontaneous way. Hilbert was tasked with fulfilling the project concept, using material selected by Lucashenko, and subsequently assumed producing responsibilities as he finished the film.",
"score": "1.51309"
},
{
"id": "3783995",
"title": "Alone, Again",
"text": " Alone, Again is a solo piano album by Paul Bley, recorded in Norway in 1974 and released on Bley's own Improvising Artists label in 1975.",
"score": "1.5013225"
},
{
"id": "3783998",
"title": "Alone, Again",
"text": "Paul Bley - piano ",
"score": "1.4948962"
},
{
"id": "31193955",
"title": "Henry Geehl",
"text": " for piano and violin, Suite espagnole, Comedy Overture, In Fairyland, On the Cornish Coast, Rhapsody for band, Prince Charlie – 1745, piano pieces and songs. His song \"For You Alone\" (\"Für dich allein\"; words by P. J. O'Reilly) achieved great popularity, being recorded by Enrico Caruso, Lauritz Melchior, Jussi Björling and Mario Lanza, among others. Eleanor Steber's rendition of \"For You Alone\" can be seen on this YouTube video. (It has been claimed that \"For You Alone\" was the only song ever sung in English by Caruso but that is contradicted by other evidence, such as his recording of George M. Cohan's \"Over There\"). Henry Geehl also wrote some ",
"score": "1.4923346"
},
{
"id": "4935881",
"title": "George Posford",
"text": " added \"Mine Alone\", composed by Manning Sherwin, which outlived the show. Posford and Harry Parr-Davies composed Full Swing (1940), starring Cicely Courtneidge and Jack Hulbert, which had 468 performances during the London blitz. Posford wrote a number of wartime revues for the duo. During World War II, he was in the Royal Corps of Signals and the London Fire Service. He was subsequently involved in the Overseas Recorded Broadcasting Service. After the war, Posford co-composed Evangeline (1946) with Harry Jacobson. Starring Frances Day, this was a reworking by Maschwitz of James Laver's Nymph Errant. In 1951, Posford was again in collaboration with Maschwitz, writing ",
"score": "1.4879698"
},
{
"id": "5282053",
"title": "Jean Lenoir (composer)",
"text": "Alone (1931) ; My Aunt from Honfleur (1931) ; Moonlight (1932) ; The Three Musketeers (1932) ; The Crisis is Over (1934) ; Miquette (1934) ; Gold in the Street (1934) ; Second Bureau (1935) ; Veille d'armes (1935) ; Women's Prison (1938) ; The Chess Player (1938) ; Dorothy Looks for Love (1945) ; Night Warning (1946) ; Midnight in Paris (2011) (Instrumental) ",
"score": "1.4849343"
},
{
"id": "7855891",
"title": "No One Is Alone (song)",
"text": " During the show's tryouts at the Old Globe theatre, this song was absent. The LA Times recounts: \"At that point, there was simply a spot in the 'Woods' script that said 'quartet for Cinderella, Red Riding Hood, Baker and Jack.' During intermission at a Wednesday evening performance, Sondheim showed up with 'No One Is Alone.' He played it for the cast after the show that night, and it was part of the score by Friday. The next day Sondheim and Lapine left for New York.\" There was initially an issue over whether the song had been inspired by a preexisting poem. James Lapine explained to LA Weekly that he killed ",
"score": "1.4833579"
},
{
"id": "8434028",
"title": "Left Alone (song)",
"text": " This is one of seven songs written by or co-written by Holiday that she never recorded. Mal Waldron began working as pianist for Holiday in mid-1953. Holiday had intended to record the song a number of times but \"always forget the damned sheet music.\" However, Waldron himself recorded the song on his 1959 album Left Alone, and near the end of the LP discusses the origin of the song.",
"score": "1.4745734"
},
{
"id": "8301238",
"title": "Fugue",
"text": " composer John Williams includes a fugue in his score for the 1990 film, Home Alone, at the point where Kevin, accidentally left at home by his family, and realizing he is about to be attacked by a pair of bumbling burglars, begins to plan his elaborate defenses. Another fugue occurs at a similar point in the 1992 sequel film, Home Alone 2: Lost in New York. The jazz composer and film composer, Michel Legrand, includes a fugue as the climax of his score (a classical theme with variations, and fugue) for Joseph Losey's 1972 film The Go-Between, based on the 1953 novel by British novelist, L.P. Hartley.",
"score": "1.47399"
},
{
"id": "25601325",
"title": "He Knows You're Alone",
"text": " The original music score was composed by Alexander and Mark Peskanov.",
"score": "1.4672188"
},
{
"id": "8042182",
"title": "Red Alone",
"text": " Red Alone is a solo piano album by jazz musician Red Garland, recorded in 1960 and released the same year on Prestige Records, originally as part of the Moodsville series.",
"score": "1.4669633"
},
{
"id": "15200831",
"title": "Alone (Bill Evans album)",
"text": " Alone is an album by jazz musician Bill Evans, recorded in late 1968 for Verve Records. The year of release is unclear, even though a release in the first months of 1970 is a strong possibility. The Grammy Award-winning Alone was Bill Evans' first single piano solo album following in the footsteps of his 1963 Verve session Conversations with Myself (three pianos overdubbed) and his 1967 Further Conversations with Myself, also on Verve (two pianos overdubbed). It has been reissued in various forms with additional tracks and alternate takes from sessions on September 23, October 8 and 21st.",
"score": "1.4539568"
},
{
"id": "13040809",
"title": "Alone in the Dark (2008 video game)",
"text": " The music in Alone in the Dark is scored by Olivier Deriviere. It includes the female choir The Mystery of Bulgarian Voices. Derivière did not use a live orchestra; instead, he used virtual instruments and samplers to create a realistic orchestral sound. The official soundtrack album by Derivière and Voices is available for purchase digitally and in audio CD format.",
"score": "1.4522319"
},
{
"id": "7855890",
"title": "No One Is Alone (song)",
"text": " \"No One Is Alone\" is a song by Stephen Sondheim from the musical Into the Woods, performed toward the end of Act II as the piece's penultimate number.",
"score": "1.4504602"
},
{
"id": "26376872",
"title": "List of compositions by George Gershwin",
"text": " Gershwin Alone – one-man play by Hershey Felder, who portrayed Gershwin, incorporating \"Swanee\" from Sinbad (lyrics by Irving Caesar), \"Embraceable You\" from Girl Crazy (lyrics by Ira Gershwin), \"Someone to Watch Over Me\" from Oh, Kay! (lyrics by Ira Gershwin), \"Bess, You is My Woman Now\" from Porgy and Bess (lyrics by DuBose Heyward and Ira Gershwin), An American in Paris and Rhapsody in Blue. ; 2002 – Elaine Stritch at Liberty – But Not For Me ; 2002 – Back from Broadway – one-time concert featuring songs by George Gershwin ; 2010 – Brian Wilson Reimagines Gershwin – two incomplete pieces by Gershwin finished by Brian Wilson and 12 other reimagined Gershwin classics ",
"score": "1.4494064"
}
] | [
"Gary Carpenter (composer)\nThe One Alone (1987), verse drama by Iris Murdoch ",
"Dominic Chad\nComposed alone Composed with Paul Draper (and others) ",
"Alone Together (1932 song)\n \"Alone Together\" is a song composed by Arthur Schwartz with lyrics by Howard Dietz. It was introduced in the Broadway musical Flying Colors in 1932 by Jean Sargent. The song soon became a hit, with Leo Reisman and His Orchestra's 1932 recording (vocal by Frank Luther) being the first to reach the charts. It has become a jazz standard. The first jazz musician to record the song was Artie Shaw in 1939.",
"Alone Together (Clare Fischer album)\n Alone Together is a studio album by American composer/arranger/pianist Clare Fischer, recorded in October 1975 and released in 1977 on the German label, MPS, and in the US by Discovery Records in 1980 (catalogue number DS 820). Its 1997 reissue on CD accompanied a volume created by pianist, composer and educator Bill Dobbins, containing transcriptions of four of Alone Together 's tracks and five from Fischer's 1995 solo piano CD, Just Me, and described by saxophonist and longtime Fischer colleague Gary Foster as \"among the very best materials published in the field of jazz pedagogy.\" Of the 1975 recording, Dobbins wrote: \"If I had to make a list of the ten most important solo jazz piano recordings of all time, this recording would definitely be on the list.\"",
"Alone (i-Ten song)\n \"Alone\" is a song composed by Billy Steinberg and Tom Kelly, who recorded it under the name i-Ten on their 1983 album Taking a Cold Look. It was later recorded by actress Valerie Stevenson and actor John Stamos on the original soundtrack of the CBS sitcom Dreams in 1984. American rock band Heart covered it on their 1987 album Bad Animals, and this version reached number one in the US and Canada. In 2007 Celine Dion recorded it for her album Taking Chances. In 2010 Alyssa Reid used the music and lyrics for the chorus of her song Alone Again.",
"Alone. (2014 film)\n Lucashenko challenged Hilbert with actualizing the project in November. The two had previously collaborated on the creation of an original score for Hilbert's 2011 film Ikland, which Hilbert had assembled from footage shot in a similarly spontaneous way. Hilbert was tasked with fulfilling the project concept, using material selected by Lucashenko, and subsequently assumed producing responsibilities as he finished the film.",
"Alone, Again\n Alone, Again is a solo piano album by Paul Bley, recorded in Norway in 1974 and released on Bley's own Improvising Artists label in 1975.",
"Alone, Again\nPaul Bley - piano ",
"Henry Geehl\n for piano and violin, Suite espagnole, Comedy Overture, In Fairyland, On the Cornish Coast, Rhapsody for band, Prince Charlie – 1745, piano pieces and songs. His song \"For You Alone\" (\"Für dich allein\"; words by P. J. O'Reilly) achieved great popularity, being recorded by Enrico Caruso, Lauritz Melchior, Jussi Björling and Mario Lanza, among others. Eleanor Steber's rendition of \"For You Alone\" can be seen on this YouTube video. (It has been claimed that \"For You Alone\" was the only song ever sung in English by Caruso but that is contradicted by other evidence, such as his recording of George M. Cohan's \"Over There\"). Henry Geehl also wrote some ",
"George Posford\n added \"Mine Alone\", composed by Manning Sherwin, which outlived the show. Posford and Harry Parr-Davies composed Full Swing (1940), starring Cicely Courtneidge and Jack Hulbert, which had 468 performances during the London blitz. Posford wrote a number of wartime revues for the duo. During World War II, he was in the Royal Corps of Signals and the London Fire Service. He was subsequently involved in the Overseas Recorded Broadcasting Service. After the war, Posford co-composed Evangeline (1946) with Harry Jacobson. Starring Frances Day, this was a reworking by Maschwitz of James Laver's Nymph Errant. In 1951, Posford was again in collaboration with Maschwitz, writing ",
"Jean Lenoir (composer)\nAlone (1931) ; My Aunt from Honfleur (1931) ; Moonlight (1932) ; The Three Musketeers (1932) ; The Crisis is Over (1934) ; Miquette (1934) ; Gold in the Street (1934) ; Second Bureau (1935) ; Veille d'armes (1935) ; Women's Prison (1938) ; The Chess Player (1938) ; Dorothy Looks for Love (1945) ; Night Warning (1946) ; Midnight in Paris (2011) (Instrumental) ",
"No One Is Alone (song)\n During the show's tryouts at the Old Globe theatre, this song was absent. The LA Times recounts: \"At that point, there was simply a spot in the 'Woods' script that said 'quartet for Cinderella, Red Riding Hood, Baker and Jack.' During intermission at a Wednesday evening performance, Sondheim showed up with 'No One Is Alone.' He played it for the cast after the show that night, and it was part of the score by Friday. The next day Sondheim and Lapine left for New York.\" There was initially an issue over whether the song had been inspired by a preexisting poem. James Lapine explained to LA Weekly that he killed ",
"Left Alone (song)\n This is one of seven songs written by or co-written by Holiday that she never recorded. Mal Waldron began working as pianist for Holiday in mid-1953. Holiday had intended to record the song a number of times but \"always forget the damned sheet music.\" However, Waldron himself recorded the song on his 1959 album Left Alone, and near the end of the LP discusses the origin of the song.",
"Fugue\n composer John Williams includes a fugue in his score for the 1990 film, Home Alone, at the point where Kevin, accidentally left at home by his family, and realizing he is about to be attacked by a pair of bumbling burglars, begins to plan his elaborate defenses. Another fugue occurs at a similar point in the 1992 sequel film, Home Alone 2: Lost in New York. The jazz composer and film composer, Michel Legrand, includes a fugue as the climax of his score (a classical theme with variations, and fugue) for Joseph Losey's 1972 film The Go-Between, based on the 1953 novel by British novelist, L.P. Hartley.",
"He Knows You're Alone\n The original music score was composed by Alexander and Mark Peskanov.",
"Red Alone\n Red Alone is a solo piano album by jazz musician Red Garland, recorded in 1960 and released the same year on Prestige Records, originally as part of the Moodsville series.",
"Alone (Bill Evans album)\n Alone is an album by jazz musician Bill Evans, recorded in late 1968 for Verve Records. The year of release is unclear, even though a release in the first months of 1970 is a strong possibility. The Grammy Award-winning Alone was Bill Evans' first single piano solo album following in the footsteps of his 1963 Verve session Conversations with Myself (three pianos overdubbed) and his 1967 Further Conversations with Myself, also on Verve (two pianos overdubbed). It has been reissued in various forms with additional tracks and alternate takes from sessions on September 23, October 8 and 21st.",
"Alone in the Dark (2008 video game)\n The music in Alone in the Dark is scored by Olivier Deriviere. It includes the female choir The Mystery of Bulgarian Voices. Derivière did not use a live orchestra; instead, he used virtual instruments and samplers to create a realistic orchestral sound. The official soundtrack album by Derivière and Voices is available for purchase digitally and in audio CD format.",
"No One Is Alone (song)\n \"No One Is Alone\" is a song by Stephen Sondheim from the musical Into the Woods, performed toward the end of Act II as the piece's penultimate number.",
"List of compositions by George Gershwin\n Gershwin Alone – one-man play by Hershey Felder, who portrayed Gershwin, incorporating \"Swanee\" from Sinbad (lyrics by Irving Caesar), \"Embraceable You\" from Girl Crazy (lyrics by Ira Gershwin), \"Someone to Watch Over Me\" from Oh, Kay! (lyrics by Ira Gershwin), \"Bess, You is My Woman Now\" from Porgy and Bess (lyrics by DuBose Heyward and Ira Gershwin), An American in Paris and Rhapsody in Blue. ; 2002 – Elaine Stritch at Liberty – But Not For Me ; 2002 – Back from Broadway – one-time concert featuring songs by George Gershwin ; 2010 – Brian Wilson Reimagines Gershwin – two incomplete pieces by Gershwin finished by Brian Wilson and 12 other reimagined Gershwin classics "
] |
Who was the composer of Famous? | [
"Tinchy Stryder",
"The Star in the Hood"
] | composer | Famous (Tinchy Stryder song) | 4,090,925 | 79 | [
{
"id": "16169551",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " John Akar (1927–1975) • Doris Akers (1923–1995) • Toshiko Akiyoshi (born 1929) • Necil Kazım Akses (1908–1999) • Yasushi Akutagawa (1925–1989) • Jehan Alain (1911–1940) • Alamanda de Castelnau (fl. second half of 12th century) • Pierre Alamire (Peter van den Hove) (c. 1470 – 1536) • Johannes Alanus (fl. late 14th or early 15th century) • Jean-Delphin Alard (1815–1888) • Isaac Albéniz (1860–1909) • Mateo Pérez de Albéniz (1755–1831) • Pedro Albéniz y Basanta (1795–1855) • Pedro Alberch Vila (1517–1582) • Petur Alberg (1885–1940) • Eleanor Alberga (born 1949) • Pirro Albergati (1663–1735) • (1722–1756) • Eugen d'Albert (1864–1932) • ",
"score": "1.4490564"
},
{
"id": "16169564",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " (1860–1928) • Georges Auric (1899–1983) • Dorothea Austin (1921–2011) • Elizabeth R. Austin (born 1938) • Frederic Austin (1872–1952) • Larry Austin (1930–2018) • Charles Avison (1709–1770) • Giuseppe Avitrano (c. 1670 – 1756) • Pedro António Avondano (1714–1782) • Ana-Maria Avram (1961–2017) • Slavko Avsenik (1929–2015) • Aaron Avshalomov (1894–1965) • Jacob Avshalomov (1919–2013) • Daniel Ayala Pérez (1906–1975) • Héctor Ayala (1914–1990) • Nat Ayer (1887–1952) • Richard Ayleward (1626–1669) • Florence Aylward (1862–1950) • Frederick Ayres (1876–1926) • Artemi Ayvazyan (1902–1975) • Azalais de Porcairagues (fl. mid-12th century) • Svitlana Azarova (born 1976) • Filippo Azzaiolo (fl. 1557–1569)",
"score": "1.4395688"
},
{
"id": "16169682",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " • Henry Leslie (1822–1896) • Franciszek Lessel (1780–1838) • Oscar Levant (1906–1972) • Richard Leveridge (1670–1758) • Richard Michael Levey (1811–1899) • Michaël Lévinas (born 1949) • Marvin David Levy (1932–2015) • David Lewin (1933–2003) • Frank Lewin (1925–2008) • Andrew Lewis (born 1963) • Jeffrey Lewis (born 1942) • Ignace Leybach (1817–1891) • Georg Dietrich Leyding (1664–1710) • Ulrich Leyendecker (1946–2018) • Jean Lhéritier (L'Heritier; Lirithier) (c. 1480–after 1551) • Fran Lhotka (1883–1962) • Reginaldus Libert (fl. c. 1425–1435) • Heinrich Lichner (1829–1898) • Johann Georg Lickl (1769–1843) • Cristiano Giuseppe Lidarti (1730–1795) • Jorge Liderman (1957–2008) • Ingvar Lidholm ",
"score": "1.4343754"
},
{
"id": "32352206",
"title": "List of people from Italy",
"text": " their melodic charm. known for Adriana Lecouvreur (1902) ; Luigi Dallapiccola (1904–1975), composer known for his lyrical twelve-tone compositions ; Lorenzo Ferrero (born 1951), composer. Among his major works are the operas Salvatore Giuliano (1986), La Conquista (2005), and Risorgimento! (2011) ; Umberto Giordano (1867–1948), opera composer in the verismo, or \"realist\", style, known for his opera Andrea Chénier (1896) ; Piero Piccioni (1921–2004), lawyer, pianist, organist, conductor, composer, he was also the prolific author of more than 300 film soundtracks. ; Pietro Mascagni (1863–1945), opera composer, famous for Cavalleria rusticana, one of the classic verismo operas ; Ennio Morricone (1928–2020), composer and conductor. He is considered one of the most prolific and influential film composers ",
"score": "1.4244809"
},
{
"id": "9643926",
"title": "List of composers by nationality",
"text": " • Marcial del Adalid y Gurréa (1826–1881), composer • Dionisio Aguado y García (1784–1849), composer and guitarist • Sebastian Aguilera de Heredia (1561–1627), composer and organist • Isaac Albéniz (1860–1909), late Romantic composer and pianist, wrote nationalist works such as Iberia • Mateo Albéniz (1755–1831), composer • Manuel Alejandro (born 1969), contemporary song composer • Francisco Alonso (1887–1948), composer of zarzuela • Vicente Amigo (born 1967), composer • Juan de Anchieta (1462–1523), composer • Juan Crisóstomo Arriaga (1806–1826), Romantic composer, nicknamed the \"Spanish Mozart\" before dying at age 19 • Emilio Arrieta (1821–1894), composer • Salvador Bacarisse (1898–1963), composer • Leonardo Balada (born ",
"score": "1.4229766"
},
{
"id": "16169611",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " (1568–1643) • Loyset Compère (c. 1445 – 1518) • Graziella Concas (born 1970) • Edward T. Cone (1917–2004) • Giovanni Battista Conforti (fl. 1550–1570) • Zez Confrey (1895–1971) • Justin Connolly (born 1933) • August Conradi (1821–1873) • Marius Constant (1925–2004) • Paul Constantinescu (1909–1963) • Sylvia Constantinidis (born 1962) • David Conte (born 1955) • Francesco Bartolomeo Conti (1681–1732) • Salvador Contreras (1910–1982) • Charles Crozat Converse (1832–1918) • Frederick Converse (1871–1940) • Girolamo Conversi (fl. 1572–1575) • Will Marion Cook (1869–1944) • Arnold Cooke (1906–2005) • Benjamin Cooke (1734–1793) • Thomas Simpson Cooke (1782–1848) • David Cope (born 1941) • Aaron ",
"score": "1.4197114"
},
{
"id": "16169645",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " c. 1560) • Julia Gomelskaya (1964–2016) • Antônio Carlos Gomes (1836–1896) • Mikołaj Gomółka (c. 1535 – 1609?) • Fernando González Casellas (1925–1998) • Howard Goodall (born 1958) • Isador Goodman (1909–1982) • Ron Goodwin (1925–2003) • Eugene Goossens (1893–1962) • Grzegorz Gerwazy Gorczycki (c. 1665/1667–1734) • Ludwig Göransson (born 1984) • Michael Gordon (born 1956) • Peter Gordon (born 1951) • Henryk Górecki (1933–2010) • John Goss (1800–1880) • François-Joseph Gossec (1734–1829) • Ralf Gothóni (born 1946) • Jakov Gotovac (1895–1982) • Louis Moreau Gottschalk (1829–1869) • Clytus Gottwald (born 1925) • Claude Goudimel (1514/1520–1572) • Glenn Gould (1932–1982) • Morton Gould (1913–1996) • Charles Gounod ",
"score": "1.4192381"
},
{
"id": "29000178",
"title": "Robert A. King (composer)",
"text": " Robert A. King (September 20, 1862 – April 13, 1932) was a prolific early twentieth century American composer, who wrote under pen names including the pen names, Mary Earl, Robert A. Keiser, and Betty Chapin.",
"score": "1.4162779"
},
{
"id": "32352202",
"title": "List of people from Italy",
"text": " composer, music theorist, and music historian who was internationally renowned as a teacher ; Giovanni Paisiello (1740–1816), one of the most successful and influential opera composers of his time. He composed more than 80 operas, including a very popular Barber of Seville (1782) ; Niccolò Piccinni (1728–1800), composer of more than 100 operas. His most famous opera was La buona figliuola (1760), which established him as one of the leading composers of his day ; Antonio Salieri (1750–1825), composer whose operas were acclaimed throughout Europe in the late 18th century ; Giovanni Battista Sammartini (1700/1701–1775), composer who was an important formative influence on the pre-Classical symphony ; Giovanni Battista Viotti (1755–1824), violinist and composer, principal founder of the 19th-century school of violin playing ",
"score": "1.4155777"
},
{
"id": "16169562",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " • Elena Asachi (1789–1877) • Boris Asafyev (1884–1949) • Joseph Ascher (1829–1869) • Leo Ascher (1880–1942) • Vicente Asencio (1908–1979) • Thomas Ashwell (c.1478 – after 1513) • Robert Ashley (1930–2014) • Nils Henrik Asheim (born 1960) • Daniel Asia (born 1953) • Gianmatteo Asola (c. 1532 – 1609) • (1906–1973) • Franz Asplmayr (1728–1786) • Caterina Assandra (c.1590 – after 1618) • Charles d'Assoucy (1605–1677) • Ignaz Assmayer (1790–1862) • Edwin Astley (1922–1998) • Fèlix Astol i Artés (1813–1901) • Hugh Aston (Hugh Ashton) (c. 1485 – 1558) • Peter Aston (1938–2013) • Emanuele d'Astorga (1680–1757) • Athenaeus son of ",
"score": "1.4148991"
},
{
"id": "16169698",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " • Ernst Hermann Meyer (1905–1988) • Giacomo Meyerbeer (1791–1864) • Adam Václav Michna z Otradovic (c. 1600 – 1676) • Richard Mico (1590–1661) • Wilhelm Middelschulte (1863–1943) • Marcin Mielczewski (c. 1600 – 1651) • Oreste Migliaccio (1882–1973) • Francisco Mignone (1897–1986) • Marcel Mihalovici (1898–1985) • Minoru Miki (1930–2011) • Mikołaj z Krakowa (Nicolaus Cracoviensis) (first half of 16th century) • Luis de Milán (c. 1500 – after 1560) • Francesco da Milano (1497–1543) • Carlo Milanuzzi (c. 1590 – c. 1647) • Robin Milford (1903–1959) • Darius Milhaud (1892–1974) • Glenn Miller (1904–1944) • Carl Millöcker (1842–1899) • ",
"score": "1.4061288"
},
{
"id": "16169616",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " (born 1957) • Hart Pease Danks (1834–1903) • John Dankworth (1927–2010) • Mychael Danna (born 1958) • Jeff Danna (born 1964) • Franz Danzi (1763–1826) • Louis-Claude Daquin (1763–1826) • Alexander Dargomyzhsky (1813–1869) • Adam Darr (1811–1866) • Michael Daugherty (born 1954) • Louis François Dauprat (1781–1868) • Antoine Dauvergne (1713–1797) • Shaun Davey (born 1948) • John Davy (1763–1824) • Félicien-César David (1810–1876) • Ferdinand David (1810–1873) • Johann Nepomuk David (1895–1977) • Padre Davide da Bergamo (Felice Moretti) (1791–1863) • Neil Davidge (born 1962) • Mario Davidovsky (1934–2019) • Hugh Davies (1943–2005) • Peter Maxwell Davies (1934–2016) • Walford ",
"score": "1.4040303"
},
{
"id": "16169576",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " (1774–1815) • Sonja Beets (born 1953) • Eve Beglarian (born 1958) • Anđelka Bego-Šimunić (born 1941) • Franz Behr (1837–1898) • Jeanne Behrend (1912–1988) • David Behrman (born 1937) • Bix Beiderbecke (1903–1931) • Jeanne Beijerman-Walraven (1878–1969) • Carl Beines (1869–1950) • Jean-Pascal Beintus (born 1966) • Sadao Bekku (1922–2012) • Jamal Belal (born 1995) • Luca Belcastro (born 1964) • Supply Belcher (1751–1836) • Laurent Belissen (1693–1762) • William Henry Bell (1873–1946) • Ján Levoslav Bella (1843–1936) • Vincenzo Bellavere (c. 1540/1541–1587) • Giulio Belli (c. 1560 – 1621 or later) • Paulo Bellinati (born 1950) • Vincenzo Bellini (1801–1835) ",
"score": "1.4037429"
},
{
"id": "16169714",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " • James Penberthy (1917–1999) • Krzysztof Penderecki (1933–2020) • Tomaž Pengov (1949–2014) • Kevin Penkin (born 1992) • David Pentecost (born 1940) • Ernst Pepping (1901–1981) • Johann Christoph Pepusch (1667–1752) • Davide Perez (1711–1778) • Juan Pérez de Gijón (fl. c. 1460–1500) • Giovanni Battista Pergolesi (1710–1736) • Jacopo Peri (1561–1633) • Scott Perkins (born 1980) • George Perle (1915–2009) • François-Louis Perne (1772–1832) • Lorenzo Perosi (1872–1956) • Pérotin (fl. 1190–1220) • George Perry (1793–1862) • William P. Perry (born 1930) • Giuseppe Persiani (1799–1869) • Vincent Persichetti (1915–1987) • Giacomo Antonio Perti (1661–1756) • Giovanni Battista Pescetti (c. 1704 – c. ",
"score": "1.4035956"
},
{
"id": "16169713",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " (1919–2007) • Stephen Paulus (1949–2014) • Conrad Paumann (c. 1410 – 1473) • Alla Pavlova (born 1952) • Anthony Payne (1936–2021) • Juan Carlos Paz (1901–1972) • Robert Lucas de Pearsall (1795–1856) • Johnny Pearson (1925–2011) • Theodhor Peci (born 1984) • Mogens Pedersøn (c. 1583 – 1623) • Carlo Pedini (born 1956) • Carlos Pedrell (1878–1941) • Felip Pedrell (1841–1922) • Teodorico Pedrini (1671–1746) • Carlo Pedrotti (1817–1893) • Martin Peerson (1571/1573–1651) • Flor Peeters (1903–1986) • Dora Pejačević (1885–1923) • Bartłomiej Pękiel (died c. 1670) • Georgs Pelēcis (born 1947) • Jorge Peña Hen (1928–1973) • Francisco de Peñalosa (c. 1470 – ",
"score": "1.4031982"
},
{
"id": "16169739",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " 1973) • Humphrey Searle (1915–1982) • Simon Sechter (1788–1867) • Sholom Secunda (1894–1974) • Seedo (Sidow) (c. 1700 – c. 1754) • Josef Seger (1716–1782) • Leif Segerstam (born 1944) • Fritz Seitz (1848–1918) • Carlos Seixas (1704–1742) • Bernhard Sekles (1872–1934) • Thomas Selle (1599–1663) • Bartolomé de Selma y Salaverde (c. 1595 – after 1638) • Sohail Sen (born 1984) • Jean Baptiste Senaillé (1687–1730) • Ramon Sender (born 1934) • Ludwig Senfl (c. 1486 – 1543) • Jacob Senleches (fl. 1382/1383–1395) • José Serebrier (born 1938) • Claudin de Sermisy (c. 1490 – 1562) • Kazimierz Serocki (1922–1981) • Alexander Serov ",
"score": "1.3979669"
},
{
"id": "8699814",
"title": "Frederick Delius",
"text": " Recognition came late to Delius; before 1899, when he was already 37, his works were largely unpublished and unknown to the public. When the symphonic poem Paa Vidderne was performed at Monte Carlo on 25 February 1894 in a programme of works from British composers, The Musical Times listed the composers as \"... Balfe, Mackenzie, Oakeley, Sullivan ... and one Delius, whoever he may be\". The work was well received in Monte Carlo, and brought the composer a congratulatory letter from Princess Alice of Monaco, but this did not lead to demands for further performances of this or other Delius works. Some of his individual songs (he ",
"score": "1.3970637"
},
{
"id": "9536560",
"title": "Henry Kimball Hadley",
"text": " Henry Hadley was one of the most performed and published American composers of his day. He considered himself first and foremost an orchestral composer, to which his many overtures, symphonic poems, orchestral suites, and symphonies attest. He also wrote brief concertos for both cello (his Konzertstück) and piano (his Concertino, Op. 131). Yet he also wrote a large number of stage works, including several operettas and musicals, along with his five operas. Though his operas Azora and Cleopatra's Night received the most attention, his comedy Bianca, which won a prize offered by the American Society of Singers for the best chamber opera in English, ",
"score": "1.393575"
},
{
"id": "8392960",
"title": "List of people from Southern Italy",
"text": " ; Vincenzo Bellini (November 1801 – 1835), composer of operas. His most notable works were Norma and La sonnambula, and I puritani. ; Federico Ricci (1809–1877), was a famous composer, brother of Luigi Ricci. ; Giovanni Matteo Mario (1810–1883), Cavaliere di Candia, better known simply as Mario, was a world-famous opera singer. ; Errico Petrella (1813–1877), was an influential opera composer. ; Gaetano Braga (1829–1907), was an eminent cellist and composer who lived mainly in London and Paris. ; Luigi Denza (February 1846 – 1922), was the composer of the immortal Neapolitan Piedigrotta song Funiculì, Funiculà. ; Paolo Tosti (April 1846 – 1916), ",
"score": "1.3934011"
},
{
"id": "16169599",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " (1808–1871) • Antoine Busnois (Busnoys) (c. 1430 – 1492) • Ferruccio Busoni (1866–1924) • Howard J. Buss (born 1951) • Henri Büsser (1872–1973) • Sylvano Bussotti (born 1931) • (1915–1979) • Pieter Bustijn (c. 1649 – 1729) • Thomas O'Brien Butler (1861–1915) • Nigel Butterley (born 1935) • Arthur Butterworth (1923–2014) • George Butterworth (1885–1916) • Johann Heinrich Buttstett (1666–1727) • Jacques Buus (c. 1500 – 1565) • Dieterich Buxtehude (1637–1707) • Arturo Buzzi-Peccia (1854?–1943) • Antonio Buzzolla (1815–1871) • William Byrd (c. 1540 – 1623) • Don Byron (born 1958) • Britta Byström (born 1977) • Byttering (fl. c. 1410–1420)",
"score": "1.3924096"
}
] | [
"List of composers by name\n John Akar (1927–1975) • Doris Akers (1923–1995) • Toshiko Akiyoshi (born 1929) • Necil Kazım Akses (1908–1999) • Yasushi Akutagawa (1925–1989) • Jehan Alain (1911–1940) • Alamanda de Castelnau (fl. second half of 12th century) • Pierre Alamire (Peter van den Hove) (c. 1470 – 1536) • Johannes Alanus (fl. late 14th or early 15th century) • Jean-Delphin Alard (1815–1888) • Isaac Albéniz (1860–1909) • Mateo Pérez de Albéniz (1755–1831) • Pedro Albéniz y Basanta (1795–1855) • Pedro Alberch Vila (1517–1582) • Petur Alberg (1885–1940) • Eleanor Alberga (born 1949) • Pirro Albergati (1663–1735) • (1722–1756) • Eugen d'Albert (1864–1932) • ",
"List of composers by name\n (1860–1928) • Georges Auric (1899–1983) • Dorothea Austin (1921–2011) • Elizabeth R. Austin (born 1938) • Frederic Austin (1872–1952) • Larry Austin (1930–2018) • Charles Avison (1709–1770) • Giuseppe Avitrano (c. 1670 – 1756) • Pedro António Avondano (1714–1782) • Ana-Maria Avram (1961–2017) • Slavko Avsenik (1929–2015) • Aaron Avshalomov (1894–1965) • Jacob Avshalomov (1919–2013) • Daniel Ayala Pérez (1906–1975) • Héctor Ayala (1914–1990) • Nat Ayer (1887–1952) • Richard Ayleward (1626–1669) • Florence Aylward (1862–1950) • Frederick Ayres (1876–1926) • Artemi Ayvazyan (1902–1975) • Azalais de Porcairagues (fl. mid-12th century) • Svitlana Azarova (born 1976) • Filippo Azzaiolo (fl. 1557–1569)",
"List of composers by name\n • Henry Leslie (1822–1896) • Franciszek Lessel (1780–1838) • Oscar Levant (1906–1972) • Richard Leveridge (1670–1758) • Richard Michael Levey (1811–1899) • Michaël Lévinas (born 1949) • Marvin David Levy (1932–2015) • David Lewin (1933–2003) • Frank Lewin (1925–2008) • Andrew Lewis (born 1963) • Jeffrey Lewis (born 1942) • Ignace Leybach (1817–1891) • Georg Dietrich Leyding (1664–1710) • Ulrich Leyendecker (1946–2018) • Jean Lhéritier (L'Heritier; Lirithier) (c. 1480–after 1551) • Fran Lhotka (1883–1962) • Reginaldus Libert (fl. c. 1425–1435) • Heinrich Lichner (1829–1898) • Johann Georg Lickl (1769–1843) • Cristiano Giuseppe Lidarti (1730–1795) • Jorge Liderman (1957–2008) • Ingvar Lidholm ",
"List of people from Italy\n their melodic charm. known for Adriana Lecouvreur (1902) ; Luigi Dallapiccola (1904–1975), composer known for his lyrical twelve-tone compositions ; Lorenzo Ferrero (born 1951), composer. Among his major works are the operas Salvatore Giuliano (1986), La Conquista (2005), and Risorgimento! (2011) ; Umberto Giordano (1867–1948), opera composer in the verismo, or \"realist\", style, known for his opera Andrea Chénier (1896) ; Piero Piccioni (1921–2004), lawyer, pianist, organist, conductor, composer, he was also the prolific author of more than 300 film soundtracks. ; Pietro Mascagni (1863–1945), opera composer, famous for Cavalleria rusticana, one of the classic verismo operas ; Ennio Morricone (1928–2020), composer and conductor. He is considered one of the most prolific and influential film composers ",
"List of composers by nationality\n • Marcial del Adalid y Gurréa (1826–1881), composer • Dionisio Aguado y García (1784–1849), composer and guitarist • Sebastian Aguilera de Heredia (1561–1627), composer and organist • Isaac Albéniz (1860–1909), late Romantic composer and pianist, wrote nationalist works such as Iberia • Mateo Albéniz (1755–1831), composer • Manuel Alejandro (born 1969), contemporary song composer • Francisco Alonso (1887–1948), composer of zarzuela • Vicente Amigo (born 1967), composer • Juan de Anchieta (1462–1523), composer • Juan Crisóstomo Arriaga (1806–1826), Romantic composer, nicknamed the \"Spanish Mozart\" before dying at age 19 • Emilio Arrieta (1821–1894), composer • Salvador Bacarisse (1898–1963), composer • Leonardo Balada (born ",
"List of composers by name\n (1568–1643) • Loyset Compère (c. 1445 – 1518) • Graziella Concas (born 1970) • Edward T. Cone (1917–2004) • Giovanni Battista Conforti (fl. 1550–1570) • Zez Confrey (1895–1971) • Justin Connolly (born 1933) • August Conradi (1821–1873) • Marius Constant (1925–2004) • Paul Constantinescu (1909–1963) • Sylvia Constantinidis (born 1962) • David Conte (born 1955) • Francesco Bartolomeo Conti (1681–1732) • Salvador Contreras (1910–1982) • Charles Crozat Converse (1832–1918) • Frederick Converse (1871–1940) • Girolamo Conversi (fl. 1572–1575) • Will Marion Cook (1869–1944) • Arnold Cooke (1906–2005) • Benjamin Cooke (1734–1793) • Thomas Simpson Cooke (1782–1848) • David Cope (born 1941) • Aaron ",
"List of composers by name\n c. 1560) • Julia Gomelskaya (1964–2016) • Antônio Carlos Gomes (1836–1896) • Mikołaj Gomółka (c. 1535 – 1609?) • Fernando González Casellas (1925–1998) • Howard Goodall (born 1958) • Isador Goodman (1909–1982) • Ron Goodwin (1925–2003) • Eugene Goossens (1893–1962) • Grzegorz Gerwazy Gorczycki (c. 1665/1667–1734) • Ludwig Göransson (born 1984) • Michael Gordon (born 1956) • Peter Gordon (born 1951) • Henryk Górecki (1933–2010) • John Goss (1800–1880) • François-Joseph Gossec (1734–1829) • Ralf Gothóni (born 1946) • Jakov Gotovac (1895–1982) • Louis Moreau Gottschalk (1829–1869) • Clytus Gottwald (born 1925) • Claude Goudimel (1514/1520–1572) • Glenn Gould (1932–1982) • Morton Gould (1913–1996) • Charles Gounod ",
"Robert A. King (composer)\n Robert A. King (September 20, 1862 – April 13, 1932) was a prolific early twentieth century American composer, who wrote under pen names including the pen names, Mary Earl, Robert A. Keiser, and Betty Chapin.",
"List of people from Italy\n composer, music theorist, and music historian who was internationally renowned as a teacher ; Giovanni Paisiello (1740–1816), one of the most successful and influential opera composers of his time. He composed more than 80 operas, including a very popular Barber of Seville (1782) ; Niccolò Piccinni (1728–1800), composer of more than 100 operas. His most famous opera was La buona figliuola (1760), which established him as one of the leading composers of his day ; Antonio Salieri (1750–1825), composer whose operas were acclaimed throughout Europe in the late 18th century ; Giovanni Battista Sammartini (1700/1701–1775), composer who was an important formative influence on the pre-Classical symphony ; Giovanni Battista Viotti (1755–1824), violinist and composer, principal founder of the 19th-century school of violin playing ",
"List of composers by name\n • Elena Asachi (1789–1877) • Boris Asafyev (1884–1949) • Joseph Ascher (1829–1869) • Leo Ascher (1880–1942) • Vicente Asencio (1908–1979) • Thomas Ashwell (c.1478 – after 1513) • Robert Ashley (1930–2014) • Nils Henrik Asheim (born 1960) • Daniel Asia (born 1953) • Gianmatteo Asola (c. 1532 – 1609) • (1906–1973) • Franz Asplmayr (1728–1786) • Caterina Assandra (c.1590 – after 1618) • Charles d'Assoucy (1605–1677) • Ignaz Assmayer (1790–1862) • Edwin Astley (1922–1998) • Fèlix Astol i Artés (1813–1901) • Hugh Aston (Hugh Ashton) (c. 1485 – 1558) • Peter Aston (1938–2013) • Emanuele d'Astorga (1680–1757) • Athenaeus son of ",
"List of composers by name\n • Ernst Hermann Meyer (1905–1988) • Giacomo Meyerbeer (1791–1864) • Adam Václav Michna z Otradovic (c. 1600 – 1676) • Richard Mico (1590–1661) • Wilhelm Middelschulte (1863–1943) • Marcin Mielczewski (c. 1600 – 1651) • Oreste Migliaccio (1882–1973) • Francisco Mignone (1897–1986) • Marcel Mihalovici (1898–1985) • Minoru Miki (1930–2011) • Mikołaj z Krakowa (Nicolaus Cracoviensis) (first half of 16th century) • Luis de Milán (c. 1500 – after 1560) • Francesco da Milano (1497–1543) • Carlo Milanuzzi (c. 1590 – c. 1647) • Robin Milford (1903–1959) • Darius Milhaud (1892–1974) • Glenn Miller (1904–1944) • Carl Millöcker (1842–1899) • ",
"List of composers by name\n (born 1957) • Hart Pease Danks (1834–1903) • John Dankworth (1927–2010) • Mychael Danna (born 1958) • Jeff Danna (born 1964) • Franz Danzi (1763–1826) • Louis-Claude Daquin (1763–1826) • Alexander Dargomyzhsky (1813–1869) • Adam Darr (1811–1866) • Michael Daugherty (born 1954) • Louis François Dauprat (1781–1868) • Antoine Dauvergne (1713–1797) • Shaun Davey (born 1948) • John Davy (1763–1824) • Félicien-César David (1810–1876) • Ferdinand David (1810–1873) • Johann Nepomuk David (1895–1977) • Padre Davide da Bergamo (Felice Moretti) (1791–1863) • Neil Davidge (born 1962) • Mario Davidovsky (1934–2019) • Hugh Davies (1943–2005) • Peter Maxwell Davies (1934–2016) • Walford ",
"List of composers by name\n (1774–1815) • Sonja Beets (born 1953) • Eve Beglarian (born 1958) • Anđelka Bego-Šimunić (born 1941) • Franz Behr (1837–1898) • Jeanne Behrend (1912–1988) • David Behrman (born 1937) • Bix Beiderbecke (1903–1931) • Jeanne Beijerman-Walraven (1878–1969) • Carl Beines (1869–1950) • Jean-Pascal Beintus (born 1966) • Sadao Bekku (1922–2012) • Jamal Belal (born 1995) • Luca Belcastro (born 1964) • Supply Belcher (1751–1836) • Laurent Belissen (1693–1762) • William Henry Bell (1873–1946) • Ján Levoslav Bella (1843–1936) • Vincenzo Bellavere (c. 1540/1541–1587) • Giulio Belli (c. 1560 – 1621 or later) • Paulo Bellinati (born 1950) • Vincenzo Bellini (1801–1835) ",
"List of composers by name\n • James Penberthy (1917–1999) • Krzysztof Penderecki (1933–2020) • Tomaž Pengov (1949–2014) • Kevin Penkin (born 1992) • David Pentecost (born 1940) • Ernst Pepping (1901–1981) • Johann Christoph Pepusch (1667–1752) • Davide Perez (1711–1778) • Juan Pérez de Gijón (fl. c. 1460–1500) • Giovanni Battista Pergolesi (1710–1736) • Jacopo Peri (1561–1633) • Scott Perkins (born 1980) • George Perle (1915–2009) • François-Louis Perne (1772–1832) • Lorenzo Perosi (1872–1956) • Pérotin (fl. 1190–1220) • George Perry (1793–1862) • William P. Perry (born 1930) • Giuseppe Persiani (1799–1869) • Vincent Persichetti (1915–1987) • Giacomo Antonio Perti (1661–1756) • Giovanni Battista Pescetti (c. 1704 – c. ",
"List of composers by name\n (1919–2007) • Stephen Paulus (1949–2014) • Conrad Paumann (c. 1410 – 1473) • Alla Pavlova (born 1952) • Anthony Payne (1936–2021) • Juan Carlos Paz (1901–1972) • Robert Lucas de Pearsall (1795–1856) • Johnny Pearson (1925–2011) • Theodhor Peci (born 1984) • Mogens Pedersøn (c. 1583 – 1623) • Carlo Pedini (born 1956) • Carlos Pedrell (1878–1941) • Felip Pedrell (1841–1922) • Teodorico Pedrini (1671–1746) • Carlo Pedrotti (1817–1893) • Martin Peerson (1571/1573–1651) • Flor Peeters (1903–1986) • Dora Pejačević (1885–1923) • Bartłomiej Pękiel (died c. 1670) • Georgs Pelēcis (born 1947) • Jorge Peña Hen (1928–1973) • Francisco de Peñalosa (c. 1470 – ",
"List of composers by name\n 1973) • Humphrey Searle (1915–1982) • Simon Sechter (1788–1867) • Sholom Secunda (1894–1974) • Seedo (Sidow) (c. 1700 – c. 1754) • Josef Seger (1716–1782) • Leif Segerstam (born 1944) • Fritz Seitz (1848–1918) • Carlos Seixas (1704–1742) • Bernhard Sekles (1872–1934) • Thomas Selle (1599–1663) • Bartolomé de Selma y Salaverde (c. 1595 – after 1638) • Sohail Sen (born 1984) • Jean Baptiste Senaillé (1687–1730) • Ramon Sender (born 1934) • Ludwig Senfl (c. 1486 – 1543) • Jacob Senleches (fl. 1382/1383–1395) • José Serebrier (born 1938) • Claudin de Sermisy (c. 1490 – 1562) • Kazimierz Serocki (1922–1981) • Alexander Serov ",
"Frederick Delius\n Recognition came late to Delius; before 1899, when he was already 37, his works were largely unpublished and unknown to the public. When the symphonic poem Paa Vidderne was performed at Monte Carlo on 25 February 1894 in a programme of works from British composers, The Musical Times listed the composers as \"... Balfe, Mackenzie, Oakeley, Sullivan ... and one Delius, whoever he may be\". The work was well received in Monte Carlo, and brought the composer a congratulatory letter from Princess Alice of Monaco, but this did not lead to demands for further performances of this or other Delius works. Some of his individual songs (he ",
"Henry Kimball Hadley\n Henry Hadley was one of the most performed and published American composers of his day. He considered himself first and foremost an orchestral composer, to which his many overtures, symphonic poems, orchestral suites, and symphonies attest. He also wrote brief concertos for both cello (his Konzertstück) and piano (his Concertino, Op. 131). Yet he also wrote a large number of stage works, including several operettas and musicals, along with his five operas. Though his operas Azora and Cleopatra's Night received the most attention, his comedy Bianca, which won a prize offered by the American Society of Singers for the best chamber opera in English, ",
"List of people from Southern Italy\n ; Vincenzo Bellini (November 1801 – 1835), composer of operas. His most notable works were Norma and La sonnambula, and I puritani. ; Federico Ricci (1809–1877), was a famous composer, brother of Luigi Ricci. ; Giovanni Matteo Mario (1810–1883), Cavaliere di Candia, better known simply as Mario, was a world-famous opera singer. ; Errico Petrella (1813–1877), was an influential opera composer. ; Gaetano Braga (1829–1907), was an eminent cellist and composer who lived mainly in London and Paris. ; Luigi Denza (February 1846 – 1922), was the composer of the immortal Neapolitan Piedigrotta song Funiculì, Funiculà. ; Paolo Tosti (April 1846 – 1916), ",
"List of composers by name\n (1808–1871) • Antoine Busnois (Busnoys) (c. 1430 – 1492) • Ferruccio Busoni (1866–1924) • Howard J. Buss (born 1951) • Henri Büsser (1872–1973) • Sylvano Bussotti (born 1931) • (1915–1979) • Pieter Bustijn (c. 1649 – 1729) • Thomas O'Brien Butler (1861–1915) • Nigel Butterley (born 1935) • Arthur Butterworth (1923–2014) • George Butterworth (1885–1916) • Johann Heinrich Buttstett (1666–1727) • Jacques Buus (c. 1500 – 1565) • Dieterich Buxtehude (1637–1707) • Arturo Buzzi-Peccia (1854?–1943) • Antonio Buzzolla (1815–1871) • William Byrd (c. 1540 – 1623) • Don Byron (born 1958) • Britta Byström (born 1977) • Byttering (fl. c. 1410–1420)"
] |
Who was the composer of Signal? | [
"Kanon Wakeshima"
] | composer | Signal (Kanon Wakeshima song) | 1,180,394 | 73 | [
{
"id": "26361404",
"title": "The Signal (2014 film)",
"text": "\"La villa dei delitti\" by Gabriele Bazzi Berneri ; \"Tell Me Now\" by Generationals ; \"Union\" by Deptford Goth ; \"Piano Piece in A Major\" by Mark Gordon ; \"Pace, Pace, Mio Dio (From La forza del destino)\" by Emilie De Voght ; \"I'll Pretend\" by Glen Morris ; \"Ever Night Lulu\" by Johnny Appleseed ; \"2.3.5.41 (feat. William Grundler)\" by Nima Fakhrara & Free the Robots ; Charles Gounod's \"Ave Maria\" (which he arranged from Johann Sebastian Bach's 1st keyboard Prelude in C major from the Well-Tempered Clavier.) The musical score for The Signal was written by composer and experimental musical instrument designer Nima Fakhrara. Fakhrara, who has a background as a dulcimer player and student of Persian classical music, approached the production seeking to contribute, having ",
"score": "1.6051426"
},
{
"id": "14964806",
"title": "Alexander Mosolov",
"text": " in Moscow, Leningrad, or Kiev until 1942. His quick release, having only served eight months of his eight-year sentence, was possible because he had been imprisoned not on political charges but on an overblown accusation of \"hooliganism\" brought by Mosolov's enemies in the Composers' Union. When World War II broke out, Mosolov composed Signal, an opera which dealt with the war. However, the compositions of Mosolov's later life were so uncharacteristic of his earlier style that one scholar noted that it was \"impossible to discern the former avant-gardist in the works written from the late thirties onward\". Mosolov lived in Moscow and continued to compose until his death in 1973.",
"score": "1.5512002"
},
{
"id": "930883",
"title": "Ensemble Signal",
"text": " Ensemble Signal specializes in the work of minimalist and post-minimalist composers like David Lang, Michael Gordon, Julia Wolfe, Steve Reich, and Phillip Glass. Ensemble Signal's recording of Shelter was finalist for a Grammy. Since its debut in 2008, the ensemble has performed over 300 concerts, has premiered 20 works, and produced ten recordings.",
"score": "1.5381842"
},
{
"id": "31212204",
"title": "Signal (KAT-TUN song)",
"text": " \"Signal\" is a song written by Ma-saya, Joker, Joey Carbone, Lisa Huang and Akira for the second single and second studio album of the Japanese boy band, KAT-TUN. It was released on July 19, 2006 in Japan, and became the group's second consecutive number one single on the Oricon daily and weekly singles charts.",
"score": "1.5334792"
},
{
"id": "32157917",
"title": "Signal Aout 42",
"text": " create more conventional electronic music compositions. Their earliest tracks in this vein were \"Pleasure and Crime\" and \"Lovely Trees\" which were released together as 12″ maxi single on the Disco Smash label. Their follow-up single was \"Girls of Vlaanderen\", a nod to Meurisse's wife who is of Flemish origin. Initial success of these early singles was followed by the release of the album Pro Patria in 1989. In 1988 Meurisse became a professional musician and invested in a recording studio located on 22 rue du Fort in Comines. It was here that Meurisse composed the New Beat track \"Le Dormeur\" for the techno-oriented side project, Pleasure Game, as well as SA42 12″ ",
"score": "1.5186007"
},
{
"id": "3718039",
"title": "Miroljub Todorović",
"text": " thousands of copies and adopted by acclamation at the Student Union at the Faculty of Philosophy as the anthem of the University of Belgrade. In 1969 he founded the neo-avantgarde literary and artistic movement Signalism, and the following year he launched the International Review “Signal” publishing most important avant-garde authors Raoul Hausmann, Augusto de Campos, Michele Perfetti, Adriano Spatola, Clemente Padin, Julien Blaine, Sarenco, Eugenio Miccini, Richard Kostelanetz, Guillermo Deisler, Bob Cobbing, Eugen Gomringer, Pierre Garnier, Enzo Minarelli, Keiichi Nakamura, Dick Higgins, Dmitry Bulatov, Sol LeWitt, Shozo Shimamoto, Klaus Peter Dencker, Ruggero Maggi, Daniel Daligand, Willi R. Melnikov, Kum-Nam Baik, On Kawara, Klaus Groh etc. He ",
"score": "1.5183312"
},
{
"id": "13275429",
"title": "Signal (band)",
"text": " The band was established in 1978 in Sofia by: Yordan Karadzhov(vocal), Georgi Kokalov – drums, Rumen Spasov – guitar and Hristo Lambrev – piano.",
"score": "1.4781243"
},
{
"id": "9192292",
"title": "Signals for Tea",
"text": " Signals for Tea is a 1995 album by composer, musician and arranger Steve Beresford which was released on the Japanese Avant label.",
"score": "1.4541631"
},
{
"id": "930882",
"title": "Ensemble Signal",
"text": " Ensemble Signal is a contemporary classical music ensemble founded in 2008 and based in New York City. It is led by Brad Lubman and performs a variety of chamber, electro-acoustic, and large scale ensemble works.",
"score": "1.4523304"
},
{
"id": "9037196",
"title": "Signals (Mal Waldron album)",
"text": " Signals is an album by American jazz pianist Mal Waldron featuring solo performances recorded in Baarn, Holland in 1971 and released on the Freedom label.",
"score": "1.4419544"
},
{
"id": "30437761",
"title": "Signal – The Southeast Electronic Music Festival",
"text": "Derrick May ; Stacey Pullen ; Crystal Castles ; Donald Glaude ; Richard Chartier ; Negativland ; Souls of Mischief ; Masta Ace ; The Nein ; Ego Likeness ; Machine Drum AKA Travis Stewart ; Black Milk ; SNMNMNM The second festival, held April 26–28, 2007, was the most ambitious to date in terms of sheer scope. Festival organizers brought together over 80 artists and performers, including:",
"score": "1.4400284"
},
{
"id": "3799131",
"title": "Signal, International Review of Signalist Research",
"text": " Magazine Signal with the subtitle \"International Review of Signalist Research\" was the periodical of Signalism, international avant-garde creative movement. The magazine was founded in 1970 in Belgrade. Founder and editor-in-chief was Miroljub Todorović. The movement was significantly boosted by the magazine, publishing multilingual works of neo avant-garde poets, fiction writers, essayists and visual artists from Europe, North and South America, Japan and Australia. Nine issues of Signal appeared between 1970 and 1973, presenting a number of domestic and international artists, as well as printing bibliographical data about the avant-garde publications all around the world. From 1973 until 1995 magazine could not be published, mainly for financial reasons. From 1995 to 2004 another 21 issues of Signal appeared. The new release of Signal revitalized the Signalist movement and brought numerous young artists into the movement in 21st century.",
"score": "1.4389021"
},
{
"id": "3718579",
"title": "Signalism",
"text": " Stojiljković, Zvonimir Kostić Palanski, Slobodan Pavićević (Flowers’ Silicates, 1973; Roadworks, 1984), Milivoje Pavlović (White Book, 1974; The World In Signals, 1996), Zoran Popović, Ljubiša Jocić (Moonshine in Tetrapack, 1975; What’s the Time, 1976: Essays on Signalism, 1994), Jaroslav Supek, Zvonko Sarić (Overcoat until the Dawn, 2001; Soul Catcher, 2003), Bogislav Marković (Altai Dust, 2006), Ilija Bakić (Prenatal Life, 1997; New Babylon, 1998; Protoplasm, 2003; The Autumn of Gatherers, 2007; To be Continued, 2009), Slobodan Škerović (Indigo, 2005; All Colors of Arcturus, 2006; Chimera or Borg, 2008), Žarko Đurović (The World of Signalism, 2002), Dušan Vidaković, Dobrivoje Jevtić, Dejan Bogojević, Andrej Tišma, Dobrica Kamperelić, Milivoj Anđelković, Zoran Stefanović and others.",
"score": "1.4377156"
},
{
"id": "3799133",
"title": "Signal, International Review of Signalist Research",
"text": " of neo-avant-garde ; Richard Kostelanetz, visual poet, theoretician of neo-avant-garde, anthologist, editor of the \"Assembling\" ; Guillermo Deisler, Chilean visual poet, critic and anthologist ; Bob Cobbing, English concrete poet and theoretician of sound poetry ; Eugen Gomringer, concrete poet and theoretician, one of the founders of concrete poetry ; Pierre Garnier, concrete poet and theoretician, founder of French spatialism, the spatial poetry ; Enzo Minarelli, main representative of the Italian \"poesia visiva\"—the visible poetry ; Keiichi Nakamura, Japanese visual and mail-artist. ; Dick Higgins, visual poet and theoretician of neo-avant-garde, editor of the publishing company \"Something Else Press\" ; Dmitry Bulatov, Russian visual poet, theoretician ",
"score": "1.436727"
},
{
"id": "1520345",
"title": "Steve Parker (artist)",
"text": " Parker is the trombonist for Ensemble Signal, a contemporary classical ensemble based in New York City. He has premiered over 200 new works for trombone, often including electronics and extended techniques. He is a Professor at the University of Texas at San Antonio.",
"score": "1.4359181"
},
{
"id": "9186172",
"title": "Boyar",
"text": " Norwegian composer Johan Halvorsen wrote a march entitled \"Bojarenes inntogsmarsj\" (\"Entry March of the Boyars\"), known in Norway as the signal tune for the radio programme Ønskekonserten. Edvard Grieg arranged it for solo piano. August Strindberg requests that this piece be played during his play The Dance of Death, Part One.",
"score": "1.4347752"
},
{
"id": "26361405",
"title": "The Signal (2014 film)",
"text": " a fan of Eubank's earlier film Love. As half of the film takes place indoors, Fakhara produced a number of custom instruments for the film designed to limit resonance, including a pagoda made of ceramic insulators, gongs, a number of bowed instruments, a steel marimba, and a tenor violin fashioned with viola strings. When the characters journey outdoors, the music and instruments change. A number of the custom instruments had to be transported to Skywalker Ranch, where Fakhrara was mastering the score. The music supervisor was Aminé Ramer. Fakhrara and Eubank went through 45 versions of the music for the opening credits scene before they chose a final version. A soundtrack album was released by Varèse Sarabande on June 10, 2014. Other songs featured in the film include:",
"score": "1.4299505"
},
{
"id": "10051792",
"title": "Signale für die musikalische Welt",
"text": " Signale für die musikalische Welt was a German music magazine established by Bartholf Senff in Leipzig in 1843 and ceasing publication in 1941. From 1907 (when the journal was sold to Simrock) to 1919, it was based in Berlin and Leipzig, and from 1920 to 1941 in Berlin. Its music critics included Louis Köhler (1844–86), Rudolf Schwarz (musicologist) (1887–97), Alfred Heuß (1902–05), and Ludwig Karpath.",
"score": "1.4298718"
},
{
"id": "27204126",
"title": "Signal (Twice song)",
"text": " \"Signal\" was written by Park Jin-young and co-composed by Park and Kairos. This marked Twice's first collaboration with their agency's founder. The electropop song features a programmed Roland TR-808-style kick and hi-hat with incorporating hip hop elements. Lyrically, it expresses a girl's frustration who keeps sending \"signs and signal\" to hint her feelings for a guy but is unnoticed.",
"score": "1.4273391"
},
{
"id": "30350781",
"title": "Anthony Payne",
"text": " Corps of Signals (1955–1957), Payne read music at the Durham University Department of Music in St Cuthbert's Society, Durham University (1958–1961). During this time, studying Palestrinian counterpoint and working with the musicologist Peter Evans assisted the growth of his musical maturity. Around his graduation, he had a nervous breakdown and largely stopped composing for four years. He spent his hiatus primarily as a freelance music critic and musicologist. Before his halting of composition, in 1959 Payne had drafted parts of the symphonic poem It Happened Once, and returning to it in 1964 under the name of Liebestod, he began to discover a newly personal style of composition.",
"score": "1.4270246"
}
] | [
"The Signal (2014 film)\n\"La villa dei delitti\" by Gabriele Bazzi Berneri ; \"Tell Me Now\" by Generationals ; \"Union\" by Deptford Goth ; \"Piano Piece in A Major\" by Mark Gordon ; \"Pace, Pace, Mio Dio (From La forza del destino)\" by Emilie De Voght ; \"I'll Pretend\" by Glen Morris ; \"Ever Night Lulu\" by Johnny Appleseed ; \"2.3.5.41 (feat. William Grundler)\" by Nima Fakhrara & Free the Robots ; Charles Gounod's \"Ave Maria\" (which he arranged from Johann Sebastian Bach's 1st keyboard Prelude in C major from the Well-Tempered Clavier.) The musical score for The Signal was written by composer and experimental musical instrument designer Nima Fakhrara. Fakhrara, who has a background as a dulcimer player and student of Persian classical music, approached the production seeking to contribute, having ",
"Alexander Mosolov\n in Moscow, Leningrad, or Kiev until 1942. His quick release, having only served eight months of his eight-year sentence, was possible because he had been imprisoned not on political charges but on an overblown accusation of \"hooliganism\" brought by Mosolov's enemies in the Composers' Union. When World War II broke out, Mosolov composed Signal, an opera which dealt with the war. However, the compositions of Mosolov's later life were so uncharacteristic of his earlier style that one scholar noted that it was \"impossible to discern the former avant-gardist in the works written from the late thirties onward\". Mosolov lived in Moscow and continued to compose until his death in 1973.",
"Ensemble Signal\n Ensemble Signal specializes in the work of minimalist and post-minimalist composers like David Lang, Michael Gordon, Julia Wolfe, Steve Reich, and Phillip Glass. Ensemble Signal's recording of Shelter was finalist for a Grammy. Since its debut in 2008, the ensemble has performed over 300 concerts, has premiered 20 works, and produced ten recordings.",
"Signal (KAT-TUN song)\n \"Signal\" is a song written by Ma-saya, Joker, Joey Carbone, Lisa Huang and Akira for the second single and second studio album of the Japanese boy band, KAT-TUN. It was released on July 19, 2006 in Japan, and became the group's second consecutive number one single on the Oricon daily and weekly singles charts.",
"Signal Aout 42\n create more conventional electronic music compositions. Their earliest tracks in this vein were \"Pleasure and Crime\" and \"Lovely Trees\" which were released together as 12″ maxi single on the Disco Smash label. Their follow-up single was \"Girls of Vlaanderen\", a nod to Meurisse's wife who is of Flemish origin. Initial success of these early singles was followed by the release of the album Pro Patria in 1989. In 1988 Meurisse became a professional musician and invested in a recording studio located on 22 rue du Fort in Comines. It was here that Meurisse composed the New Beat track \"Le Dormeur\" for the techno-oriented side project, Pleasure Game, as well as SA42 12″ ",
"Miroljub Todorović\n thousands of copies and adopted by acclamation at the Student Union at the Faculty of Philosophy as the anthem of the University of Belgrade. In 1969 he founded the neo-avantgarde literary and artistic movement Signalism, and the following year he launched the International Review “Signal” publishing most important avant-garde authors Raoul Hausmann, Augusto de Campos, Michele Perfetti, Adriano Spatola, Clemente Padin, Julien Blaine, Sarenco, Eugenio Miccini, Richard Kostelanetz, Guillermo Deisler, Bob Cobbing, Eugen Gomringer, Pierre Garnier, Enzo Minarelli, Keiichi Nakamura, Dick Higgins, Dmitry Bulatov, Sol LeWitt, Shozo Shimamoto, Klaus Peter Dencker, Ruggero Maggi, Daniel Daligand, Willi R. Melnikov, Kum-Nam Baik, On Kawara, Klaus Groh etc. He ",
"Signal (band)\n The band was established in 1978 in Sofia by: Yordan Karadzhov(vocal), Georgi Kokalov – drums, Rumen Spasov – guitar and Hristo Lambrev – piano.",
"Signals for Tea\n Signals for Tea is a 1995 album by composer, musician and arranger Steve Beresford which was released on the Japanese Avant label.",
"Ensemble Signal\n Ensemble Signal is a contemporary classical music ensemble founded in 2008 and based in New York City. It is led by Brad Lubman and performs a variety of chamber, electro-acoustic, and large scale ensemble works.",
"Signals (Mal Waldron album)\n Signals is an album by American jazz pianist Mal Waldron featuring solo performances recorded in Baarn, Holland in 1971 and released on the Freedom label.",
"Signal – The Southeast Electronic Music Festival\nDerrick May ; Stacey Pullen ; Crystal Castles ; Donald Glaude ; Richard Chartier ; Negativland ; Souls of Mischief ; Masta Ace ; The Nein ; Ego Likeness ; Machine Drum AKA Travis Stewart ; Black Milk ; SNMNMNM The second festival, held April 26–28, 2007, was the most ambitious to date in terms of sheer scope. Festival organizers brought together over 80 artists and performers, including:",
"Signal, International Review of Signalist Research\n Magazine Signal with the subtitle \"International Review of Signalist Research\" was the periodical of Signalism, international avant-garde creative movement. The magazine was founded in 1970 in Belgrade. Founder and editor-in-chief was Miroljub Todorović. The movement was significantly boosted by the magazine, publishing multilingual works of neo avant-garde poets, fiction writers, essayists and visual artists from Europe, North and South America, Japan and Australia. Nine issues of Signal appeared between 1970 and 1973, presenting a number of domestic and international artists, as well as printing bibliographical data about the avant-garde publications all around the world. From 1973 until 1995 magazine could not be published, mainly for financial reasons. From 1995 to 2004 another 21 issues of Signal appeared. The new release of Signal revitalized the Signalist movement and brought numerous young artists into the movement in 21st century.",
"Signalism\n Stojiljković, Zvonimir Kostić Palanski, Slobodan Pavićević (Flowers’ Silicates, 1973; Roadworks, 1984), Milivoje Pavlović (White Book, 1974; The World In Signals, 1996), Zoran Popović, Ljubiša Jocić (Moonshine in Tetrapack, 1975; What’s the Time, 1976: Essays on Signalism, 1994), Jaroslav Supek, Zvonko Sarić (Overcoat until the Dawn, 2001; Soul Catcher, 2003), Bogislav Marković (Altai Dust, 2006), Ilija Bakić (Prenatal Life, 1997; New Babylon, 1998; Protoplasm, 2003; The Autumn of Gatherers, 2007; To be Continued, 2009), Slobodan Škerović (Indigo, 2005; All Colors of Arcturus, 2006; Chimera or Borg, 2008), Žarko Đurović (The World of Signalism, 2002), Dušan Vidaković, Dobrivoje Jevtić, Dejan Bogojević, Andrej Tišma, Dobrica Kamperelić, Milivoj Anđelković, Zoran Stefanović and others.",
"Signal, International Review of Signalist Research\n of neo-avant-garde ; Richard Kostelanetz, visual poet, theoretician of neo-avant-garde, anthologist, editor of the \"Assembling\" ; Guillermo Deisler, Chilean visual poet, critic and anthologist ; Bob Cobbing, English concrete poet and theoretician of sound poetry ; Eugen Gomringer, concrete poet and theoretician, one of the founders of concrete poetry ; Pierre Garnier, concrete poet and theoretician, founder of French spatialism, the spatial poetry ; Enzo Minarelli, main representative of the Italian \"poesia visiva\"—the visible poetry ; Keiichi Nakamura, Japanese visual and mail-artist. ; Dick Higgins, visual poet and theoretician of neo-avant-garde, editor of the publishing company \"Something Else Press\" ; Dmitry Bulatov, Russian visual poet, theoretician ",
"Steve Parker (artist)\n Parker is the trombonist for Ensemble Signal, a contemporary classical ensemble based in New York City. He has premiered over 200 new works for trombone, often including electronics and extended techniques. He is a Professor at the University of Texas at San Antonio.",
"Boyar\n Norwegian composer Johan Halvorsen wrote a march entitled \"Bojarenes inntogsmarsj\" (\"Entry March of the Boyars\"), known in Norway as the signal tune for the radio programme Ønskekonserten. Edvard Grieg arranged it for solo piano. August Strindberg requests that this piece be played during his play The Dance of Death, Part One.",
"The Signal (2014 film)\n a fan of Eubank's earlier film Love. As half of the film takes place indoors, Fakhara produced a number of custom instruments for the film designed to limit resonance, including a pagoda made of ceramic insulators, gongs, a number of bowed instruments, a steel marimba, and a tenor violin fashioned with viola strings. When the characters journey outdoors, the music and instruments change. A number of the custom instruments had to be transported to Skywalker Ranch, where Fakhrara was mastering the score. The music supervisor was Aminé Ramer. Fakhrara and Eubank went through 45 versions of the music for the opening credits scene before they chose a final version. A soundtrack album was released by Varèse Sarabande on June 10, 2014. Other songs featured in the film include:",
"Signale für die musikalische Welt\n Signale für die musikalische Welt was a German music magazine established by Bartholf Senff in Leipzig in 1843 and ceasing publication in 1941. From 1907 (when the journal was sold to Simrock) to 1919, it was based in Berlin and Leipzig, and from 1920 to 1941 in Berlin. Its music critics included Louis Köhler (1844–86), Rudolf Schwarz (musicologist) (1887–97), Alfred Heuß (1902–05), and Ludwig Karpath.",
"Signal (Twice song)\n \"Signal\" was written by Park Jin-young and co-composed by Park and Kairos. This marked Twice's first collaboration with their agency's founder. The electropop song features a programmed Roland TR-808-style kick and hi-hat with incorporating hip hop elements. Lyrically, it expresses a girl's frustration who keeps sending \"signs and signal\" to hint her feelings for a guy but is unnoticed.",
"Anthony Payne\n Corps of Signals (1955–1957), Payne read music at the Durham University Department of Music in St Cuthbert's Society, Durham University (1958–1961). During this time, studying Palestrinian counterpoint and working with the musicologist Peter Evans assisted the growth of his musical maturity. Around his graduation, he had a nervous breakdown and largely stopped composing for four years. He spent his hiatus primarily as a freelance music critic and musicologist. Before his halting of composition, in 1959 Payne had drafted parts of the symphonic poem It Happened Once, and returning to it in 1964 under the name of Liebestod, he began to discover a newly personal style of composition."
] |
Who was the composer of Miss You? | [
"Charles Tobias",
"Harry Tobias"
] | composer | Miss You (1929 song) | 1,108,231 | 73 | [
{
"id": "26256243",
"title": "Miss You (1929 song)",
"text": " \"Miss You\" is a 1929 song by the Tobias brothers: Charles Tobias, Harry Tobias and Henry Tobias. It was the three brothers' first published song, and their first hit, but one of the few songs where all three collaborated. The song was revived for the 1942 film Strictly in the Groove when it was sung by The Dinning Sisters and played by Ozzie Nelson and Orchestra.",
"score": "1.6368158"
},
{
"id": "28933769",
"title": "Miss You (Rolling Stones song)",
"text": " \"Miss You\" is a song by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, released on Rolling Stones Records in May 1978. It was released as the first single one month in advance of their album Some Girls. \"Miss You\" was written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. It peaked at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and number three on the UK Singles Chart. An extended version, called the \"Special Disco Version\", was released as the band's first dance remix on a 12-inch single.",
"score": "1.5097526"
},
{
"id": "27141944",
"title": "Robert Uhlmann (composer)",
"text": " Miss You\" ; 2008 – Arash – \"Na Morya\" (feat. Anna Semenovich) ; 2009 – Basshunter – \"Every Morning\" ; 2009 – Aysel Teymurzadeh and Arash – \"Always\" ; 2009 – Arash – \"Kandi\" (feat. Lumidee) ; 2010 – Arash – \"Broken Angel\" (feat. Helena) ; 2010 – Arash – \"Dasa Bala\" (feat. Timbuktu & Yag) ; 2010 – Basshunter – \"Saturday\" ; 2010 – Die Antwoord – \"Enter the Ninja\" ; 2011 – Arash – \"Melody\" ; 2012 – Fabrizio Faniello – \"I Will Fight for You\" ; 2013 – Arash – \"She Makes Me Go\" (feat. Sean Paul) ; 2014 – Margaret – \"Wasted\" ",
"score": "1.4917681"
},
{
"id": "12238931",
"title": "Have You Met Miss Jones?",
"text": " \"Have You Met Miss Jones?\" is a popular song that was written for the musical comedy I'd Rather Be Right. The music was written by Richard Rodgers and the lyrics by Lorenz Hart. The song was published in 1937.",
"score": "1.4798077"
},
{
"id": "2597000",
"title": "Miss You (Gabrielle Aplin song)",
"text": " \"Miss You\" is a song by English singer-songwriter Gabrielle Aplin. It was released through Aplin's record label Never Fade Records on 9 November 2016, as the lead single from her fifth extended play of the same name. The song was written by Aplin and Liz Horsman, and produced by Mike Spencer and Horsman.",
"score": "1.4746549"
},
{
"id": "2597069",
"title": "Miss You (EP)",
"text": " Miss You is the fifth extended play (EP) by English singer-songwriter Gabrielle Aplin. It was released on 16 December 2016 through Aplin's record label, Never Fade Records. The EP was supported by the lead single and title track, \"Miss You\", released on 9 November 2016.",
"score": "1.4724047"
},
{
"id": "32883003",
"title": "Miss You (Yuna Ito song)",
"text": " \"Miss You\" is the 11th single of Japanese artist Yuna Ito slated for a release on September 3, 2008. Miss You is currently being used as the Ito En Vitamin Fruit CM song. Miss You was the inspiring song for the cell phone novel \"Tenshi no Koi\" (天使の恋).",
"score": "1.4593105"
},
{
"id": "4824503",
"title": "Miss You (Westlife song)",
"text": " \"Miss You\" is a popular song written by Jake Schulze and Rami Yacoub. It was originally recorded as a ballad, by the Irish boy band Westlife, but was never released as a single. In 2008, it was remade as a dance track by Swedish DJ and producer Basshunter becoming a hit single for him as \"I Miss You\" in 2008, notably in UK, Germany and Sweden.",
"score": "1.4581176"
},
{
"id": "15134226",
"title": "Miss 1917",
"text": " New York City by the show's cast introduced Gershwin's \"There's More to a Kiss Than the Sound\" and \"You-oo, Just You\", both with lyrics by Irving Caesar. \"Gershwin had begun work on Broadway as a rehearsal pianist for the Jerome Kern and Victor Herbert musical Miss 1917. Within months, his talent as a composer was noticed by everyone in the show and he was quickly put under contract by Harms Music. His involvement with Miss 1917 brought him to the attention of music producer Harry Askins, who in turn mentioned him to Max Dreyfus, \"one of the giants of music publishing\".",
"score": "1.4565794"
},
{
"id": "32064893",
"title": "Miss Ann (album)",
"text": " Miss Ann is an album by American keyboardist and composer Wayne Horvitz' band Pigpen recorded in 1993 and released on the independent Tim/Kerr label on October 17, 1995.",
"score": "1.4507973"
},
{
"id": "25880039",
"title": "Ivan Bootham",
"text": " Katherine Mansfield. His most recent major compositions were the mass Missa Creator Spiritus (2006) and the monodrama Bessie Blue (2009). Among his compositions are: Three Musics (1965) for French horn, strings and harp; Sonata Movement (1969) for piano; Winter Garden (1988) for wind quintet; A String of Clichés (1996) for French horn and piano; Zuweilen (2000), six short pieces for piano; Three Lejjoon Poems (2000), a short song cycle to poems by Niel Wright; Little Blue Peep (2002) for harmonica and piano; A Wild Garden of Doggerel (2003), settings of nonsense poems by the composer for unaccompanied choir; Play On A Debussy Motif (2004) for piano; Spinning Jenny (2005) for piano duet, and a song cycle For One Who Went Away (2004), a setting of seven poems by Peter Jacobson.",
"score": "1.4501863"
},
{
"id": "28933770",
"title": "Miss You (Rolling Stones song)",
"text": " \"Miss You\" was written by Mick Jagger jamming with keyboardist Billy Preston during rehearsals for the March 1977 El Mocambo club gigs, recordings from which appeared on side three of double live album Love You Live (1977). Keith Richards is credited as co-writer as was the case for all Rolling Stones originals written by either partner or in tandem. Jagger and Ronnie Wood insist that \"Miss You\" wasn't conceived as a disco song, while Richards said, \"'Miss You' was a damn good disco record; it was calculated to be one.\" In any case, what was going on in discotheques did make it to the recording. Charlie ",
"score": "1.4422119"
},
{
"id": "13431353",
"title": "Little Miss Marker (1934 film)",
"text": " Scott Ellis and David Thompson are working on a musical adaptation of the film to feature songs by Harold Arlen as its score.[1]",
"score": "1.4364009"
},
{
"id": "28933771",
"title": "Miss You (Rolling Stones song)",
"text": " said, \"A lot of those songs like 'Miss You' on 'Some Girls'... were heavily influenced by going to the discos. You can hear it in a lot of those four-to-the-floor and the Philadelphia-style drumming.\" For the bass part, Bill Wyman started from Preston's bass guitar on the song demo. Chris Kimsey, who engineered the recording, said Wyman went \"to quite a few clubs before he got that bass line sorted out\", which Kimsey said \"made that song\". Wyman recalled: \"When I did the riff for 'Miss You' – which made the song, and every band in the world copied it for the next year: Rod Stewart, ",
"score": "1.4357576"
},
{
"id": "28157455",
"title": "Misses (album)",
"text": " Misses is a 1996 compilation album by Canadian singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell. The selections, chosen by Mitchell herself, concentrate on her lesser known, more experimental work, including jazz influenced recordings from the late 1970s and electronic music from the 1980s. Mitchell also designed the album cover. The album is a companion to Hits, issued on the same day. Mitchell agreed to a request from her record company to release a greatest hits album on the condition that she also be allowed to release Misses. Cyndi Lauper nominated Misses as one of her all-time favourite albums, singling out \"A Case of You\". The best known song on Misses, \"A Case of You\" has been covered by Tori Amos, k.d. lang and Prince, among others.",
"score": "1.429353"
},
{
"id": "31650672",
"title": "Miss Lonelyhearts",
"text": " In 2006, composer Lowell Liebermann completed Miss Lonelyhearts, a two-act opera. The libretto was written by J. D. McClatchy. The opera, which received its premiere in 2006 at the Juilliard Opera Center, was commissioned by the Juilliard School for its centennial celebration. The opera was co-produced by the Thornton School of Music Opera Program at University of Southern California, and received its West Coast premiere at the school in 2007. Both premieres were directed by Thornton faculty member Ken Cazan.",
"score": "1.4254572"
},
{
"id": "28933775",
"title": "Miss You (Rolling Stones song)",
"text": " \"Miss You\" became the Rolling Stones' eighth and final number one hit in the United States on its initial release in 1978. It hit the top on 5 August 1978, ending the seven-week reign of \"Shadow Dancing\" by Andy Gibb. It also reached number three in the United Kingdom. The song was originally nearly nine minutes long, but was edited to nearly five minutes for the album version, and to three-and-a-half minutes for the radio single. In order to properly edit the radio single without audible bumps and glitches, a separate mix was constructed and then edited for continuity. The B-side of the single was another album ",
"score": "1.4238572"
},
{
"id": "27912098",
"title": "Harry Tobias",
"text": " in 1929, and writing Rudy Vallee's hit \"Miss You\" with both brothers the same year. In 1931, he had success with the song \"At Your Command\", an early success for Bing Crosby, and also co-wrote \"Sweet and Lovely\", a hit for Russ Columbo. He wrote or co-wrote the theme songs for many films in the 1930s and 1940s, including One Rainy Afternoon (1936), The Young in Heart (1938), Made for Each Other (1939), If It Wasn't for The Moon (1940) and It's a Date (1940). His many co-writers included Gene Autry. He died in St Louis, Missouri at age 99 on December 15, 1994. His interment was in Mount Sinai Memorial Park Cemetery.",
"score": "1.4198167"
},
{
"id": "12478180",
"title": "Lester Lee",
"text": " Lester Lee (November 7, 1903 - June 19, 1956) was an American composer. He was nominated for an Academy Award in the category Best Original Song for the film Miss Sadie Thompson. Lee died in June 1956 of a heart attack in Los Angeles, California, at the age of 52.",
"score": "1.4191763"
},
{
"id": "30179735",
"title": "Miss Mary (1972 film)",
"text": " The music was composed by R. K. Shekhar and the lyrics were written by Sreekumaran Thampi.",
"score": "1.417084"
}
] | [
"Miss You (1929 song)\n \"Miss You\" is a 1929 song by the Tobias brothers: Charles Tobias, Harry Tobias and Henry Tobias. It was the three brothers' first published song, and their first hit, but one of the few songs where all three collaborated. The song was revived for the 1942 film Strictly in the Groove when it was sung by The Dinning Sisters and played by Ozzie Nelson and Orchestra.",
"Miss You (Rolling Stones song)\n \"Miss You\" is a song by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, released on Rolling Stones Records in May 1978. It was released as the first single one month in advance of their album Some Girls. \"Miss You\" was written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. It peaked at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and number three on the UK Singles Chart. An extended version, called the \"Special Disco Version\", was released as the band's first dance remix on a 12-inch single.",
"Robert Uhlmann (composer)\n Miss You\" ; 2008 – Arash – \"Na Morya\" (feat. Anna Semenovich) ; 2009 – Basshunter – \"Every Morning\" ; 2009 – Aysel Teymurzadeh and Arash – \"Always\" ; 2009 – Arash – \"Kandi\" (feat. Lumidee) ; 2010 – Arash – \"Broken Angel\" (feat. Helena) ; 2010 – Arash – \"Dasa Bala\" (feat. Timbuktu & Yag) ; 2010 – Basshunter – \"Saturday\" ; 2010 – Die Antwoord – \"Enter the Ninja\" ; 2011 – Arash – \"Melody\" ; 2012 – Fabrizio Faniello – \"I Will Fight for You\" ; 2013 – Arash – \"She Makes Me Go\" (feat. Sean Paul) ; 2014 – Margaret – \"Wasted\" ",
"Have You Met Miss Jones?\n \"Have You Met Miss Jones?\" is a popular song that was written for the musical comedy I'd Rather Be Right. The music was written by Richard Rodgers and the lyrics by Lorenz Hart. The song was published in 1937.",
"Miss You (Gabrielle Aplin song)\n \"Miss You\" is a song by English singer-songwriter Gabrielle Aplin. It was released through Aplin's record label Never Fade Records on 9 November 2016, as the lead single from her fifth extended play of the same name. The song was written by Aplin and Liz Horsman, and produced by Mike Spencer and Horsman.",
"Miss You (EP)\n Miss You is the fifth extended play (EP) by English singer-songwriter Gabrielle Aplin. It was released on 16 December 2016 through Aplin's record label, Never Fade Records. The EP was supported by the lead single and title track, \"Miss You\", released on 9 November 2016.",
"Miss You (Yuna Ito song)\n \"Miss You\" is the 11th single of Japanese artist Yuna Ito slated for a release on September 3, 2008. Miss You is currently being used as the Ito En Vitamin Fruit CM song. Miss You was the inspiring song for the cell phone novel \"Tenshi no Koi\" (天使の恋).",
"Miss You (Westlife song)\n \"Miss You\" is a popular song written by Jake Schulze and Rami Yacoub. It was originally recorded as a ballad, by the Irish boy band Westlife, but was never released as a single. In 2008, it was remade as a dance track by Swedish DJ and producer Basshunter becoming a hit single for him as \"I Miss You\" in 2008, notably in UK, Germany and Sweden.",
"Miss 1917\n New York City by the show's cast introduced Gershwin's \"There's More to a Kiss Than the Sound\" and \"You-oo, Just You\", both with lyrics by Irving Caesar. \"Gershwin had begun work on Broadway as a rehearsal pianist for the Jerome Kern and Victor Herbert musical Miss 1917. Within months, his talent as a composer was noticed by everyone in the show and he was quickly put under contract by Harms Music. His involvement with Miss 1917 brought him to the attention of music producer Harry Askins, who in turn mentioned him to Max Dreyfus, \"one of the giants of music publishing\".",
"Miss Ann (album)\n Miss Ann is an album by American keyboardist and composer Wayne Horvitz' band Pigpen recorded in 1993 and released on the independent Tim/Kerr label on October 17, 1995.",
"Ivan Bootham\n Katherine Mansfield. His most recent major compositions were the mass Missa Creator Spiritus (2006) and the monodrama Bessie Blue (2009). Among his compositions are: Three Musics (1965) for French horn, strings and harp; Sonata Movement (1969) for piano; Winter Garden (1988) for wind quintet; A String of Clichés (1996) for French horn and piano; Zuweilen (2000), six short pieces for piano; Three Lejjoon Poems (2000), a short song cycle to poems by Niel Wright; Little Blue Peep (2002) for harmonica and piano; A Wild Garden of Doggerel (2003), settings of nonsense poems by the composer for unaccompanied choir; Play On A Debussy Motif (2004) for piano; Spinning Jenny (2005) for piano duet, and a song cycle For One Who Went Away (2004), a setting of seven poems by Peter Jacobson.",
"Miss You (Rolling Stones song)\n \"Miss You\" was written by Mick Jagger jamming with keyboardist Billy Preston during rehearsals for the March 1977 El Mocambo club gigs, recordings from which appeared on side three of double live album Love You Live (1977). Keith Richards is credited as co-writer as was the case for all Rolling Stones originals written by either partner or in tandem. Jagger and Ronnie Wood insist that \"Miss You\" wasn't conceived as a disco song, while Richards said, \"'Miss You' was a damn good disco record; it was calculated to be one.\" In any case, what was going on in discotheques did make it to the recording. Charlie ",
"Little Miss Marker (1934 film)\n Scott Ellis and David Thompson are working on a musical adaptation of the film to feature songs by Harold Arlen as its score.[1]",
"Miss You (Rolling Stones song)\n said, \"A lot of those songs like 'Miss You' on 'Some Girls'... were heavily influenced by going to the discos. You can hear it in a lot of those four-to-the-floor and the Philadelphia-style drumming.\" For the bass part, Bill Wyman started from Preston's bass guitar on the song demo. Chris Kimsey, who engineered the recording, said Wyman went \"to quite a few clubs before he got that bass line sorted out\", which Kimsey said \"made that song\". Wyman recalled: \"When I did the riff for 'Miss You' – which made the song, and every band in the world copied it for the next year: Rod Stewart, ",
"Misses (album)\n Misses is a 1996 compilation album by Canadian singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell. The selections, chosen by Mitchell herself, concentrate on her lesser known, more experimental work, including jazz influenced recordings from the late 1970s and electronic music from the 1980s. Mitchell also designed the album cover. The album is a companion to Hits, issued on the same day. Mitchell agreed to a request from her record company to release a greatest hits album on the condition that she also be allowed to release Misses. Cyndi Lauper nominated Misses as one of her all-time favourite albums, singling out \"A Case of You\". The best known song on Misses, \"A Case of You\" has been covered by Tori Amos, k.d. lang and Prince, among others.",
"Miss Lonelyhearts\n In 2006, composer Lowell Liebermann completed Miss Lonelyhearts, a two-act opera. The libretto was written by J. D. McClatchy. The opera, which received its premiere in 2006 at the Juilliard Opera Center, was commissioned by the Juilliard School for its centennial celebration. The opera was co-produced by the Thornton School of Music Opera Program at University of Southern California, and received its West Coast premiere at the school in 2007. Both premieres were directed by Thornton faculty member Ken Cazan.",
"Miss You (Rolling Stones song)\n \"Miss You\" became the Rolling Stones' eighth and final number one hit in the United States on its initial release in 1978. It hit the top on 5 August 1978, ending the seven-week reign of \"Shadow Dancing\" by Andy Gibb. It also reached number three in the United Kingdom. The song was originally nearly nine minutes long, but was edited to nearly five minutes for the album version, and to three-and-a-half minutes for the radio single. In order to properly edit the radio single without audible bumps and glitches, a separate mix was constructed and then edited for continuity. The B-side of the single was another album ",
"Harry Tobias\n in 1929, and writing Rudy Vallee's hit \"Miss You\" with both brothers the same year. In 1931, he had success with the song \"At Your Command\", an early success for Bing Crosby, and also co-wrote \"Sweet and Lovely\", a hit for Russ Columbo. He wrote or co-wrote the theme songs for many films in the 1930s and 1940s, including One Rainy Afternoon (1936), The Young in Heart (1938), Made for Each Other (1939), If It Wasn't for The Moon (1940) and It's a Date (1940). His many co-writers included Gene Autry. He died in St Louis, Missouri at age 99 on December 15, 1994. His interment was in Mount Sinai Memorial Park Cemetery.",
"Lester Lee\n Lester Lee (November 7, 1903 - June 19, 1956) was an American composer. He was nominated for an Academy Award in the category Best Original Song for the film Miss Sadie Thompson. Lee died in June 1956 of a heart attack in Los Angeles, California, at the age of 52.",
"Miss Mary (1972 film)\n The music was composed by R. K. Shekhar and the lyrics were written by Sreekumaran Thampi."
] |
Who was the composer of Living with You? | [
"John Cale",
"John Davies Cale",
"00033982178 IPI"
] | composer | Living with You | 662,253 | 69 | [
{
"id": "15492317",
"title": "Living with You",
"text": " \"Living with You\" is a song by Welsh musician and composer John Cale. It was released as a digital single on 25 February 2013. It was the third single from Cale's new album Shifty Adventures in Nookie Wood. Music and lyrics was written by Cale himself. As B-side of this single are \"Living with You (Organic Mix)\" and \"Living with You (Laurel Halo remix)\". The original studio version of the song \"Living with You\" featured alongside Cale (vocals, keyboards, percussion, electric viola, electric guitar) also Dustin Boyer (gut guitar) and Michael Jerome Moore (drums, cajón).",
"score": "1.7247748"
},
{
"id": "11963590",
"title": "Allan Rae (composer)",
"text": "You Two Stay Here and the Rest Come With Me (1968–9) ; Trip (1969–70) ; Where Are You Now That We Need You Simon Fraser? (1971) ; Beware the Quickly Who (1971) ; Charles Manson AKA Jesus Christ (1972) ",
"score": "1.4984362"
},
{
"id": "9441936",
"title": "Nagat El-Sagheera",
"text": "Mohamed Abdel Wahab (1902–1991) who composed her best hits including \"Do not lie\", \"In the hour when I see you beside me\" and \"Mata?” ; Kamal El Taweel (1922–2003) who composed \"Live with me” ; Baleegh Hamdi (1932–1993) who composed \"I am waiting for you\". ; Sayed Mekawy (1927–1997) who composed \"It makes a big difference\". ; Mohammad El Mougi (1923–1995) who composed \"Eyes of the heart\". ; Mahmood El Sherif (1912–1990) who in 1955 composed for her the brilliant song \"Thirsty\" on loving the Nile river which was written by Morsi Jameel Aziz. ; Ezz Eddin Hosni (1927–2013) (Nagat's brother) who composed for her \"On your wing my bird I will tie my message\" which was written by Mohammad Al Bahteeti. ; Composers of other songs: Riad Al Sunbati (1906–1981), Hilmy Bakr (born 1937) as well as Zakariyya Ahmad (1896–1961). Several of the Arabic music composers of the 20th century worked with Nagat El Sahgeera such as;",
"score": "1.4854975"
},
{
"id": "30308702",
"title": "Accessible Contemporary Music",
"text": " The first Composer Alive project was a collaboration between ACM and Beijing based composer Xiaogang Ye in the summer of 2006. Ye composed Datura, which is now published by Schott music, and traveled to Chicago for the World Premiere at the Chicago Cultural Center. ACM's other projects include Sound of Silent Film and Noteplay, an event that allows children to discover the joys of creating and manipulating sound.",
"score": "1.4664071"
},
{
"id": "9787497",
"title": "Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (film)",
"text": " André Previn composed the soundtrack score, which Alan and Marilyn Bergman later adapted and wrote lyrics. The resulting song, \"More in Love with You\", was recorded by Barbra Streisand for The Movie Album (2003).",
"score": "1.4495871"
},
{
"id": "26555907",
"title": "Peter Boyer",
"text": " Niro, Morgan Freeman, and Ed Harris as the narrators for Boyer's work. The Dream Lives On was premiered at Boston's Symphony Hall on May 18, 2010. The event received extensive media attention, was attended by many members of the Kennedy family, and was recorded and telecast on Boston's WCVB-TV. , The Boston Globe wrote: \"Boyer's work accomplishes the goals… of amplifying the texts by these three American icons. His writing draws from the traditions of Williams-esque Hollywood film scores, Broadway musicals, and American neo-Romanticism.\" Conductor Miguel Harth-Bedoya appointed Boyer as the Composer-in-Residence for the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra for the ",
"score": "1.4411519"
},
{
"id": "13545016",
"title": "At Home with You",
"text": " three tracks on At Home With You which utilised the 'Horns of Contempt' (John Howard, Jeremy Smith and Michael Waters), the brass section from Hunters & Collectors. The latter also covered Ian and Stephanie Rilen's song 'Stuck on You', which originally recorded by Sardine V. It was on the 'Hunters & Collectors' 1986 album Human Frailty. The 'X - At Home With You' album was recorded by and on the Major Music label run by Max Robenstone. He also has a relative that ran restaurant that provided excellent food to the studio which was Richmond Recorders, all paid for by Major Records.",
"score": "1.441097"
},
{
"id": "30714711",
"title": "George Russell (composer)",
"text": " In the 1970s Russell was commissioned to write and record 3 major works: Listen to the Silence, a mass for orchestra and chorus for the Norwegian Cultural Fund; Living Time, commissioned by Bill Evans for Columbia Records; and Vertical Form VI for the Swedish Radio. With Living Time (1972), Russell reunited with Bill Evans to offer a suite of compositions which represent the stages of human life. His Live in an American Time Spiral featured many young New York players who would go on to greatness, including Tom Harrell and Ray Anderson. When he was able to form an orchestra for his 1985 work The African Game, he dubbed it the Living Time Orchestra. This 14-member ensemble toured Europe and the U.S., doing frequent weeks at the Village Vanguard, and was praised by New York magazine as \"the most exciting orchestra to hit the city in ",
"score": "1.4370654"
},
{
"id": "29761354",
"title": "William Schuman",
"text": " friend he had met long before at summer camp. Around that time, Schuman met lyricist Frank Loesser and wrote some forty songs with him. Loesser's first published song, \"In Love with a Memory of You\", credits the music to William H. Schuman. On April 13, 1930, Schuman attended a Carnegie Hall concert of the New York Philharmonic, conducted by Arturo Toscanini. According to the Philharmonic's archives, the program included works by Brahms, Mendelssohn, Castelnuovo-Tedesco and Smetana. Of this experience, Schuman later said, \"I was astounded at seeing the sea of stringed instruments, and everybody bowing together. The visual thing alone was astonishing. But the sound! I was overwhelmed. I had never heard anything like it. The very next day, I decided to become a ",
"score": "1.436285"
},
{
"id": "25966479",
"title": "Living with the Law (song)",
"text": " Michael Shrieve covered the song on his album, Fascination (2001). The song has also been recorded by Robert Caruso.",
"score": "1.4321847"
},
{
"id": "14275123",
"title": "Dean Rosenthal",
"text": " their collaboration Turing Tests. Most recently, he was commissioned by the Oral History of American Music at Yale to compose a new work on the life of Vivian Perlis. His music is associated with American composers Tom Johnson, John Cage, and Wandelweiser and he has been commissioned to write or arrange his music by the Oral History of American Music collection at Yale, Barbara Galli, Morton Subotnick, the Flexible Orchestra, the Washington Square Winds, and others. In late 2019, Edition Wandelweiser Records released his first full length recording Stones/Water/Time/Breath. This recording was acquired by the BBC Radio 3 for their music archives in 2020. Underpinnings, was released as part of a compilation of postminimalism in 2007 and he has contributed to recording ",
"score": "1.4321251"
},
{
"id": "25517702",
"title": "Living Without You (Sandy Mölling song)",
"text": " \"Living Without You\" is a song by German recording artist Sandy Mölling. The pop ballad was written by Mölling along with Michelle Leonard, Martin Fliegenschmidt, and Kiko Masbaum for her second solo album, Frame of Mind (2006), while production was helmed by the latter. Released as the album's second and final single, \"Living Without You\" peaked at number 36 on the German Singles Chart, becoming the singer's lowest-charting single to date.",
"score": "1.4203659"
},
{
"id": "11210417",
"title": "Come Live with Me (film)",
"text": " Come Live with Me is a 1941 American romantic comedy film produced and directed by Clarence Brown and starring James Stewart and Hedy Lamarr. Based on a story by Virginia Van Upp, the film is about a beautiful Viennese refugee seeking United States citizenship who arranges a marriage of convenience with a struggling writer. The film's title derives from the opening line of Christopher Marlowe's poem \"The Passionate Shepherd to His Love\" (\"Come live with me and be my love\").",
"score": "1.4190879"
},
{
"id": "30254938",
"title": "Richard III (1995 film)",
"text": " The soundtrack to Richard III was released on 27 February 1996. \"Come Live With Me\" is a 1930s-style swing song, performed by Stacey Kent at the ball celebrating Edward IV's triumph. It is an original composition by Trevor Jones with anachronistic lyrics adapted from Christopher Marlowe's \"The Passionate Shepherd To His Love\", a poem actually written a century after the events depicted in the play.",
"score": "1.4167438"
},
{
"id": "11210422",
"title": "Come Live with Me (film)",
"text": "\"Die Schönbrunner\" Op. 200 (Joseph Lanner) ; \"Come Live with Me\" (John Liptrot Hatton, Christopher Marlowe) ; \"William Tell Overture\" (Gioachino Rossini) ; \"Oh Johnny, Oh Johnny Oh!\" (A. Olman, Ed Rose) ; \"There is a Tavern in the Town\" (F.J. Adams) ; \"Long, Long Ago (1883)\" (Thomas Haynes Bayly) ",
"score": "1.4151444"
},
{
"id": "1462655",
"title": "Philip Springer",
"text": " Springer composed and conducted six motion picture scores in Hollywood, including Kill a Dragon (1967); I Sailed to Tahiti with an All Girl Crew (1968); More Dead Than Alive (1969); Impasse (1969); Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon (1970); and Wicked, Wicked (1973). He also scored episodes of the television series Gunsmoke, Mannix, Then Came Bronson, and Medical Center, and composed the theme for Crosswits, a 1970s game show. Springer has composed music for more than 20 musical shows, 3 of which were produced in New York City. He composed the score for the off-Broadway musical The Chosen, based on the best-selling novel by Chaim Potok, in 1988. Songs interpolated in Broadway shows include \"Salesmanship\" (Ziegfeld Follies of '57; lyrics by Carolyn Leigh); and \"You'll Make ",
"score": "1.4112685"
},
{
"id": "26452358",
"title": "Life with You",
"text": " Life with You, released in 2007, is the seventh studio album by the Proclaimers. It appeared on W14, a joint venture label between Universal Records and John Williams, the man who gave the Proclaimers their first recording contract on Chrysalis Records. The album reached number 13 in the UK albums chart.",
"score": "1.4036309"
},
{
"id": "27009534",
"title": "Peter Garland (composer)",
"text": " Peter Garland (born January 25, 1953 in Portland, Maine) is a composer, writer and publisher of Soundings Press. A student of James Tenney and Harold Budd, much of Garland's work could be considered post-minimal although many of his postminimal works such as \"The Days Run Away\" (1971) were written in the early 1970s at the same time as the first minimalist works. He is also an expert on American Indian music, and on the music of Silvestre Revueltas. He is the author of Gone Walkabout: Essays 1991-. Garland started his Soundings Press series in 1971 after attending a publishing workshop with Dick Higgins at CalArts.",
"score": "1.3980467"
},
{
"id": "24956128",
"title": "John Sines Jr.",
"text": " In 2008, he recorded a live cd called \"ALIVE\" at Staunton River High School in Moneta, Virginia. \"Walking with Jesus\" would be the only release from this project. A music video for \"Waiting on You\" was recorded in front of a live crowd at Cattle Annie's in Lynchburg, Virginia.",
"score": "1.3951471"
},
{
"id": "25966477",
"title": "Living with the Law (song)",
"text": " \"Living with the Law\" is a song recorded by American singer-songwriter and guitarist, Chris Whitley. It was the first single to be released from his 1991 début album, Living with the Law, and became a hit single in the United States, rising to No. 28 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock chart in 1991.",
"score": "1.392544"
}
] | [
"Living with You\n \"Living with You\" is a song by Welsh musician and composer John Cale. It was released as a digital single on 25 February 2013. It was the third single from Cale's new album Shifty Adventures in Nookie Wood. Music and lyrics was written by Cale himself. As B-side of this single are \"Living with You (Organic Mix)\" and \"Living with You (Laurel Halo remix)\". The original studio version of the song \"Living with You\" featured alongside Cale (vocals, keyboards, percussion, electric viola, electric guitar) also Dustin Boyer (gut guitar) and Michael Jerome Moore (drums, cajón).",
"Allan Rae (composer)\nYou Two Stay Here and the Rest Come With Me (1968–9) ; Trip (1969–70) ; Where Are You Now That We Need You Simon Fraser? (1971) ; Beware the Quickly Who (1971) ; Charles Manson AKA Jesus Christ (1972) ",
"Nagat El-Sagheera\nMohamed Abdel Wahab (1902–1991) who composed her best hits including \"Do not lie\", \"In the hour when I see you beside me\" and \"Mata?” ; Kamal El Taweel (1922–2003) who composed \"Live with me” ; Baleegh Hamdi (1932–1993) who composed \"I am waiting for you\". ; Sayed Mekawy (1927–1997) who composed \"It makes a big difference\". ; Mohammad El Mougi (1923–1995) who composed \"Eyes of the heart\". ; Mahmood El Sherif (1912–1990) who in 1955 composed for her the brilliant song \"Thirsty\" on loving the Nile river which was written by Morsi Jameel Aziz. ; Ezz Eddin Hosni (1927–2013) (Nagat's brother) who composed for her \"On your wing my bird I will tie my message\" which was written by Mohammad Al Bahteeti. ; Composers of other songs: Riad Al Sunbati (1906–1981), Hilmy Bakr (born 1937) as well as Zakariyya Ahmad (1896–1961). Several of the Arabic music composers of the 20th century worked with Nagat El Sahgeera such as;",
"Accessible Contemporary Music\n The first Composer Alive project was a collaboration between ACM and Beijing based composer Xiaogang Ye in the summer of 2006. Ye composed Datura, which is now published by Schott music, and traveled to Chicago for the World Premiere at the Chicago Cultural Center. ACM's other projects include Sound of Silent Film and Noteplay, an event that allows children to discover the joys of creating and manipulating sound.",
"Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (film)\n André Previn composed the soundtrack score, which Alan and Marilyn Bergman later adapted and wrote lyrics. The resulting song, \"More in Love with You\", was recorded by Barbra Streisand for The Movie Album (2003).",
"Peter Boyer\n Niro, Morgan Freeman, and Ed Harris as the narrators for Boyer's work. The Dream Lives On was premiered at Boston's Symphony Hall on May 18, 2010. The event received extensive media attention, was attended by many members of the Kennedy family, and was recorded and telecast on Boston's WCVB-TV. , The Boston Globe wrote: \"Boyer's work accomplishes the goals… of amplifying the texts by these three American icons. His writing draws from the traditions of Williams-esque Hollywood film scores, Broadway musicals, and American neo-Romanticism.\" Conductor Miguel Harth-Bedoya appointed Boyer as the Composer-in-Residence for the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra for the ",
"At Home with You\n three tracks on At Home With You which utilised the 'Horns of Contempt' (John Howard, Jeremy Smith and Michael Waters), the brass section from Hunters & Collectors. The latter also covered Ian and Stephanie Rilen's song 'Stuck on You', which originally recorded by Sardine V. It was on the 'Hunters & Collectors' 1986 album Human Frailty. The 'X - At Home With You' album was recorded by and on the Major Music label run by Max Robenstone. He also has a relative that ran restaurant that provided excellent food to the studio which was Richmond Recorders, all paid for by Major Records.",
"George Russell (composer)\n In the 1970s Russell was commissioned to write and record 3 major works: Listen to the Silence, a mass for orchestra and chorus for the Norwegian Cultural Fund; Living Time, commissioned by Bill Evans for Columbia Records; and Vertical Form VI for the Swedish Radio. With Living Time (1972), Russell reunited with Bill Evans to offer a suite of compositions which represent the stages of human life. His Live in an American Time Spiral featured many young New York players who would go on to greatness, including Tom Harrell and Ray Anderson. When he was able to form an orchestra for his 1985 work The African Game, he dubbed it the Living Time Orchestra. This 14-member ensemble toured Europe and the U.S., doing frequent weeks at the Village Vanguard, and was praised by New York magazine as \"the most exciting orchestra to hit the city in ",
"William Schuman\n friend he had met long before at summer camp. Around that time, Schuman met lyricist Frank Loesser and wrote some forty songs with him. Loesser's first published song, \"In Love with a Memory of You\", credits the music to William H. Schuman. On April 13, 1930, Schuman attended a Carnegie Hall concert of the New York Philharmonic, conducted by Arturo Toscanini. According to the Philharmonic's archives, the program included works by Brahms, Mendelssohn, Castelnuovo-Tedesco and Smetana. Of this experience, Schuman later said, \"I was astounded at seeing the sea of stringed instruments, and everybody bowing together. The visual thing alone was astonishing. But the sound! I was overwhelmed. I had never heard anything like it. The very next day, I decided to become a ",
"Living with the Law (song)\n Michael Shrieve covered the song on his album, Fascination (2001). The song has also been recorded by Robert Caruso.",
"Dean Rosenthal\n their collaboration Turing Tests. Most recently, he was commissioned by the Oral History of American Music at Yale to compose a new work on the life of Vivian Perlis. His music is associated with American composers Tom Johnson, John Cage, and Wandelweiser and he has been commissioned to write or arrange his music by the Oral History of American Music collection at Yale, Barbara Galli, Morton Subotnick, the Flexible Orchestra, the Washington Square Winds, and others. In late 2019, Edition Wandelweiser Records released his first full length recording Stones/Water/Time/Breath. This recording was acquired by the BBC Radio 3 for their music archives in 2020. Underpinnings, was released as part of a compilation of postminimalism in 2007 and he has contributed to recording ",
"Living Without You (Sandy Mölling song)\n \"Living Without You\" is a song by German recording artist Sandy Mölling. The pop ballad was written by Mölling along with Michelle Leonard, Martin Fliegenschmidt, and Kiko Masbaum for her second solo album, Frame of Mind (2006), while production was helmed by the latter. Released as the album's second and final single, \"Living Without You\" peaked at number 36 on the German Singles Chart, becoming the singer's lowest-charting single to date.",
"Come Live with Me (film)\n Come Live with Me is a 1941 American romantic comedy film produced and directed by Clarence Brown and starring James Stewart and Hedy Lamarr. Based on a story by Virginia Van Upp, the film is about a beautiful Viennese refugee seeking United States citizenship who arranges a marriage of convenience with a struggling writer. The film's title derives from the opening line of Christopher Marlowe's poem \"The Passionate Shepherd to His Love\" (\"Come live with me and be my love\").",
"Richard III (1995 film)\n The soundtrack to Richard III was released on 27 February 1996. \"Come Live With Me\" is a 1930s-style swing song, performed by Stacey Kent at the ball celebrating Edward IV's triumph. It is an original composition by Trevor Jones with anachronistic lyrics adapted from Christopher Marlowe's \"The Passionate Shepherd To His Love\", a poem actually written a century after the events depicted in the play.",
"Come Live with Me (film)\n\"Die Schönbrunner\" Op. 200 (Joseph Lanner) ; \"Come Live with Me\" (John Liptrot Hatton, Christopher Marlowe) ; \"William Tell Overture\" (Gioachino Rossini) ; \"Oh Johnny, Oh Johnny Oh!\" (A. Olman, Ed Rose) ; \"There is a Tavern in the Town\" (F.J. Adams) ; \"Long, Long Ago (1883)\" (Thomas Haynes Bayly) ",
"Philip Springer\n Springer composed and conducted six motion picture scores in Hollywood, including Kill a Dragon (1967); I Sailed to Tahiti with an All Girl Crew (1968); More Dead Than Alive (1969); Impasse (1969); Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon (1970); and Wicked, Wicked (1973). He also scored episodes of the television series Gunsmoke, Mannix, Then Came Bronson, and Medical Center, and composed the theme for Crosswits, a 1970s game show. Springer has composed music for more than 20 musical shows, 3 of which were produced in New York City. He composed the score for the off-Broadway musical The Chosen, based on the best-selling novel by Chaim Potok, in 1988. Songs interpolated in Broadway shows include \"Salesmanship\" (Ziegfeld Follies of '57; lyrics by Carolyn Leigh); and \"You'll Make ",
"Life with You\n Life with You, released in 2007, is the seventh studio album by the Proclaimers. It appeared on W14, a joint venture label between Universal Records and John Williams, the man who gave the Proclaimers their first recording contract on Chrysalis Records. The album reached number 13 in the UK albums chart.",
"Peter Garland (composer)\n Peter Garland (born January 25, 1953 in Portland, Maine) is a composer, writer and publisher of Soundings Press. A student of James Tenney and Harold Budd, much of Garland's work could be considered post-minimal although many of his postminimal works such as \"The Days Run Away\" (1971) were written in the early 1970s at the same time as the first minimalist works. He is also an expert on American Indian music, and on the music of Silvestre Revueltas. He is the author of Gone Walkabout: Essays 1991-. Garland started his Soundings Press series in 1971 after attending a publishing workshop with Dick Higgins at CalArts.",
"John Sines Jr.\n In 2008, he recorded a live cd called \"ALIVE\" at Staunton River High School in Moneta, Virginia. \"Walking with Jesus\" would be the only release from this project. A music video for \"Waiting on You\" was recorded in front of a live crowd at Cattle Annie's in Lynchburg, Virginia.",
"Living with the Law (song)\n \"Living with the Law\" is a song recorded by American singer-songwriter and guitarist, Chris Whitley. It was the first single to be released from his 1991 début album, Living with the Law, and became a hit single in the United States, rising to No. 28 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock chart in 1991."
] |
Who was the composer of Pocket? | [
"Ai Otsuka",
"Ai Otuka",
"AIO",
"aio"
] | composer | Pocket (Ai Otsuka song) | 13,849 | 32 | [
{
"id": "7064081",
"title": "Pocket Maar (1974 film)",
"text": " The lyrics for the film songs were written by Anand Bakshi, and the music was composed by Laxmikant–Pyarelal.",
"score": "1.5813105"
},
{
"id": "25229714",
"title": "Pick Pocket (1976 film)",
"text": " The music was composed by M. K. Arjunan with lyrics by Pappanamkodu Lakshmanan.",
"score": "1.57915"
},
{
"id": "12859699",
"title": "Pocket Opera",
"text": " The company’s founder and Artistic Director Emeritus, Donald Pippin began creating English performance translations of opera libretti in the 1960s, which led to the founding of Pocket Opera. These accessible, highly singable, and often witty settings now include over 70 operas, and form the backbone of Pocket Opera’s productions. They have also been used by other companies, including Washington National Opera, San Francisco Opera Center, San Diego Opera, Juilliard School of Music, Aspen Music Festival, and companies in Canada, The UK, and Australia. Performance scores of Pippin’s translations are archived at Stanford University, and are available for rent through Pocket Opera.",
"score": "1.5692544"
},
{
"id": "5457297",
"title": "Pocket Money",
"text": " Pocket Money is a 1972 American Western buddy comedy film directed by Stuart Rosenberg, from a screenplay written by Terrence Malick and based on the 1970 novel Jim Kane by J.P.S. Brown. The film stars Paul Newman and Lee Marvin and takes place in 1970s Arizona and northern Mexico. The song \"Pocket Money\" is composed and performed by Carole King. It was mostly filmed in the small town of Ajo, Arizona. Portions of the film were shot at Southwestern Studios in Carefree, Arizona, a facility originally built by cast member Fred Graham. According to co-star Wayne Rogers, in an episode of Pop Goes the Culture, Newman and Marvin did not get along especially well during production. This was one of three films that Newman, Rogers, and Rosenberg made together; the others being Cool Hand Luke (1967) and WUSA (1970).",
"score": "1.556627"
},
{
"id": "25076234",
"title": "John Eaton (composer)",
"text": " John Charles Eaton (March 30, 1935 – December 2, 2015) was an American composer. Born in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, Eaton attended Princeton University, where he graduated in 1957. He later lived in Rome (1957–68), returning to Princeton to earn a PhD in 1970. He subsequently held faculty appointments at Indiana University (1970–92) and the University of Chicago (1989–99). Eaton was a prominent composer of microtonal music, and worked with Paul Ketoff and Robert Moog during the 1960s in developing several types of synthesizer. Notably, he was involved in the development, use, and ultimately unsuccessful commercialization of the SynKet. He devised a compositional genre called pocket opera, operas scored for a small cast of vocalists and a chamber group, and composed ",
"score": "1.5546705"
},
{
"id": "25076236",
"title": "John Eaton (composer)",
"text": " School of Music. During his tenure at the University of Chicago, Eaton concentrated on works for smaller ensembles, including chamber operas that involved dramatic participation of the instrumentalists alongside the singers. He founded and directed The Pocket Opera Players, a professional troupe dedicated to the performance of his works in this genre, and occasionally those of fellow composers interested in the form. He continued to lead the Pocket Opera Players in New York City, after his retirement from Chicago in 2001. He was a recipient of the Prix de Rome, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a MacArthur Fellowship. Eaton died on December 2, 2015, following a brain hemorrhage. His wife Nelda Nelson-Eaton and two children, Estela and Julian, survive him.",
"score": "1.5540191"
},
{
"id": "25345950",
"title": "Pocket symphony",
"text": " A pocket symphony is a song with extended form. The term was popularized by English journalist Derek Taylor, who used it to describe the Beach Boys' 1966 single \"Good Vibrations\". (The description of a \"pocket\" symphony had appeared in print since as early as 1928. )",
"score": "1.5328783"
},
{
"id": "13612428",
"title": "The Pocket Dream",
"text": " The Pocket Dream is a play by Elly Brewer and Sandi Toksvig, published in English circa 1992. A production of the play was put on at the Nottingham Playhouse, Albery Theatre in London in 1991-2 and starred Clive Mantle. In 2004 it was performed in theatres such as the Theatre Royal, York.",
"score": "1.5318682"
},
{
"id": "10264265",
"title": "Pocket God",
"text": " Pocket God is a game developed by Bolt Creative, in which the player manipulates an island and its inhabitants. It was released for the iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch on January 9, 2009, and released for Verizon Wireless on September 1, 2010, Android on December 1, 2010, and Windows Phone on December 4, 2010. The Facebook version was released December 23, 2010.",
"score": "1.5308079"
},
{
"id": "25076235",
"title": "John Eaton (composer)",
"text": " pocket opera works as Peer Gynt, Let's Get This Show on the Road, and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. His operas include The Cry of Clytaemnestra (1980), a re-telling of some of the events surrounding the Trojan War from the perspective of Agamemnon's wife Clytaemnestra, which has been hailed as the first feminist opera. It was premièred in Bloomington, at the Indiana University Opera Theater, on March 1, 1980, and received a number of subsequent productions, most notably in New York and California. Eaton's opera, The Tempest, with a libretto by Andrew Porter after William Shakespeare, was premièred at the Santa Fe Opera on July 27, 1985, and subsequently performed in the autumn of 1986 at the Indiana ",
"score": "1.5292423"
},
{
"id": "14388757",
"title": "In the Pocket (Neil Sedaka album)",
"text": " All tracks composed by Neil Sedaka and Howard Greenfield; except where indicated",
"score": "1.5217102"
},
{
"id": "8378865",
"title": "Air Pocket (album)",
"text": " Air Pocket is the second album by American keyboardist Roger Powell released on Bearsville Records in 1980. It includes 11 tracks all written, performed, and sung by the artist, and features Todd Rundgren on ebow guitar on one track. Other credits include John Holbrook, Cleve Pozar, and Mark Styles. Voted the #1 album of 1980 by a reader poll in Keyboard Magazine.",
"score": "1.5047781"
},
{
"id": "13054084",
"title": "Geoff Hannan",
"text": " 1994 and 1995. In 1998 he was joint winner of the Gaudeamus International Composers Award; in 2007 he was the recipient of the 5th Marenco International Composition Prize. In 2019 he received an Ivor Novello Composer Award for Pocket Universe. In 2008, he won a scholarship to study film composition at the National Film & Television School. His teachers there included Annabelle Pangborn and Peter Howell. He has composed the music for the BAFTA-nominated Take Your Partners and the multi-award-winning Kahanikar. He has also worked as orchestrator on Permanência and Miss Christina, the recipient of a Gopo Award for best ",
"score": "1.4973626"
},
{
"id": "30585776",
"title": "Pocket Magazine",
"text": " The Pocket Magazine (1895–1901) was an American literary magazine published by the Frederick A. Stokes Company in New York. It was edited by Irving Bacheller from its inception until June 1898, and by Abbot Frederic (a pseudonym for the publisher, Frederick A(bbot) Stokes) from August 1898 to the end of the run. At the end of 1901, the magazine was merged into Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly. The magazine printed work by Stephen Crane, Arthur Conan Doyle, Beatrice Harraden, Max Pemberton, Edmund C. Stedman and others.",
"score": "1.4970534"
},
{
"id": "11174270",
"title": "Greg Schiemer",
"text": " choreographer Siri Rama. ; Pocket Gamelan (2003–) – a set of microtonal instruments realised as software developed for mobile phones. Inspired by the legacy of Partch, represented in the work of contemporary tuning theorist and microtonal instrument builder Erv Wilson, the Pocket Gamelan was initially developed in the java language and recently migrated to iPhone. It has been used in live performances at international venues for computer music and microtonal music and in collaborations with musicians in Singapore at ISEA2008 and in Indonesia at GAUNG, a cultural workshop convened by the Sacred Bridge Foundation. Leading researchers have acknowledged the role the Pocket Gamelan has played in the development of performance with mobile devices. His electronic instruments include: ",
"score": "1.493213"
},
{
"id": "12859698",
"title": "Pocket Opera",
"text": " Pocket Opera is a professional chamber opera company based in San Francisco, California that presents staged chamber productions of operas sung in English. The company, founded in 1978, offers performances of both famous and lesser-known selections of operatic literature, accompanied by its chamber orchestra the Pocket Philharmonic. Since its inception, Pocket Opera has developed a repertoire that now includes over 90 operas. Pocket Opera’s season typically runs from March through July and includes four to five productions. Its current artistic director is Nicolas A. Garcia.",
"score": "1.4929887"
},
{
"id": "30188843",
"title": "Percy Phang",
"text": " In 2002, Percy founded Pocket Music, serving as the music coordinator providing services such as song licensing and IP, record productions, TV and commercial music, and other various music production projects. Other than pop music related businesses, Pocket Music also manages music albums of other genres and purposes, like children's songs, cover albums, spiritual and religious music, and special projects like student music albums collaborating with school magazines. Regarding songwriting licensing and IP, Percy is keen on developing talents and providing a platform for songwriters from the new generations.",
"score": "1.4818885"
},
{
"id": "7064077",
"title": "Pocket Maar (1974 film)",
"text": " Pocket Maar is a 1974 Hindi film directed by Ramesh Lakhanpal. The film stars Dharmendra, Saira Banu, Prem Chopra, Mehmood and Nasir Hussain. The music was composed by Laxmikant Pyarelal. The film took 4 years in the making.",
"score": "1.4813871"
},
{
"id": "11302358",
"title": "In the Pocket (Stanley Turrentine album)",
"text": " In the Pocket is an album by the jazz saxophonist Stanley Turrentine, his second recorded for the Fantasy label after associations with Blue Note Records and CTI. The album has performances by Turrentine with an orchestra arranged and conducted by Gene Page. It was released in 1975 and has yet to be rereleased on CD.",
"score": "1.4804249"
},
{
"id": "25345951",
"title": "Pocket symphony",
"text": "The Beatles – \"A Day in the Life\" (1967) ; T. Rex – \"Telegram Sam\" (1971) ; Serge Gainsbourg – Histoire de Melody Nelson (1971) ; Paul McCartney & Wings – \"Band on the Run\" (1973) ; Queen – \"Bohemian Rhapsody\" (1975) ; Radiohead - \"Paranoid Android\" (1997) ; Weezer - \"The Greatest Man That Ever Lived (Variations on a Shaker Hymn)\" (2008) ",
"score": "1.4741992"
}
] | [
"Pocket Maar (1974 film)\n The lyrics for the film songs were written by Anand Bakshi, and the music was composed by Laxmikant–Pyarelal.",
"Pick Pocket (1976 film)\n The music was composed by M. K. Arjunan with lyrics by Pappanamkodu Lakshmanan.",
"Pocket Opera\n The company’s founder and Artistic Director Emeritus, Donald Pippin began creating English performance translations of opera libretti in the 1960s, which led to the founding of Pocket Opera. These accessible, highly singable, and often witty settings now include over 70 operas, and form the backbone of Pocket Opera’s productions. They have also been used by other companies, including Washington National Opera, San Francisco Opera Center, San Diego Opera, Juilliard School of Music, Aspen Music Festival, and companies in Canada, The UK, and Australia. Performance scores of Pippin’s translations are archived at Stanford University, and are available for rent through Pocket Opera.",
"Pocket Money\n Pocket Money is a 1972 American Western buddy comedy film directed by Stuart Rosenberg, from a screenplay written by Terrence Malick and based on the 1970 novel Jim Kane by J.P.S. Brown. The film stars Paul Newman and Lee Marvin and takes place in 1970s Arizona and northern Mexico. The song \"Pocket Money\" is composed and performed by Carole King. It was mostly filmed in the small town of Ajo, Arizona. Portions of the film were shot at Southwestern Studios in Carefree, Arizona, a facility originally built by cast member Fred Graham. According to co-star Wayne Rogers, in an episode of Pop Goes the Culture, Newman and Marvin did not get along especially well during production. This was one of three films that Newman, Rogers, and Rosenberg made together; the others being Cool Hand Luke (1967) and WUSA (1970).",
"John Eaton (composer)\n John Charles Eaton (March 30, 1935 – December 2, 2015) was an American composer. Born in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, Eaton attended Princeton University, where he graduated in 1957. He later lived in Rome (1957–68), returning to Princeton to earn a PhD in 1970. He subsequently held faculty appointments at Indiana University (1970–92) and the University of Chicago (1989–99). Eaton was a prominent composer of microtonal music, and worked with Paul Ketoff and Robert Moog during the 1960s in developing several types of synthesizer. Notably, he was involved in the development, use, and ultimately unsuccessful commercialization of the SynKet. He devised a compositional genre called pocket opera, operas scored for a small cast of vocalists and a chamber group, and composed ",
"John Eaton (composer)\n School of Music. During his tenure at the University of Chicago, Eaton concentrated on works for smaller ensembles, including chamber operas that involved dramatic participation of the instrumentalists alongside the singers. He founded and directed The Pocket Opera Players, a professional troupe dedicated to the performance of his works in this genre, and occasionally those of fellow composers interested in the form. He continued to lead the Pocket Opera Players in New York City, after his retirement from Chicago in 2001. He was a recipient of the Prix de Rome, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a MacArthur Fellowship. Eaton died on December 2, 2015, following a brain hemorrhage. His wife Nelda Nelson-Eaton and two children, Estela and Julian, survive him.",
"Pocket symphony\n A pocket symphony is a song with extended form. The term was popularized by English journalist Derek Taylor, who used it to describe the Beach Boys' 1966 single \"Good Vibrations\". (The description of a \"pocket\" symphony had appeared in print since as early as 1928. )",
"The Pocket Dream\n The Pocket Dream is a play by Elly Brewer and Sandi Toksvig, published in English circa 1992. A production of the play was put on at the Nottingham Playhouse, Albery Theatre in London in 1991-2 and starred Clive Mantle. In 2004 it was performed in theatres such as the Theatre Royal, York.",
"Pocket God\n Pocket God is a game developed by Bolt Creative, in which the player manipulates an island and its inhabitants. It was released for the iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch on January 9, 2009, and released for Verizon Wireless on September 1, 2010, Android on December 1, 2010, and Windows Phone on December 4, 2010. The Facebook version was released December 23, 2010.",
"John Eaton (composer)\n pocket opera works as Peer Gynt, Let's Get This Show on the Road, and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. His operas include The Cry of Clytaemnestra (1980), a re-telling of some of the events surrounding the Trojan War from the perspective of Agamemnon's wife Clytaemnestra, which has been hailed as the first feminist opera. It was premièred in Bloomington, at the Indiana University Opera Theater, on March 1, 1980, and received a number of subsequent productions, most notably in New York and California. Eaton's opera, The Tempest, with a libretto by Andrew Porter after William Shakespeare, was premièred at the Santa Fe Opera on July 27, 1985, and subsequently performed in the autumn of 1986 at the Indiana ",
"In the Pocket (Neil Sedaka album)\n All tracks composed by Neil Sedaka and Howard Greenfield; except where indicated",
"Air Pocket (album)\n Air Pocket is the second album by American keyboardist Roger Powell released on Bearsville Records in 1980. It includes 11 tracks all written, performed, and sung by the artist, and features Todd Rundgren on ebow guitar on one track. Other credits include John Holbrook, Cleve Pozar, and Mark Styles. Voted the #1 album of 1980 by a reader poll in Keyboard Magazine.",
"Geoff Hannan\n 1994 and 1995. In 1998 he was joint winner of the Gaudeamus International Composers Award; in 2007 he was the recipient of the 5th Marenco International Composition Prize. In 2019 he received an Ivor Novello Composer Award for Pocket Universe. In 2008, he won a scholarship to study film composition at the National Film & Television School. His teachers there included Annabelle Pangborn and Peter Howell. He has composed the music for the BAFTA-nominated Take Your Partners and the multi-award-winning Kahanikar. He has also worked as orchestrator on Permanência and Miss Christina, the recipient of a Gopo Award for best ",
"Pocket Magazine\n The Pocket Magazine (1895–1901) was an American literary magazine published by the Frederick A. Stokes Company in New York. It was edited by Irving Bacheller from its inception until June 1898, and by Abbot Frederic (a pseudonym for the publisher, Frederick A(bbot) Stokes) from August 1898 to the end of the run. At the end of 1901, the magazine was merged into Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly. The magazine printed work by Stephen Crane, Arthur Conan Doyle, Beatrice Harraden, Max Pemberton, Edmund C. Stedman and others.",
"Greg Schiemer\n choreographer Siri Rama. ; Pocket Gamelan (2003–) – a set of microtonal instruments realised as software developed for mobile phones. Inspired by the legacy of Partch, represented in the work of contemporary tuning theorist and microtonal instrument builder Erv Wilson, the Pocket Gamelan was initially developed in the java language and recently migrated to iPhone. It has been used in live performances at international venues for computer music and microtonal music and in collaborations with musicians in Singapore at ISEA2008 and in Indonesia at GAUNG, a cultural workshop convened by the Sacred Bridge Foundation. Leading researchers have acknowledged the role the Pocket Gamelan has played in the development of performance with mobile devices. His electronic instruments include: ",
"Pocket Opera\n Pocket Opera is a professional chamber opera company based in San Francisco, California that presents staged chamber productions of operas sung in English. The company, founded in 1978, offers performances of both famous and lesser-known selections of operatic literature, accompanied by its chamber orchestra the Pocket Philharmonic. Since its inception, Pocket Opera has developed a repertoire that now includes over 90 operas. Pocket Opera’s season typically runs from March through July and includes four to five productions. Its current artistic director is Nicolas A. Garcia.",
"Percy Phang\n In 2002, Percy founded Pocket Music, serving as the music coordinator providing services such as song licensing and IP, record productions, TV and commercial music, and other various music production projects. Other than pop music related businesses, Pocket Music also manages music albums of other genres and purposes, like children's songs, cover albums, spiritual and religious music, and special projects like student music albums collaborating with school magazines. Regarding songwriting licensing and IP, Percy is keen on developing talents and providing a platform for songwriters from the new generations.",
"Pocket Maar (1974 film)\n Pocket Maar is a 1974 Hindi film directed by Ramesh Lakhanpal. The film stars Dharmendra, Saira Banu, Prem Chopra, Mehmood and Nasir Hussain. The music was composed by Laxmikant Pyarelal. The film took 4 years in the making.",
"In the Pocket (Stanley Turrentine album)\n In the Pocket is an album by the jazz saxophonist Stanley Turrentine, his second recorded for the Fantasy label after associations with Blue Note Records and CTI. The album has performances by Turrentine with an orchestra arranged and conducted by Gene Page. It was released in 1975 and has yet to be rereleased on CD.",
"Pocket symphony\nThe Beatles – \"A Day in the Life\" (1967) ; T. Rex – \"Telegram Sam\" (1971) ; Serge Gainsbourg – Histoire de Melody Nelson (1971) ; Paul McCartney & Wings – \"Band on the Run\" (1973) ; Queen – \"Bohemian Rhapsody\" (1975) ; Radiohead - \"Paranoid Android\" (1997) ; Weezer - \"The Greatest Man That Ever Lived (Variations on a Shaker Hymn)\" (2008) "
] |
Who was the composer of Images? | [
"Howard Skempton",
"Howard While Skempton"
] | composer | Images (Skempton) | 4,549,280 | 41 | [
{
"id": "3162685",
"title": "Images (Skempton)",
"text": " Images is a cycle of piano pieces composed by Howard Skempton in 1989. This work and a variations set, The Durham Strike, are the only large-scale piano works by Skempton, although he has been composing piano music since the beginning of his career. The work was commissioned by Channel 4's HTV West for \"Images\", a six-part television series of documentaries dealing with various aspects of photography. The series was created to mark the 150th anniversary of the invention of photography. The producer, Barrie Gavin, wanted the music to be similar in concept to Erik Satie's Gymnopedies: in the words of the composer, ",
"score": "1.5869015"
},
{
"id": "3162686",
"title": "Images (Skempton)",
"text": " pieces were to be \"like a sculpture viewed from different angles in a changing light.\" The pianist who performed Images for the TV series was Michael Finnissy. Images comprises eight preludes, two \"songs\" (The Cockfight: a traditional song and Song 2), a set of variations, eight interludes and a postlude (Postlude: The Keel Row). In concert, the order of the pieces is not fixed and is left for the performer to determine. The eight preludes contain the pieces that directly correspond to Gavin's request. Preludes 1–3, all written on three staves and in 3/8 time, share identical rhythmic and melodic structure of ",
"score": "1.4361727"
},
{
"id": "1035220",
"title": "Walter Steffens (composer)",
"text": " Monika Fink, who has been pursuing the topic of her doctoral thesis Musik nach Bildern (Music after Pictures) for over three decades, writes that she knows of no other composer who has so intensively and consistently dedicated himself to setting pictorial images to music. Under the supervision of Fink a project was initiated at the Department of Music at the University of Innsbruck to develop and maintain a comprehensive website devoted to the subject area “Music after Pictures” (see Musik nach Bildern). Numerous works by Steffens, especially those from recent years, are listed in this database, e.g., musical compositions on pictures by Peter Paul Rubens, Rembrandt van Rijn, and Emil Schumacher.",
"score": "1.4338183"
},
{
"id": "27270581",
"title": "John Palmer (composer)",
"text": " 1994. Articles and Papers: Introduction to ‘Images of the mind' (1997). Paper given at the 1997 KlangArt International Congress ‘New Music & Technology’ in Osnabrück, Germany. Published in ‘Musik und Neue Technologie 3, Musik im virtuellen Raum’ (edited by Bernd Enders), Universitätsverlag Rasch, Osnabrück (2000). ISBN: 3-934005-64-0. Conceptual models of interaction: towards a perceptual analysis of interactive composition (1997-8) Paper given at the 1997 Sonic Arts Network Conference, University of Birmingham, UK, 10–12 January 1998. Published in the Seamus Journal, USA, Vol. XIV no. 1, Summer 1999. SEAMUS, Sonic Arts Network Perceptual Abstraction and Electroacoustic Composition (1998) Paper given at the 1998 Seamus Conference, Dartmouth College, NH, USA, 16–18 April 1998 (1997–98). ",
"score": "1.4190693"
},
{
"id": "28801390",
"title": "The Photographer",
"text": " The Photographer is a three-part mixed media performance accompanied by music (also sometimes referred to as a chamber opera) by composer Philip Glass. The libretto is based on the life and homicide trial of 19th-century English photographer Eadweard Muybridge. Commissioned by the Holland Festival, the opera was first performed in 1982 at the Royal Palace in Amsterdam.",
"score": "1.417253"
},
{
"id": "6494842",
"title": "Eric Salzman",
"text": " as: The Nonesuch recording of Nude Paper Sermon was chosen separately by both Dennis Báthory-Kitsz and David Gunn, creators and hosts of the Kalvos & Damian New Music Bazaar, for their \"Top 100\" desert island recordings. In 1967, Salzman founded the \"New Image of Sound\" series at Hunter College, where his theatrical composition Verses and Cantos (or Foxes and Hedgehogs) was performed for the inaugural concert conducted by Dennis Russell Davies alongside the New York premiere of Berio's Laborintus II. In 1972, Pierre Boulez conducted the piece with the BBC Symphony Orchestra. In 1970, Salzman founded the Quog Music Theater, a mixed-media ",
"score": "1.4093912"
},
{
"id": "26998721",
"title": "Picture Studies",
"text": " Picture Studies is an orchestral suite by the American composer Adam Schoenberg. The work was commissioned by the Kansas City Symphony and the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. It was first performed by the Kansas City Symphony conducted by Michael Stern at the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts in Kansas City on February 1, 2013.",
"score": "1.4029641"
},
{
"id": "6513028",
"title": "Columbus: Images for Orchestra",
"text": " Columbus: Images for Orchestra (Colón: Imágenes para orquesta) is a composition by Spanish composer Leonardo Balada. It was finished in 1991 and uses material from Balada's opera Christopher Columbus.",
"score": "1.3997641"
},
{
"id": "6548285",
"title": "Images in Sound (He Xuntian)",
"text": " Images in Sound ( 声音图案 ) is a piece for conventional and unconventional instruments, composed by He Xuntian in 1997–2003.",
"score": "1.399596"
},
{
"id": "3820107",
"title": "Ernest Bloch",
"text": " with the entire collection of his negatives and prints. Johnson is currently Professor of Art and Design at Cal Poly State University, San Luis Obispo Ca. An account of his discovery and many of Bloch's images can be found on his website. [ericjohnsonphoto.com] ; Voices in the Wilderness: Six American Neo-Romantic Composers, by Walter Simmons. (Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, 2004) ISBN: 978-0-8108-5728-5 ; Kushner, David Z. The Ernest Bloch Companion, (Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut, 2002) ISBN: 978-0-313-27905-8 ; Kintner, Helen Johnston. The Ernest Bloch I Knew (Published by Helen Johnston Kinter, June 2009) ISBN: 978-0-9743356-3-6 ; Werlin, Joella. Suzanne Bloch: Recollections (Familore, Portland, Oregon, 2007) ; Bloch, Suzanne. Ernest Bloch: Creative Spirit: A Program Source Book (Jewish Music Council of the National Jewish Welfare Board, 1976. ; Johnson, Eric B. A Composer's Vision (Aperture 16:3, Millerton, New York, 1972) ",
"score": "1.3910317"
},
{
"id": "30708323",
"title": "Images (book)",
"text": " Images, first published in 1994 (now out of print), is a book by David Lynch.",
"score": "1.3899074"
},
{
"id": "24965093",
"title": "Images (ballet)",
"text": "May 24, 1992 Jack Anderson, NY Times ",
"score": "1.3863668"
},
{
"id": "32215593",
"title": "Ernst Haas",
"text": " In the early 1970s Haas became interested in creating audiovisual slideshows—long sequences of projected imagery with accompanying soundtracks, dissolving from one image into the next. \"I love music,\" he explained, \"and with my audiovisual presentation I can combine music and photography.” After suffering a stroke in December 1985, Haas concentrated on layouts for two books he wanted to publish, one featuring his black and white photographs, the other his color. At the time of his death from a stroke on September 12, 1986, he had been preparing to write his autobiography.",
"score": "1.3828253"
},
{
"id": "15539778",
"title": "John Stepan Zamecnik",
"text": " John Stepan Zamecnik (May 14, 1872 in Cleveland, Ohio – June 13, 1953 in Los Angeles, California) was an American composer and conductor. He is best known for the \"photoplay music\" he composed for use during silent films by pianists, organists, and orchestras. Zamecnik used many pseudonyms, including Dorothy Lee, Lionel Baxter, R.L. (Robert) Creighton, Arturo de Castro, \"Josh and Ted\", J. (Jane) Hathaway, Kathryn Hawthorne, Roberta Hudson, Ioane Kawelo, J. Edgar Lowell, Jules Reynard, F. (Frederick) Van Norman, Hal Vinton and Grant Wellesley.",
"score": "1.38228"
},
{
"id": "26305190",
"title": "Images (Kenny Barron album)",
"text": " Images is an album by pianist Kenny Barron recorded in New York in 2003 and released on the Sunnyside label.",
"score": "1.3757753"
},
{
"id": "4142559",
"title": "The Book of Images",
"text": " The Book of Images (Das Buch der Bilder) is a collection of poetry by the Bohemian-Austrian poet and novelist Rainer Maria Rilke (1875-1926). It was first published in 1902 by Axel Juncker Verlag. It consists of individual poems written from 1899 and forward. An extended version was published in 1906, after Rilke had written The Book of Hours, with which scholars link The Book of Images as a phase in the poet's writing.",
"score": "1.3757701"
},
{
"id": "28712634",
"title": "Anthony Braxton",
"text": " In his Falling River Musics Braxton began to work on \"image logics\", resulting in graphic scores with large paintings and drawings with smaller legends of various symbols. Performs must find their own meanings in the symbols and construct a path through the score, balancing \"the demands of traditional notation interpretation and esoteric inter-targeting.\"",
"score": "1.3656676"
},
{
"id": "5976138",
"title": "Selwyn Image",
"text": " Image was an influential writer on design and the first Slade Professor of Fine Arts at Oxford from 1910 to 1916. Between December 1887 and February 1888, Image gave a series of four lectures on Modern Art at Willis' Rooms. Oscar Wilde attended at least one of this series, and reviewed the second lecture in the Sunday Times on 25 January 1888. Image was also a close associate of Arthur Symons and may have shared his then mistress Muriel (Edith Broadbent). Image published a number of essays, contributed introductions and chapters to scholarly publications, and published a poetry collection, Poems and Carols in 1894.",
"score": "1.36135"
},
{
"id": "24965091",
"title": "Images (ballet)",
"text": " Images is a ballet made by Miriam Mahdaviani for the New York City Ballet's first Diamond Project to Debussy's \"Gigues\" from Images pour orchestre (1906–12) and \"Nuages\" and \"Fêtes\" from his Nocturnes (1893–99). The premiere took place 30 May 1992 at the New York State Theater, Lincoln Center.",
"score": "1.3592892"
},
{
"id": "31172593",
"title": "Images (band)",
"text": " Images was a French pop band that existed from 1986 to 1999 and then burst into the formation Émile et Images. The founders, Mario Ramsamy, Jean-Louis Pujade and Richard Seff; came from Toulouse, Occitania. Their biggest hit was \"Les Démons de minuit\" (1986), which was 13 weeks at number 1 on the charts in France.",
"score": "1.3577721"
}
] | [
"Images (Skempton)\n Images is a cycle of piano pieces composed by Howard Skempton in 1989. This work and a variations set, The Durham Strike, are the only large-scale piano works by Skempton, although he has been composing piano music since the beginning of his career. The work was commissioned by Channel 4's HTV West for \"Images\", a six-part television series of documentaries dealing with various aspects of photography. The series was created to mark the 150th anniversary of the invention of photography. The producer, Barrie Gavin, wanted the music to be similar in concept to Erik Satie's Gymnopedies: in the words of the composer, ",
"Images (Skempton)\n pieces were to be \"like a sculpture viewed from different angles in a changing light.\" The pianist who performed Images for the TV series was Michael Finnissy. Images comprises eight preludes, two \"songs\" (The Cockfight: a traditional song and Song 2), a set of variations, eight interludes and a postlude (Postlude: The Keel Row). In concert, the order of the pieces is not fixed and is left for the performer to determine. The eight preludes contain the pieces that directly correspond to Gavin's request. Preludes 1–3, all written on three staves and in 3/8 time, share identical rhythmic and melodic structure of ",
"Walter Steffens (composer)\n Monika Fink, who has been pursuing the topic of her doctoral thesis Musik nach Bildern (Music after Pictures) for over three decades, writes that she knows of no other composer who has so intensively and consistently dedicated himself to setting pictorial images to music. Under the supervision of Fink a project was initiated at the Department of Music at the University of Innsbruck to develop and maintain a comprehensive website devoted to the subject area “Music after Pictures” (see Musik nach Bildern). Numerous works by Steffens, especially those from recent years, are listed in this database, e.g., musical compositions on pictures by Peter Paul Rubens, Rembrandt van Rijn, and Emil Schumacher.",
"John Palmer (composer)\n 1994. Articles and Papers: Introduction to ‘Images of the mind' (1997). Paper given at the 1997 KlangArt International Congress ‘New Music & Technology’ in Osnabrück, Germany. Published in ‘Musik und Neue Technologie 3, Musik im virtuellen Raum’ (edited by Bernd Enders), Universitätsverlag Rasch, Osnabrück (2000). ISBN: 3-934005-64-0. Conceptual models of interaction: towards a perceptual analysis of interactive composition (1997-8) Paper given at the 1997 Sonic Arts Network Conference, University of Birmingham, UK, 10–12 January 1998. Published in the Seamus Journal, USA, Vol. XIV no. 1, Summer 1999. SEAMUS, Sonic Arts Network Perceptual Abstraction and Electroacoustic Composition (1998) Paper given at the 1998 Seamus Conference, Dartmouth College, NH, USA, 16–18 April 1998 (1997–98). ",
"The Photographer\n The Photographer is a three-part mixed media performance accompanied by music (also sometimes referred to as a chamber opera) by composer Philip Glass. The libretto is based on the life and homicide trial of 19th-century English photographer Eadweard Muybridge. Commissioned by the Holland Festival, the opera was first performed in 1982 at the Royal Palace in Amsterdam.",
"Eric Salzman\n as: The Nonesuch recording of Nude Paper Sermon was chosen separately by both Dennis Báthory-Kitsz and David Gunn, creators and hosts of the Kalvos & Damian New Music Bazaar, for their \"Top 100\" desert island recordings. In 1967, Salzman founded the \"New Image of Sound\" series at Hunter College, where his theatrical composition Verses and Cantos (or Foxes and Hedgehogs) was performed for the inaugural concert conducted by Dennis Russell Davies alongside the New York premiere of Berio's Laborintus II. In 1972, Pierre Boulez conducted the piece with the BBC Symphony Orchestra. In 1970, Salzman founded the Quog Music Theater, a mixed-media ",
"Picture Studies\n Picture Studies is an orchestral suite by the American composer Adam Schoenberg. The work was commissioned by the Kansas City Symphony and the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. It was first performed by the Kansas City Symphony conducted by Michael Stern at the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts in Kansas City on February 1, 2013.",
"Columbus: Images for Orchestra\n Columbus: Images for Orchestra (Colón: Imágenes para orquesta) is a composition by Spanish composer Leonardo Balada. It was finished in 1991 and uses material from Balada's opera Christopher Columbus.",
"Images in Sound (He Xuntian)\n Images in Sound ( 声音图案 ) is a piece for conventional and unconventional instruments, composed by He Xuntian in 1997–2003.",
"Ernest Bloch\n with the entire collection of his negatives and prints. Johnson is currently Professor of Art and Design at Cal Poly State University, San Luis Obispo Ca. An account of his discovery and many of Bloch's images can be found on his website. [ericjohnsonphoto.com] ; Voices in the Wilderness: Six American Neo-Romantic Composers, by Walter Simmons. (Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, 2004) ISBN: 978-0-8108-5728-5 ; Kushner, David Z. The Ernest Bloch Companion, (Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut, 2002) ISBN: 978-0-313-27905-8 ; Kintner, Helen Johnston. The Ernest Bloch I Knew (Published by Helen Johnston Kinter, June 2009) ISBN: 978-0-9743356-3-6 ; Werlin, Joella. Suzanne Bloch: Recollections (Familore, Portland, Oregon, 2007) ; Bloch, Suzanne. Ernest Bloch: Creative Spirit: A Program Source Book (Jewish Music Council of the National Jewish Welfare Board, 1976. ; Johnson, Eric B. A Composer's Vision (Aperture 16:3, Millerton, New York, 1972) ",
"Images (book)\n Images, first published in 1994 (now out of print), is a book by David Lynch.",
"Images (ballet)\nMay 24, 1992 Jack Anderson, NY Times ",
"Ernst Haas\n In the early 1970s Haas became interested in creating audiovisual slideshows—long sequences of projected imagery with accompanying soundtracks, dissolving from one image into the next. \"I love music,\" he explained, \"and with my audiovisual presentation I can combine music and photography.” After suffering a stroke in December 1985, Haas concentrated on layouts for two books he wanted to publish, one featuring his black and white photographs, the other his color. At the time of his death from a stroke on September 12, 1986, he had been preparing to write his autobiography.",
"John Stepan Zamecnik\n John Stepan Zamecnik (May 14, 1872 in Cleveland, Ohio – June 13, 1953 in Los Angeles, California) was an American composer and conductor. He is best known for the \"photoplay music\" he composed for use during silent films by pianists, organists, and orchestras. Zamecnik used many pseudonyms, including Dorothy Lee, Lionel Baxter, R.L. (Robert) Creighton, Arturo de Castro, \"Josh and Ted\", J. (Jane) Hathaway, Kathryn Hawthorne, Roberta Hudson, Ioane Kawelo, J. Edgar Lowell, Jules Reynard, F. (Frederick) Van Norman, Hal Vinton and Grant Wellesley.",
"Images (Kenny Barron album)\n Images is an album by pianist Kenny Barron recorded in New York in 2003 and released on the Sunnyside label.",
"The Book of Images\n The Book of Images (Das Buch der Bilder) is a collection of poetry by the Bohemian-Austrian poet and novelist Rainer Maria Rilke (1875-1926). It was first published in 1902 by Axel Juncker Verlag. It consists of individual poems written from 1899 and forward. An extended version was published in 1906, after Rilke had written The Book of Hours, with which scholars link The Book of Images as a phase in the poet's writing.",
"Anthony Braxton\n In his Falling River Musics Braxton began to work on \"image logics\", resulting in graphic scores with large paintings and drawings with smaller legends of various symbols. Performs must find their own meanings in the symbols and construct a path through the score, balancing \"the demands of traditional notation interpretation and esoteric inter-targeting.\"",
"Selwyn Image\n Image was an influential writer on design and the first Slade Professor of Fine Arts at Oxford from 1910 to 1916. Between December 1887 and February 1888, Image gave a series of four lectures on Modern Art at Willis' Rooms. Oscar Wilde attended at least one of this series, and reviewed the second lecture in the Sunday Times on 25 January 1888. Image was also a close associate of Arthur Symons and may have shared his then mistress Muriel (Edith Broadbent). Image published a number of essays, contributed introductions and chapters to scholarly publications, and published a poetry collection, Poems and Carols in 1894.",
"Images (ballet)\n Images is a ballet made by Miriam Mahdaviani for the New York City Ballet's first Diamond Project to Debussy's \"Gigues\" from Images pour orchestre (1906–12) and \"Nuages\" and \"Fêtes\" from his Nocturnes (1893–99). The premiere took place 30 May 1992 at the New York State Theater, Lincoln Center.",
"Images (band)\n Images was a French pop band that existed from 1986 to 1999 and then burst into the formation Émile et Images. The founders, Mario Ramsamy, Jean-Louis Pujade and Richard Seff; came from Toulouse, Occitania. Their biggest hit was \"Les Démons de minuit\" (1986), which was 13 weeks at number 1 on the charts in France."
] |
Who was the composer of The Hope? | [
"Frederik Magle",
"Frederik Reesen Magle",
"Magle",
"Frederick Magle"
] | composer | The Hope (Magle) | 5,932,478 | 75 | [
{
"id": "10457288",
"title": "Stephen A. Hope",
"text": " Stephen Ackerman Hope (September 15, 1931 – June 8, 2003) was an American music editor.",
"score": "1.5477607"
},
{
"id": "3732832",
"title": "Darren Hope",
"text": " Source:",
"score": "1.5439496"
},
{
"id": "26099407",
"title": "Frederik Magle",
"text": " In 2001 his work, The Hope, for brass band, choir, organ and percussion, was given its first performance during the commemoration of the 200th anniversary of the Battle of Copenhagen. The composition was commissioned by the Admiral Danish Fleet in cooperation with the Reformed Church in Copenhagen, where the premiere performance took place on 1 April. The Hope was subsequently recorded and released by the Royal Danish Navy on the album Søværnet Ønsker God Vind (The Royal Danish Navy Wishes Godspeed) in 2005. The Danish organ builders Frobenius commissioned a new work by Magle for their centennial jubilee in 2009. ",
"score": "1.5288048"
},
{
"id": "31367348",
"title": "Christian McLeer",
"text": " Christian McLeer, an American composer is a graduate of the Juilliard Conservatory Pre-College, and Manhattan School of Music. At the age of fourteen he received his first major commission for the American Cancer Society for which he wrote and performed Hope in concert. Since then, he has composed a number of works that have been commissioned and recorded including his one-act opera House of Comedy, an avant-garde piece entitled Feedback Parade, the ballet The Grandfather Clocks, and the opera Haibo. His composition Musing is included on acclaimed flutist Sophia Anastasia's CD of the same name and Hope is included on the CD ",
"score": "1.5241591"
},
{
"id": "26771717",
"title": "Ciaran Hope",
"text": " Ciaran Hope (born 4 August 1974) is an Irish composer of orchestral, choral, and film music. He is the composer of Hollywood film soundtracks such as Screw Cupid, Truth About Kerry as well as the contemplative soundtrack for The Letters, based on the life of Mother Teresa of Calcutta. He has also worked extensively in contemporary music since graduating from Trinity College Dublin. He has written a violin concerto for Cora Venus Lunny, a clarinet quartet for the Czech Clarinet Quartet, and his vocal works have been performed internationally by choirs such as Pfizerphonics and Ireland's 2016 choir of the year, Voci Nuove.",
"score": "1.4902737"
},
{
"id": "25799994",
"title": "Eric Hope",
"text": " and Debussy, although he struggled with the music of Clara Schumann's great friend Johannes Brahms. With his partner Jack Sarch Hope founded the Pro Arte Society in the 1940s. The couple invited performers including Sybil Thorndike, Ralph Richardson and Dirk Bogarde to appear in concerts of words and music, events that drew large audiences to the Royal Festival Hall. In 1973 Hope joined the staff of the Royal Academy of Music. He also taught at the London College of Music and was president of Birmingham University Music Society. In 1998 Hope announced that, following extensive research into his family's history, he wished to be known as Erik Khopinski. He died in Nottingham in 1999.",
"score": "1.4826802"
},
{
"id": "25799992",
"title": "Eric Hope",
"text": " Eric Hope (17 January 1915 – 2 August 1999) was a British pianist.",
"score": "1.4799545"
},
{
"id": "29810783",
"title": "Douglas Hope",
"text": " for the composer Douglas Hope, see Hilda Wilson Douglas David Hope (born 6 April 1944 in Erskine, Renfrewshire) is a former Scottish association football referee who refereed over 1,000 matches, the last being the Scottish Cup Final of 1994. His brother Kenny Hope refereed the 1987 Scottish Cup Final.",
"score": "1.478498"
},
{
"id": "9393635",
"title": "Kenneth Frazelle",
"text": " Concert Music, Frazelle's first publisher. The work was released on Bridge Records in 2011. Kalish remembers DeGaetani working \"like a woman possessed on the intricate and immensely challenging score.\" Worldly Hopes was among the last works that DeGaetani and Kalish premiered—she died of leukemia in 1989. DeGaetani and Kalish discussed the immense complexity of “Worldly Hopes” with Frazelle, relating that it was the most challenging score they had ever tackled. They told him there would be very few performers who would be willing—and able—to take on scores of this difficulty. The composer took this into careful consideration, as the duo had ",
"score": "1.4719777"
},
{
"id": "25708157",
"title": "Donald Hustad",
"text": " During his years at MBI and with the Graham team, Hustad had served as a musical advisor for Hope Publishing Company. Since the 1950s, Hope has published most of Hustad's choral, vocal, and keyboard compositions and arrangements. Hustad held the position of chief editorial consultant with Hope from 1950 to 1961, although his counsel as a musical advisor for the firm continued for three more decades. His knowledge of hymnody and his understanding of trends in church music helped to guide the development of Hope. Hustad's catalog includes over 100 octavos and many vocal and keyboard volumes. Among his editorial contributions are fourteen song books and hymnals, as well as dozens of collections.",
"score": "1.4649837"
},
{
"id": "28445527",
"title": "Victor Hely-Hutchinson",
"text": " Christian Victor Noel Hope Hely-Hutchinson (26 December 1901 – 11 March 1947) was a British composer, conductor, pianist and music administrator. He is best known for the Carol Symphony and for humorous song-settings.",
"score": "1.4620583"
},
{
"id": "3812193",
"title": "List of program music",
"text": "The Hope (2001), depicting the battle of Copenhagen ",
"score": "1.4543152"
},
{
"id": "12873787",
"title": "List of compositions by Leo Sowerby",
"text": "A Liturgy of Hope (selections from the Psalms) (1917) ; The Vision of Sir Launfal (poem of James Russell Lowell (1925) ; Forsaken of Man (Passion setting, adapted from the Gospels by Edward Borgers) (1939) ; The Canticle of the Sun (St Francis of Assisi) (1944), mentioned above ; The Throne of God (Book of Revelation) (1956) ",
"score": "1.447777"
},
{
"id": "28247920",
"title": "The Hope (Magle)",
"text": " The Hope (Danish: Håbet) is a work for brass band, percussion, choir, and organ written in 2001 by Frederik Magle, depicting the Battle of Copenhagen in 1801. It consists of two movements with the first being purely instrumental. The choir enters in the second movement using text from Psalm 27. The music was commissioned by the Admiral Danish Fleet (Royal Danish Navy Operational Command) for the 200th anniversary of the battle in 2001. The Hope also commemorates Olfert Fischer (Commander of the Danish fleet in 1801) who lies buried in the Reformed Church, Copenhagen, where the first performance of the work took place on April 1, 2001, with the Royal Danish Navy Band, the choir of the Reformed church, ",
"score": "1.4455603"
},
{
"id": "25799993",
"title": "Eric Hope",
"text": " Born in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, of Baltic descent, he was a pupil at Warwick School, 1931-34. He studied piano playing in London under Kathleen Arnold, herself a pupil of Clara Schumann's most distinguished student, Fanny Davies. He worked with leading figures of his day, including the conductor Sir Henry Wood and the composer Arthur Bliss. He made his London debut at the BBC Promenade concerts, and could be heard regularly with the London Philharmonic, London Symphony and Hallé orchestras under the batons of conductors such as Malcolm Sargent, Adrian Boult and John Pritchard. During the Second World War Eric Hope was a conscientious objector. He became renowned as a specialist in the works of Bach, ",
"score": "1.4386187"
},
{
"id": "2902794",
"title": "Percy Faith",
"text": " Percy Faith (April 7, 1908 – February 9, 1976) was a Canadian bandleader, orchestrator, composer and conductor, known for his lush arrangements of pop and Christmas standards. He is often credited with popularizing the \"easy listening\" or \"mood music\" format. He became a staple of American popular music in the 1950s and continued well into the 1960s. Though his professional orchestra-leading career began at the height of the Swing Era, he refined and rethought orchestration techniques, including use of large string sections, to soften and fill out the brass-dominated popular music of the 1940s.",
"score": "1.4312935"
},
{
"id": "11335813",
"title": "Hope of the Ages",
"text": " \"Hope of the Ages\" is composed in the key of B with a tempo of 99.5 beats per minute and a musical time signature of.",
"score": "1.4199269"
},
{
"id": "28247922",
"title": "The Hope (Magle)",
"text": "Brass band with 4 Trumpets or Cornets, 1 Flugelhorn, 1 or 2 French horns, 2 Trombones, 1 Euphonium, and 2 Tubas ; 5 Percussionists ; Timpani ; Mixed choir (SATB) ; Organ The work is scored for There is also a version for 4 (or more) cornets, 1 flugelhorn, 3 tenor horns, 2 baritones, 2 trombones, 1 bass trombone, 1 euphonium, 2 tubas, 5 percussionists, timpani, choir, and organ. The Hope is published by Edition Wilhelm Hansen",
"score": "1.4189483"
},
{
"id": "9393633",
"title": "Kenneth Frazelle",
"text": " for Piano to the attention of Kahane, who had an immediate response to the score, and instigated the composer's first commission, a quintet for piano and strings for members of the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra. Kahane's advocacy of Frazelle's music has had a profound effect on the composer's career, resulting in the premieres or performances of fifteen works. The collaboration would also lead to orchestral residencies in the 1990s. Kenneth Frazelle's work came to national attention when the noted singer Jan DeGaetani and pianist Gilbert Kalish premiered Worldly Hopes, in 1987, at the Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art. The composer chose ",
"score": "1.418502"
},
{
"id": "7704588",
"title": "John Ireland (composer)",
"text": " \"The Vain Desire\" (\"If truth in hearts that perish\") ; 5) \"The Encounter\" (\"The street sounds to the soldiers' tread\") ; 6) \"Epilogue\" (\"You smile upon your friend today\") ; \"Love is a Sickness Full of Woes\" ; Mother and Child (song cycle, Christina Rossetti, 1918) ; 1) \"Newborn\" ; 2) \"The Only child\" ; 3) \"Hope\" ; 4) \"Skylark and Nightingale\" ; 5) \"The Blind Boy\" ; 6) \"Baby\" ; 7) \"Death Parting\" ; 8) \"The Garland\" ; \"The Sacred Flame\" ; \"Santa Chiara\" (1925) ; \"Sea-Fever\" (John Masefield, 1913) ; \"Song from o'er the Hill\" (1913) ; Songs of a Wayfarer (song cycle, various poets, 1912) ; ",
"score": "1.4154931"
}
] | [
"Stephen A. Hope\n Stephen Ackerman Hope (September 15, 1931 – June 8, 2003) was an American music editor.",
"Darren Hope\n Source:",
"Frederik Magle\n In 2001 his work, The Hope, for brass band, choir, organ and percussion, was given its first performance during the commemoration of the 200th anniversary of the Battle of Copenhagen. The composition was commissioned by the Admiral Danish Fleet in cooperation with the Reformed Church in Copenhagen, where the premiere performance took place on 1 April. The Hope was subsequently recorded and released by the Royal Danish Navy on the album Søværnet Ønsker God Vind (The Royal Danish Navy Wishes Godspeed) in 2005. The Danish organ builders Frobenius commissioned a new work by Magle for their centennial jubilee in 2009. ",
"Christian McLeer\n Christian McLeer, an American composer is a graduate of the Juilliard Conservatory Pre-College, and Manhattan School of Music. At the age of fourteen he received his first major commission for the American Cancer Society for which he wrote and performed Hope in concert. Since then, he has composed a number of works that have been commissioned and recorded including his one-act opera House of Comedy, an avant-garde piece entitled Feedback Parade, the ballet The Grandfather Clocks, and the opera Haibo. His composition Musing is included on acclaimed flutist Sophia Anastasia's CD of the same name and Hope is included on the CD ",
"Ciaran Hope\n Ciaran Hope (born 4 August 1974) is an Irish composer of orchestral, choral, and film music. He is the composer of Hollywood film soundtracks such as Screw Cupid, Truth About Kerry as well as the contemplative soundtrack for The Letters, based on the life of Mother Teresa of Calcutta. He has also worked extensively in contemporary music since graduating from Trinity College Dublin. He has written a violin concerto for Cora Venus Lunny, a clarinet quartet for the Czech Clarinet Quartet, and his vocal works have been performed internationally by choirs such as Pfizerphonics and Ireland's 2016 choir of the year, Voci Nuove.",
"Eric Hope\n and Debussy, although he struggled with the music of Clara Schumann's great friend Johannes Brahms. With his partner Jack Sarch Hope founded the Pro Arte Society in the 1940s. The couple invited performers including Sybil Thorndike, Ralph Richardson and Dirk Bogarde to appear in concerts of words and music, events that drew large audiences to the Royal Festival Hall. In 1973 Hope joined the staff of the Royal Academy of Music. He also taught at the London College of Music and was president of Birmingham University Music Society. In 1998 Hope announced that, following extensive research into his family's history, he wished to be known as Erik Khopinski. He died in Nottingham in 1999.",
"Eric Hope\n Eric Hope (17 January 1915 – 2 August 1999) was a British pianist.",
"Douglas Hope\n for the composer Douglas Hope, see Hilda Wilson Douglas David Hope (born 6 April 1944 in Erskine, Renfrewshire) is a former Scottish association football referee who refereed over 1,000 matches, the last being the Scottish Cup Final of 1994. His brother Kenny Hope refereed the 1987 Scottish Cup Final.",
"Kenneth Frazelle\n Concert Music, Frazelle's first publisher. The work was released on Bridge Records in 2011. Kalish remembers DeGaetani working \"like a woman possessed on the intricate and immensely challenging score.\" Worldly Hopes was among the last works that DeGaetani and Kalish premiered—she died of leukemia in 1989. DeGaetani and Kalish discussed the immense complexity of “Worldly Hopes” with Frazelle, relating that it was the most challenging score they had ever tackled. They told him there would be very few performers who would be willing—and able—to take on scores of this difficulty. The composer took this into careful consideration, as the duo had ",
"Donald Hustad\n During his years at MBI and with the Graham team, Hustad had served as a musical advisor for Hope Publishing Company. Since the 1950s, Hope has published most of Hustad's choral, vocal, and keyboard compositions and arrangements. Hustad held the position of chief editorial consultant with Hope from 1950 to 1961, although his counsel as a musical advisor for the firm continued for three more decades. His knowledge of hymnody and his understanding of trends in church music helped to guide the development of Hope. Hustad's catalog includes over 100 octavos and many vocal and keyboard volumes. Among his editorial contributions are fourteen song books and hymnals, as well as dozens of collections.",
"Victor Hely-Hutchinson\n Christian Victor Noel Hope Hely-Hutchinson (26 December 1901 – 11 March 1947) was a British composer, conductor, pianist and music administrator. He is best known for the Carol Symphony and for humorous song-settings.",
"List of program music\nThe Hope (2001), depicting the battle of Copenhagen ",
"List of compositions by Leo Sowerby\nA Liturgy of Hope (selections from the Psalms) (1917) ; The Vision of Sir Launfal (poem of James Russell Lowell (1925) ; Forsaken of Man (Passion setting, adapted from the Gospels by Edward Borgers) (1939) ; The Canticle of the Sun (St Francis of Assisi) (1944), mentioned above ; The Throne of God (Book of Revelation) (1956) ",
"The Hope (Magle)\n The Hope (Danish: Håbet) is a work for brass band, percussion, choir, and organ written in 2001 by Frederik Magle, depicting the Battle of Copenhagen in 1801. It consists of two movements with the first being purely instrumental. The choir enters in the second movement using text from Psalm 27. The music was commissioned by the Admiral Danish Fleet (Royal Danish Navy Operational Command) for the 200th anniversary of the battle in 2001. The Hope also commemorates Olfert Fischer (Commander of the Danish fleet in 1801) who lies buried in the Reformed Church, Copenhagen, where the first performance of the work took place on April 1, 2001, with the Royal Danish Navy Band, the choir of the Reformed church, ",
"Eric Hope\n Born in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, of Baltic descent, he was a pupil at Warwick School, 1931-34. He studied piano playing in London under Kathleen Arnold, herself a pupil of Clara Schumann's most distinguished student, Fanny Davies. He worked with leading figures of his day, including the conductor Sir Henry Wood and the composer Arthur Bliss. He made his London debut at the BBC Promenade concerts, and could be heard regularly with the London Philharmonic, London Symphony and Hallé orchestras under the batons of conductors such as Malcolm Sargent, Adrian Boult and John Pritchard. During the Second World War Eric Hope was a conscientious objector. He became renowned as a specialist in the works of Bach, ",
"Percy Faith\n Percy Faith (April 7, 1908 – February 9, 1976) was a Canadian bandleader, orchestrator, composer and conductor, known for his lush arrangements of pop and Christmas standards. He is often credited with popularizing the \"easy listening\" or \"mood music\" format. He became a staple of American popular music in the 1950s and continued well into the 1960s. Though his professional orchestra-leading career began at the height of the Swing Era, he refined and rethought orchestration techniques, including use of large string sections, to soften and fill out the brass-dominated popular music of the 1940s.",
"Hope of the Ages\n \"Hope of the Ages\" is composed in the key of B with a tempo of 99.5 beats per minute and a musical time signature of.",
"The Hope (Magle)\nBrass band with 4 Trumpets or Cornets, 1 Flugelhorn, 1 or 2 French horns, 2 Trombones, 1 Euphonium, and 2 Tubas ; 5 Percussionists ; Timpani ; Mixed choir (SATB) ; Organ The work is scored for There is also a version for 4 (or more) cornets, 1 flugelhorn, 3 tenor horns, 2 baritones, 2 trombones, 1 bass trombone, 1 euphonium, 2 tubas, 5 percussionists, timpani, choir, and organ. The Hope is published by Edition Wilhelm Hansen",
"Kenneth Frazelle\n for Piano to the attention of Kahane, who had an immediate response to the score, and instigated the composer's first commission, a quintet for piano and strings for members of the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra. Kahane's advocacy of Frazelle's music has had a profound effect on the composer's career, resulting in the premieres or performances of fifteen works. The collaboration would also lead to orchestral residencies in the 1990s. Kenneth Frazelle's work came to national attention when the noted singer Jan DeGaetani and pianist Gilbert Kalish premiered Worldly Hopes, in 1987, at the Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art. The composer chose ",
"John Ireland (composer)\n \"The Vain Desire\" (\"If truth in hearts that perish\") ; 5) \"The Encounter\" (\"The street sounds to the soldiers' tread\") ; 6) \"Epilogue\" (\"You smile upon your friend today\") ; \"Love is a Sickness Full of Woes\" ; Mother and Child (song cycle, Christina Rossetti, 1918) ; 1) \"Newborn\" ; 2) \"The Only child\" ; 3) \"Hope\" ; 4) \"Skylark and Nightingale\" ; 5) \"The Blind Boy\" ; 6) \"Baby\" ; 7) \"Death Parting\" ; 8) \"The Garland\" ; \"The Sacred Flame\" ; \"Santa Chiara\" (1925) ; \"Sea-Fever\" (John Masefield, 1913) ; \"Song from o'er the Hill\" (1913) ; Songs of a Wayfarer (song cycle, various poets, 1912) ; "
] |
Who was the composer of Time Machine? | [
"Michael Daugherty",
"Michael Kevin Daugherty"
] | composer | Time Machine (composition) | 1,465,830 | 81 | [
{
"id": "11679971",
"title": "The Time Machine (1960 film)",
"text": " An original film score CD was released in 1987 produced by Arnold Leibovit, the original soundtrack recording was composed and conducted by Russell Garcia himself. Released by GNP Crescendo. The track listing is as follows:",
"score": "1.5881864"
},
{
"id": "13302900",
"title": "Time Machine (Nektar album)",
"text": "Roye Albrighton – composer, guitars, mixing, vocals ; Barbel Craven - composer ; Klaus Henatsch - composer, keyboards ; Ron Howden - composer, drums, vocals ; Billy Sherwood - bass, engineer, mixing ",
"score": "1.5649223"
},
{
"id": "4781905",
"title": "The Time Machine (2002 film)",
"text": " A full score was written by Klaus Badelt, with the recognizable theme being the track \"I Don't Belong Here\", which was later used in the 2008 Discovery Channel Mini series When We Left Earth. In 2002, the film's soundtrack won the World Soundtrack Award for Discovery of the Year.",
"score": "1.549033"
},
{
"id": "1678651",
"title": "John Cacavas",
"text": " John Harry Cacavas (August 13, 1930 – January 28, 2014 ) was an American composer and conductor probably best known for his television scores, such as Kojak, and The Time Machine, for which he was the chief composer. He also composed Kojak's second main title theme for its 5th and final season in 1977-1978.",
"score": "1.5313551"
},
{
"id": "2579193",
"title": "The Time Machine (Alan Parsons album)",
"text": " The Time Machine is the third solo album by English rock musician Alan Parsons. While the sound of this album is similar to some of the soft, ethereal tracks by the Alan Parsons Project, none of the writing or performance credits in the sleeve notes (of the CD edition - the vinyl edition's credits are significantly different) go to Alan Parsons, except for one short and simple instrumental part on \"Temporalia\"; his relation to the album is almost exclusively as producer. The album lacks much of the rock edge of the previous albums up to and including On Air.",
"score": "1.4804108"
},
{
"id": "31290685",
"title": "Cecil Effinger",
"text": " Fort Logan. After the war, he resumed his position at the Colorado College from 1946 to 1948, when he was appointed professor of composition at the University of Colorado in Boulder. He remained in that position, becoming the head of the composition department until 1981, and was composer-in-residence there until his retirement in 1984. In 1945 in Paris, Effinger conceived the idea of a music typewriter, and by 1947 had developed a rough prototype. In March 1954 he patented his machine as the \"Musicwriter\", and exhibited his first production model in July 1955, in Denver. It was simple and robust in construction and was a commercial success throughout the world for more than thirty years. He also invented a device to accurately determine the tempo of music as it is being performed, which he called the Tempowatch.",
"score": "1.4798825"
},
{
"id": "5271407",
"title": "Rick Wakeman",
"text": " College Chapel Choir. The music was originally written for a concert as part of a fund raising event for a church. Wakeman played the album with Remedios and his band in Caesarea, Israel in the following year as well as the Royal Albert Hall in London. Wakeman recorded Time Machine, a concept album based on the science fiction novel The Time Machine by H. G. Wells, featuring Roy Wood and Tracy Ackerman as guest vocalists. The album was released in 1988; Wakeman intended to record it with an orchestra and choir and put on an ice show, but the idea was cancelled due to lack of funds.",
"score": "1.471152"
},
{
"id": "1775950",
"title": "Peter Reynolds (composer)",
"text": " Peter Reynolds (January 12, 1958 – October 11, 2016) was a Welsh composer known for founding PM Music Ensemble. In addition, he was recognised by Guinness World Records as having written with writer Simon Rees the shortest opera on Earth, Sands of Time; a three-minute and thirty-four second long piece. He died on 11 October 2016 at his home in Cardiff.",
"score": "1.4613106"
},
{
"id": "12431844",
"title": "Electronica 1: The Time Machine",
"text": " Electronica 1: The Time Machine is the seventeenth studio album by French electronic musician and composer Jean-Michel Jarre, released on 16 October 2015 by Columbia Records. It was recorded with the help of 15 collaborators, including Vince Clarke of Depeche Mode, Yazoo, and Erasure, Gesaffelstein, M83, Armin van Buuren, John Carpenter, Robert \"3D\" Del Naja of Massive Attack fame, Pete Townshend (from The Who), and the late Edgar Froese of Tangerine Dream, the collaboration being one of Froese's last projects before dying in January 2015. Jarre announced on 20 April 2015 \"Conquistador\" as result of his collaboration with French techno producer Gesaffelstein. On 15 May 2015, a second collaboration, this time with French electronic band M83 titled \"Glory\" was announced, with a music video for the track being released on ",
"score": "1.4490722"
},
{
"id": "3446423",
"title": "Time Machines",
"text": " Time Machines is a 1998 album by English experimental group Coil, originally released under the alias Time Machines. The album was created under the premise of drones named after hallucinogenic chemicals, \"tested and retested\" in the studio for apparent narcotic potency. Main member John Balance also described the album as an attempt to create \"temporal slips\".",
"score": "1.4488184"
},
{
"id": "32727913",
"title": "Time Machine (Rick Wakeman album)",
"text": " Time Machine is a progressive rock album released in 1988 by Rick Wakeman. The album features guest vocals from Roy Wood.The timings are for the CD release on which 5 tracks were extended versions from the LP edition. LP timings for the extended tracks are: \"Angel of Time\" (4.38), \"Slaveman\" (5.05), \"Open Up Your Eyes\" (5.48), \"Make Me a Woman\" (4.57) and \"Rock Age\" (7.48).",
"score": "1.4285762"
},
{
"id": "13628762",
"title": "Richard Norris (musician)",
"text": " Norris formed a new project in 2009 called The Time and Space Machine. The Time and Space Machine signed to Tirk Records in 2009 and released a 7\" single \"Children of the Sun,\" an EP You Are The One, andan album Set Phazer to Stun. A second Time and Space Machine album Taste the Lazer was released in 2012. A The Time and Space Machine remix collection The Way Out Sound From In was released in 2015. This featured remixes of: Warpaint, Jagwar Ma and Temples. The band also collaborated with designer Luke Insect and the street wear label Stussy to create a series of Time and Space Machine Stussy T-shirts.",
"score": "1.4255784"
},
{
"id": "14275123",
"title": "Dean Rosenthal",
"text": " their collaboration Turing Tests. Most recently, he was commissioned by the Oral History of American Music at Yale to compose a new work on the life of Vivian Perlis. His music is associated with American composers Tom Johnson, John Cage, and Wandelweiser and he has been commissioned to write or arrange his music by the Oral History of American Music collection at Yale, Barbara Galli, Morton Subotnick, the Flexible Orchestra, the Washington Square Winds, and others. In late 2019, Edition Wandelweiser Records released his first full length recording Stones/Water/Time/Breath. This recording was acquired by the BBC Radio 3 for their music archives in 2020. Underpinnings, was released as part of a compilation of postminimalism in 2007 and he has contributed to recording ",
"score": "1.4204894"
},
{
"id": "2579200",
"title": "The Time Machine (Alan Parsons album)",
"text": "Alan Parsons – acoustic guitars, keyboards, organ, composer, engineer, producer ; Ian Bairnson – keyboards, guitars, mandolin, saxophone, composer ; Stuart Elliott – keyboards, keyboard programming, drums, drum programming, percussions, orchestral arrangement, composer ; Richard Cottle – keyboards, additional keyboards ; Robyn Smith – keyboards, piano ; John Giblin – bass guitar ; Claire Orsler – viola ; Jackie Norrie, Julia Singleton – violin ; The Philharmonia Orchestra –strings, brass, horns ; Clio Gould – orchestra leader ; Andrew Powell – orchestral arrangement and direction ; Kathryn Tickell – bagpipes, Northumbrian pipes ; Julian Sutton – melodeon ; Tony Hadley, Neil Lockwood, Colin Blunstone, Moya Brennan, Beverley Craven, Graham Dye, Chris Rainbow – lead vocals ; Chris Rainbow, Stuart Elliott – additional vocals ; Prof. Frank Close – narration on \"Temporalia\" ",
"score": "1.4203527"
},
{
"id": "4269546",
"title": "Time Machine (group)",
"text": " Time Machine is American Independent Hip Hop group composed of DJ Mekalek (Matthew Katz), Stoerok (Mike Puretz), Jaysonic (Jason Shechtman) and Comel (Eric Latham). The group formed in 1999 in Washington, D.C.",
"score": "1.4182945"
},
{
"id": "13302898",
"title": "Time Machine (Nektar album)",
"text": " Time Machine is the 13th album by German-based English progressive rock band, Nektar. It is their first album of new material in over four years following Book of Days. However, it is final studio album to feature Roye Albrighton before his death in July 2016.",
"score": "1.412466"
},
{
"id": "12914677",
"title": "Bebe and Louis Barron",
"text": " 1819 ; Time Machine (1970) on Music from the Soundtrack of 'Destination Moon' and Other Themes, Cinema Records LP-8005 ; Space Boy (1971) Tape; revised and used for film of same name, 1973 ; What's The Big Hurry? (1974) Driver's education film ; More Than Human (1974) Film score ; Cannabis (1975) Film score ; The Circe Circuit (1982) Tape ; Elegy for a Dying Planet (1982) Tape ; New Age Synthesis II on Totally Wired (1986) Pennsylvania Public Radio Associates Cassette Series ; What's the Big Hurry? (date unknown) from Sid Davis Productions ; Mixed Emotions by Bebe Barron (2000) CD ",
"score": "1.4118414"
},
{
"id": "7404947",
"title": "Timecop",
"text": " The musical score of Timecop was composed by Mark Isham and conducted by Ken Kugler.",
"score": "1.4114392"
},
{
"id": "13527325",
"title": "David Behrman",
"text": " David Behrman (born August 16, 1937) is an American composer and a pioneer of computer music. In the early 1960s he was the producer of Columbia Records' Music of Our Time series, which included the first recording of Terry Riley's In C. In 1966 Behrman co-founded Sonic Arts Union with fellow composers Robert Ashley, Alvin Lucier and Gordon Mumma. He wrote the music for Merce Cunningham's dances Walkaround Time (1968), Rebus (1975), Pictures (1984) and Eyespace 40 (2007). In 1978, he released his debut album On the Other Ocean, a pioneering work combining computer music with live performance.",
"score": "1.4110388"
},
{
"id": "33044728",
"title": "Time's Encomium",
"text": " Time's Encomium (Jan. 1968-Jan. 1969, 31'43\") is an electronic, four channel, musical composition by Charles Wuorinen for synthesized and processed synthesized sound. Released on Nonesuch Records in 1969, the composition was commissioned by Teresa Sterne for the label. It was awarded the 1970 Pulitzer Prize for Music, and was realized on the RCA Mark II Synthesizer at the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center, NYC. At the time Wuorinen was the youngest composer ever to win the Pulitzer. The piece is also the first electronic piece to win the prize. \"Time's Encomium is the title because in this work everything depends on the absolute, not the seeming, length of events and sections. Being electronic, Time's Encomium has no inflective dimension. Its rhythm is always quantitative, never qualitative. Because I need time, I praise it; hence the title. Because it doesn't ",
"score": "1.4097751"
}
] | [
"The Time Machine (1960 film)\n An original film score CD was released in 1987 produced by Arnold Leibovit, the original soundtrack recording was composed and conducted by Russell Garcia himself. Released by GNP Crescendo. The track listing is as follows:",
"Time Machine (Nektar album)\nRoye Albrighton – composer, guitars, mixing, vocals ; Barbel Craven - composer ; Klaus Henatsch - composer, keyboards ; Ron Howden - composer, drums, vocals ; Billy Sherwood - bass, engineer, mixing ",
"The Time Machine (2002 film)\n A full score was written by Klaus Badelt, with the recognizable theme being the track \"I Don't Belong Here\", which was later used in the 2008 Discovery Channel Mini series When We Left Earth. In 2002, the film's soundtrack won the World Soundtrack Award for Discovery of the Year.",
"John Cacavas\n John Harry Cacavas (August 13, 1930 – January 28, 2014 ) was an American composer and conductor probably best known for his television scores, such as Kojak, and The Time Machine, for which he was the chief composer. He also composed Kojak's second main title theme for its 5th and final season in 1977-1978.",
"The Time Machine (Alan Parsons album)\n The Time Machine is the third solo album by English rock musician Alan Parsons. While the sound of this album is similar to some of the soft, ethereal tracks by the Alan Parsons Project, none of the writing or performance credits in the sleeve notes (of the CD edition - the vinyl edition's credits are significantly different) go to Alan Parsons, except for one short and simple instrumental part on \"Temporalia\"; his relation to the album is almost exclusively as producer. The album lacks much of the rock edge of the previous albums up to and including On Air.",
"Cecil Effinger\n Fort Logan. After the war, he resumed his position at the Colorado College from 1946 to 1948, when he was appointed professor of composition at the University of Colorado in Boulder. He remained in that position, becoming the head of the composition department until 1981, and was composer-in-residence there until his retirement in 1984. In 1945 in Paris, Effinger conceived the idea of a music typewriter, and by 1947 had developed a rough prototype. In March 1954 he patented his machine as the \"Musicwriter\", and exhibited his first production model in July 1955, in Denver. It was simple and robust in construction and was a commercial success throughout the world for more than thirty years. He also invented a device to accurately determine the tempo of music as it is being performed, which he called the Tempowatch.",
"Rick Wakeman\n College Chapel Choir. The music was originally written for a concert as part of a fund raising event for a church. Wakeman played the album with Remedios and his band in Caesarea, Israel in the following year as well as the Royal Albert Hall in London. Wakeman recorded Time Machine, a concept album based on the science fiction novel The Time Machine by H. G. Wells, featuring Roy Wood and Tracy Ackerman as guest vocalists. The album was released in 1988; Wakeman intended to record it with an orchestra and choir and put on an ice show, but the idea was cancelled due to lack of funds.",
"Peter Reynolds (composer)\n Peter Reynolds (January 12, 1958 – October 11, 2016) was a Welsh composer known for founding PM Music Ensemble. In addition, he was recognised by Guinness World Records as having written with writer Simon Rees the shortest opera on Earth, Sands of Time; a three-minute and thirty-four second long piece. He died on 11 October 2016 at his home in Cardiff.",
"Electronica 1: The Time Machine\n Electronica 1: The Time Machine is the seventeenth studio album by French electronic musician and composer Jean-Michel Jarre, released on 16 October 2015 by Columbia Records. It was recorded with the help of 15 collaborators, including Vince Clarke of Depeche Mode, Yazoo, and Erasure, Gesaffelstein, M83, Armin van Buuren, John Carpenter, Robert \"3D\" Del Naja of Massive Attack fame, Pete Townshend (from The Who), and the late Edgar Froese of Tangerine Dream, the collaboration being one of Froese's last projects before dying in January 2015. Jarre announced on 20 April 2015 \"Conquistador\" as result of his collaboration with French techno producer Gesaffelstein. On 15 May 2015, a second collaboration, this time with French electronic band M83 titled \"Glory\" was announced, with a music video for the track being released on ",
"Time Machines\n Time Machines is a 1998 album by English experimental group Coil, originally released under the alias Time Machines. The album was created under the premise of drones named after hallucinogenic chemicals, \"tested and retested\" in the studio for apparent narcotic potency. Main member John Balance also described the album as an attempt to create \"temporal slips\".",
"Time Machine (Rick Wakeman album)\n Time Machine is a progressive rock album released in 1988 by Rick Wakeman. The album features guest vocals from Roy Wood.The timings are for the CD release on which 5 tracks were extended versions from the LP edition. LP timings for the extended tracks are: \"Angel of Time\" (4.38), \"Slaveman\" (5.05), \"Open Up Your Eyes\" (5.48), \"Make Me a Woman\" (4.57) and \"Rock Age\" (7.48).",
"Richard Norris (musician)\n Norris formed a new project in 2009 called The Time and Space Machine. The Time and Space Machine signed to Tirk Records in 2009 and released a 7\" single \"Children of the Sun,\" an EP You Are The One, andan album Set Phazer to Stun. A second Time and Space Machine album Taste the Lazer was released in 2012. A The Time and Space Machine remix collection The Way Out Sound From In was released in 2015. This featured remixes of: Warpaint, Jagwar Ma and Temples. The band also collaborated with designer Luke Insect and the street wear label Stussy to create a series of Time and Space Machine Stussy T-shirts.",
"Dean Rosenthal\n their collaboration Turing Tests. Most recently, he was commissioned by the Oral History of American Music at Yale to compose a new work on the life of Vivian Perlis. His music is associated with American composers Tom Johnson, John Cage, and Wandelweiser and he has been commissioned to write or arrange his music by the Oral History of American Music collection at Yale, Barbara Galli, Morton Subotnick, the Flexible Orchestra, the Washington Square Winds, and others. In late 2019, Edition Wandelweiser Records released his first full length recording Stones/Water/Time/Breath. This recording was acquired by the BBC Radio 3 for their music archives in 2020. Underpinnings, was released as part of a compilation of postminimalism in 2007 and he has contributed to recording ",
"The Time Machine (Alan Parsons album)\nAlan Parsons – acoustic guitars, keyboards, organ, composer, engineer, producer ; Ian Bairnson – keyboards, guitars, mandolin, saxophone, composer ; Stuart Elliott – keyboards, keyboard programming, drums, drum programming, percussions, orchestral arrangement, composer ; Richard Cottle – keyboards, additional keyboards ; Robyn Smith – keyboards, piano ; John Giblin – bass guitar ; Claire Orsler – viola ; Jackie Norrie, Julia Singleton – violin ; The Philharmonia Orchestra –strings, brass, horns ; Clio Gould – orchestra leader ; Andrew Powell – orchestral arrangement and direction ; Kathryn Tickell – bagpipes, Northumbrian pipes ; Julian Sutton – melodeon ; Tony Hadley, Neil Lockwood, Colin Blunstone, Moya Brennan, Beverley Craven, Graham Dye, Chris Rainbow – lead vocals ; Chris Rainbow, Stuart Elliott – additional vocals ; Prof. Frank Close – narration on \"Temporalia\" ",
"Time Machine (group)\n Time Machine is American Independent Hip Hop group composed of DJ Mekalek (Matthew Katz), Stoerok (Mike Puretz), Jaysonic (Jason Shechtman) and Comel (Eric Latham). The group formed in 1999 in Washington, D.C.",
"Time Machine (Nektar album)\n Time Machine is the 13th album by German-based English progressive rock band, Nektar. It is their first album of new material in over four years following Book of Days. However, it is final studio album to feature Roye Albrighton before his death in July 2016.",
"Bebe and Louis Barron\n 1819 ; Time Machine (1970) on Music from the Soundtrack of 'Destination Moon' and Other Themes, Cinema Records LP-8005 ; Space Boy (1971) Tape; revised and used for film of same name, 1973 ; What's The Big Hurry? (1974) Driver's education film ; More Than Human (1974) Film score ; Cannabis (1975) Film score ; The Circe Circuit (1982) Tape ; Elegy for a Dying Planet (1982) Tape ; New Age Synthesis II on Totally Wired (1986) Pennsylvania Public Radio Associates Cassette Series ; What's the Big Hurry? (date unknown) from Sid Davis Productions ; Mixed Emotions by Bebe Barron (2000) CD ",
"Timecop\n The musical score of Timecop was composed by Mark Isham and conducted by Ken Kugler.",
"David Behrman\n David Behrman (born August 16, 1937) is an American composer and a pioneer of computer music. In the early 1960s he was the producer of Columbia Records' Music of Our Time series, which included the first recording of Terry Riley's In C. In 1966 Behrman co-founded Sonic Arts Union with fellow composers Robert Ashley, Alvin Lucier and Gordon Mumma. He wrote the music for Merce Cunningham's dances Walkaround Time (1968), Rebus (1975), Pictures (1984) and Eyespace 40 (2007). In 1978, he released his debut album On the Other Ocean, a pioneering work combining computer music with live performance.",
"Time's Encomium\n Time's Encomium (Jan. 1968-Jan. 1969, 31'43\") is an electronic, four channel, musical composition by Charles Wuorinen for synthesized and processed synthesized sound. Released on Nonesuch Records in 1969, the composition was commissioned by Teresa Sterne for the label. It was awarded the 1970 Pulitzer Prize for Music, and was realized on the RCA Mark II Synthesizer at the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center, NYC. At the time Wuorinen was the youngest composer ever to win the Pulitzer. The piece is also the first electronic piece to win the prize. \"Time's Encomium is the title because in this work everything depends on the absolute, not the seeming, length of events and sections. Being electronic, Time's Encomium has no inflective dimension. Its rhythm is always quantitative, never qualitative. Because I need time, I praise it; hence the title. Because it doesn't "
] |
Who was the composer of Porch? | [
"Eddie Vedder",
"Eddie Jerome Vedder",
"Edward Louis Severson III"
] | composer | Porch (Pearl Jam song) | 1,985,979 | 76 | [
{
"id": "31700753",
"title": "Ludlow Porch",
"text": " Ludlow Porch (October 11, 1934 – February 11, 2011), born Bobby Crawford Hanson, was an American radio humorist popular in the Southern United States. He was the author of many humor books, including Fat White Guys Cookbook and Who Cares about Apathy. His stepbrother was Lewis Grizzard.",
"score": "1.5623969"
},
{
"id": "477652",
"title": "Porches (band)",
"text": " Porches (formerly stylized as PORCHES.) is an American synth-pop project of New York-based musician Aaron Maine, formed in Pleasantville, New York in 2010.",
"score": "1.5431765"
},
{
"id": "8237897",
"title": "Beth Porch",
"text": " Beth Porch (born 13 November 1994 in Dawlish, Devon, England) is an English pop singer, who rose to fame after appearing on the fourteenth series of Britain's Got Talent. She performed an original song for her audition, \"You Taught Me What Love Is\", which was subsequently released as a single to raise money for the NHS during the COVID-19 pandemic. Porch is also a children's nurse at Great Ormond Street Hospital. Her performance of \"You Taught Me What Love Is\" on Britain's Got Talent was filmed in January but aired during the COVID-19 pandemic, and Porch revealed that she had contracted the disease herself. Her paternal grandfather was doctor and antarctic explorer Antony G Davies, the namesake of Davies Top.",
"score": "1.4774442"
},
{
"id": "477653",
"title": "Porches (band)",
"text": " Maine has also released music under the names Aaron Maine, Aaron Maine and the Reilly Brothers, Ronald Paris, and Ronnie Mystery. The band released its second studio album, Pool, on February 5, 2016, to critical acclaim. The band released its third studio album, The House, on January 19, 2018. The band's fourth album, Ricky Music, was released on March 13, 2020.",
"score": "1.4756613"
},
{
"id": "6047587",
"title": "Porchlight Music Theatre",
"text": " Porchlight Music Theatre is a professional theatre company in Chicago, Illinois that has won numerous Joseph Jefferson Awards in its 25-year history. The company has come to embody the slogan \"american musicals. chicago style.\"",
"score": "1.4689168"
},
{
"id": "13541098",
"title": "Front Porch",
"text": " Front Porch is the sixth studio album released by American singer-songwriter Joy Williams. It is Williams' second solo album since the breakup of The Civil Wars and was released on May 3, 2019. It was nominated for Best Folk Album at the 62nd Grammy Awards.",
"score": "1.4675511"
},
{
"id": "8237758",
"title": "You Taught Me What Love Is",
"text": " Porch is a children's nurse at Great Ormond Street Hospital and the song was inspired by the families and patients she works with. The performance on the fourteenth series of Britain's Got Talent was filmed in January 2020 but aired during the COVID-19 pandemic, and Porch revealed that she had contracted the disease herself. Proceeds from the single were shared between NHS Charities Together and Great Ormond Street Hospital Children's Charity.",
"score": "1.4630039"
},
{
"id": "6047588",
"title": "Porchlight Music Theatre",
"text": " Its initial production in 1995 was the premiere of Women Who Love Science Too Much by K.R. Cahill and directed by William Eric Bramlett. In 2010, Michael Weber took over artistic direction. Weber previously served as artistic director for the inaugural season of Drury Lane Theatre Water Tower Place (now the Broadway Playhouse) and at Theatre at the Center (1998–2004). During the 2016–2017 season, the theatre attracted record attendance with its staging of In the Heights. This production changed the face of the company and helped the company move to the Ruth Page Center for the Arts, in Chicago's Gold Coast.",
"score": "1.4474734"
},
{
"id": "2097834",
"title": "Robert Porch",
"text": " Porch was a right-handed middle-order batsman. He did not appear in first-class cricket for Oxford University, but when Somerset played the university side in 1895, he played for the county team, scoring 11 and 42. At the end of the university term, he became a fairly regular player for Somerset in the second half of the 1895 season. In his third first-class match, against Essex at Taunton, he scored an unbeaten 85, and this was to be the highest score of his cricket career; he was upstaged in the match, however, by the Essex total of 692, which was the highest total for the county for 95 years until beaten in 1990. Even that Essex record was upstaged in Porch's next match for Somerset at Taunton, though, when Lancashire made 801, with Archie MacLaren setting a world record for the highest first-class ",
"score": "1.4398772"
},
{
"id": "477655",
"title": "Porches (band)",
"text": "Summer of Ten (2011) ; Je t'aime (2011) ; Scrap and Love Songs Revisited (2011) ; Water (2016) ",
"score": "1.4382931"
},
{
"id": "4976220",
"title": "Porch (company)",
"text": " In October 2015, Porch announced the acquisition of Fountain, an online service that connects Internet users with a variety of experts through video chats, texts and annotated photos. Fountain was co-founded by Aaron Patzer, the founder of Mint.com, and Jean Sini. Sini joined Porch; Patzer did not.",
"score": "1.4354181"
},
{
"id": "27575966",
"title": "Verandah Porche",
"text": " Verandah Porche (born November 8, 1945) is a poet living in Guilford, Vermont.",
"score": "1.4248068"
},
{
"id": "7804481",
"title": "Golden Boy (musical)",
"text": " a hit in a cover version recorded by Matt Monro. Art Blakey recorded a jazz version of the score in 1964 and Quincy Jones' Golden Boy (Mercury, 1964) featured three versions of the theme. Davis reprised his role for the 1968 West End production at the London Palladium, the first book musical ever to play in the theatre. Porchlight Music Theatre presented Golden Boy as a part of \"Porchlight Revisits\" in which they stage three forgotten musicals per year. It was in Chicago, Illinois in February 2014. It was directed by Chuck Smith, choreographed by Dina DiCostanzio, and music directed by Austin Cook.",
"score": "1.421805"
},
{
"id": "30486859",
"title": "Last Night on the Back Porch",
"text": " \"Last Night on the Back Porch (I Loved Her Best of All)\" is a popular song with music by Carl Schraubstader and lyrics by Lew Brown, published in 1923. It was introduced in the Broadway revue George White's Scandals where it was performed by Winnie Lightner. The song was popularized in 1924 by Paul Whiteman (recorded for Victor on September 4, 1923, vocals by the American Quartet); and by a recording by Ernest Hare and Billy Jones, both of which reached the charts of the day.",
"score": "1.421586"
},
{
"id": "477654",
"title": "Porches (band)",
"text": "Slow Dance in the Cosmos (2013) ; Pool (2016) ; The House (2018) ; Ricky Music (2020) ; All Day Gentle Hold ! (2021) ",
"score": "1.4163446"
},
{
"id": "477657",
"title": "Porches (band)",
"text": "Aaron Maine (guitar, vocals, 2010–present) ; Seiya Jewell (keyboards, 2011–present) ; Maya Laner (bass, vocals, synths, 2013–present) ; Dan English (guitar, 2017–present) ; Noah Hecht (drums, 2018–present) ",
"score": "1.4111996"
},
{
"id": "2097832",
"title": "Robert Porch",
"text": " Porch's family were prominent bankers in the company of Reeves and Porch in the Somerset town of Glastonbury and both his grandfather, Thomas Porch Porch (originally named Thomas Porch Reeves), and his father, John Albert Porch, were long-serving members of the town council and mayor of Glastonbury three times each. Porch's mother was Margaret Bagehot from Langport, a cousin of the economist and political writer Walter Bagehot; the Bagehots were also prominent Somerset bankers and the family firm was Stuckey's of Langport, which had taken over Reeves and Porch and which was in Victorian times the second largest producer of banknotes in England after the Bank of England. The ",
"score": "1.4073598"
},
{
"id": "14193816",
"title": "Frank R. Adams",
"text": " He was born on July 7, 1883 in Morrison, Illinois. Educated at the University of Chicago, Adams worked as a reporter for several Chicago newspapers, including the Chicago Tribune, City Press, Chicago Daily News, and the Chicago Herald-Examiner. From 1916 to 1932, he was manager of the Nufer-Adams Playhouse (which he cofounded with lumberman J.J. Nufer and which since 1973 has been known as Howmet Playhouse) and owner of the Sylvan Beach Resort Co. in Whitehall, Michigan. Adams wrote plays, musical comedies, and lyrics for popular songs, such as \"I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now\". He composed the stage scores for the musicals \"The Time, the Place, and the Girl\", \"The Girl Question\", \"A Stubborn Cinderella\", \"The Goddess of Liberty\", and \"The Price of Tonight\". ",
"score": "1.4021193"
},
{
"id": "32565775",
"title": "Patrick Wilson (composer)",
"text": " Patrick Wilson is a Sussex born musician/composer who was educated at Hurstpierpoint College where he formed his first band. In 1982 his composition and production skills attracted the attention of 'godfather of library music' Robin Phillips, MD of Bruton Music. With Bruton, Patrick's music quickly became popular in movies, TV and commercials, including 'Dumb & Dumber', themes tunes for C4's pioneering 'Parliament Programme', GMTV's 'Breakfast TV' and the first major 'Gossard Wonderbra' commercial. Patrick has released many records and CD's over the years and is now composing Polish mezzo-soprano Renata Jonscher's new CD. Their videos have gained wide popularity via Classic FMTV and now feature daily on Sky channel 369 (oMusic TV).",
"score": "1.4014503"
},
{
"id": "6047590",
"title": "Porchlight Music Theatre",
"text": " Since 2013, the company has staged series' of 'lost' musicals. There are three of these productions per season. Each production runs for three nights. Before each performance, there is a \"Behind the Show Backstory\" multimedia presentation by Artistic Director Michael Weber explaining the history of the production.",
"score": "1.3978596"
}
] | [
"Ludlow Porch\n Ludlow Porch (October 11, 1934 – February 11, 2011), born Bobby Crawford Hanson, was an American radio humorist popular in the Southern United States. He was the author of many humor books, including Fat White Guys Cookbook and Who Cares about Apathy. His stepbrother was Lewis Grizzard.",
"Porches (band)\n Porches (formerly stylized as PORCHES.) is an American synth-pop project of New York-based musician Aaron Maine, formed in Pleasantville, New York in 2010.",
"Beth Porch\n Beth Porch (born 13 November 1994 in Dawlish, Devon, England) is an English pop singer, who rose to fame after appearing on the fourteenth series of Britain's Got Talent. She performed an original song for her audition, \"You Taught Me What Love Is\", which was subsequently released as a single to raise money for the NHS during the COVID-19 pandemic. Porch is also a children's nurse at Great Ormond Street Hospital. Her performance of \"You Taught Me What Love Is\" on Britain's Got Talent was filmed in January but aired during the COVID-19 pandemic, and Porch revealed that she had contracted the disease herself. Her paternal grandfather was doctor and antarctic explorer Antony G Davies, the namesake of Davies Top.",
"Porches (band)\n Maine has also released music under the names Aaron Maine, Aaron Maine and the Reilly Brothers, Ronald Paris, and Ronnie Mystery. The band released its second studio album, Pool, on February 5, 2016, to critical acclaim. The band released its third studio album, The House, on January 19, 2018. The band's fourth album, Ricky Music, was released on March 13, 2020.",
"Porchlight Music Theatre\n Porchlight Music Theatre is a professional theatre company in Chicago, Illinois that has won numerous Joseph Jefferson Awards in its 25-year history. The company has come to embody the slogan \"american musicals. chicago style.\"",
"Front Porch\n Front Porch is the sixth studio album released by American singer-songwriter Joy Williams. It is Williams' second solo album since the breakup of The Civil Wars and was released on May 3, 2019. It was nominated for Best Folk Album at the 62nd Grammy Awards.",
"You Taught Me What Love Is\n Porch is a children's nurse at Great Ormond Street Hospital and the song was inspired by the families and patients she works with. The performance on the fourteenth series of Britain's Got Talent was filmed in January 2020 but aired during the COVID-19 pandemic, and Porch revealed that she had contracted the disease herself. Proceeds from the single were shared between NHS Charities Together and Great Ormond Street Hospital Children's Charity.",
"Porchlight Music Theatre\n Its initial production in 1995 was the premiere of Women Who Love Science Too Much by K.R. Cahill and directed by William Eric Bramlett. In 2010, Michael Weber took over artistic direction. Weber previously served as artistic director for the inaugural season of Drury Lane Theatre Water Tower Place (now the Broadway Playhouse) and at Theatre at the Center (1998–2004). During the 2016–2017 season, the theatre attracted record attendance with its staging of In the Heights. This production changed the face of the company and helped the company move to the Ruth Page Center for the Arts, in Chicago's Gold Coast.",
"Robert Porch\n Porch was a right-handed middle-order batsman. He did not appear in first-class cricket for Oxford University, but when Somerset played the university side in 1895, he played for the county team, scoring 11 and 42. At the end of the university term, he became a fairly regular player for Somerset in the second half of the 1895 season. In his third first-class match, against Essex at Taunton, he scored an unbeaten 85, and this was to be the highest score of his cricket career; he was upstaged in the match, however, by the Essex total of 692, which was the highest total for the county for 95 years until beaten in 1990. Even that Essex record was upstaged in Porch's next match for Somerset at Taunton, though, when Lancashire made 801, with Archie MacLaren setting a world record for the highest first-class ",
"Porches (band)\nSummer of Ten (2011) ; Je t'aime (2011) ; Scrap and Love Songs Revisited (2011) ; Water (2016) ",
"Porch (company)\n In October 2015, Porch announced the acquisition of Fountain, an online service that connects Internet users with a variety of experts through video chats, texts and annotated photos. Fountain was co-founded by Aaron Patzer, the founder of Mint.com, and Jean Sini. Sini joined Porch; Patzer did not.",
"Verandah Porche\n Verandah Porche (born November 8, 1945) is a poet living in Guilford, Vermont.",
"Golden Boy (musical)\n a hit in a cover version recorded by Matt Monro. Art Blakey recorded a jazz version of the score in 1964 and Quincy Jones' Golden Boy (Mercury, 1964) featured three versions of the theme. Davis reprised his role for the 1968 West End production at the London Palladium, the first book musical ever to play in the theatre. Porchlight Music Theatre presented Golden Boy as a part of \"Porchlight Revisits\" in which they stage three forgotten musicals per year. It was in Chicago, Illinois in February 2014. It was directed by Chuck Smith, choreographed by Dina DiCostanzio, and music directed by Austin Cook.",
"Last Night on the Back Porch\n \"Last Night on the Back Porch (I Loved Her Best of All)\" is a popular song with music by Carl Schraubstader and lyrics by Lew Brown, published in 1923. It was introduced in the Broadway revue George White's Scandals where it was performed by Winnie Lightner. The song was popularized in 1924 by Paul Whiteman (recorded for Victor on September 4, 1923, vocals by the American Quartet); and by a recording by Ernest Hare and Billy Jones, both of which reached the charts of the day.",
"Porches (band)\nSlow Dance in the Cosmos (2013) ; Pool (2016) ; The House (2018) ; Ricky Music (2020) ; All Day Gentle Hold ! (2021) ",
"Porches (band)\nAaron Maine (guitar, vocals, 2010–present) ; Seiya Jewell (keyboards, 2011–present) ; Maya Laner (bass, vocals, synths, 2013–present) ; Dan English (guitar, 2017–present) ; Noah Hecht (drums, 2018–present) ",
"Robert Porch\n Porch's family were prominent bankers in the company of Reeves and Porch in the Somerset town of Glastonbury and both his grandfather, Thomas Porch Porch (originally named Thomas Porch Reeves), and his father, John Albert Porch, were long-serving members of the town council and mayor of Glastonbury three times each. Porch's mother was Margaret Bagehot from Langport, a cousin of the economist and political writer Walter Bagehot; the Bagehots were also prominent Somerset bankers and the family firm was Stuckey's of Langport, which had taken over Reeves and Porch and which was in Victorian times the second largest producer of banknotes in England after the Bank of England. The ",
"Frank R. Adams\n He was born on July 7, 1883 in Morrison, Illinois. Educated at the University of Chicago, Adams worked as a reporter for several Chicago newspapers, including the Chicago Tribune, City Press, Chicago Daily News, and the Chicago Herald-Examiner. From 1916 to 1932, he was manager of the Nufer-Adams Playhouse (which he cofounded with lumberman J.J. Nufer and which since 1973 has been known as Howmet Playhouse) and owner of the Sylvan Beach Resort Co. in Whitehall, Michigan. Adams wrote plays, musical comedies, and lyrics for popular songs, such as \"I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now\". He composed the stage scores for the musicals \"The Time, the Place, and the Girl\", \"The Girl Question\", \"A Stubborn Cinderella\", \"The Goddess of Liberty\", and \"The Price of Tonight\". ",
"Patrick Wilson (composer)\n Patrick Wilson is a Sussex born musician/composer who was educated at Hurstpierpoint College where he formed his first band. In 1982 his composition and production skills attracted the attention of 'godfather of library music' Robin Phillips, MD of Bruton Music. With Bruton, Patrick's music quickly became popular in movies, TV and commercials, including 'Dumb & Dumber', themes tunes for C4's pioneering 'Parliament Programme', GMTV's 'Breakfast TV' and the first major 'Gossard Wonderbra' commercial. Patrick has released many records and CD's over the years and is now composing Polish mezzo-soprano Renata Jonscher's new CD. Their videos have gained wide popularity via Classic FMTV and now feature daily on Sky channel 369 (oMusic TV).",
"Porchlight Music Theatre\n Since 2013, the company has staged series' of 'lost' musicals. There are three of these productions per season. Each production runs for three nights. Before each performance, there is a \"Behind the Show Backstory\" multimedia presentation by Artistic Director Michael Weber explaining the history of the production."
] |
Who was the composer of Shine? | [
"Luna Sea",
"Lunacy"
] | composer | Shine (Luna Sea song) | 5,745,774 | 56 | [
{
"id": "12466161",
"title": "Shine (Kevin Moore album)",
"text": " Shine is the soundtrack to the 2006 Turkish film Küçük kiyamet (“Little Apocalypse“). Kevin Moore wrote the music while he was living in Istanbul, Turkey. The album was funded by fans and released via Kickstarter.com on CD in 2011.",
"score": "1.6061239"
},
{
"id": "15648256",
"title": "Shine (Gwen Stefani song)",
"text": " \"Shine\" received mixed reviews from music critics. E! News Bruna Nessif gave the single a positive review, stating: \"When it comes to feel-good music, leave it up to Gwen Stefani and Pharrell to get the job done\". A reviewer from Vibe praised it as \"the perfect theme song\". Abe Dewing, a member of the Cambridge Symphony Orchestra, described it as a \"sharp, hip tune\" in the Boston Herald. He compared its opening trumpet riff to music by British composer Herbert Chappell, who created the theme for the 1975 television series Paddington. Chappell also composed music for the 1986 concerto \"Paddington Bear's First Concert\". Dewing praised Stefani and Willams' ability \"to compose new music for existing source material intended for children\". A reviewer from the website antiMusic described the recording as \"even more feel good\" than the pair's collaboration on \"Spark the Fire\". Daniel Sannwald gave it three ",
"score": "1.5069582"
},
{
"id": "31075616",
"title": "Piano Concerto No. 3 (Rachmaninoff)",
"text": " The concerto is significant in the 1996 film Shine, based on the life of pianist David Helfgott.",
"score": "1.4906495"
},
{
"id": "5683320",
"title": "Shine (film)",
"text": " Shine is a 1996 Australian biographical psychological drama film based on the life of David Helfgott, a pianist who suffered a mental breakdown and spent years in institutions. The film stars Geoffrey Rush, Lynn Redgrave, Armin Mueller-Stahl, Noah Taylor, John Gielgud, Googie Withers, Justin Braine, Sonia Todd, Nicholas Bell, Chris Haywood, and Alex Rafalowicz. The film was directed by Scott Hicks. The screenplay was written by Jan Sardi. Shine had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival. In 1997, Geoffrey Rush was awarded the Academy Award for Best Actor at the 69th Academy Awards for his performance in the lead role.",
"score": "1.4862287"
},
{
"id": "3004775",
"title": "Paddington (film)",
"text": " Nick Urata composed the film's soundtrack. Gwen Stefani and Pharrell Williams were commissioned to write a song for the film's American release, which turned into \"Shine\".",
"score": "1.4840844"
},
{
"id": "28992013",
"title": "Shine (Mary-Jess Leaverland album)",
"text": " Shine is the debut studio album by the English classical crossover singer-songwriter Mary-Jess Leaverland. It was originally released in August 2011, on the label Decca. The album follows her victory on Chinese television talent contest Min Xing Chang Fan Tian in December 2009. Leaverland described the album's sound as a \"True hybrid between Classical and Pop with a filmic element and an Oriental thread\".",
"score": "1.4815059"
},
{
"id": "16423879",
"title": "Rain or Shine (Dick Haymes album)",
"text": "Harold Arlen\tComposer ; Irving Berlin\tComposer ; Ian Bernard\tConductor, Primary Artist ; Hoagy Carmichael\tComposer ; Howard Dietz\tComposer ; Walter Donaldson\tComposer ; George Gershwin\tComposer ; Ira Gershwin\tComposer ; Mack Gordon\tComposer ; Oscar Hammerstein II\tComposer ; Lorenz Hart\tComposer ; Dick Haymes\tPrimary Artist, Vocals ; Herman Leonard\tCover Photo ; Johnny Mercer\tComposer ; Ray Noble\tComposer ; Richard Rodgers\tComposer ; Arthur Schwartz\tComposer ; Harry Warren\tComposer ; Ned Washington\tComposer ",
"score": "1.4684625"
},
{
"id": "5683321",
"title": "Shine (film)",
"text": " A young man (Geoffrey Rush) wanders through a heavy rainstorm, finding his way into a nearby restaurant. The restaurant's employees try to determine if he needs help. Despite his manic mode of speech being difficult to understand, a waitress, Sylvia, learns that his name is David Helfgott and that he is staying at a local hotel. Sylvia returns him to the hotel, and despite his attempts to engage her with his musical knowledge and ownership of various musical scores, she leaves. As a child, David is growing up in suburban Adelaide, South Australia and competing in the musical competition of a local Eisteddfod. Helfgott has been taught to play by his father, Peter (Armin ",
"score": "1.4680514"
},
{
"id": "5683327",
"title": "Shine (film)",
"text": " Geoffrey Rush resumed piano lessons—suspended when he was 14—in order not to require a hand double.",
"score": "1.46438"
},
{
"id": "14727337",
"title": "ShineBright",
"text": " December 2013",
"score": "1.4621564"
},
{
"id": "12466162",
"title": "Shine (Kevin Moore album)",
"text": "Written and performed by Kevin Moore ; Vocals by Bige Akdeniz ; Cover artwork by Conte di San Pietro ",
"score": "1.4616508"
},
{
"id": "13729159",
"title": "Shine (Take That song)",
"text": "} ",
"score": "1.4583462"
},
{
"id": "5683322",
"title": "Shine (film)",
"text": " who is obsessed with winning and has no tolerance for imperfection or disobedience. While playing at the Eisteddfod, David is noticed by Mr. Rosen, a local piano teacher who, after initial resistance from Peter, takes over David's musical instruction. As a teenager, David wins the state musical championship and is invited by concert violinist Isaac Stern to study in United States. Although plans are made to raise money to send David off for America and that his family is initially supportive, Peter forbids David to leave, thinking his absence would destroy the family. To make matters worse, Peter begins physically and mentally abusing David which causes strain to the rest of the family. Crushed, ",
"score": "1.4519417"
},
{
"id": "14961492",
"title": "1996 in Australia",
"text": "Shine ",
"score": "1.4425583"
},
{
"id": "30607018",
"title": "Shine (French band)",
"text": "Judas and Mary (2012) ; SHINE featuring Terry Reid (2009) ; The Common Station (2008) (bonsaï music / EMI) ; One Day (2004) ",
"score": "1.4369974"
},
{
"id": "28970627",
"title": "Shine (Sopho Nizharadze song)",
"text": " \"Shine\" is a song composed by Hanne Sørvaag, Harry Sommerdahl and Christian Leuzzi and performed by Sopho Nizharadze, and represented Georgia at the Eurovision Song Contest 2010. The song was selected on 27 February from six songs performed by Nizharadze, with a public televote and a professional jury selection the winner. The preview video came out in the middle of March 2010. It came ninth place in the contest's final. This is Hanne Sørvaag's third Eurovision entry, after co-writing the No Angels song \"Disappear\", the German entry for 2008, and the Norwegian entry for the 2010 Contest \"My Heart Is Yours\", performed by Didrik Solli-Tangen.",
"score": "1.436177"
},
{
"id": "5683337",
"title": "Shine (film)",
"text": "1) \"With a Girl Like You\" (Reg Presley) – The Troggs ; 2) \"Why Do They Doubt Our Love\" written & perf by Johnny O'Keefe ; 3) Polonaise in A flat major, Op. 53 (Frédéric Chopin) – Ricky Edwards ; 4) \"Fast zu Ernst\" – Scenes from Childhood, Op. 15 (Robert Schumann) – Wilhelm Kempff ; 5) La Campanella (Franz Liszt) – David Helfgott ; 6) Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 in C sharp minor (Liszt) – David Helfgott ; 7) \"The Flight of the Bumble Bee\" (Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov) – David Helfgott ; 8) Gloria, RV 589 (Antonio Vivaldi) ; 9) \"Un sospiro\" (Liszt) – David ",
"score": "1.4356349"
},
{
"id": "28379382",
"title": "Shine (compilation series)",
"text": " Released 1 April 1997",
"score": "1.4350526"
},
{
"id": "28379388",
"title": "Shine (compilation series)",
"text": " Released 24 November 1997",
"score": "1.4339273"
},
{
"id": "28379385",
"title": "Shine (compilation series)",
"text": " Released 1 September 1997",
"score": "1.4300551"
}
] | [
"Shine (Kevin Moore album)\n Shine is the soundtrack to the 2006 Turkish film Küçük kiyamet (“Little Apocalypse“). Kevin Moore wrote the music while he was living in Istanbul, Turkey. The album was funded by fans and released via Kickstarter.com on CD in 2011.",
"Shine (Gwen Stefani song)\n \"Shine\" received mixed reviews from music critics. E! News Bruna Nessif gave the single a positive review, stating: \"When it comes to feel-good music, leave it up to Gwen Stefani and Pharrell to get the job done\". A reviewer from Vibe praised it as \"the perfect theme song\". Abe Dewing, a member of the Cambridge Symphony Orchestra, described it as a \"sharp, hip tune\" in the Boston Herald. He compared its opening trumpet riff to music by British composer Herbert Chappell, who created the theme for the 1975 television series Paddington. Chappell also composed music for the 1986 concerto \"Paddington Bear's First Concert\". Dewing praised Stefani and Willams' ability \"to compose new music for existing source material intended for children\". A reviewer from the website antiMusic described the recording as \"even more feel good\" than the pair's collaboration on \"Spark the Fire\". Daniel Sannwald gave it three ",
"Piano Concerto No. 3 (Rachmaninoff)\n The concerto is significant in the 1996 film Shine, based on the life of pianist David Helfgott.",
"Shine (film)\n Shine is a 1996 Australian biographical psychological drama film based on the life of David Helfgott, a pianist who suffered a mental breakdown and spent years in institutions. The film stars Geoffrey Rush, Lynn Redgrave, Armin Mueller-Stahl, Noah Taylor, John Gielgud, Googie Withers, Justin Braine, Sonia Todd, Nicholas Bell, Chris Haywood, and Alex Rafalowicz. The film was directed by Scott Hicks. The screenplay was written by Jan Sardi. Shine had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival. In 1997, Geoffrey Rush was awarded the Academy Award for Best Actor at the 69th Academy Awards for his performance in the lead role.",
"Paddington (film)\n Nick Urata composed the film's soundtrack. Gwen Stefani and Pharrell Williams were commissioned to write a song for the film's American release, which turned into \"Shine\".",
"Shine (Mary-Jess Leaverland album)\n Shine is the debut studio album by the English classical crossover singer-songwriter Mary-Jess Leaverland. It was originally released in August 2011, on the label Decca. The album follows her victory on Chinese television talent contest Min Xing Chang Fan Tian in December 2009. Leaverland described the album's sound as a \"True hybrid between Classical and Pop with a filmic element and an Oriental thread\".",
"Rain or Shine (Dick Haymes album)\nHarold Arlen\tComposer ; Irving Berlin\tComposer ; Ian Bernard\tConductor, Primary Artist ; Hoagy Carmichael\tComposer ; Howard Dietz\tComposer ; Walter Donaldson\tComposer ; George Gershwin\tComposer ; Ira Gershwin\tComposer ; Mack Gordon\tComposer ; Oscar Hammerstein II\tComposer ; Lorenz Hart\tComposer ; Dick Haymes\tPrimary Artist, Vocals ; Herman Leonard\tCover Photo ; Johnny Mercer\tComposer ; Ray Noble\tComposer ; Richard Rodgers\tComposer ; Arthur Schwartz\tComposer ; Harry Warren\tComposer ; Ned Washington\tComposer ",
"Shine (film)\n A young man (Geoffrey Rush) wanders through a heavy rainstorm, finding his way into a nearby restaurant. The restaurant's employees try to determine if he needs help. Despite his manic mode of speech being difficult to understand, a waitress, Sylvia, learns that his name is David Helfgott and that he is staying at a local hotel. Sylvia returns him to the hotel, and despite his attempts to engage her with his musical knowledge and ownership of various musical scores, she leaves. As a child, David is growing up in suburban Adelaide, South Australia and competing in the musical competition of a local Eisteddfod. Helfgott has been taught to play by his father, Peter (Armin ",
"Shine (film)\n Geoffrey Rush resumed piano lessons—suspended when he was 14—in order not to require a hand double.",
"ShineBright\n December 2013",
"Shine (Kevin Moore album)\nWritten and performed by Kevin Moore ; Vocals by Bige Akdeniz ; Cover artwork by Conte di San Pietro ",
"Shine (Take That song)\n} ",
"Shine (film)\n who is obsessed with winning and has no tolerance for imperfection or disobedience. While playing at the Eisteddfod, David is noticed by Mr. Rosen, a local piano teacher who, after initial resistance from Peter, takes over David's musical instruction. As a teenager, David wins the state musical championship and is invited by concert violinist Isaac Stern to study in United States. Although plans are made to raise money to send David off for America and that his family is initially supportive, Peter forbids David to leave, thinking his absence would destroy the family. To make matters worse, Peter begins physically and mentally abusing David which causes strain to the rest of the family. Crushed, ",
"1996 in Australia\nShine ",
"Shine (French band)\nJudas and Mary (2012) ; SHINE featuring Terry Reid (2009) ; The Common Station (2008) (bonsaï music / EMI) ; One Day (2004) ",
"Shine (Sopho Nizharadze song)\n \"Shine\" is a song composed by Hanne Sørvaag, Harry Sommerdahl and Christian Leuzzi and performed by Sopho Nizharadze, and represented Georgia at the Eurovision Song Contest 2010. The song was selected on 27 February from six songs performed by Nizharadze, with a public televote and a professional jury selection the winner. The preview video came out in the middle of March 2010. It came ninth place in the contest's final. This is Hanne Sørvaag's third Eurovision entry, after co-writing the No Angels song \"Disappear\", the German entry for 2008, and the Norwegian entry for the 2010 Contest \"My Heart Is Yours\", performed by Didrik Solli-Tangen.",
"Shine (film)\n1) \"With a Girl Like You\" (Reg Presley) – The Troggs ; 2) \"Why Do They Doubt Our Love\" written & perf by Johnny O'Keefe ; 3) Polonaise in A flat major, Op. 53 (Frédéric Chopin) – Ricky Edwards ; 4) \"Fast zu Ernst\" – Scenes from Childhood, Op. 15 (Robert Schumann) – Wilhelm Kempff ; 5) La Campanella (Franz Liszt) – David Helfgott ; 6) Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 in C sharp minor (Liszt) – David Helfgott ; 7) \"The Flight of the Bumble Bee\" (Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov) – David Helfgott ; 8) Gloria, RV 589 (Antonio Vivaldi) ; 9) \"Un sospiro\" (Liszt) – David ",
"Shine (compilation series)\n Released 1 April 1997",
"Shine (compilation series)\n Released 24 November 1997",
"Shine (compilation series)\n Released 1 September 1997"
] |
Who was the composer of Nozze istriane? | [
"Antonio Smareglia"
] | composer | Nozze istriane | 6,512,081 | 96 | [
{
"id": "29743040",
"title": "Nozze istriane",
"text": " Nozze istriane (An Istrian wedding) is an opera in three acts by Antonio Smareglia to an Italian libretto by Luigi Illica. It premiered on 28 March 1895 at the Teatro Comunale in Trieste.",
"score": "1.8921034"
},
{
"id": "29743042",
"title": "Nozze istriane",
"text": "Antonio Smareglia: Nozze istriane – Ian Storey (tenor), Katia Lytting (mezzo-soprano), Svetla Vassileva (soprano), Enzo Capuano (baritone), Giorgio Surjan (bass), Alberto Mastromarino (baritone); Teatro Verdi di Trieste Orchestra and Chorus; Tiziano Severini (conductor). Live performance recording from the Teatro Lirico Giuseppe Verdi, December 1999. Label: Bongiovanni BGV 2265 king ",
"score": "1.6453278"
},
{
"id": "32352207",
"title": "List of people from Italy",
"text": " his era ; Luigi Nono (1924–1990), leading Italian composer of electronic, aleatory, and serial music ; Goffredo Petrassi (1904–2003), composer of modern classical music, conductor, and teacher ; Giacomo Puccini (1858–1924), composer of operas. His finest operas, La bohème (1896), Tosca (1900), Madama Butterfly (1904), and Turandot (produced posthumously in 1926) ; Ottorino Respighi (1879–1936), composer, known for colourful tone poems The Fountains of Rome (1916) and The Pines of Rome (1924) ; Nino Rota (1911–1979), composer of film scores, notably for the films of Federico Fellini and Luchino Visconti ; John Serry Sr. (1915–2003), Italian-American composer of music for the Free-bass system Accordion including American Rhapsody (1955) and Concerto for Free Bass Accordion (1964) ",
"score": "1.6135037"
},
{
"id": "9643875",
"title": "List of composers by nationality",
"text": " • Andrea Antico (c. 1480–1538) • Krešimir Baranović (1894–1975) • Blagoje Bersa (1873–1934) • Bruno Bjelinski (1909–1992) • Rudolf Brucci (1917–2002) • Arsen Dedić (1938–2015) • Dubravko Detoni (born 1937) • Jakov Gotovac (1895–1982) • Josip Hatze (1879–1959) • Žiga Hirschler (1894–1941) • Đelo Jusić (1939–2019) • Alfi Kabiljo (born 1935) • Milko Kelemen (1924–2018), contemporary composer • Ivana Kiš (born 1979) • Franjo Krežma (1862–1881) • Igor Kuljerić (1938–2006) • Ivana Lang (Zagreb, 1912 – Zagreb, 1982), composer, pianist and piano teacher. • Vatroslav Lisinski (1819–1854), 19th-century composer and co–founder of \"Illyrian Movement\" • Ferdo Livadić (1799–1879) • Nada Ludvig-Pečar ",
"score": "1.5992783"
},
{
"id": "4755804",
"title": "List of Croatian composers",
"text": " • Ferdo Livadić (1799–1879) • Nada Ludvig-Pečar (1929–2008) • Ivan Lukačić (1584–1648), renaissance composer • Ivan Matetić Ronjgov (1880–1960) • Boris Papandopulo (1914–1986), 20th-century composer • Dora Pejačević (1885–1923), late–romantic composer • Dragan Plamenac (1895–1983) • Elena Pucić-Sorkočević (1786–1865) • Vjekoslav Rosenberg-Ružić (1870–1954) • Marko Rothmüller (1908–1993) • Josif Runjanin (1821–1878) • Milan Sachs (1884–1968) • Berislav Šipuš (born 1958) • Antun Sorkočević (1775–1841) • Luka Sorkočević (1734–1789) • Josip Štolcer-Slavenski (1896–1955) • Stjepan Šulek (1906–1991), 20th-century composer • Franz von Suppé (1819–1895) • Ivo Tijardović (1895–1976) • Marko Tomasović (born 1976), 21st-century composer • Marcel Tyberg (1893–1944), composer who lived in Abbazia (formerly in Italy), now called Opatija, Croatia • Albe Vidaković (1914–1964) • Ivan Zajc (1832–1914)",
"score": "1.5594764"
},
{
"id": "28520317",
"title": "Marij Kogoj",
"text": " Marij Julij Kogoj (Trieste, 20 September 1892 – Ljubljana, 25 February 1956) was a Slovenian composer. He was a pupil of Schoenberg and Franz Schreker, and immensely popular during the 1920s, culminating with his opera Črne maske (Black masks). His career ended in 1932, when he was institutionalized for schizophrenia. He remained there until his death in 1956.",
"score": "1.5432708"
},
{
"id": "16057820",
"title": "List of Italian composers",
"text": "Giovanni Bernardino Nanino (c. 1560–1623) ; Giovanni Maria Nanino (1543/44–1607), also Nanini ; Gianna Nannini (born 1954) ; Pietro Nardini (1722–1793) ; Mario Nascimbene (1913–2002) ; Mariella Nava (born 1960) ; Marcantonio Negri (?–1624) ; Giovanni Cesare Netti (1649–1686) ; Niccolò da Perugia (later 14th century) ; Bruno Nicolai (1926–1991) ; Giuseppe Nicolini (1762–1842) ; Piero Niro (born 1957) ; Giovanni Domenico da Nola (c. 1510/20–1592), also known as Nolla ; Luigi Nono (1924–1990) ; Michele Novaro (1818–1885), composed national anthem of the current Italian Republic ; Emanuele Nutile (1862–1932) ",
"score": "1.53647"
},
{
"id": "10121579",
"title": "Ferdo Livadić",
"text": " Ferdo Livadić (Ferdinand Wiesner) (30 May 1799 – 8 January 1879) was a Croatian composer. Livadić was born in Celje, in present-day Slovenia. A leader of the 19th-century Croatian national revival, he wrote the tune for Još Hrvatska ni propala, the anthem of the Illyrian movement. He frequently invited many of the movement's most important members, together with such celebrities as Franz Liszt, to his property at Samobor. He also composed numerous art songs in Croatian, Slovenian, and German, as well as marches, dances and scherzi for piano. Probably the best of these piano works is a Nocturne in F sharp minor. His work prepared the way for the nationalist Croatian composers Vatroslav Lisinski and Ivan Zajc. He died, aged 79, in Samobor.",
"score": "1.5283897"
},
{
"id": "531088",
"title": "Adriano Guarnieri (composer)",
"text": " occhi Sarajevo, for ensemble with piano, concertante guitar and electric bass (2002) ; Epifania dell’eterno, for solo violin (2002) ; Suono a cielo aperto, for soprano and strings (2002) ; In Badia fiesolana 1980 n. 1, for ensemble (2002) ; La terra del tramonto Live-Symphony n. 1, for large orchestra and live electronics (2003) ; Salmo n. 50, for voices and orchestra (2003) ; Stagioni, Dura stagion, dal sole accesa... for flute, violin and strings (2003) ; Sospeso d’incanto N. 2, for piano (2003) ; La città capovolta, for amplified guitar and recitation voice (2003) ; Sull’onda notturna del mare infinito, to Roberto Fabbriciani for bass ",
"score": "1.5238547"
},
{
"id": "9643876",
"title": "List of composers by nationality",
"text": " • Ivan Lukačić (1584–1648), renaissance composer • Ivan Matetić Ronjgov (1880–1960) • Boris Papandopulo (1914–1986), 20th-century composer • Dora Pejačević (1885–1923), late-romantic composer • Dragan Plamenac (1895–1983) • Elena Pucić-Sorkočević (1786–1865) • Vjekoslav Rosenberg-Ružić (1870–1954) • Marko Rothmüller (1908–1993) • Josif Runjanin (1821–1878) • Milan Sachs (1884–1968) • Antun Sorkočević (1775–1841) • Luka Sorkočević (1734–1789) • Josip Štolcer-Slavenski (1896–1955) • Stjepan Šulek (1906–1991), 20th-century composer • Ivo Tijardović (1895–1976) • Marko Tomasović (composer) (born 1976), 21st-century composer • Marcel Tyberg (1893–1944), composer who lived in Abbazia (formerly in Italy), now called Opatija, Croatia • Albe Vidaković (1914–1964) • Ivan Zajc (1832–1914)",
"score": "1.5189977"
},
{
"id": "16057821",
"title": "List of Italian composers",
"text": "Nino Oliviero (1918–1980) ; Giacomo Orefice (1865–1922) ; Ferdinando Orlandi (1774–1848) ; Nora Orlandi (born 1933) ; Alessandro Orologio (1550–1633) ; Riz Ortolani (1926–2014) ; Bernardo Ottani (1736–1827) ",
"score": "1.5179195"
},
{
"id": "29693132",
"title": "Antonio Nola",
"text": " Antonio Nola (1642-after 1715) was a Neapolitan composer of whom little biographical information or music survives. He is to be distinguished from the better known Giovanni Domenico da Nola born 130 years earlier (died 1592). Antonio Nola was a minor figure among the Neapolitan composers who collaborated with musicians from the church of the Girolamini, which included Giovanni Maria Trabaci, Scipione Dentice (nephew of Fabrizio Dentice), Giovanni Maria Sabino, Giovanni Salvatore, master of the royal chapel Filippo Coppola and, foremost among them, Erasmo di Bartolo (\"Padre Raimo\") author of the monumental Mottetti per le quarant' ore. His only recorded work, in comparison with the Magnificat a 5 composed in the same year by his colleague Francesco Provenzale (1624–1704), shows a less sophisticated compositional level.",
"score": "1.5127879"
},
{
"id": "28506337",
"title": "Italian opera",
"text": "Gian Francesco Malipiero (1882–1973) whose 19 operas include L'Orfeide and Torneo notturno ; Luigi Dallapiccola (1904–1975) whose operas include Ulisse, Volo di notte and Il prigioniero ; Luigi Nono (1924–1990) who wrote Al gran sole carico d'amore, Intolleranza 1960, and Prometeo ; Sylvano Bussotti (born 1931) whose prolific compositional output includes La Passion selon Sade, La Racine, pianobar pour Phèdre, Nympheo, Bozzetto siciliano ; Salvatore Sciarrino (born 1947) who wrote several operas including Luci mie traditrici Some of the greatest Italian operas of the 20th century were written by Giacomo Puccini (1858–1924). These include Manon Lescaut, La bohème, Tosca, Madama Butterfly, La fanciulla del West, La rondine and Turandot, the last two being left unfinished. In 1926 and in 2002 Franco Alfano and Luciano Berio respectively attempted a completion of Turandot, and in 1994 Lorenzo Ferrero completed the orchestration of the third version of La rondine. Berio himself wrote two operas, Un re in ascolto and Opera. Ferrero likewise has composed several operas including Salvatore Giuliano, La Conquista, and his 2011 Risorgimento! Other 20th-century Italian opera composers are:",
"score": "1.5115747"
},
{
"id": "531077",
"title": "Adriano Guarnieri (composer)",
"text": " thought of as a synthesis of a fluid episodic multiplicity. Through his Pierrot series he was able to reveal a ‘melodic’ component of his music which broadens in the opera Trionfo della notte (1986–87 season at the Teatro Comunale di Bologna), which won the Premio Abbiati as the best composition of the year. Among his later works are Romanza alla notte No. 2, for violin and orchestra (Parma, June 20, 1991), proof of the deep relationship existing between the composer and Pier Paolo Pasolini's poetics. He dedicated to Pasolini Il glicine, for soprano, reciting voice, amplified flute and violin (Milan, July 2, 1993). In Orfeo cantando... tolse..., ten lyric actions based on text freely taken by Poliziano’s Orfeo ",
"score": "1.50657"
},
{
"id": "4755803",
"title": "List of Croatian composers",
"text": " This is a list of Croatian composers. • Andrea Antico (c. 1480–1538) • Krešimir Baranović (1894–1975) • Blagoje Bersa (1873–1934) • Rudolf Brucci (1917–2002) • Bruno Bjelinski (1909–1992) • Ivan Božičević (born 1961) • Arsen Dedić (1938–2015) • Dubravko Detoni (born 1937) • Jakov Gotovac (1895–1982) • Darko Hajsek (born 1959) • Josip Hatze (1879–1959) • Žiga Hirschler (1894–1941) • Stanko Horvat (1930–2006), 20th-century composer • Ivan Mane Jarnović (1747–1804) • Đelo Jusić (born 1939) • Alfi Kabiljo (born 1935) • Milko Kelemen (1924–2018), contemporary composer • Ivana Kiš (born 1979) • Franjo Krežma (1862–1881) • Igor Kuljerić (1938–2006) • Ivana Lang (1912–1982), composer, pianist and piano teacher. • Vatroslav Lisinski (1819–1854), 19th-century composer and co–founder of \"Illyrian ",
"score": "1.5007093"
},
{
"id": "30347220",
"title": "List of compositions by Salvatore Sciarrino",
"text": " ; 2 Arie notturne dal campo (2001) ; In nomine nominis (2001) ; La perfidia (2002) ; Cavatina e i gridi (2002) ; Allegro KV 15 (2003) ; Due smarrimenti (2003) ; Sestetto (2003) ; Quaderno di strada (2003) ; Scena di vento (2004) ; Il legno e la parola (2004) ; Vento d'ombra (2005) ; Archeologia del telefono (2005) ; Tre duetti con l'eco (2006) ; Dita unite a quattro mani (2006) ; Le stagioni artificiali (2006) ; 12 Madrigali (2007) ; Quartetto n. 8 (2008) ; Il giardino di Sara (2008) ; Adagio (2009) ; L'altro giardino (2009) ; Adagio di Mozart (2010) ; Fanofania (2010) ; Cantiere del poema (2011) ",
"score": "1.495435"
},
{
"id": "31949684",
"title": "Giulio Alary",
"text": " Giulio Alary (sometimes Alari) (1814-1891) was an Italian composer. Born in Mantua, he was a student at the Milan Conservatory before relocating to Paris, where he died, in 1891. He wrote three operas, as well as some orchestral and chamber music, arias, and melodies. He also served as a conductor and singing teacher. An excerpt from Le tre nozze, a polka with variations, is said to have been a particular favorite of Henriette Sontag.",
"score": "1.4948082"
},
{
"id": "3355958",
"title": "Music of Croatia",
"text": " unknown to the public, and yet need to be explored by musicologists and than published. ; Josip Hatze is the author of the first Croatian mass (ca. 1895) and the first Croatian cantata (Night on Una, 1902). ; Dora Pejačević (born as Theodora Pejacsevich) – one of the composers to introduce the orchestral song to Croatian music. Her Symphony in F-sharp minor is considered by scholars to be the first modern symphony in Croatian Music. ; Blagoje Bersa (born as Benito Bersa) is a typical figure of late Romantic stylistic crisis, the author of 'futuristic' opera Der Eisenhammer / Oganj (Zagreb, 1911). ; Fran Lhotka ",
"score": "1.4899735"
},
{
"id": "531086",
"title": "Adriano Guarnieri (composer)",
"text": " occhi, Sarajevo...” for amplified piano and two pianos on tape (1995) ; Il pianto della scavatrice for amplified female voice, flute, bass clarinet, violin and cello (1996) ; Omaggio a Mina 6 songs for light voice, soprano and orchestra (1996) ; A Giacomo Manzoni o delle dissolvenze sonore for alto flute and soprano (amplified) (1997) ; Blandine Ballata for piano and spoken voices (1997) ; “... Uno spazio che tremola celeste...” for string quartet (1997) ; Traviata. Preludio Atto III for quartet and string orchestra (transcription) (1997) ; Pensieri canuti for soloists, chorus, two ensemble on double choir and live electronics (1998) ; “...canto un ricordo...” ",
"score": "1.486275"
},
{
"id": "31313617",
"title": "List of Istrians",
"text": "Andrea Antico, music printer, editor, publisher and composer of the Renaissance, who is regarded as the first significant music printer. ; Franka Batelić, singer and songwriter, who won the first edition of Showtime and represented Croatia at the Eurovision Song Contest 2018. ; Michael Bublé, Canadian singer, songwriter, and record producer. His grandparents were Istrians, both Slavic and Italian. ; Tony Cetinski, pop singer, one of the most popular musicians in Croatia and countries of former Yugoslavia. ; Luigi Dallapiccola, composer known for his lyrical twelve-tone compositions. ; Sergio Endrigo, singer-songwriter, who won the Sanremo Music Festival in 1968, and represented Italy at the Eurovision Song Contest 1968. ; Gustafi, Porin Award-winning folk rock band. ; Lidija Percan, singer, famous for her songs in the Italian ",
"score": "1.4857496"
}
] | [
"Nozze istriane\n Nozze istriane (An Istrian wedding) is an opera in three acts by Antonio Smareglia to an Italian libretto by Luigi Illica. It premiered on 28 March 1895 at the Teatro Comunale in Trieste.",
"Nozze istriane\nAntonio Smareglia: Nozze istriane – Ian Storey (tenor), Katia Lytting (mezzo-soprano), Svetla Vassileva (soprano), Enzo Capuano (baritone), Giorgio Surjan (bass), Alberto Mastromarino (baritone); Teatro Verdi di Trieste Orchestra and Chorus; Tiziano Severini (conductor). Live performance recording from the Teatro Lirico Giuseppe Verdi, December 1999. Label: Bongiovanni BGV 2265 king ",
"List of people from Italy\n his era ; Luigi Nono (1924–1990), leading Italian composer of electronic, aleatory, and serial music ; Goffredo Petrassi (1904–2003), composer of modern classical music, conductor, and teacher ; Giacomo Puccini (1858–1924), composer of operas. His finest operas, La bohème (1896), Tosca (1900), Madama Butterfly (1904), and Turandot (produced posthumously in 1926) ; Ottorino Respighi (1879–1936), composer, known for colourful tone poems The Fountains of Rome (1916) and The Pines of Rome (1924) ; Nino Rota (1911–1979), composer of film scores, notably for the films of Federico Fellini and Luchino Visconti ; John Serry Sr. (1915–2003), Italian-American composer of music for the Free-bass system Accordion including American Rhapsody (1955) and Concerto for Free Bass Accordion (1964) ",
"List of composers by nationality\n • Andrea Antico (c. 1480–1538) • Krešimir Baranović (1894–1975) • Blagoje Bersa (1873–1934) • Bruno Bjelinski (1909–1992) • Rudolf Brucci (1917–2002) • Arsen Dedić (1938–2015) • Dubravko Detoni (born 1937) • Jakov Gotovac (1895–1982) • Josip Hatze (1879–1959) • Žiga Hirschler (1894–1941) • Đelo Jusić (1939–2019) • Alfi Kabiljo (born 1935) • Milko Kelemen (1924–2018), contemporary composer • Ivana Kiš (born 1979) • Franjo Krežma (1862–1881) • Igor Kuljerić (1938–2006) • Ivana Lang (Zagreb, 1912 – Zagreb, 1982), composer, pianist and piano teacher. • Vatroslav Lisinski (1819–1854), 19th-century composer and co–founder of \"Illyrian Movement\" • Ferdo Livadić (1799–1879) • Nada Ludvig-Pečar ",
"List of Croatian composers\n • Ferdo Livadić (1799–1879) • Nada Ludvig-Pečar (1929–2008) • Ivan Lukačić (1584–1648), renaissance composer • Ivan Matetić Ronjgov (1880–1960) • Boris Papandopulo (1914–1986), 20th-century composer • Dora Pejačević (1885–1923), late–romantic composer • Dragan Plamenac (1895–1983) • Elena Pucić-Sorkočević (1786–1865) • Vjekoslav Rosenberg-Ružić (1870–1954) • Marko Rothmüller (1908–1993) • Josif Runjanin (1821–1878) • Milan Sachs (1884–1968) • Berislav Šipuš (born 1958) • Antun Sorkočević (1775–1841) • Luka Sorkočević (1734–1789) • Josip Štolcer-Slavenski (1896–1955) • Stjepan Šulek (1906–1991), 20th-century composer • Franz von Suppé (1819–1895) • Ivo Tijardović (1895–1976) • Marko Tomasović (born 1976), 21st-century composer • Marcel Tyberg (1893–1944), composer who lived in Abbazia (formerly in Italy), now called Opatija, Croatia • Albe Vidaković (1914–1964) • Ivan Zajc (1832–1914)",
"Marij Kogoj\n Marij Julij Kogoj (Trieste, 20 September 1892 – Ljubljana, 25 February 1956) was a Slovenian composer. He was a pupil of Schoenberg and Franz Schreker, and immensely popular during the 1920s, culminating with his opera Črne maske (Black masks). His career ended in 1932, when he was institutionalized for schizophrenia. He remained there until his death in 1956.",
"List of Italian composers\nGiovanni Bernardino Nanino (c. 1560–1623) ; Giovanni Maria Nanino (1543/44–1607), also Nanini ; Gianna Nannini (born 1954) ; Pietro Nardini (1722–1793) ; Mario Nascimbene (1913–2002) ; Mariella Nava (born 1960) ; Marcantonio Negri (?–1624) ; Giovanni Cesare Netti (1649–1686) ; Niccolò da Perugia (later 14th century) ; Bruno Nicolai (1926–1991) ; Giuseppe Nicolini (1762–1842) ; Piero Niro (born 1957) ; Giovanni Domenico da Nola (c. 1510/20–1592), also known as Nolla ; Luigi Nono (1924–1990) ; Michele Novaro (1818–1885), composed national anthem of the current Italian Republic ; Emanuele Nutile (1862–1932) ",
"Ferdo Livadić\n Ferdo Livadić (Ferdinand Wiesner) (30 May 1799 – 8 January 1879) was a Croatian composer. Livadić was born in Celje, in present-day Slovenia. A leader of the 19th-century Croatian national revival, he wrote the tune for Još Hrvatska ni propala, the anthem of the Illyrian movement. He frequently invited many of the movement's most important members, together with such celebrities as Franz Liszt, to his property at Samobor. He also composed numerous art songs in Croatian, Slovenian, and German, as well as marches, dances and scherzi for piano. Probably the best of these piano works is a Nocturne in F sharp minor. His work prepared the way for the nationalist Croatian composers Vatroslav Lisinski and Ivan Zajc. He died, aged 79, in Samobor.",
"Adriano Guarnieri (composer)\n occhi Sarajevo, for ensemble with piano, concertante guitar and electric bass (2002) ; Epifania dell’eterno, for solo violin (2002) ; Suono a cielo aperto, for soprano and strings (2002) ; In Badia fiesolana 1980 n. 1, for ensemble (2002) ; La terra del tramonto Live-Symphony n. 1, for large orchestra and live electronics (2003) ; Salmo n. 50, for voices and orchestra (2003) ; Stagioni, Dura stagion, dal sole accesa... for flute, violin and strings (2003) ; Sospeso d’incanto N. 2, for piano (2003) ; La città capovolta, for amplified guitar and recitation voice (2003) ; Sull’onda notturna del mare infinito, to Roberto Fabbriciani for bass ",
"List of composers by nationality\n • Ivan Lukačić (1584–1648), renaissance composer • Ivan Matetić Ronjgov (1880–1960) • Boris Papandopulo (1914–1986), 20th-century composer • Dora Pejačević (1885–1923), late-romantic composer • Dragan Plamenac (1895–1983) • Elena Pucić-Sorkočević (1786–1865) • Vjekoslav Rosenberg-Ružić (1870–1954) • Marko Rothmüller (1908–1993) • Josif Runjanin (1821–1878) • Milan Sachs (1884–1968) • Antun Sorkočević (1775–1841) • Luka Sorkočević (1734–1789) • Josip Štolcer-Slavenski (1896–1955) • Stjepan Šulek (1906–1991), 20th-century composer • Ivo Tijardović (1895–1976) • Marko Tomasović (composer) (born 1976), 21st-century composer • Marcel Tyberg (1893–1944), composer who lived in Abbazia (formerly in Italy), now called Opatija, Croatia • Albe Vidaković (1914–1964) • Ivan Zajc (1832–1914)",
"List of Italian composers\nNino Oliviero (1918–1980) ; Giacomo Orefice (1865–1922) ; Ferdinando Orlandi (1774–1848) ; Nora Orlandi (born 1933) ; Alessandro Orologio (1550–1633) ; Riz Ortolani (1926–2014) ; Bernardo Ottani (1736–1827) ",
"Antonio Nola\n Antonio Nola (1642-after 1715) was a Neapolitan composer of whom little biographical information or music survives. He is to be distinguished from the better known Giovanni Domenico da Nola born 130 years earlier (died 1592). Antonio Nola was a minor figure among the Neapolitan composers who collaborated with musicians from the church of the Girolamini, which included Giovanni Maria Trabaci, Scipione Dentice (nephew of Fabrizio Dentice), Giovanni Maria Sabino, Giovanni Salvatore, master of the royal chapel Filippo Coppola and, foremost among them, Erasmo di Bartolo (\"Padre Raimo\") author of the monumental Mottetti per le quarant' ore. His only recorded work, in comparison with the Magnificat a 5 composed in the same year by his colleague Francesco Provenzale (1624–1704), shows a less sophisticated compositional level.",
"Italian opera\nGian Francesco Malipiero (1882–1973) whose 19 operas include L'Orfeide and Torneo notturno ; Luigi Dallapiccola (1904–1975) whose operas include Ulisse, Volo di notte and Il prigioniero ; Luigi Nono (1924–1990) who wrote Al gran sole carico d'amore, Intolleranza 1960, and Prometeo ; Sylvano Bussotti (born 1931) whose prolific compositional output includes La Passion selon Sade, La Racine, pianobar pour Phèdre, Nympheo, Bozzetto siciliano ; Salvatore Sciarrino (born 1947) who wrote several operas including Luci mie traditrici Some of the greatest Italian operas of the 20th century were written by Giacomo Puccini (1858–1924). These include Manon Lescaut, La bohème, Tosca, Madama Butterfly, La fanciulla del West, La rondine and Turandot, the last two being left unfinished. In 1926 and in 2002 Franco Alfano and Luciano Berio respectively attempted a completion of Turandot, and in 1994 Lorenzo Ferrero completed the orchestration of the third version of La rondine. Berio himself wrote two operas, Un re in ascolto and Opera. Ferrero likewise has composed several operas including Salvatore Giuliano, La Conquista, and his 2011 Risorgimento! Other 20th-century Italian opera composers are:",
"Adriano Guarnieri (composer)\n thought of as a synthesis of a fluid episodic multiplicity. Through his Pierrot series he was able to reveal a ‘melodic’ component of his music which broadens in the opera Trionfo della notte (1986–87 season at the Teatro Comunale di Bologna), which won the Premio Abbiati as the best composition of the year. Among his later works are Romanza alla notte No. 2, for violin and orchestra (Parma, June 20, 1991), proof of the deep relationship existing between the composer and Pier Paolo Pasolini's poetics. He dedicated to Pasolini Il glicine, for soprano, reciting voice, amplified flute and violin (Milan, July 2, 1993). In Orfeo cantando... tolse..., ten lyric actions based on text freely taken by Poliziano’s Orfeo ",
"List of Croatian composers\n This is a list of Croatian composers. • Andrea Antico (c. 1480–1538) • Krešimir Baranović (1894–1975) • Blagoje Bersa (1873–1934) • Rudolf Brucci (1917–2002) • Bruno Bjelinski (1909–1992) • Ivan Božičević (born 1961) • Arsen Dedić (1938–2015) • Dubravko Detoni (born 1937) • Jakov Gotovac (1895–1982) • Darko Hajsek (born 1959) • Josip Hatze (1879–1959) • Žiga Hirschler (1894–1941) • Stanko Horvat (1930–2006), 20th-century composer • Ivan Mane Jarnović (1747–1804) • Đelo Jusić (born 1939) • Alfi Kabiljo (born 1935) • Milko Kelemen (1924–2018), contemporary composer • Ivana Kiš (born 1979) • Franjo Krežma (1862–1881) • Igor Kuljerić (1938–2006) • Ivana Lang (1912–1982), composer, pianist and piano teacher. • Vatroslav Lisinski (1819–1854), 19th-century composer and co–founder of \"Illyrian ",
"List of compositions by Salvatore Sciarrino\n ; 2 Arie notturne dal campo (2001) ; In nomine nominis (2001) ; La perfidia (2002) ; Cavatina e i gridi (2002) ; Allegro KV 15 (2003) ; Due smarrimenti (2003) ; Sestetto (2003) ; Quaderno di strada (2003) ; Scena di vento (2004) ; Il legno e la parola (2004) ; Vento d'ombra (2005) ; Archeologia del telefono (2005) ; Tre duetti con l'eco (2006) ; Dita unite a quattro mani (2006) ; Le stagioni artificiali (2006) ; 12 Madrigali (2007) ; Quartetto n. 8 (2008) ; Il giardino di Sara (2008) ; Adagio (2009) ; L'altro giardino (2009) ; Adagio di Mozart (2010) ; Fanofania (2010) ; Cantiere del poema (2011) ",
"Giulio Alary\n Giulio Alary (sometimes Alari) (1814-1891) was an Italian composer. Born in Mantua, he was a student at the Milan Conservatory before relocating to Paris, where he died, in 1891. He wrote three operas, as well as some orchestral and chamber music, arias, and melodies. He also served as a conductor and singing teacher. An excerpt from Le tre nozze, a polka with variations, is said to have been a particular favorite of Henriette Sontag.",
"Music of Croatia\n unknown to the public, and yet need to be explored by musicologists and than published. ; Josip Hatze is the author of the first Croatian mass (ca. 1895) and the first Croatian cantata (Night on Una, 1902). ; Dora Pejačević (born as Theodora Pejacsevich) – one of the composers to introduce the orchestral song to Croatian music. Her Symphony in F-sharp minor is considered by scholars to be the first modern symphony in Croatian Music. ; Blagoje Bersa (born as Benito Bersa) is a typical figure of late Romantic stylistic crisis, the author of 'futuristic' opera Der Eisenhammer / Oganj (Zagreb, 1911). ; Fran Lhotka ",
"Adriano Guarnieri (composer)\n occhi, Sarajevo...” for amplified piano and two pianos on tape (1995) ; Il pianto della scavatrice for amplified female voice, flute, bass clarinet, violin and cello (1996) ; Omaggio a Mina 6 songs for light voice, soprano and orchestra (1996) ; A Giacomo Manzoni o delle dissolvenze sonore for alto flute and soprano (amplified) (1997) ; Blandine Ballata for piano and spoken voices (1997) ; “... Uno spazio che tremola celeste...” for string quartet (1997) ; Traviata. Preludio Atto III for quartet and string orchestra (transcription) (1997) ; Pensieri canuti for soloists, chorus, two ensemble on double choir and live electronics (1998) ; “...canto un ricordo...” ",
"List of Istrians\nAndrea Antico, music printer, editor, publisher and composer of the Renaissance, who is regarded as the first significant music printer. ; Franka Batelić, singer and songwriter, who won the first edition of Showtime and represented Croatia at the Eurovision Song Contest 2018. ; Michael Bublé, Canadian singer, songwriter, and record producer. His grandparents were Istrians, both Slavic and Italian. ; Tony Cetinski, pop singer, one of the most popular musicians in Croatia and countries of former Yugoslavia. ; Luigi Dallapiccola, composer known for his lyrical twelve-tone compositions. ; Sergio Endrigo, singer-songwriter, who won the Sanremo Music Festival in 1968, and represented Italy at the Eurovision Song Contest 1968. ; Gustafi, Porin Award-winning folk rock band. ; Lidija Percan, singer, famous for her songs in the Italian "
] |
Who was the composer of Overture in G major? | [
"Luigi Cherubini",
"Luigi Maria Cherubini",
"Louis-Charles-Zenobi-Salvador-Marie Cherubini",
"Marie Louis Charles Zanobi Salvador Cherubini"
] | composer | Overture in G major (Cherubini) | 1,121,371 | 98 | [
{
"id": "3394823",
"title": "Overture (Bruckner)",
"text": " Anton Bruckner composed the Overture in G minor, WAB 98 in 1862–63, during his tuition by Otto Kitzler.",
"score": "1.781965"
},
{
"id": "11459517",
"title": "Karl Goldmark",
"text": " in E-flat major, Op. 43), and numerous concert overtures, such as the Sakuntala Overture Op. 13 (a work which cemented his fame after his String Quartet), the Penthesilea Overture Op. 31, the In the Spring Overture Op. 36, the Prometheus Bound Overture Op. 38, the Sappho Overture Op. 44, the In Italy Overture Op. 49, and the Aus Jugendtagen Overture, Op. 53. Other orchestral works include the symphonic poem Zrínyi, Op. 47, and two orchestral scherzos, in E minor, Op. 19, and in A major, Op. 45. Goldmark's nephew Rubin Goldmark (1872–1936), a pupil of Dvořák, was also a composer, who spent his career in New York.",
"score": "1.59635"
},
{
"id": "12056091",
"title": "Francesco Maria Veracini",
"text": " In addition to violin sonatas, edited by Ferdinand David, operas and oratorios, Veracini also wrote violin concertos, sonatas for recorder and basso continuo, and orchestral suites, called Overtures. The six Overtures were performed for Prince Friedrich August in Venice in 1716, as part of Veracini's ultimately successful attempt to secure a position at the Dresden court. They are all either in F major or B-flat major, except for one in G minor. The last one of these, in B-flat major, is remarkable for concluding with a unison minuet. Veracini also wrote a \"lively, highly original theory treatise\", Il trionfo della pratica musicale, and edited other composers' works, adding \"improvements\" of his own, such as he did in his Dissertazioni with the Opus 5 Violin Sonatas of Arcangelo Corelli.",
"score": "1.5953403"
},
{
"id": "3394824",
"title": "Overture (Bruckner)",
"text": " In the fall of 1862, when studying with Otto Kitzler in Linz, Bruckner composed his first orchestral compositions: the Four Orchestral Pieces (the March in D minor and the Three Pieces for orchestra). His next orchestral composition was an Overture in G minor, WAB 98. A sketch of the Overture, which was started in November 1862, is found in the Kizler-Studienbuch pp. 287–301. A first version of the Overture was completed on 24 December 1862. On 6 January 1863 Bruckner started with the composition of a new coda, which he finished on 22 January 1863. The original manuscript of the Overture contains both the 1863 version and, on pp. 44–50, its 1862 coda. The manuscript, ",
"score": "1.5907809"
},
{
"id": "30415802",
"title": "List of compositions by Luigi Boccherini",
"text": "G 490: Overture in D major (second movement related to G478) ; G 491: Sinfonia concertante Op. 7 in C major ; G 492: 6 Divertimenti (6 Sextets) Op. 16, G 461–466 ; G 493: Symphony Op. 21 No. 1 in B-flat major ; G 494: Symphony Op. 21 No. 2 in E-flat major ; G 495: Symphony Op. 21 No. 3 in C major ; G 496: Symphony Op. 21 No. 4 in D major ; G 497: Symphony Op. 21 No. 5 in B-flat major ; G 498: Symphony Op. 21 No. 6 in A major ; G 499: Sinfonia concertante in G major (= G470) ; G 500: Symphony in D major ; G 501: Serenade ",
"score": "1.5896702"
},
{
"id": "3394825",
"title": "Overture (Bruckner)",
"text": " which sheet No. 7 (bars 188-212) is missing, is stored in the archive of the Kremsmünster Abbey. A copy of the complete score of the Overture was given by Bruckner to his friend Cyrill Hynais, together with that of the Four Orchestral Pieces and the Symphony in F minor. These scores are stored in the archive of the Stadt- und Landesbibliothek of Vienna. The work was first published by Alfred Orel in Unbekannte Frühwerke Anton Bruckners, 1921. The Overture was first performed by Franz Moißl on 8 September 1921 in Klosterneuburg. The Overture in G minor (Ouvertüre g-Moll), as well as its 1862 coda, are edited in Band XII/5 of the current Bruckner's Gesamtausgabe.",
"score": "1.5819032"
},
{
"id": "29816034",
"title": "Cipriani Potter",
"text": "Overture in E minor (1815, revised 1848) ; Symphony [No. 1] in G minor (1819, revised 1824–26 & 1833) [styled No. 1 by the composer] ; Symphony [No. 2] in B major (1821, revised 1839) [unnumbered by the composer] ; Symphony [No. 3] in C minor (1826) [styled No. 6 by the composer] ; Symphony [No. 4] in F major (1826) [styled No. 7 by the composer] ; Symphony [No. 5] in E major (1828, revised 1846 with replacement slow movement) [styled No. 8 by the composer] ; Symphony [No. 6] in G minor (1832) [styled both No. 10 and No. 2 in G minor by the composer] ; Symphony [No. 7] in D major (1833) [styled No. 2 in D major by the composer] ; Symphony [No. 8] in C minor (1834) [unnumbered by the composer] ; Symphony [No. 9] in D major (1834) [styled No. 4 in ",
"score": "1.5589138"
},
{
"id": "29889146",
"title": "Luigi Cherubini",
"text": "Overture in G (1815) ; Symphony in D major (1815) ; Marche funèbre (1820) ",
"score": "1.5575283"
},
{
"id": "13898036",
"title": "August Klughardt",
"text": " in E \"Im Frühling\" (In Spring), Op. 30 and the Fest-Overture in E flat, Op. 78. Between 1975 and 1980 another label, Sterling, recorded the Concert Overture in G major, Op. 45, the Konzertstück for Oboe and Orchestra in F, Op. 18, the Cello Concerto in A minor, Op. 59 and the Suite for Orchestra, \"Auf der Wanderschaft\" (A Walk in the Countryside), Op. 67, an orchestration by the composer of an earlier piano suite that he composed after he and his wife holidayed in the Harz mountains; they are performed by Rolf-Julius Koch (oboe), Horst Beckedorf (cello) and the NDR Radiophilarmonie with three different conductors.",
"score": "1.557478"
},
{
"id": "2806065",
"title": "Jose Gonzalez Granero",
"text": " In 2003, José composed an Overture titled Overture for a Celebration with a level of Difficulty 4. His Composition won the second prize at the city of Comines-Warneton in Belgium and his Original Work has been published in Italy by Scomegna Edizioni Musicali .",
"score": "1.5562546"
},
{
"id": "14089347",
"title": "Konrad Wölki",
"text": "Overture No. 1 (A major) ; Overture No. 2 (F-sharp minor) ; Overture No. 3 (D major) ; Overture No. 4 (B minor) for plucked orchestra and woodwinds ; Overture No. 5 (C major) ; Overture No. 6 (G major) ; Suite No. 1 for Zupforchester, Op. 29 (1935) ; Suite No. 2, Op. 31 (1937) (\"Music for simple celebration hours\") ; Small suite in G major ; Concerto for violin, 2 flutes and Zupforchester, Op. 57 (1954, new version 1966) ; Rondo scherzoso ; Three old-fashioned dances ; Vienna concert ",
"score": "1.5497105"
},
{
"id": "3779916",
"title": "Giovanni Sgambati",
"text": "Cola di Rienzo Overture (1866) ; Piano Concerto in G minor, Op. 15 (1878–1880) ; Symphony No. 1 in D major, Op. 16 (1880–1881) ; Symphony No. 2 in E-flat major (1883–1885) ",
"score": "1.5469136"
},
{
"id": "9068008",
"title": "Idomeneo",
"text": " The overture, in D major and common time, is in a modified sonata form in which the development is but a very short transition section connecting the exposition with the recapitulation. Other conventional hallmarks of the sonata form are apparent: the exposition modulates from the tonic (D major) to the dominant (A major), while the recapitulation is centred on the tonic. The overture concludes with a coda ending in D major chords. These chords, soft and tentative, turn out not to be a resolution of the overture in the tonic but chords in the dominant of G minor, which is the home key of the scene that immediately follows.",
"score": "1.5464326"
},
{
"id": "3990168",
"title": "List of compositions by Henry Purcell",
"text": " D minor (1687) ; ZT 690, Overture in C minor (Unknown) ; ZT 691, Overture in D major (Unknown) ; ZT 692, Overture in D major (Unknown) ; ZT 693/1, Overture in G minor (Unknown) ; ZT 693/2, Air in G minor (Unknown) ; ZT 694, Song Tune in C major (1687) ; ZT 695, Song Tune in C major (1687) ; ZT 696/1, Air in D minor (Unknown) – [2nd version of ZT 675] ; ZT 696/2, Air in D minor (Unknown) ; ZT 697, Trumpet Tune in C major (1696) ; ZT 698, Trumpet Tune in C major (1696) Note: All the following are keyboard works ",
"score": "1.5382714"
},
{
"id": "27313220",
"title": "List of compositions by Franz Schubert by genre",
"text": "D 592, Overture in D major for piano duet, in the Italian Style (1817, version for piano duet of D 590) ; D 597, Overture in C major for piano duet, in the Italian Style (1817, version for piano duet of D 591) ; D 668, Overture in G minor for piano duet (1819) ; D 675, Overture in F major for piano duet (1819?, first published as Op. 34) ; D 773, Overture to the Opera Alfonso und Estrella for piano duet (1823, version for piano duet of the Overture from D 732; first published as Op. 69) ; D 798, Overture to the Opera Fierabras for piano duet (1823, version for piano duet of the Overture from D 796; NSA also appends a version by Carl Czerny) ",
"score": "1.5366445"
},
{
"id": "3394826",
"title": "Overture (Bruckner)",
"text": " The orchestral setting is the same as that of the earlier March in D minor, except that the second flute is replaced by a piccolo. The first (1862) version of the Overture in G minor, which is 301-bar long, had a different coda on bars 233–288. This was replaced—and approved by Kitzler—with a new coda in the final version of 1863. The final version is 8 bars shorter (293 bars). The \"coda of the coda\" (bars 289–301 of the 1862 version / bars 281–293 of the 1863 version) is the same in both versions. After an introduction in Adagio (bars 1-22), the work in Allegro non troppo is further in sonata form, with the use in its development of theme inversion. In contrast with the earlier Four Orchestral Pieces and the next Symphony in F minor, the Overture appears a much more mature work. Bruckner's characteristics are already present: the opening subject with his octave leap in unison, the full orchestral chords followed by semiquaver runs, and the second slower (Un poco meno mosso) subject with its large interval leaps.",
"score": "1.5361367"
},
{
"id": "7586443",
"title": "Overture Respighiana",
"text": " Overture Respighiana (Overtura Respighiana) was composed by Salvatore Di Vittorio in 2008, as an homage to Ottorino Respighi. The work was written one year before Di Vittorio's completion of Respighi's rediscovered first Violin Concerto in A Major.",
"score": "1.5351043"
},
{
"id": "7980617",
"title": "List of compositions by Felix Mendelssohn",
"text": "Op. Posth. 101, Trumpet Overture, Overture in C major for orchestra (1826) (MWV P 2) ; Op. Posth. 102, (6) Songs Without Words for piano, Book VIII (1842/45) ; No. 1 Andante un poco agitato in E minor (MWV U 162) ; No. 2 Adagio in D major (MWV U 192) ; No. 3 Presto in C major (\"Tarantelle\") (\"Kinderstuck\") (MWV U 195) ; No. 4 Un poco agitato, ma andante in G minor (\"The Sighing Wind\") (MWV U 152) ; No. 5 Allegro vivace in A major (\"The Joyous Peasant\") (\"Kinderstuck\") (MWV U 194) ; No. 6 Andante in C major (\"Belief\") (MWV U 172) ; Op. Posth. 103, Trauermarsch [Funeral March] in A minor for military orchestra ",
"score": "1.5290205"
},
{
"id": "4837945",
"title": "Symphony in G minor (Moeran)",
"text": "Allegro ; Lento ; Vivace ; Lento – Allegro molto The Symphony in G minor was the only completed symphony written by Ernest John Moeran. He wrote it in 1934–37. It is in four movements. In 1926, the conductor of the Hallé Orchestra, Sir Hamilton Harty, commissioned a symphony from Moeran. He had already been working on a symphony since 1924, and the premiere performance of the new work was announced for 4 March 1926. However, when it was almost finished, he decided he was not satisfied with its structure and withdrew it. Over the next eight years he worked on his revision of the piece, but in 1934 he abandoned his sketches ",
"score": "1.5282941"
},
{
"id": "26783938",
"title": "Prince Igor",
"text": " settled the matter as follows between us: He was to fill in all the gaps in Act III and write down from memory the Overture played so often by the composer, while I was to orchestrate, finish composing, and systematize all the rest that had been left unfinished and unorchestrated by Borodin.\" - Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Chronicle of My Musical Life, 1909 The often-repeated account that Glazunov reconstructed and orchestrated the overture from memory after hearing the composer play it at the piano is true only in part. The following statement by Glazunov himself clarifies the matter: \"The overture was composed by me ",
"score": "1.5275527"
}
] | [
"Overture (Bruckner)\n Anton Bruckner composed the Overture in G minor, WAB 98 in 1862–63, during his tuition by Otto Kitzler.",
"Karl Goldmark\n in E-flat major, Op. 43), and numerous concert overtures, such as the Sakuntala Overture Op. 13 (a work which cemented his fame after his String Quartet), the Penthesilea Overture Op. 31, the In the Spring Overture Op. 36, the Prometheus Bound Overture Op. 38, the Sappho Overture Op. 44, the In Italy Overture Op. 49, and the Aus Jugendtagen Overture, Op. 53. Other orchestral works include the symphonic poem Zrínyi, Op. 47, and two orchestral scherzos, in E minor, Op. 19, and in A major, Op. 45. Goldmark's nephew Rubin Goldmark (1872–1936), a pupil of Dvořák, was also a composer, who spent his career in New York.",
"Francesco Maria Veracini\n In addition to violin sonatas, edited by Ferdinand David, operas and oratorios, Veracini also wrote violin concertos, sonatas for recorder and basso continuo, and orchestral suites, called Overtures. The six Overtures were performed for Prince Friedrich August in Venice in 1716, as part of Veracini's ultimately successful attempt to secure a position at the Dresden court. They are all either in F major or B-flat major, except for one in G minor. The last one of these, in B-flat major, is remarkable for concluding with a unison minuet. Veracini also wrote a \"lively, highly original theory treatise\", Il trionfo della pratica musicale, and edited other composers' works, adding \"improvements\" of his own, such as he did in his Dissertazioni with the Opus 5 Violin Sonatas of Arcangelo Corelli.",
"Overture (Bruckner)\n In the fall of 1862, when studying with Otto Kitzler in Linz, Bruckner composed his first orchestral compositions: the Four Orchestral Pieces (the March in D minor and the Three Pieces for orchestra). His next orchestral composition was an Overture in G minor, WAB 98. A sketch of the Overture, which was started in November 1862, is found in the Kizler-Studienbuch pp. 287–301. A first version of the Overture was completed on 24 December 1862. On 6 January 1863 Bruckner started with the composition of a new coda, which he finished on 22 January 1863. The original manuscript of the Overture contains both the 1863 version and, on pp. 44–50, its 1862 coda. The manuscript, ",
"List of compositions by Luigi Boccherini\nG 490: Overture in D major (second movement related to G478) ; G 491: Sinfonia concertante Op. 7 in C major ; G 492: 6 Divertimenti (6 Sextets) Op. 16, G 461–466 ; G 493: Symphony Op. 21 No. 1 in B-flat major ; G 494: Symphony Op. 21 No. 2 in E-flat major ; G 495: Symphony Op. 21 No. 3 in C major ; G 496: Symphony Op. 21 No. 4 in D major ; G 497: Symphony Op. 21 No. 5 in B-flat major ; G 498: Symphony Op. 21 No. 6 in A major ; G 499: Sinfonia concertante in G major (= G470) ; G 500: Symphony in D major ; G 501: Serenade ",
"Overture (Bruckner)\n which sheet No. 7 (bars 188-212) is missing, is stored in the archive of the Kremsmünster Abbey. A copy of the complete score of the Overture was given by Bruckner to his friend Cyrill Hynais, together with that of the Four Orchestral Pieces and the Symphony in F minor. These scores are stored in the archive of the Stadt- und Landesbibliothek of Vienna. The work was first published by Alfred Orel in Unbekannte Frühwerke Anton Bruckners, 1921. The Overture was first performed by Franz Moißl on 8 September 1921 in Klosterneuburg. The Overture in G minor (Ouvertüre g-Moll), as well as its 1862 coda, are edited in Band XII/5 of the current Bruckner's Gesamtausgabe.",
"Cipriani Potter\nOverture in E minor (1815, revised 1848) ; Symphony [No. 1] in G minor (1819, revised 1824–26 & 1833) [styled No. 1 by the composer] ; Symphony [No. 2] in B major (1821, revised 1839) [unnumbered by the composer] ; Symphony [No. 3] in C minor (1826) [styled No. 6 by the composer] ; Symphony [No. 4] in F major (1826) [styled No. 7 by the composer] ; Symphony [No. 5] in E major (1828, revised 1846 with replacement slow movement) [styled No. 8 by the composer] ; Symphony [No. 6] in G minor (1832) [styled both No. 10 and No. 2 in G minor by the composer] ; Symphony [No. 7] in D major (1833) [styled No. 2 in D major by the composer] ; Symphony [No. 8] in C minor (1834) [unnumbered by the composer] ; Symphony [No. 9] in D major (1834) [styled No. 4 in ",
"Luigi Cherubini\nOverture in G (1815) ; Symphony in D major (1815) ; Marche funèbre (1820) ",
"August Klughardt\n in E \"Im Frühling\" (In Spring), Op. 30 and the Fest-Overture in E flat, Op. 78. Between 1975 and 1980 another label, Sterling, recorded the Concert Overture in G major, Op. 45, the Konzertstück for Oboe and Orchestra in F, Op. 18, the Cello Concerto in A minor, Op. 59 and the Suite for Orchestra, \"Auf der Wanderschaft\" (A Walk in the Countryside), Op. 67, an orchestration by the composer of an earlier piano suite that he composed after he and his wife holidayed in the Harz mountains; they are performed by Rolf-Julius Koch (oboe), Horst Beckedorf (cello) and the NDR Radiophilarmonie with three different conductors.",
"Jose Gonzalez Granero\n In 2003, José composed an Overture titled Overture for a Celebration with a level of Difficulty 4. His Composition won the second prize at the city of Comines-Warneton in Belgium and his Original Work has been published in Italy by Scomegna Edizioni Musicali .",
"Konrad Wölki\nOverture No. 1 (A major) ; Overture No. 2 (F-sharp minor) ; Overture No. 3 (D major) ; Overture No. 4 (B minor) for plucked orchestra and woodwinds ; Overture No. 5 (C major) ; Overture No. 6 (G major) ; Suite No. 1 for Zupforchester, Op. 29 (1935) ; Suite No. 2, Op. 31 (1937) (\"Music for simple celebration hours\") ; Small suite in G major ; Concerto for violin, 2 flutes and Zupforchester, Op. 57 (1954, new version 1966) ; Rondo scherzoso ; Three old-fashioned dances ; Vienna concert ",
"Giovanni Sgambati\nCola di Rienzo Overture (1866) ; Piano Concerto in G minor, Op. 15 (1878–1880) ; Symphony No. 1 in D major, Op. 16 (1880–1881) ; Symphony No. 2 in E-flat major (1883–1885) ",
"Idomeneo\n The overture, in D major and common time, is in a modified sonata form in which the development is but a very short transition section connecting the exposition with the recapitulation. Other conventional hallmarks of the sonata form are apparent: the exposition modulates from the tonic (D major) to the dominant (A major), while the recapitulation is centred on the tonic. The overture concludes with a coda ending in D major chords. These chords, soft and tentative, turn out not to be a resolution of the overture in the tonic but chords in the dominant of G minor, which is the home key of the scene that immediately follows.",
"List of compositions by Henry Purcell\n D minor (1687) ; ZT 690, Overture in C minor (Unknown) ; ZT 691, Overture in D major (Unknown) ; ZT 692, Overture in D major (Unknown) ; ZT 693/1, Overture in G minor (Unknown) ; ZT 693/2, Air in G minor (Unknown) ; ZT 694, Song Tune in C major (1687) ; ZT 695, Song Tune in C major (1687) ; ZT 696/1, Air in D minor (Unknown) – [2nd version of ZT 675] ; ZT 696/2, Air in D minor (Unknown) ; ZT 697, Trumpet Tune in C major (1696) ; ZT 698, Trumpet Tune in C major (1696) Note: All the following are keyboard works ",
"List of compositions by Franz Schubert by genre\nD 592, Overture in D major for piano duet, in the Italian Style (1817, version for piano duet of D 590) ; D 597, Overture in C major for piano duet, in the Italian Style (1817, version for piano duet of D 591) ; D 668, Overture in G minor for piano duet (1819) ; D 675, Overture in F major for piano duet (1819?, first published as Op. 34) ; D 773, Overture to the Opera Alfonso und Estrella for piano duet (1823, version for piano duet of the Overture from D 732; first published as Op. 69) ; D 798, Overture to the Opera Fierabras for piano duet (1823, version for piano duet of the Overture from D 796; NSA also appends a version by Carl Czerny) ",
"Overture (Bruckner)\n The orchestral setting is the same as that of the earlier March in D minor, except that the second flute is replaced by a piccolo. The first (1862) version of the Overture in G minor, which is 301-bar long, had a different coda on bars 233–288. This was replaced—and approved by Kitzler—with a new coda in the final version of 1863. The final version is 8 bars shorter (293 bars). The \"coda of the coda\" (bars 289–301 of the 1862 version / bars 281–293 of the 1863 version) is the same in both versions. After an introduction in Adagio (bars 1-22), the work in Allegro non troppo is further in sonata form, with the use in its development of theme inversion. In contrast with the earlier Four Orchestral Pieces and the next Symphony in F minor, the Overture appears a much more mature work. Bruckner's characteristics are already present: the opening subject with his octave leap in unison, the full orchestral chords followed by semiquaver runs, and the second slower (Un poco meno mosso) subject with its large interval leaps.",
"Overture Respighiana\n Overture Respighiana (Overtura Respighiana) was composed by Salvatore Di Vittorio in 2008, as an homage to Ottorino Respighi. The work was written one year before Di Vittorio's completion of Respighi's rediscovered first Violin Concerto in A Major.",
"List of compositions by Felix Mendelssohn\nOp. Posth. 101, Trumpet Overture, Overture in C major for orchestra (1826) (MWV P 2) ; Op. Posth. 102, (6) Songs Without Words for piano, Book VIII (1842/45) ; No. 1 Andante un poco agitato in E minor (MWV U 162) ; No. 2 Adagio in D major (MWV U 192) ; No. 3 Presto in C major (\"Tarantelle\") (\"Kinderstuck\") (MWV U 195) ; No. 4 Un poco agitato, ma andante in G minor (\"The Sighing Wind\") (MWV U 152) ; No. 5 Allegro vivace in A major (\"The Joyous Peasant\") (\"Kinderstuck\") (MWV U 194) ; No. 6 Andante in C major (\"Belief\") (MWV U 172) ; Op. Posth. 103, Trauermarsch [Funeral March] in A minor for military orchestra ",
"Symphony in G minor (Moeran)\nAllegro ; Lento ; Vivace ; Lento – Allegro molto The Symphony in G minor was the only completed symphony written by Ernest John Moeran. He wrote it in 1934–37. It is in four movements. In 1926, the conductor of the Hallé Orchestra, Sir Hamilton Harty, commissioned a symphony from Moeran. He had already been working on a symphony since 1924, and the premiere performance of the new work was announced for 4 March 1926. However, when it was almost finished, he decided he was not satisfied with its structure and withdrew it. Over the next eight years he worked on his revision of the piece, but in 1934 he abandoned his sketches ",
"Prince Igor\n settled the matter as follows between us: He was to fill in all the gaps in Act III and write down from memory the Overture played so often by the composer, while I was to orchestrate, finish composing, and systematize all the rest that had been left unfinished and unorchestrated by Borodin.\" - Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Chronicle of My Musical Life, 1909 The often-repeated account that Glazunov reconstructed and orchestrated the overture from memory after hearing the composer play it at the piano is true only in part. The following statement by Glazunov himself clarifies the matter: \"The overture was composed by me "
] |
Who was the composer of Tea for One? | [
"Jimmy Page",
"James Patrick Page",
"Jim Page"
] | composer | Tea for One | 2,281,491 | 96 | [
{
"id": "13671956",
"title": "Tea for Two (album)",
"text": "Irving Caesar\tComposer ; Anne Caldwell\tComposer ; Page Cavanaugh\tVocals ; Doris Day\tPrimary Artist, Vocals ; Al Dubin\tComposer ; George Gershwin\tComposer ; Ira Gershwin\tComposer ; Lorenz Hart\tComposer ; Roger Wolfe Kahn\tComposer ; Ken Lane\tVocals ; Joseph Meyer\tComposer ; Gene Nelson\tVocals ; Richard Rodgers\tComposer ; Axel Stordahl\tOrchestra Director ; Harry Warren\tComposer ; Vincent Youmans\tComposer ",
"score": "1.68027"
},
{
"id": "13672256",
"title": "Tea for Two (film)",
"text": " Tea for Two is a 1950 American musical film directed by David Butler. The screenplay by Harry Clork and William Jacobs was inspired by the 1925 stage musical No, No, Nanette, although the plot was changed considerably from the original book by Otto Harbach and Frank Mandel; and the score by Harbach, Irving Caesar, and Vincent Youmans was augmented with songs by other composers.",
"score": "1.625599"
},
{
"id": "30284800",
"title": "Eric Thiman",
"text": " Eric Harding Thiman (12 September 1900 – 13 February 1975) was an English composer, conductor and organist. The surname is pronounced 'tea-man'. By 1939 he was considered one of the leading non-conformist organists in England.",
"score": "1.5644357"
},
{
"id": "13671954",
"title": "Tea for Two (album)",
"text": " Tea for Two was a 10\" LP album released by Columbia Records on September 4, 1950. It was released under catalog number CL-6149, featuring Doris Day, with Axel Stordahl conducting the orchestra on some pieces, and the Page Cavanaugh Trio as backup musicians on others. It contained songs from the soundtrack of the movie of the same name.",
"score": "1.5427752"
},
{
"id": "25312993",
"title": "Come Out of the Pantry",
"text": "\"Everything Stops for Tea\", by Al Hoffman, Al Goodhart and Maurice Sigler; Sung by Jack Buchanan ; \"From One Minute to Another\", by Al Hoffman, Al Goodhart and Maurice Sigler The film includes the following songs: A version of \"Everything Stops for Tea\" was later recorded by blues singer John Baldry on his 1972 album Everything Stops for Tea, produced by Elton John and Rod Stewart. The song was later rewritten (except for the chorus) by chap hop artist Professor Elemental in his 2012 album, Father of Invention.",
"score": "1.4927568"
},
{
"id": "9192292",
"title": "Signals for Tea",
"text": " Signals for Tea is a 1995 album by composer, musician and arranger Steve Beresford which was released on the Japanese Avant label.",
"score": "1.4802495"
},
{
"id": "9726350",
"title": "Stephen Trombley",
"text": " songs with Angela Kaset, whom he met while she was staying in Vermont in 2011. Upon moving to Nashville he became a regular co-writer with Fred Koller, with whom he penned three of the tracks on his 2014 CD \"Tea For Three\". These include \"Suzy Says\", \"Whaddya Know\" and \"I Know It's Summer\". The title track, \"Tea For Three\", was written with Oliver Ray, formerly of Patti Smith's band. \"One of These Days\" and \"Man Of The World\" were written with Kaset. In 2013 Trombley and Koller composed the musical \"1961\", which looks at peace and prosperity in the fictional town of Pleasantville, USA, in the years between the Korean and Vietnam wars.",
"score": "1.4492617"
},
{
"id": "32404774",
"title": "Frank Scheffer",
"text": " a portrait on the composer as well as a view of the history of modernism in the 20th century. In 2005 Scheffer also finished a feature-length documentary on the Tea-Opera composed by Tan Dun, with Pierre Audi (Director) and Xiu Ying(libretto), Tea. This film had its world premiere in the Museum of Modern Art in New York. In 2006 a retrospective of his work and a Docu-Concert was exhibited in the Museum of Modern Art in New York. A documentary on the Tehran Philharmonic Orchestra and its chief conductor, the Iranian composer Nader Mashayekhi with the title To Be And Not ",
"score": "1.4343629"
},
{
"id": "13672263",
"title": "Tea for Two (film)",
"text": " In his review in The New York Times, Bosley Crowther called the film \"pleasant entertainment,\" \"a sprightly show,\" and \"quite a genial production\" and added, \"Miss Day and Mr. MacRae . . . complement each other like peanut butter and jelly.\" Time wrote, \"[It] sheds a Technicolor tear for the good old days of plus fours, prohibition and the stock-market crash. The story . . . employs nearly every musical-comedy cliché . . . as hot-weather entertainment, Tea for Two is at its best when concentrating on the old tunes of Vincent Youmans, George Gershwin and Roger Wolfe Kahn.\"",
"score": "1.434062"
},
{
"id": "223485",
"title": "Teacup Travels",
"text": " The soundtrack for series one and two was composed by Rasmus Borowski and Alexius Tschallener. The score was recorded live in Prague, Czech Republic, with the City of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra and Nic Raine conducting.",
"score": "1.4339516"
},
{
"id": "28720118",
"title": "Alfred Baldwin Sloane",
"text": " Alfred Baldwin Sloane (28 August 1872, Baltimore – 21 February 1925, Red Bank, New Jersey) was an American composer, considered the most prolific songwriter for Broadway musical comedies at the beginning of the 20th century. His scores were first heard in amateur productions in Baltimore, where he grew up. When Sloane first moved to New York in 1890, he began interpolating melodies into others' scores and soon was invited to create his own. His biggest hit was \"Heaven Will Protect the Working Girl,\" which Marie Dressler introduced in Tillie's Nightmare (1910), but none of his songs found enduring popularity. He composed only rarely after 1912, but he did provide much of the music for the 1919 and 1920 Greenwich Village Follies. He wrote one of his musicals, Lady Teazle, for Lillian Russell when she was at the height of her national popularity. His last score, for the 1925 Broadway production China Rose, was in production at his death. China Rose had been produced in Boston, by Christmas Eve, 1924.",
"score": "1.4301603"
},
{
"id": "10015052",
"title": "China Tea (instrumental)",
"text": " \"China Tea\" is a piano solo instrumental which was written and recorded by the English pianist Russ Conway. It became a hit for Conway in 1959, with his recording reaching the UK Singles Chart top 10. He composed the tune and published it under his real name, Trevor H. (Herbert) Stanford. \"China Tea\" spent two weeks at No. 1 on the UK's sheet music charts in October 1959.",
"score": "1.4286113"
},
{
"id": "4654084",
"title": "Vincent Youmans",
"text": " musical-comedy success of the 1920s in both Europe and the US and his two songs \"Tea for Two\" and \"I Want to Be Happy\" were worldwide hits. Both songs are considered standards. \"Tea For Two\" was consistently ranked among the most recorded popular songs for decades. In 1927, Youmans began producing his own Broadway shows. He also left his publisher TB Harms Company and began publishing his own songs. He had a major success with Hit the Deck! (1927), which included the hit songs \"Sometimes I'm Happy\" and \"Hallelujah\". His subsequent productions after 1927 were failures, despite the song hits they featured (\"Great Day and \"Without a Song\" from Great Day (1929), \"Time On My Hands\" ",
"score": "1.4122064"
},
{
"id": "31162989",
"title": "Giovanni Bolzoni (composer)",
"text": " Arturo Toscanini performed some of Bolzoni's music; two 1943 performances with the NBC Symphony Orchestra have been preserved on disc. In 1958, Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops Orchestra recorded Bolzoni's Minuet for RCA Victor as part of the Boston Tea Party album, which was later issued on CD. The work has also been recorded by Frederick Fennell and the London Pops Orchestra for Mercury Records and Neeme Järvi and the Detroit Symphony Orchestra for Chandos Records.",
"score": "1.398909"
},
{
"id": "26123915",
"title": "American tea culture",
"text": "\"I'm a Little Teapot\" (formally titled \"The Teapot Song\"), a children's song from 1939 and a related dance ; My Cup of Tea ; \"\"Tea for Two\" (song), a song from the 1925 musical No, No, Nanette ",
"score": "1.3829105"
},
{
"id": "1349852",
"title": "Lockrem Johnson",
"text": "Flower Drum Song ; She Seattle-based Lockrem Johnson (1924, Davenport, Iowa – 1977) was an American composer. He studied at The Cornish School from 1931-38 with Berthe Poncy Jacobson and at the University of Washington from 1938-42 with George McKay. His one-act chamber opera A Letter to Emily (1951) was runner up for the Pulitzer Prize for Music in 1952. Regarding an incident in the life of poet Emily Dickinson, the libretto was adapted by the composer from the play Consider the Lilies by Robert Hupton. Johnson returned to Seattle in 1962 to become head of the music department at The Cornish School, remaining in that position until 1969. He founded Puget Music Publications in 1970, devoted to publishing works by composers from the American Northwest. Other works:",
"score": "1.3755643"
},
{
"id": "13672260",
"title": "Tea for Two (film)",
"text": "\"I Know That You Know\" - sung by Doris Day and Gene Nelson ; \"Crazy Rhythm\" - sung by Patrice Wymore and Gene Nelson ; \"I Only Have Eyes for You\" - sung by Gordon MacRae ; \"Tea for Two\" - sung by Doris Day and Gordon MacRae ; \"I Want to Be Happy\" - sung by Doris Day and Gordon MacRae ; \"Do Do Do\" by - sung by Doris Day and Gordon MacRae ; \"Oh Me! Oh My!\" - sung by Doris Day and Gene Nelson ; \"Charleston\" - danced to by Billy De Wolfe ; \"Tea for Two (Reprise)\" - sung by Doris Day and Gene Nelson ; \"Here in My Arms\" - sung by Doris Day ; \"No, No, Nanette\" - sung by Doris Day and Gene Nelson ; \"Tea for Two (Finale)\" - sung by Doris Day and Gordon MacRae ",
"score": "1.3749666"
},
{
"id": "8396263",
"title": "Tea: A Mirror of Soul",
"text": " Tea: A Mirror of Soul (Chinese 茶 \"tea\") is a 2002 Chinese-language western-style opera by Tan Dun, to a libretto by the composer and Peking opera librettist Xu Ying. The opera was commissioned by Suntory Hall in Tokyo, Japan and was given its world premiere performance there in English. The United States premiere, also in English, was given on July 21, 2007 at the Santa Fe Opera in Santa Fe, New Mexico.",
"score": "1.3738399"
},
{
"id": "28173835",
"title": "Tea and Symphony",
"text": " Tea and Symphony was a British progressive rock musical group of the late 1960s and early 1970s, whose style may be described as \"progressive folk\". From Birmingham, England, they recorded two albums for Harvest Records, had one track, \"Maybe My Mind (With Egg)\", included on the Harvest sampler Picnic - A Breath of Fresh Air, toured Britain with Bakerloo (Blues Line) and were guests on John Peel's BBC radio programme. The group was generally a trio, though sometimes supplemented by extra musicians. Members included Jeff Daw (lead guitar, backing vocals, flute), James Langston (lead vocals, rhythm guitar), Nigel Phillips (drums, backing vocals, keyboards, recorder, left 1969), Jonathan Benyon (mime, joined 1968 ",
"score": "1.3710119"
},
{
"id": "4959497",
"title": "Tristram Cary",
"text": " His concert works of note include a Sonata for guitar (1959), Continuum for tape (1969), a cantata Peccata Mundi (1972), Contours and Densities at First Hill for orchestra (1972), a Nonet (1979), String Quartet No. 2 (1985) and The Dancing Girls for orchestra (1991). Cary is also particularly well known for his film and television music. He wrote music for the science fiction television series Doctor Who (including the first Dalek story ), as well as the score for the Ealing comedy The Ladykillers (1955). Later film scores included The Boy Who Stole a Million (1960); The Prince and The Pauper (1962); Sammy Going South (1963); Quatermass and ",
"score": "1.3634281"
}
] | [
"Tea for Two (album)\nIrving Caesar\tComposer ; Anne Caldwell\tComposer ; Page Cavanaugh\tVocals ; Doris Day\tPrimary Artist, Vocals ; Al Dubin\tComposer ; George Gershwin\tComposer ; Ira Gershwin\tComposer ; Lorenz Hart\tComposer ; Roger Wolfe Kahn\tComposer ; Ken Lane\tVocals ; Joseph Meyer\tComposer ; Gene Nelson\tVocals ; Richard Rodgers\tComposer ; Axel Stordahl\tOrchestra Director ; Harry Warren\tComposer ; Vincent Youmans\tComposer ",
"Tea for Two (film)\n Tea for Two is a 1950 American musical film directed by David Butler. The screenplay by Harry Clork and William Jacobs was inspired by the 1925 stage musical No, No, Nanette, although the plot was changed considerably from the original book by Otto Harbach and Frank Mandel; and the score by Harbach, Irving Caesar, and Vincent Youmans was augmented with songs by other composers.",
"Eric Thiman\n Eric Harding Thiman (12 September 1900 – 13 February 1975) was an English composer, conductor and organist. The surname is pronounced 'tea-man'. By 1939 he was considered one of the leading non-conformist organists in England.",
"Tea for Two (album)\n Tea for Two was a 10\" LP album released by Columbia Records on September 4, 1950. It was released under catalog number CL-6149, featuring Doris Day, with Axel Stordahl conducting the orchestra on some pieces, and the Page Cavanaugh Trio as backup musicians on others. It contained songs from the soundtrack of the movie of the same name.",
"Come Out of the Pantry\n\"Everything Stops for Tea\", by Al Hoffman, Al Goodhart and Maurice Sigler; Sung by Jack Buchanan ; \"From One Minute to Another\", by Al Hoffman, Al Goodhart and Maurice Sigler The film includes the following songs: A version of \"Everything Stops for Tea\" was later recorded by blues singer John Baldry on his 1972 album Everything Stops for Tea, produced by Elton John and Rod Stewart. The song was later rewritten (except for the chorus) by chap hop artist Professor Elemental in his 2012 album, Father of Invention.",
"Signals for Tea\n Signals for Tea is a 1995 album by composer, musician and arranger Steve Beresford which was released on the Japanese Avant label.",
"Stephen Trombley\n songs with Angela Kaset, whom he met while she was staying in Vermont in 2011. Upon moving to Nashville he became a regular co-writer with Fred Koller, with whom he penned three of the tracks on his 2014 CD \"Tea For Three\". These include \"Suzy Says\", \"Whaddya Know\" and \"I Know It's Summer\". The title track, \"Tea For Three\", was written with Oliver Ray, formerly of Patti Smith's band. \"One of These Days\" and \"Man Of The World\" were written with Kaset. In 2013 Trombley and Koller composed the musical \"1961\", which looks at peace and prosperity in the fictional town of Pleasantville, USA, in the years between the Korean and Vietnam wars.",
"Frank Scheffer\n a portrait on the composer as well as a view of the history of modernism in the 20th century. In 2005 Scheffer also finished a feature-length documentary on the Tea-Opera composed by Tan Dun, with Pierre Audi (Director) and Xiu Ying(libretto), Tea. This film had its world premiere in the Museum of Modern Art in New York. In 2006 a retrospective of his work and a Docu-Concert was exhibited in the Museum of Modern Art in New York. A documentary on the Tehran Philharmonic Orchestra and its chief conductor, the Iranian composer Nader Mashayekhi with the title To Be And Not ",
"Tea for Two (film)\n In his review in The New York Times, Bosley Crowther called the film \"pleasant entertainment,\" \"a sprightly show,\" and \"quite a genial production\" and added, \"Miss Day and Mr. MacRae . . . complement each other like peanut butter and jelly.\" Time wrote, \"[It] sheds a Technicolor tear for the good old days of plus fours, prohibition and the stock-market crash. The story . . . employs nearly every musical-comedy cliché . . . as hot-weather entertainment, Tea for Two is at its best when concentrating on the old tunes of Vincent Youmans, George Gershwin and Roger Wolfe Kahn.\"",
"Teacup Travels\n The soundtrack for series one and two was composed by Rasmus Borowski and Alexius Tschallener. The score was recorded live in Prague, Czech Republic, with the City of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra and Nic Raine conducting.",
"Alfred Baldwin Sloane\n Alfred Baldwin Sloane (28 August 1872, Baltimore – 21 February 1925, Red Bank, New Jersey) was an American composer, considered the most prolific songwriter for Broadway musical comedies at the beginning of the 20th century. His scores were first heard in amateur productions in Baltimore, where he grew up. When Sloane first moved to New York in 1890, he began interpolating melodies into others' scores and soon was invited to create his own. His biggest hit was \"Heaven Will Protect the Working Girl,\" which Marie Dressler introduced in Tillie's Nightmare (1910), but none of his songs found enduring popularity. He composed only rarely after 1912, but he did provide much of the music for the 1919 and 1920 Greenwich Village Follies. He wrote one of his musicals, Lady Teazle, for Lillian Russell when she was at the height of her national popularity. His last score, for the 1925 Broadway production China Rose, was in production at his death. China Rose had been produced in Boston, by Christmas Eve, 1924.",
"China Tea (instrumental)\n \"China Tea\" is a piano solo instrumental which was written and recorded by the English pianist Russ Conway. It became a hit for Conway in 1959, with his recording reaching the UK Singles Chart top 10. He composed the tune and published it under his real name, Trevor H. (Herbert) Stanford. \"China Tea\" spent two weeks at No. 1 on the UK's sheet music charts in October 1959.",
"Vincent Youmans\n musical-comedy success of the 1920s in both Europe and the US and his two songs \"Tea for Two\" and \"I Want to Be Happy\" were worldwide hits. Both songs are considered standards. \"Tea For Two\" was consistently ranked among the most recorded popular songs for decades. In 1927, Youmans began producing his own Broadway shows. He also left his publisher TB Harms Company and began publishing his own songs. He had a major success with Hit the Deck! (1927), which included the hit songs \"Sometimes I'm Happy\" and \"Hallelujah\". His subsequent productions after 1927 were failures, despite the song hits they featured (\"Great Day and \"Without a Song\" from Great Day (1929), \"Time On My Hands\" ",
"Giovanni Bolzoni (composer)\n Arturo Toscanini performed some of Bolzoni's music; two 1943 performances with the NBC Symphony Orchestra have been preserved on disc. In 1958, Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops Orchestra recorded Bolzoni's Minuet for RCA Victor as part of the Boston Tea Party album, which was later issued on CD. The work has also been recorded by Frederick Fennell and the London Pops Orchestra for Mercury Records and Neeme Järvi and the Detroit Symphony Orchestra for Chandos Records.",
"American tea culture\n\"I'm a Little Teapot\" (formally titled \"The Teapot Song\"), a children's song from 1939 and a related dance ; My Cup of Tea ; \"\"Tea for Two\" (song), a song from the 1925 musical No, No, Nanette ",
"Lockrem Johnson\nFlower Drum Song ; She Seattle-based Lockrem Johnson (1924, Davenport, Iowa – 1977) was an American composer. He studied at The Cornish School from 1931-38 with Berthe Poncy Jacobson and at the University of Washington from 1938-42 with George McKay. His one-act chamber opera A Letter to Emily (1951) was runner up for the Pulitzer Prize for Music in 1952. Regarding an incident in the life of poet Emily Dickinson, the libretto was adapted by the composer from the play Consider the Lilies by Robert Hupton. Johnson returned to Seattle in 1962 to become head of the music department at The Cornish School, remaining in that position until 1969. He founded Puget Music Publications in 1970, devoted to publishing works by composers from the American Northwest. Other works:",
"Tea for Two (film)\n\"I Know That You Know\" - sung by Doris Day and Gene Nelson ; \"Crazy Rhythm\" - sung by Patrice Wymore and Gene Nelson ; \"I Only Have Eyes for You\" - sung by Gordon MacRae ; \"Tea for Two\" - sung by Doris Day and Gordon MacRae ; \"I Want to Be Happy\" - sung by Doris Day and Gordon MacRae ; \"Do Do Do\" by - sung by Doris Day and Gordon MacRae ; \"Oh Me! Oh My!\" - sung by Doris Day and Gene Nelson ; \"Charleston\" - danced to by Billy De Wolfe ; \"Tea for Two (Reprise)\" - sung by Doris Day and Gene Nelson ; \"Here in My Arms\" - sung by Doris Day ; \"No, No, Nanette\" - sung by Doris Day and Gene Nelson ; \"Tea for Two (Finale)\" - sung by Doris Day and Gordon MacRae ",
"Tea: A Mirror of Soul\n Tea: A Mirror of Soul (Chinese 茶 \"tea\") is a 2002 Chinese-language western-style opera by Tan Dun, to a libretto by the composer and Peking opera librettist Xu Ying. The opera was commissioned by Suntory Hall in Tokyo, Japan and was given its world premiere performance there in English. The United States premiere, also in English, was given on July 21, 2007 at the Santa Fe Opera in Santa Fe, New Mexico.",
"Tea and Symphony\n Tea and Symphony was a British progressive rock musical group of the late 1960s and early 1970s, whose style may be described as \"progressive folk\". From Birmingham, England, they recorded two albums for Harvest Records, had one track, \"Maybe My Mind (With Egg)\", included on the Harvest sampler Picnic - A Breath of Fresh Air, toured Britain with Bakerloo (Blues Line) and were guests on John Peel's BBC radio programme. The group was generally a trio, though sometimes supplemented by extra musicians. Members included Jeff Daw (lead guitar, backing vocals, flute), James Langston (lead vocals, rhythm guitar), Nigel Phillips (drums, backing vocals, keyboards, recorder, left 1969), Jonathan Benyon (mime, joined 1968 ",
"Tristram Cary\n His concert works of note include a Sonata for guitar (1959), Continuum for tape (1969), a cantata Peccata Mundi (1972), Contours and Densities at First Hill for orchestra (1972), a Nonet (1979), String Quartet No. 2 (1985) and The Dancing Girls for orchestra (1991). Cary is also particularly well known for his film and television music. He wrote music for the science fiction television series Doctor Who (including the first Dalek story ), as well as the score for the Ealing comedy The Ladykillers (1955). Later film scores included The Boy Who Stole a Million (1960); The Prince and The Pauper (1962); Sammy Going South (1963); Quatermass and "
] |
Who was the composer of Chasing? | [
"Gemma Hayes"
] | composer | Chasing (song) | 1,409,758 | 68 | [
{
"id": "28026137",
"title": "George S. Chase",
"text": " George Salisbury Chase (1909–1972) was an American composer for film and library music. He was born in Brooklyn, New York on October 23, 1909, to George S. and Florence E. (Reynolds) Chase. In 1957, Chase was hired by R.T.F. Music Publishing Corp., a subsidiary of Thomas J. Valentino, Inc., to write background and production film music, and remained working there until his death. Chase composed under the pseudonym of Michael Reynolds for the firm's Major Record library. He was also known under the pseudonym \"Franz Mahl\". Some of his compositions were used in episodes of the 1955–1956 seasons of Adventures of Superman. Four of them, \"Dark of the Moon,\" \"Mystic Night,\" \"Hypertension,\" and \"Vigil,\" were also tracked into Edward D. Wood Jr.'s \"Plan 9 from Outer Space\" (1956). He is also credited with composing the music for the 1952–4 television show Mr. and Mrs. North. Chase was a composer of liturgical music as well; the 1940 U.S. Census records his occupation as \"musician, church.\" He was an active member of Brooklyn Council of the Knights of Columbus. Chase died on August 1, 1972, in Huntingdon, New York.",
"score": "1.6786265"
},
{
"id": "3403159",
"title": "Chasing (2021 film)",
"text": " Chasing is a 2021 Indian Tamil language action crime film written and directed by Veerakumar on his directorial debut. The film features Varalaxmi Sarathkumar in the lead role. The film had a theatrical release on 16 April 2021. It was released to negative reviews.",
"score": "1.5830545"
},
{
"id": "20200",
"title": "Chasing (song)",
"text": " \"Chasing\" is a song written by Irish singer-songwriter Gemma Hayes and is the first single release from her fifth studio album Bones+Longing.",
"score": "1.5776708"
},
{
"id": "7469626",
"title": "Bruce Chase",
"text": " Robert Bruce Chase (March 22, 1912 – June 29, 2001) was an American composer and music arranger.",
"score": "1.5752206"
},
{
"id": "3801505",
"title": "Craig Safan",
"text": " loved the freedom to put together all my talents, from the dramatic writing of theater, to the melodic and rhythmic world of songs, to the esoteric world of contemporary classical music. It just suddenly all came together at that moment.” One assignment led to another. Writing the title music for California Reich, a 1975 documentary for Walter Parkes, led him to score a low-budget exploitation film called The Great Texas Dynamite Chase (1976), which began his long relationship with Michael Pressman, for whom he would score five more pictures through the 1990s. Meanwhile, he started studying film music and sought out the wisdom of Fred ",
"score": "1.554826"
},
{
"id": "29583186",
"title": "Nicholas Frances Chase",
"text": " Nicholas Frances Chase (born Nebeil Mahayni; 1966 in Roseburg, Oregon) is an American composer and performer. Chase received a Bachelor of Arts in German Area Studies from University of Oregon in 1993 and studied music composition at the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) with Stephen Mosko, Morton Subotnick, Bunita Marcus, and Mary Jane Leach, receiving his Master of Fine Arts in 2000. At CalArts he studied Hindustani Classical Music with Rajeev Taranath and Arabic Classical Music with Dr. Ziad Bunni. His compositional style references popular music forms such as techno, electronica, ambient, and noise music, and frequently integrates interactive signal processing and electronic sound material with acoustic instrumentation. He has written original music for various ensembles including the California EAR Unit, the Long Beach Opera, and the Philadelphia Classical Symphony.",
"score": "1.5508366"
},
{
"id": "20202",
"title": "Chasing (song)",
"text": " No music video has been made for this single.",
"score": "1.5336504"
},
{
"id": "5704999",
"title": "La Jolla Playhouse production history",
"text": "Chasing the Song, book by Joe DiPietro, music by David Bryan, lyrics by Joe DiPietro and David Bryan ; The Orphan of Zhao, adapted by James Fenton ; Ether Dome by Elizabeth Egloff ; Kingdom City by Sheri Wilner ; The Hunchback of Notre Dame (musical), novel by Victor Hugo, music by Alan Menken, lyrics by Stephen Schwartz ",
"score": "1.5309865"
},
{
"id": "15405930",
"title": "Andy Chase",
"text": " he signed to his label, such as the Postmarks and Ukrainian singer Lana Mir. In 2009, he produced and performed on Juliana Hatfield's album How to Walk Away. He has also produced albums for the Smashing Pumpkins, Tahiti 80, the Trash Can Sinatras, and Fountains of Wayne. He owned Stratosphere Sound recording studios with Adam Schelsinger and James Iha. Films and television shows that feature Chase's songs include There's Something About Mary, Me Myself & Irene, Shallow Hal, Orange County, Insomnia, Stuck on You, Fever Pitch, Bee Season, and Music and Lyrics. He has composed original music for film and TV, and voice acted for the video game Kya: Dark Lineage.",
"score": "1.5268627"
},
{
"id": "2943494",
"title": "Chasing (2016 film)",
"text": " Chasing (lit. \"Catch Him to Survive\") is a 2016 South Korean action-comedy film about a top CEO (played by Kim Seung-woo) who has his cellphone stolen by a fearless gang of male high-school students led by the rebellious Han Won-tae (played by Hyuk of VIXX, in his film debut) and homicide detective (played by Kim Jung-tae) who loses his gun to the same gang of high-school students. Both the gun and the cellphone are very valuable to the CEO and detective and begins a fast-paced pursuit in order to retrieve their items back from the gang. The film was directed by Oh In-chun (the director of Mourning Grave) and released in theaters on January 7, 2016.",
"score": "1.524554"
},
{
"id": "3900215",
"title": "Joshua Ravetch",
"text": " Ravetch's award-winning play, Chasing Mem'ries: A Different Kind of Musical received the Edgerton New Play Award and was nominated for the Ovation. The play starred Tyne Daly and Robert Forster and world premiered at The Geffen Playhouse in 2017. Ravetch collaborated with legendary lyricists Alan and Marilyn Bergman with music by Marvin Hamlisch, Michel Legrand and Johnny Mandel. During the workshop of the production, Norman Lear said, \"If there were a Tony for a yet-to-be-fully-produced-play, Chasing Mem'ries would get my vote. This is a touching, luscious, triumphant piece of theatre.\" They are collaborating for the second time on the second musical in the ",
"score": "1.5092921"
},
{
"id": "9479160",
"title": "Chasing the Deer",
"text": " The film soundtrack includes music by the Scottish celtic rock group Runrig and the ex-Marillion singer-songwriter Fish, and features the song \"Battle Lines\" by the English rock musician John Wetton.",
"score": "1.5082021"
},
{
"id": "20201",
"title": "Chasing (song)",
"text": " The song was revealed as the first single release in September 2014. It was released to fans for free who supported her Pledge Music campaign on 9 October 2014 and became available in the iTunes Store in Ireland, UK, US & Canada as part of the albums pre-orders. On 9 October 2014 the full version of the single appeared on Beat's website. On 14 November 2014 a remixed version of the song was revealed through Clash Magazine. The single was made available on 9 October 2014 in Ireland and it will be released worldwide on 15 December 2014.",
"score": "1.5076365"
},
{
"id": "8673578",
"title": "Lincoln Chase",
"text": " Lincoln R. Chase (June 29, 1926 – October 6, 1980) was an American songwriter and occasional recording artist. As a writer, his most notable songs were \"Such a Night\", \"Jim Dandy\", and several of Shirley Ellis' hits in the early 1960s including \"The Name Game\" and \"The Clapping Song\".",
"score": "1.501013"
},
{
"id": "6574192",
"title": "Chase H.Q.",
"text": " at the Arcade Operator's Union trade show in Tokyo. The game was released as Chase H.Q. 2 later in the year. Saint Etienne recorded a demo dance track called \"Chase HQ\" that was inspired by Chase H.Q. It includes samples of the \"Oh man!\" and \"Punch the pedal!\" exclamations from the game action. The track was released as a bonus track on the 2009 Deluxe reissue of the band's 1991 album, Foxbase Alpha. Chase HQs gameplay, which involved ramming the enemy car while avoiding oncoming traffic, has been cited as a precursor to the gameplay of later titles such as Driver and Burnout.",
"score": "1.500171"
},
{
"id": "15120199",
"title": "Chasing Coral",
"text": " Saul Simon MacWilliams and Dan Romer composed the score for the film. Romer also co-wrote an original song, \"Tell Me How Long\", featuring Kristen Bell.",
"score": "1.4999344"
},
{
"id": "540277",
"title": "Michael Hunter (composer)",
"text": " Michael Hunter is a Scottish composer and musician from Glasgow, Scotland, who composed the theme songs for both Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas and Grand Theft Auto IV. He has also released music under the aliases of Pablo and Butch Cassidy Sound System. On 22 August 2011, he released his debut album, State of Flux. The second album, Circuit Brain, was released on 29 August 2018.",
"score": "1.4955194"
},
{
"id": "2769729",
"title": "Chasing Yesterday (books)",
"text": " Chasing Yesterday is a series of books written by Robin Wasserman. The series follows a girl after she wakes up in the middle of rubble, with no memory of her past. The series includes Awakening, Betrayal, and Truth.",
"score": "1.4933525"
},
{
"id": "26793065",
"title": "Chasing Stars",
"text": "Alesso – producer, composer, lyricist, ; Marshmello – producer, composer, lyricist, associated performer, programming ; The Monsters & Strangerz – producer, composer, lyricist, associated performer, vocal producer ; Alexander Izquierdo – composer, lyricist ; James Bay – composer, lyricist, associated performer, featured artist, vocalist ; Jonathan Bellion – composer, lyricist ; Michael Pollack – composer, lyricist ; Jeremie Inhaber – assistant mixer, studio personnal ; Michelle Mancini – mastering engineer, studio personnal ; Chris Galland – mix engineer, studio personnal ; Manny Marroquin – mixer, studio personnal ; Henri Davies – recording engineer, studio personnal Credits adapted from Tidal. ",
"score": "1.4930649"
},
{
"id": "4055679",
"title": "Chase (instrumental)",
"text": " Created especially for the film Midnight Express, Alan Parker, the director of the film, explicitly asked Moroder for a song in the style of \"I Feel Love\", which Moroder composed for Donna Summer. It was Moroder's second time composing a movie soundtrack after his work on 1972's German softcore sex film \"Sex Life in a Convent\". The song's main melody was played on a Roland SH-2000 synthesizer, while the bass lines were played on a Minimoog synthesizer. The track also has a flanging effect produced by the MXR Flanger, while other instruments used include an ARP/Solina String Ensemble, Fender Rhodes, Hohner Clavinet, and piano. Although a disco piece, \"Chase\", along with \"I Feel Love\", is more specifically considered the pioneering introduction of the hi-NRG genre, which came to prominence in the early 1980s. The music was arranged by Harold Faltermeyer under the leadership of Giorgio Moroder.",
"score": "1.4922974"
}
] | [
"George S. Chase\n George Salisbury Chase (1909–1972) was an American composer for film and library music. He was born in Brooklyn, New York on October 23, 1909, to George S. and Florence E. (Reynolds) Chase. In 1957, Chase was hired by R.T.F. Music Publishing Corp., a subsidiary of Thomas J. Valentino, Inc., to write background and production film music, and remained working there until his death. Chase composed under the pseudonym of Michael Reynolds for the firm's Major Record library. He was also known under the pseudonym \"Franz Mahl\". Some of his compositions were used in episodes of the 1955–1956 seasons of Adventures of Superman. Four of them, \"Dark of the Moon,\" \"Mystic Night,\" \"Hypertension,\" and \"Vigil,\" were also tracked into Edward D. Wood Jr.'s \"Plan 9 from Outer Space\" (1956). He is also credited with composing the music for the 1952–4 television show Mr. and Mrs. North. Chase was a composer of liturgical music as well; the 1940 U.S. Census records his occupation as \"musician, church.\" He was an active member of Brooklyn Council of the Knights of Columbus. Chase died on August 1, 1972, in Huntingdon, New York.",
"Chasing (2021 film)\n Chasing is a 2021 Indian Tamil language action crime film written and directed by Veerakumar on his directorial debut. The film features Varalaxmi Sarathkumar in the lead role. The film had a theatrical release on 16 April 2021. It was released to negative reviews.",
"Chasing (song)\n \"Chasing\" is a song written by Irish singer-songwriter Gemma Hayes and is the first single release from her fifth studio album Bones+Longing.",
"Bruce Chase\n Robert Bruce Chase (March 22, 1912 – June 29, 2001) was an American composer and music arranger.",
"Craig Safan\n loved the freedom to put together all my talents, from the dramatic writing of theater, to the melodic and rhythmic world of songs, to the esoteric world of contemporary classical music. It just suddenly all came together at that moment.” One assignment led to another. Writing the title music for California Reich, a 1975 documentary for Walter Parkes, led him to score a low-budget exploitation film called The Great Texas Dynamite Chase (1976), which began his long relationship with Michael Pressman, for whom he would score five more pictures through the 1990s. Meanwhile, he started studying film music and sought out the wisdom of Fred ",
"Nicholas Frances Chase\n Nicholas Frances Chase (born Nebeil Mahayni; 1966 in Roseburg, Oregon) is an American composer and performer. Chase received a Bachelor of Arts in German Area Studies from University of Oregon in 1993 and studied music composition at the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) with Stephen Mosko, Morton Subotnick, Bunita Marcus, and Mary Jane Leach, receiving his Master of Fine Arts in 2000. At CalArts he studied Hindustani Classical Music with Rajeev Taranath and Arabic Classical Music with Dr. Ziad Bunni. His compositional style references popular music forms such as techno, electronica, ambient, and noise music, and frequently integrates interactive signal processing and electronic sound material with acoustic instrumentation. He has written original music for various ensembles including the California EAR Unit, the Long Beach Opera, and the Philadelphia Classical Symphony.",
"Chasing (song)\n No music video has been made for this single.",
"La Jolla Playhouse production history\nChasing the Song, book by Joe DiPietro, music by David Bryan, lyrics by Joe DiPietro and David Bryan ; The Orphan of Zhao, adapted by James Fenton ; Ether Dome by Elizabeth Egloff ; Kingdom City by Sheri Wilner ; The Hunchback of Notre Dame (musical), novel by Victor Hugo, music by Alan Menken, lyrics by Stephen Schwartz ",
"Andy Chase\n he signed to his label, such as the Postmarks and Ukrainian singer Lana Mir. In 2009, he produced and performed on Juliana Hatfield's album How to Walk Away. He has also produced albums for the Smashing Pumpkins, Tahiti 80, the Trash Can Sinatras, and Fountains of Wayne. He owned Stratosphere Sound recording studios with Adam Schelsinger and James Iha. Films and television shows that feature Chase's songs include There's Something About Mary, Me Myself & Irene, Shallow Hal, Orange County, Insomnia, Stuck on You, Fever Pitch, Bee Season, and Music and Lyrics. He has composed original music for film and TV, and voice acted for the video game Kya: Dark Lineage.",
"Chasing (2016 film)\n Chasing (lit. \"Catch Him to Survive\") is a 2016 South Korean action-comedy film about a top CEO (played by Kim Seung-woo) who has his cellphone stolen by a fearless gang of male high-school students led by the rebellious Han Won-tae (played by Hyuk of VIXX, in his film debut) and homicide detective (played by Kim Jung-tae) who loses his gun to the same gang of high-school students. Both the gun and the cellphone are very valuable to the CEO and detective and begins a fast-paced pursuit in order to retrieve their items back from the gang. The film was directed by Oh In-chun (the director of Mourning Grave) and released in theaters on January 7, 2016.",
"Joshua Ravetch\n Ravetch's award-winning play, Chasing Mem'ries: A Different Kind of Musical received the Edgerton New Play Award and was nominated for the Ovation. The play starred Tyne Daly and Robert Forster and world premiered at The Geffen Playhouse in 2017. Ravetch collaborated with legendary lyricists Alan and Marilyn Bergman with music by Marvin Hamlisch, Michel Legrand and Johnny Mandel. During the workshop of the production, Norman Lear said, \"If there were a Tony for a yet-to-be-fully-produced-play, Chasing Mem'ries would get my vote. This is a touching, luscious, triumphant piece of theatre.\" They are collaborating for the second time on the second musical in the ",
"Chasing the Deer\n The film soundtrack includes music by the Scottish celtic rock group Runrig and the ex-Marillion singer-songwriter Fish, and features the song \"Battle Lines\" by the English rock musician John Wetton.",
"Chasing (song)\n The song was revealed as the first single release in September 2014. It was released to fans for free who supported her Pledge Music campaign on 9 October 2014 and became available in the iTunes Store in Ireland, UK, US & Canada as part of the albums pre-orders. On 9 October 2014 the full version of the single appeared on Beat's website. On 14 November 2014 a remixed version of the song was revealed through Clash Magazine. The single was made available on 9 October 2014 in Ireland and it will be released worldwide on 15 December 2014.",
"Lincoln Chase\n Lincoln R. Chase (June 29, 1926 – October 6, 1980) was an American songwriter and occasional recording artist. As a writer, his most notable songs were \"Such a Night\", \"Jim Dandy\", and several of Shirley Ellis' hits in the early 1960s including \"The Name Game\" and \"The Clapping Song\".",
"Chase H.Q.\n at the Arcade Operator's Union trade show in Tokyo. The game was released as Chase H.Q. 2 later in the year. Saint Etienne recorded a demo dance track called \"Chase HQ\" that was inspired by Chase H.Q. It includes samples of the \"Oh man!\" and \"Punch the pedal!\" exclamations from the game action. The track was released as a bonus track on the 2009 Deluxe reissue of the band's 1991 album, Foxbase Alpha. Chase HQs gameplay, which involved ramming the enemy car while avoiding oncoming traffic, has been cited as a precursor to the gameplay of later titles such as Driver and Burnout.",
"Chasing Coral\n Saul Simon MacWilliams and Dan Romer composed the score for the film. Romer also co-wrote an original song, \"Tell Me How Long\", featuring Kristen Bell.",
"Michael Hunter (composer)\n Michael Hunter is a Scottish composer and musician from Glasgow, Scotland, who composed the theme songs for both Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas and Grand Theft Auto IV. He has also released music under the aliases of Pablo and Butch Cassidy Sound System. On 22 August 2011, he released his debut album, State of Flux. The second album, Circuit Brain, was released on 29 August 2018.",
"Chasing Yesterday (books)\n Chasing Yesterday is a series of books written by Robin Wasserman. The series follows a girl after she wakes up in the middle of rubble, with no memory of her past. The series includes Awakening, Betrayal, and Truth.",
"Chasing Stars\nAlesso – producer, composer, lyricist, ; Marshmello – producer, composer, lyricist, associated performer, programming ; The Monsters & Strangerz – producer, composer, lyricist, associated performer, vocal producer ; Alexander Izquierdo – composer, lyricist ; James Bay – composer, lyricist, associated performer, featured artist, vocalist ; Jonathan Bellion – composer, lyricist ; Michael Pollack – composer, lyricist ; Jeremie Inhaber – assistant mixer, studio personnal ; Michelle Mancini – mastering engineer, studio personnal ; Chris Galland – mix engineer, studio personnal ; Manny Marroquin – mixer, studio personnal ; Henri Davies – recording engineer, studio personnal Credits adapted from Tidal. ",
"Chase (instrumental)\n Created especially for the film Midnight Express, Alan Parker, the director of the film, explicitly asked Moroder for a song in the style of \"I Feel Love\", which Moroder composed for Donna Summer. It was Moroder's second time composing a movie soundtrack after his work on 1972's German softcore sex film \"Sex Life in a Convent\". The song's main melody was played on a Roland SH-2000 synthesizer, while the bass lines were played on a Minimoog synthesizer. The track also has a flanging effect produced by the MXR Flanger, while other instruments used include an ARP/Solina String Ensemble, Fender Rhodes, Hohner Clavinet, and piano. Although a disco piece, \"Chase\", along with \"I Feel Love\", is more specifically considered the pioneering introduction of the hi-NRG genre, which came to prominence in the early 1980s. The music was arranged by Harold Faltermeyer under the leadership of Giorgio Moroder."
] |
Who was the composer of String Quartet No. 3? | [
"Carl Nielsen",
"Carl August Nielsen"
] | composer | String Quartet No. 3 (Nielsen) | 1,825,771 | 76 | [
{
"id": "35022",
"title": "String Quartet No. 3 (Husa)",
"text": " The String Quartet No. 3 is a composition for string quartet by the composer Karel Husa. It was first performed on October 14, 1968, at the Goodman Theatre, Chicago, by the Fine Arts Quartet, to whose members the work is dedicated. The piece won the 1969 Pulitzer Prize for Music.",
"score": "1.8940462"
},
{
"id": "30810614",
"title": "String Quartet No. 3 (Rochberg)",
"text": " George Rochberg's String Quartet No. 3 is an important piece in American contemporary music literature. Written in 1971 and premiered on May 15, 1972, by the Concord String Quartet, the third string quartet was an important move away from serialism for the American composer.",
"score": "1.86849"
},
{
"id": "14181041",
"title": "String Quartet No. 3 (Carter)",
"text": " The Third String Quartet by American composer Elliott Carter was completed in 1971. It is dedicated to the Juilliard String Quartet, and it was premiered in 1973. This quartet earned Carter his second Pulitzer Prize in Music in 1973.",
"score": "1.8443488"
},
{
"id": "3203952",
"title": "String Quartet No. 3 (Piston)",
"text": " String Quartet No. 3 by Walter Piston is a chamber-music work composed in 1947.",
"score": "1.8192964"
},
{
"id": "15858835",
"title": "String Quartet No. 3 (Bacewicz)",
"text": " String Quartet No. 3 is a 1947 composition by Polish composer Grażyna Bacewicz. The composition won the Polish Ministry of Culture Award in 1955.",
"score": "1.804173"
},
{
"id": "31470515",
"title": "String Quartet No. 3 (Brahms)",
"text": " The String Quartet No. 3 in B major, Op. 67, was composed by Johannes Brahms in the summer of 1875 and published by the firm of Fritz Simrock. It received its premiere performance on October 30, 1876 in Berlin. It has four movements: 1. Vivace (B-flat major) 2. Andante (F major) 3. Agitato (Allegretto non troppo) — Trio — Coda (D minor) 4. Poco Allegretto con Variazioni (B-flat major) Brahms composed the work in Ziegelhausen, near Heidelberg, and dedicated it to Professor Theodor Wilhelm Engelmann, an amateur cellist who had hosted Brahms on a visit to Utrecht. Brahms was at the time the artistic director of the Vienna Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde. The work is lighthearted and cheerful, \"a useless trifle\", as he put it, \"to avoid facing the serious countenance ",
"score": "1.787537"
},
{
"id": "4575973",
"title": "String Quartet No. 3 (Revueltas)",
"text": " String Quartet No. 3 is a chamber-music work written in 1931 by the Mexican composer and violinist Silvestre Revueltas.",
"score": "1.7815291"
},
{
"id": "35024",
"title": "String Quartet No. 3 (Husa)",
"text": " The work won Husa the 1969 Pulitzer Prize for Music. The award brought international attention to Czech-born composer, who favorably recalled, \"You have the confidence that what you are doing is somehow rewarded. That's a terrific feeling, of course. It gives you an incredible lift, and keeps you in a mood so that you can compose more.\"",
"score": "1.7741691"
},
{
"id": "31635040",
"title": "String Quartet No. 3 (Mendelssohn)",
"text": " The String Quartet No. 3 in D major, Op. 44, No. 1, was composed by Felix Mendelssohn(1809-1847) in July of 1838 at the age of 29. It premiered in 1839, then was published later in 1840. Quartet No. 3 in D minor a traditional quartet, comprising two violins, a viola, and a cello. The piece is part of the Op. 44 set of 3 string quartets that Mendelssohn dedicated to the Crown Prince of Sweden.",
"score": "1.7641789"
},
{
"id": "12454761",
"title": "String Quartet No. 3 (Beethoven)",
"text": " The String Quartet No. 3 in D major, Op. 18, No. 3, was written by Ludwig van Beethoven between 1798 and 1800 and published in 1801, dedicated to Joseph Franz von Lobkowitz. Although it is numbered third, it was the first quartet Beethoven composed.",
"score": "1.7627578"
},
{
"id": "3203953",
"title": "String Quartet No. 3 (Piston)",
"text": " Piston’s Third Quartet was commissioned by Harvard University and first performed by the Walden Quartet on May 1, 1947. It is dedicated to Diran Alexanian.",
"score": "1.7591958"
},
{
"id": "15239658",
"title": "List of string quartet composers",
"text": " 1975): Movimento di quartetto (2004), La rosa que no canto (2006), Di tumulti e d’ombre. Studio per Faust (2011). ; Vivian Fung (born 1975): String Quartet No. 1 (the third movement, Pizzicato, may be performed as a separate work for string quartet; 2004), No. 2 (2009), No. 3 (2013), No. 4 (2019). ; David Philip Hefti (born 1975): Ph(r)asen – String Quartet No. 1 (2007); Guggisberg-Variationen – String Quartet No. 2 (2008); Mobile – String Quartet No. 3 (2011); con fuoco – String Quartet No. 4 (2011); Concubia nocte – Music for the Second Nocturnal Vigil – String Quartet No. 5 (2018). ; Svitlana Azarova (born 1976): Hotel Charlotte (2005), for ",
"score": "1.7514207"
},
{
"id": "28947792",
"title": "String Quartet No. 3 (Babbitt)",
"text": " String Quartet No. 3 is the third of six chamber-music works in the string quartet medium by the American composer Milton Babbitt.",
"score": "1.7511611"
},
{
"id": "12463705",
"title": "String Quartet No. 3 (Villa-Lobos)",
"text": " String Quartet No. 3 (\"Quarteto de pipocas\"—\"Popcorn\" Quartet) is the third of seventeen works in the medium by the Brazilian composer Heitor Villa-Lobos, and was written in 1916. A performance lasts approximately twenty-three minutes.",
"score": "1.7426286"
},
{
"id": "14565437",
"title": "String Quartet No. 3 (Oswald)",
"text": " The String Quartet No. 3, Op. 39, by Henrique Oswald was composed in 1908. It is dedicated to Antônio Francisco Braga.",
"score": "1.7414167"
},
{
"id": "15239584",
"title": "List of string quartet composers",
"text": " 3, op 15 (1919), No 4, op 16 (1923), No 6 (1927), No 5 (1931) ; Florence Price (1887–1953): Two string quartets (1929, 1935) and Five Folksongs in Counterpoint for String Quartet (1951). ; Ernst Toch (1887–1964): Thirteen string quartets, the first five now lost, and a brief Dedication for quartet. ; Fartein Valen (1887–1952): Two string quartets. ; Heitor Villa-Lobos (1887–1959): Seventeen string quartets between 1915 and 1957. ; Matthijs Vermeulen (1888–1967): One string quartet (1960–61). ; Johanna Beyer (1888–1944): At least four (1934, 1936, ?, 1943). ; Hugo Kauder (1888–1972): Nineteen string quartets. ; Ina Boyle (1889–1967): One string quartet (1934). ; Ethel Glenn Hier (1889–1971): Two string quartets. ",
"score": "1.7378066"
},
{
"id": "28947796",
"title": "String Quartet No. 3 (Babbitt)",
"text": "The Contemporary Composer in the USA. Milton Babbitt: Quartet No. 3; Charles Wuorinen: String Quartet. Fine Arts Quartet (Leonard Sorkin and Abram Loft, violins; Bernard Zaslav, viola; George Sopkin, cello). LP recording, stereo, 12 in. Turnabout TV-S 34515. New York: Vox Productions, Inc., 1972. Reissued on CD, stereo. Music & Arts CD 707. Berkeley, California: Music & Arts, 1991. ",
"score": "1.7366046"
},
{
"id": "4575974",
"title": "String Quartet No. 3 (Revueltas)",
"text": " Revueltas composed his third string quartet in the same year as his second, 1931, and the Cuarteto Clásico Nacional gave the first performance on 2 September 1931. Although the score was announced in 1958 as being \"in preparation for sale\", it was only finally published in 1995, fifty-five years after the composer's death and several decades after his other three quartets.",
"score": "1.7327104"
},
{
"id": "15239579",
"title": "List of string quartet composers",
"text": " 3, Op. 20) ; George Enescu (1881–1955): Two string quartets (No. 1 in E and No. 2 in G, Op. 22 nos. 1 and 2, 1916–1920 and 1951). ; Nikolai Myaskovsky (1881–1950): Thirteen (1907–1949). ; Nikolai Roslavets (1881–1944): Five string quartets (1913, 1915, 1920, 1929–31, 1942, and a minuet (1907); only Nos. 1, 3 & 5, and the minuet, have been published as of 2015. ; Ignatz Waghalter (1881–1949): One string quartet, in D major, Op. 3. ; Karl Weigl (1881–1949): Eight string quartets: No. 1 in C minor (1903 or 1905); No. 2 in E (with viola d'amore) (1906); No. 3 in A major (1909); No. 4 in D minor ",
"score": "1.7292585"
},
{
"id": "25577594",
"title": "String Quartet No. 3 (Tchaikovsky)",
"text": " The String Quartet No. 3 in E minor, Op. 30, by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, was composed in 1876, and is the last of his three String Quartets. It was written as a memorial for Ferdinand Laub. (The date upon the manuscript is early February 1876. ) The quartet was performed for the first time at a party at Nikolai Rubinstein's apartment on March 2, 1876. The first public performance was at a concert on 30 March (new style/March 18 (old style), the performers being: Jan Hřímalý and Adolph Brodsky, violins; Yuly Gerber, viola; and Wilhelm Fitzenhagen, cello. Once, while Tchaikovsky was staying with some friends, they surprised him by bringing in a string quartet who performed this quartet for him. When they finished playing, Tchaikovsky remarked, \"At first I didn't much like the Finale, but now I see that it is quite good.\" Recently, it was featured in the downloadable content Left Behind for the 2013 video game The Last of Us.",
"score": "1.7254698"
}
] | [
"String Quartet No. 3 (Husa)\n The String Quartet No. 3 is a composition for string quartet by the composer Karel Husa. It was first performed on October 14, 1968, at the Goodman Theatre, Chicago, by the Fine Arts Quartet, to whose members the work is dedicated. The piece won the 1969 Pulitzer Prize for Music.",
"String Quartet No. 3 (Rochberg)\n George Rochberg's String Quartet No. 3 is an important piece in American contemporary music literature. Written in 1971 and premiered on May 15, 1972, by the Concord String Quartet, the third string quartet was an important move away from serialism for the American composer.",
"String Quartet No. 3 (Carter)\n The Third String Quartet by American composer Elliott Carter was completed in 1971. It is dedicated to the Juilliard String Quartet, and it was premiered in 1973. This quartet earned Carter his second Pulitzer Prize in Music in 1973.",
"String Quartet No. 3 (Piston)\n String Quartet No. 3 by Walter Piston is a chamber-music work composed in 1947.",
"String Quartet No. 3 (Bacewicz)\n String Quartet No. 3 is a 1947 composition by Polish composer Grażyna Bacewicz. The composition won the Polish Ministry of Culture Award in 1955.",
"String Quartet No. 3 (Brahms)\n The String Quartet No. 3 in B major, Op. 67, was composed by Johannes Brahms in the summer of 1875 and published by the firm of Fritz Simrock. It received its premiere performance on October 30, 1876 in Berlin. It has four movements: 1. Vivace (B-flat major) 2. Andante (F major) 3. Agitato (Allegretto non troppo) — Trio — Coda (D minor) 4. Poco Allegretto con Variazioni (B-flat major) Brahms composed the work in Ziegelhausen, near Heidelberg, and dedicated it to Professor Theodor Wilhelm Engelmann, an amateur cellist who had hosted Brahms on a visit to Utrecht. Brahms was at the time the artistic director of the Vienna Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde. The work is lighthearted and cheerful, \"a useless trifle\", as he put it, \"to avoid facing the serious countenance ",
"String Quartet No. 3 (Revueltas)\n String Quartet No. 3 is a chamber-music work written in 1931 by the Mexican composer and violinist Silvestre Revueltas.",
"String Quartet No. 3 (Husa)\n The work won Husa the 1969 Pulitzer Prize for Music. The award brought international attention to Czech-born composer, who favorably recalled, \"You have the confidence that what you are doing is somehow rewarded. That's a terrific feeling, of course. It gives you an incredible lift, and keeps you in a mood so that you can compose more.\"",
"String Quartet No. 3 (Mendelssohn)\n The String Quartet No. 3 in D major, Op. 44, No. 1, was composed by Felix Mendelssohn(1809-1847) in July of 1838 at the age of 29. It premiered in 1839, then was published later in 1840. Quartet No. 3 in D minor a traditional quartet, comprising two violins, a viola, and a cello. The piece is part of the Op. 44 set of 3 string quartets that Mendelssohn dedicated to the Crown Prince of Sweden.",
"String Quartet No. 3 (Beethoven)\n The String Quartet No. 3 in D major, Op. 18, No. 3, was written by Ludwig van Beethoven between 1798 and 1800 and published in 1801, dedicated to Joseph Franz von Lobkowitz. Although it is numbered third, it was the first quartet Beethoven composed.",
"String Quartet No. 3 (Piston)\n Piston’s Third Quartet was commissioned by Harvard University and first performed by the Walden Quartet on May 1, 1947. It is dedicated to Diran Alexanian.",
"List of string quartet composers\n 1975): Movimento di quartetto (2004), La rosa que no canto (2006), Di tumulti e d’ombre. Studio per Faust (2011). ; Vivian Fung (born 1975): String Quartet No. 1 (the third movement, Pizzicato, may be performed as a separate work for string quartet; 2004), No. 2 (2009), No. 3 (2013), No. 4 (2019). ; David Philip Hefti (born 1975): Ph(r)asen – String Quartet No. 1 (2007); Guggisberg-Variationen – String Quartet No. 2 (2008); Mobile – String Quartet No. 3 (2011); con fuoco – String Quartet No. 4 (2011); Concubia nocte – Music for the Second Nocturnal Vigil – String Quartet No. 5 (2018). ; Svitlana Azarova (born 1976): Hotel Charlotte (2005), for ",
"String Quartet No. 3 (Babbitt)\n String Quartet No. 3 is the third of six chamber-music works in the string quartet medium by the American composer Milton Babbitt.",
"String Quartet No. 3 (Villa-Lobos)\n String Quartet No. 3 (\"Quarteto de pipocas\"—\"Popcorn\" Quartet) is the third of seventeen works in the medium by the Brazilian composer Heitor Villa-Lobos, and was written in 1916. A performance lasts approximately twenty-three minutes.",
"String Quartet No. 3 (Oswald)\n The String Quartet No. 3, Op. 39, by Henrique Oswald was composed in 1908. It is dedicated to Antônio Francisco Braga.",
"List of string quartet composers\n 3, op 15 (1919), No 4, op 16 (1923), No 6 (1927), No 5 (1931) ; Florence Price (1887–1953): Two string quartets (1929, 1935) and Five Folksongs in Counterpoint for String Quartet (1951). ; Ernst Toch (1887–1964): Thirteen string quartets, the first five now lost, and a brief Dedication for quartet. ; Fartein Valen (1887–1952): Two string quartets. ; Heitor Villa-Lobos (1887–1959): Seventeen string quartets between 1915 and 1957. ; Matthijs Vermeulen (1888–1967): One string quartet (1960–61). ; Johanna Beyer (1888–1944): At least four (1934, 1936, ?, 1943). ; Hugo Kauder (1888–1972): Nineteen string quartets. ; Ina Boyle (1889–1967): One string quartet (1934). ; Ethel Glenn Hier (1889–1971): Two string quartets. ",
"String Quartet No. 3 (Babbitt)\nThe Contemporary Composer in the USA. Milton Babbitt: Quartet No. 3; Charles Wuorinen: String Quartet. Fine Arts Quartet (Leonard Sorkin and Abram Loft, violins; Bernard Zaslav, viola; George Sopkin, cello). LP recording, stereo, 12 in. Turnabout TV-S 34515. New York: Vox Productions, Inc., 1972. Reissued on CD, stereo. Music & Arts CD 707. Berkeley, California: Music & Arts, 1991. ",
"String Quartet No. 3 (Revueltas)\n Revueltas composed his third string quartet in the same year as his second, 1931, and the Cuarteto Clásico Nacional gave the first performance on 2 September 1931. Although the score was announced in 1958 as being \"in preparation for sale\", it was only finally published in 1995, fifty-five years after the composer's death and several decades after his other three quartets.",
"List of string quartet composers\n 3, Op. 20) ; George Enescu (1881–1955): Two string quartets (No. 1 in E and No. 2 in G, Op. 22 nos. 1 and 2, 1916–1920 and 1951). ; Nikolai Myaskovsky (1881–1950): Thirteen (1907–1949). ; Nikolai Roslavets (1881–1944): Five string quartets (1913, 1915, 1920, 1929–31, 1942, and a minuet (1907); only Nos. 1, 3 & 5, and the minuet, have been published as of 2015. ; Ignatz Waghalter (1881–1949): One string quartet, in D major, Op. 3. ; Karl Weigl (1881–1949): Eight string quartets: No. 1 in C minor (1903 or 1905); No. 2 in E (with viola d'amore) (1906); No. 3 in A major (1909); No. 4 in D minor ",
"String Quartet No. 3 (Tchaikovsky)\n The String Quartet No. 3 in E minor, Op. 30, by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, was composed in 1876, and is the last of his three String Quartets. It was written as a memorial for Ferdinand Laub. (The date upon the manuscript is early February 1876. ) The quartet was performed for the first time at a party at Nikolai Rubinstein's apartment on March 2, 1876. The first public performance was at a concert on 30 March (new style/March 18 (old style), the performers being: Jan Hřímalý and Adolph Brodsky, violins; Yuly Gerber, viola; and Wilhelm Fitzenhagen, cello. Once, while Tchaikovsky was staying with some friends, they surprised him by bringing in a string quartet who performed this quartet for him. When they finished playing, Tchaikovsky remarked, \"At first I didn't much like the Finale, but now I see that it is quite good.\" Recently, it was featured in the downloadable content Left Behind for the 2013 video game The Last of Us."
] |
Who was the composer of That's Right? | [
"Johnny Cash",
"The Man in Black",
"John R. Cash",
"J. R. Cash"
] | composer | That's Right (Carl Perkins song) | 5,905,835 | 98 | [
{
"id": "511900",
"title": "That's Right (album)",
"text": " That's Right is an album by George Benson, originally released through GRP Records in 1996. That's Right was Benson's first album released on GRP Records after twenty years on Warner Bros. Records and produced by longtime producer, Tommy LiPuma. The cover photograph is by Andy Earl and captures Benson in Burnaby Street, Chelsea, London.",
"score": "1.7433321"
},
{
"id": "9616095",
"title": "That's Right – You're Wrong",
"text": " That's Right – You're Wrong is a 1939 American musical film directed by David Butler and released by RKO Radio Pictures. The film stars Kay Kyser and his band, with a cast that included Adolphe Menjou, Lucille Ball, Edward Everett Horton, Roscoe Karns, and Ginny Simms (as herself). It was the first film to feature Kyser and his band, and its success led to their headlining several more pictures over the next five years. The title was a Kyser catchphrase, used on his radio show when a contestant correctly gave a wrong answer to a \"right or wrong\" question.",
"score": "1.6371021"
},
{
"id": "9785122",
"title": "The Honeycombs",
"text": " a lasting impression in Sweden, where they scored two No. 1 singles. The Honeycombs made many appearances on music television shows such as Top of the Pops, Ready Steady Go! (UK), Shindig! (US), and Beat-Club (Germany). The group also appeared in the 1965 film Pop Gear, miming \"Have I the Right?\" and \"Eyes\". In July 1965, British music magazine NME reported that it had been agreed in the London High Court that \"Have I The Right?\" was the work of Howard and Blaikley. Composer Geoff Goddard agreed to drop allegations that he, not they, had written the song. In August 1965 the group released \"That's the Way\", ",
"score": "1.6197531"
},
{
"id": "13980999",
"title": "Have I the Right?",
"text": " In July 1965, the British music magazine NME reported that it had been agreed in the London High Court that \"Have I the Right?\" was the work of Howard and Blaikley. Composer Geoff Goddard agreed to drop allegations that he, and not they, had written the song. Goddard had been Meek's principal songwriter, but the two had fallen out. He claimed that the song was adapted from his earlier song \"Give Me The Chance\", but was too shy to testify in court.",
"score": "1.6054142"
},
{
"id": "31907542",
"title": "Alan Blaikley",
"text": " In the 1960s and 1970s, in collaboration with Ken Howard, Blaikley composed the music and words for many international top 10 hits, including two UK number ones, \"Have I the Right?\" (The Honeycombs) and \"The Legend of Xanadu\" (Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich). Among other performers for whom they have written are Petula Clark, Phil Collins, Sacha Distel, Rolf Harris, Frankie Howerd (the theme song for his film Up Pompeii), Engelbert Humperdinck, Horst Jankowski, Eartha Kitt, Little Eva, Marmalade, The Herd, Lulu and Matthews Southern Comfort. Blaikley and Howard were the first British composers to write for Elvis Presley, including the hit \"I've Lost You\" (1970), which he later performed in the film That's The Way It Is.",
"score": "1.597564"
},
{
"id": "10180035",
"title": "Who Dares Wins (film)",
"text": " The score was composed by Roy Budd, while the song Right on Time, which is heard during the church scene was written by Jerry and Marc Donahue.",
"score": "1.5853398"
},
{
"id": "25688799",
"title": "Codename: Rondo",
"text": " The New York Times praised \"That's Right,\" writing that \"it’s both a classic pop singalong and, perhaps more innovatively, a stab at giving the blues a futuristic face lift.\"",
"score": "1.5830181"
},
{
"id": "29563032",
"title": "Walt Levinsky",
"text": " well-known production company specializing in TV music. Levinsky is credited on a 1976 album of music cues for The Price is Right, which includes much of the show's music that is still heard today such as the showcase showdown and various car cues. One of those cues, a Nashville Brass-style country music piece, became the theme to Family Feud; the 1988 version of this theme is still used today. The 1990s brought further success with a busy concert and touring schedule as bandleader and clarinet soloist with his Great American Swing Band. Levinsky died in Sarasota, Florida, aged 70, from a brain tumour.",
"score": "1.5581203"
},
{
"id": "31907538",
"title": "Alan Blaikley",
"text": " Alan Blaikley (born 23 March 1940) is an English songwriter and composer. He is best known for writing a series of international hits in the 1960s and 1970s in collaboration with Ken Howard, including the UK number ones \"Have I the Right?\" and \"The Legend of Xanadu\". Together with Howard, he has also written two West End musicals and a number of TV themes, including the theme music for the BBC's long-running series of Agatha Christie's Miss Marple.",
"score": "1.5494034"
},
{
"id": "3244173",
"title": "That's Me Right There (EP)",
"text": " On October 30, 2014, it was confirmed by Villegas via Twitter that the title of the EP would be That's Me Right There with a release date set for November 10. Its cover artwork and track listing were revealed the same day.",
"score": "1.5392599"
},
{
"id": "2886836",
"title": "That's Entertainment! (album)",
"text": " That's Entertainment! is a 1960 album by the American vocalist Judy Garland arranged by Jack Marshall and Conrad Salinger. Garland turned to her former MGM arranger Conrad Salinger for four full orchestra-backed songs, including the title track, “I’ve Confessed to the Breeze” from No, No, Nanette and ”Alone Together” which was selected for The Band Wagon but not ultimately used in the film.",
"score": "1.5387007"
},
{
"id": "29040112",
"title": "That's Right (Three 6 Mafia song)",
"text": " That's Right is the final single released by Three 6 Mafia from their July 19, 2008 studio album Last 2 Walk. It features Akon, and in the music video version, Jim Jones.",
"score": "1.5373175"
},
{
"id": "6384326",
"title": "Nathan Wang",
"text": "One Six Right (2005) (orchestrator) ; Sabrina: The Animated Series (composer: additional music) (22 episodes, 1999) ; ... a.k.a. \"Sabrina\" (USA: short title) ; \"Anywhere But Here\" (1999) TV episode (composer: additional music) ; Boogie Shoes (1999) TV episode (composer: additional music) ; Boy Meets Bike (1999) TV episode (composer: additional music) ; Extreme Harvey (1999) TV episode (composer: additional music) ; Feats of Clay (1999) TV episode (composer: additional music) ; The Last Days (1998) (associate composer) (orchestrator) ; Flesh Gordon Meets the Cosmic Cheerleaders (1989) (composer: additional music) ; ... a.k.a. Flesh Gordon 2 ; Soundtrack: ; Wo shi shei (1998) (writer: \"Friendship\") ; ... a.k.a. Jackie Chan's Who Am I? (USA: cable TV title) ; ... a.k.a. Who Am I? ; Hung fan au (1995) (writer: \"You Are The One\") ; ... a.k.a. Rumble in the Bronx (Hong Kong: English title) (USA) ; ... a.k.a. Hong fan ou (Hong Kong: Mandarin title) ; ... a.k.a. Red Bronx ; ... a.k.a. Zizanie dans le Bronx (Canada: French title) ; Actor: ; Who's Your Daddy? (2003/I) (V) .... The Arnold Horshack Experience 2000s 1990s 1980s",
"score": "1.5207752"
},
{
"id": "25718125",
"title": "Sammy Fain",
"text": "Everybody's Welcome (1931) - musical - composer ; Right This Way (1938) - musical - featured songwriter for \"I'll Be Seeing You\" ; Hellzapoppin' (1938) - revue - co-composer and co-lyricist ; George White's Scandals of 1939 (1939) - revue - composer ; Boys and Girls Together (1940) - revue - composer ; Sons o' Fun (1941) - revue - co-composer and co-lyricist ; Toplitzky of Notre Dame (1946) - musical - composer ; Alive and Kicking (1950) - revue - co-composer ; Flahooley (1951) - musical - composer ; Ankles Aweigh (1955) - musical - composer ; Catch a Star (1955) - revue - co-composer ; Ziegfeld Follies of 1957 (1957) - revue - featured songwriter for \"An Element of Doubt\" ; Christine (1960) - musical - composer ; Something More! (1964) - musical - composer ; Rock 'N Roll! The First 5,000 Years (1982) - revue - featured songwriter for \"Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing\" ; Swing! (1999) - revue - featured songwriter for \"I'll Be Seeing You\" ; Calamity Jane (2018) - musical - composer (first full staging in the NYC area) ",
"score": "1.5183034"
},
{
"id": "15704922",
"title": "Honeyburst",
"text": " The song \"Right Next To the Right One\" was used as the title song for the Emmy Award winning DR1 drama series Nikolaj og Julie that was aired in 2002-2003. It became a national hit in 2002, a year ahead of Honeyburst's release. Christensen explains the match was made quickly: \"The producer of the show called me, he said they liked what I was doing and wanted to know if I had a song they could use. At the time we had made demos one of which was \"Right Next To the Right One\". He told me what the series were about, and I said, 'I believe I ",
"score": "1.5171802"
},
{
"id": "12753704",
"title": "That's Right (Carl Perkins song)",
"text": " \"That's Right\" is a 1957 rock and roll song written by Carl Perkins and Johnny Cash. The song was released as a single on Sun Records by Carl Perkins in August, 1957. \"That's Right\" was released as Sun 274, Matrix #U-259, backed with \"Forever Yours\", Matrix #U-258. The song was recorded at Sun Records studios at 706 Union Avenue in Memphis, Tennessee. \"That's Right\" was published by Hi-Lo Music while \"Forever Yours\" was published by Knox Music. The personnel on the session were Carl Perkins, vocals and guitar, Jay Perkins, guitar, Clayton Perkins, bass, and W.S. \"Fluke\" Holland on drums. Both sides failed to chart.",
"score": "1.5153079"
},
{
"id": "16527558",
"title": "Milton Scott Michel",
"text": " Charles Strouse's \"Sixth Finger Theme\", originally written for the play Sixth Finger In A Five Finger Glove, was used as the original theme music for The Price Is Right from 1956-1961.",
"score": "1.5038517"
},
{
"id": "8979101",
"title": "Edd Kalehoff",
"text": " Edward Woodley Kalehoff Jr. (born September 1, 1945) is an American television composer who specializes in compositions for television, known for his work on the Moog synthesizer. Kalehoff composed the musical themes to the game shows The Price Is Right and Double Dare, as well as for ABC World News Tonight and Monday Night Football.",
"score": "1.5021956"
},
{
"id": "14357810",
"title": "Jerome Brailey",
"text": "\"Right Move\" (Avco Records 1975) ",
"score": "1.5021251"
},
{
"id": "25075431",
"title": "Right (song)",
"text": " \"Right\" is a song by English musician David Bowie from his album Young Americans, released on 7 March 1975. Recorded on 14–18 August and 20–24 November 1974 at Sigma Sound in Philadelphia, \"Right\" is the last of four tracks on side one of Young Americans, and the B-side of the single \"Fame\", released in August 1975.",
"score": "1.500582"
}
] | [
"That's Right (album)\n That's Right is an album by George Benson, originally released through GRP Records in 1996. That's Right was Benson's first album released on GRP Records after twenty years on Warner Bros. Records and produced by longtime producer, Tommy LiPuma. The cover photograph is by Andy Earl and captures Benson in Burnaby Street, Chelsea, London.",
"That's Right – You're Wrong\n That's Right – You're Wrong is a 1939 American musical film directed by David Butler and released by RKO Radio Pictures. The film stars Kay Kyser and his band, with a cast that included Adolphe Menjou, Lucille Ball, Edward Everett Horton, Roscoe Karns, and Ginny Simms (as herself). It was the first film to feature Kyser and his band, and its success led to their headlining several more pictures over the next five years. The title was a Kyser catchphrase, used on his radio show when a contestant correctly gave a wrong answer to a \"right or wrong\" question.",
"The Honeycombs\n a lasting impression in Sweden, where they scored two No. 1 singles. The Honeycombs made many appearances on music television shows such as Top of the Pops, Ready Steady Go! (UK), Shindig! (US), and Beat-Club (Germany). The group also appeared in the 1965 film Pop Gear, miming \"Have I the Right?\" and \"Eyes\". In July 1965, British music magazine NME reported that it had been agreed in the London High Court that \"Have I The Right?\" was the work of Howard and Blaikley. Composer Geoff Goddard agreed to drop allegations that he, not they, had written the song. In August 1965 the group released \"That's the Way\", ",
"Have I the Right?\n In July 1965, the British music magazine NME reported that it had been agreed in the London High Court that \"Have I the Right?\" was the work of Howard and Blaikley. Composer Geoff Goddard agreed to drop allegations that he, and not they, had written the song. Goddard had been Meek's principal songwriter, but the two had fallen out. He claimed that the song was adapted from his earlier song \"Give Me The Chance\", but was too shy to testify in court.",
"Alan Blaikley\n In the 1960s and 1970s, in collaboration with Ken Howard, Blaikley composed the music and words for many international top 10 hits, including two UK number ones, \"Have I the Right?\" (The Honeycombs) and \"The Legend of Xanadu\" (Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich). Among other performers for whom they have written are Petula Clark, Phil Collins, Sacha Distel, Rolf Harris, Frankie Howerd (the theme song for his film Up Pompeii), Engelbert Humperdinck, Horst Jankowski, Eartha Kitt, Little Eva, Marmalade, The Herd, Lulu and Matthews Southern Comfort. Blaikley and Howard were the first British composers to write for Elvis Presley, including the hit \"I've Lost You\" (1970), which he later performed in the film That's The Way It Is.",
"Who Dares Wins (film)\n The score was composed by Roy Budd, while the song Right on Time, which is heard during the church scene was written by Jerry and Marc Donahue.",
"Codename: Rondo\n The New York Times praised \"That's Right,\" writing that \"it’s both a classic pop singalong and, perhaps more innovatively, a stab at giving the blues a futuristic face lift.\"",
"Walt Levinsky\n well-known production company specializing in TV music. Levinsky is credited on a 1976 album of music cues for The Price is Right, which includes much of the show's music that is still heard today such as the showcase showdown and various car cues. One of those cues, a Nashville Brass-style country music piece, became the theme to Family Feud; the 1988 version of this theme is still used today. The 1990s brought further success with a busy concert and touring schedule as bandleader and clarinet soloist with his Great American Swing Band. Levinsky died in Sarasota, Florida, aged 70, from a brain tumour.",
"Alan Blaikley\n Alan Blaikley (born 23 March 1940) is an English songwriter and composer. He is best known for writing a series of international hits in the 1960s and 1970s in collaboration with Ken Howard, including the UK number ones \"Have I the Right?\" and \"The Legend of Xanadu\". Together with Howard, he has also written two West End musicals and a number of TV themes, including the theme music for the BBC's long-running series of Agatha Christie's Miss Marple.",
"That's Me Right There (EP)\n On October 30, 2014, it was confirmed by Villegas via Twitter that the title of the EP would be That's Me Right There with a release date set for November 10. Its cover artwork and track listing were revealed the same day.",
"That's Entertainment! (album)\n That's Entertainment! is a 1960 album by the American vocalist Judy Garland arranged by Jack Marshall and Conrad Salinger. Garland turned to her former MGM arranger Conrad Salinger for four full orchestra-backed songs, including the title track, “I’ve Confessed to the Breeze” from No, No, Nanette and ”Alone Together” which was selected for The Band Wagon but not ultimately used in the film.",
"That's Right (Three 6 Mafia song)\n That's Right is the final single released by Three 6 Mafia from their July 19, 2008 studio album Last 2 Walk. It features Akon, and in the music video version, Jim Jones.",
"Nathan Wang\nOne Six Right (2005) (orchestrator) ; Sabrina: The Animated Series (composer: additional music) (22 episodes, 1999) ; ... a.k.a. \"Sabrina\" (USA: short title) ; \"Anywhere But Here\" (1999) TV episode (composer: additional music) ; Boogie Shoes (1999) TV episode (composer: additional music) ; Boy Meets Bike (1999) TV episode (composer: additional music) ; Extreme Harvey (1999) TV episode (composer: additional music) ; Feats of Clay (1999) TV episode (composer: additional music) ; The Last Days (1998) (associate composer) (orchestrator) ; Flesh Gordon Meets the Cosmic Cheerleaders (1989) (composer: additional music) ; ... a.k.a. Flesh Gordon 2 ; Soundtrack: ; Wo shi shei (1998) (writer: \"Friendship\") ; ... a.k.a. Jackie Chan's Who Am I? (USA: cable TV title) ; ... a.k.a. Who Am I? ; Hung fan au (1995) (writer: \"You Are The One\") ; ... a.k.a. Rumble in the Bronx (Hong Kong: English title) (USA) ; ... a.k.a. Hong fan ou (Hong Kong: Mandarin title) ; ... a.k.a. Red Bronx ; ... a.k.a. Zizanie dans le Bronx (Canada: French title) ; Actor: ; Who's Your Daddy? (2003/I) (V) .... The Arnold Horshack Experience 2000s 1990s 1980s",
"Sammy Fain\nEverybody's Welcome (1931) - musical - composer ; Right This Way (1938) - musical - featured songwriter for \"I'll Be Seeing You\" ; Hellzapoppin' (1938) - revue - co-composer and co-lyricist ; George White's Scandals of 1939 (1939) - revue - composer ; Boys and Girls Together (1940) - revue - composer ; Sons o' Fun (1941) - revue - co-composer and co-lyricist ; Toplitzky of Notre Dame (1946) - musical - composer ; Alive and Kicking (1950) - revue - co-composer ; Flahooley (1951) - musical - composer ; Ankles Aweigh (1955) - musical - composer ; Catch a Star (1955) - revue - co-composer ; Ziegfeld Follies of 1957 (1957) - revue - featured songwriter for \"An Element of Doubt\" ; Christine (1960) - musical - composer ; Something More! (1964) - musical - composer ; Rock 'N Roll! The First 5,000 Years (1982) - revue - featured songwriter for \"Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing\" ; Swing! (1999) - revue - featured songwriter for \"I'll Be Seeing You\" ; Calamity Jane (2018) - musical - composer (first full staging in the NYC area) ",
"Honeyburst\n The song \"Right Next To the Right One\" was used as the title song for the Emmy Award winning DR1 drama series Nikolaj og Julie that was aired in 2002-2003. It became a national hit in 2002, a year ahead of Honeyburst's release. Christensen explains the match was made quickly: \"The producer of the show called me, he said they liked what I was doing and wanted to know if I had a song they could use. At the time we had made demos one of which was \"Right Next To the Right One\". He told me what the series were about, and I said, 'I believe I ",
"That's Right (Carl Perkins song)\n \"That's Right\" is a 1957 rock and roll song written by Carl Perkins and Johnny Cash. The song was released as a single on Sun Records by Carl Perkins in August, 1957. \"That's Right\" was released as Sun 274, Matrix #U-259, backed with \"Forever Yours\", Matrix #U-258. The song was recorded at Sun Records studios at 706 Union Avenue in Memphis, Tennessee. \"That's Right\" was published by Hi-Lo Music while \"Forever Yours\" was published by Knox Music. The personnel on the session were Carl Perkins, vocals and guitar, Jay Perkins, guitar, Clayton Perkins, bass, and W.S. \"Fluke\" Holland on drums. Both sides failed to chart.",
"Milton Scott Michel\n Charles Strouse's \"Sixth Finger Theme\", originally written for the play Sixth Finger In A Five Finger Glove, was used as the original theme music for The Price Is Right from 1956-1961.",
"Edd Kalehoff\n Edward Woodley Kalehoff Jr. (born September 1, 1945) is an American television composer who specializes in compositions for television, known for his work on the Moog synthesizer. Kalehoff composed the musical themes to the game shows The Price Is Right and Double Dare, as well as for ABC World News Tonight and Monday Night Football.",
"Jerome Brailey\n\"Right Move\" (Avco Records 1975) ",
"Right (song)\n \"Right\" is a song by English musician David Bowie from his album Young Americans, released on 7 March 1975. Recorded on 14–18 August and 20–24 November 1974 at Sigma Sound in Philadelphia, \"Right\" is the last of four tracks on side one of Young Americans, and the B-side of the single \"Fame\", released in August 1975."
] |
Who was the composer of Symphony No. 33? | [
"Michael Haydn",
"Johann Michael Haydn"
] | composer | Symphony No. 33 (Michael Haydn) | 2,664,743 | 59 | [
{
"id": "1057795",
"title": "Symphony No. 33 (Haydn)",
"text": " The Symphony No. 33 in C major (Hoboken I/33) is a festive symphony by Joseph Haydn. The precise date of composition is unknown. Haydn scholar H.C. Robbins Landon has dated this work to 1763–65. It has also been suggested that it was written in 1760 or 1761, along with Symphony no. 32.",
"score": "1.7065983"
},
{
"id": "1842072",
"title": "Symphony No. 33 (Mozart)",
"text": " The Symphony No. 33 in B major, K. 319, was written by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and dated on 9 July 1779.",
"score": "1.6668217"
},
{
"id": "5804553",
"title": "Symphony No. 27 (Haydn)",
"text": " In 1946, a copy of the symphony was discovered in the summer palace of Baron Samuel von Brukenthal near the city of Hermannstadt (now Sibiu in Romania). Originally thought to be an original discovery, the symphony briefly acquired the nickname Hermannstädter after it was recorded under that title by the Prague Symphony Orchestra with the Rumanian conductor Constantin Silvestri. Because of the political climate in Eastern Europe following the Second World War, it was some time before musicologists were able to examine the find and realize that the manuscript was a copy of a work that had already been published by Breitkopf & Hartel in 1907.",
"score": "1.6247168"
},
{
"id": "14159283",
"title": "List of symphony composers",
"text": " Le Flem (1881–1984), French composer of 4 symphonies ; Nikolai Myaskovsky (1881–1950), Russian composer of 27 symphonies, as well as 3 sinfoniette for strings. ; Nikolai Roslavets (1881–1944), Russian composer of 1 symphony and 1 chamber symphony ; Karl Weigl (1881–1949), Austrian composer of 6 symphonies ; Marion Bauer (1882–1955), American composer of 1 symphony ; Walter Braunfels (1882–1954), German composer of 1 symphony (Sinfonia brevis op. 69) plus a Sinfonia concertante for violin, viola, 2 horns and strings ; Alf Hurum (1882–1972), Norwegian composer of a Symphony in D minor (1927) ; Zoltán Kodály (1882–1967), Hungarian composer of ",
"score": "1.6225823"
},
{
"id": "798396",
"title": "Symphony No. 4 (Nielsen)",
"text": " Symphony No. 4, Op. 29, FS 76, also known as \"The Inextinguishable\" (Det Uudslukkelige), was completed by Danish composer Carl Nielsen in 1916. Composed against the backdrop of the First World War, this symphony is among the most dramatic that Nielsen wrote, featuring a \"battle\" between two sets of timpani.",
"score": "1.6211774"
},
{
"id": "30794537",
"title": "Symphony No. 30 (Haydn)",
"text": " The Symphony No. 30 in C major, Hoboken I/30, is a symphony by Joseph Haydn composed in 1765, at the age of 33. It is nicknamed the Alleluia Symphony because of Haydn's use of a Gregorian Alleluia chant in the opening movement.",
"score": "1.6189837"
},
{
"id": "14159287",
"title": "List of symphony composers",
"text": " (1883–1964), English composer of 1 symphony, plus a Choral Symphony, composed in 1910 but not premiered until 2014. ; Joseph Matthias Hauer (1883–1959), Austrian composer of 1 symphony and 1 sinfonietta ; Manolis Kalomiris (1883–1962), Greek composer of 3 symphonies (No. 1, Leventia, for mixed chorus and orchestra, 1920, r. 1937, 1952; No. 2, Symphony of the Simple and Good People, for mezzo-soprano, mixed chorus, and orchestra, 1931; and No. 3, Palamiki, D minor, for reciter and orchestra, 1955) ; Paul von Klenau (1883–1946), Danish composer of 9 symphonies ; Alexander Krein (1883–1951), Russian composer of 1 symphony ; ",
"score": "1.6183268"
},
{
"id": "14159361",
"title": "List of symphony composers",
"text": " Natra (born 1924), Romanian–Israeli composer of 3 symphonies and 1 symphony for strings ; Serge Nigg (1924–2008), French composer of 1 symphony (Jérôme Bosch, 1960) ; Mikhaïl Nosyrev (1924–1981), Russian composer of 4 symphonies ; Else Marie Pade (1924–2016), Danish composer of 2 symphonies ; Joly Braga Santos (1924–1988), Portuguese composer of 6 symphonies ; Ernest Tomlinson (1924–2015), English composer of 2 symphonies ; Yasushi Akutagawa (1925–1989), Japanese composer of 1 numbered symphony (1954), plus a Symphony \"Twin Stars\", for children (1957) and the Ellora Symphony (1958) ; Jurriaan Andriessen (1925–1996), Dutch composer of 8 numbered symphonies, plus a ",
"score": "1.6181277"
},
{
"id": "14159349",
"title": "List of symphony composers",
"text": " sinfoniettas ; Vincent Persichetti (1915–1987), American composer of 9 symphonies ; Humphrey Searle (1915–1982), British composer of 5 symphonies ; Carlos Surinach (1915–1997), American composer of Catalan origin, he wrote 3 symphonies ; Denis ApIvor (1916–2004), British composer of 5 symphonies ; Karl-Birger Blomdahl (1916–1968), Swedish composer of 3 symphonies ; Houston Bright (1916–1970), American composer of 1 symphony ; Peter Crossley-Holland (1916–2001), British composer of 1 symphony ; Henri Dutilleux (1916–2013), French composer of 2 symphonies ; Einar Englund (1916–1999), Finnish composer of 7 symphonies ; Ellis Kohs (1916–2000), American composer of 2 symphonies ; Tolia Nikiprowetzky (1916–1997), ",
"score": "1.6169703"
},
{
"id": "32763878",
"title": "Symphony No. 34 (Haydn)",
"text": " The scoring of the symphony is typical of Haydn in this period: two oboes, bassoon, two horns, strings and continuo.",
"score": "1.6154338"
},
{
"id": "14159270",
"title": "List of symphony composers",
"text": " Gregory Mason (1873–1953), American composer of 3 symphonies ; Henri Rabaud (1873–1949), French composer of 2 symphonies ; Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873–1943), Russian composer of 3 numbered symphonies, as well as the choral symphony The Bells, Op. 35 (1913); also symphonic is the unfinished Youth Symphony in D minor (1891)—see. ; Julius Bittner (1874–1939), Austrian composer of 2 symphonies ; Gustav Holst (1874–1934), English composer of a Symphony F major (The Cotswolds, 1900), as well as a First Choral Symphony (1924), for soprano, mixed chorus, and orchestra (fragmentary sketches also exist for a Second Choral Symphony); in addition, the composer also ",
"score": "1.6143618"
},
{
"id": "14159263",
"title": "List of symphony composers",
"text": " 1 symphony ; Cornelis Dopper (1870–1939), Dutch composer of 7 symphonies ; Emil Młynarski (1870–1935), Polish composer of a Symphony in F major (Polonia, Op. 14, 1910) ; Vítězslav Novák (1870–1949), Czech composer of two unnumbered symphonies (the Autumn Symphony, 1934, for mixed chorus and orchestra; and the May Symphony, 1943, for soloists, mixed chorus, and orchestra) ; Joseph Ryelandt (1870–1965), Belgian composer of 6 symphonies ; Florent Schmitt (1870–1958), French composer of 3 symphonies, chronologically as: a Symphonie concertante, for piano and orchestra (1932); a symphony for strings, Janiana (1941); and a \"Symphony No. 2\" (1957) ; Hermann Suter ",
"score": "1.6138356"
},
{
"id": "33086773",
"title": "Symphony No. 34 (Mozart)",
"text": " Symphony No. 34 in C major, K. 338, was written by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in 1780, and completed on 29 August.",
"score": "1.6132288"
},
{
"id": "14159317",
"title": "List of symphony composers",
"text": " of 3 symphonies (the second for strings) and a Symphonie concertante for trumpet and orchestra ; Nicolai Berezowsky (1900–1953), Russian–American violinist and composer of 4 symphonies ; Willy Burkhard (1900–1955), Swiss composer of 1 symphony (Piccola sinfonia giocosa for small orchestra) ; Alan Bush (1900–1995), British composer of 4 symphonies ; Aaron Copland (1900–1990), American composer of 3 numbered symphonies, a Symphony for organ and orchestra (later arranged without organ as Symphony No. 1), and a Dance Symphony for orchestra. The fourth movement of No. 3 is based on his famous Fanfare for the Common Man ; Pierre-Octave Ferroud (1900–1936), ",
"score": "1.6122577"
},
{
"id": "14159286",
"title": "List of symphony composers",
"text": " del mar\" (1945) ; Hermann Wolfgang von Waltershausen (1882–1954), German composer of 1 symphony ; Paul Hastings Allen (1883–1952), American composer of 8 symphonies ; Sir Arnold Bax (1883–1953), English composer of 7 numbered symphonies, preceded by a Symphony in F major (completed piano score 1907; orchestrated in 2012–13 by Martin Yates); the tone poem Spring Fire (1913) is classified occasionally as an unnumbered, programmatic symphony. Bax also composed a Sinfonietta—see ; Alfredo Casella (1883–1947), Italian composer of 3 symphonies (No. 1, B minor, 1906; No. 2, C minor, 1909; and No. 3, titled Sinfonia, 1940) ; Sir George ",
"score": "1.6118965"
},
{
"id": "14159274",
"title": "List of symphony composers",
"text": " are three additional symphonic projects in fragmentary form: No. 7, Sinfonia gaia (1936); No. 8 (1937); and No. 9 (c. 1930s) ; Cyril Rootham (1875–1938), English composer of 2 symphonies, of which the Second (The Revelation of St. John, 1938) is for orchestra and chorus ; Donald Tovey (1875–1940), British composer of a Symphony in D major (1913) ; Richard Wetz (1875–1935), German composer of 3 symphonies (No. 1, C minor, 1917; No. 2, A major, 1919; and No. 3, B-flat minor, 1922) ; Hakon Børresen (1876–1954), Danish composer of 3 symphonies (No. 1, C minor, 1901; No. 2, ",
"score": "1.6115396"
},
{
"id": "14159339",
"title": "List of symphony composers",
"text": " Golubev (1910–1988), Russian composer of 7 symphonies ; Charles Jones (1910–1997), Canadian–American composer of 4 symphonies ; Erland von Koch (1910–2009), Swedish composer of 6 symphonies (No. 1, 1938; No. 2, Sinfonia Dalecarlica, 1945; No. 3, 1948; No. 4, Sinfonia seria, 1953, r. 1962; No. 5, Lapponica, 1977; and No. 6, Salva la terra, 1992); also symphonic is the Sinfonietta (1949) ; Rolf Liebermann (1910–1999), Swiss composer of 1 symphony ; Marijan Lipovšek (1910–1995), Slovenian composer of 1 symphony ; Jean Martinon (1910–1976), French conductor and composer of 4 numbered symphonies plus a sinfonietta and a Symphonie de voyages ",
"score": "1.6107635"
},
{
"id": "14159239",
"title": "List of symphony composers",
"text": " Mihalovich (1842–1929), Hungarian composer of 4 symphonies ; Arthur Sullivan (1842–1900), British composer of 1 symphony ; Edvard Grieg (1843–1907), Norwegian composer of the Symphony in C minor (1864), as well as sketches for a second. ; Asger Hamerik (1843–1923), Danish conductor and composer of 8 symphonies ; Heinrich von Herzogenberg (1843–1900), Austrian composer of 8 symphonies ; Charles Lefebvre (1843–1917), French composer of 1 symphony ; Miguel Marqués (1843–1918), Spanish composer of 5 symphonies ; Hermann Graedener (1844–1929), German composer of 2 symphonies ; Émile Paladilhe (1844–1926), French composer of 1 symphony ; Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (1844–1908), Russian composer of 3 symphonies, the ",
"score": "1.6099546"
},
{
"id": "14159289",
"title": "List of symphony composers",
"text": " minor, 1914; No. 2, My Country, D minor, 1919; No. 3, Song under the Stars, D-flat major, in one movement, 1929; and No. 4, Invocatio, D minor, for organ and orchestra, 1936) ; Albert Wolff (1884–1970), French conductor and composer of 1 symphony ; Julio Fonseca (1885–1950), Costa Rican composer of the \"Great Symphonic Fantasy on folk motifs\" ; Henri Collet (1885–1951), French composer of \"Symphonie de l'Alhambra\" (1947) ; Dimitrie Cuclin (1885–1978), Romanian composer of 20 symphonies ; Werner Josten (1885–1963), German–American composer of 1 symphony ; Otto Klemperer (1885–1973), German conductor and composer of 6 symphonies ; ",
"score": "1.6081984"
},
{
"id": "14159322",
"title": "List of symphony composers",
"text": " earlier symphony (lost) ; Arnold Walter (1902–1973), Austrian–Canadian composer of 1 symphony ; Sir William Walton (1902–1983), English composer of 2 symphonies ; Meredith Willson (1902–1984), American composer of 2 symphonies ; Stefan Wolpe (1902–1972), German-born composer of a Symphony (1955–56) ; Sir Lennox Berkeley (1903–1989), English composer of 4 symphonies ; Boris Blacher (1903–1975), German composer of 2 symphonies ; Vernon Duke (1903–1969), Russian–American composer of 3 symphonies ; Antiochos Evangelatos (1903–1981), Greek composer of 2 symphonies and 1 sinfonietta ; Jerzy Fitelberg (1903–1951), Polish–American composer of 2 symphonies, plus a symphony for strings and a sinfonietta ; Vittorio ",
"score": "1.6066777"
}
] | [
"Symphony No. 33 (Haydn)\n The Symphony No. 33 in C major (Hoboken I/33) is a festive symphony by Joseph Haydn. The precise date of composition is unknown. Haydn scholar H.C. Robbins Landon has dated this work to 1763–65. It has also been suggested that it was written in 1760 or 1761, along with Symphony no. 32.",
"Symphony No. 33 (Mozart)\n The Symphony No. 33 in B major, K. 319, was written by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and dated on 9 July 1779.",
"Symphony No. 27 (Haydn)\n In 1946, a copy of the symphony was discovered in the summer palace of Baron Samuel von Brukenthal near the city of Hermannstadt (now Sibiu in Romania). Originally thought to be an original discovery, the symphony briefly acquired the nickname Hermannstädter after it was recorded under that title by the Prague Symphony Orchestra with the Rumanian conductor Constantin Silvestri. Because of the political climate in Eastern Europe following the Second World War, it was some time before musicologists were able to examine the find and realize that the manuscript was a copy of a work that had already been published by Breitkopf & Hartel in 1907.",
"List of symphony composers\n Le Flem (1881–1984), French composer of 4 symphonies ; Nikolai Myaskovsky (1881–1950), Russian composer of 27 symphonies, as well as 3 sinfoniette for strings. ; Nikolai Roslavets (1881–1944), Russian composer of 1 symphony and 1 chamber symphony ; Karl Weigl (1881–1949), Austrian composer of 6 symphonies ; Marion Bauer (1882–1955), American composer of 1 symphony ; Walter Braunfels (1882–1954), German composer of 1 symphony (Sinfonia brevis op. 69) plus a Sinfonia concertante for violin, viola, 2 horns and strings ; Alf Hurum (1882–1972), Norwegian composer of a Symphony in D minor (1927) ; Zoltán Kodály (1882–1967), Hungarian composer of ",
"Symphony No. 4 (Nielsen)\n Symphony No. 4, Op. 29, FS 76, also known as \"The Inextinguishable\" (Det Uudslukkelige), was completed by Danish composer Carl Nielsen in 1916. Composed against the backdrop of the First World War, this symphony is among the most dramatic that Nielsen wrote, featuring a \"battle\" between two sets of timpani.",
"Symphony No. 30 (Haydn)\n The Symphony No. 30 in C major, Hoboken I/30, is a symphony by Joseph Haydn composed in 1765, at the age of 33. It is nicknamed the Alleluia Symphony because of Haydn's use of a Gregorian Alleluia chant in the opening movement.",
"List of symphony composers\n (1883–1964), English composer of 1 symphony, plus a Choral Symphony, composed in 1910 but not premiered until 2014. ; Joseph Matthias Hauer (1883–1959), Austrian composer of 1 symphony and 1 sinfonietta ; Manolis Kalomiris (1883–1962), Greek composer of 3 symphonies (No. 1, Leventia, for mixed chorus and orchestra, 1920, r. 1937, 1952; No. 2, Symphony of the Simple and Good People, for mezzo-soprano, mixed chorus, and orchestra, 1931; and No. 3, Palamiki, D minor, for reciter and orchestra, 1955) ; Paul von Klenau (1883–1946), Danish composer of 9 symphonies ; Alexander Krein (1883–1951), Russian composer of 1 symphony ; ",
"List of symphony composers\n Natra (born 1924), Romanian–Israeli composer of 3 symphonies and 1 symphony for strings ; Serge Nigg (1924–2008), French composer of 1 symphony (Jérôme Bosch, 1960) ; Mikhaïl Nosyrev (1924–1981), Russian composer of 4 symphonies ; Else Marie Pade (1924–2016), Danish composer of 2 symphonies ; Joly Braga Santos (1924–1988), Portuguese composer of 6 symphonies ; Ernest Tomlinson (1924–2015), English composer of 2 symphonies ; Yasushi Akutagawa (1925–1989), Japanese composer of 1 numbered symphony (1954), plus a Symphony \"Twin Stars\", for children (1957) and the Ellora Symphony (1958) ; Jurriaan Andriessen (1925–1996), Dutch composer of 8 numbered symphonies, plus a ",
"List of symphony composers\n sinfoniettas ; Vincent Persichetti (1915–1987), American composer of 9 symphonies ; Humphrey Searle (1915–1982), British composer of 5 symphonies ; Carlos Surinach (1915–1997), American composer of Catalan origin, he wrote 3 symphonies ; Denis ApIvor (1916–2004), British composer of 5 symphonies ; Karl-Birger Blomdahl (1916–1968), Swedish composer of 3 symphonies ; Houston Bright (1916–1970), American composer of 1 symphony ; Peter Crossley-Holland (1916–2001), British composer of 1 symphony ; Henri Dutilleux (1916–2013), French composer of 2 symphonies ; Einar Englund (1916–1999), Finnish composer of 7 symphonies ; Ellis Kohs (1916–2000), American composer of 2 symphonies ; Tolia Nikiprowetzky (1916–1997), ",
"Symphony No. 34 (Haydn)\n The scoring of the symphony is typical of Haydn in this period: two oboes, bassoon, two horns, strings and continuo.",
"List of symphony composers\n Gregory Mason (1873–1953), American composer of 3 symphonies ; Henri Rabaud (1873–1949), French composer of 2 symphonies ; Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873–1943), Russian composer of 3 numbered symphonies, as well as the choral symphony The Bells, Op. 35 (1913); also symphonic is the unfinished Youth Symphony in D minor (1891)—see. ; Julius Bittner (1874–1939), Austrian composer of 2 symphonies ; Gustav Holst (1874–1934), English composer of a Symphony F major (The Cotswolds, 1900), as well as a First Choral Symphony (1924), for soprano, mixed chorus, and orchestra (fragmentary sketches also exist for a Second Choral Symphony); in addition, the composer also ",
"List of symphony composers\n 1 symphony ; Cornelis Dopper (1870–1939), Dutch composer of 7 symphonies ; Emil Młynarski (1870–1935), Polish composer of a Symphony in F major (Polonia, Op. 14, 1910) ; Vítězslav Novák (1870–1949), Czech composer of two unnumbered symphonies (the Autumn Symphony, 1934, for mixed chorus and orchestra; and the May Symphony, 1943, for soloists, mixed chorus, and orchestra) ; Joseph Ryelandt (1870–1965), Belgian composer of 6 symphonies ; Florent Schmitt (1870–1958), French composer of 3 symphonies, chronologically as: a Symphonie concertante, for piano and orchestra (1932); a symphony for strings, Janiana (1941); and a \"Symphony No. 2\" (1957) ; Hermann Suter ",
"Symphony No. 34 (Mozart)\n Symphony No. 34 in C major, K. 338, was written by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in 1780, and completed on 29 August.",
"List of symphony composers\n of 3 symphonies (the second for strings) and a Symphonie concertante for trumpet and orchestra ; Nicolai Berezowsky (1900–1953), Russian–American violinist and composer of 4 symphonies ; Willy Burkhard (1900–1955), Swiss composer of 1 symphony (Piccola sinfonia giocosa for small orchestra) ; Alan Bush (1900–1995), British composer of 4 symphonies ; Aaron Copland (1900–1990), American composer of 3 numbered symphonies, a Symphony for organ and orchestra (later arranged without organ as Symphony No. 1), and a Dance Symphony for orchestra. The fourth movement of No. 3 is based on his famous Fanfare for the Common Man ; Pierre-Octave Ferroud (1900–1936), ",
"List of symphony composers\n del mar\" (1945) ; Hermann Wolfgang von Waltershausen (1882–1954), German composer of 1 symphony ; Paul Hastings Allen (1883–1952), American composer of 8 symphonies ; Sir Arnold Bax (1883–1953), English composer of 7 numbered symphonies, preceded by a Symphony in F major (completed piano score 1907; orchestrated in 2012–13 by Martin Yates); the tone poem Spring Fire (1913) is classified occasionally as an unnumbered, programmatic symphony. Bax also composed a Sinfonietta—see ; Alfredo Casella (1883–1947), Italian composer of 3 symphonies (No. 1, B minor, 1906; No. 2, C minor, 1909; and No. 3, titled Sinfonia, 1940) ; Sir George ",
"List of symphony composers\n are three additional symphonic projects in fragmentary form: No. 7, Sinfonia gaia (1936); No. 8 (1937); and No. 9 (c. 1930s) ; Cyril Rootham (1875–1938), English composer of 2 symphonies, of which the Second (The Revelation of St. John, 1938) is for orchestra and chorus ; Donald Tovey (1875–1940), British composer of a Symphony in D major (1913) ; Richard Wetz (1875–1935), German composer of 3 symphonies (No. 1, C minor, 1917; No. 2, A major, 1919; and No. 3, B-flat minor, 1922) ; Hakon Børresen (1876–1954), Danish composer of 3 symphonies (No. 1, C minor, 1901; No. 2, ",
"List of symphony composers\n Golubev (1910–1988), Russian composer of 7 symphonies ; Charles Jones (1910–1997), Canadian–American composer of 4 symphonies ; Erland von Koch (1910–2009), Swedish composer of 6 symphonies (No. 1, 1938; No. 2, Sinfonia Dalecarlica, 1945; No. 3, 1948; No. 4, Sinfonia seria, 1953, r. 1962; No. 5, Lapponica, 1977; and No. 6, Salva la terra, 1992); also symphonic is the Sinfonietta (1949) ; Rolf Liebermann (1910–1999), Swiss composer of 1 symphony ; Marijan Lipovšek (1910–1995), Slovenian composer of 1 symphony ; Jean Martinon (1910–1976), French conductor and composer of 4 numbered symphonies plus a sinfonietta and a Symphonie de voyages ",
"List of symphony composers\n Mihalovich (1842–1929), Hungarian composer of 4 symphonies ; Arthur Sullivan (1842–1900), British composer of 1 symphony ; Edvard Grieg (1843–1907), Norwegian composer of the Symphony in C minor (1864), as well as sketches for a second. ; Asger Hamerik (1843–1923), Danish conductor and composer of 8 symphonies ; Heinrich von Herzogenberg (1843–1900), Austrian composer of 8 symphonies ; Charles Lefebvre (1843–1917), French composer of 1 symphony ; Miguel Marqués (1843–1918), Spanish composer of 5 symphonies ; Hermann Graedener (1844–1929), German composer of 2 symphonies ; Émile Paladilhe (1844–1926), French composer of 1 symphony ; Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (1844–1908), Russian composer of 3 symphonies, the ",
"List of symphony composers\n minor, 1914; No. 2, My Country, D minor, 1919; No. 3, Song under the Stars, D-flat major, in one movement, 1929; and No. 4, Invocatio, D minor, for organ and orchestra, 1936) ; Albert Wolff (1884–1970), French conductor and composer of 1 symphony ; Julio Fonseca (1885–1950), Costa Rican composer of the \"Great Symphonic Fantasy on folk motifs\" ; Henri Collet (1885–1951), French composer of \"Symphonie de l'Alhambra\" (1947) ; Dimitrie Cuclin (1885–1978), Romanian composer of 20 symphonies ; Werner Josten (1885–1963), German–American composer of 1 symphony ; Otto Klemperer (1885–1973), German conductor and composer of 6 symphonies ; ",
"List of symphony composers\n earlier symphony (lost) ; Arnold Walter (1902–1973), Austrian–Canadian composer of 1 symphony ; Sir William Walton (1902–1983), English composer of 2 symphonies ; Meredith Willson (1902–1984), American composer of 2 symphonies ; Stefan Wolpe (1902–1972), German-born composer of a Symphony (1955–56) ; Sir Lennox Berkeley (1903–1989), English composer of 4 symphonies ; Boris Blacher (1903–1975), German composer of 2 symphonies ; Vernon Duke (1903–1969), Russian–American composer of 3 symphonies ; Antiochos Evangelatos (1903–1981), Greek composer of 2 symphonies and 1 sinfonietta ; Jerzy Fitelberg (1903–1951), Polish–American composer of 2 symphonies, plus a symphony for strings and a sinfonietta ; Vittorio "
] |
Who was the composer of Symphony No. 8? | [
"Einojuhani Rautavaara",
"Eino Juhani Rautavaara",
"Eino-Juhani Rautavaara"
] | composer | Symphony No. 8 (Rautavaara) | 5,866,070 | 92 | [
{
"id": "33166025",
"title": "Symphony No. 8 (Dvořák)",
"text": " The Symphony No. 8 in G major, Op. 88, B. 163, is a symphony by Antonín Dvořák, composed in 1889 at Vysoká u Příbramě, Bohemia, on the occasion of his election to the Bohemian Academy of Science, Literature and Arts. Dvořák conducted the premiere in Prague on 2 February 1890. In contrast to other symphonies of both the composer and the period, the music is cheerful and optimistic. It was originally published as Symphony No. 4.",
"score": "1.8713241"
},
{
"id": "1375031",
"title": "Symphony No. 8 (Sallinen)",
"text": " The Symphony No. 8 Autumnal Fragments, Op. 81, is the eighth symphony by the Finnish composer Aulis Sallinen. The work was commissioned by the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra and was completed in October 2001. Its world premiere was given by the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra conducted by Paavo Järvi at the Concertgebouw on April 16, 2004.",
"score": "1.841464"
},
{
"id": "15809719",
"title": "Symphony No. 8 (Bruckner)",
"text": " Robert Haas published his edition of the Eighth Symphony in 1939. He based it on the 1890 autograph but included passages from 1887 that had been changed or omitted. The Gesamtausgabe describes it as a \"Mischform\", or mixed form. Nevertheless, it remains a beloved and, perhaps, the most frequently played and recorded edition of the work. Haas argued that Levi's comments were a crippling blow to Bruckner's artistic confidence, even leading him to \"entertain suicidal notions\", although Haas had no evidence for this. This led, Haas maintained, to Bruckner's three-year effort to revise the Eighth Symphony and many of his earlier works. This line of thought supports Haas' editorial ",
"score": "1.8150837"
},
{
"id": "30588320",
"title": "Symphony No. 8 (Rautavaara)",
"text": " Finnish composer Einojuhani Rautavaara wrote his Symphony No. 8, subtitled The Journey, in 1999. The total playing time is approximately 28 minutes.",
"score": "1.8084269"
},
{
"id": "7695334",
"title": "Symphony No. 8 (Villa-Lobos)",
"text": " Villa-Lobos composed his Eighth Symphony in Rio de Janeiro in 1950. It was first performed at Carnegie Hall in New York on 14 January 1955 by the Philadelphia Orchestra, conducted by the composer. The European premiere took place shortly afterward, on 15 March 1955 at the Salle Gaveau in Paris. The performers were the Orchestra of the Concert Society of the Paris Conservatory, conducted by the composer. The score is dedicated to the New York Times music critic Olin Downes.",
"score": "1.7905648"
},
{
"id": "7695333",
"title": "Symphony No. 8 (Villa-Lobos)",
"text": " Symphony No. 8 is a composition by the Brazilian composer Heitor Villa-Lobos, written in 1950. A performance lasts about 25 minutes",
"score": "1.7902405"
},
{
"id": "15809723",
"title": "Symphony No. 8 (Bruckner)",
"text": " As noted above, under the discussion of versions, Nowak left in 1955 an edition of the 1890 version and in 1972 an edition of the 1887 version.",
"score": "1.7813194"
},
{
"id": "7805024",
"title": "Symphony No. 9 (Villa-Lobos)",
"text": " Villa-Lobos composed his Ninth Symphony in Rio de Janeiro in 1952. It was first performed by the Philadelphia Orchestra, conducted by Eugene Ormandy. The score is dedicated to Mindinha (Arminda Neves d'Almeida), the composer's companion for the last 23 years of his life.",
"score": "1.7769527"
},
{
"id": "1995949",
"title": "Symphony No. 8 (Piston)",
"text": " The Symphony No. 8 by Walter Piston is a symphony dating from 1965.",
"score": "1.7684197"
},
{
"id": "15809695",
"title": "Symphony No. 8 (Bruckner)",
"text": " Bruckner began work on the Eighth Symphony in July 1884. Working mainly during the summer vacations from his duties at the University of Vienna and the Vienna Conservatory, the composer had all four movements completed in draft form by August 1885. The orchestration of the work took Bruckner until April 1887 to complete; during this stage of composition, the order of the inner movements was reversed, leaving the Scherzo second and the Adagio as the third movement. In September 1887, Bruckner had the score copied and sent to conductor Hermann Levi. Levi was one of Bruckner's closest collaborators, having given a performance of the Symphony No. 7 in Munich ",
"score": "1.7683622"
},
{
"id": "31687836",
"title": "Symphony No. 8 (Shostakovich)",
"text": " The Symphony No. 8 in C minor, Op. 65, by Dmitri Shostakovich was written in the summer of 1943, and first performed on November 4 of that year by the USSR Symphony Orchestra under Yevgeny Mravinsky, to whom the work is dedicated. It was named the 'Stalingrad Symphony' by the USSR. The symphony does not appear on concert programs very often, yet many recent scholars have ranked it among the composer’s finest scores. Although some have argued that the work falls within the tradition of other C minor \"tragedy to triumph\" symphonies, such as Beethoven's Fifth, Brahms' First, Bruckner's Eighth, and Mahler's Second, there is considerable disagreement over the level of optimism present in the final pages. Shostakovich's friend Isaac Glikman called this symphony \"his most tragic work\". The work, like many of his symphonies, breaks some of the standard conventions of symphonic form and structure. Shostakovich clearly references themes, rhythms and harmonies from his previous symphonies, most notably Symphony No. 5 and Symphony No. 7.",
"score": "1.7524962"
},
{
"id": "33166026",
"title": "Symphony No. 8 (Dvořák)",
"text": " Dvořák composed and orchestrated the symphony within the two-and-a-half-month period from 26 August to 8 November 1889 at his summer resort in Vysoká u Příbramě, Bohemia. The score was composed on the occasion of his admission to Prague Academy and dedicated \"To the Bohemian Academy of Emperor Franz Joseph for the Encouragement of Arts and Literature, in thanks for my election.\" Dvořák conducted the premiere in Prague on 2 February 1890. Dvořák tried to achieve a marked difference to his Symphony No. 7, a stormy romantic work. No. 8 would be: \"different from the other symphonies, with individual thoughts worked out in a new way\". The Eighth is cheery and lyrical and draws its inspiration more from the Bohemian folk music that Dvořák loved.",
"score": "1.7402747"
},
{
"id": "32626696",
"title": "Symphony No. 8 (Davies)",
"text": " The Symphony No. 8 (also called the Antarctic Symphony) is an orchestral composition by Peter Maxwell Davies, completed on 15 December 2001.",
"score": "1.733903"
},
{
"id": "1995950",
"title": "Symphony No. 8 (Piston)",
"text": " The Boston Symphony Orchestra commissioned the Eighth Symphony and gave its first performance on March 5, 1965, conducted by Erich Leinsdorf, to whom the score is dedicated. Initially, Piston had preferred to write a flute concerto for the Boston Symphony's principal flautist, Doriot Anthony Dwyer, but Leinsdorf preferred a symphony. The concerto was eventually composed in 1971. According to another account, however, it was Piston himself who expressed a preference for a symphony.",
"score": "1.7336516"
},
{
"id": "15809694",
"title": "Symphony No. 8 (Bruckner)",
"text": " Anton Bruckner's Symphony No. 8 in C minor, WAB 108, is the last symphony the composer completed. It exists in two major versions of 1887 and 1890. It was premiered under conductor Hans Richter in 1892 at the Musikverein, Vienna. It is dedicated to the Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria. This symphony is sometimes nicknamed The Apocalyptic, but this was not a name Bruckner gave to the work himself. In the article \"The 20 Greatest Symphonies of all time\" from BBC Music Magazine, this symphony is placed at the 13th position. Bruckner also holds the 20th place with his Symphony No. 7.",
"score": "1.7316432"
},
{
"id": "16529206",
"title": "Symphony No. 8 (Glazunov)",
"text": "Allegro moderato ( = 100) ; Mesto ( = 50–54) ; Allegro ( = 120) ; Finale: Moderato sostenuto ( = 66) The Symphony No. 8 in E-flat major, Op. 83, was composed by Alexander Glazunov in 1905, and was published two years later. This four-movement symphony (his last one) was premiered on December 22, 1906 in Saint Petersburg, the composer conducting. It was an important influence on Igor Stravinsky's Symphony in E-flat. It is in four movements:",
"score": "1.7267963"
},
{
"id": "32682045",
"title": "Symphony No. 8 (Vaughan Williams)",
"text": " Ralph Vaughan Williams's Symphony No. 8 in D minor was composed between 1953 and 1955. Sir John Barbirolli, its dedicatee, conducted the Hallé Orchestra in the premiere at the Free Trade Hall in Manchester on 2 May 1956. It is the shortest of the composer's nine symphonies, and is mostly buoyant and optimistic in tone.",
"score": "1.7267318"
},
{
"id": "5128354",
"title": "Symphony No. 8 (Haydn)",
"text": " Joseph Haydn wrote his Symphony No. 8 in G major under the employ of Prince Paul II Anton Esterházy in Spring 1761, in the transition between the Baroque and Classical periods. It is the third part of a set of three symphonies that Prince Anton had commissioned him to write – Le matin (\"Morning\"; No. 6), Le midi (\"Noon\"; No. 7) and Le soir (\"Evening\"; No. 8). He had given him as inspiration the three times of Day.",
"score": "1.7207687"
},
{
"id": "26023744",
"title": "Symphony No. 8 (Simpson)",
"text": " The Symphony No. 8 by Robert Simpson was completed in 1981 and commissioned by the Royal Philharmonic Society. The first performance was given at the Royal Festival Hall on 10 November 1982 by the Royal Danish Orchestra conducted by Jerzy Semkow. The work employs a large orchestra which includes two sets of timpani and four horns. It one of Simpson’s largest, richest and most complex scores. Prior to composing this work, Simpson had in mind to write a symphony for one particular listener and decided asked a close friend, painter Anthony Dorrell, to describe the kind of symphony he would ",
"score": "1.7187296"
},
{
"id": "3082984",
"title": "Symphony, D 708A (Schubert)",
"text": " orchestral score for his seventh symphony, although piano sketches exist for the eighth. These four unfinished symphonies thus show how Schubert was, as he stated in a letter from the mid-1820s, preoccupied with \"planning a path to [write] a grand symphony [plans he would realize in the ninth symphony]\", with his string quartets, octet and these unfinished symphonies as intermediate steps in this plan. The unusually large number of unfinished symphonies on the way to the ninth from the sixth show how preoccupied he was with writing this great symphony, and how important this plan was to him. Schubert's reasons for abandoning D ",
"score": "1.7160838"
}
] | [
"Symphony No. 8 (Dvořák)\n The Symphony No. 8 in G major, Op. 88, B. 163, is a symphony by Antonín Dvořák, composed in 1889 at Vysoká u Příbramě, Bohemia, on the occasion of his election to the Bohemian Academy of Science, Literature and Arts. Dvořák conducted the premiere in Prague on 2 February 1890. In contrast to other symphonies of both the composer and the period, the music is cheerful and optimistic. It was originally published as Symphony No. 4.",
"Symphony No. 8 (Sallinen)\n The Symphony No. 8 Autumnal Fragments, Op. 81, is the eighth symphony by the Finnish composer Aulis Sallinen. The work was commissioned by the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra and was completed in October 2001. Its world premiere was given by the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra conducted by Paavo Järvi at the Concertgebouw on April 16, 2004.",
"Symphony No. 8 (Bruckner)\n Robert Haas published his edition of the Eighth Symphony in 1939. He based it on the 1890 autograph but included passages from 1887 that had been changed or omitted. The Gesamtausgabe describes it as a \"Mischform\", or mixed form. Nevertheless, it remains a beloved and, perhaps, the most frequently played and recorded edition of the work. Haas argued that Levi's comments were a crippling blow to Bruckner's artistic confidence, even leading him to \"entertain suicidal notions\", although Haas had no evidence for this. This led, Haas maintained, to Bruckner's three-year effort to revise the Eighth Symphony and many of his earlier works. This line of thought supports Haas' editorial ",
"Symphony No. 8 (Rautavaara)\n Finnish composer Einojuhani Rautavaara wrote his Symphony No. 8, subtitled The Journey, in 1999. The total playing time is approximately 28 minutes.",
"Symphony No. 8 (Villa-Lobos)\n Villa-Lobos composed his Eighth Symphony in Rio de Janeiro in 1950. It was first performed at Carnegie Hall in New York on 14 January 1955 by the Philadelphia Orchestra, conducted by the composer. The European premiere took place shortly afterward, on 15 March 1955 at the Salle Gaveau in Paris. The performers were the Orchestra of the Concert Society of the Paris Conservatory, conducted by the composer. The score is dedicated to the New York Times music critic Olin Downes.",
"Symphony No. 8 (Villa-Lobos)\n Symphony No. 8 is a composition by the Brazilian composer Heitor Villa-Lobos, written in 1950. A performance lasts about 25 minutes",
"Symphony No. 8 (Bruckner)\n As noted above, under the discussion of versions, Nowak left in 1955 an edition of the 1890 version and in 1972 an edition of the 1887 version.",
"Symphony No. 9 (Villa-Lobos)\n Villa-Lobos composed his Ninth Symphony in Rio de Janeiro in 1952. It was first performed by the Philadelphia Orchestra, conducted by Eugene Ormandy. The score is dedicated to Mindinha (Arminda Neves d'Almeida), the composer's companion for the last 23 years of his life.",
"Symphony No. 8 (Piston)\n The Symphony No. 8 by Walter Piston is a symphony dating from 1965.",
"Symphony No. 8 (Bruckner)\n Bruckner began work on the Eighth Symphony in July 1884. Working mainly during the summer vacations from his duties at the University of Vienna and the Vienna Conservatory, the composer had all four movements completed in draft form by August 1885. The orchestration of the work took Bruckner until April 1887 to complete; during this stage of composition, the order of the inner movements was reversed, leaving the Scherzo second and the Adagio as the third movement. In September 1887, Bruckner had the score copied and sent to conductor Hermann Levi. Levi was one of Bruckner's closest collaborators, having given a performance of the Symphony No. 7 in Munich ",
"Symphony No. 8 (Shostakovich)\n The Symphony No. 8 in C minor, Op. 65, by Dmitri Shostakovich was written in the summer of 1943, and first performed on November 4 of that year by the USSR Symphony Orchestra under Yevgeny Mravinsky, to whom the work is dedicated. It was named the 'Stalingrad Symphony' by the USSR. The symphony does not appear on concert programs very often, yet many recent scholars have ranked it among the composer’s finest scores. Although some have argued that the work falls within the tradition of other C minor \"tragedy to triumph\" symphonies, such as Beethoven's Fifth, Brahms' First, Bruckner's Eighth, and Mahler's Second, there is considerable disagreement over the level of optimism present in the final pages. Shostakovich's friend Isaac Glikman called this symphony \"his most tragic work\". The work, like many of his symphonies, breaks some of the standard conventions of symphonic form and structure. Shostakovich clearly references themes, rhythms and harmonies from his previous symphonies, most notably Symphony No. 5 and Symphony No. 7.",
"Symphony No. 8 (Dvořák)\n Dvořák composed and orchestrated the symphony within the two-and-a-half-month period from 26 August to 8 November 1889 at his summer resort in Vysoká u Příbramě, Bohemia. The score was composed on the occasion of his admission to Prague Academy and dedicated \"To the Bohemian Academy of Emperor Franz Joseph for the Encouragement of Arts and Literature, in thanks for my election.\" Dvořák conducted the premiere in Prague on 2 February 1890. Dvořák tried to achieve a marked difference to his Symphony No. 7, a stormy romantic work. No. 8 would be: \"different from the other symphonies, with individual thoughts worked out in a new way\". The Eighth is cheery and lyrical and draws its inspiration more from the Bohemian folk music that Dvořák loved.",
"Symphony No. 8 (Davies)\n The Symphony No. 8 (also called the Antarctic Symphony) is an orchestral composition by Peter Maxwell Davies, completed on 15 December 2001.",
"Symphony No. 8 (Piston)\n The Boston Symphony Orchestra commissioned the Eighth Symphony and gave its first performance on March 5, 1965, conducted by Erich Leinsdorf, to whom the score is dedicated. Initially, Piston had preferred to write a flute concerto for the Boston Symphony's principal flautist, Doriot Anthony Dwyer, but Leinsdorf preferred a symphony. The concerto was eventually composed in 1971. According to another account, however, it was Piston himself who expressed a preference for a symphony.",
"Symphony No. 8 (Bruckner)\n Anton Bruckner's Symphony No. 8 in C minor, WAB 108, is the last symphony the composer completed. It exists in two major versions of 1887 and 1890. It was premiered under conductor Hans Richter in 1892 at the Musikverein, Vienna. It is dedicated to the Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria. This symphony is sometimes nicknamed The Apocalyptic, but this was not a name Bruckner gave to the work himself. In the article \"The 20 Greatest Symphonies of all time\" from BBC Music Magazine, this symphony is placed at the 13th position. Bruckner also holds the 20th place with his Symphony No. 7.",
"Symphony No. 8 (Glazunov)\nAllegro moderato ( = 100) ; Mesto ( = 50–54) ; Allegro ( = 120) ; Finale: Moderato sostenuto ( = 66) The Symphony No. 8 in E-flat major, Op. 83, was composed by Alexander Glazunov in 1905, and was published two years later. This four-movement symphony (his last one) was premiered on December 22, 1906 in Saint Petersburg, the composer conducting. It was an important influence on Igor Stravinsky's Symphony in E-flat. It is in four movements:",
"Symphony No. 8 (Vaughan Williams)\n Ralph Vaughan Williams's Symphony No. 8 in D minor was composed between 1953 and 1955. Sir John Barbirolli, its dedicatee, conducted the Hallé Orchestra in the premiere at the Free Trade Hall in Manchester on 2 May 1956. It is the shortest of the composer's nine symphonies, and is mostly buoyant and optimistic in tone.",
"Symphony No. 8 (Haydn)\n Joseph Haydn wrote his Symphony No. 8 in G major under the employ of Prince Paul II Anton Esterházy in Spring 1761, in the transition between the Baroque and Classical periods. It is the third part of a set of three symphonies that Prince Anton had commissioned him to write – Le matin (\"Morning\"; No. 6), Le midi (\"Noon\"; No. 7) and Le soir (\"Evening\"; No. 8). He had given him as inspiration the three times of Day.",
"Symphony No. 8 (Simpson)\n The Symphony No. 8 by Robert Simpson was completed in 1981 and commissioned by the Royal Philharmonic Society. The first performance was given at the Royal Festival Hall on 10 November 1982 by the Royal Danish Orchestra conducted by Jerzy Semkow. The work employs a large orchestra which includes two sets of timpani and four horns. It one of Simpson’s largest, richest and most complex scores. Prior to composing this work, Simpson had in mind to write a symphony for one particular listener and decided asked a close friend, painter Anthony Dorrell, to describe the kind of symphony he would ",
"Symphony, D 708A (Schubert)\n orchestral score for his seventh symphony, although piano sketches exist for the eighth. These four unfinished symphonies thus show how Schubert was, as he stated in a letter from the mid-1820s, preoccupied with \"planning a path to [write] a grand symphony [plans he would realize in the ninth symphony]\", with his string quartets, octet and these unfinished symphonies as intermediate steps in this plan. The unusually large number of unfinished symphonies on the way to the ninth from the sixth show how preoccupied he was with writing this great symphony, and how important this plan was to him. Schubert's reasons for abandoning D "
] |
Who was the composer of Discipline? | [
"Adrian Belew",
"Robert Steven Belew"
] | composer | Discipline (instrumental) | 3,922,189 | 53 | [
{
"id": "26361474",
"title": "Discipline (band)",
"text": " Not to be confused with the mid-1981 lineup of King Crimson Discipline is an American progressive rock band formed in 1987 by singer-songwriter Matthew Parmenter. Based in Detroit, Michigan the band has released five studio albums, two live albums, a live DVD, and a live concert motion picture. Discipline may be best known for their 1997 release Unfolded Like Staircase.",
"score": "1.6061934"
},
{
"id": "11401",
"title": "Discipline (Desmond Child album)",
"text": "Arranged by Desmond Child and Jeffrey \"C.J.\" Vanston ; Produced by Desmond Child and Sir Arthur Payson ; Recorded and engineered by Sir Arthur Payson ; Mixed by Brian Malouf; mix assistant: Pat MacDougall ; Mastered by Bob Ludwig ",
"score": "1.5656374"
},
{
"id": "11398",
"title": "Discipline (Desmond Child album)",
"text": " Discipline is the only solo album recorded by American songwriter and producer Desmond Child. It was released on Elektra in 1991 and features his longer take on \"Love on a Rooftop\", a song he wrote for Ronnie Spector's album Unfinished Business in 1987, later included in Cher's studio album Heart of Stone. Child's version reached number 40 on the US Billboard Hot 100. Bon Jovi guitarist Richie Sambora appears on the album; he co-wrote two tracks (\"Discipline\" and \"According to the Gospel of Love\"). Also notable is an appearance by Bon Jovi's drummer, Tico Torres. Songwriter Burt Bacharach co-wrote the song \"Obsession\", which peaked at number 19 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart.",
"score": "1.5532279"
},
{
"id": "26361475",
"title": "Discipline (band)",
"text": " Discipline was formed in 1987, adopting its name from an influential King Crimson album. The band have released multiple studio albums and appeared at several progressive rock festivals, including Nearfest, RoSfest, ProgScape, the Orion Studios progressive rock showcase, Summers End, Terra incognita, Veruno Prog Festival and six appearances at ProgDay. In addition, the band did a 1993 tour in Norway to support their first studio recording Push & Profit. The tour was organized by students of the Norwegian University of Life Sciences in Ås, Norway near Oslo. The band is best known for its 1997 album Unfolded Like Staircase. The band has remained independent since its inception. In 1995 ",
"score": "1.5452532"
},
{
"id": "15894422",
"title": "Discipline of Love",
"text": " \"Discipline of Love\" is a song by English singer Robert Palmer. It was released as a lead single from his eight studio album, Riptide.",
"score": "1.5093113"
},
{
"id": "26361478",
"title": "Discipline (band)",
"text": " Discipline's style and genre has been variously described. The Detroit News described them as an \"alternative band.\" However, the progressive rock website Prog Archives classifies Discipline as \"Symphonic Prog\". Doug Levy in Detroit's South End newspaper writes of Discipline, \"this is not some kind of over-the-top theatrical rock troupe of sorts as much as it is a welcome merging of both art and tightly-knit (hence the name) modern rock.\" John Collinge, publisher of Progression Magazine, writes, \"Discipline’s music demands focused attention—preferably with headphones and lyric booklet, at least on the first spin. Once you’ve locked into Parmenter’s vibe, strong melodies and gloriously edgy accompaniment seal the deal.\" Discipline is a registered trademark of Strung Out Records.",
"score": "1.5000492"
},
{
"id": "13693184",
"title": "Discipline (Janet Jackson album)",
"text": " Discipline is the tenth studio album by American singer Janet Jackson. It was released on February 22, 2008 by Island Records. It is her only album released with the record label after her five-album deal with Virgin Records was fulfilled with the release of 20 Y.O. (2006). Jackson worked with producers such as Darkchild, Ne-Yo, Shea Taylor, Stargate, Johntá Austin, Jermaine Dupri, Tricky Stewart, and The-Dream on the album. Jackson's long-time producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis did not contribute to the project. The album was executive produced by Island Urban president Dupri and Jackson. The album experimented with the electropop, house, and dance-pop genres and also contained R&B and hip hop-oriented tracks. The album received generally positive reviews, with critics arguing that it was an improvement on Jackson's ",
"score": "1.4926684"
},
{
"id": "14145064",
"title": "Catholic Discipline",
"text": " Catholic Discipline was an American punk rock (first-generation new wave) band, formed in 1979 in San Francisco, California, by Slash Fanzine editor Claude Bessy. The initial line-up of the band featured Bessy on vocals, Phranc on guitar, Rick Brodey on bass guitar, Richard Meade on keyboards and Craig Lee on drums.",
"score": "1.4822316"
},
{
"id": "26361480",
"title": "Discipline (band)",
"text": "Chaos Out of Order (1988) ; Push & Profit (1993) ; Discipline Live 1995 (VHS 1995) ; Unfolded Like Staircase (1997) ; Discipline. Live into the Dream... (1999) ; Discipline Live 1995 (DVD reissue 2005) ; Live Days (2010) ; To Shatter All Accord (2011) ; Chaos Out of Order – 25th anniversary reissue (2013) ; This One's for England (2014) ; Discipline Live in Gettysburg (motion picture 2015) ; Captives of the Wine Dark Sea (2017) ",
"score": "1.4726624"
},
{
"id": "12401977",
"title": "King Crimson",
"text": " named the new quartet Discipline, and they went to England to rehearse and write new material. They made their live debut at Moles Club in Bath, Somerset on 30 April 1981, and completed a short tour supported by the Lounge Lizards. By October 1981, the band had opted to change their name to King Crimson. In 1981, King Crimson recorded Discipline with producer Rhett Davies. The album displayed a very different version of the band, with newer influences including post-punk, new wave, funk, minimalism, world music and African percussion. With a sound described in The New Rolling Stone Album Guide as having ",
"score": "1.4686805"
},
{
"id": "26361476",
"title": "Discipline (band)",
"text": " was approached by the American progressive rock label Magna Carta Records and its European distribution partner Roadrunner Records (originally of the Netherlands). Although an early version of the band's epic \"Canto IV (Limbo)\" appeared on a Magna Carta sampler in 1995, the label deal fell apart due to artistic differences. Later Discipline signed a European distribution deal with Hungary's Periferic Records. In 2010 England's Cyclops/GFT label released \"Discipline. Live Days,\" a double CD compilation pulled from several live concert recordings. In 2011 the band released To Shatter All Accord, their first studio album in fourteen years. Subsequently, in 2012, the band was featured on the cover of the Italian ",
"score": "1.4674983"
},
{
"id": "13693187",
"title": "Discipline (Janet Jackson album)",
"text": " Burbank, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Edina, Detroit, New York City, East Orange, Atlantic City, Atlanta and Miami. Jackson worked with producers such as Rodney Jerkins (who produced the lead single \"Feedback\" alongside D'Mile), Jermaine Dupri, Ne-Yo, Shea Taylor, Stargate, Johntá Austin, Tricky Stewart, and The-Dream. Jackson's long-time producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, did not contribute to the project. The album was executive produced by Island Urban president Jermaine Dupri and Jackson. She did not write or co-write any songs on the album, a departure from her usual practice of co-writing and producing all of the songs on her albums. The song \"So Much Betta\" contains sampled portions of the track \"Daftendirekt\" by the French house music duo Daft Punk. ",
"score": "1.4669747"
},
{
"id": "26361479",
"title": "Discipline (band)",
"text": "Matthew Parmenter (1987–present) – vocals, keyboards, violin, saxophone, guitars ; Chris Herin (2014–present) – lead guitar ; Jon Preston Bouda (1987–2014) – lead guitar ; Mathew Kennedy (1988–present) – bass guitar ; Paul Dzendzel (1991–present) – drums ; Brad Buszard (1993–1995) – keyboards ; Dave Krofchof (1991–1993) – keyboards ; Woody Saunders (1987–1991) – drums ; Don Bakerian (1987) – backing guitar ",
"score": "1.4606167"
},
{
"id": "29924045",
"title": "Urban Discipline",
"text": " Urban Discipline is the second studio album by American heavy metal band Biohazard, released on November 10, 1992 by Roadrunner Records. The intro to the song \"Punishment\" is from the 1989 film The Punisher starring Dolph Lundgren. A remastered edition featuring bonus tracks was released in 2007.",
"score": "1.45322"
},
{
"id": "30877146",
"title": "Kompressor (musician)",
"text": "Kompressormusik (1998) ; World Domination (2001) Crush Television (2002) Underground Archives (2003) ; Discipline (2004) Discipline Remix CD (2005) This two-CD set is the final release by Kompressor. It set contains 52 royalty-free audio tracks, which contain all sounds from Discipline and many World Domination and Crush Television sounds, including drums, synthesizers, vocoder, vocals, and processed/acoustic sounds. The CDs also contain 9 tracks of out-takes, unused synthesizer and drum tracks, and fragments of never-heard b-sides from Discipline.",
"score": "1.4487925"
},
{
"id": "144207",
"title": "Club Cheval",
"text": " Culture scene. In September 2015, Club Cheval released \"Discipline\", title-track from the album, with a video directed by J.A.C.K, a French Award-winning duo behind the videos for Christine and The Queens and Madonna's \"Living for Love\". Taking place in a house party, the \"Discipline\" video sees the band \"soundtracking a massive game of musical chairs\". On February 4, 2016, radio host Zane Lowe premiered a new song, \"Young, Rich and Radical\" on his Beats1 show. Club Cheval subsequently announced the Discipline album release date for March 4, 2016. In an interview with FACT, Sam Tiba reveals that most of the vocals on the record are performed by the Miami-based artist Rudy, a reference singer for Chris Brown and The Weeknd.",
"score": "1.4441061"
},
{
"id": "26361477",
"title": "Discipline (band)",
"text": " Wonderous Stories and French magazine Koid 9. In 2013, after twenty-five years, the band reissued their first album Chaos Out of Order, originally released on cassette tape in 1988. In January 2014, the band released a double CD, This One's for England, recorded live in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania during their appearance at RoSfest in 2012. In 2015 Discipline performed at UK's Summers End music festival. Discipline performed at Italy's 2Days Prog+1 festival on September 2, 2017, billed as “the most important Prog Rock festival in Italy.” The band also played October 22, 2017, at Chicago's 3-day Progtoberfest. Discipline headlined the FestivAlterNativo music festival in Querétaro, Mexico August 25, 2018.",
"score": "1.4405539"
},
{
"id": "11400",
"title": "Discipline (Desmond Child album)",
"text": "Desmond Child – lead vocals ; Joan Jett, Mark Free, Jesse Harte, Mitch Malloy, Kane Roberts, Rouge (Maria Vidal, Diana Grasselli, Myriam Valle) – backing vocals ; Vivian Campbell, Butch Walker, John McCurry, Steve Lukather, Richie Sambora – guitars ; Jeffrey \"C.J.\" Vanston – keyboards, synthesizers ; Tony Levin, Abraham Laboriel – bass ; Vinnie Colaiuta, Tico Torres – drums ; Michael Fisher – percussion ",
"score": "1.4399629"
},
{
"id": "13693190",
"title": "Discipline (Janet Jackson album)",
"text": " Discipline is a pop, electronic and R&B album with some house and hip hop-oriented songs. Lyrically, it explores erotic themes such as sexual fetishism and sadomasochism, along with other themes such as love and relationships. Throughout the album, Jackson interacts with a fictional DJ-robot Kyoko. The album opens with a 48-second spoken-word intro \"I.D.\", which is followed by the lead single \"Feedback\". \"Feedback\" is an electropop and dance-pop song which incorporates elements of Eurodance and hip hop. Its lyrical composition is based on Jackson's sexual bravado, questioning the listener while responding with a chant of \"sexy, sexy\". The song's chorus compares her body to instruments such as a guitar and amplifier, using metaphors to demonstrate sexual climax. It's followed by ",
"score": "1.4366267"
},
{
"id": "14145067",
"title": "Catholic Discipline",
"text": "Past members ; Claude Bessy – vocals (1979-1980) ; Phranc – guitar (1979-1980) ; Craig Lee – drums (1979-1980) ; Rick Brodey (AKA: Rick Jaffe, Rick Morrison) – bass (1979-1980) ; Richard Meade – keyboards (1979-1980) ; El Vez (Robert Lopez) – keyboards (1980) ",
"score": "1.4357474"
}
] | [
"Discipline (band)\n Not to be confused with the mid-1981 lineup of King Crimson Discipline is an American progressive rock band formed in 1987 by singer-songwriter Matthew Parmenter. Based in Detroit, Michigan the band has released five studio albums, two live albums, a live DVD, and a live concert motion picture. Discipline may be best known for their 1997 release Unfolded Like Staircase.",
"Discipline (Desmond Child album)\nArranged by Desmond Child and Jeffrey \"C.J.\" Vanston ; Produced by Desmond Child and Sir Arthur Payson ; Recorded and engineered by Sir Arthur Payson ; Mixed by Brian Malouf; mix assistant: Pat MacDougall ; Mastered by Bob Ludwig ",
"Discipline (Desmond Child album)\n Discipline is the only solo album recorded by American songwriter and producer Desmond Child. It was released on Elektra in 1991 and features his longer take on \"Love on a Rooftop\", a song he wrote for Ronnie Spector's album Unfinished Business in 1987, later included in Cher's studio album Heart of Stone. Child's version reached number 40 on the US Billboard Hot 100. Bon Jovi guitarist Richie Sambora appears on the album; he co-wrote two tracks (\"Discipline\" and \"According to the Gospel of Love\"). Also notable is an appearance by Bon Jovi's drummer, Tico Torres. Songwriter Burt Bacharach co-wrote the song \"Obsession\", which peaked at number 19 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart.",
"Discipline (band)\n Discipline was formed in 1987, adopting its name from an influential King Crimson album. The band have released multiple studio albums and appeared at several progressive rock festivals, including Nearfest, RoSfest, ProgScape, the Orion Studios progressive rock showcase, Summers End, Terra incognita, Veruno Prog Festival and six appearances at ProgDay. In addition, the band did a 1993 tour in Norway to support their first studio recording Push & Profit. The tour was organized by students of the Norwegian University of Life Sciences in Ås, Norway near Oslo. The band is best known for its 1997 album Unfolded Like Staircase. The band has remained independent since its inception. In 1995 ",
"Discipline of Love\n \"Discipline of Love\" is a song by English singer Robert Palmer. It was released as a lead single from his eight studio album, Riptide.",
"Discipline (band)\n Discipline's style and genre has been variously described. The Detroit News described them as an \"alternative band.\" However, the progressive rock website Prog Archives classifies Discipline as \"Symphonic Prog\". Doug Levy in Detroit's South End newspaper writes of Discipline, \"this is not some kind of over-the-top theatrical rock troupe of sorts as much as it is a welcome merging of both art and tightly-knit (hence the name) modern rock.\" John Collinge, publisher of Progression Magazine, writes, \"Discipline’s music demands focused attention—preferably with headphones and lyric booklet, at least on the first spin. Once you’ve locked into Parmenter’s vibe, strong melodies and gloriously edgy accompaniment seal the deal.\" Discipline is a registered trademark of Strung Out Records.",
"Discipline (Janet Jackson album)\n Discipline is the tenth studio album by American singer Janet Jackson. It was released on February 22, 2008 by Island Records. It is her only album released with the record label after her five-album deal with Virgin Records was fulfilled with the release of 20 Y.O. (2006). Jackson worked with producers such as Darkchild, Ne-Yo, Shea Taylor, Stargate, Johntá Austin, Jermaine Dupri, Tricky Stewart, and The-Dream on the album. Jackson's long-time producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis did not contribute to the project. The album was executive produced by Island Urban president Dupri and Jackson. The album experimented with the electropop, house, and dance-pop genres and also contained R&B and hip hop-oriented tracks. The album received generally positive reviews, with critics arguing that it was an improvement on Jackson's ",
"Catholic Discipline\n Catholic Discipline was an American punk rock (first-generation new wave) band, formed in 1979 in San Francisco, California, by Slash Fanzine editor Claude Bessy. The initial line-up of the band featured Bessy on vocals, Phranc on guitar, Rick Brodey on bass guitar, Richard Meade on keyboards and Craig Lee on drums.",
"Discipline (band)\nChaos Out of Order (1988) ; Push & Profit (1993) ; Discipline Live 1995 (VHS 1995) ; Unfolded Like Staircase (1997) ; Discipline. Live into the Dream... (1999) ; Discipline Live 1995 (DVD reissue 2005) ; Live Days (2010) ; To Shatter All Accord (2011) ; Chaos Out of Order – 25th anniversary reissue (2013) ; This One's for England (2014) ; Discipline Live in Gettysburg (motion picture 2015) ; Captives of the Wine Dark Sea (2017) ",
"King Crimson\n named the new quartet Discipline, and they went to England to rehearse and write new material. They made their live debut at Moles Club in Bath, Somerset on 30 April 1981, and completed a short tour supported by the Lounge Lizards. By October 1981, the band had opted to change their name to King Crimson. In 1981, King Crimson recorded Discipline with producer Rhett Davies. The album displayed a very different version of the band, with newer influences including post-punk, new wave, funk, minimalism, world music and African percussion. With a sound described in The New Rolling Stone Album Guide as having ",
"Discipline (band)\n was approached by the American progressive rock label Magna Carta Records and its European distribution partner Roadrunner Records (originally of the Netherlands). Although an early version of the band's epic \"Canto IV (Limbo)\" appeared on a Magna Carta sampler in 1995, the label deal fell apart due to artistic differences. Later Discipline signed a European distribution deal with Hungary's Periferic Records. In 2010 England's Cyclops/GFT label released \"Discipline. Live Days,\" a double CD compilation pulled from several live concert recordings. In 2011 the band released To Shatter All Accord, their first studio album in fourteen years. Subsequently, in 2012, the band was featured on the cover of the Italian ",
"Discipline (Janet Jackson album)\n Burbank, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Edina, Detroit, New York City, East Orange, Atlantic City, Atlanta and Miami. Jackson worked with producers such as Rodney Jerkins (who produced the lead single \"Feedback\" alongside D'Mile), Jermaine Dupri, Ne-Yo, Shea Taylor, Stargate, Johntá Austin, Tricky Stewart, and The-Dream. Jackson's long-time producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, did not contribute to the project. The album was executive produced by Island Urban president Jermaine Dupri and Jackson. She did not write or co-write any songs on the album, a departure from her usual practice of co-writing and producing all of the songs on her albums. The song \"So Much Betta\" contains sampled portions of the track \"Daftendirekt\" by the French house music duo Daft Punk. ",
"Discipline (band)\nMatthew Parmenter (1987–present) – vocals, keyboards, violin, saxophone, guitars ; Chris Herin (2014–present) – lead guitar ; Jon Preston Bouda (1987–2014) – lead guitar ; Mathew Kennedy (1988–present) – bass guitar ; Paul Dzendzel (1991–present) – drums ; Brad Buszard (1993–1995) – keyboards ; Dave Krofchof (1991–1993) – keyboards ; Woody Saunders (1987–1991) – drums ; Don Bakerian (1987) – backing guitar ",
"Urban Discipline\n Urban Discipline is the second studio album by American heavy metal band Biohazard, released on November 10, 1992 by Roadrunner Records. The intro to the song \"Punishment\" is from the 1989 film The Punisher starring Dolph Lundgren. A remastered edition featuring bonus tracks was released in 2007.",
"Kompressor (musician)\nKompressormusik (1998) ; World Domination (2001) Crush Television (2002) Underground Archives (2003) ; Discipline (2004) Discipline Remix CD (2005) This two-CD set is the final release by Kompressor. It set contains 52 royalty-free audio tracks, which contain all sounds from Discipline and many World Domination and Crush Television sounds, including drums, synthesizers, vocoder, vocals, and processed/acoustic sounds. The CDs also contain 9 tracks of out-takes, unused synthesizer and drum tracks, and fragments of never-heard b-sides from Discipline.",
"Club Cheval\n Culture scene. In September 2015, Club Cheval released \"Discipline\", title-track from the album, with a video directed by J.A.C.K, a French Award-winning duo behind the videos for Christine and The Queens and Madonna's \"Living for Love\". Taking place in a house party, the \"Discipline\" video sees the band \"soundtracking a massive game of musical chairs\". On February 4, 2016, radio host Zane Lowe premiered a new song, \"Young, Rich and Radical\" on his Beats1 show. Club Cheval subsequently announced the Discipline album release date for March 4, 2016. In an interview with FACT, Sam Tiba reveals that most of the vocals on the record are performed by the Miami-based artist Rudy, a reference singer for Chris Brown and The Weeknd.",
"Discipline (band)\n Wonderous Stories and French magazine Koid 9. In 2013, after twenty-five years, the band reissued their first album Chaos Out of Order, originally released on cassette tape in 1988. In January 2014, the band released a double CD, This One's for England, recorded live in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania during their appearance at RoSfest in 2012. In 2015 Discipline performed at UK's Summers End music festival. Discipline performed at Italy's 2Days Prog+1 festival on September 2, 2017, billed as “the most important Prog Rock festival in Italy.” The band also played October 22, 2017, at Chicago's 3-day Progtoberfest. Discipline headlined the FestivAlterNativo music festival in Querétaro, Mexico August 25, 2018.",
"Discipline (Desmond Child album)\nDesmond Child – lead vocals ; Joan Jett, Mark Free, Jesse Harte, Mitch Malloy, Kane Roberts, Rouge (Maria Vidal, Diana Grasselli, Myriam Valle) – backing vocals ; Vivian Campbell, Butch Walker, John McCurry, Steve Lukather, Richie Sambora – guitars ; Jeffrey \"C.J.\" Vanston – keyboards, synthesizers ; Tony Levin, Abraham Laboriel – bass ; Vinnie Colaiuta, Tico Torres – drums ; Michael Fisher – percussion ",
"Discipline (Janet Jackson album)\n Discipline is a pop, electronic and R&B album with some house and hip hop-oriented songs. Lyrically, it explores erotic themes such as sexual fetishism and sadomasochism, along with other themes such as love and relationships. Throughout the album, Jackson interacts with a fictional DJ-robot Kyoko. The album opens with a 48-second spoken-word intro \"I.D.\", which is followed by the lead single \"Feedback\". \"Feedback\" is an electropop and dance-pop song which incorporates elements of Eurodance and hip hop. Its lyrical composition is based on Jackson's sexual bravado, questioning the listener while responding with a chant of \"sexy, sexy\". The song's chorus compares her body to instruments such as a guitar and amplifier, using metaphors to demonstrate sexual climax. It's followed by ",
"Catholic Discipline\nPast members ; Claude Bessy – vocals (1979-1980) ; Phranc – guitar (1979-1980) ; Craig Lee – drums (1979-1980) ; Rick Brodey (AKA: Rick Jaffe, Rick Morrison) – bass (1979-1980) ; Richard Meade – keyboards (1979-1980) ; El Vez (Robert Lopez) – keyboards (1980) "
] |
Who was the composer of Cue Ball Cat? | [
"Scott Bradley",
"Walter Scott Bradley"
] | composer | Cue Ball Cat | 3,807,464 | 70 | [
{
"id": "5658133",
"title": "Alexander Laszlo (composer)",
"text": " the 1940s he was music director at NBC Radio. In Hollywood from about 1944, he wrote the music for several films such as Charlie Chan and the Chinese Cat (1944), Scared Stiff (1945) and Yankee Kafir (1947). Also, The Great Flamarion (1945), The Amazing Mr. X (1949), Tarzan's Magic Fountain (1948), Night of the Blood Beast (1958), Attack of the Giant Leeches (1959), Beast from Haunted Cave (1959) and The Atomic Submarine (1959), and television series including Rocky Jones, Space Ranger and My Little Margie. He established a publishing company to collect ASCAP royalties under the name \"Alexander Publications.\"",
"score": "1.5039258"
},
{
"id": "9249925",
"title": "Zez Confrey",
"text": " Edward Elzear \"Zez\" Confrey (3 April 1895 – 22 November 1971) was an American composer and performer of novelty piano and jazz music. His most noted works were \"Kitten on the Keys\" and \"Dizzy Fingers.\" Studying at the Chicago Musical College and becoming enthralled by French impressionists played a critical role in how he composed and performed music.",
"score": "1.4718308"
},
{
"id": "27334312",
"title": "The Aristocats",
"text": " song was dropped when Elmira was removed from the story. Another deleted song was for Thomas O'Malley titled \"My Way's The Highway\", but the filmmakers had Terry Gilkyson compose the eponymous song \"Thomas O'Malley Cat\". Gilkyson explained \"It was the same song, but they orchestrated it twice. They used the simpler one, because they may have thought the other too elaborate or too hot. It was a jazz version with a full orchestra.\" The instrumental music was composed by George Bruns, who drew from his background with jazz bands in the 1940s and decided to feature the accordion-like musette for French flavor. On Classic Disney: 60 ",
"score": "1.4705864"
},
{
"id": "31628493",
"title": "Music of Denmark",
"text": " One of the most universally known pieces of Danish music is the Jalousie 'Tango Tzigane' (1925) composed by Jacob Gade. It has been used in countless films, such as the classic Danish sex comedy I Tvillingernes tegn (1975), where it is the centerpiece of a big nude dancing production number set in the 1930s, and Sally Potter's The Man Who Cried (2000), with Johnny Depp playing a gypsy in the 1920s. A special position is occupied by Bent Fabricius-Bjerre (b. 1924), who has written music for Danish films and television series such as Matador in his highly individual style. The signature tune Alley Cat quickly won international success in the same class as Gade's tango.",
"score": "1.4486531"
},
{
"id": "6932960",
"title": "Scott Bradley (composer)",
"text": " Walter Scott Bradley (November 26, 1891 – April 27, 1977) was an American composer, pianist, arranger, and conductor. Bradley is best remembered for scoring the MGM Cartoon Studio theatrical cartoons, including those starring Tom and Jerry, Droopy, Barney Bear, Screwy Squirrel, George and Junior and many one-off cartoons.",
"score": "1.4383273"
},
{
"id": "13328158",
"title": "Bruce Haack",
"text": " scoring dance and theater productions, as well as writing pop songs for record labels like Dot Records and Coral Records. Haack's early scores, like 1955's Les Etapes, suggested the futuristic themes and experimental techniques Haack developed in his later works. Originally commissioned for a Belgian ballet, Les Etapes mixed tape samples, electronics, soprano, and violin; the following year, he finished a musique concrète piece called \"Lullaby for a Cat\". As the 1960s began, the public's interest in electronic music and synthesizers increased, and so did Haack's notoriety. Along with songwriting and scoring, Haack appeared on TV shows like I've Got ",
"score": "1.4183366"
},
{
"id": "6096291",
"title": "Ira Levin",
"text": "Drat! The Cat! (1965) – lyricist and bookwriter ",
"score": "1.4139732"
},
{
"id": "32013245",
"title": "George Kleinsinger",
"text": " George Kleinsinger (February 13, 1914, San Bernardino, California – July 28, 1982, New York City, New York) was an American composer. His works include his collaboration with Paul Tripp on the 1940s children's classical-music piece \"Tubby the Tuba\". He also wrote the music for the phonograph record Archy & Mehitabel and the Broadway musical Shinbone Alley, based on the record. For the last 25 years of his life, he was a resident at New York's famous Chelsea Hotel.",
"score": "1.4113296"
},
{
"id": "12101228",
"title": "The Cat's Meow",
"text": " Composer Ian Whitcomb's score was augmented by original recordings that were popular during the period in which the film takes place. These included \"Avalon,\" \"Toot Toot Tootsie,\" and \"California, Here I Come\" by Al Jolson; \"Everybody Loves My Baby\" and \"Wild Cat Blues\" by Clarence Williams; \"Stumbling,\" \"Say It With Music,\" \"Somebody Loves Me,\" and \"Linger Awhile\" by Paul Whiteman; and \"Wabash Blues\" by Fletcher Henderson. In addition, Ian Whitcomb & His Bungalow Boys performed many tunes from the era, among them \"Ain't We Got Fun,\" \"I'm Just Wild About Harry,\" \"St. Louis Blues,\" \"A Pretty Girl Is Like a Melody,\" ",
"score": "1.4102538"
},
{
"id": "130792",
"title": "Top Cat: The Movie",
"text": " The film's original score was composed by Leoncio Lara. The TV show's theme song was featured in the film. The song, \"New York Groove\" by Ace Frehley, was also featured in the film's trailer and end credits.",
"score": "1.4020312"
},
{
"id": "13603170",
"title": "Irving Caesar",
"text": " Irving Caesar (born Isidor Keiser, July 4, 1895 – December 18, 1996) was an American lyricist and theater composer who wrote lyrics for numerous song standards, including \"Swanee\", \"Sometimes I'm Happy\", \"Crazy Rhythm\", and \"Tea for Two\", one of the most frequently recorded tunes ever written. In 1972, he was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame.",
"score": "1.3996994"
},
{
"id": "13134489",
"title": "1912 in music",
"text": " jazz singer and pianist (died 2007) ; October 21 ; Don Byas, jazz musician (died 1972) ; Sir Georg Solti, conductor (died 1997) ; October 24 – Peter Gellhorn, pianist, conductor and composer (died 2004) ; October 27 – Conlon Nancarrow, composer (died 1997) ; November 4 – Vadim Salmanov, Russian composer (died 1978) ; November 6 – King Kolax, jazz trumpeter (died 1991) ; November 11 – Larry LaPrise, creator of the \"Hokey-Pokey\" or \"Hokey-Cokey\" song and dance (died 1996) ; November 18 – Jimmy Swan, country musician (died 1995) ; November 21 – Eleanor Powell, dancer (died 1982) ; November 22 – Chick Henderson, ",
"score": "1.3993827"
},
{
"id": "3655843",
"title": "F. Henri Klickmann",
"text": " Frank Henri Klickmann (February 4, 1885 - June 25, 1966), was a composer, songwriter, musician, and arranger of music from the 1900s to the 1940s. He composed over a hundred songs, including The Vamp, Walkin' the Dog, Kitten on the Keys, Some of These Days, Don't You Remember the Time, and Sweet Hawaiian Moonlight. During the 1920s, he was employed by Jack Mills Music, Inc.",
"score": "1.3983229"
},
{
"id": "5443536",
"title": "Charles Albertine",
"text": " Charles Albertine (February 24, 1929 – May 18, 1986) was an American musician, composer, and arranger of the space-age pop era. He is best known as an arranger for Les and Larry Elgart, Sammy Kaye, and The Three Suns, and as the composer of Bandstand Boogie. He also composed music for many television shows.",
"score": "1.3973143"
},
{
"id": "12416959",
"title": "Gary Lucas",
"text": " that coincided with the Captain Beefheart Weekend in Liverpool, England, where Lucas served on a panel at the participating Bluecoat Gallery. In collaboration with Dutch DJ/producer Co de Cloet, the final interview given by Don Van Vliet was set to music composed by Lucas. Titled \"I Have a Cat,\" t was commissioned by Dutch national radio NPS where it was first broadcast in 1993. Later the project was released digitally by OkayMusic, and the pair performed the work live at the Zappanale in Germany as well as at the BimHuis in Amsterdam. On February 17th 2013, Lucas led the 65-piece Metropole Orchestra in ",
"score": "1.3945715"
},
{
"id": "27488050",
"title": "Cats (musical)",
"text": " Shortly after the Sydmonton Festival, Lloyd Webber began setting the unpublished poems he had been given to music, a few of which were later added into the show. He also composed the overture and \"The Jellicle Ball\", incorporating analog synthesizers into these orchestrations to try to create a unique electronic soundscape. Meanwhile, Mackintosh recruited Nunn, the then artistic director of the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC), to direct Practical Cats. Nunn was an unusual choice as he was considered \"too high-brow\" for musical theatre, but Mackintosh felt that a \"pedigree\" director was needed to ensure Valerie Eliot's approval of the project. After much persuasion, Nunn ",
"score": "1.3893368"
},
{
"id": "27808015",
"title": "Eric Ball (composer)",
"text": " Eric Walter John Ball OBE (31 October 1903 – 1 October 1989) was a British composer, arranger and conductor of brass band music, described as \"one of the most prolific writers and influential figures in the brass band and choral world\".",
"score": "1.3892312"
},
{
"id": "11113475",
"title": "Andrzej Włast",
"text": " show The Wonder Bar. ... The original Polish text of Tango Milonga was written by Andrzej Włast (born Gustaw Baumritter, 1885–1941), one of the best-known lyricists of the interwar period, who wrote other hit tunes with melodies by Petersburski [such as] Już nigdy (Never Again) and Ja się boję sama spać (I’m Afraid to Sleep Alone), and by other Jewish composers, such as Henryk Gold (1899–1977; Szkoda twoich łez (Don’t Waste Your Tears)), Artur Gold (1897–1943; Przy kominku (By the Fireplace)), Zygmunt Białostocki (1897–1942; Rebeka), and Fanny Gordon (pen name of Fania Markovna Kviatkovskaia, 1904–1991; Pod samowarem (By the Samovar)).'\" After the 1939 German invasion of ",
"score": "1.385515"
},
{
"id": "14674929",
"title": "Pete Wendling",
"text": " Pete Wendling (June 6, 1888 – April 7, 1974) was an American composer and pianist, born in New York City to German immigrants. He started his working life as a carpenter, but gained fame during the mid 1910s as a popular music composer - producing such hits as Yaaka Hula Hickey Dula, Take Me To The Land Of Jazz, Take Your Girlie To The Movies, Felix The Cat, and Oh What A Pal Is Mary. Wendling was also one of the top pianists of his era, and set a long-standing record when he appeared at the London Hippodrome for 8 consecutive weeks. He joined the Rhythmodik Music Roll Company in 1914, ",
"score": "1.3849387"
},
{
"id": "6786139",
"title": "DeWitt Bodeen",
"text": " DeWitt Bodeen (July 25, 1908 — March 12, 1988) was an American film screenwriter and television writer best known for writing Cat People (1942).",
"score": "1.3827454"
}
] | [
"Alexander Laszlo (composer)\n the 1940s he was music director at NBC Radio. In Hollywood from about 1944, he wrote the music for several films such as Charlie Chan and the Chinese Cat (1944), Scared Stiff (1945) and Yankee Kafir (1947). Also, The Great Flamarion (1945), The Amazing Mr. X (1949), Tarzan's Magic Fountain (1948), Night of the Blood Beast (1958), Attack of the Giant Leeches (1959), Beast from Haunted Cave (1959) and The Atomic Submarine (1959), and television series including Rocky Jones, Space Ranger and My Little Margie. He established a publishing company to collect ASCAP royalties under the name \"Alexander Publications.\"",
"Zez Confrey\n Edward Elzear \"Zez\" Confrey (3 April 1895 – 22 November 1971) was an American composer and performer of novelty piano and jazz music. His most noted works were \"Kitten on the Keys\" and \"Dizzy Fingers.\" Studying at the Chicago Musical College and becoming enthralled by French impressionists played a critical role in how he composed and performed music.",
"The Aristocats\n song was dropped when Elmira was removed from the story. Another deleted song was for Thomas O'Malley titled \"My Way's The Highway\", but the filmmakers had Terry Gilkyson compose the eponymous song \"Thomas O'Malley Cat\". Gilkyson explained \"It was the same song, but they orchestrated it twice. They used the simpler one, because they may have thought the other too elaborate or too hot. It was a jazz version with a full orchestra.\" The instrumental music was composed by George Bruns, who drew from his background with jazz bands in the 1940s and decided to feature the accordion-like musette for French flavor. On Classic Disney: 60 ",
"Music of Denmark\n One of the most universally known pieces of Danish music is the Jalousie 'Tango Tzigane' (1925) composed by Jacob Gade. It has been used in countless films, such as the classic Danish sex comedy I Tvillingernes tegn (1975), where it is the centerpiece of a big nude dancing production number set in the 1930s, and Sally Potter's The Man Who Cried (2000), with Johnny Depp playing a gypsy in the 1920s. A special position is occupied by Bent Fabricius-Bjerre (b. 1924), who has written music for Danish films and television series such as Matador in his highly individual style. The signature tune Alley Cat quickly won international success in the same class as Gade's tango.",
"Scott Bradley (composer)\n Walter Scott Bradley (November 26, 1891 – April 27, 1977) was an American composer, pianist, arranger, and conductor. Bradley is best remembered for scoring the MGM Cartoon Studio theatrical cartoons, including those starring Tom and Jerry, Droopy, Barney Bear, Screwy Squirrel, George and Junior and many one-off cartoons.",
"Bruce Haack\n scoring dance and theater productions, as well as writing pop songs for record labels like Dot Records and Coral Records. Haack's early scores, like 1955's Les Etapes, suggested the futuristic themes and experimental techniques Haack developed in his later works. Originally commissioned for a Belgian ballet, Les Etapes mixed tape samples, electronics, soprano, and violin; the following year, he finished a musique concrète piece called \"Lullaby for a Cat\". As the 1960s began, the public's interest in electronic music and synthesizers increased, and so did Haack's notoriety. Along with songwriting and scoring, Haack appeared on TV shows like I've Got ",
"Ira Levin\nDrat! The Cat! (1965) – lyricist and bookwriter ",
"George Kleinsinger\n George Kleinsinger (February 13, 1914, San Bernardino, California – July 28, 1982, New York City, New York) was an American composer. His works include his collaboration with Paul Tripp on the 1940s children's classical-music piece \"Tubby the Tuba\". He also wrote the music for the phonograph record Archy & Mehitabel and the Broadway musical Shinbone Alley, based on the record. For the last 25 years of his life, he was a resident at New York's famous Chelsea Hotel.",
"The Cat's Meow\n Composer Ian Whitcomb's score was augmented by original recordings that were popular during the period in which the film takes place. These included \"Avalon,\" \"Toot Toot Tootsie,\" and \"California, Here I Come\" by Al Jolson; \"Everybody Loves My Baby\" and \"Wild Cat Blues\" by Clarence Williams; \"Stumbling,\" \"Say It With Music,\" \"Somebody Loves Me,\" and \"Linger Awhile\" by Paul Whiteman; and \"Wabash Blues\" by Fletcher Henderson. In addition, Ian Whitcomb & His Bungalow Boys performed many tunes from the era, among them \"Ain't We Got Fun,\" \"I'm Just Wild About Harry,\" \"St. Louis Blues,\" \"A Pretty Girl Is Like a Melody,\" ",
"Top Cat: The Movie\n The film's original score was composed by Leoncio Lara. The TV show's theme song was featured in the film. The song, \"New York Groove\" by Ace Frehley, was also featured in the film's trailer and end credits.",
"Irving Caesar\n Irving Caesar (born Isidor Keiser, July 4, 1895 – December 18, 1996) was an American lyricist and theater composer who wrote lyrics for numerous song standards, including \"Swanee\", \"Sometimes I'm Happy\", \"Crazy Rhythm\", and \"Tea for Two\", one of the most frequently recorded tunes ever written. In 1972, he was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame.",
"1912 in music\n jazz singer and pianist (died 2007) ; October 21 ; Don Byas, jazz musician (died 1972) ; Sir Georg Solti, conductor (died 1997) ; October 24 – Peter Gellhorn, pianist, conductor and composer (died 2004) ; October 27 – Conlon Nancarrow, composer (died 1997) ; November 4 – Vadim Salmanov, Russian composer (died 1978) ; November 6 – King Kolax, jazz trumpeter (died 1991) ; November 11 – Larry LaPrise, creator of the \"Hokey-Pokey\" or \"Hokey-Cokey\" song and dance (died 1996) ; November 18 – Jimmy Swan, country musician (died 1995) ; November 21 – Eleanor Powell, dancer (died 1982) ; November 22 – Chick Henderson, ",
"F. Henri Klickmann\n Frank Henri Klickmann (February 4, 1885 - June 25, 1966), was a composer, songwriter, musician, and arranger of music from the 1900s to the 1940s. He composed over a hundred songs, including The Vamp, Walkin' the Dog, Kitten on the Keys, Some of These Days, Don't You Remember the Time, and Sweet Hawaiian Moonlight. During the 1920s, he was employed by Jack Mills Music, Inc.",
"Charles Albertine\n Charles Albertine (February 24, 1929 – May 18, 1986) was an American musician, composer, and arranger of the space-age pop era. He is best known as an arranger for Les and Larry Elgart, Sammy Kaye, and The Three Suns, and as the composer of Bandstand Boogie. He also composed music for many television shows.",
"Gary Lucas\n that coincided with the Captain Beefheart Weekend in Liverpool, England, where Lucas served on a panel at the participating Bluecoat Gallery. In collaboration with Dutch DJ/producer Co de Cloet, the final interview given by Don Van Vliet was set to music composed by Lucas. Titled \"I Have a Cat,\" t was commissioned by Dutch national radio NPS where it was first broadcast in 1993. Later the project was released digitally by OkayMusic, and the pair performed the work live at the Zappanale in Germany as well as at the BimHuis in Amsterdam. On February 17th 2013, Lucas led the 65-piece Metropole Orchestra in ",
"Cats (musical)\n Shortly after the Sydmonton Festival, Lloyd Webber began setting the unpublished poems he had been given to music, a few of which were later added into the show. He also composed the overture and \"The Jellicle Ball\", incorporating analog synthesizers into these orchestrations to try to create a unique electronic soundscape. Meanwhile, Mackintosh recruited Nunn, the then artistic director of the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC), to direct Practical Cats. Nunn was an unusual choice as he was considered \"too high-brow\" for musical theatre, but Mackintosh felt that a \"pedigree\" director was needed to ensure Valerie Eliot's approval of the project. After much persuasion, Nunn ",
"Eric Ball (composer)\n Eric Walter John Ball OBE (31 October 1903 – 1 October 1989) was a British composer, arranger and conductor of brass band music, described as \"one of the most prolific writers and influential figures in the brass band and choral world\".",
"Andrzej Włast\n show The Wonder Bar. ... The original Polish text of Tango Milonga was written by Andrzej Włast (born Gustaw Baumritter, 1885–1941), one of the best-known lyricists of the interwar period, who wrote other hit tunes with melodies by Petersburski [such as] Już nigdy (Never Again) and Ja się boję sama spać (I’m Afraid to Sleep Alone), and by other Jewish composers, such as Henryk Gold (1899–1977; Szkoda twoich łez (Don’t Waste Your Tears)), Artur Gold (1897–1943; Przy kominku (By the Fireplace)), Zygmunt Białostocki (1897–1942; Rebeka), and Fanny Gordon (pen name of Fania Markovna Kviatkovskaia, 1904–1991; Pod samowarem (By the Samovar)).'\" After the 1939 German invasion of ",
"Pete Wendling\n Pete Wendling (June 6, 1888 – April 7, 1974) was an American composer and pianist, born in New York City to German immigrants. He started his working life as a carpenter, but gained fame during the mid 1910s as a popular music composer - producing such hits as Yaaka Hula Hickey Dula, Take Me To The Land Of Jazz, Take Your Girlie To The Movies, Felix The Cat, and Oh What A Pal Is Mary. Wendling was also one of the top pianists of his era, and set a long-standing record when he appeared at the London Hippodrome for 8 consecutive weeks. He joined the Rhythmodik Music Roll Company in 1914, ",
"DeWitt Bodeen\n DeWitt Bodeen (July 25, 1908 — March 12, 1988) was an American film screenwriter and television writer best known for writing Cat People (1942)."
] |
Who was the composer of One More Time? | [
"James LaBrie",
"Kevin James LaBrie",
"00219295358 IPI"
] | composer | One More Time (James LaBrie song) | 780,748 | 75 | [
{
"id": "31582967",
"title": "Time UK (band)",
"text": "One More Time (DRCD 041, Detour Records, 2002) ",
"score": "1.7632213"
},
{
"id": "4204388",
"title": "Nottz production discography",
"text": "\"One More Time\" ",
"score": "1.7511659"
},
{
"id": "266958",
"title": "One More Time (One More Time album)",
"text": " One More Time is the second album by the Swedish pop group One More Time and was released in 1994. The album did not continue the international success of the group's first album, and One More Time did not enter the Swedish Albums Chart. Three songs were released as singles; \"Song of Fête\", \"Get Out\" and \"The Dolphin\". The first song was the only one that entered the Swedish Singles Chart, where it peaked at number 36. Dazzle Light was a re-recording of a song included on one of Sound of Music's album (both Peter Grönvall and Nanne Grönvall were members of Sound of Music and One More Time).",
"score": "1.7190487"
},
{
"id": "32276610",
"title": "One More Time (Twice song)",
"text": " \"One More Time\" was composed by Na.Zu.Na, Yu-ki Kokubo and Yhanael, with lyrics written by Natsumi Watanabe and Yhanael. Yhanael previously wrote the lyrics for Twice's \"Like Ooh-Ahh (Japanese ver.)\". The song enlists some 90's electronica vibes that deviate from the EDM with a combination of the blaring synths and loud bass.",
"score": "1.7141383"
},
{
"id": "28803925",
"title": "One More Time (1970 film)",
"text": " Slightly before the release of the film, per the era's customary timing, a novelization of the screenplay was released by Popular Library. The author was Michael Avallone.",
"score": "1.7135422"
},
{
"id": "15095714",
"title": "One More Time (2015 film)",
"text": " The film was released on April 8, 2016, by Starz Digital.",
"score": "1.7092847"
},
{
"id": "32276614",
"title": "One More Time (Twice song)",
"text": " Credits adapted from CD single liner notes.",
"score": "1.7046974"
},
{
"id": "29917192",
"title": "One More Time (1931 song)",
"text": " \"One More Time\" is a popular song, one of the last written by the songwriting team of DeSylva, Brown, and Henderson. It was published in 1931. It was the last song recorded by Bing Crosby as a big band singer, before becoming a soloist. Crosby recorded the song for Victor Records with Gus Arnheim and his orchestra on March 2, 1931. The recording was very popular and reached the charts of the day.",
"score": "1.699094"
},
{
"id": "4168288",
"title": "One More Time (Real McCoy album)",
"text": " From discogs.",
"score": "1.6827109"
},
{
"id": "15826612",
"title": "One More Once",
"text": " One More Once is a 1994 album by the Latin jazz pianist Michel Camilo.",
"score": "1.6780007"
},
{
"id": "28803924",
"title": "One More Time (1970 film)",
"text": " The film was released on DVD on January 25, 2005.",
"score": "1.6674621"
},
{
"id": "4168291",
"title": "One More Time (Real McCoy album)",
"text": "Olaf Jeglitza (O-Jay) ; Vanessa Mason ; Lisa Cork ",
"score": "1.6628683"
},
{
"id": "30844314",
"title": "One More Time (Canadian TV series)",
"text": " One More Time was a Canadian music television series which aired on CBC Television from 1969 to 1970.",
"score": "1.6620233"
},
{
"id": "2974021",
"title": "One More Time (Daft Punk song)",
"text": " }}",
"score": "1.6612487"
},
{
"id": "266959",
"title": "One More Time (One More Time album)",
"text": "1) Symphony of Doom ; 2) Get Out ; 3) The Dolphin ; 4) Anguish Kept in Secrecy ; 5) Song of Fête ; 6) Time ; 7) Moments of Passion ; 8) Dazzle Light ; 9) Chance of a Lifetime ; 10) Fairytale ",
"score": "1.6378967"
},
{
"id": "32040518",
"title": "One More Time (band)",
"text": "Peter Grönvall (1991-1997) ; Nanne Grönvall (1991-1997) ; Maria Rådsten (1991-1997) ; Thérèse Löf (1991-1992) ",
"score": "1.6266917"
},
{
"id": "4168749",
"title": "One More Time (Real McCoy song)",
"text": " \"One More Time\" is the lead single from the album, One More Time by the German Eurodance and Pop music project Real McCoy. Released in 1997, it was a Top 5 single in Australia, where it was certified Platinum. The song also reached number-one on the Canadian dance music chart and number 14 on the Hot Dance Club Songs chart in the US.",
"score": "1.6230692"
},
{
"id": "4168292",
"title": "One More Time (Real McCoy album)",
"text": "Juergen Wind (J. Wind) - Executive Producer ; Berman Brothers ; Per Adebratt, Douglas Carr & Tony Ekman for Lemon Productions ",
"score": "1.5943224"
},
{
"id": "4168285",
"title": "One More Time (Real McCoy album)",
"text": " One More Time is the second studio album by Real McCoy under Arista Records and the third under BMG Berlin. It was the follow-up to the multi-platinum selling album Another Night. Music producer Juergen Wind (J. Wind) wrote and produced the album with the Sweden based production team known as Lemon Productions (Per Adebratt, Douglas Carr & Tony Ekman). American songwriter Brent Argovitz and German rapper Olaf Jeglitza worked together as songwriters on the album. A producer duo known as the Berman Brothers also produced a Shania Twain cover for the album and made the remixes for the singles. For promotional reasons, Jeglitza was credited as an Executive ",
"score": "1.592697"
},
{
"id": "28803923",
"title": "One More Time (1970 film)",
"text": " The film was the only one that Lewis directed but did not star in, although he does have a role as the off-screen voice of the bandleader.",
"score": "1.5882834"
}
] | [
"Time UK (band)\nOne More Time (DRCD 041, Detour Records, 2002) ",
"Nottz production discography\n\"One More Time\" ",
"One More Time (One More Time album)\n One More Time is the second album by the Swedish pop group One More Time and was released in 1994. The album did not continue the international success of the group's first album, and One More Time did not enter the Swedish Albums Chart. Three songs were released as singles; \"Song of Fête\", \"Get Out\" and \"The Dolphin\". The first song was the only one that entered the Swedish Singles Chart, where it peaked at number 36. Dazzle Light was a re-recording of a song included on one of Sound of Music's album (both Peter Grönvall and Nanne Grönvall were members of Sound of Music and One More Time).",
"One More Time (Twice song)\n \"One More Time\" was composed by Na.Zu.Na, Yu-ki Kokubo and Yhanael, with lyrics written by Natsumi Watanabe and Yhanael. Yhanael previously wrote the lyrics for Twice's \"Like Ooh-Ahh (Japanese ver.)\". The song enlists some 90's electronica vibes that deviate from the EDM with a combination of the blaring synths and loud bass.",
"One More Time (1970 film)\n Slightly before the release of the film, per the era's customary timing, a novelization of the screenplay was released by Popular Library. The author was Michael Avallone.",
"One More Time (2015 film)\n The film was released on April 8, 2016, by Starz Digital.",
"One More Time (Twice song)\n Credits adapted from CD single liner notes.",
"One More Time (1931 song)\n \"One More Time\" is a popular song, one of the last written by the songwriting team of DeSylva, Brown, and Henderson. It was published in 1931. It was the last song recorded by Bing Crosby as a big band singer, before becoming a soloist. Crosby recorded the song for Victor Records with Gus Arnheim and his orchestra on March 2, 1931. The recording was very popular and reached the charts of the day.",
"One More Time (Real McCoy album)\n From discogs.",
"One More Once\n One More Once is a 1994 album by the Latin jazz pianist Michel Camilo.",
"One More Time (1970 film)\n The film was released on DVD on January 25, 2005.",
"One More Time (Real McCoy album)\nOlaf Jeglitza (O-Jay) ; Vanessa Mason ; Lisa Cork ",
"One More Time (Canadian TV series)\n One More Time was a Canadian music television series which aired on CBC Television from 1969 to 1970.",
"One More Time (Daft Punk song)\n }}",
"One More Time (One More Time album)\n1) Symphony of Doom ; 2) Get Out ; 3) The Dolphin ; 4) Anguish Kept in Secrecy ; 5) Song of Fête ; 6) Time ; 7) Moments of Passion ; 8) Dazzle Light ; 9) Chance of a Lifetime ; 10) Fairytale ",
"One More Time (band)\nPeter Grönvall (1991-1997) ; Nanne Grönvall (1991-1997) ; Maria Rådsten (1991-1997) ; Thérèse Löf (1991-1992) ",
"One More Time (Real McCoy song)\n \"One More Time\" is the lead single from the album, One More Time by the German Eurodance and Pop music project Real McCoy. Released in 1997, it was a Top 5 single in Australia, where it was certified Platinum. The song also reached number-one on the Canadian dance music chart and number 14 on the Hot Dance Club Songs chart in the US.",
"One More Time (Real McCoy album)\nJuergen Wind (J. Wind) - Executive Producer ; Berman Brothers ; Per Adebratt, Douglas Carr & Tony Ekman for Lemon Productions ",
"One More Time (Real McCoy album)\n One More Time is the second studio album by Real McCoy under Arista Records and the third under BMG Berlin. It was the follow-up to the multi-platinum selling album Another Night. Music producer Juergen Wind (J. Wind) wrote and produced the album with the Sweden based production team known as Lemon Productions (Per Adebratt, Douglas Carr & Tony Ekman). American songwriter Brent Argovitz and German rapper Olaf Jeglitza worked together as songwriters on the album. A producer duo known as the Berman Brothers also produced a Shania Twain cover for the album and made the remixes for the singles. For promotional reasons, Jeglitza was credited as an Executive ",
"One More Time (1970 film)\n The film was the only one that Lewis directed but did not star in, although he does have a role as the off-screen voice of the bandleader."
] |
Who was the composer of Big Foot? | [
"Charlie Parker",
"Yardbird",
"Bird",
"Charles Parker Jr.",
"Charlie Parker Jr.",
"Charles Christopher Parker, Jr."
] | composer | Drifting on a Reed | 1,121,628 | 73 | [
{
"id": "16380423",
"title": "Big Foot (Charlie Parker composition)",
"text": " \"Big Foot\" or \"Drifting on a Reed\" is a 1948 jazz standard. It was written by Charlie Parker.",
"score": "1.6401227"
},
{
"id": "33067661",
"title": "Mark Goffeney",
"text": " Mark Goffeney (May 22, 1969 – March 2, 2021) was an American musician from San Diego, California, known as \"Big Toe\" because, being born without arms, he played guitar with his feet. He was bassist and vocalist for the 'Big Toe' band and played the principal role on Fox Television's Emmy-nominated commercial 'Feet'.",
"score": "1.5151544"
},
{
"id": "13237056",
"title": "The Big Foot",
"text": " Big Foot is a 1927 crime novel by Edgar Wallace. This is one of the most significant of his works because of the character Sooper, a detective from Metropolitan Guard. A woman is found dead in a locked room, Big Foot's threats all about... but - apparently - Sooper is more concerned about a singing tramp. The brutal murder of a woman in a lonely beach cottage, huge footprints found nearby, a meandering tramp singing snatches of opera in the night! Superintendent Minter - \"Sooper\", rattles around the countryside on his noisy motorbike and tries to find a connection. Hampered by amateur detective Gordon Cardew, aided and admired by lawyer Jim Ferraby and the beautiful Elfa Leigh, Sooper finds the case further complicated by another murder. The mysterious `Big Foot' anticipates Minter's every move and only by delving into the past does he solve the case and bring the villain to justice.",
"score": "1.4955475"
},
{
"id": "14425224",
"title": "Big Foot (The Goodies)",
"text": " \"Big Foot\" is an episode of the British comedy television series The Goodies. The episode is also known as \"Bigfoot\", \"In Search of Bigfoot\", \"Arthur C. Clarke\" and \"In Search of Arthur C. Clarke\". This episode was made by LWT for ITV, and was written by The Goodies, with songs and music by Bill Oddie.",
"score": "1.4922006"
},
{
"id": "11242015",
"title": "Your Feet's Too Big",
"text": " \"Your Feet's Too Big\" is a song composed in 1936 by Fred Fisher with lyrics by Ada Benson. It has been recorded by many artists, notably the Ink Spots and by Fats Waller in 1939. The song became associated with Waller who ad-libbed his own lyrics such as \"Your pedal extremities are colossal, to me you look just like a fossil\" and his catchphrase, \"You know, your pedal extremities really are obnoxious. One never knows, do one?\" It was performed in the 1978 revue of Waller tunes, Ain't Misbehavin'. The TV comedy series Harry and the Hendersons used Leon Redbone's version of the song as its theme tune. The film Be Kind Rewind used Fats Waller’s version of the song, although Mos Def recorded his own rendition of the song as recorded by Waller for the film.",
"score": "1.4631355"
},
{
"id": "2004165",
"title": "Operation Big",
"text": " Footnotes",
"score": "1.4406565"
},
{
"id": "3586013",
"title": "Fats Waller",
"text": " to Bed, his original idea was for Waller to perform in it as a comic character, not to write the music. Waller was, after all, as much a comedian as a musician. Comedy rarely dates well, but almost 80 years later, his comments and timing during \"Your Feet's Too Big\" are as funny as anything on Comedy Central, and he nearly walks away with the movie Stormy Weather with just one musical scene and a bit of mugging later on, despite the competition of Bill \"Bojangles\" Robinson, Lena Horne, and the Nicholas Brothers. Kollmar's original choice for composer [of Early to ",
"score": "1.4379959"
},
{
"id": "29652341",
"title": "Howard Biggs",
"text": " Born in Seattle, Washington, the son of naval machinist Antonio Biggs and Thelma Buchanan, he learned piano as a child and gave his first concert at the First African Methodist Episcopal Church in the city at the age of ten. He studied at the University of Washington before becoming resident composer with the Negro Repertory Company in Seattle. In 1937 he composed the score for the company's production An Evening with Dunbar, based on the life and poems of Paul Laurence Dunbar, and wrote several songs incorporating Dunbar's words as well as directing the theatre chorus. In 1939 he wrote the score for ",
"score": "1.4340059"
},
{
"id": "4715769",
"title": "Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty",
"text": " for new music. After being approached by artistic director John McFall in 2007, Big Boi collaborated with the Atlanta Ballet company on a production entitled big. As creative director, Big Boi recruited bandmembers, developed a story line, and worked with choreographer Lauri Stallings to put the project together. The production received good buzz and ran for six performances in April 2010 at the Fox Theatre in Atlanta. It featured him in a starring role as himself, a live band of musicians from the Purple Ribbon label, performances by Sleepy Brown and Janelle Monáe, and syncopated dance sequences set to OutKast hits and tracks intended for Big Boi's solo album.",
"score": "1.4220538"
},
{
"id": "30166933",
"title": "Feet of Flames",
"text": " Feet of Flames is an Irish dance show directed by Michael Flatley and scored by Ronan Hardiman. Flatley was known for the shows Riverdance and Lord of the Dance.",
"score": "1.4202011"
},
{
"id": "14533893",
"title": "Morton's Foot",
"text": " Morton's Foot is an album by the Lebanese oud player and composer Rabih Abou-Khalil which was recorded in Germany in 2003 and released on the Enja label.",
"score": "1.4178404"
},
{
"id": "4715765",
"title": "Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty",
"text": " Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty is the debut studio album by American rapper Big Boi, released on July 5, 2010, by Purple Ribbon Records and Def Jam Recordings. It is his first solo album, following his work as a member of the hip hop duo OutKast. Production for the album took place primarily at Stankonia Recording Studio in Atlanta during 2007 to 2010 and was handled by several record producers, including Organized Noize, Scott Storch, Salaam Remi, Mr. DJ, and André 3000, among others. Rooted in Southern hip hop and funk music, Sir Lucious Left Foot features a bounce and bass-heavy sound, layered production, and assorted musical elements. Its lyrics deal with boasting, sex, social commentary, and club themes, featuring Big Boi's clever wordplay and versatile flow. ",
"score": "1.4165848"
},
{
"id": "5128743",
"title": "Big Foot Museum",
"text": " Its name come from what has been narrated as The Legend of the Big Foot.",
"score": "1.4099715"
},
{
"id": "26170676",
"title": "Innovaders",
"text": "Metropolis Magazine Article: Scores for Stores Their first major hit was \"Feetlegshead,\" which features a young ballet student explaining the importance of every movement while dancing. This track was used in The March 2003 issue of Metropolis Magazine's online article about the Guggenheim Museum.",
"score": "1.4056698"
},
{
"id": "15149518",
"title": "Norman Foote",
"text": " Norman Mervyn Barrington-Foote is a Canadian musician, songwriter, and comedian. Foote is originally from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. He has been nominated for four Juno Awards for Best Children's Album in 1990, 1993, 2001, and won in 2010. He has written for Walt Disney Records, Shari Lewis, CBC's syndicated TV show Scoop and Doozie, and Koba Entertainment, with productions including Nelvana's Little Bear Live, Max and Ruby live on stage shows, Toopy and Binoo in The Marshmallow Moon and Backyardigans Live.",
"score": "1.4038112"
},
{
"id": "30887002",
"title": "Dave Cavanaugh",
"text": " David Cavanaugh, also known as Dave Cavanaugh or occasionally Big Dave Cavanaugh, (March 13, 1919 – December 31, 1981) was an American composer, arranger, musician and producer.",
"score": "1.3976461"
},
{
"id": "5128739",
"title": "Big Foot Museum",
"text": " Big Foot Museum is a museum and a theme park based in the South Goa, India, village of Loutolim in the sub-district (or taluka) of Salcete. It is a museum dedicated to rural Goan life. It was founded and is run by the artist Maendra Alvares. Loutolim is close to Margao.",
"score": "1.394534"
},
{
"id": "6863520",
"title": "The Legend of Bigfoot",
"text": " Don Peake composed the music for the film.",
"score": "1.3913059"
},
{
"id": "1790527",
"title": "Jack Elliott (composer)",
"text": " mater, the University of Hartford's Hartt School of Music. Elliott was co-founder and music director of the American Jazz Philharmonic (formerly the New American Orchestra) and creator of the Henry Mancini Institute. The original name of the Orchestra was \"The Big O\" and was the largest jazz orchestra of its kind featuring over 92 musicians. Elliott blended the classical European style orchestra with modern American jazz style. His professional repertoire was diverse, highlighted by stints as music director for the Academy Awards, Emmy Awards, Kennedy Center Honors and the 1984 Summer Olympics. In addition, he holds the distinction of serving as music director of the Grammy Awards for 30 consecutive years. He had an accomplished career in film, scoring numerous hit movies, including Sibling Rivalry, The Jerk, Oh God!, and Where's Poppa?. He also produced the Blade Runner soundtrack album with the New American Orchestra.",
"score": "1.3861909"
},
{
"id": "5425249",
"title": "Ronan Hardiman",
"text": " Ronan Hardiman (born 19 May 1961 in Dublin, Ireland) is an Irish composer, famous for his soundtracks to Michael Flatley's dance shows Lord of the Dance, Feet of Flames and Celtic Tiger Live.",
"score": "1.3842816"
}
] | [
"Big Foot (Charlie Parker composition)\n \"Big Foot\" or \"Drifting on a Reed\" is a 1948 jazz standard. It was written by Charlie Parker.",
"Mark Goffeney\n Mark Goffeney (May 22, 1969 – March 2, 2021) was an American musician from San Diego, California, known as \"Big Toe\" because, being born without arms, he played guitar with his feet. He was bassist and vocalist for the 'Big Toe' band and played the principal role on Fox Television's Emmy-nominated commercial 'Feet'.",
"The Big Foot\n Big Foot is a 1927 crime novel by Edgar Wallace. This is one of the most significant of his works because of the character Sooper, a detective from Metropolitan Guard. A woman is found dead in a locked room, Big Foot's threats all about... but - apparently - Sooper is more concerned about a singing tramp. The brutal murder of a woman in a lonely beach cottage, huge footprints found nearby, a meandering tramp singing snatches of opera in the night! Superintendent Minter - \"Sooper\", rattles around the countryside on his noisy motorbike and tries to find a connection. Hampered by amateur detective Gordon Cardew, aided and admired by lawyer Jim Ferraby and the beautiful Elfa Leigh, Sooper finds the case further complicated by another murder. The mysterious `Big Foot' anticipates Minter's every move and only by delving into the past does he solve the case and bring the villain to justice.",
"Big Foot (The Goodies)\n \"Big Foot\" is an episode of the British comedy television series The Goodies. The episode is also known as \"Bigfoot\", \"In Search of Bigfoot\", \"Arthur C. Clarke\" and \"In Search of Arthur C. Clarke\". This episode was made by LWT for ITV, and was written by The Goodies, with songs and music by Bill Oddie.",
"Your Feet's Too Big\n \"Your Feet's Too Big\" is a song composed in 1936 by Fred Fisher with lyrics by Ada Benson. It has been recorded by many artists, notably the Ink Spots and by Fats Waller in 1939. The song became associated with Waller who ad-libbed his own lyrics such as \"Your pedal extremities are colossal, to me you look just like a fossil\" and his catchphrase, \"You know, your pedal extremities really are obnoxious. One never knows, do one?\" It was performed in the 1978 revue of Waller tunes, Ain't Misbehavin'. The TV comedy series Harry and the Hendersons used Leon Redbone's version of the song as its theme tune. The film Be Kind Rewind used Fats Waller’s version of the song, although Mos Def recorded his own rendition of the song as recorded by Waller for the film.",
"Operation Big\n Footnotes",
"Fats Waller\n to Bed, his original idea was for Waller to perform in it as a comic character, not to write the music. Waller was, after all, as much a comedian as a musician. Comedy rarely dates well, but almost 80 years later, his comments and timing during \"Your Feet's Too Big\" are as funny as anything on Comedy Central, and he nearly walks away with the movie Stormy Weather with just one musical scene and a bit of mugging later on, despite the competition of Bill \"Bojangles\" Robinson, Lena Horne, and the Nicholas Brothers. Kollmar's original choice for composer [of Early to ",
"Howard Biggs\n Born in Seattle, Washington, the son of naval machinist Antonio Biggs and Thelma Buchanan, he learned piano as a child and gave his first concert at the First African Methodist Episcopal Church in the city at the age of ten. He studied at the University of Washington before becoming resident composer with the Negro Repertory Company in Seattle. In 1937 he composed the score for the company's production An Evening with Dunbar, based on the life and poems of Paul Laurence Dunbar, and wrote several songs incorporating Dunbar's words as well as directing the theatre chorus. In 1939 he wrote the score for ",
"Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty\n for new music. After being approached by artistic director John McFall in 2007, Big Boi collaborated with the Atlanta Ballet company on a production entitled big. As creative director, Big Boi recruited bandmembers, developed a story line, and worked with choreographer Lauri Stallings to put the project together. The production received good buzz and ran for six performances in April 2010 at the Fox Theatre in Atlanta. It featured him in a starring role as himself, a live band of musicians from the Purple Ribbon label, performances by Sleepy Brown and Janelle Monáe, and syncopated dance sequences set to OutKast hits and tracks intended for Big Boi's solo album.",
"Feet of Flames\n Feet of Flames is an Irish dance show directed by Michael Flatley and scored by Ronan Hardiman. Flatley was known for the shows Riverdance and Lord of the Dance.",
"Morton's Foot\n Morton's Foot is an album by the Lebanese oud player and composer Rabih Abou-Khalil which was recorded in Germany in 2003 and released on the Enja label.",
"Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty\n Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty is the debut studio album by American rapper Big Boi, released on July 5, 2010, by Purple Ribbon Records and Def Jam Recordings. It is his first solo album, following his work as a member of the hip hop duo OutKast. Production for the album took place primarily at Stankonia Recording Studio in Atlanta during 2007 to 2010 and was handled by several record producers, including Organized Noize, Scott Storch, Salaam Remi, Mr. DJ, and André 3000, among others. Rooted in Southern hip hop and funk music, Sir Lucious Left Foot features a bounce and bass-heavy sound, layered production, and assorted musical elements. Its lyrics deal with boasting, sex, social commentary, and club themes, featuring Big Boi's clever wordplay and versatile flow. ",
"Big Foot Museum\n Its name come from what has been narrated as The Legend of the Big Foot.",
"Innovaders\nMetropolis Magazine Article: Scores for Stores Their first major hit was \"Feetlegshead,\" which features a young ballet student explaining the importance of every movement while dancing. This track was used in The March 2003 issue of Metropolis Magazine's online article about the Guggenheim Museum.",
"Norman Foote\n Norman Mervyn Barrington-Foote is a Canadian musician, songwriter, and comedian. Foote is originally from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. He has been nominated for four Juno Awards for Best Children's Album in 1990, 1993, 2001, and won in 2010. He has written for Walt Disney Records, Shari Lewis, CBC's syndicated TV show Scoop and Doozie, and Koba Entertainment, with productions including Nelvana's Little Bear Live, Max and Ruby live on stage shows, Toopy and Binoo in The Marshmallow Moon and Backyardigans Live.",
"Dave Cavanaugh\n David Cavanaugh, also known as Dave Cavanaugh or occasionally Big Dave Cavanaugh, (March 13, 1919 – December 31, 1981) was an American composer, arranger, musician and producer.",
"Big Foot Museum\n Big Foot Museum is a museum and a theme park based in the South Goa, India, village of Loutolim in the sub-district (or taluka) of Salcete. It is a museum dedicated to rural Goan life. It was founded and is run by the artist Maendra Alvares. Loutolim is close to Margao.",
"The Legend of Bigfoot\n Don Peake composed the music for the film.",
"Jack Elliott (composer)\n mater, the University of Hartford's Hartt School of Music. Elliott was co-founder and music director of the American Jazz Philharmonic (formerly the New American Orchestra) and creator of the Henry Mancini Institute. The original name of the Orchestra was \"The Big O\" and was the largest jazz orchestra of its kind featuring over 92 musicians. Elliott blended the classical European style orchestra with modern American jazz style. His professional repertoire was diverse, highlighted by stints as music director for the Academy Awards, Emmy Awards, Kennedy Center Honors and the 1984 Summer Olympics. In addition, he holds the distinction of serving as music director of the Grammy Awards for 30 consecutive years. He had an accomplished career in film, scoring numerous hit movies, including Sibling Rivalry, The Jerk, Oh God!, and Where's Poppa?. He also produced the Blade Runner soundtrack album with the New American Orchestra.",
"Ronan Hardiman\n Ronan Hardiman (born 19 May 1961 in Dublin, Ireland) is an Irish composer, famous for his soundtracks to Michael Flatley's dance shows Lord of the Dance, Feet of Flames and Celtic Tiger Live."
] |
Who was the composer of Sometime? | [
"Rudolf Friml",
"Charles Rudolf Friml"
] | composer | Sometime (musical) | 1,380,246 | 75 | [
{
"id": "16169551",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " John Akar (1927–1975) • Doris Akers (1923–1995) • Toshiko Akiyoshi (born 1929) • Necil Kazım Akses (1908–1999) • Yasushi Akutagawa (1925–1989) • Jehan Alain (1911–1940) • Alamanda de Castelnau (fl. second half of 12th century) • Pierre Alamire (Peter van den Hove) (c. 1470 – 1536) • Johannes Alanus (fl. late 14th or early 15th century) • Jean-Delphin Alard (1815–1888) • Isaac Albéniz (1860–1909) • Mateo Pérez de Albéniz (1755–1831) • Pedro Albéniz y Basanta (1795–1855) • Pedro Alberch Vila (1517–1582) • Petur Alberg (1885–1940) • Eleanor Alberga (born 1949) • Pirro Albergati (1663–1735) • (1722–1756) • Eugen d'Albert (1864–1932) • ",
"score": "1.4777498"
},
{
"id": "16169556",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " 1981) • Jean-Claude Amiot (born 1939) • Emanuel Amiran-Pougatchov (1909–1993) • Charles Amirkhanian (born 1945) • Elias Nikolaus Ammerbach (c. 1530 – 1597) • Ammiya (c.1400 BC) • John Amner (1579–1641) • Cataldo Amodei (c. 1650 – c. 1695) • David Amram (born 1930) • Gilbert Amy (born 1936) • Juan de Anchieta (1462–1523) • Solange Ancona (born 1943) • Jean Ancot (1776–1848) • Laura Andel (born 1968) • Gwyneth Van Anden Walker (born 1947) • Avril Anderson (born 1953) • Beth Anderson (born 1950) • Johann Andreas Amon (1763–1825) • Fritz Andersen (1829–1910) • Joachim Andersen (1847–1909) • Julian Anderson ",
"score": "1.4761188"
},
{
"id": "9643926",
"title": "List of composers by nationality",
"text": " • Marcial del Adalid y Gurréa (1826–1881), composer • Dionisio Aguado y García (1784–1849), composer and guitarist • Sebastian Aguilera de Heredia (1561–1627), composer and organist • Isaac Albéniz (1860–1909), late Romantic composer and pianist, wrote nationalist works such as Iberia • Mateo Albéniz (1755–1831), composer • Manuel Alejandro (born 1969), contemporary song composer • Francisco Alonso (1887–1948), composer of zarzuela • Vicente Amigo (born 1967), composer • Juan de Anchieta (1462–1523), composer • Juan Crisóstomo Arriaga (1806–1826), Romantic composer, nicknamed the \"Spanish Mozart\" before dying at age 19 • Emilio Arrieta (1821–1894), composer • Salvador Bacarisse (1898–1963), composer • Leonardo Balada (born ",
"score": "1.4410853"
},
{
"id": "16169611",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " (1568–1643) • Loyset Compère (c. 1445 – 1518) • Graziella Concas (born 1970) • Edward T. Cone (1917–2004) • Giovanni Battista Conforti (fl. 1550–1570) • Zez Confrey (1895–1971) • Justin Connolly (born 1933) • August Conradi (1821–1873) • Marius Constant (1925–2004) • Paul Constantinescu (1909–1963) • Sylvia Constantinidis (born 1962) • David Conte (born 1955) • Francesco Bartolomeo Conti (1681–1732) • Salvador Contreras (1910–1982) • Charles Crozat Converse (1832–1918) • Frederick Converse (1871–1940) • Girolamo Conversi (fl. 1572–1575) • Will Marion Cook (1869–1944) • Arnold Cooke (1906–2005) • Benjamin Cooke (1734–1793) • Thomas Simpson Cooke (1782–1848) • David Cope (born 1941) • Aaron ",
"score": "1.4313514"
},
{
"id": "30918194",
"title": "List of songs written by Glenn Miller",
"text": " \"Sometime\" was a pop ballad with lyrics and music composed by Glenn Miller with Chummy MacGregor in 1939 and sung by Ray Eberle according to John Flower. The published musical score, copyrighted on September 27, 1940 lists the composers as Glenn Miller, Chummy MacGregor, and lyricist Mitchell Parish. \"Sometime\" was performed for radio broadcast and two airchecks have been released of the song. \"Sometime\" was first performed on March 5, 1939 at the Meadowbrook Ballroom in Cedar Grove, New Jersey. The song was also performed at the Meadowbrook on March 26, April 7, and April 18, 1939, which recording was released as Victor LPM/LSP 2769 and 6101, \"Glenn Miller on the Air\", and RCA RD/SF 7612. The announcer introduced the song as follows: \"Now comes a number that was originated right here in the band. Glenn and Mac the piano player got together and wrote it. Ray Eberle sings it. The title: 'Sometime'.\" This song is different from the Gus Kahn and Ted Fiorito song of the same name from 1925 and the 1918 Rudolf Friml and Rida Johnson Young song. [Glenn Miller: The Broadcast Archives: Volumes 1 and 2. Avid Entertainment, 2005.]",
"score": "1.4274669"
},
{
"id": "16169661",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " • Jacques Ibert (1890–1962) • Alois Ickstadt (born 1930) • Airat Ichmouratov (born 1973) • Akira Ifukube (1916–2006) • Ilayaraaja (born 1943) • Márton Illés (born 1975) • Andrew Imbrie (1921–2007) • Sigismondo d'India (c. 1582 – 1629) • Vincent d'Indy (1851–1931) • Marc'Antonio Ingegneri (1535/1536–1592) • Mikhail Ippolitov-Ivanov (1859–1935) • Francis Ireland (1721–1784) • John Ireland (1879–1962) • Juan Francés de Iribarren (1699–1767) • Miguel de Irízar (1635–1684) • Heinrich Isaac (c. 1450/1455–1517) • Sigurd Islandsmoen (1881–1964) • Nicolas Isouard (1775–1818) • Jānis Ivanovs (1906–1983) • Volodymyr Ivasiuk (1949–1979) • Charles Ives (1874–1954) • Simon Ives (1600–1662) • Jean Eichelberger Ivey (1923–2010)",
"score": "1.4269955"
},
{
"id": "16169564",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " (1860–1928) • Georges Auric (1899–1983) • Dorothea Austin (1921–2011) • Elizabeth R. Austin (born 1938) • Frederic Austin (1872–1952) • Larry Austin (1930–2018) • Charles Avison (1709–1770) • Giuseppe Avitrano (c. 1670 – 1756) • Pedro António Avondano (1714–1782) • Ana-Maria Avram (1961–2017) • Slavko Avsenik (1929–2015) • Aaron Avshalomov (1894–1965) • Jacob Avshalomov (1919–2013) • Daniel Ayala Pérez (1906–1975) • Héctor Ayala (1914–1990) • Nat Ayer (1887–1952) • Richard Ayleward (1626–1669) • Florence Aylward (1862–1950) • Frederick Ayres (1876–1926) • Artemi Ayvazyan (1902–1975) • Azalais de Porcairagues (fl. mid-12th century) • Svitlana Azarova (born 1976) • Filippo Azzaiolo (fl. 1557–1569)",
"score": "1.4196577"
},
{
"id": "16169733",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " (born 1958) • Timothy Salter (born 1942) • Michael Salvatori (born 1954) • Spyridon Samaras (1861–1917) • Giovanni Battista Sammartini (c. 1701 – 1775) • Giuseppe Sammartini (1695–1750) • Giovanni Felice Sances (c. 1600 – 1679) • Carlos Sandoval (born 1956) • Greg Sandow (born 1943) • Jan Sandström (born 1954) • Sven-David Sandström (1942–2019) • Sandrin (Pierre Regnault) (c. 1490 – after 1560) • Ramon Santos (born 1941) • Gaspar Sanz (1640–1710) • Lucio D. San Pedro (1913–2002) • Claudio Saracini (1586–1630) • Pablo de Sarasate (1844–1908) • Malcolm Sargent (1895–1967) • Vahram Sargsyan (born 1981) • Domenico Sarro (1679–1744) • Giuseppe Sarti ",
"score": "1.4170487"
},
{
"id": "16169559",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " da Cividale (fl. 1392–1421) • Antonio José Martínez Palacios (1902–1936) • Theodore Antoniou (1935–2018) • Giovanni D'Anzi (1906–1974) • Yoshino Aoki (born 1971) • (1754–1832) • Georges Aperghis (born 1945) • Aphex Twin (born 1971) • Denis ApIvor (1916–2004) • Giuseppe Apolloni (1822–1889) • Hans Erich Apostel (1901–1972) • Dina Appeldoorn (1884–1938) • Benedictus Appenzeller (1480/1488–after 1558) • Adelaide Orsola Appignani (1807–1884) • Louis Applebaum (1918–2000) • Thomas Appleby (c.1488?–1563/1564) • Mary Jeanne van Appledorn (1927–2014) • Francesco Araja (1709 – after 1762) • Jesús Arámbarri (1902–1960) • Pedro Aranaz (1742–1821) • Juan Arañés (died 1649) • Juan de Araujo (1646–1712) ",
"score": "1.4146843"
},
{
"id": "8357926",
"title": "List of Classical-era composers",
"text": " (1733–1787) ; Thomas Sanders Dupuis (1733–1796) ; Anton Fils, or Filtz (1733–1760) ; Johann Christian Fischer (1733–1800) ; (1733–1778) Hungarian form of Benedek Istvánffy ; Thomas Linley the elder (1733–1795) ; Giacomo Tritto (1733–1824) ; Franz Ignaz Beck (1734–1809) ; Jean-Jacques Beauvarlet Charpentier (1734–1794) ; Benjamin Cooke (1734–1793) ; François-Joseph Gossec (1734–1829) ; Karl von Ordóñez (1734–1786) ; Jean-Baptiste Rey (1734–1810) ; Luka Sorkočević (1734–1789) ; (1734–1808) ; Johann Christian Bach (1735–1782) ; John Bennett (c. 1735–1784) ; (1735–1801) ; John Collett (c. 1735?–1775) ; Johann Gottfried Eckard (1735–1809) ; Mme Papavoine (born c. 1735; fl. 1755–61) ; Anton Schweitzer (1735–1787) ; Johann Schobert (c. 1735–1767) ; ",
"score": "1.4086233"
},
{
"id": "16169682",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " • Henry Leslie (1822–1896) • Franciszek Lessel (1780–1838) • Oscar Levant (1906–1972) • Richard Leveridge (1670–1758) • Richard Michael Levey (1811–1899) • Michaël Lévinas (born 1949) • Marvin David Levy (1932–2015) • David Lewin (1933–2003) • Frank Lewin (1925–2008) • Andrew Lewis (born 1963) • Jeffrey Lewis (born 1942) • Ignace Leybach (1817–1891) • Georg Dietrich Leyding (1664–1710) • Ulrich Leyendecker (1946–2018) • Jean Lhéritier (L'Heritier; Lirithier) (c. 1480–after 1551) • Fran Lhotka (1883–1962) • Reginaldus Libert (fl. c. 1425–1435) • Heinrich Lichner (1829–1898) • Johann Georg Lickl (1769–1843) • Cristiano Giuseppe Lidarti (1730–1795) • Jorge Liderman (1957–2008) • Ingvar Lidholm ",
"score": "1.4064028"
},
{
"id": "9643930",
"title": "List of composers by nationality",
"text": " • Cristóbal de Morales (1500–1553), composer • Federico Moreno Torroba (1891–1982), composer • Alonso Mudarra (1510–1580), composer • Luis de Narváez (fl. 1526–1549), composer and vihuelist • Pablo Nassarre (1650–1730), composer, organist, and theorist • Jaime Nunó (1824–1908), composer • Fernando Obradors (1897–1945), composer • Gonzalo de Olavide (1934–2005), composer • Diego Ortiz (1510–1570), composer and theorist • Luis de Pablo (1930–2021), composer • Felipe Pedrell (1841–1922), 19th-century composer • Joan Baptista Pla (1720–1773), composer • David del Puerto (born 1964), composer • Joan Pau Pujol (1570–1626), composer • Niño Ricardo (1904–1972), composer • Joaquín Rodrigo (1901–1999), 20th-century composer, wrote the Concierto ",
"score": "1.4062498"
},
{
"id": "16169710",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " • Luis de Pablo (1930–2021) • Charles Theodore Pachelbel (1690–1750) • Johann Pachelbel (1653–1706) • Wilhelm Hieronymus Pachelbel (c. 1685 – 1764) • Giovanni Pacini (1796–1867) • Fredrik Pacius (1809–1891) • Cornelis Thymenszoon Padbrué (c. 1592 – 1670) • Martijn Padding (born 1956) • Else Marie Pade (1924–2016) • Steen Pade (born 1956) • Ignacy Jan Paderewski (1860–1941) • Juan Gutiérrez de Padilla (c. 1590 – 1664) • Ferdinando Paer (1771–1839) • Niccolò Paganini (1782–1840) • John Knowles Paine (1839–1906) • James Paisible (Jacques Paisible) (c. 1656 – 1721) • Giovanni Paisiello (1740–1816) • Antonio Palella (1692–1761) • Charlemagne Palestine (born c. 1945/47) • ",
"score": "1.4049838"
},
{
"id": "4895145",
"title": "Michael East (composer)",
"text": " Michael East (or Easte, Est, Este) (ca. 1580–1648) was an English organist and composer. He was a nephew of London music publisher Thomas East (ca. 1540–1608), although it was once thought that he was his son. In 1601, East wrote a madrigal that was accepted by Thomas Morley for publication in his collection The Triumphs of Oriana. In 1606, he received a Bachelor of Music degree from the University of Cambridge and in 1609 he joined the choir of Ely Cathedral, initially as a lay clerk. By 1618 he was employed by Lichfield Cathedral, where he worked as a choirmaster, probably until 1644, when the Civil War brought an end to ",
"score": "1.4030434"
},
{
"id": "16169563",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " (fl. 138 BC–28 BC) • Esmeralda Athanasiu-Gardeev (1834–1917) • Chet Atkins (1924–2001) • Ivor Atkins (1869–1953) • Pierre Attaingnant (c.1494–late 1551 or 1552) • Kurt Atterberg (1887–1974) • Thomas Attwood (1765–1838) • Daniel Auber (1782–1871) • Jacques Aubert (1689–1753) • Louis Aubert (1877–1968) • Tony Aubin (1907–1981) • René Aubry (born 1956) • Edmond Audran (1842–1901) • Leopold Auer (1845–1930) • Lera Auerbach (born 1973) • Marianna Auenbrugger (1759–1782) • Josepha Barbara Auernhammer (1758–1820) • May Aufderheide (1888–1972) • Benedikt Anton Aufschnaiter (1665–1742) • Rafał Augustyn (born 1951) • Pietro Auletta (c. 1698 – 1771) • Tor Aulin (1866–1914) • Valborg ",
"score": "1.4025207"
},
{
"id": "16169714",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " • James Penberthy (1917–1999) • Krzysztof Penderecki (1933–2020) • Tomaž Pengov (1949–2014) • Kevin Penkin (born 1992) • David Pentecost (born 1940) • Ernst Pepping (1901–1981) • Johann Christoph Pepusch (1667–1752) • Davide Perez (1711–1778) • Juan Pérez de Gijón (fl. c. 1460–1500) • Giovanni Battista Pergolesi (1710–1736) • Jacopo Peri (1561–1633) • Scott Perkins (born 1980) • George Perle (1915–2009) • François-Louis Perne (1772–1832) • Lorenzo Perosi (1872–1956) • Pérotin (fl. 1190–1220) • George Perry (1793–1862) • William P. Perry (born 1930) • Giuseppe Persiani (1799–1869) • Vincent Persichetti (1915–1987) • Giacomo Antonio Perti (1661–1756) • Giovanni Battista Pescetti (c. 1704 – c. ",
"score": "1.4017786"
},
{
"id": "25176736",
"title": "List of Renaissance composers",
"text": " 1628), illegitimate son of Alfonso Ferrabosco the elder ; William Simmes (c. 1575 – c. 1625) ; John Holmes (fl. from 1599; died 1629) ; Thomas Greaves (fl. 1604) ; Thomas Weelkes (1576–1623) ; John Maynard (c. 1577 – between 1614 and 1633), primarily known from one published work, The XIII Wonders of the World, published in London in 1611; It contains twelve songs, six duets for lute and viol, and seven pieces for lyra viol with optional bass viol ; Robert Jones (1577–1617), published five volumes of simple and melodious lute songs, and one of madrigals ; John Amner (1579–1641) ; Michael East (c. 1580 – 1648), probably the son of Thomas East ; Richard Dering (c. 1580 – 1630) ; Thomas Ford (c. 1580 ",
"score": "1.4010952"
},
{
"id": "16169607",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " – 1712) • Ernest Chausson (1855–1899) • Carlos Chávez (1899–1978) • Charles Chaynes (1925–2016) • Nicolas Chédeville (1705–1782) • Fortunato Chelleri (1690–1757) • Qigang Chen (born 1951) • Xiaoyong Chen (born 1955) • Chen Gang (born 1935) • Chen Yi (born 1953) • Ch'eng Mao-yün (1900–1957) • Yury Chernavsky (born 1947) • Luigi Cherubini (1760–1842) • Pavel Chesnokov (1877–1944) • Paul Chihara (born 1938) • Thomas Chilcot (c. 1707 – 1766) • Bob Chilcott (born 1955) • William Child (1606–1697) • Unsuk Chin (born 1961) • Edmund Chipp (1823–1886) • Erik Chisholm (1904–1965) • Gian Paolo Chiti (born 1939) • Frédéric Chopin (1810–1849) ",
"score": "1.3985897"
},
{
"id": "16169760",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " 1480/1485–c. 1530) • Giuseppe Verdi (1813–1901) • Cornelis Verdonck (1563–1625) • Sándor Veress (1907–1992) • Johannes Verhulst (1816–1891) • Gaspar de Verlit (1622–1682) • Pierre Vermont (c. 1495 – c. 1533) • Matthijs Vermeulen (1888–1967) • Alexey Verstovsky (1799–1862) • Michael Vetter (1943–2013) • Nicolaus Vetter (1666–1734) • Lodovico Grossi da Viadana (c. 1560 – 1627) • Pauline Viardot (1821–1910) • Tomás Luis de Victoria (c. 1548 – 1611) • Gerard Victory (1921–1995) • Jacobus Vide (fl. 1405?–1433) • Johann Vierdanck (c. 1605 – 1646) • Louis Vierne (1870–1937) • Henri François Joseph Vieuxtemps (1820–1881) • Heitor Villa-Lobos (1887–1959) ",
"score": "1.3955163"
},
{
"id": "16169713",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " (1919–2007) • Stephen Paulus (1949–2014) • Conrad Paumann (c. 1410 – 1473) • Alla Pavlova (born 1952) • Anthony Payne (1936–2021) • Juan Carlos Paz (1901–1972) • Robert Lucas de Pearsall (1795–1856) • Johnny Pearson (1925–2011) • Theodhor Peci (born 1984) • Mogens Pedersøn (c. 1583 – 1623) • Carlo Pedini (born 1956) • Carlos Pedrell (1878–1941) • Felip Pedrell (1841–1922) • Teodorico Pedrini (1671–1746) • Carlo Pedrotti (1817–1893) • Martin Peerson (1571/1573–1651) • Flor Peeters (1903–1986) • Dora Pejačević (1885–1923) • Bartłomiej Pękiel (died c. 1670) • Georgs Pelēcis (born 1947) • Jorge Peña Hen (1928–1973) • Francisco de Peñalosa (c. 1470 – ",
"score": "1.3946688"
}
] | [
"List of composers by name\n John Akar (1927–1975) • Doris Akers (1923–1995) • Toshiko Akiyoshi (born 1929) • Necil Kazım Akses (1908–1999) • Yasushi Akutagawa (1925–1989) • Jehan Alain (1911–1940) • Alamanda de Castelnau (fl. second half of 12th century) • Pierre Alamire (Peter van den Hove) (c. 1470 – 1536) • Johannes Alanus (fl. late 14th or early 15th century) • Jean-Delphin Alard (1815–1888) • Isaac Albéniz (1860–1909) • Mateo Pérez de Albéniz (1755–1831) • Pedro Albéniz y Basanta (1795–1855) • Pedro Alberch Vila (1517–1582) • Petur Alberg (1885–1940) • Eleanor Alberga (born 1949) • Pirro Albergati (1663–1735) • (1722–1756) • Eugen d'Albert (1864–1932) • ",
"List of composers by name\n 1981) • Jean-Claude Amiot (born 1939) • Emanuel Amiran-Pougatchov (1909–1993) • Charles Amirkhanian (born 1945) • Elias Nikolaus Ammerbach (c. 1530 – 1597) • Ammiya (c.1400 BC) • John Amner (1579–1641) • Cataldo Amodei (c. 1650 – c. 1695) • David Amram (born 1930) • Gilbert Amy (born 1936) • Juan de Anchieta (1462–1523) • Solange Ancona (born 1943) • Jean Ancot (1776–1848) • Laura Andel (born 1968) • Gwyneth Van Anden Walker (born 1947) • Avril Anderson (born 1953) • Beth Anderson (born 1950) • Johann Andreas Amon (1763–1825) • Fritz Andersen (1829–1910) • Joachim Andersen (1847–1909) • Julian Anderson ",
"List of composers by nationality\n • Marcial del Adalid y Gurréa (1826–1881), composer • Dionisio Aguado y García (1784–1849), composer and guitarist • Sebastian Aguilera de Heredia (1561–1627), composer and organist • Isaac Albéniz (1860–1909), late Romantic composer and pianist, wrote nationalist works such as Iberia • Mateo Albéniz (1755–1831), composer • Manuel Alejandro (born 1969), contemporary song composer • Francisco Alonso (1887–1948), composer of zarzuela • Vicente Amigo (born 1967), composer • Juan de Anchieta (1462–1523), composer • Juan Crisóstomo Arriaga (1806–1826), Romantic composer, nicknamed the \"Spanish Mozart\" before dying at age 19 • Emilio Arrieta (1821–1894), composer • Salvador Bacarisse (1898–1963), composer • Leonardo Balada (born ",
"List of composers by name\n (1568–1643) • Loyset Compère (c. 1445 – 1518) • Graziella Concas (born 1970) • Edward T. Cone (1917–2004) • Giovanni Battista Conforti (fl. 1550–1570) • Zez Confrey (1895–1971) • Justin Connolly (born 1933) • August Conradi (1821–1873) • Marius Constant (1925–2004) • Paul Constantinescu (1909–1963) • Sylvia Constantinidis (born 1962) • David Conte (born 1955) • Francesco Bartolomeo Conti (1681–1732) • Salvador Contreras (1910–1982) • Charles Crozat Converse (1832–1918) • Frederick Converse (1871–1940) • Girolamo Conversi (fl. 1572–1575) • Will Marion Cook (1869–1944) • Arnold Cooke (1906–2005) • Benjamin Cooke (1734–1793) • Thomas Simpson Cooke (1782–1848) • David Cope (born 1941) • Aaron ",
"List of songs written by Glenn Miller\n \"Sometime\" was a pop ballad with lyrics and music composed by Glenn Miller with Chummy MacGregor in 1939 and sung by Ray Eberle according to John Flower. The published musical score, copyrighted on September 27, 1940 lists the composers as Glenn Miller, Chummy MacGregor, and lyricist Mitchell Parish. \"Sometime\" was performed for radio broadcast and two airchecks have been released of the song. \"Sometime\" was first performed on March 5, 1939 at the Meadowbrook Ballroom in Cedar Grove, New Jersey. The song was also performed at the Meadowbrook on March 26, April 7, and April 18, 1939, which recording was released as Victor LPM/LSP 2769 and 6101, \"Glenn Miller on the Air\", and RCA RD/SF 7612. The announcer introduced the song as follows: \"Now comes a number that was originated right here in the band. Glenn and Mac the piano player got together and wrote it. Ray Eberle sings it. The title: 'Sometime'.\" This song is different from the Gus Kahn and Ted Fiorito song of the same name from 1925 and the 1918 Rudolf Friml and Rida Johnson Young song. [Glenn Miller: The Broadcast Archives: Volumes 1 and 2. Avid Entertainment, 2005.]",
"List of composers by name\n • Jacques Ibert (1890–1962) • Alois Ickstadt (born 1930) • Airat Ichmouratov (born 1973) • Akira Ifukube (1916–2006) • Ilayaraaja (born 1943) • Márton Illés (born 1975) • Andrew Imbrie (1921–2007) • Sigismondo d'India (c. 1582 – 1629) • Vincent d'Indy (1851–1931) • Marc'Antonio Ingegneri (1535/1536–1592) • Mikhail Ippolitov-Ivanov (1859–1935) • Francis Ireland (1721–1784) • John Ireland (1879–1962) • Juan Francés de Iribarren (1699–1767) • Miguel de Irízar (1635–1684) • Heinrich Isaac (c. 1450/1455–1517) • Sigurd Islandsmoen (1881–1964) • Nicolas Isouard (1775–1818) • Jānis Ivanovs (1906–1983) • Volodymyr Ivasiuk (1949–1979) • Charles Ives (1874–1954) • Simon Ives (1600–1662) • Jean Eichelberger Ivey (1923–2010)",
"List of composers by name\n (1860–1928) • Georges Auric (1899–1983) • Dorothea Austin (1921–2011) • Elizabeth R. Austin (born 1938) • Frederic Austin (1872–1952) • Larry Austin (1930–2018) • Charles Avison (1709–1770) • Giuseppe Avitrano (c. 1670 – 1756) • Pedro António Avondano (1714–1782) • Ana-Maria Avram (1961–2017) • Slavko Avsenik (1929–2015) • Aaron Avshalomov (1894–1965) • Jacob Avshalomov (1919–2013) • Daniel Ayala Pérez (1906–1975) • Héctor Ayala (1914–1990) • Nat Ayer (1887–1952) • Richard Ayleward (1626–1669) • Florence Aylward (1862–1950) • Frederick Ayres (1876–1926) • Artemi Ayvazyan (1902–1975) • Azalais de Porcairagues (fl. mid-12th century) • Svitlana Azarova (born 1976) • Filippo Azzaiolo (fl. 1557–1569)",
"List of composers by name\n (born 1958) • Timothy Salter (born 1942) • Michael Salvatori (born 1954) • Spyridon Samaras (1861–1917) • Giovanni Battista Sammartini (c. 1701 – 1775) • Giuseppe Sammartini (1695–1750) • Giovanni Felice Sances (c. 1600 – 1679) • Carlos Sandoval (born 1956) • Greg Sandow (born 1943) • Jan Sandström (born 1954) • Sven-David Sandström (1942–2019) • Sandrin (Pierre Regnault) (c. 1490 – after 1560) • Ramon Santos (born 1941) • Gaspar Sanz (1640–1710) • Lucio D. San Pedro (1913–2002) • Claudio Saracini (1586–1630) • Pablo de Sarasate (1844–1908) • Malcolm Sargent (1895–1967) • Vahram Sargsyan (born 1981) • Domenico Sarro (1679–1744) • Giuseppe Sarti ",
"List of composers by name\n da Cividale (fl. 1392–1421) • Antonio José Martínez Palacios (1902–1936) • Theodore Antoniou (1935–2018) • Giovanni D'Anzi (1906–1974) • Yoshino Aoki (born 1971) • (1754–1832) • Georges Aperghis (born 1945) • Aphex Twin (born 1971) • Denis ApIvor (1916–2004) • Giuseppe Apolloni (1822–1889) • Hans Erich Apostel (1901–1972) • Dina Appeldoorn (1884–1938) • Benedictus Appenzeller (1480/1488–after 1558) • Adelaide Orsola Appignani (1807–1884) • Louis Applebaum (1918–2000) • Thomas Appleby (c.1488?–1563/1564) • Mary Jeanne van Appledorn (1927–2014) • Francesco Araja (1709 – after 1762) • Jesús Arámbarri (1902–1960) • Pedro Aranaz (1742–1821) • Juan Arañés (died 1649) • Juan de Araujo (1646–1712) ",
"List of Classical-era composers\n (1733–1787) ; Thomas Sanders Dupuis (1733–1796) ; Anton Fils, or Filtz (1733–1760) ; Johann Christian Fischer (1733–1800) ; (1733–1778) Hungarian form of Benedek Istvánffy ; Thomas Linley the elder (1733–1795) ; Giacomo Tritto (1733–1824) ; Franz Ignaz Beck (1734–1809) ; Jean-Jacques Beauvarlet Charpentier (1734–1794) ; Benjamin Cooke (1734–1793) ; François-Joseph Gossec (1734–1829) ; Karl von Ordóñez (1734–1786) ; Jean-Baptiste Rey (1734–1810) ; Luka Sorkočević (1734–1789) ; (1734–1808) ; Johann Christian Bach (1735–1782) ; John Bennett (c. 1735–1784) ; (1735–1801) ; John Collett (c. 1735?–1775) ; Johann Gottfried Eckard (1735–1809) ; Mme Papavoine (born c. 1735; fl. 1755–61) ; Anton Schweitzer (1735–1787) ; Johann Schobert (c. 1735–1767) ; ",
"List of composers by name\n • Henry Leslie (1822–1896) • Franciszek Lessel (1780–1838) • Oscar Levant (1906–1972) • Richard Leveridge (1670–1758) • Richard Michael Levey (1811–1899) • Michaël Lévinas (born 1949) • Marvin David Levy (1932–2015) • David Lewin (1933–2003) • Frank Lewin (1925–2008) • Andrew Lewis (born 1963) • Jeffrey Lewis (born 1942) • Ignace Leybach (1817–1891) • Georg Dietrich Leyding (1664–1710) • Ulrich Leyendecker (1946–2018) • Jean Lhéritier (L'Heritier; Lirithier) (c. 1480–after 1551) • Fran Lhotka (1883–1962) • Reginaldus Libert (fl. c. 1425–1435) • Heinrich Lichner (1829–1898) • Johann Georg Lickl (1769–1843) • Cristiano Giuseppe Lidarti (1730–1795) • Jorge Liderman (1957–2008) • Ingvar Lidholm ",
"List of composers by nationality\n • Cristóbal de Morales (1500–1553), composer • Federico Moreno Torroba (1891–1982), composer • Alonso Mudarra (1510–1580), composer • Luis de Narváez (fl. 1526–1549), composer and vihuelist • Pablo Nassarre (1650–1730), composer, organist, and theorist • Jaime Nunó (1824–1908), composer • Fernando Obradors (1897–1945), composer • Gonzalo de Olavide (1934–2005), composer • Diego Ortiz (1510–1570), composer and theorist • Luis de Pablo (1930–2021), composer • Felipe Pedrell (1841–1922), 19th-century composer • Joan Baptista Pla (1720–1773), composer • David del Puerto (born 1964), composer • Joan Pau Pujol (1570–1626), composer • Niño Ricardo (1904–1972), composer • Joaquín Rodrigo (1901–1999), 20th-century composer, wrote the Concierto ",
"List of composers by name\n • Luis de Pablo (1930–2021) • Charles Theodore Pachelbel (1690–1750) • Johann Pachelbel (1653–1706) • Wilhelm Hieronymus Pachelbel (c. 1685 – 1764) • Giovanni Pacini (1796–1867) • Fredrik Pacius (1809–1891) • Cornelis Thymenszoon Padbrué (c. 1592 – 1670) • Martijn Padding (born 1956) • Else Marie Pade (1924–2016) • Steen Pade (born 1956) • Ignacy Jan Paderewski (1860–1941) • Juan Gutiérrez de Padilla (c. 1590 – 1664) • Ferdinando Paer (1771–1839) • Niccolò Paganini (1782–1840) • John Knowles Paine (1839–1906) • James Paisible (Jacques Paisible) (c. 1656 – 1721) • Giovanni Paisiello (1740–1816) • Antonio Palella (1692–1761) • Charlemagne Palestine (born c. 1945/47) • ",
"Michael East (composer)\n Michael East (or Easte, Est, Este) (ca. 1580–1648) was an English organist and composer. He was a nephew of London music publisher Thomas East (ca. 1540–1608), although it was once thought that he was his son. In 1601, East wrote a madrigal that was accepted by Thomas Morley for publication in his collection The Triumphs of Oriana. In 1606, he received a Bachelor of Music degree from the University of Cambridge and in 1609 he joined the choir of Ely Cathedral, initially as a lay clerk. By 1618 he was employed by Lichfield Cathedral, where he worked as a choirmaster, probably until 1644, when the Civil War brought an end to ",
"List of composers by name\n (fl. 138 BC–28 BC) • Esmeralda Athanasiu-Gardeev (1834–1917) • Chet Atkins (1924–2001) • Ivor Atkins (1869–1953) • Pierre Attaingnant (c.1494–late 1551 or 1552) • Kurt Atterberg (1887–1974) • Thomas Attwood (1765–1838) • Daniel Auber (1782–1871) • Jacques Aubert (1689–1753) • Louis Aubert (1877–1968) • Tony Aubin (1907–1981) • René Aubry (born 1956) • Edmond Audran (1842–1901) • Leopold Auer (1845–1930) • Lera Auerbach (born 1973) • Marianna Auenbrugger (1759–1782) • Josepha Barbara Auernhammer (1758–1820) • May Aufderheide (1888–1972) • Benedikt Anton Aufschnaiter (1665–1742) • Rafał Augustyn (born 1951) • Pietro Auletta (c. 1698 – 1771) • Tor Aulin (1866–1914) • Valborg ",
"List of composers by name\n • James Penberthy (1917–1999) • Krzysztof Penderecki (1933–2020) • Tomaž Pengov (1949–2014) • Kevin Penkin (born 1992) • David Pentecost (born 1940) • Ernst Pepping (1901–1981) • Johann Christoph Pepusch (1667–1752) • Davide Perez (1711–1778) • Juan Pérez de Gijón (fl. c. 1460–1500) • Giovanni Battista Pergolesi (1710–1736) • Jacopo Peri (1561–1633) • Scott Perkins (born 1980) • George Perle (1915–2009) • François-Louis Perne (1772–1832) • Lorenzo Perosi (1872–1956) • Pérotin (fl. 1190–1220) • George Perry (1793–1862) • William P. Perry (born 1930) • Giuseppe Persiani (1799–1869) • Vincent Persichetti (1915–1987) • Giacomo Antonio Perti (1661–1756) • Giovanni Battista Pescetti (c. 1704 – c. ",
"List of Renaissance composers\n 1628), illegitimate son of Alfonso Ferrabosco the elder ; William Simmes (c. 1575 – c. 1625) ; John Holmes (fl. from 1599; died 1629) ; Thomas Greaves (fl. 1604) ; Thomas Weelkes (1576–1623) ; John Maynard (c. 1577 – between 1614 and 1633), primarily known from one published work, The XIII Wonders of the World, published in London in 1611; It contains twelve songs, six duets for lute and viol, and seven pieces for lyra viol with optional bass viol ; Robert Jones (1577–1617), published five volumes of simple and melodious lute songs, and one of madrigals ; John Amner (1579–1641) ; Michael East (c. 1580 – 1648), probably the son of Thomas East ; Richard Dering (c. 1580 – 1630) ; Thomas Ford (c. 1580 ",
"List of composers by name\n – 1712) • Ernest Chausson (1855–1899) • Carlos Chávez (1899–1978) • Charles Chaynes (1925–2016) • Nicolas Chédeville (1705–1782) • Fortunato Chelleri (1690–1757) • Qigang Chen (born 1951) • Xiaoyong Chen (born 1955) • Chen Gang (born 1935) • Chen Yi (born 1953) • Ch'eng Mao-yün (1900–1957) • Yury Chernavsky (born 1947) • Luigi Cherubini (1760–1842) • Pavel Chesnokov (1877–1944) • Paul Chihara (born 1938) • Thomas Chilcot (c. 1707 – 1766) • Bob Chilcott (born 1955) • William Child (1606–1697) • Unsuk Chin (born 1961) • Edmund Chipp (1823–1886) • Erik Chisholm (1904–1965) • Gian Paolo Chiti (born 1939) • Frédéric Chopin (1810–1849) ",
"List of composers by name\n 1480/1485–c. 1530) • Giuseppe Verdi (1813–1901) • Cornelis Verdonck (1563–1625) • Sándor Veress (1907–1992) • Johannes Verhulst (1816–1891) • Gaspar de Verlit (1622–1682) • Pierre Vermont (c. 1495 – c. 1533) • Matthijs Vermeulen (1888–1967) • Alexey Verstovsky (1799–1862) • Michael Vetter (1943–2013) • Nicolaus Vetter (1666–1734) • Lodovico Grossi da Viadana (c. 1560 – 1627) • Pauline Viardot (1821–1910) • Tomás Luis de Victoria (c. 1548 – 1611) • Gerard Victory (1921–1995) • Jacobus Vide (fl. 1405?–1433) • Johann Vierdanck (c. 1605 – 1646) • Louis Vierne (1870–1937) • Henri François Joseph Vieuxtemps (1820–1881) • Heitor Villa-Lobos (1887–1959) ",
"List of composers by name\n (1919–2007) • Stephen Paulus (1949–2014) • Conrad Paumann (c. 1410 – 1473) • Alla Pavlova (born 1952) • Anthony Payne (1936–2021) • Juan Carlos Paz (1901–1972) • Robert Lucas de Pearsall (1795–1856) • Johnny Pearson (1925–2011) • Theodhor Peci (born 1984) • Mogens Pedersøn (c. 1583 – 1623) • Carlo Pedini (born 1956) • Carlos Pedrell (1878–1941) • Felip Pedrell (1841–1922) • Teodorico Pedrini (1671–1746) • Carlo Pedrotti (1817–1893) • Martin Peerson (1571/1573–1651) • Flor Peeters (1903–1986) • Dora Pejačević (1885–1923) • Bartłomiej Pękiel (died c. 1670) • Georgs Pelēcis (born 1947) • Jorge Peña Hen (1928–1973) • Francisco de Peñalosa (c. 1470 – "
] |
Who was the composer of Prelude for Clarinet? | [
"Krzysztof Penderecki",
"Krzysztof Eugeniusz Penderecki"
] | composer | Prelude for Clarinet (Penderecki) | 1,807,138 | 86 | [
{
"id": "29086415",
"title": "Prelude (music)",
"text": " Schoenberg's Suite for piano, Op. 25 (1921/23), both of which begin with an introductory prelude (Schoenberg's choral introduction to the Genesis Suite is a rare case of an attached prelude written in the 20th century without any neo-baroque intent ). As well as a series of unattached piano preludes (Op. 2), Dmitri Shostakovich composed a set of 24 Preludes and Fugues in the tradition of Bach's The Well Tempered Clavier. Some avant-garde composers have also produced unattached preludes. John Cage's brief Prelude for Meditation is written for prepared piano, while François-Bernard Mâche's Prélude (1959) and Branimir Sakač's Aleatory Prelude (1961) call on electronic resources and aleatoric techniques.",
"score": "1.5828516"
},
{
"id": "6233590",
"title": "Prelude, Fugue, and Riffs",
"text": " its premiere as part of Bernstein's Omnibus television show, The World of Jazz on October 16, 1955. According to some sources the soloist at the premiere was Al Gallodoro; other sources state it was premiered by Benny Goodman – Bernstein's Tanglewood neighbour and friend since the 1940s – to whom the work was dedicated. In 1952 Bernstein revised the score from its original instrumentation for a more conventional pit orchestra, and the work was then incorporated into a ballet sequence in the first draft of the musical comedy Wonderful Town. The revised version of Prelude, Fugue and Riffs did not survive and the majority of the music was cut from the final version of the Wonderful Town score with the exception of a few phrases in the musical's numbers \"Conquering the City\" and \"Conversation Piece\". It later was transcribed for clarinet and orchestra by Lukas Foss.",
"score": "1.5758169"
},
{
"id": "30984893",
"title": "Frank Bencriscutto",
"text": "Rondeau for percussion and piano (1959) ; Valse Rondo for solo clarinet and piano (1978) ; Dialogue for solo clarinet and piano (1978) ; Elegy for solo clarinet and piano (1978) ; Concerto grosso for saxophone quartet and piano (1980) ; Suite for flute and piano, bass, drum-set (1986) ",
"score": "1.5743315"
},
{
"id": "29086410",
"title": "Prelude (music)",
"text": " composers such as Dieterich Buxtehude (c.1637–1707) and Nikolaus Bruhns (c.1665–1697) combined sections of free improvised passages with parts in strict contrapuntal writing (usually brief fugues). Outside Germany, Abraham van den Kerckhoven (c.1618–c.1701), one of the most important Dutch composers of the period, used this model for some of his preludes. Southern and central German composers did not follow the sectional model and their preludes remained improvisational in character with little or no strict counterpoint. During the second half of the 17th century, German composers started pairing preludes (or sometimes toccatas) with fugues in the same key; Johann Pachelbel (c.1653–1706) was one of the first to do so, although ",
"score": "1.5738618"
},
{
"id": "2923809",
"title": "Benny Goodman",
"text": " for Clarinet and Piano by Francis Poulenc, and Clarinet Concerto by Aaron Copland. Prelude, Fugue, and Riffs by Leonard Bernstein was commissioned for Woody Herman's big band, but it was premiered by Goodman. Herman was the dedicatee (1945) and first performer (1946) of Igor Stravinsky's Ebony Concerto, but many years later Stravinsky made another recording with Goodman as the soloist. He made a recording of Mozart's Clarinet Quintet in July 1956 with the Boston Symphony String Quartet at the Berkshire Festival; on the same occasion he recorded Mozart's Clarinet Concerto in A major, K. 622, with the Boston Symphony Orchestra conducted by Charles Munch. He also recorded the clarinet concertos of Weber After forays outside swing, Goodman started a new band in 1953. According ",
"score": "1.5647485"
},
{
"id": "10544094",
"title": "Island Prelude",
"text": " Joan Tower says that she found her inspiration for Island Prelude in oboist Peter Bowman's \"exceptionally lyrical playing and also Samuel Barber's wonderfully controlled Adagio for Strings\". The piece premiered May 4, 1989, in a performance by Peter Bowman and the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Leonard Slatkin. Island Prelude is also scored for oboe and string quartet, and for woodwind quintet. As part of a National Endowment for the Arts Consortium Commissioning Grant, the wind ensembles Quintessence, the Dorian Quintet, and the Dakota Quintet commissioned the woodwind quintet version for a series of premieres. The first performance of this arrangement was given by Nancy Clauter and Quintessence at Arizona State University on April 9, 1989. ",
"score": "1.5641639"
},
{
"id": "6233589",
"title": "Prelude, Fugue, and Riffs",
"text": "brass and rhythm in the first movement, ; saxophones in the second movement, and ; the entire ensemble plus solo clarinet in the third movement first with backing from the piano then by the entire ensemble. Prelude, Fugue and Riffs is a \"written-out\" jazz-in-concert-hall composition composed by Leonard Bernstein for a jazz ensemble featuring solo clarinet. The title points to the union of classical music and jazz: Prelude (first movement) and Fugue (second movement) – both baroque forms – are followed immediately without a pause by a series of \"riffs\" (third movement), which is a jazz term for a repeated and short melodic figure. It features: Completed in 1949 for Woody Herman's big band as part of a series of commissioned works – that already included Stravinsky's Ebony Concerto – it was never performed by Herman, possibly because his orchestra had disbanded at that time. Instead, it ",
"score": "1.5617924"
},
{
"id": "11825478",
"title": "Preludes (Chopin)",
"text": " The untitled Presto con leggierezza in A major was composed in 1834 as a gift for Pierre Wolff and published in Geneva in 1918. Sometimes known as Prelude No. 26, the piece is very short and generally bright in tone.",
"score": "1.5614945"
},
{
"id": "1014958",
"title": "List of compositions by Eugène Bozza",
"text": "Aria for alto saxophone (or flute, or clarinet, or violin, or cello) and piano (1936) ; Ballade for bass clarinet and piano (1939) ; Fantaisie italienne for clarinet (or flute, or oboe) and piano (1939) ; Pulcinella for clarinet (or alto saxophone) and piano (1944) ; 14 Études de mecanisme for clarinet (1948) ; Bucolique for clarinet and piano (1949) ; Claribel for clarinet and piano (1952) ; 12 Études for clarinet (1953) ; Idylle for clarinet and piano (1959) ; Prélude et divertissement for clarinet (or alto saxophone) and piano (1960) ; Caprice-improvisation for clarinet and piano (1963) ; Lucioles for 6 clarinets (1963) ; Divertissement for clarinet and piano, Op. 39 (1964) ; Épithalame for clarinet and piano (1971) ; Sonatine for clarinet quartet (1971); also for flute, oboe, clarinet and bassoon ; 11 Études sur des modes karnatiques (11 Studies in Karnatic Modes) for clarinet (1972) ; Suite for clarinet and piano (1973) ; Rapsodie niçoise for clarinet and piano (1977) ",
"score": "1.5575523"
},
{
"id": "16476017",
"title": "Sonata for Clarinet and Piano (Bernstein)",
"text": " Now a popular piece in the clarinet repertoire, featured on the DipABRSM & AMEB examination syllabus, the Initial reviews were mixed. The Boston Globe and The Boston Herald reviewed the premiere. Though the former praised its jazz inflections, both felt the composing was stronger for the piano than for the clarinet. Many early reviews alluded to the influences of Hindemith and Copland and were very mixed. By the end of 1943, though, Bernstein had become a conducting star through his work with the New York Philharmonic and subsequent reviews were more positive and the jazz aspects were frequently referred to positively. The sonata is now a part of the standard repertoire for clarinet and others outside of the clarinet world have embraced the piece. In 1994 it was orchestrated by Sid Ramin so that it can be played by a solo clarinet with orchestral accompaniment. Yo-Yo Ma has arranged this work for cello and piano. It has also been arranged for both violin and trombone. Bernstein later returned to composing for the clarinet in 1949, when he composed Prelude, Fugue, and Riffs for Solo Clarinet and Jazz Ensemble, dedicated to Benny Goodman.",
"score": "1.5566562"
},
{
"id": "8544052",
"title": "Jules Semler-Collery",
"text": "Habanera Piano Solo (publisher Eschig) ; Prelude Piano Solo (publisher Eschig) ; Introduction et Saltarelle Flute and Piano (publisher Eschig) ; Pastorale et Caprice Flute and Piano (publisher Alphonse Leduc) ; Cantilène et petit Divertissement Oboe and Piano (publisher Eschig) ; Etudes de Concert Clarinet Solo (publisher Eschig) ; Petites Etudes Recreatives Clarinet Solo (publisher Eschig) ; Lied et Final Clarinet and Piano (publisher Eschig) ; Fantaisie et Danse en Forme de Gigue Clarinet and Piano (publisher Alphonse Leduc) ; Reverie et Scherzo Clarinet and Piano (publisher Alphonse Leduc) ; Melodie expressive Clarinet and Piano (publisher Eschig) ; Pièce de Caractère for two clarinets (publisher Billaudot) ; Terzetto for ",
"score": "1.5490975"
},
{
"id": "1771247",
"title": "Clarinet Concerto (Piston)",
"text": " Walter Piston's Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra, was written in 1967. It was commissioned for the Hopkins Center Congregation of the Arts at Dartmouth College by its music director, Mario di Bonaventura, who conducted the world premiere on August 6, 1967 at the Congregation of Arts Festival, with clarinetist Donald Wendlant and the Dartmouth Symphony Orchestra.",
"score": "1.5474594"
},
{
"id": "6765956",
"title": "Aurelio de la Vega",
"text": " Consonance Tres Preludios (Three Preludes) (1944) ; Rondó (1948) ; Epigrama (\"Epigram\") (1953) ; Danza Lenta (\"Slow Dance\") (1956) ; Minuet (1957) ; Toccata (1957) ; Antinomies (1967) - commissioned by Peter Hewitt ; Homenagem (\"Homage\"),\"In Memoriam Heitor Villa-Lobos\" (1987) - commissioned by José Eduardo Martins Sound Clouds (1975) ; Bifloreo (1992) - commissioned by guitarist Anton Machleder Interpolation, for solo clarinet with or without pre-recorded sounds (1965) - commissioned by clarinetist John Neufeld ; Undici Colori (\"Eleven Colors\"), for solo bassoon with or without projected transparencies of mixed media colored drawings by the composer (1981) - commissioned by the Klimt Foundation for bassoonist Donald Christlieb ; Memorial ",
"score": "1.5402517"
},
{
"id": "26359810",
"title": "Preludes (musical)",
"text": " Preludes is a musical fantasia set in the mind of Sergei Rachmaninoff, written and composed by Dave Malloy. The music is a combination of compositions by Rachmaninoff, Malloy, hybrids of the two, as well as music and lyrics from other related compositions.",
"score": "1.5390784"
},
{
"id": "14602727",
"title": "Sean Osborn",
"text": "Preludes, Book 1. by Claude Debussy for Orchestra ; Suite of Music by William Byrd, for clarinet quartet ; smaller pieces and Christmas songs for clarinet quartet or Wind Quintet ; pieces by Grieg, Bach, Faure and others for Wind Quintet ",
"score": "1.5372933"
},
{
"id": "9047661",
"title": "Richard Henry Walthew",
"text": " the end not played at) the 1943 Proms. (This version was recorded by Dutton Epoch in 2016). His most successful chamber work was the Phantasy Quintet for piano, violin, viola, cello and double bass, commissioned by the Worshipful Company of Musicians, dedicated to Walter Cobbett and published by Stainer and Bell in 1912. This was later revived by the composer at the marathon one thousandth South Place Sunday Concert in February 1927. Among his educational piano works, the short piece Sun and Shade was chosen as one of ten test pieces for the Daily Express national piano playing competition in 1928, and recorded as a demonstration by William Murdoch. The Prelude and Fugue (1945), originally written for strings, later transcribed for two clarinets and bassoon, has been reissued in recent times and recorded by The Trio Pleyel.",
"score": "1.5339305"
},
{
"id": "13789687",
"title": "Paul Jeanjean",
"text": " Paul Jeanjean (1874 – 1928) was a noted French composer and principal clarinetist of the Garde Republicaine Band and the MonteCarlo opera. While known primarily for his clarinet compositions, he also composed for other instruments, such as the bassoon and cornet. He studied with one of the most important clarinet teachers, Chrysogone Cyrille Rose. His compositions for the clarinet are mainly studies for the practice of technical elements. Every year, the Paris Conservatoire would call on the clarinet teachers to compose music for that of their own use and also for their students. As a result we now have many sets of studies for the clarinet.",
"score": "1.5321255"
},
{
"id": "10544093",
"title": "Island Prelude",
"text": " Island Prelude is a chamber work composed by Joan Tower in 1988. Intended for oboist Peter Bowman of the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra, it is originally scored for solo oboe and string orchestra.",
"score": "1.5311086"
},
{
"id": "8791446",
"title": "Prelude in C-sharp minor (Rachmaninoff)",
"text": " Sergei Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C-sharp minor (Прелюдия), Op. 3, No. 2, is one of the composer's most famous compositions. Part of a set of five piano pieces titled Morceaux de fantaisie, it is a 62-bar prelude in ternary (ABA) form. It is also known as The Bells of Moscow since the introduction seems to reproduce the Kremlin's most solemn carillon chimes. Its first performance was by the composer on 26 September 1892, at a festival called the Moscow Electrical Exhibition. After this première, a review of the concert singled out the Prelude, noting that it had “aroused enthusiasm”. From this point on, its popularity grew. Rachmaninoff later published 23 more preludes to complete a set of 24 preludes covering all the major and minor keys, to emulate earlier sets by Bach, Chopin, Alkan, Scriabin and others.",
"score": "1.530369"
},
{
"id": "2978089",
"title": "Henri Tomasi",
"text": " much stress or accent when indicated. (Gordon) There are a plethora of accents sprinkled throughout this brief movement. It opens with a quick two bar ostinato in 3/8. The changing meters give it impetus. It is in ABA form with the interior section marked Lent and fantasque This is punctuated by a figure marked brusquement and counteracted with three bars marked tendrement. The \"A\" section returns briefly with the main theme ostinato. Introduction et Danse was composed in 1949 and dedicated to the clarinetist Louis Cahuzac. It was published in 1949 by Alphonse Leduc. It can be performed with clarinet and piano ",
"score": "1.5261573"
}
] | [
"Prelude (music)\n Schoenberg's Suite for piano, Op. 25 (1921/23), both of which begin with an introductory prelude (Schoenberg's choral introduction to the Genesis Suite is a rare case of an attached prelude written in the 20th century without any neo-baroque intent ). As well as a series of unattached piano preludes (Op. 2), Dmitri Shostakovich composed a set of 24 Preludes and Fugues in the tradition of Bach's The Well Tempered Clavier. Some avant-garde composers have also produced unattached preludes. John Cage's brief Prelude for Meditation is written for prepared piano, while François-Bernard Mâche's Prélude (1959) and Branimir Sakač's Aleatory Prelude (1961) call on electronic resources and aleatoric techniques.",
"Prelude, Fugue, and Riffs\n its premiere as part of Bernstein's Omnibus television show, The World of Jazz on October 16, 1955. According to some sources the soloist at the premiere was Al Gallodoro; other sources state it was premiered by Benny Goodman – Bernstein's Tanglewood neighbour and friend since the 1940s – to whom the work was dedicated. In 1952 Bernstein revised the score from its original instrumentation for a more conventional pit orchestra, and the work was then incorporated into a ballet sequence in the first draft of the musical comedy Wonderful Town. The revised version of Prelude, Fugue and Riffs did not survive and the majority of the music was cut from the final version of the Wonderful Town score with the exception of a few phrases in the musical's numbers \"Conquering the City\" and \"Conversation Piece\". It later was transcribed for clarinet and orchestra by Lukas Foss.",
"Frank Bencriscutto\nRondeau for percussion and piano (1959) ; Valse Rondo for solo clarinet and piano (1978) ; Dialogue for solo clarinet and piano (1978) ; Elegy for solo clarinet and piano (1978) ; Concerto grosso for saxophone quartet and piano (1980) ; Suite for flute and piano, bass, drum-set (1986) ",
"Prelude (music)\n composers such as Dieterich Buxtehude (c.1637–1707) and Nikolaus Bruhns (c.1665–1697) combined sections of free improvised passages with parts in strict contrapuntal writing (usually brief fugues). Outside Germany, Abraham van den Kerckhoven (c.1618–c.1701), one of the most important Dutch composers of the period, used this model for some of his preludes. Southern and central German composers did not follow the sectional model and their preludes remained improvisational in character with little or no strict counterpoint. During the second half of the 17th century, German composers started pairing preludes (or sometimes toccatas) with fugues in the same key; Johann Pachelbel (c.1653–1706) was one of the first to do so, although ",
"Benny Goodman\n for Clarinet and Piano by Francis Poulenc, and Clarinet Concerto by Aaron Copland. Prelude, Fugue, and Riffs by Leonard Bernstein was commissioned for Woody Herman's big band, but it was premiered by Goodman. Herman was the dedicatee (1945) and first performer (1946) of Igor Stravinsky's Ebony Concerto, but many years later Stravinsky made another recording with Goodman as the soloist. He made a recording of Mozart's Clarinet Quintet in July 1956 with the Boston Symphony String Quartet at the Berkshire Festival; on the same occasion he recorded Mozart's Clarinet Concerto in A major, K. 622, with the Boston Symphony Orchestra conducted by Charles Munch. He also recorded the clarinet concertos of Weber After forays outside swing, Goodman started a new band in 1953. According ",
"Island Prelude\n Joan Tower says that she found her inspiration for Island Prelude in oboist Peter Bowman's \"exceptionally lyrical playing and also Samuel Barber's wonderfully controlled Adagio for Strings\". The piece premiered May 4, 1989, in a performance by Peter Bowman and the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Leonard Slatkin. Island Prelude is also scored for oboe and string quartet, and for woodwind quintet. As part of a National Endowment for the Arts Consortium Commissioning Grant, the wind ensembles Quintessence, the Dorian Quintet, and the Dakota Quintet commissioned the woodwind quintet version for a series of premieres. The first performance of this arrangement was given by Nancy Clauter and Quintessence at Arizona State University on April 9, 1989. ",
"Prelude, Fugue, and Riffs\nbrass and rhythm in the first movement, ; saxophones in the second movement, and ; the entire ensemble plus solo clarinet in the third movement first with backing from the piano then by the entire ensemble. Prelude, Fugue and Riffs is a \"written-out\" jazz-in-concert-hall composition composed by Leonard Bernstein for a jazz ensemble featuring solo clarinet. The title points to the union of classical music and jazz: Prelude (first movement) and Fugue (second movement) – both baroque forms – are followed immediately without a pause by a series of \"riffs\" (third movement), which is a jazz term for a repeated and short melodic figure. It features: Completed in 1949 for Woody Herman's big band as part of a series of commissioned works – that already included Stravinsky's Ebony Concerto – it was never performed by Herman, possibly because his orchestra had disbanded at that time. Instead, it ",
"Preludes (Chopin)\n The untitled Presto con leggierezza in A major was composed in 1834 as a gift for Pierre Wolff and published in Geneva in 1918. Sometimes known as Prelude No. 26, the piece is very short and generally bright in tone.",
"List of compositions by Eugène Bozza\nAria for alto saxophone (or flute, or clarinet, or violin, or cello) and piano (1936) ; Ballade for bass clarinet and piano (1939) ; Fantaisie italienne for clarinet (or flute, or oboe) and piano (1939) ; Pulcinella for clarinet (or alto saxophone) and piano (1944) ; 14 Études de mecanisme for clarinet (1948) ; Bucolique for clarinet and piano (1949) ; Claribel for clarinet and piano (1952) ; 12 Études for clarinet (1953) ; Idylle for clarinet and piano (1959) ; Prélude et divertissement for clarinet (or alto saxophone) and piano (1960) ; Caprice-improvisation for clarinet and piano (1963) ; Lucioles for 6 clarinets (1963) ; Divertissement for clarinet and piano, Op. 39 (1964) ; Épithalame for clarinet and piano (1971) ; Sonatine for clarinet quartet (1971); also for flute, oboe, clarinet and bassoon ; 11 Études sur des modes karnatiques (11 Studies in Karnatic Modes) for clarinet (1972) ; Suite for clarinet and piano (1973) ; Rapsodie niçoise for clarinet and piano (1977) ",
"Sonata for Clarinet and Piano (Bernstein)\n Now a popular piece in the clarinet repertoire, featured on the DipABRSM & AMEB examination syllabus, the Initial reviews were mixed. The Boston Globe and The Boston Herald reviewed the premiere. Though the former praised its jazz inflections, both felt the composing was stronger for the piano than for the clarinet. Many early reviews alluded to the influences of Hindemith and Copland and were very mixed. By the end of 1943, though, Bernstein had become a conducting star through his work with the New York Philharmonic and subsequent reviews were more positive and the jazz aspects were frequently referred to positively. The sonata is now a part of the standard repertoire for clarinet and others outside of the clarinet world have embraced the piece. In 1994 it was orchestrated by Sid Ramin so that it can be played by a solo clarinet with orchestral accompaniment. Yo-Yo Ma has arranged this work for cello and piano. It has also been arranged for both violin and trombone. Bernstein later returned to composing for the clarinet in 1949, when he composed Prelude, Fugue, and Riffs for Solo Clarinet and Jazz Ensemble, dedicated to Benny Goodman.",
"Jules Semler-Collery\nHabanera Piano Solo (publisher Eschig) ; Prelude Piano Solo (publisher Eschig) ; Introduction et Saltarelle Flute and Piano (publisher Eschig) ; Pastorale et Caprice Flute and Piano (publisher Alphonse Leduc) ; Cantilène et petit Divertissement Oboe and Piano (publisher Eschig) ; Etudes de Concert Clarinet Solo (publisher Eschig) ; Petites Etudes Recreatives Clarinet Solo (publisher Eschig) ; Lied et Final Clarinet and Piano (publisher Eschig) ; Fantaisie et Danse en Forme de Gigue Clarinet and Piano (publisher Alphonse Leduc) ; Reverie et Scherzo Clarinet and Piano (publisher Alphonse Leduc) ; Melodie expressive Clarinet and Piano (publisher Eschig) ; Pièce de Caractère for two clarinets (publisher Billaudot) ; Terzetto for ",
"Clarinet Concerto (Piston)\n Walter Piston's Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra, was written in 1967. It was commissioned for the Hopkins Center Congregation of the Arts at Dartmouth College by its music director, Mario di Bonaventura, who conducted the world premiere on August 6, 1967 at the Congregation of Arts Festival, with clarinetist Donald Wendlant and the Dartmouth Symphony Orchestra.",
"Aurelio de la Vega\n Consonance Tres Preludios (Three Preludes) (1944) ; Rondó (1948) ; Epigrama (\"Epigram\") (1953) ; Danza Lenta (\"Slow Dance\") (1956) ; Minuet (1957) ; Toccata (1957) ; Antinomies (1967) - commissioned by Peter Hewitt ; Homenagem (\"Homage\"),\"In Memoriam Heitor Villa-Lobos\" (1987) - commissioned by José Eduardo Martins Sound Clouds (1975) ; Bifloreo (1992) - commissioned by guitarist Anton Machleder Interpolation, for solo clarinet with or without pre-recorded sounds (1965) - commissioned by clarinetist John Neufeld ; Undici Colori (\"Eleven Colors\"), for solo bassoon with or without projected transparencies of mixed media colored drawings by the composer (1981) - commissioned by the Klimt Foundation for bassoonist Donald Christlieb ; Memorial ",
"Preludes (musical)\n Preludes is a musical fantasia set in the mind of Sergei Rachmaninoff, written and composed by Dave Malloy. The music is a combination of compositions by Rachmaninoff, Malloy, hybrids of the two, as well as music and lyrics from other related compositions.",
"Sean Osborn\nPreludes, Book 1. by Claude Debussy for Orchestra ; Suite of Music by William Byrd, for clarinet quartet ; smaller pieces and Christmas songs for clarinet quartet or Wind Quintet ; pieces by Grieg, Bach, Faure and others for Wind Quintet ",
"Richard Henry Walthew\n the end not played at) the 1943 Proms. (This version was recorded by Dutton Epoch in 2016). His most successful chamber work was the Phantasy Quintet for piano, violin, viola, cello and double bass, commissioned by the Worshipful Company of Musicians, dedicated to Walter Cobbett and published by Stainer and Bell in 1912. This was later revived by the composer at the marathon one thousandth South Place Sunday Concert in February 1927. Among his educational piano works, the short piece Sun and Shade was chosen as one of ten test pieces for the Daily Express national piano playing competition in 1928, and recorded as a demonstration by William Murdoch. The Prelude and Fugue (1945), originally written for strings, later transcribed for two clarinets and bassoon, has been reissued in recent times and recorded by The Trio Pleyel.",
"Paul Jeanjean\n Paul Jeanjean (1874 – 1928) was a noted French composer and principal clarinetist of the Garde Republicaine Band and the MonteCarlo opera. While known primarily for his clarinet compositions, he also composed for other instruments, such as the bassoon and cornet. He studied with one of the most important clarinet teachers, Chrysogone Cyrille Rose. His compositions for the clarinet are mainly studies for the practice of technical elements. Every year, the Paris Conservatoire would call on the clarinet teachers to compose music for that of their own use and also for their students. As a result we now have many sets of studies for the clarinet.",
"Island Prelude\n Island Prelude is a chamber work composed by Joan Tower in 1988. Intended for oboist Peter Bowman of the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra, it is originally scored for solo oboe and string orchestra.",
"Prelude in C-sharp minor (Rachmaninoff)\n Sergei Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C-sharp minor (Прелюдия), Op. 3, No. 2, is one of the composer's most famous compositions. Part of a set of five piano pieces titled Morceaux de fantaisie, it is a 62-bar prelude in ternary (ABA) form. It is also known as The Bells of Moscow since the introduction seems to reproduce the Kremlin's most solemn carillon chimes. Its first performance was by the composer on 26 September 1892, at a festival called the Moscow Electrical Exhibition. After this première, a review of the concert singled out the Prelude, noting that it had “aroused enthusiasm”. From this point on, its popularity grew. Rachmaninoff later published 23 more preludes to complete a set of 24 preludes covering all the major and minor keys, to emulate earlier sets by Bach, Chopin, Alkan, Scriabin and others.",
"Henri Tomasi\n much stress or accent when indicated. (Gordon) There are a plethora of accents sprinkled throughout this brief movement. It opens with a quick two bar ostinato in 3/8. The changing meters give it impetus. It is in ABA form with the interior section marked Lent and fantasque This is punctuated by a figure marked brusquement and counteracted with three bars marked tendrement. The \"A\" section returns briefly with the main theme ostinato. Introduction et Danse was composed in 1949 and dedicated to the clarinetist Louis Cahuzac. It was published in 1949 by Alphonse Leduc. It can be performed with clarinet and piano "
] |
Who was the composer of The Moment's Energy? | [
"Evan Parker"
] | composer | The Moment's Energy | 2,685,175 | 59 | [
{
"id": "15407815",
"title": "The Moment's Energy",
"text": " The Moment's Energy is an album by British saxophonist and improvisor Evan Parker's Electro-Acoustic Ensemble recorded at the Lawrence Batley Theatre in 2007 and released on the ECM label.",
"score": "1.8743422"
},
{
"id": "15407819",
"title": "The Moment's Energy",
"text": "Evan Parker - soprano saxophone ; Peter Evans - trumpet, piccolo trumpet ; Ko Ishikawa - shō ; Ned Rothenberg - clarinet, bass clarinet, shakuhachi ; Philipp Wachsmann - violin, live electronics ; Agustí Fernandez - piano, prepared piano ; Barry Guy - double bass ; Paul Lytton - percussion, live electronics ; Lawrence Casserley - signal processing instrument ; Joel Ryan - sample and signal processing ; Walter Prati - computer processing ; Richard Barrett - live electronics ; Paul Obermayer - live electronics ; Marco Vecchi - sound projection ",
"score": "1.6776707"
},
{
"id": "15407818",
"title": "The Moment's Energy",
"text": "1) \"The Moment's Energy I\" - 9:29 ; 2) \"The Moment's Energy II\" - 9:45 ; 3) \"The Moment's Energy III\" - 9:34 ; 4) \"The Moment's Energy IV\" - 4:19 ; 5) \"The Moment's Energy V\" - 9:23 ; 6) \"The Moment's Energy VI\" - 8:11 ; 7) \"The Moment's Energy VII\" - 11:14 ; 8) \"Incandescent Clouds\" - 5:05 All compositions by Evan Parker",
"score": "1.6330698"
},
{
"id": "30403178",
"title": "Momente",
"text": " Momente (Moments) is a work by the German composer Karlheinz Stockhausen, written between 1962 and 1969, scored for solo soprano, four mixed choirs, and thirteen instrumentalists (four trumpets, four trombones, three percussionists, and two electric keyboards). A \"cantata with radiophonic and theatrical overtones\", it is described by the composer as \"practically an opera of Mother Earth surrounded by her chicks\". It was Stockhausen's first piece composed on principles of modular transposability, and his first musical form to be determined from categories of sensation or perception rather than by numerical units of musical terminology, which marks a significant change in the composer's musical approach from the abstract forms of the 1950s.",
"score": "1.6206441"
},
{
"id": "15407816",
"title": "The Moment's Energy",
"text": " The Allmusic review by Thom Jurek awarded the album 4 stars stating \"this work is more modern composition than merely free or experimental jazz. This is a gorgeous work when taken as a whole, a musical journey through multi-dimensional landscapes and sonic shadows that seems to stretch time itself.\" On All About Jazz John Kelman called it \"an album where there's both greater density and delineation, an even broader dynamic scope and, quite simply, one of the most ambitious mixtures of form and freedom, and extant and new-found textures\" and \"A composition that could never be performed the same way twice, its careful construction of sound in real-time and post-production makes for ",
"score": "1.6029215"
},
{
"id": "3437396",
"title": "The Moment (Kenny G composition)",
"text": " CD-Maxi BMG",
"score": "1.5426261"
},
{
"id": "29509281",
"title": "Nicolae Kirculescu",
"text": " Nicolae Kirculescu (December 28, 1903, Corabia – December 31, 1985, Recas) was a Romanian composer. He wrote music particularly for the stage and screen. One of his well-known works is Musical Moment for piano and orchestra, the musical theme of a Romanian television science program named Teleenciclopedia. His compositions also include operetta, musical comedy/canzonetta and instrumental songs.",
"score": "1.5103087"
},
{
"id": "10327249",
"title": "Robert Simpson (composer)",
"text": "Energy (1971), Test Piece, Brass Band World Championships ; Volcano (1979), Test Piece, National Brass Band Championships of Britain ; The Four Temperaments, Suite for Brass Band (1983). The composer also re-orchestrated this work for orchestral brass. ; Introduction and Allegro on a Bass of Max Reger (1987) ; Vortex (1989) ",
"score": "1.5058517"
},
{
"id": "31260410",
"title": "Moment (mathematics)",
"text": " Since",
"score": "1.5005472"
},
{
"id": "8677049",
"title": "Richard Barrett (composer)",
"text": " codex I ; FURT: sense (Psi 2009) ; Adrift—3 compositions 2007/8 (Psi 2009). RB with Sarah Nicolls, ELISION, Champ d'Action—contains adrift, codex VII and codex IX ; Richard Barrett and Han-earl Park (guitar): numbers (Creative Sources 2012) ; DARK MATTER (NMC 2012). ELISION and Cikada ensembles conducted by Christian Eggen ; Richard Barrett, Jon Rose (violin/tenor violin), Meinrad Kneer (contrabass): colophony (Creative Sources 2013) ; SKEIN – RB with Frank Gratkowski, Achim Kaufmann, Wilbert de Joode, Okkyung Lee and Tony Buck (Leo Records 2014) ; fORCH: \"spukhafte Fernwirkung\" (Treader 2015) ; \"Music for cello and electronics\" (double CD, Aeon 2016). Arne Deforce (cello) and Yutaka Oya (piano) The Eleventh Hour (ECM 2004) ; The Moment's Energy (ECM 2007) ; SET (Psi 2009) ; hasselt (Psi 2012) With Evan Parker's Electro-Acoustic Ensemble",
"score": "1.499793"
},
{
"id": "3437393",
"title": "The Moment (Kenny G composition)",
"text": " \"The Moment\" is an instrumental by American Smooth jazz saxophonist Kenny G, from his seventh studio album The Moment which was released in 1996.",
"score": "1.4961908"
},
{
"id": "2682388",
"title": "Steve Gadd discography",
"text": "The Moment (Videoarts Music, 1992) ",
"score": "1.47153"
},
{
"id": "30403180",
"title": "Momente",
"text": " and for three months both Stockhausen and Bauermeister \"worked like crazy\" on their respective projects, retreating to a small, easily heated room, furnished with a piano and two tables. Shortly before Doris was to have come to Siculiana a telegram arrived, saying she had been taken seriously ill and required surgery. Stockhausen decided to return to Germany to support her, and they spent a quiet time in the Black Forest, where Doris went to recuperate. A first version of Momente, consisting of all the K moments, i(m), i(d), M(m) and MK(d), was premiered on 21 May 1962 at the Westdeutscher Rundfunk in Cologne. Moment i had already been composed, but was not included in the Cologne performance. A second group of moments, including ",
"score": "1.4694518"
},
{
"id": "3437395",
"title": "The Moment (Kenny G composition)",
"text": " \"The Moment\" was Kenny G's first hit in Billboard Hot 100 in three years. The song reached number 63. It also reached the Hot R&B Singles and Adult Contemporary charts at numbers 62 and 16, respectively.",
"score": "1.4593017"
},
{
"id": "13941888",
"title": "The Musical Moment",
"text": " The Musical Moment, signed by the Romanian composer Nicolae Kirculescu, is a classical musical work for piano and orchestra, that was published in 1950. The premiere of the piece took place in 1965 and it is related to the adaption of the ending part of it to the opening credits of a well-known Romanian documentary show called „Teleenciclopedia” (broadcast by TVR), the show being broadcast for the first time in this same year. The 1965 recording remains a symbol for the show, this particular interpretation being made by Romanian Radio Orchestra, conducted by Iosif Conta, and the piano soloist, student at that time, Dan Grigore. The composition was very often mistakenly labeled, due to original labeling done on the Electrorecord vinyl disc Așa începe dragostea (translating: That's how the loves starts) (containing many well-known pieces of Kirculescu). By this, the Musical moment may be found under the wrong name Patru studii de concert (in English: Four concerto studies), another work of the composer, this time for solo piano only. Other times, the tune is nicknamed „Plutașul de pe Bistrița” („The rafter of Bistrita”).",
"score": "1.457259"
},
{
"id": "30403201",
"title": "Momente",
"text": "Pedro Amaral (composer). 2003. \"Momente ou le paradigme de la forme\". PhD thesis at IRCAM, Formation doctorale en Musique et Musicologie du XXe siècle. ; Attinello, Paul Gregory. 1997. \"The Interpretation of Chaos: A Critical Analysis of Meaning in European Avant-garde Vocal Music, 1958–68\". Ph.D. diss. Los Angeles: University of California Los Angeles. ; Gilmore, Bob. 2009. \"Claude Vivier and Karlheinz Stockhausen: Moments from a Double Portrait\". Circuit: musiques contemporaines 19, no. 2:35–49. ; Gordon, Michael Zev. 1995. \"Deutsche Romantik: Various Artists, South Bank, 29 September–24 November\". The Musical Times 136, no. 1823 (January): 48–49. ; Heyworth, Peter. 1973. \"Momentous Momente\". The New York Times (4 February): Section 2, pp. 15 & 33. ; Katzenberger, Günter. 1979. \"Zu Karlheinz Stockhausens Momente, Version 1965: analytische Informationen und didaktische Ansatzmöglichkeiten.\" Musik ",
"score": "1.4542882"
},
{
"id": "13711002",
"title": "Eduardo Gatti",
"text": " Eduardo Gatti Benoit (born 1949) is a Chilean singer-songwriter in the tradition of Nueva Canción and Nueva Trova. His best-known song is \"Los Momentos\" (The Moments), originally recorded in 1970 by Gatti when he was a member of the band Los Blops.",
"score": "1.4527037"
},
{
"id": "25741136",
"title": "Moment exotique",
"text": " The piece is thought to have been composed in either 1920 or 1921, before Horowitz left Russia. He originally composed the piece for his brother's 18th birthday party. Horowitz first recorded the piece on a piano roll for Welte-Mignon in 1926 and later went on to record it for RCA Records in 1930, this time as an audio recording.",
"score": "1.4511602"
},
{
"id": "5747044",
"title": "Ether Dome",
"text": " The Great Moment is a 1944 biographical film written and directed by Preston Sturges. It tells the story of Dr. William Thomas Green Morton, leading up to the dramatic demonstration in the Ether Dome.",
"score": "1.4447223"
},
{
"id": "30403181",
"title": "Momente",
"text": " the remaining M moments and some of the D moments, was composed for a performance planned for the 1963 Settimane Internazionali di Nuova Musica di Palermo, but the musicians rebelled at the unconventional nature of the music and the performance did not take place. Early in 1964 these moments were revised. Seven of the M moments and the i moment were added for a tour in October 1965, but the D moments were withheld for practical performance reasons. Some of the D moments were subsequently reworked, and the long i(k) moment composed for a completely new version, completed in 1969 but only premiered on 8 December 1972 in Bonn. This version was recorded for commercial release and taken on a tour of Europe.",
"score": "1.4413338"
}
] | [
"The Moment's Energy\n The Moment's Energy is an album by British saxophonist and improvisor Evan Parker's Electro-Acoustic Ensemble recorded at the Lawrence Batley Theatre in 2007 and released on the ECM label.",
"The Moment's Energy\nEvan Parker - soprano saxophone ; Peter Evans - trumpet, piccolo trumpet ; Ko Ishikawa - shō ; Ned Rothenberg - clarinet, bass clarinet, shakuhachi ; Philipp Wachsmann - violin, live electronics ; Agustí Fernandez - piano, prepared piano ; Barry Guy - double bass ; Paul Lytton - percussion, live electronics ; Lawrence Casserley - signal processing instrument ; Joel Ryan - sample and signal processing ; Walter Prati - computer processing ; Richard Barrett - live electronics ; Paul Obermayer - live electronics ; Marco Vecchi - sound projection ",
"The Moment's Energy\n1) \"The Moment's Energy I\" - 9:29 ; 2) \"The Moment's Energy II\" - 9:45 ; 3) \"The Moment's Energy III\" - 9:34 ; 4) \"The Moment's Energy IV\" - 4:19 ; 5) \"The Moment's Energy V\" - 9:23 ; 6) \"The Moment's Energy VI\" - 8:11 ; 7) \"The Moment's Energy VII\" - 11:14 ; 8) \"Incandescent Clouds\" - 5:05 All compositions by Evan Parker",
"Momente\n Momente (Moments) is a work by the German composer Karlheinz Stockhausen, written between 1962 and 1969, scored for solo soprano, four mixed choirs, and thirteen instrumentalists (four trumpets, four trombones, three percussionists, and two electric keyboards). A \"cantata with radiophonic and theatrical overtones\", it is described by the composer as \"practically an opera of Mother Earth surrounded by her chicks\". It was Stockhausen's first piece composed on principles of modular transposability, and his first musical form to be determined from categories of sensation or perception rather than by numerical units of musical terminology, which marks a significant change in the composer's musical approach from the abstract forms of the 1950s.",
"The Moment's Energy\n The Allmusic review by Thom Jurek awarded the album 4 stars stating \"this work is more modern composition than merely free or experimental jazz. This is a gorgeous work when taken as a whole, a musical journey through multi-dimensional landscapes and sonic shadows that seems to stretch time itself.\" On All About Jazz John Kelman called it \"an album where there's both greater density and delineation, an even broader dynamic scope and, quite simply, one of the most ambitious mixtures of form and freedom, and extant and new-found textures\" and \"A composition that could never be performed the same way twice, its careful construction of sound in real-time and post-production makes for ",
"The Moment (Kenny G composition)\n CD-Maxi BMG",
"Nicolae Kirculescu\n Nicolae Kirculescu (December 28, 1903, Corabia – December 31, 1985, Recas) was a Romanian composer. He wrote music particularly for the stage and screen. One of his well-known works is Musical Moment for piano and orchestra, the musical theme of a Romanian television science program named Teleenciclopedia. His compositions also include operetta, musical comedy/canzonetta and instrumental songs.",
"Robert Simpson (composer)\nEnergy (1971), Test Piece, Brass Band World Championships ; Volcano (1979), Test Piece, National Brass Band Championships of Britain ; The Four Temperaments, Suite for Brass Band (1983). The composer also re-orchestrated this work for orchestral brass. ; Introduction and Allegro on a Bass of Max Reger (1987) ; Vortex (1989) ",
"Moment (mathematics)\n Since",
"Richard Barrett (composer)\n codex I ; FURT: sense (Psi 2009) ; Adrift—3 compositions 2007/8 (Psi 2009). RB with Sarah Nicolls, ELISION, Champ d'Action—contains adrift, codex VII and codex IX ; Richard Barrett and Han-earl Park (guitar): numbers (Creative Sources 2012) ; DARK MATTER (NMC 2012). ELISION and Cikada ensembles conducted by Christian Eggen ; Richard Barrett, Jon Rose (violin/tenor violin), Meinrad Kneer (contrabass): colophony (Creative Sources 2013) ; SKEIN – RB with Frank Gratkowski, Achim Kaufmann, Wilbert de Joode, Okkyung Lee and Tony Buck (Leo Records 2014) ; fORCH: \"spukhafte Fernwirkung\" (Treader 2015) ; \"Music for cello and electronics\" (double CD, Aeon 2016). Arne Deforce (cello) and Yutaka Oya (piano) The Eleventh Hour (ECM 2004) ; The Moment's Energy (ECM 2007) ; SET (Psi 2009) ; hasselt (Psi 2012) With Evan Parker's Electro-Acoustic Ensemble",
"The Moment (Kenny G composition)\n \"The Moment\" is an instrumental by American Smooth jazz saxophonist Kenny G, from his seventh studio album The Moment which was released in 1996.",
"Steve Gadd discography\nThe Moment (Videoarts Music, 1992) ",
"Momente\n and for three months both Stockhausen and Bauermeister \"worked like crazy\" on their respective projects, retreating to a small, easily heated room, furnished with a piano and two tables. Shortly before Doris was to have come to Siculiana a telegram arrived, saying she had been taken seriously ill and required surgery. Stockhausen decided to return to Germany to support her, and they spent a quiet time in the Black Forest, where Doris went to recuperate. A first version of Momente, consisting of all the K moments, i(m), i(d), M(m) and MK(d), was premiered on 21 May 1962 at the Westdeutscher Rundfunk in Cologne. Moment i had already been composed, but was not included in the Cologne performance. A second group of moments, including ",
"The Moment (Kenny G composition)\n \"The Moment\" was Kenny G's first hit in Billboard Hot 100 in three years. The song reached number 63. It also reached the Hot R&B Singles and Adult Contemporary charts at numbers 62 and 16, respectively.",
"The Musical Moment\n The Musical Moment, signed by the Romanian composer Nicolae Kirculescu, is a classical musical work for piano and orchestra, that was published in 1950. The premiere of the piece took place in 1965 and it is related to the adaption of the ending part of it to the opening credits of a well-known Romanian documentary show called „Teleenciclopedia” (broadcast by TVR), the show being broadcast for the first time in this same year. The 1965 recording remains a symbol for the show, this particular interpretation being made by Romanian Radio Orchestra, conducted by Iosif Conta, and the piano soloist, student at that time, Dan Grigore. The composition was very often mistakenly labeled, due to original labeling done on the Electrorecord vinyl disc Așa începe dragostea (translating: That's how the loves starts) (containing many well-known pieces of Kirculescu). By this, the Musical moment may be found under the wrong name Patru studii de concert (in English: Four concerto studies), another work of the composer, this time for solo piano only. Other times, the tune is nicknamed „Plutașul de pe Bistrița” („The rafter of Bistrita”).",
"Momente\nPedro Amaral (composer). 2003. \"Momente ou le paradigme de la forme\". PhD thesis at IRCAM, Formation doctorale en Musique et Musicologie du XXe siècle. ; Attinello, Paul Gregory. 1997. \"The Interpretation of Chaos: A Critical Analysis of Meaning in European Avant-garde Vocal Music, 1958–68\". Ph.D. diss. Los Angeles: University of California Los Angeles. ; Gilmore, Bob. 2009. \"Claude Vivier and Karlheinz Stockhausen: Moments from a Double Portrait\". Circuit: musiques contemporaines 19, no. 2:35–49. ; Gordon, Michael Zev. 1995. \"Deutsche Romantik: Various Artists, South Bank, 29 September–24 November\". The Musical Times 136, no. 1823 (January): 48–49. ; Heyworth, Peter. 1973. \"Momentous Momente\". The New York Times (4 February): Section 2, pp. 15 & 33. ; Katzenberger, Günter. 1979. \"Zu Karlheinz Stockhausens Momente, Version 1965: analytische Informationen und didaktische Ansatzmöglichkeiten.\" Musik ",
"Eduardo Gatti\n Eduardo Gatti Benoit (born 1949) is a Chilean singer-songwriter in the tradition of Nueva Canción and Nueva Trova. His best-known song is \"Los Momentos\" (The Moments), originally recorded in 1970 by Gatti when he was a member of the band Los Blops.",
"Moment exotique\n The piece is thought to have been composed in either 1920 or 1921, before Horowitz left Russia. He originally composed the piece for his brother's 18th birthday party. Horowitz first recorded the piece on a piano roll for Welte-Mignon in 1926 and later went on to record it for RCA Records in 1930, this time as an audio recording.",
"Ether Dome\n The Great Moment is a 1944 biographical film written and directed by Preston Sturges. It tells the story of Dr. William Thomas Green Morton, leading up to the dramatic demonstration in the Ether Dome.",
"Momente\n the remaining M moments and some of the D moments, was composed for a performance planned for the 1963 Settimane Internazionali di Nuova Musica di Palermo, but the musicians rebelled at the unconventional nature of the music and the performance did not take place. Early in 1964 these moments were revised. Seven of the M moments and the i moment were added for a tour in October 1965, but the D moments were withheld for practical performance reasons. Some of the D moments were subsequently reworked, and the long i(k) moment composed for a completely new version, completed in 1969 but only premiered on 8 December 1972 in Bonn. This version was recorded for commercial release and taken on a tour of Europe."
] |
Who was the composer of Pole? | [
"Karlheinz Stockhausen",
"Karl-Heinz Stockhausen",
"Karlheinz Stockhausen"
] | composer | Pole (Stockhausen) | 5,467,575 | 94 | [
{
"id": "28254470",
"title": "Pole (Stockhausen)",
"text": " Pole was composed in Bali in February 1970, at that time under the working title of Duo. Between 14 March and 14 September 1970, Pole was played and sung over a thousand times at Expo '70 in Osaka, Japan, in daily performances by twenty different musicians including the composer. The score is dedicated to Harald Bojé and Péter Eötvös, who played in the majority of the early performances, and who also made a number of radio recordings and two commercially released recordings of the piece.",
"score": "1.7943823"
},
{
"id": "28254468",
"title": "Pole (Stockhausen)",
"text": " Pole (Poles), for two performers with shortwave radio receivers and a sound projectionist, is a composition by Karlheinz Stockhausen, written in 1970. It is Number 30 in the catalogue of the composer's works.",
"score": "1.6605164"
},
{
"id": "4738058",
"title": "List of compositions by Howard Skempton",
"text": "May Pole (open score) (1971) ; Chorales (1980) ; Chorales 2 (1987) ; Lento (1990) ; The Light Fantastic, for chamber orchestra (1991) ; Concerto for Hurdy-Gurdy and Percussion (1994) ; Ballade, for saxophone quartet and string orchestra (1997) ; Concerto for Oboe, Accordion and Strings (1997) ; Concertante, for solo violin and strings (1998) ; Prelude (1999) ; Sarabande (2002) ; Only the Sound Remains for viola and chamber ensemble (2010) ; Piano Concerto ",
"score": "1.6339897"
},
{
"id": "31276581",
"title": "Howard Skempton",
"text": " propagating in the late 1960s. The score of May Pole (1971), a piece for orchestra, consists of a chance-determined sequence of chords. Each performer chooses a note from a chord, and chooses the moment when to play that note. The later the choice, the softer the dynamics. Skempton later called such pieces \"landscapes\" that \"simply project the material as sound, without momentum.\" Other early works include two pieces for tape, a medium Skempton rarely used later: Indian Summer (1969) and Drum No. 3 (1971). The early 1970s saw a slow shift from static, abstract pieces to pieces with more clearly defined rhythmic and ",
"score": "1.5724168"
},
{
"id": "32454566",
"title": "Pole (musician)",
"text": " Pole is the artistic name of Stefan Betke (born 18 February 1967), a German electronic music artist commonly associated with the glitch genre as well as dubtronica.",
"score": "1.5591594"
},
{
"id": "32454570",
"title": "Pole (musician)",
"text": "Waldgeschichten (2011) ; Waldgeschichten 2 (2011) ; Waldgeschichten 3 (2012) ",
"score": "1.5163449"
},
{
"id": "15599344",
"title": "Basil Poledouris",
"text": " Basil Konstantine Poledouris (August 21, 1945 – November 8, 2006) was an American composer, conductor, and orchestrator of film and television scores, best known for his long-running collaborations with directors John Milius and Paul Verhoeven. Among his works are scores for the films Conan the Barbarian (1982), Red Dawn (1984), Iron Eagle (1986), RoboCop (1987), The Hunt for Red October (1990), Free Willy (1993), Starship Troopers (1997) and Les Miserables (1998). Poledouris won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Music Composition for a Limited Series, Movie, or Special for his work on the four-part miniseries Lonesome Dove in 1989, and was a four-time recipient of the BMI Film Music Award.",
"score": "1.5106467"
},
{
"id": "32454569",
"title": "Pole (musician)",
"text": "1 (1998) ; 2 (1999) ; 3 (2000) ; R (2001) ; Pole (2003) ; Steingarten (2007) ; Wald (2015) ; Fading (2020) ",
"score": "1.4706423"
},
{
"id": "4026073",
"title": "David Pohle",
"text": " David Pohle (1624 – 20 December 1695) was a German composer of the Baroque era. His surname is also spelled Pohl, Pohlen, Pole, Pol or Bohle.",
"score": "1.4701564"
},
{
"id": "30801400",
"title": "Victoria Poleva",
"text": " (Swiss, Graubunden). In 2010, among such composers as Giya Kancheli, Valentin Silvestrov, Leonid Desyatnikov, Aleksander Raskatov, Alexander Wustin, Victor Kissine and Georgs Pelecis, Victoria Polevá has taken part in Gidon Kremer's international project «The Art of Instrumentation», devoted to Johann Sebastian Bach and Glenn Gould. In 2011 Victoria Polevá was invited by Gidon Kremer as composer-in-residence at the XXX Lockenhaus Chamber Music Festival (Austria). In 2012 a butoh dancer Tadashi Endo did premiere of her ballet \"Gagaku\". In 2013 Kronos Quartet did premiere of V.Polevá \"Walking on Waters\". In 2013 Victoria Polevá was composer-in-residence at Festival of Contemporary Music Darwin Vargas ",
"score": "1.4607956"
},
{
"id": "30801395",
"title": "Victoria Poleva",
"text": " Victoria Vita Polevá (also spelled: Poleváya; Вікторія Польова; Виктория Полевая; born September 11, 1962) is a Ukrainian composer.",
"score": "1.4544089"
},
{
"id": "2781546",
"title": "The Bohemian G-yurl and the Unapproachable Pole",
"text": " The Bohemian G-yurl and the Unapproachable Pole is a musical burlesque in two acts, with a score by Meyer Lutz to a libretto by Henry James Byron, which played under the management of John Hollingshead at the Gaiety Theatre in London in 1877. It was a parody of the popular opera The Bohemian Girl composed by Michael William Balfe with a libretto by Alfred Bunn.",
"score": "1.4476302"
},
{
"id": "16169717",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " • Francis Pilkington (c. 1565 – 1638) • Daniel Pinkham (1923–2006) • Maria Teresa Agnesi Pinottini (1720–1795) • George Pinto (1785–1806) • Matthias Pintscher (born 1971) • Nicola Piovani (born 1946) • Matthaeus Pipelare (c. 1450 – c. 1515) • Bernardo Pisano (1490–1548) • Johann Georg Pisendel (1687–1755) • Francesco Antonio Pistocchi (1659–1726) • Walter Piston (1894–1976) • Thomas Pitfield (1903–1999) • Giuseppe Ottavio Pitoni (1657–1743) • Johann Peter Pixis (1788–1874) • Ildebrando Pizzetti (1880–1968) • Joan Baptista Pla (c. 1720 – 1773) • Robert Planquette (1848–1903) • Peter Planyavsky (born 1947) • Pietro Platania (1828–1907) • Giovanni Benedetto Platti (1697–1763) • Ignaz Pleyel ",
"score": "1.4446557"
},
{
"id": "29225481",
"title": "Karel Bendl",
"text": " Bendl was born and died in Prague. He studied at the organ school, where he met and befriended Antonín Dvořák one year before graduating with honors in 1858. By then he had already composed a number of small choral works. In 1861 his Poletuje holubice won a prize and at once became a favorite with the local choral societies. In 1864, Bendl went to Brussels, where for a short time he held the post of second conductor of the opera. After visiting Amsterdam and Paris. In Paris, he became influenced by the stage works of Charles Gounod and Ambroise Thomas and especially by Giacomo Meyerbeer. By 1865, he was back in Prague where he was appointed conductor of the choral society known as , and he held the post ",
"score": "1.4435732"
},
{
"id": "11508134",
"title": "1 (Pole album)",
"text": " 1 is the debut studio album by German electronic music producer Pole. It was released by Kiff SM and Matador Records in 1998.",
"score": "1.4395959"
},
{
"id": "30801397",
"title": "Victoria Poleva",
"text": " Plish, Alena Solovey, Boris Alvarado. Born on September 11, 1962 in Kiev, Ukraine, daughter of composer Valery Polevoy (1927–1986). Graduate of Kiev Conservatory (class of composition with Prof. Ivan Karabyts) 1989. Post-graduate studies completed there in 1995 under Prof. Levko Kolodub. 1990-1998 - lecturer in the faculty of composition, 2000-2005 – at the Music Information Technologies Department of the Kiev Conservatory. Since 2005 she has been a freelance composer. 2014, 2015 - member of the jury of the International Composers Competition \"Sacrarium\" (Italy) A genre range of her compositions includes symphonic, choral, chamber music. Early works of Victoria Polevá were related to ",
"score": "1.4377608"
},
{
"id": "5054056",
"title": "Valery Polekh",
"text": " Valery Vladimirovich Polekh (July 5, 1918 – September 6, 2006) was a Soviet horn player. The horn concerto Op.91 by Reinhold Glière was dedicated to him.",
"score": "1.4290543"
},
{
"id": "16485894",
"title": "Sinfonia antartica",
"text": "Beckerman, Michael (Spring 2000). \"The Composer as Pole Seeker: Reading Vaughan Williams's Sinfonia antartica.\" Current Musicology, no. 69, pp. 42-67. ; Grimley, Daniel M. (Spring-Summer 2008). \"Music, Ice, and the 'Geometry of Fear': The Landscapes of Vaughan Williams's 'Sinfonia Antartica.'\" The Musical Quarterly, vol. 91, nos. 1-2, pp. 116-150. ; Mason, Colin. (March 1953). \"Vaughan Williams's 'Sinfonia Antartica.'\" The Musical Times, vol. 94, no. 1321, p. 128. ",
"score": "1.4280022"
},
{
"id": "28254469",
"title": "Pole (Stockhausen)",
"text": " Pole is the last in a series of works dating from the late 1960s which Stockhausen designated as \"process\" compositions. These works in effect separate the \"form\" from the \"content\" by presenting the performers with a series of transformation signs which are to be applied to material that may vary considerably from one performance to the next. In Pole and three companion works (Kurzwellen for six performers, Spiral for a soloist, and Expo for three), this material is to be drawn spontaneously during the performance from shortwave radio broadcasts. The processes, indicated primarily by plus, minus, and equal signs, constitute the composition and, despite the unpredictability of the materials, these processes can be heard from one performance to another as being \"the same\".",
"score": "1.424376"
},
{
"id": "16169611",
"title": "List of composers by name",
"text": " (1568–1643) • Loyset Compère (c. 1445 – 1518) • Graziella Concas (born 1970) • Edward T. Cone (1917–2004) • Giovanni Battista Conforti (fl. 1550–1570) • Zez Confrey (1895–1971) • Justin Connolly (born 1933) • August Conradi (1821–1873) • Marius Constant (1925–2004) • Paul Constantinescu (1909–1963) • Sylvia Constantinidis (born 1962) • David Conte (born 1955) • Francesco Bartolomeo Conti (1681–1732) • Salvador Contreras (1910–1982) • Charles Crozat Converse (1832–1918) • Frederick Converse (1871–1940) • Girolamo Conversi (fl. 1572–1575) • Will Marion Cook (1869–1944) • Arnold Cooke (1906–2005) • Benjamin Cooke (1734–1793) • Thomas Simpson Cooke (1782–1848) • David Cope (born 1941) • Aaron ",
"score": "1.4166145"
}
] | [
"Pole (Stockhausen)\n Pole was composed in Bali in February 1970, at that time under the working title of Duo. Between 14 March and 14 September 1970, Pole was played and sung over a thousand times at Expo '70 in Osaka, Japan, in daily performances by twenty different musicians including the composer. The score is dedicated to Harald Bojé and Péter Eötvös, who played in the majority of the early performances, and who also made a number of radio recordings and two commercially released recordings of the piece.",
"Pole (Stockhausen)\n Pole (Poles), for two performers with shortwave radio receivers and a sound projectionist, is a composition by Karlheinz Stockhausen, written in 1970. It is Number 30 in the catalogue of the composer's works.",
"List of compositions by Howard Skempton\nMay Pole (open score) (1971) ; Chorales (1980) ; Chorales 2 (1987) ; Lento (1990) ; The Light Fantastic, for chamber orchestra (1991) ; Concerto for Hurdy-Gurdy and Percussion (1994) ; Ballade, for saxophone quartet and string orchestra (1997) ; Concerto for Oboe, Accordion and Strings (1997) ; Concertante, for solo violin and strings (1998) ; Prelude (1999) ; Sarabande (2002) ; Only the Sound Remains for viola and chamber ensemble (2010) ; Piano Concerto ",
"Howard Skempton\n propagating in the late 1960s. The score of May Pole (1971), a piece for orchestra, consists of a chance-determined sequence of chords. Each performer chooses a note from a chord, and chooses the moment when to play that note. The later the choice, the softer the dynamics. Skempton later called such pieces \"landscapes\" that \"simply project the material as sound, without momentum.\" Other early works include two pieces for tape, a medium Skempton rarely used later: Indian Summer (1969) and Drum No. 3 (1971). The early 1970s saw a slow shift from static, abstract pieces to pieces with more clearly defined rhythmic and ",
"Pole (musician)\n Pole is the artistic name of Stefan Betke (born 18 February 1967), a German electronic music artist commonly associated with the glitch genre as well as dubtronica.",
"Pole (musician)\nWaldgeschichten (2011) ; Waldgeschichten 2 (2011) ; Waldgeschichten 3 (2012) ",
"Basil Poledouris\n Basil Konstantine Poledouris (August 21, 1945 – November 8, 2006) was an American composer, conductor, and orchestrator of film and television scores, best known for his long-running collaborations with directors John Milius and Paul Verhoeven. Among his works are scores for the films Conan the Barbarian (1982), Red Dawn (1984), Iron Eagle (1986), RoboCop (1987), The Hunt for Red October (1990), Free Willy (1993), Starship Troopers (1997) and Les Miserables (1998). Poledouris won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Music Composition for a Limited Series, Movie, or Special for his work on the four-part miniseries Lonesome Dove in 1989, and was a four-time recipient of the BMI Film Music Award.",
"Pole (musician)\n1 (1998) ; 2 (1999) ; 3 (2000) ; R (2001) ; Pole (2003) ; Steingarten (2007) ; Wald (2015) ; Fading (2020) ",
"David Pohle\n David Pohle (1624 – 20 December 1695) was a German composer of the Baroque era. His surname is also spelled Pohl, Pohlen, Pole, Pol or Bohle.",
"Victoria Poleva\n (Swiss, Graubunden). In 2010, among such composers as Giya Kancheli, Valentin Silvestrov, Leonid Desyatnikov, Aleksander Raskatov, Alexander Wustin, Victor Kissine and Georgs Pelecis, Victoria Polevá has taken part in Gidon Kremer's international project «The Art of Instrumentation», devoted to Johann Sebastian Bach and Glenn Gould. In 2011 Victoria Polevá was invited by Gidon Kremer as composer-in-residence at the XXX Lockenhaus Chamber Music Festival (Austria). In 2012 a butoh dancer Tadashi Endo did premiere of her ballet \"Gagaku\". In 2013 Kronos Quartet did premiere of V.Polevá \"Walking on Waters\". In 2013 Victoria Polevá was composer-in-residence at Festival of Contemporary Music Darwin Vargas ",
"Victoria Poleva\n Victoria Vita Polevá (also spelled: Poleváya; Вікторія Польова; Виктория Полевая; born September 11, 1962) is a Ukrainian composer.",
"The Bohemian G-yurl and the Unapproachable Pole\n The Bohemian G-yurl and the Unapproachable Pole is a musical burlesque in two acts, with a score by Meyer Lutz to a libretto by Henry James Byron, which played under the management of John Hollingshead at the Gaiety Theatre in London in 1877. It was a parody of the popular opera The Bohemian Girl composed by Michael William Balfe with a libretto by Alfred Bunn.",
"List of composers by name\n • Francis Pilkington (c. 1565 – 1638) • Daniel Pinkham (1923–2006) • Maria Teresa Agnesi Pinottini (1720–1795) • George Pinto (1785–1806) • Matthias Pintscher (born 1971) • Nicola Piovani (born 1946) • Matthaeus Pipelare (c. 1450 – c. 1515) • Bernardo Pisano (1490–1548) • Johann Georg Pisendel (1687–1755) • Francesco Antonio Pistocchi (1659–1726) • Walter Piston (1894–1976) • Thomas Pitfield (1903–1999) • Giuseppe Ottavio Pitoni (1657–1743) • Johann Peter Pixis (1788–1874) • Ildebrando Pizzetti (1880–1968) • Joan Baptista Pla (c. 1720 – 1773) • Robert Planquette (1848–1903) • Peter Planyavsky (born 1947) • Pietro Platania (1828–1907) • Giovanni Benedetto Platti (1697–1763) • Ignaz Pleyel ",
"Karel Bendl\n Bendl was born and died in Prague. He studied at the organ school, where he met and befriended Antonín Dvořák one year before graduating with honors in 1858. By then he had already composed a number of small choral works. In 1861 his Poletuje holubice won a prize and at once became a favorite with the local choral societies. In 1864, Bendl went to Brussels, where for a short time he held the post of second conductor of the opera. After visiting Amsterdam and Paris. In Paris, he became influenced by the stage works of Charles Gounod and Ambroise Thomas and especially by Giacomo Meyerbeer. By 1865, he was back in Prague where he was appointed conductor of the choral society known as , and he held the post ",
"1 (Pole album)\n 1 is the debut studio album by German electronic music producer Pole. It was released by Kiff SM and Matador Records in 1998.",
"Victoria Poleva\n Plish, Alena Solovey, Boris Alvarado. Born on September 11, 1962 in Kiev, Ukraine, daughter of composer Valery Polevoy (1927–1986). Graduate of Kiev Conservatory (class of composition with Prof. Ivan Karabyts) 1989. Post-graduate studies completed there in 1995 under Prof. Levko Kolodub. 1990-1998 - lecturer in the faculty of composition, 2000-2005 – at the Music Information Technologies Department of the Kiev Conservatory. Since 2005 she has been a freelance composer. 2014, 2015 - member of the jury of the International Composers Competition \"Sacrarium\" (Italy) A genre range of her compositions includes symphonic, choral, chamber music. Early works of Victoria Polevá were related to ",
"Valery Polekh\n Valery Vladimirovich Polekh (July 5, 1918 – September 6, 2006) was a Soviet horn player. The horn concerto Op.91 by Reinhold Glière was dedicated to him.",
"Sinfonia antartica\nBeckerman, Michael (Spring 2000). \"The Composer as Pole Seeker: Reading Vaughan Williams's Sinfonia antartica.\" Current Musicology, no. 69, pp. 42-67. ; Grimley, Daniel M. (Spring-Summer 2008). \"Music, Ice, and the 'Geometry of Fear': The Landscapes of Vaughan Williams's 'Sinfonia Antartica.'\" The Musical Quarterly, vol. 91, nos. 1-2, pp. 116-150. ; Mason, Colin. (March 1953). \"Vaughan Williams's 'Sinfonia Antartica.'\" The Musical Times, vol. 94, no. 1321, p. 128. ",
"Pole (Stockhausen)\n Pole is the last in a series of works dating from the late 1960s which Stockhausen designated as \"process\" compositions. These works in effect separate the \"form\" from the \"content\" by presenting the performers with a series of transformation signs which are to be applied to material that may vary considerably from one performance to the next. In Pole and three companion works (Kurzwellen for six performers, Spiral for a soloist, and Expo for three), this material is to be drawn spontaneously during the performance from shortwave radio broadcasts. The processes, indicated primarily by plus, minus, and equal signs, constitute the composition and, despite the unpredictability of the materials, these processes can be heard from one performance to another as being \"the same\".",
"List of composers by name\n (1568–1643) • Loyset Compère (c. 1445 – 1518) • Graziella Concas (born 1970) • Edward T. Cone (1917–2004) • Giovanni Battista Conforti (fl. 1550–1570) • Zez Confrey (1895–1971) • Justin Connolly (born 1933) • August Conradi (1821–1873) • Marius Constant (1925–2004) • Paul Constantinescu (1909–1963) • Sylvia Constantinidis (born 1962) • David Conte (born 1955) • Francesco Bartolomeo Conti (1681–1732) • Salvador Contreras (1910–1982) • Charles Crozat Converse (1832–1918) • Frederick Converse (1871–1940) • Girolamo Conversi (fl. 1572–1575) • Will Marion Cook (1869–1944) • Arnold Cooke (1906–2005) • Benjamin Cooke (1734–1793) • Thomas Simpson Cooke (1782–1848) • David Cope (born 1941) • Aaron "
] |
Who was the composer of Miss You? | [
"Charles Tobias",
"Harry Tobias"
] | composer | Miss You (1929 song) | 1,108,230 | 73 | [
{
"id": "26256243",
"title": "Miss You (1929 song)",
"text": " \"Miss You\" is a 1929 song by the Tobias brothers: Charles Tobias, Harry Tobias and Henry Tobias. It was the three brothers' first published song, and their first hit, but one of the few songs where all three collaborated. The song was revived for the 1942 film Strictly in the Groove when it was sung by The Dinning Sisters and played by Ozzie Nelson and Orchestra.",
"score": "1.6368158"
},
{
"id": "28933769",
"title": "Miss You (Rolling Stones song)",
"text": " \"Miss You\" is a song by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, released on Rolling Stones Records in May 1978. It was released as the first single one month in advance of their album Some Girls. \"Miss You\" was written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. It peaked at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and number three on the UK Singles Chart. An extended version, called the \"Special Disco Version\", was released as the band's first dance remix on a 12-inch single.",
"score": "1.5097526"
},
{
"id": "27141944",
"title": "Robert Uhlmann (composer)",
"text": " Miss You\" ; 2008 – Arash – \"Na Morya\" (feat. Anna Semenovich) ; 2009 – Basshunter – \"Every Morning\" ; 2009 – Aysel Teymurzadeh and Arash – \"Always\" ; 2009 – Arash – \"Kandi\" (feat. Lumidee) ; 2010 – Arash – \"Broken Angel\" (feat. Helena) ; 2010 – Arash – \"Dasa Bala\" (feat. Timbuktu & Yag) ; 2010 – Basshunter – \"Saturday\" ; 2010 – Die Antwoord – \"Enter the Ninja\" ; 2011 – Arash – \"Melody\" ; 2012 – Fabrizio Faniello – \"I Will Fight for You\" ; 2013 – Arash – \"She Makes Me Go\" (feat. Sean Paul) ; 2014 – Margaret – \"Wasted\" ",
"score": "1.4917681"
},
{
"id": "12238931",
"title": "Have You Met Miss Jones?",
"text": " \"Have You Met Miss Jones?\" is a popular song that was written for the musical comedy I'd Rather Be Right. The music was written by Richard Rodgers and the lyrics by Lorenz Hart. The song was published in 1937.",
"score": "1.4798077"
},
{
"id": "2597000",
"title": "Miss You (Gabrielle Aplin song)",
"text": " \"Miss You\" is a song by English singer-songwriter Gabrielle Aplin. It was released through Aplin's record label Never Fade Records on 9 November 2016, as the lead single from her fifth extended play of the same name. The song was written by Aplin and Liz Horsman, and produced by Mike Spencer and Horsman.",
"score": "1.4746549"
},
{
"id": "2597069",
"title": "Miss You (EP)",
"text": " Miss You is the fifth extended play (EP) by English singer-songwriter Gabrielle Aplin. It was released on 16 December 2016 through Aplin's record label, Never Fade Records. The EP was supported by the lead single and title track, \"Miss You\", released on 9 November 2016.",
"score": "1.4724047"
},
{
"id": "32883003",
"title": "Miss You (Yuna Ito song)",
"text": " \"Miss You\" is the 11th single of Japanese artist Yuna Ito slated for a release on September 3, 2008. Miss You is currently being used as the Ito En Vitamin Fruit CM song. Miss You was the inspiring song for the cell phone novel \"Tenshi no Koi\" (天使の恋).",
"score": "1.4593105"
},
{
"id": "4824503",
"title": "Miss You (Westlife song)",
"text": " \"Miss You\" is a popular song written by Jake Schulze and Rami Yacoub. It was originally recorded as a ballad, by the Irish boy band Westlife, but was never released as a single. In 2008, it was remade as a dance track by Swedish DJ and producer Basshunter becoming a hit single for him as \"I Miss You\" in 2008, notably in UK, Germany and Sweden.",
"score": "1.4581176"
},
{
"id": "15134226",
"title": "Miss 1917",
"text": " New York City by the show's cast introduced Gershwin's \"There's More to a Kiss Than the Sound\" and \"You-oo, Just You\", both with lyrics by Irving Caesar. \"Gershwin had begun work on Broadway as a rehearsal pianist for the Jerome Kern and Victor Herbert musical Miss 1917. Within months, his talent as a composer was noticed by everyone in the show and he was quickly put under contract by Harms Music. His involvement with Miss 1917 brought him to the attention of music producer Harry Askins, who in turn mentioned him to Max Dreyfus, \"one of the giants of music publishing\".",
"score": "1.4565794"
},
{
"id": "32064893",
"title": "Miss Ann (album)",
"text": " Miss Ann is an album by American keyboardist and composer Wayne Horvitz' band Pigpen recorded in 1993 and released on the independent Tim/Kerr label on October 17, 1995.",
"score": "1.4507973"
},
{
"id": "25880039",
"title": "Ivan Bootham",
"text": " Katherine Mansfield. His most recent major compositions were the mass Missa Creator Spiritus (2006) and the monodrama Bessie Blue (2009). Among his compositions are: Three Musics (1965) for French horn, strings and harp; Sonata Movement (1969) for piano; Winter Garden (1988) for wind quintet; A String of Clichés (1996) for French horn and piano; Zuweilen (2000), six short pieces for piano; Three Lejjoon Poems (2000), a short song cycle to poems by Niel Wright; Little Blue Peep (2002) for harmonica and piano; A Wild Garden of Doggerel (2003), settings of nonsense poems by the composer for unaccompanied choir; Play On A Debussy Motif (2004) for piano; Spinning Jenny (2005) for piano duet, and a song cycle For One Who Went Away (2004), a setting of seven poems by Peter Jacobson.",
"score": "1.4501863"
},
{
"id": "28933770",
"title": "Miss You (Rolling Stones song)",
"text": " \"Miss You\" was written by Mick Jagger jamming with keyboardist Billy Preston during rehearsals for the March 1977 El Mocambo club gigs, recordings from which appeared on side three of double live album Love You Live (1977). Keith Richards is credited as co-writer as was the case for all Rolling Stones originals written by either partner or in tandem. Jagger and Ronnie Wood insist that \"Miss You\" wasn't conceived as a disco song, while Richards said, \"'Miss You' was a damn good disco record; it was calculated to be one.\" In any case, what was going on in discotheques did make it to the recording. Charlie ",
"score": "1.4422119"
},
{
"id": "13431353",
"title": "Little Miss Marker (1934 film)",
"text": " Scott Ellis and David Thompson are working on a musical adaptation of the film to feature songs by Harold Arlen as its score.[1]",
"score": "1.4364009"
},
{
"id": "28933771",
"title": "Miss You (Rolling Stones song)",
"text": " said, \"A lot of those songs like 'Miss You' on 'Some Girls'... were heavily influenced by going to the discos. You can hear it in a lot of those four-to-the-floor and the Philadelphia-style drumming.\" For the bass part, Bill Wyman started from Preston's bass guitar on the song demo. Chris Kimsey, who engineered the recording, said Wyman went \"to quite a few clubs before he got that bass line sorted out\", which Kimsey said \"made that song\". Wyman recalled: \"When I did the riff for 'Miss You' – which made the song, and every band in the world copied it for the next year: Rod Stewart, ",
"score": "1.4357576"
},
{
"id": "28157455",
"title": "Misses (album)",
"text": " Misses is a 1996 compilation album by Canadian singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell. The selections, chosen by Mitchell herself, concentrate on her lesser known, more experimental work, including jazz influenced recordings from the late 1970s and electronic music from the 1980s. Mitchell also designed the album cover. The album is a companion to Hits, issued on the same day. Mitchell agreed to a request from her record company to release a greatest hits album on the condition that she also be allowed to release Misses. Cyndi Lauper nominated Misses as one of her all-time favourite albums, singling out \"A Case of You\". The best known song on Misses, \"A Case of You\" has been covered by Tori Amos, k.d. lang and Prince, among others.",
"score": "1.429353"
},
{
"id": "31650672",
"title": "Miss Lonelyhearts",
"text": " In 2006, composer Lowell Liebermann completed Miss Lonelyhearts, a two-act opera. The libretto was written by J. D. McClatchy. The opera, which received its premiere in 2006 at the Juilliard Opera Center, was commissioned by the Juilliard School for its centennial celebration. The opera was co-produced by the Thornton School of Music Opera Program at University of Southern California, and received its West Coast premiere at the school in 2007. Both premieres were directed by Thornton faculty member Ken Cazan.",
"score": "1.4254572"
},
{
"id": "28933775",
"title": "Miss You (Rolling Stones song)",
"text": " \"Miss You\" became the Rolling Stones' eighth and final number one hit in the United States on its initial release in 1978. It hit the top on 5 August 1978, ending the seven-week reign of \"Shadow Dancing\" by Andy Gibb. It also reached number three in the United Kingdom. The song was originally nearly nine minutes long, but was edited to nearly five minutes for the album version, and to three-and-a-half minutes for the radio single. In order to properly edit the radio single without audible bumps and glitches, a separate mix was constructed and then edited for continuity. The B-side of the single was another album ",
"score": "1.4238572"
},
{
"id": "27912098",
"title": "Harry Tobias",
"text": " in 1929, and writing Rudy Vallee's hit \"Miss You\" with both brothers the same year. In 1931, he had success with the song \"At Your Command\", an early success for Bing Crosby, and also co-wrote \"Sweet and Lovely\", a hit for Russ Columbo. He wrote or co-wrote the theme songs for many films in the 1930s and 1940s, including One Rainy Afternoon (1936), The Young in Heart (1938), Made for Each Other (1939), If It Wasn't for The Moon (1940) and It's a Date (1940). His many co-writers included Gene Autry. He died in St Louis, Missouri at age 99 on December 15, 1994. His interment was in Mount Sinai Memorial Park Cemetery.",
"score": "1.4198167"
},
{
"id": "12478180",
"title": "Lester Lee",
"text": " Lester Lee (November 7, 1903 - June 19, 1956) was an American composer. He was nominated for an Academy Award in the category Best Original Song for the film Miss Sadie Thompson. Lee died in June 1956 of a heart attack in Los Angeles, California, at the age of 52.",
"score": "1.4191763"
},
{
"id": "30179735",
"title": "Miss Mary (1972 film)",
"text": " The music was composed by R. K. Shekhar and the lyrics were written by Sreekumaran Thampi.",
"score": "1.417084"
}
] | [
"Miss You (1929 song)\n \"Miss You\" is a 1929 song by the Tobias brothers: Charles Tobias, Harry Tobias and Henry Tobias. It was the three brothers' first published song, and their first hit, but one of the few songs where all three collaborated. The song was revived for the 1942 film Strictly in the Groove when it was sung by The Dinning Sisters and played by Ozzie Nelson and Orchestra.",
"Miss You (Rolling Stones song)\n \"Miss You\" is a song by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, released on Rolling Stones Records in May 1978. It was released as the first single one month in advance of their album Some Girls. \"Miss You\" was written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. It peaked at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and number three on the UK Singles Chart. An extended version, called the \"Special Disco Version\", was released as the band's first dance remix on a 12-inch single.",
"Robert Uhlmann (composer)\n Miss You\" ; 2008 – Arash – \"Na Morya\" (feat. Anna Semenovich) ; 2009 – Basshunter – \"Every Morning\" ; 2009 – Aysel Teymurzadeh and Arash – \"Always\" ; 2009 – Arash – \"Kandi\" (feat. Lumidee) ; 2010 – Arash – \"Broken Angel\" (feat. Helena) ; 2010 – Arash – \"Dasa Bala\" (feat. Timbuktu & Yag) ; 2010 – Basshunter – \"Saturday\" ; 2010 – Die Antwoord – \"Enter the Ninja\" ; 2011 – Arash – \"Melody\" ; 2012 – Fabrizio Faniello – \"I Will Fight for You\" ; 2013 – Arash – \"She Makes Me Go\" (feat. Sean Paul) ; 2014 – Margaret – \"Wasted\" ",
"Have You Met Miss Jones?\n \"Have You Met Miss Jones?\" is a popular song that was written for the musical comedy I'd Rather Be Right. The music was written by Richard Rodgers and the lyrics by Lorenz Hart. The song was published in 1937.",
"Miss You (Gabrielle Aplin song)\n \"Miss You\" is a song by English singer-songwriter Gabrielle Aplin. It was released through Aplin's record label Never Fade Records on 9 November 2016, as the lead single from her fifth extended play of the same name. The song was written by Aplin and Liz Horsman, and produced by Mike Spencer and Horsman.",
"Miss You (EP)\n Miss You is the fifth extended play (EP) by English singer-songwriter Gabrielle Aplin. It was released on 16 December 2016 through Aplin's record label, Never Fade Records. The EP was supported by the lead single and title track, \"Miss You\", released on 9 November 2016.",
"Miss You (Yuna Ito song)\n \"Miss You\" is the 11th single of Japanese artist Yuna Ito slated for a release on September 3, 2008. Miss You is currently being used as the Ito En Vitamin Fruit CM song. Miss You was the inspiring song for the cell phone novel \"Tenshi no Koi\" (天使の恋).",
"Miss You (Westlife song)\n \"Miss You\" is a popular song written by Jake Schulze and Rami Yacoub. It was originally recorded as a ballad, by the Irish boy band Westlife, but was never released as a single. In 2008, it was remade as a dance track by Swedish DJ and producer Basshunter becoming a hit single for him as \"I Miss You\" in 2008, notably in UK, Germany and Sweden.",
"Miss 1917\n New York City by the show's cast introduced Gershwin's \"There's More to a Kiss Than the Sound\" and \"You-oo, Just You\", both with lyrics by Irving Caesar. \"Gershwin had begun work on Broadway as a rehearsal pianist for the Jerome Kern and Victor Herbert musical Miss 1917. Within months, his talent as a composer was noticed by everyone in the show and he was quickly put under contract by Harms Music. His involvement with Miss 1917 brought him to the attention of music producer Harry Askins, who in turn mentioned him to Max Dreyfus, \"one of the giants of music publishing\".",
"Miss Ann (album)\n Miss Ann is an album by American keyboardist and composer Wayne Horvitz' band Pigpen recorded in 1993 and released on the independent Tim/Kerr label on October 17, 1995.",
"Ivan Bootham\n Katherine Mansfield. His most recent major compositions were the mass Missa Creator Spiritus (2006) and the monodrama Bessie Blue (2009). Among his compositions are: Three Musics (1965) for French horn, strings and harp; Sonata Movement (1969) for piano; Winter Garden (1988) for wind quintet; A String of Clichés (1996) for French horn and piano; Zuweilen (2000), six short pieces for piano; Three Lejjoon Poems (2000), a short song cycle to poems by Niel Wright; Little Blue Peep (2002) for harmonica and piano; A Wild Garden of Doggerel (2003), settings of nonsense poems by the composer for unaccompanied choir; Play On A Debussy Motif (2004) for piano; Spinning Jenny (2005) for piano duet, and a song cycle For One Who Went Away (2004), a setting of seven poems by Peter Jacobson.",
"Miss You (Rolling Stones song)\n \"Miss You\" was written by Mick Jagger jamming with keyboardist Billy Preston during rehearsals for the March 1977 El Mocambo club gigs, recordings from which appeared on side three of double live album Love You Live (1977). Keith Richards is credited as co-writer as was the case for all Rolling Stones originals written by either partner or in tandem. Jagger and Ronnie Wood insist that \"Miss You\" wasn't conceived as a disco song, while Richards said, \"'Miss You' was a damn good disco record; it was calculated to be one.\" In any case, what was going on in discotheques did make it to the recording. Charlie ",
"Little Miss Marker (1934 film)\n Scott Ellis and David Thompson are working on a musical adaptation of the film to feature songs by Harold Arlen as its score.[1]",
"Miss You (Rolling Stones song)\n said, \"A lot of those songs like 'Miss You' on 'Some Girls'... were heavily influenced by going to the discos. You can hear it in a lot of those four-to-the-floor and the Philadelphia-style drumming.\" For the bass part, Bill Wyman started from Preston's bass guitar on the song demo. Chris Kimsey, who engineered the recording, said Wyman went \"to quite a few clubs before he got that bass line sorted out\", which Kimsey said \"made that song\". Wyman recalled: \"When I did the riff for 'Miss You' – which made the song, and every band in the world copied it for the next year: Rod Stewart, ",
"Misses (album)\n Misses is a 1996 compilation album by Canadian singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell. The selections, chosen by Mitchell herself, concentrate on her lesser known, more experimental work, including jazz influenced recordings from the late 1970s and electronic music from the 1980s. Mitchell also designed the album cover. The album is a companion to Hits, issued on the same day. Mitchell agreed to a request from her record company to release a greatest hits album on the condition that she also be allowed to release Misses. Cyndi Lauper nominated Misses as one of her all-time favourite albums, singling out \"A Case of You\". The best known song on Misses, \"A Case of You\" has been covered by Tori Amos, k.d. lang and Prince, among others.",
"Miss Lonelyhearts\n In 2006, composer Lowell Liebermann completed Miss Lonelyhearts, a two-act opera. The libretto was written by J. D. McClatchy. The opera, which received its premiere in 2006 at the Juilliard Opera Center, was commissioned by the Juilliard School for its centennial celebration. The opera was co-produced by the Thornton School of Music Opera Program at University of Southern California, and received its West Coast premiere at the school in 2007. Both premieres were directed by Thornton faculty member Ken Cazan.",
"Miss You (Rolling Stones song)\n \"Miss You\" became the Rolling Stones' eighth and final number one hit in the United States on its initial release in 1978. It hit the top on 5 August 1978, ending the seven-week reign of \"Shadow Dancing\" by Andy Gibb. It also reached number three in the United Kingdom. The song was originally nearly nine minutes long, but was edited to nearly five minutes for the album version, and to three-and-a-half minutes for the radio single. In order to properly edit the radio single without audible bumps and glitches, a separate mix was constructed and then edited for continuity. The B-side of the single was another album ",
"Harry Tobias\n in 1929, and writing Rudy Vallee's hit \"Miss You\" with both brothers the same year. In 1931, he had success with the song \"At Your Command\", an early success for Bing Crosby, and also co-wrote \"Sweet and Lovely\", a hit for Russ Columbo. He wrote or co-wrote the theme songs for many films in the 1930s and 1940s, including One Rainy Afternoon (1936), The Young in Heart (1938), Made for Each Other (1939), If It Wasn't for The Moon (1940) and It's a Date (1940). His many co-writers included Gene Autry. He died in St Louis, Missouri at age 99 on December 15, 1994. His interment was in Mount Sinai Memorial Park Cemetery.",
"Lester Lee\n Lester Lee (November 7, 1903 - June 19, 1956) was an American composer. He was nominated for an Academy Award in the category Best Original Song for the film Miss Sadie Thompson. Lee died in June 1956 of a heart attack in Los Angeles, California, at the age of 52.",
"Miss Mary (1972 film)\n The music was composed by R. K. Shekhar and the lyrics were written by Sreekumaran Thampi."
] |
What is the religion of James Albert Duffy? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | James Albert Duffy | 4,615,302 | 62 | [
{
"id": "13581686",
"title": "James Albert Duffy",
"text": " Bishop James Albert Duffy (13 September 1873 – 12 February 1968) was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church who served as the first bishop of the Diocese of Grand Island (formerly diocese of Kearney), Nebraska from 1913 to 1931.",
"score": "1.7298851"
},
{
"id": "13581687",
"title": "James Albert Duffy",
"text": " Duffy was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, the third child of James J. Duffy and Johanna Shiely. When the death of the parents in 1879 orphaned the eight Duffy children, James Albert went to live at the Boys Orphan Asylum in Minneapolis. From 1887 to 1893 he was a student at the University of St. Thomas and subsequently attended Saint Paul Seminary School of Divinity from 1894 to 1899.",
"score": "1.727602"
},
{
"id": "13480955",
"title": "James Duffy (Irish publisher)",
"text": " James Duffy (1809 – 4 July 1871) was a prominent Irish author and publisher. Duffy's business would become one of the major publishers of Irish nationalist books, bibles, magazines, Missals and religious texts throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. He was also a major publisher of Irish fiction. He was described as having \"invented a new kind of cosy family Catholicism.\"",
"score": "1.6299229"
},
{
"id": "5326087",
"title": "Patrick Duffy (British politician)",
"text": " In 2014, Duffy published his autobiography, Growing Up Irish in Britain, British in Ireland and in Washington, Moscow, Rome & Sydney. A practicing Catholic, Duffy completed the El Camino Santiago de Compostela pilgrimage (known as the Way of St. James in English) for six years running whilst in his 80s, which involves a 25 km daily walk for 35 days. He was invested as a Knight Commander of the Order of St. Gregory the Great (KCSG) at the age of 96 in 2017. He has never married, though according to Yorkshire Live, \"he says he was not short of attractive ",
"score": "1.6289523"
},
{
"id": "32967398",
"title": "Joe Duffy",
"text": " Joseph Duffy (born 27 January 1956) is an Irish broadcaster employed by Raidió Teilifís Éireann (RTÉ). One of RTÉ's highest-earning stars, he is the current presenter of Liveline, an interview and phone-in chat show broadcast on RTÉ Radio 1 on Mondays to Fridays between 13:45 and 15:h00. Duffy has a history as a student activist. As President of the Union of Students in Ireland (U.S.I.) he was once jailed for an occupation in which he had participated. He describes himself as a Christian socialist who advocates justice \"very much based on Christian teaching and principles\". Duffy retraced his Christian roots in 2010 by hosting an RTÉ One TV show called Joe Duffy's Spirit Level which discussed the great faith of the Irish people and various religions present in the country, and also queried whether David McSavage's satirical portrayal of Duffy could be considered blasphemous. Duffy is married, is the father of triplets, and resides in Clontarf, Dublin. He won a Jacob's Award in 1992.",
"score": "1.606693"
},
{
"id": "6334311",
"title": "Jimmy Duffy",
"text": " James Duffy (May 1, 1890 in County Sligo, Ireland – April 23, 1915 outside Ypres, Belgium) was a distance runner from Canada, one of the world's best marathon runners at the beginning of the 20th century. He participated in the 1912 Summer Olympics in Stockholm and was the winner of the 1914 Boston Marathon.",
"score": "1.5976403"
},
{
"id": "5326075",
"title": "Patrick Duffy (British politician)",
"text": " Sir Albert Edward Patrick Duffy KCSG (born 17 June 1920) is an economist and Labour Party politician in the United Kingdom. He was the Member of Parliament for Colne Valley from 1963 to 1966, and for Sheffield Attercliffe from 1970 to 1992. Duffy was also a Minister of the Navy in the 1970s, and President of the NATO Assembly in the 1980s. Following the death of Ronald Atkins on 30 December 2020, Duffy became Britain's oldest surviving former MP.",
"score": "1.5936484"
},
{
"id": "13581689",
"title": "James Albert Duffy",
"text": " He died on 12 February 1968 at St. Joseph's infirmary in Hot Springs, Arkansas, and was buried in Calvary Cemetery, Grand Island, Nebraska. At the time of his death, Bishop Duffy was the most senior Bishop in the United States in both age and years of consecration.",
"score": "1.5818369"
},
{
"id": "5326076",
"title": "Patrick Duffy (British politician)",
"text": " Duffy was born in Wigan, Lancashire in June 1920, to Irish Catholic immigrant parents James and Margaret Duffy, who were both from the village of Raith, near Aghamore in County Mayo. James and his father, who was also named Patrick, came to England as migrant agricultural workers in the late 19th and early 20th century. James worked as a miner in Wigan's Maypole pit, before moving with his family to the mining village of Rossington near Doncaster in South Yorkshire in 1925. , the younger Patrick still lives in Doncaster. Duffy served in the Fleet Air Arm in World War II. After his plane had crashed near Scapa Flow in Orkney, and still in his early 20s, a priest gave him the last rites; however, Duffy left the forces ",
"score": "1.5648022"
},
{
"id": "1119923",
"title": "James E. Duffy Jr.",
"text": " Born in St. Paul, Minnesota, Duffy graduated from Cretin High School in Saint Paul, Minnesota, Duffy earned a bachelor's degree from the College of St. Thomas in 1965. He then went on to Marquette University to obtain his doctorate of jurisprudence in 1968.",
"score": "1.5626959"
},
{
"id": "29121015",
"title": "John A. Duffy",
"text": " John Aloysius Duffy (October 29, 1884 – September 27, 1944) was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as Bishop of Syracuse from 1933 to 1937, and as Bishop of Buffalo from 1937 until his death.",
"score": "1.5585562"
},
{
"id": "29755706",
"title": "James P.B. Duffy",
"text": " James Patrick Bernard Duffy (November 25, 1878 – January 8, 1969) was a Democratic member of the United States House of Representatives from New York. Duffy was born in Rochester, New York, one of nine children. He graduated from Georgetown University in 1901 and from Harvard Law School in 1904. He was admitted to the bar the same year and began practice in partnership with Republican James Breck Perkins, a member of Congress. He abandoned the practice of law in 1914 acceding to his father's request to take over as manager of The Duffy-Powers Department Store, the family business. There he remained until the concern went bankrupt in 1932. Duffy was an avid Democratic Party member and held a series ",
"score": "1.5551915"
},
{
"id": "12638028",
"title": "James Duffy (VC)",
"text": " James Duffy (17 November 1889 – 8 April 1969) (Séamus Ó Dubhthaigh) was a British Army soldier during the First World War, and an Irish recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. Duffy was born on 17 November 1889 in Gweedore (Gaoth Dobhair), County Donegal, Ireland. He was 28 years old, and a private in the 6th Battalion, The Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, British Army during the First World War when the following deed took place for which he was awarded the VC. On 27 December 1917 at Kereina Peak, Palestine, whilst the company was holding a very exposed position, Private Duffy, a stretcher-bearer, and another stretcher-bearer went out to bring in a seriously wounded comrade. When the other stretcher-bearer was wounded, Private Duffy returned to get another man, who was killed almost immediately. The private then went forward alone and, under very heavy fire, succeeded in getting both wounded men under cover and attended to their injuries. His gallantry undoubtedly saved both men's lives.",
"score": "1.5479522"
},
{
"id": "4649153",
"title": "Eamon Duffy",
"text": " Duffy was born on 9 February 1947, in Dundalk, Ireland. He describes himself as a \"cradle Catholic\". He was educated at St Philip's School and the University of Hull. He undertook postgraduate research at the University of Cambridge, where his doctoral advisers were Owen Chadwick and Gordon Rupp.",
"score": "1.5475512"
},
{
"id": "2301453",
"title": "James F. Duffy",
"text": " James Francis Duffy Jr. (June 3, 1892 – February 23, 1961) was an American football player and coach. A Massachusetts native, Duffy played college football as a quarterback at Colgate University. He was the head coach of the University of Detroit football team for six seasons between 1917 and 1924 and led the program to national prominence. His coaching career was interrupted by one year of military service during World War I and by his retirement after the 1922 season. In his first five years as the team's head coach, his teams compiled a 39–7–1 record. He returned to coaching in 1924 and sustained the only losing record of his career. After retiring from football, Duffy practiced law and served for a time as Michigan's boxing commissioner.",
"score": "1.5422105"
},
{
"id": "2301459",
"title": "James F. Duffy",
"text": " Duffy received a law degree from the University of Detroit. He began his law practice in 1923 at Denby, Kennedy & O'Brien. In 1933, he was appointed by Gov. William Comstock to the State Athletic Board of Control as Michigan's boxing commissioner. At the time, the Detroit Free Press described him as \"a chunky grey-eyed nervous little man 'with the map of Ireland stamped upon his face.'\" Duffy did not marry. He died at the Detroit Veterans' Hospital in Detroit in 1961.",
"score": "1.5420215"
},
{
"id": "13480957",
"title": "James Duffy (Irish publisher)",
"text": " owned by the Central Catholic Library in Dublin ; John O'Hart, Irish landed gentry: when Cromwell came to Ireland (Dublin: James Duffy & Sons, 1887) ; John O’Hanlon, Lives of the Irish Saints, Vol 6 (James Duffy and Sons, 1891) ; Gerald Griffin The Invasion (Dublin, James Duffy & Sons) Duffy was born in Monaghan. He was educated at a hedge school and began his business as a bookseller through purchasing Protestant bibles given to Catholics. He then traveled to Liverpool where he traded them for more valuable books. In 1830 he founded his own company, James Duffy and Sons ",
"score": "1.5334187"
},
{
"id": "11561661",
"title": "Gabriel Duffy",
"text": " Gabriel Patrick Duffy (1942–2008) was an author and philosopher born in Dublin, Ireland, and is best known for his autobiography, Sham to Rock. Duffy emigrated to London in 1963, where he worked as an accountant. He then worked in recruitment, subsequently establishing and building up Gabriel Duffy, which in the 1980s became a well known and successful financial recruitment consultancy. When, as a result of the recession in the early 1990s, the business hit difficulties, he turned full-time to his great love, writing. He has two daughters and was friendly with the novelist Colin Wilson. Duffy died of peritonitis in his Brighton flat in early December, 2008.",
"score": "1.5331379"
},
{
"id": "29121016",
"title": "John A. Duffy",
"text": " John Duffy was born in Jersey City, New Jersey, to Patrick Joseph and Anna Marie (née Smith) Duffy. A onetime boilermaker, he was ordained to the priesthood on June 13, 1908. Duffy then served as assistant pastor at Our Lady of Grace Church in Hoboken, professor of literature and languages at Seton Hall, and instructor in Church history at the Newark seminary. He became a Domestic Prelate of His Holiness, and served as chancellor and vicar general for the Diocese of Newark. He was the diocese's Apostolic Administrator between the death of John O'Connor and the appointment of Thomas Walsh, and served as pastor of St. Joseph's Church in Jersey City.",
"score": "1.5318526"
},
{
"id": "30271689",
"title": "Jim Duffy (baseball coach)",
"text": " James Duffy (born July 18, 1974) is an American college baseball coach and former first baseman. He had served as head coach of the Manhattan Jaspers baseball team from 2012 through 2017. He was named to that position prior to the 2012 season.",
"score": "1.5190281"
}
] | [
"James Albert Duffy\n Bishop James Albert Duffy (13 September 1873 – 12 February 1968) was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church who served as the first bishop of the Diocese of Grand Island (formerly diocese of Kearney), Nebraska from 1913 to 1931.",
"James Albert Duffy\n Duffy was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, the third child of James J. Duffy and Johanna Shiely. When the death of the parents in 1879 orphaned the eight Duffy children, James Albert went to live at the Boys Orphan Asylum in Minneapolis. From 1887 to 1893 he was a student at the University of St. Thomas and subsequently attended Saint Paul Seminary School of Divinity from 1894 to 1899.",
"James Duffy (Irish publisher)\n James Duffy (1809 – 4 July 1871) was a prominent Irish author and publisher. Duffy's business would become one of the major publishers of Irish nationalist books, bibles, magazines, Missals and religious texts throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. He was also a major publisher of Irish fiction. He was described as having \"invented a new kind of cosy family Catholicism.\"",
"Patrick Duffy (British politician)\n In 2014, Duffy published his autobiography, Growing Up Irish in Britain, British in Ireland and in Washington, Moscow, Rome & Sydney. A practicing Catholic, Duffy completed the El Camino Santiago de Compostela pilgrimage (known as the Way of St. James in English) for six years running whilst in his 80s, which involves a 25 km daily walk for 35 days. He was invested as a Knight Commander of the Order of St. Gregory the Great (KCSG) at the age of 96 in 2017. He has never married, though according to Yorkshire Live, \"he says he was not short of attractive ",
"Joe Duffy\n Joseph Duffy (born 27 January 1956) is an Irish broadcaster employed by Raidió Teilifís Éireann (RTÉ). One of RTÉ's highest-earning stars, he is the current presenter of Liveline, an interview and phone-in chat show broadcast on RTÉ Radio 1 on Mondays to Fridays between 13:45 and 15:h00. Duffy has a history as a student activist. As President of the Union of Students in Ireland (U.S.I.) he was once jailed for an occupation in which he had participated. He describes himself as a Christian socialist who advocates justice \"very much based on Christian teaching and principles\". Duffy retraced his Christian roots in 2010 by hosting an RTÉ One TV show called Joe Duffy's Spirit Level which discussed the great faith of the Irish people and various religions present in the country, and also queried whether David McSavage's satirical portrayal of Duffy could be considered blasphemous. Duffy is married, is the father of triplets, and resides in Clontarf, Dublin. He won a Jacob's Award in 1992.",
"Jimmy Duffy\n James Duffy (May 1, 1890 in County Sligo, Ireland – April 23, 1915 outside Ypres, Belgium) was a distance runner from Canada, one of the world's best marathon runners at the beginning of the 20th century. He participated in the 1912 Summer Olympics in Stockholm and was the winner of the 1914 Boston Marathon.",
"Patrick Duffy (British politician)\n Sir Albert Edward Patrick Duffy KCSG (born 17 June 1920) is an economist and Labour Party politician in the United Kingdom. He was the Member of Parliament for Colne Valley from 1963 to 1966, and for Sheffield Attercliffe from 1970 to 1992. Duffy was also a Minister of the Navy in the 1970s, and President of the NATO Assembly in the 1980s. Following the death of Ronald Atkins on 30 December 2020, Duffy became Britain's oldest surviving former MP.",
"James Albert Duffy\n He died on 12 February 1968 at St. Joseph's infirmary in Hot Springs, Arkansas, and was buried in Calvary Cemetery, Grand Island, Nebraska. At the time of his death, Bishop Duffy was the most senior Bishop in the United States in both age and years of consecration.",
"Patrick Duffy (British politician)\n Duffy was born in Wigan, Lancashire in June 1920, to Irish Catholic immigrant parents James and Margaret Duffy, who were both from the village of Raith, near Aghamore in County Mayo. James and his father, who was also named Patrick, came to England as migrant agricultural workers in the late 19th and early 20th century. James worked as a miner in Wigan's Maypole pit, before moving with his family to the mining village of Rossington near Doncaster in South Yorkshire in 1925. , the younger Patrick still lives in Doncaster. Duffy served in the Fleet Air Arm in World War II. After his plane had crashed near Scapa Flow in Orkney, and still in his early 20s, a priest gave him the last rites; however, Duffy left the forces ",
"James E. Duffy Jr.\n Born in St. Paul, Minnesota, Duffy graduated from Cretin High School in Saint Paul, Minnesota, Duffy earned a bachelor's degree from the College of St. Thomas in 1965. He then went on to Marquette University to obtain his doctorate of jurisprudence in 1968.",
"John A. Duffy\n John Aloysius Duffy (October 29, 1884 – September 27, 1944) was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as Bishop of Syracuse from 1933 to 1937, and as Bishop of Buffalo from 1937 until his death.",
"James P.B. Duffy\n James Patrick Bernard Duffy (November 25, 1878 – January 8, 1969) was a Democratic member of the United States House of Representatives from New York. Duffy was born in Rochester, New York, one of nine children. He graduated from Georgetown University in 1901 and from Harvard Law School in 1904. He was admitted to the bar the same year and began practice in partnership with Republican James Breck Perkins, a member of Congress. He abandoned the practice of law in 1914 acceding to his father's request to take over as manager of The Duffy-Powers Department Store, the family business. There he remained until the concern went bankrupt in 1932. Duffy was an avid Democratic Party member and held a series ",
"James Duffy (VC)\n James Duffy (17 November 1889 – 8 April 1969) (Séamus Ó Dubhthaigh) was a British Army soldier during the First World War, and an Irish recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. Duffy was born on 17 November 1889 in Gweedore (Gaoth Dobhair), County Donegal, Ireland. He was 28 years old, and a private in the 6th Battalion, The Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, British Army during the First World War when the following deed took place for which he was awarded the VC. On 27 December 1917 at Kereina Peak, Palestine, whilst the company was holding a very exposed position, Private Duffy, a stretcher-bearer, and another stretcher-bearer went out to bring in a seriously wounded comrade. When the other stretcher-bearer was wounded, Private Duffy returned to get another man, who was killed almost immediately. The private then went forward alone and, under very heavy fire, succeeded in getting both wounded men under cover and attended to their injuries. His gallantry undoubtedly saved both men's lives.",
"Eamon Duffy\n Duffy was born on 9 February 1947, in Dundalk, Ireland. He describes himself as a \"cradle Catholic\". He was educated at St Philip's School and the University of Hull. He undertook postgraduate research at the University of Cambridge, where his doctoral advisers were Owen Chadwick and Gordon Rupp.",
"James F. Duffy\n James Francis Duffy Jr. (June 3, 1892 – February 23, 1961) was an American football player and coach. A Massachusetts native, Duffy played college football as a quarterback at Colgate University. He was the head coach of the University of Detroit football team for six seasons between 1917 and 1924 and led the program to national prominence. His coaching career was interrupted by one year of military service during World War I and by his retirement after the 1922 season. In his first five years as the team's head coach, his teams compiled a 39–7–1 record. He returned to coaching in 1924 and sustained the only losing record of his career. After retiring from football, Duffy practiced law and served for a time as Michigan's boxing commissioner.",
"James F. Duffy\n Duffy received a law degree from the University of Detroit. He began his law practice in 1923 at Denby, Kennedy & O'Brien. In 1933, he was appointed by Gov. William Comstock to the State Athletic Board of Control as Michigan's boxing commissioner. At the time, the Detroit Free Press described him as \"a chunky grey-eyed nervous little man 'with the map of Ireland stamped upon his face.'\" Duffy did not marry. He died at the Detroit Veterans' Hospital in Detroit in 1961.",
"James Duffy (Irish publisher)\n owned by the Central Catholic Library in Dublin ; John O'Hart, Irish landed gentry: when Cromwell came to Ireland (Dublin: James Duffy & Sons, 1887) ; John O’Hanlon, Lives of the Irish Saints, Vol 6 (James Duffy and Sons, 1891) ; Gerald Griffin The Invasion (Dublin, James Duffy & Sons) Duffy was born in Monaghan. He was educated at a hedge school and began his business as a bookseller through purchasing Protestant bibles given to Catholics. He then traveled to Liverpool where he traded them for more valuable books. In 1830 he founded his own company, James Duffy and Sons ",
"Gabriel Duffy\n Gabriel Patrick Duffy (1942–2008) was an author and philosopher born in Dublin, Ireland, and is best known for his autobiography, Sham to Rock. Duffy emigrated to London in 1963, where he worked as an accountant. He then worked in recruitment, subsequently establishing and building up Gabriel Duffy, which in the 1980s became a well known and successful financial recruitment consultancy. When, as a result of the recession in the early 1990s, the business hit difficulties, he turned full-time to his great love, writing. He has two daughters and was friendly with the novelist Colin Wilson. Duffy died of peritonitis in his Brighton flat in early December, 2008.",
"John A. Duffy\n John Duffy was born in Jersey City, New Jersey, to Patrick Joseph and Anna Marie (née Smith) Duffy. A onetime boilermaker, he was ordained to the priesthood on June 13, 1908. Duffy then served as assistant pastor at Our Lady of Grace Church in Hoboken, professor of literature and languages at Seton Hall, and instructor in Church history at the Newark seminary. He became a Domestic Prelate of His Holiness, and served as chancellor and vicar general for the Diocese of Newark. He was the diocese's Apostolic Administrator between the death of John O'Connor and the appointment of Thomas Walsh, and served as pastor of St. Joseph's Church in Jersey City.",
"Jim Duffy (baseball coach)\n James Duffy (born July 18, 1974) is an American college baseball coach and former first baseman. He had served as head coach of the Manhattan Jaspers baseball team from 2012 through 2017. He was named to that position prior to the 2012 season."
] |
What is the religion of Pierre-Antoine Paulo? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Pierre-Antoine Paulo | 4,176,391 | 69 | [
{
"id": "1438782",
"title": "René Vilatte",
"text": " longer underground, but visibly, at all levels of society.\" Joanne Pearson describes, in Wicca and the Christian Heritage, these \"cults and counter religions\" as often \"combining heterodox Christianity, occultism, Freemasonry and spiritualism\", and considers the Johannite Church (Église Johannite des Chrétiens Primitifs) founded by Bernard-Raymond Fabré-Palaprat as an exemplar of sects that were revivals of heresy; they were linked with \"gnosis such as Catharism and the Templars, and sought to return to the simplicity of an imagined primitive Christianity.\" Pearson notes the Johannite Church attracted lapsed Catholic bishops and priests. The paradox of 19th century French religious revival, alongside anti-clericalism and irreligion, is characterised by David ",
"score": "1.3633275"
},
{
"id": "14783378",
"title": "Pierre-Jean Souriac",
"text": " Souriac is a specialist of history of religions, and more precisely religious conflicts in the 16th century and their extension in local political contexts, of military history, public finances and political power under the Ancien Régime and the provincial and municipal institutions in Ancien Régime France.",
"score": "1.3496261"
},
{
"id": "4956801",
"title": "Pierre de Bérulle",
"text": " Pierre de Bérulle (4 February 1575 – 2 October 1629), was a French Catholic priest, cardinal and statesman, one of the most important mystics of the 17th century in France. He was the founder of the French school of spirituality, who could count among his friends and disciples Vincent de Paul and Francis de Sales.",
"score": "1.3460947"
},
{
"id": "13546337",
"title": "Joseph Dinouart",
"text": " Joseph Antoine Toussaint Dinouart (November 1, 1716 – April 23, 1786) was a preacher, polemicist, compiler of sacred learning, and apologist for French feminism. Born in Amiens, he was ordained as a priest in there in 1740. In his youth, he showed a talent for Latin poetry, but soon neglected this in favor of his religious studies. After writing a short essay on women's rights, he had a falling out with his bishop and moved to Paris, where he joined the Saint-Eustache parish. He soon left, however, to tutor the son of a police lieutenant. This position gave him a stable yearly income and allowed Dinouart to devote himself to the study of literature. In 1760, he founded the Journal ecclésiastique, which he edited until his death. The collected work of this journal numbers more than 100 volumes. It contains extracts from sermons, treatises on morality and piety, and research on ecclesiastical law and councils.",
"score": "1.3409797"
},
{
"id": "28710566",
"title": "Jean-Paul Rabaut Saint-Étienne",
"text": " Jean-Paul Rabaut Saint-Étienne (14 November 1743 – 5 December 1793) was a leader of the French Protestants and a moderate French revolutionary.",
"score": "1.3403107"
},
{
"id": "16270388",
"title": "Romaine-la-Prophétesse",
"text": " and Hourya Bentouhami count Romaine-la-Prophétesse among the women who led the Haitian Revolution. Romaine has been compared to Dona Beatriz Kimpa Vita, who professed to be the incarnation of a male Catholic saint, as both of their religious self-identifications \"transcended gender\". In January 1792, during Romaine's occupation of the city, the mayor of Léogâne referred to the insurgent leader as \"hermaphroditic\". Ouvière said Rivière wore a turban (other islanders wore headwraps) and appeared like \"a prophet of the Roman religion [in] the clothing of a Turk\", and later denounced the insurgent leader as \"the Muhammad of Saint Domingue\". Other contemporary French accounts were also hostile and regarded the insurgent leader as a \"villain\", \"charlatan\", \"maniac\", or \"adventurer\".",
"score": "1.3352182"
},
{
"id": "27797107",
"title": "Pierre Mouallem",
"text": " Mouallem was born in Eilabun, Galilee, in 1928 and received his education at the Minor and Major Seminaries of St. Paul Missionaries, Harissa, Lebanon, and was ordained a priest in 1955. From 1955 to 1975 he taught Arabic literature, French literature and humanities (Classical Greek and Latin) at the Seminary of St. Paul, Harissa, Lebanon. Then he taught philosophy, sociology and patristics at St. Anne of Jerusalem (Salahiyeh). He finally returned to Lebanon to teach theology, liturgy and Islamology at St. Paul's High Institute, Harissa. From 1975 to 1987 he was superior general of St. Paul's Society. He was consecrated bishop of ",
"score": "1.3348248"
},
{
"id": "6737259",
"title": "Vincent Paulos",
"text": " He was born on 20 February 1964 in Kumarankudy Village near Thiruvattar in the District of Kanyakumari in the state of Tamil Nadu. He belongs to the Eparchy of Marthandom. His parents are Kochupillai and Maria Thangam.",
"score": "1.3325512"
},
{
"id": "1581065",
"title": "São Paulo",
"text": " Sé, considered one of the five largest Gothic temples in the world. The Catholic Church recognizes as patron saints of the city Saint Paul of Tarsus and Our Lady of Penha of France. The city has the most diverse Protestant or Reformed creeds, such as the Evangelical Community of Our Land, Maranatha Christian Church, Lutheran Church, Presbyterian Church, Methodist Church, Anglican Episcopal Church, Baptist churches, Assembly Church of God, The Seventh-day Adventist Church, the World Church of God's Power, the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God, the Christian Congregation in Brazil, among others, as well as Christians of various denominations. ''Source: IBGE 2010. ''",
"score": "1.3300946"
},
{
"id": "29059902",
"title": "Antonio Bulhões",
"text": " Antonio Carlos Martins de Bulhões (born 5 May 1968) is a Brazilian politician and religious leader. Although born in Rio de Janeiro, he has spent his political career representing São Paulo, having served as state representative since 2007.",
"score": "1.3268858"
},
{
"id": "25408412",
"title": "Jean-Marie Adiaffi",
"text": " Jean-Marie Adiaffi is also the inventor of the concept of Bossonism – from \"bosson\" genius Agni – billed as \"the religion of Africans.\" For Adiaffi, colonization began with the spiritual (the `missionary activities), the release must be done by the spiritual way. \"Bossonism\", another name of \"animism\"- a term he`did not accept – appears as a theory of the revaluation of the \"African spirituality\". This concept is also, for Adiaffi, a \"theology of African liberation.\"",
"score": "1.3266869"
},
{
"id": "16158805",
"title": "French Directory",
"text": " cathedral Notre Dame de Paris was renamed \"Temple of the Supreme Being\", Saint-Étienne-du-Mont became the \"Temple of Filial piety\". On decadi, the constitutional priests who performed services were required to share the space with other republican religions and associations who wanted to use the buildings. Large churches were divided into sections for use by various religions. A new religion, Theophilanthropy, had been founded in 1796 by a Freemason printer-bookseller named Jean-Baptiste Chemin-Dupontès (1760–1852?). It was encouraged by the Director La Révellière-Lépeaux and the Ministry of the Interior, with the state paying for its newspaper. Members believed in God and in the immortality of the soul, but not in the original sin. The sect was similar ",
"score": "1.3264304"
},
{
"id": "937733",
"title": "François-Léon Clergue",
"text": " François-Léon Clergue (23 December 1825 – 8 February 1907) - in religion Marie-Antoine de Lavaur - was a French Roman Catholic priest and professed member from the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin. He became a popular priest who attracted large crowds when he would preach; he preached around 700 itinerant missions in southern France which would earn him a nickname as the \"Apostle of the South\". He is also credited with the development of pilgrimages to the shrine in Lourdes where he often visited to preach and to tend to the visiting pilgrims. He was a traditionalist who railed against secularist influences and remained in France in 1880 when religious orders (including his own) were expelled to other European nations; he ",
"score": "1.3260512"
},
{
"id": "7512094",
"title": "Maronite Catholic Eparchy of Our Lady of Lebanon of São Paulo",
"text": " The Eparchy of Our Lady of Lebanon of São Paulo (Eparquia Nossa Senhora do Líbano em São Paulo; Eparchia Dominae Nostrae Libanensis Sancti Pauli Maronitarum) is a Maronite Church ecclesiastical territory or eparchy of the Catholic Church in Brazil. Its episcopal see is São Paulo. The current bishop is Edgard Madi. The Eparchy of Our Lady of Lebanon of São Paulo is a suffragan eparchy in the ecclesiastical province of the metropolitan Archdiocese of São Paulo, a Latin Church archdiocese.",
"score": "1.3227967"
},
{
"id": "14192105",
"title": "Jean-Pierre Chantin",
"text": " Jean-Pierre Chantin is born in 1961, associated with the University of Lyon. He specializes in the history of religion in France, including the Catholic Church and the role of new religious movements. In 1998 his study of Jansenism was published by the University of Lyon. In 2001 he was the chief editor of the Dictionary of the religious world in contemporary France, \"The margins of the Christianity\", published by Editions Beauchesne. In 2004 he published a 157-page study on French sects from 1905 to 2000, asking: \"disputes or religious innovations?\" and in 2010 about \"The French certified diet\", Editions Beauchesne (director of collection Bibliothèque Beauchesne).",
"score": "1.3212789"
},
{
"id": "9461003",
"title": "Jean de Labadie",
"text": " Jean de Labadie (13 February 1610 – 13 February 1674) was a 17th-century French Pietist. Originally a Roman Catholic Jesuit priest, he became a member of the Reformed Church in 1650, before founding the community which became known as the Labadists in 1669. At its height the movement numbered around 600 with thousands of adherents further afield. It attracted some notable female converts such as the famed poet and scholar, Anna Maria van Schurman, and the entomological artist Maria Merian. Labadie combined the influences of Jansenism, Precicianism, and Reformed Pietism, developing a form of radical Christianity with an emphasis upon holiness and Christian communal living. Labadie's teachings gained hold in the Netherlands.",
"score": "1.3158774"
},
{
"id": "10099079",
"title": "Louis Auguste Sabatier",
"text": "Mémoire sur la notion hébraique de l'Esprit (1879). ; Les origines littéraires et la composition de l'apocalypse de Saint Jean (1888). ; The Vitality of Christian Dogmas and their Power of Evolution (1898). ; Outlines of a philosophy of religion based on psychology and history (1902). ; The Apostle Paul (1903). ; The doctrine of the atonement and its historical evolution; and, Religion and modern culture (1904). ; Religions of Authority and the Religion of the Spirit; translation of Les religions d'autorité de la religion de l'esprit (1904, posthumous), to which his colleague Jean Réville prefixed a short memoir. Among Louis Auguste Sabatier's chief works were: These works show Sabatier as \"at once an accomplished dialectician and a mystic in the best sense of the word\".",
"score": "1.3149278"
},
{
"id": "16544313",
"title": "Jean-Pierre-André Amar",
"text": " Jean-Pierre-André Amar or Jean-Baptiste-André Amar (May 11, 1755 – December 21, 1816) was a French political figure of the Revolution and Freemason.",
"score": "1.3108041"
},
{
"id": "29004755",
"title": "Coorilos Paulose of Panampady",
"text": " Ignatius Zakka I, Patriarch of Antioch, declared him a saint on 24 October 2008 for being a holy father who had preserved the faith in the crisis of the Syriac Orthodox Church in India, and gave permission to remember the name of Coorilos Paulose in the Fifth Diptych.",
"score": "1.3106455"
},
{
"id": "32137781",
"title": "Pierre Pigneau de Behaine",
"text": " years in any case. Pigneau often compromised his religious principles when they came into conflict with political and diplomatic imperatives. He had initially taught Canh to refuse to engage in ancestor worship, something that greatly shocked and angered Nguyễn Ánh. He later changed his mind on the papal ban and proposed to consider ancestor worship as a civil ceremony, a simple manifestation of respect for the dead. He cited the apostles as being tolerant of local customs as his justification. In 1983, the tomb of Pigneau de Behaine was dismantled by the Vietnamese government, and the area was replaced by a park. His remains were cremated and sent to France where they are now housed in the Paris Foreign Missions Society.",
"score": "1.3106203"
}
] | [
"René Vilatte\n longer underground, but visibly, at all levels of society.\" Joanne Pearson describes, in Wicca and the Christian Heritage, these \"cults and counter religions\" as often \"combining heterodox Christianity, occultism, Freemasonry and spiritualism\", and considers the Johannite Church (Église Johannite des Chrétiens Primitifs) founded by Bernard-Raymond Fabré-Palaprat as an exemplar of sects that were revivals of heresy; they were linked with \"gnosis such as Catharism and the Templars, and sought to return to the simplicity of an imagined primitive Christianity.\" Pearson notes the Johannite Church attracted lapsed Catholic bishops and priests. The paradox of 19th century French religious revival, alongside anti-clericalism and irreligion, is characterised by David ",
"Pierre-Jean Souriac\n Souriac is a specialist of history of religions, and more precisely religious conflicts in the 16th century and their extension in local political contexts, of military history, public finances and political power under the Ancien Régime and the provincial and municipal institutions in Ancien Régime France.",
"Pierre de Bérulle\n Pierre de Bérulle (4 February 1575 – 2 October 1629), was a French Catholic priest, cardinal and statesman, one of the most important mystics of the 17th century in France. He was the founder of the French school of spirituality, who could count among his friends and disciples Vincent de Paul and Francis de Sales.",
"Joseph Dinouart\n Joseph Antoine Toussaint Dinouart (November 1, 1716 – April 23, 1786) was a preacher, polemicist, compiler of sacred learning, and apologist for French feminism. Born in Amiens, he was ordained as a priest in there in 1740. In his youth, he showed a talent for Latin poetry, but soon neglected this in favor of his religious studies. After writing a short essay on women's rights, he had a falling out with his bishop and moved to Paris, where he joined the Saint-Eustache parish. He soon left, however, to tutor the son of a police lieutenant. This position gave him a stable yearly income and allowed Dinouart to devote himself to the study of literature. In 1760, he founded the Journal ecclésiastique, which he edited until his death. The collected work of this journal numbers more than 100 volumes. It contains extracts from sermons, treatises on morality and piety, and research on ecclesiastical law and councils.",
"Jean-Paul Rabaut Saint-Étienne\n Jean-Paul Rabaut Saint-Étienne (14 November 1743 – 5 December 1793) was a leader of the French Protestants and a moderate French revolutionary.",
"Romaine-la-Prophétesse\n and Hourya Bentouhami count Romaine-la-Prophétesse among the women who led the Haitian Revolution. Romaine has been compared to Dona Beatriz Kimpa Vita, who professed to be the incarnation of a male Catholic saint, as both of their religious self-identifications \"transcended gender\". In January 1792, during Romaine's occupation of the city, the mayor of Léogâne referred to the insurgent leader as \"hermaphroditic\". Ouvière said Rivière wore a turban (other islanders wore headwraps) and appeared like \"a prophet of the Roman religion [in] the clothing of a Turk\", and later denounced the insurgent leader as \"the Muhammad of Saint Domingue\". Other contemporary French accounts were also hostile and regarded the insurgent leader as a \"villain\", \"charlatan\", \"maniac\", or \"adventurer\".",
"Pierre Mouallem\n Mouallem was born in Eilabun, Galilee, in 1928 and received his education at the Minor and Major Seminaries of St. Paul Missionaries, Harissa, Lebanon, and was ordained a priest in 1955. From 1955 to 1975 he taught Arabic literature, French literature and humanities (Classical Greek and Latin) at the Seminary of St. Paul, Harissa, Lebanon. Then he taught philosophy, sociology and patristics at St. Anne of Jerusalem (Salahiyeh). He finally returned to Lebanon to teach theology, liturgy and Islamology at St. Paul's High Institute, Harissa. From 1975 to 1987 he was superior general of St. Paul's Society. He was consecrated bishop of ",
"Vincent Paulos\n He was born on 20 February 1964 in Kumarankudy Village near Thiruvattar in the District of Kanyakumari in the state of Tamil Nadu. He belongs to the Eparchy of Marthandom. His parents are Kochupillai and Maria Thangam.",
"São Paulo\n Sé, considered one of the five largest Gothic temples in the world. The Catholic Church recognizes as patron saints of the city Saint Paul of Tarsus and Our Lady of Penha of France. The city has the most diverse Protestant or Reformed creeds, such as the Evangelical Community of Our Land, Maranatha Christian Church, Lutheran Church, Presbyterian Church, Methodist Church, Anglican Episcopal Church, Baptist churches, Assembly Church of God, The Seventh-day Adventist Church, the World Church of God's Power, the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God, the Christian Congregation in Brazil, among others, as well as Christians of various denominations. ''Source: IBGE 2010. ''",
"Antonio Bulhões\n Antonio Carlos Martins de Bulhões (born 5 May 1968) is a Brazilian politician and religious leader. Although born in Rio de Janeiro, he has spent his political career representing São Paulo, having served as state representative since 2007.",
"Jean-Marie Adiaffi\n Jean-Marie Adiaffi is also the inventor of the concept of Bossonism – from \"bosson\" genius Agni – billed as \"the religion of Africans.\" For Adiaffi, colonization began with the spiritual (the `missionary activities), the release must be done by the spiritual way. \"Bossonism\", another name of \"animism\"- a term he`did not accept – appears as a theory of the revaluation of the \"African spirituality\". This concept is also, for Adiaffi, a \"theology of African liberation.\"",
"French Directory\n cathedral Notre Dame de Paris was renamed \"Temple of the Supreme Being\", Saint-Étienne-du-Mont became the \"Temple of Filial piety\". On decadi, the constitutional priests who performed services were required to share the space with other republican religions and associations who wanted to use the buildings. Large churches were divided into sections for use by various religions. A new religion, Theophilanthropy, had been founded in 1796 by a Freemason printer-bookseller named Jean-Baptiste Chemin-Dupontès (1760–1852?). It was encouraged by the Director La Révellière-Lépeaux and the Ministry of the Interior, with the state paying for its newspaper. Members believed in God and in the immortality of the soul, but not in the original sin. The sect was similar ",
"François-Léon Clergue\n François-Léon Clergue (23 December 1825 – 8 February 1907) - in religion Marie-Antoine de Lavaur - was a French Roman Catholic priest and professed member from the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin. He became a popular priest who attracted large crowds when he would preach; he preached around 700 itinerant missions in southern France which would earn him a nickname as the \"Apostle of the South\". He is also credited with the development of pilgrimages to the shrine in Lourdes where he often visited to preach and to tend to the visiting pilgrims. He was a traditionalist who railed against secularist influences and remained in France in 1880 when religious orders (including his own) were expelled to other European nations; he ",
"Maronite Catholic Eparchy of Our Lady of Lebanon of São Paulo\n The Eparchy of Our Lady of Lebanon of São Paulo (Eparquia Nossa Senhora do Líbano em São Paulo; Eparchia Dominae Nostrae Libanensis Sancti Pauli Maronitarum) is a Maronite Church ecclesiastical territory or eparchy of the Catholic Church in Brazil. Its episcopal see is São Paulo. The current bishop is Edgard Madi. The Eparchy of Our Lady of Lebanon of São Paulo is a suffragan eparchy in the ecclesiastical province of the metropolitan Archdiocese of São Paulo, a Latin Church archdiocese.",
"Jean-Pierre Chantin\n Jean-Pierre Chantin is born in 1961, associated with the University of Lyon. He specializes in the history of religion in France, including the Catholic Church and the role of new religious movements. In 1998 his study of Jansenism was published by the University of Lyon. In 2001 he was the chief editor of the Dictionary of the religious world in contemporary France, \"The margins of the Christianity\", published by Editions Beauchesne. In 2004 he published a 157-page study on French sects from 1905 to 2000, asking: \"disputes or religious innovations?\" and in 2010 about \"The French certified diet\", Editions Beauchesne (director of collection Bibliothèque Beauchesne).",
"Jean de Labadie\n Jean de Labadie (13 February 1610 – 13 February 1674) was a 17th-century French Pietist. Originally a Roman Catholic Jesuit priest, he became a member of the Reformed Church in 1650, before founding the community which became known as the Labadists in 1669. At its height the movement numbered around 600 with thousands of adherents further afield. It attracted some notable female converts such as the famed poet and scholar, Anna Maria van Schurman, and the entomological artist Maria Merian. Labadie combined the influences of Jansenism, Precicianism, and Reformed Pietism, developing a form of radical Christianity with an emphasis upon holiness and Christian communal living. Labadie's teachings gained hold in the Netherlands.",
"Louis Auguste Sabatier\nMémoire sur la notion hébraique de l'Esprit (1879). ; Les origines littéraires et la composition de l'apocalypse de Saint Jean (1888). ; The Vitality of Christian Dogmas and their Power of Evolution (1898). ; Outlines of a philosophy of religion based on psychology and history (1902). ; The Apostle Paul (1903). ; The doctrine of the atonement and its historical evolution; and, Religion and modern culture (1904). ; Religions of Authority and the Religion of the Spirit; translation of Les religions d'autorité de la religion de l'esprit (1904, posthumous), to which his colleague Jean Réville prefixed a short memoir. Among Louis Auguste Sabatier's chief works were: These works show Sabatier as \"at once an accomplished dialectician and a mystic in the best sense of the word\".",
"Jean-Pierre-André Amar\n Jean-Pierre-André Amar or Jean-Baptiste-André Amar (May 11, 1755 – December 21, 1816) was a French political figure of the Revolution and Freemason.",
"Coorilos Paulose of Panampady\n Ignatius Zakka I, Patriarch of Antioch, declared him a saint on 24 October 2008 for being a holy father who had preserved the faith in the crisis of the Syriac Orthodox Church in India, and gave permission to remember the name of Coorilos Paulose in the Fifth Diptych.",
"Pierre Pigneau de Behaine\n years in any case. Pigneau often compromised his religious principles when they came into conflict with political and diplomatic imperatives. He had initially taught Canh to refuse to engage in ancestor worship, something that greatly shocked and angered Nguyễn Ánh. He later changed his mind on the papal ban and proposed to consider ancestor worship as a civil ceremony, a simple manifestation of respect for the dead. He cited the apostles as being tolerant of local customs as his justification. In 1983, the tomb of Pigneau de Behaine was dismantled by the Vietnamese government, and the area was replaced by a park. His remains were cremated and sent to France where they are now housed in the Paris Foreign Missions Society."
] |
What is the religion of Joseph-Médard Émard? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Joseph-Médard Émard | 2,421,525 | 74 | [
{
"id": "5986282",
"title": "Joseph-Médard Émard",
"text": " Joseph-Médard Émard (31 March 1853 – 28 March 1927) was a Canadian Roman Catholic priest, professor, and Archbishop of Ottawa.",
"score": "1.8313932"
},
{
"id": "25462143",
"title": "Joseph Médard Carrière",
"text": " Joseph Médard Carrière (1902–1970), was a Franco-Ontarian French-language scholar.",
"score": "1.4935716"
},
{
"id": "7579203",
"title": "François-Xavier Picard Tahourenché",
"text": " François-Xavier Picard Tahourenché (1810-1883) was a Great Chief of the Lorette Hurons from 1870 to 1883 and an archivist who was designated a Person of National Historic Significance by the Canadian Government in 2008. He \"shaped the history of his nation by keeping archives and heritage objects that reflect the life, history and values of the Huron-Wendat people.\" He was born to Marguerite Vincent Lawinonkié and Paul Picard Hondawonhont in Wendake, Quebec.",
"score": "1.4826041"
},
{
"id": "32245813",
"title": "Joseph Hémard",
"text": " Joseph Hémard, a popular French book illustrator, was born in Les Mureaux, France, a small town on the Seine, northwest of Paris, on 2 August 1880. He died on 9 August 1961 in Paris. He was a prolific artist. During the early years of the 20th century he published cartoons and comics in illustrated newspapers like Le Pêle-mêle or Le Bon Vivant. He also designed costumes and sets for several operas, patterns for printed textiles, bookbindings, posters and even a facade for a bar in the 1925 Paris Exposition of Decorative Art. His lasting fame, however, lies in his book illustrations – always distinctly French ",
"score": "1.4635674"
},
{
"id": "11632736",
"title": "Joseph Henri Picard",
"text": " Joseph Henri Picard (February 18, 1857 – May 23, 1934) was a politician in Alberta, Canada and a municipal councillor in Edmonton. Picard was born in Saint-Jean-de-Matha, Quebec on February 18, 1857. He apprenticed as a carpenter before coming west in 1884 to Fort Qu'Appelle and then Regina. In Calgary, he met Father Albert Lacombe, who suggested to him that he move to Edmonton, which he did in 1887. Once in Edmonton, he opened a general store, Larue & Picard; it was sold in 1907 when both he and his partner retired. In 1903, he married Martine Voyer. The couple had two sons. His political career began in 1894 when he ",
"score": "1.4486682"
},
{
"id": "32294612",
"title": "Joseph Teye Tetteh",
"text": " He is a Christian",
"score": "1.429509"
},
{
"id": "25462144",
"title": "Joseph Médard Carrière",
"text": " One of his specialisms was folklore, and he taught for many years at the University of Virginia. Carrière's papers are lodged in the archives of Université Laval.",
"score": "1.4173927"
},
{
"id": "25300040",
"title": "Joseph-Henri Tabaret",
"text": " Joseph-Henri Tabaret (12 April 1828 – 8 February 1886) was a French-born Roman Catholic Priest and academic, best known because of his long and important association with the University of Ottawa. He was a member of the Oblate Fathers of Mary Immaculate. The Oblates founded the College of Bytown in 1848. Under Tabaret's leadership from 1853–1861, Bytown College became an official university. He was rector (president) of Collège d'Ottawa / College of Ottawa from 1861–1864, 1867-1874 and 1877–1886. Rev. Joseph-Henri Tabaret, OMI, served the College for a total of 30 years during the 19th century, and is generally regarded as the builder of the University. Father Tabaret was an ardent defender of bilingualism, often heard to say: \"...in this part of Canada, the use of both languages is not a matter of discussion; it is a matter of necessity.\"",
"score": "1.4155784"
},
{
"id": "16133145",
"title": "Joseph Mede",
"text": " Joseph Mede (1586 in Berden – 1639) was an English scholar with a wide range of interests. He was educated at Christ's College, Cambridge, where he became a Fellow from 1613. He is now remembered as a biblical scholar. He was also a naturalist and Egyptologist. He was a Hebraist, and became Lecturer of Greek.",
"score": "1.4154856"
},
{
"id": "12572727",
"title": "Joseph-Isidore Bédard",
"text": " Joseph-Isidore Bédard (January 9, 1806 – April 14, 1833) was a lawyer and political figure in Lower Canada. He was born in Quebec City in 1806, the son of Pierre-Stanislas Bédard, and studied at the Séminaire de Nicolet. He articled in law with Georges-Barthélemi Faribault and was called to the bar in 1829. He was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada for Saguenay in 1830. He opposed an elected legislative council and voted against the expulsion of Robert Christie from the assembly. Bédard wrote the words to the patriotic song ''Sol Canadien! Terre chérie!, first published in the Quebec Gazette''. Bédard travelled to England with Denis-Benjamin Viger in 1831. In September 1832, when he was about to return to Lower Canada, he suffered a haemorrhage of the lungs. He died in Paris in 1833 and was buried in the cemetery at Montmartre. His brother Elzéar was a judge and also served in the legislative assembly.",
"score": "1.4133477"
},
{
"id": "7389656",
"title": "Laoukein Médard",
"text": " Laoukein Kourayo Médard is a Chadian opposition politician of the Chadian Convention for Peace and Development (CTPD) party who served as Mayor of Moundou. He ran for the president of Chad Republic in the 2016 presidential poll but lost to long serving President Idris Deby who was running for a fourth term in office. Médard pulled a political surprise after placing 3rd position with 392,988 or 10.61 per cent of the votes. In 2021, he declared that he would run in the presidential poll due to the inclusion of military officers loyal to President Deby as electoral officials and restriction on campaign gathering. In July 2017, Médard was arrested and detained for days on the charges of financial embezzlement when he was the mayor of Moundou. An independent investigation ordered by the court found that Médard was not guilty of the charges against and was subsequently released.",
"score": "1.4128714"
},
{
"id": "9975744",
"title": "Angecourt",
"text": "The Church of Saint Médard contains a Funeral Plaque of Nicolas des Oudet (18th century) which is registered as an historical object. ",
"score": "1.409843"
},
{
"id": "32682298",
"title": "Joseph Millard",
"text": " Joseph Hopkins Millard (April 20, 1836 – January 13, 1922) was a Canadian-American businessman and politician from Nebraska. He served in the United States Senate and as mayor of Omaha, and was an anti-suffrage activist.",
"score": "1.4050654"
},
{
"id": "9954970",
"title": "Joseph Chiwatenhwa",
"text": " deeply that all I can do in return is to offer myself to you. I chose you as my elder and chief. There is no one else.\" In adopting his new faith, Joseph drew on many of the spiritual and cultural teachings of his people; he entered the Catholic Church as a Huron. This helped him spread the Good News to many members of his family and tribe. Pope John Paul II said at Huronia that \"the worthy traditions of the Indian tribes were strengthened and enriched by the Gospel message … not only is Christianity relevant to the Indian peoples, but Christ, in the members of his Body, is himself Indian.\" Let us ",
"score": "1.4046767"
},
{
"id": "4422349",
"title": "Joseph Medawar",
"text": " Joseph Michel Medawar (in Arabic جوزف مدوّر, born November 22, 1961 in Beirut, Lebanon) is a Lebanese American financial strategist and investment-banking counselor specializing in media, entertainment and related industries, and a film producer. In 2006, he was sentenced to a year and a day in prison and was ordered to pay $2.6 million in restitution to the defrauded investors.",
"score": "1.4029424"
},
{
"id": "9216178",
"title": "Alex Joseph",
"text": " Alex Joseph (1936 – September 27, 1998) (born Alec Richard Joseph; also referred to as Ronald Ellison) was an American outspoken polygamist and founder of the Confederate Nations of Israel, a Mormon fundamentalist sect. As mayor of Big Water, Utah, Joseph was the first Libertarian Party mayor of a community in the United States.",
"score": "1.397198"
},
{
"id": "14685881",
"title": "Joseph-François Lafitau",
"text": " Lafitau's comparative method (method of reciprocal illumination) rests on his \"system\" which is a compendium of his theoretical presupposition. He believed that man was created equal by God and was given a set of divine moral principles. These principles were gradually violated due to the inherited sinfulness of man—a consequence of the penalty of Original Sin. All men originally shared one religion with one God but over time people migrated to separate margins of the earth where they then lost touch with the values and traditions of this one \"true religion\" and culture. Therefore, Lafitau believed in the \"psychic unity of mankind\" and the doctrine of primitive monotheism. Lafitau strove to find traces of this degenerated \"true faith\", of which Christianity was the highest form, among the Native Americans. Lafitau's version of these theories differed from that of his predecessors and contemporaries. Pierre Daniel Huet, for ",
"score": "1.3927974"
},
{
"id": "4422350",
"title": "Joseph Medawar",
"text": " Joseph Medawar was born in Beirut in a Christian Lebanese family. He immigrated to the United States in 1975 fleeing the war in Lebanon and settled with his family in Palos Verdes, California.",
"score": "1.3830627"
},
{
"id": "12442755",
"title": "Church of Saint-Médard, Tremblay-en-France",
"text": " The parish (parochia de Trembleium) was established a long time ago and became the property of Saint-Denis Abbey in the 9th century. A church dedicated to Saint Medard was mentioned in 1163. Several elements of the foundation are said to date back to the Merovingian period. Three tombs of that time were found on the site. Several stone blocks from the 13th century were found in the base of the church. However, the choir of the current building dates back to 1543, and the nave to the 18th century. In 1781, at the request of intendant Louis Bénigne François Bertier de Sauvigny, architect Jacques Cellerier offered to re-build the nave and the belltower without altering the foundations. This project led to further restoration works in the 19th century. The church of Saint-Médard was listed as a Class Historic Monument in 1939. The church is adorned with liturgical furniture made by sculptor Jacques Dieudonné: an altar, an ambon, crosses and candlesticks.",
"score": "1.3764787"
},
{
"id": "10841118",
"title": "Claude Sicard",
"text": " Father Claude Sicard (1677–1726) was a French Jesuit priest, and an early modern visitor to Egypt, between 1708 and 1712. Sicard was a scholar and at the age of 22 was a professor in the seminary at Lyon. He was well educated in Latin, Greek, Coptic and Arabic. He was also skilled in cartography. His aim was to convert Egypt's Coptic Christians to Roman Catholicism. Sicard was Supervisor of the Jesuit Mission in Cairo. He ate only vegetables and conformed to the Egyptian way of living for nine successive years. He was the first European to locate Thebes. He identified the ruins of Karnak and Luxor as those of ancient Thebes. Sicard commented that \"Its remains are magnificent and more extensive than it is possible to imagine.\" Sicard died of plague from nursing the afflicted in 1726.",
"score": "1.3724668"
}
] | [
"Joseph-Médard Émard\n Joseph-Médard Émard (31 March 1853 – 28 March 1927) was a Canadian Roman Catholic priest, professor, and Archbishop of Ottawa.",
"Joseph Médard Carrière\n Joseph Médard Carrière (1902–1970), was a Franco-Ontarian French-language scholar.",
"François-Xavier Picard Tahourenché\n François-Xavier Picard Tahourenché (1810-1883) was a Great Chief of the Lorette Hurons from 1870 to 1883 and an archivist who was designated a Person of National Historic Significance by the Canadian Government in 2008. He \"shaped the history of his nation by keeping archives and heritage objects that reflect the life, history and values of the Huron-Wendat people.\" He was born to Marguerite Vincent Lawinonkié and Paul Picard Hondawonhont in Wendake, Quebec.",
"Joseph Hémard\n Joseph Hémard, a popular French book illustrator, was born in Les Mureaux, France, a small town on the Seine, northwest of Paris, on 2 August 1880. He died on 9 August 1961 in Paris. He was a prolific artist. During the early years of the 20th century he published cartoons and comics in illustrated newspapers like Le Pêle-mêle or Le Bon Vivant. He also designed costumes and sets for several operas, patterns for printed textiles, bookbindings, posters and even a facade for a bar in the 1925 Paris Exposition of Decorative Art. His lasting fame, however, lies in his book illustrations – always distinctly French ",
"Joseph Henri Picard\n Joseph Henri Picard (February 18, 1857 – May 23, 1934) was a politician in Alberta, Canada and a municipal councillor in Edmonton. Picard was born in Saint-Jean-de-Matha, Quebec on February 18, 1857. He apprenticed as a carpenter before coming west in 1884 to Fort Qu'Appelle and then Regina. In Calgary, he met Father Albert Lacombe, who suggested to him that he move to Edmonton, which he did in 1887. Once in Edmonton, he opened a general store, Larue & Picard; it was sold in 1907 when both he and his partner retired. In 1903, he married Martine Voyer. The couple had two sons. His political career began in 1894 when he ",
"Joseph Teye Tetteh\n He is a Christian",
"Joseph Médard Carrière\n One of his specialisms was folklore, and he taught for many years at the University of Virginia. Carrière's papers are lodged in the archives of Université Laval.",
"Joseph-Henri Tabaret\n Joseph-Henri Tabaret (12 April 1828 – 8 February 1886) was a French-born Roman Catholic Priest and academic, best known because of his long and important association with the University of Ottawa. He was a member of the Oblate Fathers of Mary Immaculate. The Oblates founded the College of Bytown in 1848. Under Tabaret's leadership from 1853–1861, Bytown College became an official university. He was rector (president) of Collège d'Ottawa / College of Ottawa from 1861–1864, 1867-1874 and 1877–1886. Rev. Joseph-Henri Tabaret, OMI, served the College for a total of 30 years during the 19th century, and is generally regarded as the builder of the University. Father Tabaret was an ardent defender of bilingualism, often heard to say: \"...in this part of Canada, the use of both languages is not a matter of discussion; it is a matter of necessity.\"",
"Joseph Mede\n Joseph Mede (1586 in Berden – 1639) was an English scholar with a wide range of interests. He was educated at Christ's College, Cambridge, where he became a Fellow from 1613. He is now remembered as a biblical scholar. He was also a naturalist and Egyptologist. He was a Hebraist, and became Lecturer of Greek.",
"Joseph-Isidore Bédard\n Joseph-Isidore Bédard (January 9, 1806 – April 14, 1833) was a lawyer and political figure in Lower Canada. He was born in Quebec City in 1806, the son of Pierre-Stanislas Bédard, and studied at the Séminaire de Nicolet. He articled in law with Georges-Barthélemi Faribault and was called to the bar in 1829. He was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada for Saguenay in 1830. He opposed an elected legislative council and voted against the expulsion of Robert Christie from the assembly. Bédard wrote the words to the patriotic song ''Sol Canadien! Terre chérie!, first published in the Quebec Gazette''. Bédard travelled to England with Denis-Benjamin Viger in 1831. In September 1832, when he was about to return to Lower Canada, he suffered a haemorrhage of the lungs. He died in Paris in 1833 and was buried in the cemetery at Montmartre. His brother Elzéar was a judge and also served in the legislative assembly.",
"Laoukein Médard\n Laoukein Kourayo Médard is a Chadian opposition politician of the Chadian Convention for Peace and Development (CTPD) party who served as Mayor of Moundou. He ran for the president of Chad Republic in the 2016 presidential poll but lost to long serving President Idris Deby who was running for a fourth term in office. Médard pulled a political surprise after placing 3rd position with 392,988 or 10.61 per cent of the votes. In 2021, he declared that he would run in the presidential poll due to the inclusion of military officers loyal to President Deby as electoral officials and restriction on campaign gathering. In July 2017, Médard was arrested and detained for days on the charges of financial embezzlement when he was the mayor of Moundou. An independent investigation ordered by the court found that Médard was not guilty of the charges against and was subsequently released.",
"Angecourt\nThe Church of Saint Médard contains a Funeral Plaque of Nicolas des Oudet (18th century) which is registered as an historical object. ",
"Joseph Millard\n Joseph Hopkins Millard (April 20, 1836 – January 13, 1922) was a Canadian-American businessman and politician from Nebraska. He served in the United States Senate and as mayor of Omaha, and was an anti-suffrage activist.",
"Joseph Chiwatenhwa\n deeply that all I can do in return is to offer myself to you. I chose you as my elder and chief. There is no one else.\" In adopting his new faith, Joseph drew on many of the spiritual and cultural teachings of his people; he entered the Catholic Church as a Huron. This helped him spread the Good News to many members of his family and tribe. Pope John Paul II said at Huronia that \"the worthy traditions of the Indian tribes were strengthened and enriched by the Gospel message … not only is Christianity relevant to the Indian peoples, but Christ, in the members of his Body, is himself Indian.\" Let us ",
"Joseph Medawar\n Joseph Michel Medawar (in Arabic جوزف مدوّر, born November 22, 1961 in Beirut, Lebanon) is a Lebanese American financial strategist and investment-banking counselor specializing in media, entertainment and related industries, and a film producer. In 2006, he was sentenced to a year and a day in prison and was ordered to pay $2.6 million in restitution to the defrauded investors.",
"Alex Joseph\n Alex Joseph (1936 – September 27, 1998) (born Alec Richard Joseph; also referred to as Ronald Ellison) was an American outspoken polygamist and founder of the Confederate Nations of Israel, a Mormon fundamentalist sect. As mayor of Big Water, Utah, Joseph was the first Libertarian Party mayor of a community in the United States.",
"Joseph-François Lafitau\n Lafitau's comparative method (method of reciprocal illumination) rests on his \"system\" which is a compendium of his theoretical presupposition. He believed that man was created equal by God and was given a set of divine moral principles. These principles were gradually violated due to the inherited sinfulness of man—a consequence of the penalty of Original Sin. All men originally shared one religion with one God but over time people migrated to separate margins of the earth where they then lost touch with the values and traditions of this one \"true religion\" and culture. Therefore, Lafitau believed in the \"psychic unity of mankind\" and the doctrine of primitive monotheism. Lafitau strove to find traces of this degenerated \"true faith\", of which Christianity was the highest form, among the Native Americans. Lafitau's version of these theories differed from that of his predecessors and contemporaries. Pierre Daniel Huet, for ",
"Joseph Medawar\n Joseph Medawar was born in Beirut in a Christian Lebanese family. He immigrated to the United States in 1975 fleeing the war in Lebanon and settled with his family in Palos Verdes, California.",
"Church of Saint-Médard, Tremblay-en-France\n The parish (parochia de Trembleium) was established a long time ago and became the property of Saint-Denis Abbey in the 9th century. A church dedicated to Saint Medard was mentioned in 1163. Several elements of the foundation are said to date back to the Merovingian period. Three tombs of that time were found on the site. Several stone blocks from the 13th century were found in the base of the church. However, the choir of the current building dates back to 1543, and the nave to the 18th century. In 1781, at the request of intendant Louis Bénigne François Bertier de Sauvigny, architect Jacques Cellerier offered to re-build the nave and the belltower without altering the foundations. This project led to further restoration works in the 19th century. The church of Saint-Médard was listed as a Class Historic Monument in 1939. The church is adorned with liturgical furniture made by sculptor Jacques Dieudonné: an altar, an ambon, crosses and candlesticks.",
"Claude Sicard\n Father Claude Sicard (1677–1726) was a French Jesuit priest, and an early modern visitor to Egypt, between 1708 and 1712. Sicard was a scholar and at the age of 22 was a professor in the seminary at Lyon. He was well educated in Latin, Greek, Coptic and Arabic. He was also skilled in cartography. His aim was to convert Egypt's Coptic Christians to Roman Catholicism. Sicard was Supervisor of the Jesuit Mission in Cairo. He ate only vegetables and conformed to the Egyptian way of living for nine successive years. He was the first European to locate Thebes. He identified the ruins of Karnak and Luxor as those of ancient Thebes. Sicard commented that \"Its remains are magnificent and more extensive than it is possible to imagine.\" Sicard died of plague from nursing the afflicted in 1726."
] |
What is the religion of Clemente Isnard? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Clemente Isnard | 3,048,421 | 47 | [
{
"id": "13335747",
"title": "Clemente",
"text": " film producer, director and writer ; Clemente G. Gomez-Rodriguez (born 1939), Cuban writer ; Clemente Gera (died 1643), Italian Roman Catholic bishop ; Clemente Gordon (born 1967), American football quarterback ; Clemente Gràcia (1897–1981), Spanish footballer ; Clemente Isnard (1917–2011), Brazilian Catholic bishop ; Clemente López de Osornio (1720–1783), Argentine-Spanish military leader. ; Clemente Marroquín (1897–1978), Guatemalan journalist and politician ; Clemente Mejía (1928–1978), Mexican swimmer ; Clemente Micara (1879–1965), Italian Catholic cardinal ; Clemente Núñez (born 1975), Dominican baseball player ; Clemente Origo (1855–1921), Italian painter ; Clemente Ovalle (born 1982), Mexican footballer ; Clemente Palacios (born 1993), Colombian footballer ; Clemente Palma (1872–1946), Peruvian writer ; ",
"score": "1.4753063"
},
{
"id": "11624462",
"title": "Louie Clemente",
"text": " Louie Clemente (born January 23, 1965) is a former drummer for the Bay Area thrash metal band Testament. He is known for being a part of Testament's original line-up.",
"score": "1.4745893"
},
{
"id": "13335745",
"title": "Clemente",
"text": " Louie Clemente (born 1965), American musician ; Ludovic Clemente (born 1986), Andorran footballer ; Manuel Clemente (born 1948), Catholic Patriarch of Lisbon ; Mariano Clemente, Argentine footballer ; Michael Clemente (1908–1987), American mobster ; Nicholas Clemente (1929–2009), American judge ; Paul Clemente, American politician ; Paulo Clemente (born 1983), Portuguese footballer ; Pia Clemente, Filipina-American film producer ; Ramón Clemente (born 1985), Puerto Rican basketball player ; Ramon di Clemente (born 1975), South African Olympic rower ; Roberto Clemente (1934–1972), Puerto Rican baseball player ; Roberto Clemente Jr. (born 1965), Puerto Rican broadcaster and former baseball player, son of Roberto Clemente ; Rosa Clemente (born 1972), American journalist and activist ; Simón de Roxas Clemente y Rubio (1777–1827), a Spanish botanist who used the standard author abbreviation Clemente ; Steve Clemente (1885–1950), Mexican-American actor ; Tim Clemente (born 1960), American counter-terrorism expert ; Enrique Clemente (born 1999), Spanish footballer ",
"score": "1.4735212"
},
{
"id": "13335748",
"title": "Clemente",
"text": " Peani (1731–1782), Catholic missionary ; Clemente Polito (died 1606), Italian Catholic bishop ; Clemente Promontorio (1340–1415), Genoese doge ; Clemente Rebora (1885–1957), Italian poet ; Clemente Rojas (born 1952), Colombian boxer ; Clemente Ruiz Nazario (1896–1969), Puerto Rican judge ; Clemente Russo (born 1982), Italian boxer ; Clemente Sánchez (1947–1978), Mexican boxer ; Clemente Sánchez (born 1958), American politician ; Clemente Soto Vélez (1903–1993), Puerto Rican writer and activist ; Clemente Susini (1754–1814), Italian artist and anatomist ; Clemente Tabone (c. undefined 1575–1665), Maltese landowner and militia member ; Clemente Valencia (1968–2011), Mexican wrestler ; Clemente Villaverde (born 1959), Spanish footballer ; Clemente Yerovi (1904–1981), Ecuadoran politician ",
"score": "1.4729702"
},
{
"id": "8438788",
"title": "Clement Kofi Humado",
"text": " He is a Christian and worships as a Catholic. He is married with 5 children.",
"score": "1.4658147"
},
{
"id": "13335746",
"title": "Clemente",
"text": "Clemente Agosto (born 1974), Puerto Rican politician ; Clemente Aguirre (1828–1900), Mexican musician ; Clemente Albèri (1803–1864), Italian painter ; Clemente Álvarez (born 1968), Venezuelan baseball player ; Clemente Biondetti (1898–1955), Italian racing driver ; Clemente Bocciardo (1620–1658), Italian painter ; Clemente Bondi (1742–1821), Italian poet ; Clemente Canepari (1886–1966), Italian cyclist ; Clemente \"Clem\" Cattini (born 1937), British musician ; Clemente Cerdeira Fernández (1887–1947), Spanish Arabist and diplomat ; Clemente de Faria Jr. (born 1987), Brazilian racing driver ; Clemente Domínguez y Gómez (1946–2005), Antipope of the Palmarian Catholic Church ; Clemente Estable (1894–1976), Uruguayan scientist ; Clemente Fernández López (1919–1996), Spanish footballer ; Clemente Fracassi (1917–1993), ",
"score": "1.4593152"
},
{
"id": "13335744",
"title": "Clemente",
"text": "Aldo Di Clemente (born 1948), Italian amateur astronomer ; Anna Clemente (born 1994), Italian racewalker ; Ari Clemente (born 1939), Brazilian footballer ; Aria Clemente (born 1995), Filipina actress and singer ; Art Clemente (born 1925), American politician ; C. Daniel Clemente (born 1936), American attorney and businessman ; Christofer Clemente, Australian scientist ; Denis Clemente (born 1986), Puerto Rican basketball player ; Edgard Clemente (born 1975), Puerto Rican baseball player, nephew of Roberto Clemente ; Fernando Clemente (1917–1998), Italian architect ; Francesco Clemente (born 1952), Italian painter ; Gerardo Clemente (born 1982), Swiss football player ; Jacob Clemente (born 1997), American actor and dancer ; Javier Clemente (born 1950), Spanish football manager ; Jim Clemente, American author and television writer and producer ; John Clemente (1926–2011) Italian physician and philatelist ; Joseph Clemente (born 1987), Indian footballer ; L. Gary Clemente (1908–1968), United States Representative from New York ",
"score": "1.4365685"
},
{
"id": "12276723",
"title": "Paul Clemente",
"text": " Clemente's wife is Cara Clemente, who became a politician. They have three children. Clemente lives in Lincoln Park, Michigan.",
"score": "1.4261993"
},
{
"id": "15020414",
"title": "John Clemente",
"text": " John Faust Clemente (1926–2011) was an Italian physician whose career was in Tasmania, Australia, and who, as an alderman, was one of the main figures behind the creation of the Salamanca Market in Hobart in 1972. In his spare time, he collected art and antiques with his wife Ruth and formed a leading collection of Tasmanian postal history.",
"score": "1.4136386"
},
{
"id": "15020417",
"title": "John Clemente",
"text": " Clemente was an alderman in Hobart from 1968 to 1976 and one of the prime forces behind the creation of the Salamanca Market in 1972. A commemorative plaque exists on the building where the Maldini Café Restaurant is located. Clemente was president of Hobart Juventus, the local association football team.",
"score": "1.392482"
},
{
"id": "10199927",
"title": "Lino de Clemente",
"text": " Lino de Clemente (1767–1834) was a figure in the movement to obtain Venezuelan independence from Spain. Clemente was born in what is now Venezuela and received his early education in Spain before joining the Spanish navy. In the 1790s he served in the Napoleonic Wars in Europe. In 1811 he was part of the group that declared the independence of Venezuela. Clemente married a sister of Simon Bolívar. In 1826 he served as minister of the navy for Gran Colombia. For a time in the 1810s he lived with his family in exile in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. There he acted as an agent for the Venezuelan government in getting supplies to advance the interests of the revolution.",
"score": "1.3890573"
},
{
"id": "10199928",
"title": "Lino de Clemente",
"text": "source on Clemente ; another translated source on Clemente ; report on Clemente connected with a statue of him ",
"score": "1.3864143"
},
{
"id": "11624463",
"title": "Louie Clemente",
"text": " Clemente joined Testament in 1983 when they were called Legacy, and appeared on their first five studio albums, The Legacy (1987), The New Order (1988), Practice What You Preach (1989), Souls of Black (1990) and The Ritual (1992), as well as the live EP Live at Eindhoven (1987). In 1992 he left the band at the same time as guitarist Alex Skolnick. Clemente moved to a more stable career outside music, but agreed to share drum duties in 2005 during the classic reunion line-up in London. Unable to perform touring duties, after not having played a full set for 13 years, Clemente never officially rejoined Testament, but has called the London show one of the top points of his life. He has not played with Testament since. As of 2017, Clemente was Testament's longest-serving drummer, having been a member of the band for nine years, and the only drummer to record at least five albums with them. During his tenure in Testament, Clemente played Tama drums and Paiste cymbals.",
"score": "1.3844482"
},
{
"id": "3297509",
"title": "Clemente Villaverde",
"text": " Clemente Villaverde Huelva (born 8 February 1959), known simply as Clemente, is a Spanish former footballer who played as a left back. He is the current general manager of Getafe CF.",
"score": "1.3840852"
},
{
"id": "27885427",
"title": "Richard Rossi",
"text": " \"too preachy and too Catholic.\" The controversial scene turned out to be one of the most popular scenes in the film and won over fans to the idea of pitching for Clemente's canonization as a saint in the Catholic Church. Rossi received support for his efforts to canonize Clemente from various people and from Archbishop José Horacio Gómez of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles. \"I've never thought of him in terms of being a saint\", said MLB second baseman Neil Walker, a devout Catholic whose father knew Clemente. \"But he's somebody who lived his life serving others, really. So if it would happen, I wouldn't be terribly surprised by it.\" Some claim the canonization church requirement of a ",
"score": "1.382853"
},
{
"id": "27081063",
"title": "C. Daniel Clemente",
"text": " C. Daniel Clemente (born October 14, 1936) is a prominent American attorney, business executive, and consultant. He is the founder and CEO of Clemente Development Company, Inc., a real estate property management and development company based in Tysons Corner, Virginia. Clemente is a noted expert on real estate bankruptcy and corporate liquidation and has served as a court-appointed Receiver and Trustee for numerous companies. He is the former chair of the Board of Visitors for George Mason University, holding the position from July 2012 through June 2014. He currently serves on the Board of Directors for the Virginia Economic Development Partnership.",
"score": "1.3816127"
},
{
"id": "12276720",
"title": "Paul Clemente",
"text": " Paul Clemente (born May 19, 1963) is an American politician who served in the Michigan House of Representatives from 2011 to 2016. He represented the 14th district which includes Lincoln Park, Riverview, Melvindale and Wyandotte in the Downriver section of Wayne County.",
"score": "1.3785145"
},
{
"id": "27081064",
"title": "C. Daniel Clemente",
"text": " Clemente was born Costantino Daniel Clemente in Manhattan to Louis James and Amelia T. Clemente. His father was a surgeon who served in World War II as a Major in the U.S. Army. Clemente grew up in Brooklyn, attended the Brooklyn Preparatory School and matriculated to Fordham University, where he received his B.S. in economics in 1958. Following a year of postgraduate work at Marquette University, Clemente attended Georgetown University Law Center and was a member of the law review. He graduated with a J.D. in 1963 and was admitted to the bar in the same year.",
"score": "1.3723242"
},
{
"id": "8954999",
"title": "Manuel Clemente",
"text": " Manuel was ordained a priest on 29 June 1979 by Patriarch of Lisbon, António Ribeiro at the age of 31. From then on, he attained several positions. He became the director of Center for the Study of Religious History from 2000-2007. he became the member of the Scientific Society of the Catholic University since 1993 and became Associate Academic Correspondent of the Portuguese Academy of History from 1996. Manuel also became the head of the Foundation for Science and Technology's projects: Church and social movements: Catholic organizations in Portugal in the twentieth century (1993–1995) and The Catholic movement and the presence Church in Portuguese ",
"score": "1.3661711"
},
{
"id": "29323644",
"title": "São Clemente (Loulé)",
"text": " São Clemente is a Portuguese civil parish (freguesia) in the municipality of Loulé. The church of St. Clemente (Portuguese: Igreja Matriz de São Clemente) is the oldest and most important church in Loulé. It dates back to the second half of the 13th century and was built on the site of a former mosque The Church built in Gothic style consists of three naves, divided by Gothic arches supported by narrow columns. In the 16th century, several side chapels were added and five altarpieces were built. Located across the church is Jardim dos Amuados which is an old Arab Muslim cemetery. The St. Clemente Church bell tower is the oldest part of the church. It dates to the period of Muslim Moor rule in Portugal. It was the original minaret of a former mosque and used for issuing the Islamic call to prayer (Adhaan) five times a day for faithful to come to the mosque for congregation. It is one of the very few remaining Moorish minarets and mosque structures in Portugal. On 20 June 1924, the church was classified as a national monument by Decree No. 9842.",
"score": "1.3658049"
}
] | [
"Clemente\n film producer, director and writer ; Clemente G. Gomez-Rodriguez (born 1939), Cuban writer ; Clemente Gera (died 1643), Italian Roman Catholic bishop ; Clemente Gordon (born 1967), American football quarterback ; Clemente Gràcia (1897–1981), Spanish footballer ; Clemente Isnard (1917–2011), Brazilian Catholic bishop ; Clemente López de Osornio (1720–1783), Argentine-Spanish military leader. ; Clemente Marroquín (1897–1978), Guatemalan journalist and politician ; Clemente Mejía (1928–1978), Mexican swimmer ; Clemente Micara (1879–1965), Italian Catholic cardinal ; Clemente Núñez (born 1975), Dominican baseball player ; Clemente Origo (1855–1921), Italian painter ; Clemente Ovalle (born 1982), Mexican footballer ; Clemente Palacios (born 1993), Colombian footballer ; Clemente Palma (1872–1946), Peruvian writer ; ",
"Louie Clemente\n Louie Clemente (born January 23, 1965) is a former drummer for the Bay Area thrash metal band Testament. He is known for being a part of Testament's original line-up.",
"Clemente\n Louie Clemente (born 1965), American musician ; Ludovic Clemente (born 1986), Andorran footballer ; Manuel Clemente (born 1948), Catholic Patriarch of Lisbon ; Mariano Clemente, Argentine footballer ; Michael Clemente (1908–1987), American mobster ; Nicholas Clemente (1929–2009), American judge ; Paul Clemente, American politician ; Paulo Clemente (born 1983), Portuguese footballer ; Pia Clemente, Filipina-American film producer ; Ramón Clemente (born 1985), Puerto Rican basketball player ; Ramon di Clemente (born 1975), South African Olympic rower ; Roberto Clemente (1934–1972), Puerto Rican baseball player ; Roberto Clemente Jr. (born 1965), Puerto Rican broadcaster and former baseball player, son of Roberto Clemente ; Rosa Clemente (born 1972), American journalist and activist ; Simón de Roxas Clemente y Rubio (1777–1827), a Spanish botanist who used the standard author abbreviation Clemente ; Steve Clemente (1885–1950), Mexican-American actor ; Tim Clemente (born 1960), American counter-terrorism expert ; Enrique Clemente (born 1999), Spanish footballer ",
"Clemente\n Peani (1731–1782), Catholic missionary ; Clemente Polito (died 1606), Italian Catholic bishop ; Clemente Promontorio (1340–1415), Genoese doge ; Clemente Rebora (1885–1957), Italian poet ; Clemente Rojas (born 1952), Colombian boxer ; Clemente Ruiz Nazario (1896–1969), Puerto Rican judge ; Clemente Russo (born 1982), Italian boxer ; Clemente Sánchez (1947–1978), Mexican boxer ; Clemente Sánchez (born 1958), American politician ; Clemente Soto Vélez (1903–1993), Puerto Rican writer and activist ; Clemente Susini (1754–1814), Italian artist and anatomist ; Clemente Tabone (c. undefined 1575–1665), Maltese landowner and militia member ; Clemente Valencia (1968–2011), Mexican wrestler ; Clemente Villaverde (born 1959), Spanish footballer ; Clemente Yerovi (1904–1981), Ecuadoran politician ",
"Clement Kofi Humado\n He is a Christian and worships as a Catholic. He is married with 5 children.",
"Clemente\nClemente Agosto (born 1974), Puerto Rican politician ; Clemente Aguirre (1828–1900), Mexican musician ; Clemente Albèri (1803–1864), Italian painter ; Clemente Álvarez (born 1968), Venezuelan baseball player ; Clemente Biondetti (1898–1955), Italian racing driver ; Clemente Bocciardo (1620–1658), Italian painter ; Clemente Bondi (1742–1821), Italian poet ; Clemente Canepari (1886–1966), Italian cyclist ; Clemente \"Clem\" Cattini (born 1937), British musician ; Clemente Cerdeira Fernández (1887–1947), Spanish Arabist and diplomat ; Clemente de Faria Jr. (born 1987), Brazilian racing driver ; Clemente Domínguez y Gómez (1946–2005), Antipope of the Palmarian Catholic Church ; Clemente Estable (1894–1976), Uruguayan scientist ; Clemente Fernández López (1919–1996), Spanish footballer ; Clemente Fracassi (1917–1993), ",
"Clemente\nAldo Di Clemente (born 1948), Italian amateur astronomer ; Anna Clemente (born 1994), Italian racewalker ; Ari Clemente (born 1939), Brazilian footballer ; Aria Clemente (born 1995), Filipina actress and singer ; Art Clemente (born 1925), American politician ; C. Daniel Clemente (born 1936), American attorney and businessman ; Christofer Clemente, Australian scientist ; Denis Clemente (born 1986), Puerto Rican basketball player ; Edgard Clemente (born 1975), Puerto Rican baseball player, nephew of Roberto Clemente ; Fernando Clemente (1917–1998), Italian architect ; Francesco Clemente (born 1952), Italian painter ; Gerardo Clemente (born 1982), Swiss football player ; Jacob Clemente (born 1997), American actor and dancer ; Javier Clemente (born 1950), Spanish football manager ; Jim Clemente, American author and television writer and producer ; John Clemente (1926–2011) Italian physician and philatelist ; Joseph Clemente (born 1987), Indian footballer ; L. Gary Clemente (1908–1968), United States Representative from New York ",
"Paul Clemente\n Clemente's wife is Cara Clemente, who became a politician. They have three children. Clemente lives in Lincoln Park, Michigan.",
"John Clemente\n John Faust Clemente (1926–2011) was an Italian physician whose career was in Tasmania, Australia, and who, as an alderman, was one of the main figures behind the creation of the Salamanca Market in Hobart in 1972. In his spare time, he collected art and antiques with his wife Ruth and formed a leading collection of Tasmanian postal history.",
"John Clemente\n Clemente was an alderman in Hobart from 1968 to 1976 and one of the prime forces behind the creation of the Salamanca Market in 1972. A commemorative plaque exists on the building where the Maldini Café Restaurant is located. Clemente was president of Hobart Juventus, the local association football team.",
"Lino de Clemente\n Lino de Clemente (1767–1834) was a figure in the movement to obtain Venezuelan independence from Spain. Clemente was born in what is now Venezuela and received his early education in Spain before joining the Spanish navy. In the 1790s he served in the Napoleonic Wars in Europe. In 1811 he was part of the group that declared the independence of Venezuela. Clemente married a sister of Simon Bolívar. In 1826 he served as minister of the navy for Gran Colombia. For a time in the 1810s he lived with his family in exile in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. There he acted as an agent for the Venezuelan government in getting supplies to advance the interests of the revolution.",
"Lino de Clemente\nsource on Clemente ; another translated source on Clemente ; report on Clemente connected with a statue of him ",
"Louie Clemente\n Clemente joined Testament in 1983 when they were called Legacy, and appeared on their first five studio albums, The Legacy (1987), The New Order (1988), Practice What You Preach (1989), Souls of Black (1990) and The Ritual (1992), as well as the live EP Live at Eindhoven (1987). In 1992 he left the band at the same time as guitarist Alex Skolnick. Clemente moved to a more stable career outside music, but agreed to share drum duties in 2005 during the classic reunion line-up in London. Unable to perform touring duties, after not having played a full set for 13 years, Clemente never officially rejoined Testament, but has called the London show one of the top points of his life. He has not played with Testament since. As of 2017, Clemente was Testament's longest-serving drummer, having been a member of the band for nine years, and the only drummer to record at least five albums with them. During his tenure in Testament, Clemente played Tama drums and Paiste cymbals.",
"Clemente Villaverde\n Clemente Villaverde Huelva (born 8 February 1959), known simply as Clemente, is a Spanish former footballer who played as a left back. He is the current general manager of Getafe CF.",
"Richard Rossi\n \"too preachy and too Catholic.\" The controversial scene turned out to be one of the most popular scenes in the film and won over fans to the idea of pitching for Clemente's canonization as a saint in the Catholic Church. Rossi received support for his efforts to canonize Clemente from various people and from Archbishop José Horacio Gómez of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles. \"I've never thought of him in terms of being a saint\", said MLB second baseman Neil Walker, a devout Catholic whose father knew Clemente. \"But he's somebody who lived his life serving others, really. So if it would happen, I wouldn't be terribly surprised by it.\" Some claim the canonization church requirement of a ",
"C. Daniel Clemente\n C. Daniel Clemente (born October 14, 1936) is a prominent American attorney, business executive, and consultant. He is the founder and CEO of Clemente Development Company, Inc., a real estate property management and development company based in Tysons Corner, Virginia. Clemente is a noted expert on real estate bankruptcy and corporate liquidation and has served as a court-appointed Receiver and Trustee for numerous companies. He is the former chair of the Board of Visitors for George Mason University, holding the position from July 2012 through June 2014. He currently serves on the Board of Directors for the Virginia Economic Development Partnership.",
"Paul Clemente\n Paul Clemente (born May 19, 1963) is an American politician who served in the Michigan House of Representatives from 2011 to 2016. He represented the 14th district which includes Lincoln Park, Riverview, Melvindale and Wyandotte in the Downriver section of Wayne County.",
"C. Daniel Clemente\n Clemente was born Costantino Daniel Clemente in Manhattan to Louis James and Amelia T. Clemente. His father was a surgeon who served in World War II as a Major in the U.S. Army. Clemente grew up in Brooklyn, attended the Brooklyn Preparatory School and matriculated to Fordham University, where he received his B.S. in economics in 1958. Following a year of postgraduate work at Marquette University, Clemente attended Georgetown University Law Center and was a member of the law review. He graduated with a J.D. in 1963 and was admitted to the bar in the same year.",
"Manuel Clemente\n Manuel was ordained a priest on 29 June 1979 by Patriarch of Lisbon, António Ribeiro at the age of 31. From then on, he attained several positions. He became the director of Center for the Study of Religious History from 2000-2007. he became the member of the Scientific Society of the Catholic University since 1993 and became Associate Academic Correspondent of the Portuguese Academy of History from 1996. Manuel also became the head of the Foundation for Science and Technology's projects: Church and social movements: Catholic organizations in Portugal in the twentieth century (1993–1995) and The Catholic movement and the presence Church in Portuguese ",
"São Clemente (Loulé)\n São Clemente is a Portuguese civil parish (freguesia) in the municipality of Loulé. The church of St. Clemente (Portuguese: Igreja Matriz de São Clemente) is the oldest and most important church in Loulé. It dates back to the second half of the 13th century and was built on the site of a former mosque The Church built in Gothic style consists of three naves, divided by Gothic arches supported by narrow columns. In the 16th century, several side chapels were added and five altarpieces were built. Located across the church is Jardim dos Amuados which is an old Arab Muslim cemetery. The St. Clemente Church bell tower is the oldest part of the church. It dates to the period of Muslim Moor rule in Portugal. It was the original minaret of a former mosque and used for issuing the Islamic call to prayer (Adhaan) five times a day for faithful to come to the mosque for congregation. It is one of the very few remaining Moorish minarets and mosque structures in Portugal. On 20 June 1924, the church was classified as a national monument by Decree No. 9842."
] |
What is the religion of Franciszek Rogaczewski? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Franciszek Rogaczewski | 3,093,191 | 78 | [
{
"id": "1972952",
"title": "Józef Roszyński",
"text": " Józef Roszyński (born August 18, 1962 in Nidzica) is a Polish clergyman and bishop for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Wewak. He was appointed bishop in 2015.",
"score": "1.4817828"
},
{
"id": "1026969",
"title": "Wojciech Roszkowski",
"text": " Wojciech Roszkowski OOB (born 20 June 1947 in Warsaw) is a Polish nobleman, economic historian and writer, specializing in Polish and European history of the 20th and 21st century. He was a politician and Member of the European Parliament (MEP) in 2004–2009. From 1980 to 1983 he was a member of the independent self-governing trade union Solidarność. From 1990 to 1993 he served as vice-rector of Warsaw School of Economics. He is a fellow of Collegium Invisibile and a signatory of the Prague Declaration on European Conscience and Communism. Under the pseudonym Andrzej Albert, he has published books about 20th-century Polish history, focusing on 1918–1980, as well as a synthesis of the political history of the world post-1945. The books were edited in single and three-band releases, in Polish and English. His book \"The World of Christ\", a complete history of the world depicted during the lifetime of Jesus Christ, was published in 2016 after over fifty years of work. He is one of Poland's most popular authors. In 2019 \"The Shattered Mirror – The Downfall of Western Civilization\" was one of Poland's most read books.",
"score": "1.4613974"
},
{
"id": "12460900",
"title": "Franciszek Blachnicki",
"text": " Franciszek Blachnicki (24 March 1921 – 27 February 1987) was a Polish Roman Catholic priest and the founder of the Light-Life movement - also known as the Oasis Movement - and the Secular Institute of the Immaculate Mother of the Church. He founded several other movements and religious congregations that would address a range of social and ethical issues. These issues included anti-alcoholism and human rights. His movements first came about after starting out as simple retreats designed for both altar servers and families that later began to address a series of issues in Poland at the time. His concern for human rights came during the communist era in Poland as well as his experiences as a prisoner of war during World War II in which he was incarcerated in Auschwitz and other concentration camps under the German Nazi regime. Blachnicki's beatification process opened in Poland in the 1990s and he became titled as a Servant of God upon the cause's commencement. The decisive moment in the process came on 30 September 2015 after Pope Francis confirmed his heroic virtue and titled him as Venerable.",
"score": "1.4565789"
},
{
"id": "30063021",
"title": "Irreligion in Poland",
"text": " person could openly admit their atheism or agnosticism. The initiative aims to promote ideological assertiveness among the unbelievers, checking the presence of believers in the social life and the consolidation and strengthening of cooperation between free thinkers. Many leading Polish media have written dozens of articles about this initiative, causing a discussion on the situation of unbelievers in Poland (Gazeta Wyborcza, Cross-section, Overview, Republic, Newsweek, Tribune, Gazeta Pomorska, Kurier Lubelski, Wirtualna Polska, Życie Warszawy ), and on the radio TOK FM was a debate about atheism between the academic priest Gregory Michalczyk and the founder and then-president of the Polish Rationalist Association Mariusz Agnosiewicz. After two ",
"score": "1.4552982"
},
{
"id": "9414744",
"title": "Franciszek",
"text": " army sergeant whose life was spared when Saint Maximilian Kolbe sacrificed his life for Gajowniczek at Auschwitz ; Franciszek Gąsienica Groń (born 1931), Polish Olympic skier ; Franciszek Gąsior (born 1947), Polish Olympic handball player ; Franciszek Grocholski (1730–1792), Polish nobleman and politician ; Franciszek Gruszka (1910–1940), Polish aviator who flew with the RAF during the Battle of Britain ; Franciszek Hodur (1866–1953), Polish prelate of the Polish National Catholic Church ; Franciszek Jamroż (contemporary), Polish politician, former Mayor of Gdańsk; imprisoned for corruption and bribery ; Franciszek Jarecki (born 1931), Polish Air Force aviator who defected to the West with a MIG-15 in 1953 ; Franciszek ",
"score": "1.4351329"
},
{
"id": "8333084",
"title": "Franciszek Siarczyński",
"text": " Franciszek Siarczyński (1758–1829) was a Polish Roman Catholic priest, member of the Piarist religious order, historian, geographer, teacher, writer and publicist. He was a lecturer of grammar, history and geography at the Collegium Nobilium in Warsaw, Poland from 1781 to 1785. He was a regular guest at the Thursday Dinners held by the King of Poland, Stanisław August Poniatowski in the era of the Enlightenment in Poland. He was the author of three volumes of ‘Geografii, czyli opisania naturalnego, historycznego i politycznego krajów i narodów’ (Geography, natural history, history and politics of the country and its citizens). At the time of the Kościuszko Uprising in ",
"score": "1.4303267"
},
{
"id": "9585159",
"title": "Szymon Niemiec",
"text": " the Church by Archbishop Terry Flynn. In May 2007 he published his first book: Rainbow Humming Bird on the Butt. From 2008, Niemiec became a member of the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association, and president of the board of \"Friends of Szymon\" foundation. In October 2019, Niemiec was interrogated by police under suspicion of offending religious feelings \"by insulting the object of worship in the form of a Roman Catholic Mass\"; police had received more than 150 complaints regarding the incident. He had held an ecumenical, LGBT religious service for Warsaw's 2019 Equality Parade, criticized by the Roman Catholic Episcopal Conference of Poland and Law and Justice politicians. Niemiec had held similar services every year since 2010 with little controversy. Niemiec and Julia Maciocha, president of the committee which organizes Equality Parade, stated that the complaint violates the constitutional guarantee of freedom of religion.",
"score": "1.4281948"
},
{
"id": "3772846",
"title": "Józef Rogacki",
"text": " Józef Rogacki (born 21 November 1953, in Gorzałów) is a Polish politician who is a current Member of Kuyavian-Pomeranian Regional Assembly.",
"score": "1.4240685"
},
{
"id": "9414748",
"title": "Franciszek",
"text": " activist ; Franciszek Pieczka (born 1928), Polish film and stage actor ; Franciszek Piper (born 1941), Polish scholar, historian and author; specializing in the Holocaust ; Franciszek Pius Radziwiłł (1878–1944), Polish nobleman and political activist ; Franciszek Pokorny (fl. mid-20th century), Polish military officer and cryptographer ; Franciszek Przysiężniak (1909–1975), Polish military officer and anticommunist resistance fighter; recipient of the Virtuti Militari ; Franciszek Rychnowski (1850–1929), Polish engineer and an inventor ; Franciszek Salezy Dmochowski (1801–1871), Polish writer, poet, translator, critic, and journalist ; Franciszek Salezy Jezierski (1740–1791), Polish priest, writer, and activist of the Enlightenment period ; Franciszek Salezy Potocki (1700–1772), Polish-Lithuanian nobleman; Knight of ",
"score": "1.4216335"
},
{
"id": "29484338",
"title": "Jacek Rostowski",
"text": " Jan Anthony Vincent-Rostowski, also known as Jacek Rostowski (born 30 April 1951, London), is a British-Polish economist and politician who served as Minister of Finance and Deputy Prime Minister of the Republic of Poland. He was a candidate for Change UK in London at the 2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom.",
"score": "1.4215119"
},
{
"id": "9414749",
"title": "Franciszek",
"text": " Order of the White Eagle ; Franciszek Sebastian Lubomirski (diet 1699), Polish nobleman ; Franciszek Siarczyński (1758–1829), Polish Roman Catholic Piarist priest, historian, geographer, teacher, and writer ; Franciszek Smuda (born 1948), Polish professional football player, coach, and manager ; Franciszek Smuglewicz (1745–1807), Polish-Lithuanian draftsman and painter ; Franciszek Starowieyski (1930–2009), Polish artist ; Franciszek Stefaniuk (born 1944), Polish politician from Chełm ; Franciszek Sulik (1908–2000), Polish-Australian chess master ; Franciszek Szymczyk (1892–1976), Polish Olympic track cyclist ; Franciszek Trąbalski (1870–1964), Polish socialist politician ; Franciszek Trześniewski (died 1939), Polish gourmand and chef; eponym of the Trześniewski restaurant in Vienna ; Franciszek Walicki (born 1921), Polish ",
"score": "1.4186418"
},
{
"id": "30063015",
"title": "Irreligion in Poland",
"text": " Atheism and irreligion is uncommon in Poland with Catholic Christianity as the largest faith. However, it is on the rise, which has caused tensions in the country. In a public performance during the 2014 Procession of Atheists in Poland commemorated Kazimierz Łyszczyński, who is considered the first Polish atheist.",
"score": "1.4173872"
},
{
"id": "2618605",
"title": "Church of St Francis in Warsaw",
"text": "Constantine Francis Mokronowski (d. 1733), the standard-bearer of land in Warsaw ; Ladislaus Grzegorzewski (d. 1758), Castellan Ciechanow, General royal guard 1736 ; Father Anthony Kaczanowski (d. 1896) ; Henryk Perzyński (d. 1898), ; Sabina Wróblewska (d. 1904) ",
"score": "1.4172938"
},
{
"id": "4773342",
"title": "St. Hedwig's (Milwaukee)",
"text": " was appointed and his first Mass was said on December 11, 1885. Father Rogozinski had been born in Poland in 1835 and had been ordained in Łowicz in 1861, just as another national uprising was taking place against the Tsar. The provisional Polish government had chosen Rogozinski to administer the oath of allegiance to the rebels. After the uprising failed, Rogozinski tried to escape to Galicia, but was detained by the Russian police and imprisoned in Olomuniec for 11 months. After his release, he journeyed to America, finally settling in Milwaukee. Father Rogozinski, who was revered by the local ",
"score": "1.4147344"
},
{
"id": "9414745",
"title": "Franciszek",
"text": " Jaskulski (1913–1947), Polish soldier and commander in the anticommunist Freedom and Independence organization ; Franciszek Kamieński (1851–1912), Polish botanist ; Franciszek Kamiński (1902–2000), Polish general and activist of the peasant movement ; Franciszek Kareu (1731–1802), Belarusian Jesuit priest; Superior General of the Society of Jesus 1801–02 ; Franciszek Karpiński (1741–1825), Polish poet of the Age of Enlightenment ; Franciszek Karwowski (1895–2005), Austria-Hungary World War I veteran ; Franciszek Kasparek (1844–1903), Polish jurist, professor of law, and rector of Kraków University ; Franciszek Kleeberg (1888–1941), Polish general officer in the Austro-Hungarian army and subsequently in the Polish Legions ; Franciszek Kniaźnin (1750–1807), Polish dramatist and writer ; Franciszek ",
"score": "1.4135838"
},
{
"id": "12507334",
"title": "Karol Grycz-Śmiłowski",
"text": " Karol Grycz-Śmiłowski (17 September 1885 in Śmiłowice – 16 February 1959 in Kraków) was a Polish Lutheran priest who sought to reestablish the Polish Brethren of the period 1565-1658. Grycz-Śmiłowski was head of the Lutheran pastoral care service in Kraków. In 1934 he published A contemporary faith from the Holy Land (\"Z ziemi świętej nowoczesne Wierzę\") in which he presented himself as a free thinker, heir to the Polish Brethren. In 1936 he founded a small group started to publish the quarterly magazine Free Religious Thought (\"Wolna Myśl Religijna\"). In 1937 at a meeting in Łódź he founded the free religious association \"Bracia Polscy\", which in ",
"score": "1.4135742"
},
{
"id": "12736770",
"title": "Jan Woleński",
"text": " Woleński is active in Poland's atheist movement. In the 1960s he was a member of the government-sponsored Association of Atheists and Freethinkers, and since 2007 he is a member of the Honorary Committee of the Polish Rationalist Association. He is widely recognized in Poland as an atheist and has promoted the replacement of religion classes with philosophy classes in Polish schools. Woleński is involved in the secular Jewish movement, writing on the common Polish-Jewish past and on today's Polish-Jewish relations. He is a member of B'nai B'rith and was deputy president of its Polish chapter from 2007 to 2012. He was a member of the Polish United Workers Party (the Polish communist party) from 1965 to 1981. From 1980 to 1990 he was a member of the Solidarity (Polish trade union) movement.",
"score": "1.4119766"
},
{
"id": "3168888",
"title": "Róża Czacka",
"text": " to travel a considerable distance from that part of Poland to Warsaw and Laski. His broad intellectual horizons and numerous contacts, however, opened up new perspectives for the FSC. On his initiative, new institutions and centers were founded, including the Library of Religious Knowledge, a publishing house and the Verbum bookshop as well as a retreat house. From 1930, Fr Korniłowicz finally set up permanent residence Laski. University students and young intelligentsia were attracted to his so-called ‘Circle’. Some of them consequently entered the FSC or the Third Order of St Francis. Czacka’s decision to include lay co-workers from the Society for the ",
"score": "1.4097141"
},
{
"id": "30063018",
"title": "Irreligion in Poland",
"text": " Warsaw Circle of Intellectuals. They were also issued a letter Rationalist. In the twentieth and twenty first centuries Poles declaring a lifelong or temporary atheistic worldview include Tadeusz Boy-Żeleński, Tadeusz Kotarbiński, Irena Krzywicka, Witold Gombrowicz, Władysław Gomułka, Jan Kott, Jeremi Przybora, Wisława Szymborska, Stanisław Lem, Tadeusz Różewicz, Marek Edelman, Jerzy Kawalerowicz, Zygmunt Bauman, Maria Janion, Tadeusz Łomnicki, Włodzimierz Ptak, Jacek Kuroń, Kazimierz Kutz, Jerzy Urban, Roman Polański, Jerzy Vetulani, Karol Modzelewski, Zbigniew Religa, Jan Woleński, Andrzej Sapkowski, Kora Jackowska, Lech Janerka, Wanda Nowicka, Magdalena Środa, Jacek Kaczmarski, Aleksander Kwaśniewski, Kazik Staszewski, Kuba Wojewódzki, Janusz Palikot, Jan Hartman, Maria Peszek, Dorota Nieznalska, Robert Biedroń. After World War ",
"score": "1.408552"
},
{
"id": "9414743",
"title": "Franciszek",
"text": " (1906–1964), Polish Olympic rower ; Franciszek Bukaty (1747–1797), Polish diplomat ; Franciszek Cebulak (1906–1960), Polish Olympic football (soccer) player ; Franciszek Chalupka (1856–1909), Polish theologian; founder of the first Polish-American parishes in New England ; Franciszek Czapek (1811–unknown), Czech-Polish watchmaker ; Franciszek Dionizy Kniaźnin (1750–1807), Polish poet of the Enlightenment period ; Franciszek Dobrowolski (1830–1896), Polish theater director ; Franciszek Ferdynant Lubomirski (1710–1774), Polish nobleman and Knight of the Order of the White Eagle ; Franciszek Fiszer (1860–1937), Polish bon vivant, gourmand, erudite, and philosopher ; Franciszek Gągor (1951–2010), Polish general officer, Chief of the General Staff of the Polish Army since 2006 ; Franciszek Gajowniczek (1901–1995), ",
"score": "1.4066529"
}
] | [
"Józef Roszyński\n Józef Roszyński (born August 18, 1962 in Nidzica) is a Polish clergyman and bishop for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Wewak. He was appointed bishop in 2015.",
"Wojciech Roszkowski\n Wojciech Roszkowski OOB (born 20 June 1947 in Warsaw) is a Polish nobleman, economic historian and writer, specializing in Polish and European history of the 20th and 21st century. He was a politician and Member of the European Parliament (MEP) in 2004–2009. From 1980 to 1983 he was a member of the independent self-governing trade union Solidarność. From 1990 to 1993 he served as vice-rector of Warsaw School of Economics. He is a fellow of Collegium Invisibile and a signatory of the Prague Declaration on European Conscience and Communism. Under the pseudonym Andrzej Albert, he has published books about 20th-century Polish history, focusing on 1918–1980, as well as a synthesis of the political history of the world post-1945. The books were edited in single and three-band releases, in Polish and English. His book \"The World of Christ\", a complete history of the world depicted during the lifetime of Jesus Christ, was published in 2016 after over fifty years of work. He is one of Poland's most popular authors. In 2019 \"The Shattered Mirror – The Downfall of Western Civilization\" was one of Poland's most read books.",
"Franciszek Blachnicki\n Franciszek Blachnicki (24 March 1921 – 27 February 1987) was a Polish Roman Catholic priest and the founder of the Light-Life movement - also known as the Oasis Movement - and the Secular Institute of the Immaculate Mother of the Church. He founded several other movements and religious congregations that would address a range of social and ethical issues. These issues included anti-alcoholism and human rights. His movements first came about after starting out as simple retreats designed for both altar servers and families that later began to address a series of issues in Poland at the time. His concern for human rights came during the communist era in Poland as well as his experiences as a prisoner of war during World War II in which he was incarcerated in Auschwitz and other concentration camps under the German Nazi regime. Blachnicki's beatification process opened in Poland in the 1990s and he became titled as a Servant of God upon the cause's commencement. The decisive moment in the process came on 30 September 2015 after Pope Francis confirmed his heroic virtue and titled him as Venerable.",
"Irreligion in Poland\n person could openly admit their atheism or agnosticism. The initiative aims to promote ideological assertiveness among the unbelievers, checking the presence of believers in the social life and the consolidation and strengthening of cooperation between free thinkers. Many leading Polish media have written dozens of articles about this initiative, causing a discussion on the situation of unbelievers in Poland (Gazeta Wyborcza, Cross-section, Overview, Republic, Newsweek, Tribune, Gazeta Pomorska, Kurier Lubelski, Wirtualna Polska, Życie Warszawy ), and on the radio TOK FM was a debate about atheism between the academic priest Gregory Michalczyk and the founder and then-president of the Polish Rationalist Association Mariusz Agnosiewicz. After two ",
"Franciszek\n army sergeant whose life was spared when Saint Maximilian Kolbe sacrificed his life for Gajowniczek at Auschwitz ; Franciszek Gąsienica Groń (born 1931), Polish Olympic skier ; Franciszek Gąsior (born 1947), Polish Olympic handball player ; Franciszek Grocholski (1730–1792), Polish nobleman and politician ; Franciszek Gruszka (1910–1940), Polish aviator who flew with the RAF during the Battle of Britain ; Franciszek Hodur (1866–1953), Polish prelate of the Polish National Catholic Church ; Franciszek Jamroż (contemporary), Polish politician, former Mayor of Gdańsk; imprisoned for corruption and bribery ; Franciszek Jarecki (born 1931), Polish Air Force aviator who defected to the West with a MIG-15 in 1953 ; Franciszek ",
"Franciszek Siarczyński\n Franciszek Siarczyński (1758–1829) was a Polish Roman Catholic priest, member of the Piarist religious order, historian, geographer, teacher, writer and publicist. He was a lecturer of grammar, history and geography at the Collegium Nobilium in Warsaw, Poland from 1781 to 1785. He was a regular guest at the Thursday Dinners held by the King of Poland, Stanisław August Poniatowski in the era of the Enlightenment in Poland. He was the author of three volumes of ‘Geografii, czyli opisania naturalnego, historycznego i politycznego krajów i narodów’ (Geography, natural history, history and politics of the country and its citizens). At the time of the Kościuszko Uprising in ",
"Szymon Niemiec\n the Church by Archbishop Terry Flynn. In May 2007 he published his first book: Rainbow Humming Bird on the Butt. From 2008, Niemiec became a member of the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association, and president of the board of \"Friends of Szymon\" foundation. In October 2019, Niemiec was interrogated by police under suspicion of offending religious feelings \"by insulting the object of worship in the form of a Roman Catholic Mass\"; police had received more than 150 complaints regarding the incident. He had held an ecumenical, LGBT religious service for Warsaw's 2019 Equality Parade, criticized by the Roman Catholic Episcopal Conference of Poland and Law and Justice politicians. Niemiec had held similar services every year since 2010 with little controversy. Niemiec and Julia Maciocha, president of the committee which organizes Equality Parade, stated that the complaint violates the constitutional guarantee of freedom of religion.",
"Józef Rogacki\n Józef Rogacki (born 21 November 1953, in Gorzałów) is a Polish politician who is a current Member of Kuyavian-Pomeranian Regional Assembly.",
"Franciszek\n activist ; Franciszek Pieczka (born 1928), Polish film and stage actor ; Franciszek Piper (born 1941), Polish scholar, historian and author; specializing in the Holocaust ; Franciszek Pius Radziwiłł (1878–1944), Polish nobleman and political activist ; Franciszek Pokorny (fl. mid-20th century), Polish military officer and cryptographer ; Franciszek Przysiężniak (1909–1975), Polish military officer and anticommunist resistance fighter; recipient of the Virtuti Militari ; Franciszek Rychnowski (1850–1929), Polish engineer and an inventor ; Franciszek Salezy Dmochowski (1801–1871), Polish writer, poet, translator, critic, and journalist ; Franciszek Salezy Jezierski (1740–1791), Polish priest, writer, and activist of the Enlightenment period ; Franciszek Salezy Potocki (1700–1772), Polish-Lithuanian nobleman; Knight of ",
"Jacek Rostowski\n Jan Anthony Vincent-Rostowski, also known as Jacek Rostowski (born 30 April 1951, London), is a British-Polish economist and politician who served as Minister of Finance and Deputy Prime Minister of the Republic of Poland. He was a candidate for Change UK in London at the 2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom.",
"Franciszek\n Order of the White Eagle ; Franciszek Sebastian Lubomirski (diet 1699), Polish nobleman ; Franciszek Siarczyński (1758–1829), Polish Roman Catholic Piarist priest, historian, geographer, teacher, and writer ; Franciszek Smuda (born 1948), Polish professional football player, coach, and manager ; Franciszek Smuglewicz (1745–1807), Polish-Lithuanian draftsman and painter ; Franciszek Starowieyski (1930–2009), Polish artist ; Franciszek Stefaniuk (born 1944), Polish politician from Chełm ; Franciszek Sulik (1908–2000), Polish-Australian chess master ; Franciszek Szymczyk (1892–1976), Polish Olympic track cyclist ; Franciszek Trąbalski (1870–1964), Polish socialist politician ; Franciszek Trześniewski (died 1939), Polish gourmand and chef; eponym of the Trześniewski restaurant in Vienna ; Franciszek Walicki (born 1921), Polish ",
"Irreligion in Poland\n Atheism and irreligion is uncommon in Poland with Catholic Christianity as the largest faith. However, it is on the rise, which has caused tensions in the country. In a public performance during the 2014 Procession of Atheists in Poland commemorated Kazimierz Łyszczyński, who is considered the first Polish atheist.",
"Church of St Francis in Warsaw\nConstantine Francis Mokronowski (d. 1733), the standard-bearer of land in Warsaw ; Ladislaus Grzegorzewski (d. 1758), Castellan Ciechanow, General royal guard 1736 ; Father Anthony Kaczanowski (d. 1896) ; Henryk Perzyński (d. 1898), ; Sabina Wróblewska (d. 1904) ",
"St. Hedwig's (Milwaukee)\n was appointed and his first Mass was said on December 11, 1885. Father Rogozinski had been born in Poland in 1835 and had been ordained in Łowicz in 1861, just as another national uprising was taking place against the Tsar. The provisional Polish government had chosen Rogozinski to administer the oath of allegiance to the rebels. After the uprising failed, Rogozinski tried to escape to Galicia, but was detained by the Russian police and imprisoned in Olomuniec for 11 months. After his release, he journeyed to America, finally settling in Milwaukee. Father Rogozinski, who was revered by the local ",
"Franciszek\n Jaskulski (1913–1947), Polish soldier and commander in the anticommunist Freedom and Independence organization ; Franciszek Kamieński (1851–1912), Polish botanist ; Franciszek Kamiński (1902–2000), Polish general and activist of the peasant movement ; Franciszek Kareu (1731–1802), Belarusian Jesuit priest; Superior General of the Society of Jesus 1801–02 ; Franciszek Karpiński (1741–1825), Polish poet of the Age of Enlightenment ; Franciszek Karwowski (1895–2005), Austria-Hungary World War I veteran ; Franciszek Kasparek (1844–1903), Polish jurist, professor of law, and rector of Kraków University ; Franciszek Kleeberg (1888–1941), Polish general officer in the Austro-Hungarian army and subsequently in the Polish Legions ; Franciszek Kniaźnin (1750–1807), Polish dramatist and writer ; Franciszek ",
"Karol Grycz-Śmiłowski\n Karol Grycz-Śmiłowski (17 September 1885 in Śmiłowice – 16 February 1959 in Kraków) was a Polish Lutheran priest who sought to reestablish the Polish Brethren of the period 1565-1658. Grycz-Śmiłowski was head of the Lutheran pastoral care service in Kraków. In 1934 he published A contemporary faith from the Holy Land (\"Z ziemi świętej nowoczesne Wierzę\") in which he presented himself as a free thinker, heir to the Polish Brethren. In 1936 he founded a small group started to publish the quarterly magazine Free Religious Thought (\"Wolna Myśl Religijna\"). In 1937 at a meeting in Łódź he founded the free religious association \"Bracia Polscy\", which in ",
"Jan Woleński\n Woleński is active in Poland's atheist movement. In the 1960s he was a member of the government-sponsored Association of Atheists and Freethinkers, and since 2007 he is a member of the Honorary Committee of the Polish Rationalist Association. He is widely recognized in Poland as an atheist and has promoted the replacement of religion classes with philosophy classes in Polish schools. Woleński is involved in the secular Jewish movement, writing on the common Polish-Jewish past and on today's Polish-Jewish relations. He is a member of B'nai B'rith and was deputy president of its Polish chapter from 2007 to 2012. He was a member of the Polish United Workers Party (the Polish communist party) from 1965 to 1981. From 1980 to 1990 he was a member of the Solidarity (Polish trade union) movement.",
"Róża Czacka\n to travel a considerable distance from that part of Poland to Warsaw and Laski. His broad intellectual horizons and numerous contacts, however, opened up new perspectives for the FSC. On his initiative, new institutions and centers were founded, including the Library of Religious Knowledge, a publishing house and the Verbum bookshop as well as a retreat house. From 1930, Fr Korniłowicz finally set up permanent residence Laski. University students and young intelligentsia were attracted to his so-called ‘Circle’. Some of them consequently entered the FSC or the Third Order of St Francis. Czacka’s decision to include lay co-workers from the Society for the ",
"Irreligion in Poland\n Warsaw Circle of Intellectuals. They were also issued a letter Rationalist. In the twentieth and twenty first centuries Poles declaring a lifelong or temporary atheistic worldview include Tadeusz Boy-Żeleński, Tadeusz Kotarbiński, Irena Krzywicka, Witold Gombrowicz, Władysław Gomułka, Jan Kott, Jeremi Przybora, Wisława Szymborska, Stanisław Lem, Tadeusz Różewicz, Marek Edelman, Jerzy Kawalerowicz, Zygmunt Bauman, Maria Janion, Tadeusz Łomnicki, Włodzimierz Ptak, Jacek Kuroń, Kazimierz Kutz, Jerzy Urban, Roman Polański, Jerzy Vetulani, Karol Modzelewski, Zbigniew Religa, Jan Woleński, Andrzej Sapkowski, Kora Jackowska, Lech Janerka, Wanda Nowicka, Magdalena Środa, Jacek Kaczmarski, Aleksander Kwaśniewski, Kazik Staszewski, Kuba Wojewódzki, Janusz Palikot, Jan Hartman, Maria Peszek, Dorota Nieznalska, Robert Biedroń. After World War ",
"Franciszek\n (1906–1964), Polish Olympic rower ; Franciszek Bukaty (1747–1797), Polish diplomat ; Franciszek Cebulak (1906–1960), Polish Olympic football (soccer) player ; Franciszek Chalupka (1856–1909), Polish theologian; founder of the first Polish-American parishes in New England ; Franciszek Czapek (1811–unknown), Czech-Polish watchmaker ; Franciszek Dionizy Kniaźnin (1750–1807), Polish poet of the Enlightenment period ; Franciszek Dobrowolski (1830–1896), Polish theater director ; Franciszek Ferdynant Lubomirski (1710–1774), Polish nobleman and Knight of the Order of the White Eagle ; Franciszek Fiszer (1860–1937), Polish bon vivant, gourmand, erudite, and philosopher ; Franciszek Gągor (1951–2010), Polish general officer, Chief of the General Staff of the Polish Army since 2006 ; Franciszek Gajowniczek (1901–1995), "
] |
What is the religion of Arturo Tabera Araoz? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Arturo Tabera Araoz | 5,407,426 | 73 | [
{
"id": "16201525",
"title": "Arturo Tabera Araoz",
"text": " Arturo Tabera Araoz was born in Barco, near Ávila, Spain. He joined the Congregation of Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary in May 1915. He was educated at the Claretian Seminary, and the Pontifical Roman Athenaeum \"S. Apollinare\" in Rome where he earned a doctorate in canon law.",
"score": "1.7801161"
},
{
"id": "16201524",
"title": "Arturo Tabera Araoz",
"text": " Arturo Tabera Araoz J.C.D. (29 October 1903 – 13 June 1975) was a Spanish Cardinal of the Catholic Church who served as Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for Religious and Secular Institutes.",
"score": "1.7352035"
},
{
"id": "16201526",
"title": "Arturo Tabera Araoz",
"text": " He was ordained on 22 December 1928. He was from 1930 until 1946 a faculty member of the Theological School of Zafra, Badajoz; director of the journal Ilustración del Clero, Madrid; staff member of the journal Commemoratium pro religiosis, Rome; secretary of the prefecture of studies of his congregation; founder of the journal Vida religiosa, Rome; vice-postulator of the cause of beatification of Marcelo Spinola y Maestre, Archbishop of Seville.",
"score": "1.6664736"
},
{
"id": "16201527",
"title": "Arturo Tabera Araoz",
"text": " Pope Pius XII appointed him titular bishop of Lirbe and apostolic administrator of Barbastro, Spain, on 16 February 1946. He was transferred to the diocese of Albacete on 13 May 1950. He attended the Second Vatican Council in Rome. He was promoted to the metropolitan see of Pamplona by Pope Paul VI on 23 July 1968.",
"score": "1.4590154"
},
{
"id": "16201528",
"title": "Arturo Tabera Araoz",
"text": " He was made Cardinal-Priest of San Pietro in Montorio in the consistory of 28 April 1969 by Pope Paul. He was appointed Prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship on 20 February 1971. Pope Paul appointed him prefect of the Sacred Congregation for Religious and Secular Institutes on 8 September 1973. He died in 1975 in Rome.",
"score": "1.4035342"
},
{
"id": "31142634",
"title": "Aráoz",
"text": "Alejandro Fernández de Araoz y de la Devesa (1894–1970), Spanish lawyer and banker ; Alvin J. Araoz (1987-), American Entrepreneur ; Antero Flores Aráoz (1942–), Peruvian lawyer and politician ; Arturo Tabera Araoz (1903–1975), Roman Catholic cardinal from Spain ; Bernabé Aráoz (1776–1824), Argentine politician ; Claudio Fernández-Aráoz, Argentine business theorist and author ; Daniel Aráoz (disambiguation), several people ; Diego Aráoz (1771–1840), Argentine soldier and politician ; Duberty Aráoz, Bolivian footballer active in the 1950s ; German Araoz, Argentine professional rugby union player ; Gregorio Aráoz de Lamadrid (1795–1857), Argentine military leader ; Mercedes Aráoz (1961–), Peruvian politician ; Pedro Miguel Aráoz (1759–1832), Argentine statesman and priest Araoz is a variation of the Spanish Basque name Araotz which means \"cold valley\" in ancient Basque. The valley and municipality of Araotz (Araoz) has existed for more than 800 years. Basque surname, with Other variations of Araotz are Araoz, Arauz, Arautz and Araos. and may also refer to: ",
"score": "1.3937507"
},
{
"id": "9475381",
"title": "Ántero Flores Aráoz",
"text": " Son of Ántero Flores-Aráoz Adalid and Inés Esparza Moselli. He was born in Lima in 1942. He is the fourth grandson of the hero of the Independence of Argentina and Peru, Francisco Aráoz de Lamadrid. He studied primary and secondary school at Colegio La Salle de Lima. He entered the Faculty of Law of the Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú; however, he transferred to the National University of San Marcos, from which he graduated in Law and obtained the title of Lawyer. He has also served as a teacher at the University of Lima and at the University of San Martín de Porres.",
"score": "1.3923407"
},
{
"id": "2157016",
"title": "Diego Aráoz",
"text": " Diego Aráoz was born in 1771. His father was Francisco Javier de Aráoz Paz y Figueroa, and his mother was María Petrona de Ledesma Valderrama Diez Andino. On 11 April 1804 he married Micaela Alurralde Ávila. Their daughter Lucía Aráoz Alurralde was born the next year. Diego was a distant relative of Bernabé Aráoz, being his father's second cousin. There was bitter enmity between Diego Aráoz and Bernabé Aráoz, which can probably be traced to family conflicts in the late eighteenth century. Bernabé Aráoz was elected governor of Tucumán on 12 November 1819, and the next year proclaimed the Republic of Tucumán, consisting of today's provinces of Tucumán, Santiago del Estero and Catamarca. The republic was attacked by Martín Miguel de Güemes, Governor of Salta, whom Bernabé Aráoz finally defeated on 3 April 1821. The republic dissolved as both Santiago del Estero and Catamarca obtained autonomy from Tucumán. On 28 November 1821, Abraham González, chief of the armed forces, deposed Bernabé Aráoz, who took refuge in the countryside.",
"score": "1.3708311"
},
{
"id": "2157015",
"title": "Diego Aráoz",
"text": " Diego Aráoz Valderrama (1771–1840) was an Argentine soldier who was governor of Tucumán Province several times in the early nineteenth century during a time of political chaos and internecine struggle among the ruling elite of the province.",
"score": "1.3524785"
},
{
"id": "3957244",
"title": "Marcelo Araúz Lavadenz",
"text": " Marcelo Araúz Lavadenz is a Bolivian festival director, culture promoter, choir leader and music educator. He was born on October 20, 1934 in Santa Cruz de la Sierra and spend his youth on the lowlands of Palmar de las Islas. He studied Sociology at the Katholic University of Leuven in Belgium. Araúz worked initially for the French Alliance française and the Casa de la Cultura Raúl Otero Reiche in Santa Cruz. Then he became secretary-general for the Asociación Pro Arte y Cultura (Apac), a Bolivian organization for the promotion of art and culture. Furthermore, he is the founder of Urubichá Choir that ",
"score": "1.3508437"
},
{
"id": "9475380",
"title": "Ántero Flores Aráoz",
"text": " Ántero Flores-Aráoz Esparza (born 28 February 1942) is a Peruvian lawyer and politician who briefly served as the Prime Minister of Peru in November 2020. Once a prominent member and leader of the Christian People's Party, he left and founded the Order Party in order to run for the presidency at the 2016 general election, in which he placed tenth and last with 0.4% of the popular vote.",
"score": "1.3347967"
},
{
"id": "404339",
"title": "Gustavo Morales",
"text": " thereon. His university education took him to the faculties of History, Sociology and to Information Science, where he specialized. He wrote about the Iranian-Iraqi war, living in Al Amarah (Maysan) and Baghdad in 1982. He was an observer of the cease-fire in Iran. He has written two books on Islamic fundamentalism published in 1988, Imam Khomeini's Iran, and in 1990, Iran in the World. He was editor-in-chief of the magazine MC, directed the newspaper Ya and the program The Quadrilateral on Channel 7 TV. He was also editor-in-chief and deputy editor of the magazine Defensa, founded by Arturo Pérez-Reverte and Vicente Talón Ortiz. Before his travels he enlisted in the ",
"score": "1.3328145"
},
{
"id": "10408794",
"title": "Arturo Montero",
"text": " Arturo Montero was born the 15th of December, in 1961, in Mexico City. He is descendant of a family with many generations in the Mexican army, he is the only son of the Artillery Major Alfonso Montero and the Lieutenant Nurse Luz Lidia Garcia. He began his studies at the Salesiano Private School. After that, from another teaching perspective, he studied the High School at the Colegio de Ciencias y Humanidades of UNAM, and continued his career in public schools. In 1988, he obtained his degree in Archaeology. Later, in 2005 he obtained his Ph.D. in Anthropology. Montero has discovered at least fifty archaeological sites in the high Mexican mountain. He is the author of seven books, has coordinated five more and has written 64 research articles that have been published in Mexico and abroad. Nowadays, he is the principal in the Universidad del Tepeyac's Centro de Estudios de Posgrado, in Mexico.",
"score": "1.3221667"
},
{
"id": "27574811",
"title": "Pedro Miguel Aráoz",
"text": " Pedro Miguel Aráoz (20 June 1759 – 18 June 1832) was an Argentine statesman and priest. He was a representative in the 1816 Congress of Tucumán, which declared the Independence of Argentina. Aráoz was born in Tucumán to Pedro Antonio Aráoz and Francisca Nuñez de Herrera. He studied in Tucumán, and then was educated in theology in Buenos Aires at the Real Colegio de San Carlos. He received his doctorate in 1782 at the University of Córdoba and was ordained in Tucumán. He became rector of Tucumán Cathedral, serving until his death. Aráoz assisted Manuel Belgrano of the Army of the North. He was elected to Congress to represent Tucumán and served in 1816 for the declaration. After the Congress moved to Buenos Aires, he resigned his mandate and returned to his hometown. He collaborated in local politics with his close relative, Bernabé Aráoz, assisting in the 1820 formation of the Republic of Tucumán and serving as a legislator in the provincial assembly. He wrote the Republic's constitution and was the editor of its first provincial newspaper. After the death of Bernabé and the collapse of the Tucumán Republic, Aráoz retired from politics.",
"score": "1.3059119"
},
{
"id": "10408798",
"title": "Arturo Montero",
"text": " the Comité Asesor para la Conservación de Materiales Arqueológicos de Santuarios Incaicos de Altura in Argentina, and member force of the CONACYT assessors’ registration. Researching, documenting, and cultural and natural heritage preserving activities have taken him to be a member of the Sociedad Mexicana de Geografía y Estadística; the Asociación Mexicana de Mastozoología; the Sociedad Mexicana de Historia de la Ciencia y la Tecnología; the National Cave Rescue Commission of the National Speleological Society; the Society for American Archaeology; and the Comité Asesor para la Conservación de Materiales Arqueológicos de Santuarios Incaicos de Altura. He is, also a member of the Consejo Asesor Académico del Parque Nacional Izta-Popo, Zoquiapan. ",
"score": "1.3037891"
},
{
"id": "31592024",
"title": "Arturo Jiménez Borja",
"text": " Arturo Jiménez Borja (1908–2000) was a Peruvian physician, ethnologist, painter and writer. He was born in Tacna on July 21, 1908, and died in Lima on January 13, 2000. He was a first order descendant of the last indigenous curaca in Tacna, Toribio Ara.",
"score": "1.2974386"
},
{
"id": "9475385",
"title": "Ántero Flores Aráoz",
"text": " Flores Aráoz holds conservative political positions, and although he was known as a pragmatist and a moderate christian democrat early in his political career, he eventually shifted to far right politics since his exit from the Christian People's Party in 2007. He also has been active in denouncing terrorism in Peru.",
"score": "1.2930832"
},
{
"id": "26022710",
"title": "Baháʼí Faith in Chile",
"text": " Kamal Siegel is a musician born in Punta Arenas of American parents; his first album was released in 2005, and one of its songs was featured in a 2007 compilation album produced by Grammy Award-Winner KC Porter. In 1998 Siegel moved to the Seattle area of the United States where he gained experience as a game artist and designer and in 2004 founded his own production and animation company. Other Chilean Baháʼí artists include musician Rebecca Johnston-Garvin who moved to Chile in 1979, who has produced three CD's, singer/songwriter Dario Cardoso, who in 1991 participated in a Baháʼí music group called Planeta Paz and toured Brasil, Uruguay, Argentina and Paraguay, architect and musician Javier Duhart, and rap duo \"New Vision\" with Vahid Masrour and Kioumars Balazadeh.",
"score": "1.2927775"
},
{
"id": "2243633",
"title": "Alejandro Vallega",
"text": " Alejandro Arturo Vallega Arredondo (born February 18, 1964) is a Chilean-born philosopher, decolonial thinker, writer, painter, and Professor of philosophy at the University of Oregon. In his work he develops an aesthetic philosophy, in which he engages the aesthetic or pre-reflexive affective, embodied and memorial dimensions of philosophical understanding. In the recent years he has emphasized this approach to philosophical understanding in Philosophy of Liberation and decolonial thought. Vallega has been co-director of the Collegium Phänomenologicum twice and is active member of the director's board. He served in the past as president of North American Society for Philosophical Hermeneutics. Among his editorial activities, he is the editor of the English version of Enrique Dussel's Ethics of Liberation, and he is editor of the World Philosophies Series, published by Indiana University Press. In the last years he has developed a body of art works under the theme of \"elemental painting.\"",
"score": "1.2917392"
},
{
"id": "26121175",
"title": "Mohamed Alí Seineldín",
"text": " Seineldín was born in Concepción del Uruguay into a Lebanese Argentine family. He converted from Druzism to Roman Catholicism during his youth, and was consecrated to the Virgin of the Rosary (Virgen del Rosario). He remained a devout Roman Catholic throughout his life, even devoting his men in the army to the Virgin of the Holy Rosary as well. In an interview on his goals during his military career, Seineldín later explained, Luchamos por el mismo objetivo, que es la nacionalidad y la fe cristiana, which translates as, \"We fought for the same goal, which is nationality and the Christian faith.\"",
"score": "1.2911102"
}
] | [
"Arturo Tabera Araoz\n Arturo Tabera Araoz was born in Barco, near Ávila, Spain. He joined the Congregation of Sons of the Immaculate Heart of Mary in May 1915. He was educated at the Claretian Seminary, and the Pontifical Roman Athenaeum \"S. Apollinare\" in Rome where he earned a doctorate in canon law.",
"Arturo Tabera Araoz\n Arturo Tabera Araoz J.C.D. (29 October 1903 – 13 June 1975) was a Spanish Cardinal of the Catholic Church who served as Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for Religious and Secular Institutes.",
"Arturo Tabera Araoz\n He was ordained on 22 December 1928. He was from 1930 until 1946 a faculty member of the Theological School of Zafra, Badajoz; director of the journal Ilustración del Clero, Madrid; staff member of the journal Commemoratium pro religiosis, Rome; secretary of the prefecture of studies of his congregation; founder of the journal Vida religiosa, Rome; vice-postulator of the cause of beatification of Marcelo Spinola y Maestre, Archbishop of Seville.",
"Arturo Tabera Araoz\n Pope Pius XII appointed him titular bishop of Lirbe and apostolic administrator of Barbastro, Spain, on 16 February 1946. He was transferred to the diocese of Albacete on 13 May 1950. He attended the Second Vatican Council in Rome. He was promoted to the metropolitan see of Pamplona by Pope Paul VI on 23 July 1968.",
"Arturo Tabera Araoz\n He was made Cardinal-Priest of San Pietro in Montorio in the consistory of 28 April 1969 by Pope Paul. He was appointed Prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship on 20 February 1971. Pope Paul appointed him prefect of the Sacred Congregation for Religious and Secular Institutes on 8 September 1973. He died in 1975 in Rome.",
"Aráoz\nAlejandro Fernández de Araoz y de la Devesa (1894–1970), Spanish lawyer and banker ; Alvin J. Araoz (1987-), American Entrepreneur ; Antero Flores Aráoz (1942–), Peruvian lawyer and politician ; Arturo Tabera Araoz (1903–1975), Roman Catholic cardinal from Spain ; Bernabé Aráoz (1776–1824), Argentine politician ; Claudio Fernández-Aráoz, Argentine business theorist and author ; Daniel Aráoz (disambiguation), several people ; Diego Aráoz (1771–1840), Argentine soldier and politician ; Duberty Aráoz, Bolivian footballer active in the 1950s ; German Araoz, Argentine professional rugby union player ; Gregorio Aráoz de Lamadrid (1795–1857), Argentine military leader ; Mercedes Aráoz (1961–), Peruvian politician ; Pedro Miguel Aráoz (1759–1832), Argentine statesman and priest Araoz is a variation of the Spanish Basque name Araotz which means \"cold valley\" in ancient Basque. The valley and municipality of Araotz (Araoz) has existed for more than 800 years. Basque surname, with Other variations of Araotz are Araoz, Arauz, Arautz and Araos. and may also refer to: ",
"Ántero Flores Aráoz\n Son of Ántero Flores-Aráoz Adalid and Inés Esparza Moselli. He was born in Lima in 1942. He is the fourth grandson of the hero of the Independence of Argentina and Peru, Francisco Aráoz de Lamadrid. He studied primary and secondary school at Colegio La Salle de Lima. He entered the Faculty of Law of the Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú; however, he transferred to the National University of San Marcos, from which he graduated in Law and obtained the title of Lawyer. He has also served as a teacher at the University of Lima and at the University of San Martín de Porres.",
"Diego Aráoz\n Diego Aráoz was born in 1771. His father was Francisco Javier de Aráoz Paz y Figueroa, and his mother was María Petrona de Ledesma Valderrama Diez Andino. On 11 April 1804 he married Micaela Alurralde Ávila. Their daughter Lucía Aráoz Alurralde was born the next year. Diego was a distant relative of Bernabé Aráoz, being his father's second cousin. There was bitter enmity between Diego Aráoz and Bernabé Aráoz, which can probably be traced to family conflicts in the late eighteenth century. Bernabé Aráoz was elected governor of Tucumán on 12 November 1819, and the next year proclaimed the Republic of Tucumán, consisting of today's provinces of Tucumán, Santiago del Estero and Catamarca. The republic was attacked by Martín Miguel de Güemes, Governor of Salta, whom Bernabé Aráoz finally defeated on 3 April 1821. The republic dissolved as both Santiago del Estero and Catamarca obtained autonomy from Tucumán. On 28 November 1821, Abraham González, chief of the armed forces, deposed Bernabé Aráoz, who took refuge in the countryside.",
"Diego Aráoz\n Diego Aráoz Valderrama (1771–1840) was an Argentine soldier who was governor of Tucumán Province several times in the early nineteenth century during a time of political chaos and internecine struggle among the ruling elite of the province.",
"Marcelo Araúz Lavadenz\n Marcelo Araúz Lavadenz is a Bolivian festival director, culture promoter, choir leader and music educator. He was born on October 20, 1934 in Santa Cruz de la Sierra and spend his youth on the lowlands of Palmar de las Islas. He studied Sociology at the Katholic University of Leuven in Belgium. Araúz worked initially for the French Alliance française and the Casa de la Cultura Raúl Otero Reiche in Santa Cruz. Then he became secretary-general for the Asociación Pro Arte y Cultura (Apac), a Bolivian organization for the promotion of art and culture. Furthermore, he is the founder of Urubichá Choir that ",
"Ántero Flores Aráoz\n Ántero Flores-Aráoz Esparza (born 28 February 1942) is a Peruvian lawyer and politician who briefly served as the Prime Minister of Peru in November 2020. Once a prominent member and leader of the Christian People's Party, he left and founded the Order Party in order to run for the presidency at the 2016 general election, in which he placed tenth and last with 0.4% of the popular vote.",
"Gustavo Morales\n thereon. His university education took him to the faculties of History, Sociology and to Information Science, where he specialized. He wrote about the Iranian-Iraqi war, living in Al Amarah (Maysan) and Baghdad in 1982. He was an observer of the cease-fire in Iran. He has written two books on Islamic fundamentalism published in 1988, Imam Khomeini's Iran, and in 1990, Iran in the World. He was editor-in-chief of the magazine MC, directed the newspaper Ya and the program The Quadrilateral on Channel 7 TV. He was also editor-in-chief and deputy editor of the magazine Defensa, founded by Arturo Pérez-Reverte and Vicente Talón Ortiz. Before his travels he enlisted in the ",
"Arturo Montero\n Arturo Montero was born the 15th of December, in 1961, in Mexico City. He is descendant of a family with many generations in the Mexican army, he is the only son of the Artillery Major Alfonso Montero and the Lieutenant Nurse Luz Lidia Garcia. He began his studies at the Salesiano Private School. After that, from another teaching perspective, he studied the High School at the Colegio de Ciencias y Humanidades of UNAM, and continued his career in public schools. In 1988, he obtained his degree in Archaeology. Later, in 2005 he obtained his Ph.D. in Anthropology. Montero has discovered at least fifty archaeological sites in the high Mexican mountain. He is the author of seven books, has coordinated five more and has written 64 research articles that have been published in Mexico and abroad. Nowadays, he is the principal in the Universidad del Tepeyac's Centro de Estudios de Posgrado, in Mexico.",
"Pedro Miguel Aráoz\n Pedro Miguel Aráoz (20 June 1759 – 18 June 1832) was an Argentine statesman and priest. He was a representative in the 1816 Congress of Tucumán, which declared the Independence of Argentina. Aráoz was born in Tucumán to Pedro Antonio Aráoz and Francisca Nuñez de Herrera. He studied in Tucumán, and then was educated in theology in Buenos Aires at the Real Colegio de San Carlos. He received his doctorate in 1782 at the University of Córdoba and was ordained in Tucumán. He became rector of Tucumán Cathedral, serving until his death. Aráoz assisted Manuel Belgrano of the Army of the North. He was elected to Congress to represent Tucumán and served in 1816 for the declaration. After the Congress moved to Buenos Aires, he resigned his mandate and returned to his hometown. He collaborated in local politics with his close relative, Bernabé Aráoz, assisting in the 1820 formation of the Republic of Tucumán and serving as a legislator in the provincial assembly. He wrote the Republic's constitution and was the editor of its first provincial newspaper. After the death of Bernabé and the collapse of the Tucumán Republic, Aráoz retired from politics.",
"Arturo Montero\n the Comité Asesor para la Conservación de Materiales Arqueológicos de Santuarios Incaicos de Altura in Argentina, and member force of the CONACYT assessors’ registration. Researching, documenting, and cultural and natural heritage preserving activities have taken him to be a member of the Sociedad Mexicana de Geografía y Estadística; the Asociación Mexicana de Mastozoología; the Sociedad Mexicana de Historia de la Ciencia y la Tecnología; the National Cave Rescue Commission of the National Speleological Society; the Society for American Archaeology; and the Comité Asesor para la Conservación de Materiales Arqueológicos de Santuarios Incaicos de Altura. He is, also a member of the Consejo Asesor Académico del Parque Nacional Izta-Popo, Zoquiapan. ",
"Arturo Jiménez Borja\n Arturo Jiménez Borja (1908–2000) was a Peruvian physician, ethnologist, painter and writer. He was born in Tacna on July 21, 1908, and died in Lima on January 13, 2000. He was a first order descendant of the last indigenous curaca in Tacna, Toribio Ara.",
"Ántero Flores Aráoz\n Flores Aráoz holds conservative political positions, and although he was known as a pragmatist and a moderate christian democrat early in his political career, he eventually shifted to far right politics since his exit from the Christian People's Party in 2007. He also has been active in denouncing terrorism in Peru.",
"Baháʼí Faith in Chile\n Kamal Siegel is a musician born in Punta Arenas of American parents; his first album was released in 2005, and one of its songs was featured in a 2007 compilation album produced by Grammy Award-Winner KC Porter. In 1998 Siegel moved to the Seattle area of the United States where he gained experience as a game artist and designer and in 2004 founded his own production and animation company. Other Chilean Baháʼí artists include musician Rebecca Johnston-Garvin who moved to Chile in 1979, who has produced three CD's, singer/songwriter Dario Cardoso, who in 1991 participated in a Baháʼí music group called Planeta Paz and toured Brasil, Uruguay, Argentina and Paraguay, architect and musician Javier Duhart, and rap duo \"New Vision\" with Vahid Masrour and Kioumars Balazadeh.",
"Alejandro Vallega\n Alejandro Arturo Vallega Arredondo (born February 18, 1964) is a Chilean-born philosopher, decolonial thinker, writer, painter, and Professor of philosophy at the University of Oregon. In his work he develops an aesthetic philosophy, in which he engages the aesthetic or pre-reflexive affective, embodied and memorial dimensions of philosophical understanding. In the recent years he has emphasized this approach to philosophical understanding in Philosophy of Liberation and decolonial thought. Vallega has been co-director of the Collegium Phänomenologicum twice and is active member of the director's board. He served in the past as president of North American Society for Philosophical Hermeneutics. Among his editorial activities, he is the editor of the English version of Enrique Dussel's Ethics of Liberation, and he is editor of the World Philosophies Series, published by Indiana University Press. In the last years he has developed a body of art works under the theme of \"elemental painting.\"",
"Mohamed Alí Seineldín\n Seineldín was born in Concepción del Uruguay into a Lebanese Argentine family. He converted from Druzism to Roman Catholicism during his youth, and was consecrated to the Virgin of the Rosary (Virgen del Rosario). He remained a devout Roman Catholic throughout his life, even devoting his men in the army to the Virgin of the Holy Rosary as well. In an interview on his goals during his military career, Seineldín later explained, Luchamos por el mismo objetivo, que es la nacionalidad y la fe cristiana, which translates as, \"We fought for the same goal, which is nationality and the Christian faith.\""
] |
What is the religion of Alfred Reid? | [
"Anglicanism",
"Anglicanism, Anglican Church"
] | religion | Alfred Reid (bishop) | 3,286,642 | 54 | [
{
"id": "26147235",
"title": "Alfred E. Reid",
"text": " Alfred Edward Reid (November 28, 1891 – October 7, 1955) was a Canadian politician. He represented the electoral district of Hants East in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly from 1954 to 1955. He was a member of the Nova Scotia Liberal Party. Born in 1891 at Musquodoboit, Halifax County, Nova Scotia, Reid was a general merchant by career. He married Ruth Emma Kerr in 1913. Reid attempted to enter provincial politics in the 1953 election, and after trailing on election night, a recount resulted in Reid winning the Hants East riding by one vote over Progressive Conservative incumbent Ernest M. Ettinger. Ettinger appealed to the Supreme Court citing voting irregularities, and the election was voided in February 1954. A byelection was held on November 16, 1954, resulting in a tie between Reid and Ettinger which was broken when the returning officer cast the deciding vote for Reid, declaring him elected by one vote. Reid died in office on October 7, 1955.",
"score": "1.5022359"
},
{
"id": "6147199",
"title": "William Hamilton Reid",
"text": " Reid later edited the Orthodox Churchman's Magazine, which was subsequently taken over by John Watkins. The Magazine was hostile to deists, Latitudinarians, Methodists and Unitarians, and its tone was set from the first issue in 1801 by the High Church views of William Stevens. In 1806, however, Reid dropped his Anglican affiliations, joining the Unitarian congregation of Thomas Belsham in Hackney. He contributed unpaid material to the Monthly Repository. In the September 1806 issue of the Repository, an article signed \"W. H. R.\" commented favourably on the abolition of the Holy Roman Empire, and the prospects for universal toleration. Reid went on to abandon the Unitarianism he found too formal. He twice called on the Royal Literary Fund for support, initially in 1810. He died on 3 June 1826.",
"score": "1.4746925"
},
{
"id": "12590622",
"title": "Michael Reid (evangelist)",
"text": " Michael Reid (born 1944) is a Christian evangelist in Essex, England and founder of Peniel Pentecostal Church (aka Michael Reid Ministries). Michael and his late wife Ruth Reid were missionaries travelling the world spreading the gospel of Jesus Christ. They ministered in African countries like Cameroon and planted the vastly successful Peniel Church. He founded Peniel College allowing many students to train and graduate in Theology. He resigned from the role of pastor at Peniel Church in April 2008 after personal issues arose. The Church is now known as Trinity.",
"score": "1.4696635"
},
{
"id": "6147204",
"title": "William Hamilton Reid",
"text": " Rise and Dissolution purported to trace the connections, dating from the 17th century, between religious enthusiasm and secular reform organisations. Reid associated Priestley's rational dissent with the opinions of David Williams, supporter of the Octagon Chapel liturgy and \"unconditional philosophical liberty\". He tended to blur distinctions between reformers, unbelievers, deists and millenarians, all of whom were accorded a hearing in the Unitarian tradition of unbounded debate. He characterized the \"Society of Ancient Deists\", who met near Hoxton in the period 1770 to 1790, as \"infidel mystics\". Reid also described as dangerous the staid deist and political debating clubs run by Williams. In the context of the Corresponding ",
"score": "1.4687712"
},
{
"id": "12584182",
"title": "Ira De Augustine Reid",
"text": " Ira De Augustine Reid (July 2, 1901 – August 15, 1968 ) was a prominent sociologist and author who wrote extensively on the lives of black immigrants and communities in the United States. He was also influential in the field of educational sociology. He held faculty appointments at Atlanta University, New York University, and Haverford College, one of very few African American faculty members in the United States at white institutions during the era of \"separate but equal.\"",
"score": "1.4513483"
},
{
"id": "12590623",
"title": "Michael Reid (evangelist)",
"text": " Along with his wife, Rev. Ruth Reid, they travelled the globe and there were many miraculous healings through his ministry, although a 1999 investigation by the Advertising Standards Authority was unable to substantiate the claims. He is the author and co-author of several books and a founder member of the Christian Congress for Traditional Values (CCTV) to monitor challenges to family life and traditional belief in the UK. He was also a leading figure in the organisation's campaign challenging the BBC over its decision to screen Jerry Springer - The Opera on television. In April 2008, Reid admitted to an extramarital sexual relationship and resigned from the leadership of Peniel Pentecostal Church, stating that \"It is with great sorrow and regret that I have resigned from the church board and have stepped down from official duties. I confess that I have sinned by committing adultery. I recognize that I have failed in my duties and acted in a way that harmed the Church. I take full responsibility for my actions and so I resigned. I apologize to my wife and family and all of you whose trust I have betrayed and ask for your forgiveness and prayers.\"",
"score": "1.4402714"
},
{
"id": "961753",
"title": "Richard Reid (Northern Ireland politician)",
"text": " Richard Reid is a former Ulster unionist politician. Reid worked as a farmer in Pomeroy, County Tyrone. An evangelical Protestant, he became friendly with Norman Porter, secretary of the National Union of Protestants. In 1950, he arranged a meeting at the town courthouse for Monica Farrell, and through this, became acquainted with Ian Paisley. He subsequently joined Paisley's Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster, and, although there was no local congregation, he became a church elder. In 1975, Reid stood for Paisley's Democratic Unionist Party in Mid Ulster, and was elected to the Northern Ireland Constitutional Convention. He was also elected to Cookstown District Council at the 1977 Northern Ireland local elections. From the 1980s on, Reid withdrew from formal politics, but he was active in the Orange Order, where he became known as a leading traditionalist during the Drumcree conflict.",
"score": "1.4338925"
},
{
"id": "1966278",
"title": "Alfred Reid (bishop)",
"text": " Alfred Charles Reid, O.J. (died 2 December 2019) served the Anglican Diocese of Jamaica as a bishop for over 30 years. He was educated at St Peter's College Jamaica and ordained in 1960. His first post was a curacy in Montego Bay after which he held incumbencies at Vere and Stony Hill. He was Suffragan Bishop of Montego Bay from 1980 to 2000 when he became the diocesan bishop, a position he held until 2012.",
"score": "1.4338188"
},
{
"id": "25477079",
"title": "Steven Reid",
"text": "Source: ",
"score": "1.4300826"
},
{
"id": "10294919",
"title": "Alf Reid",
"text": " Alfred J. Reid was a college football player and chemist. A native of Lake Charles, he was a prominent fullback for the LSU Tigers. He was selected All-Southern in 1913. He was captain of the 1915 team.",
"score": "1.4246812"
},
{
"id": "28301421",
"title": "Scott Reid (politician)",
"text": " Reid was born in Hull, Quebec. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in political science and a Master of Arts in Russian history from Carleton University in Ottawa, and has written on federalism and the Canadian constitution. He was raised in his father's Unitarian church, and remains a member of that faith. His mother is Jewish. Reid lives in Perth with his wife, Robyn Mulcahy. He separated from his earlier spouse, Lynda Cuff-Reid, early in 2013. Reid also serves on the board of directors of Giant Tiger Stores Ltd., a family-owned business founded by his father, Gordon Reid.",
"score": "1.4245203"
},
{
"id": "7696097",
"title": "Alan Reid (journalist)",
"text": " Alan Douglas Joseph Reid (19 December 1914 – 1 September 1987), nicknamed the Red Fox, was an Australian political journalist, who worked in the Federal Parliamentary Press Gallery from 1937 to 1985. He is noted for his role in the Australian Labor Party split of 1955 and his coinage of the term \"36 faceless men\" to describe the members of the Australian Labor Party's Federal Conference.",
"score": "1.4188204"
},
{
"id": "10967671",
"title": "Robert Reid (Australian politician, born 1842)",
"text": " Robert Reid (18 October 1842 – 12 May 1904) was a Scottish-born Australian politician. Born in Leven, Fife, he migrated to Australia, arriving Hobson's Bay on the Ralph Waller from Liverpool, 7 April 1855, the ship having struck an iceberg near the Island of Desolation. He worked in the retail trade before becoming a businessman. In 1891, after the death of Nunn, co-owner with Buckley of Buckley & Nunn store, Reid bought the business and sold it on in London in 1892 for £300,000. In October 1892 Reid was elected to the Victorian Legislative Council for Melbourne Province as a Free Trader, becoming Minister for Defence and ",
"score": "1.4118637"
},
{
"id": "12584183",
"title": "Ira De Augustine Reid",
"text": " Reid was born in Clifton Forge, Virginia, the son of a Baptist minister, but grew up in Harrisburg and Germantown, Philadelphia. He attended integrated public schools. While at the University of Pittsburgh, Reid met and wed Gladys Russell Scott, with whom he adopted a child. In 1950, Reid and his wife joined the Society of Friends, in which Reid was very active with educational works. Gladys Russell Scott died in 1956 and Reid remarried, to Anna \"Anne\" Margaret Cooke in 1958. Reid died in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania on August 15, 1968.",
"score": "1.4096556"
},
{
"id": "30551284",
"title": "George Watson MacGregor Reid",
"text": " George Watson McGregor Reid was a Scottish modern Druid who established and led the Church of the Universal Bond. Little is known of Reid's early life although he may have been born in Scotland. He embarked on a nautical career and by 1888 was involved in trade union activities for seamen.",
"score": "1.4018613"
},
{
"id": "9185035",
"title": "Bruce Willis",
"text": " Willis was a Lutheran at some point, but no longer practices. In a July 1998 interview with George magazine, he stated: \"Organized religions in general, in my opinion, are dying forms. They were all very important when we didn't know why the sun moved, why weather changed, why hurricanes occurred, or volcanoes happened. Modern religion is the end trail of modern mythology. But there are people who interpret the Bible literally. Literally! I choose not to believe that's the way. And that's what makes America cool, you know?\"",
"score": "1.3989751"
},
{
"id": "27447548",
"title": "W. Stanford Reid",
"text": " William Stanford Reid (13 September 1913 – 28 December 1996), usually cited as W. Stanford Reid, was a professor of history at McGill University and the University of Guelph and a Presbyterian Church in Canada minister. He held a Doctor of Philosophy degree from the University of Pennsylvania (1941). He also had a divinity degree from Westminster Theological Seminary, studying under the Presbyterian scholar J. Gresham Machen.",
"score": "1.3965793"
},
{
"id": "30538107",
"title": "Rose Marie Reid",
"text": " Rose Marie Reid was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. She shared her faith with neighbors and business associates. She also had many Jewish friends with whom she shared her beliefs. She did some of this work in the 1950s in cooperation with LeGrand Richards and Hugh Nibley. Reid suggested that Richards title his book Israel! Do You Know? (instead of the original ''Judah! Do Yo Know?''). With Richards' encouragement, Reid authored a lesson plan for explaining Mormonism to Jewish investigators. Rose Marie also helped with many fundraising efforts for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, including fundraising for the construction of church buildings and the Los Angeles California Temple ",
"score": "1.3897426"
},
{
"id": "31861750",
"title": "Escott Reid",
"text": " Born in Campbellford, Ontario, he was the son of Shropshire native Rev. Alfred John Reid (1861–1957), by his wife Morna Irvine Meredith (1871–1962), the youngest daughter of Edmund Allen Meredith and a god-daughter of George Irvine. His Meredith grandfather had served as Deputy Under-Secretary of Canada, and Reid later occupied his very same offices at Parliament Hill. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science from Trinity College, in the University of Toronto in 1927. A Rhodes scholar, he received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1929 and a Master of Arts degree in 1935 from Christ Church, Oxford. Though academic jobs were scarce in 1930, he had won a Rockefeller Fellowship which enabled him to study the Canadian party and electoral systems in general and Saskatchewan's in particular. At Oxford he had met and married Ruth Herriot, of Winnipeg, and they had three children: Patrick Reid; Morna Reid; and Tim Reid (b. 1936), a Canadian educator, civil servant, and executive.",
"score": "1.3844295"
},
{
"id": "7696104",
"title": "Alan Reid (journalist)",
"text": " A biography of Reid, Alan 'The Red Fox' Reid: Pressman Par Excellence, by Ross Fitzgerald and Stephen Holt, with a foreword by Laurie Oakes, was published in 2010. In 2015 Reid's novel The Bandar Log was posthumously published. It was written in 1958 and inspired by the 1955 Labor split. Not only had Reid been unable to find a publisher, but in 1961 the District Court had ruled that it was defamatory, despite being unpublished. The manuscript was found in Reid's papers at the Mitchell Library by his biographer Ross Fitzgerald, who edited it and arranged its publication over 27 years after the author's death.",
"score": "1.3836023"
}
] | [
"Alfred E. Reid\n Alfred Edward Reid (November 28, 1891 – October 7, 1955) was a Canadian politician. He represented the electoral district of Hants East in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly from 1954 to 1955. He was a member of the Nova Scotia Liberal Party. Born in 1891 at Musquodoboit, Halifax County, Nova Scotia, Reid was a general merchant by career. He married Ruth Emma Kerr in 1913. Reid attempted to enter provincial politics in the 1953 election, and after trailing on election night, a recount resulted in Reid winning the Hants East riding by one vote over Progressive Conservative incumbent Ernest M. Ettinger. Ettinger appealed to the Supreme Court citing voting irregularities, and the election was voided in February 1954. A byelection was held on November 16, 1954, resulting in a tie between Reid and Ettinger which was broken when the returning officer cast the deciding vote for Reid, declaring him elected by one vote. Reid died in office on October 7, 1955.",
"William Hamilton Reid\n Reid later edited the Orthodox Churchman's Magazine, which was subsequently taken over by John Watkins. The Magazine was hostile to deists, Latitudinarians, Methodists and Unitarians, and its tone was set from the first issue in 1801 by the High Church views of William Stevens. In 1806, however, Reid dropped his Anglican affiliations, joining the Unitarian congregation of Thomas Belsham in Hackney. He contributed unpaid material to the Monthly Repository. In the September 1806 issue of the Repository, an article signed \"W. H. R.\" commented favourably on the abolition of the Holy Roman Empire, and the prospects for universal toleration. Reid went on to abandon the Unitarianism he found too formal. He twice called on the Royal Literary Fund for support, initially in 1810. He died on 3 June 1826.",
"Michael Reid (evangelist)\n Michael Reid (born 1944) is a Christian evangelist in Essex, England and founder of Peniel Pentecostal Church (aka Michael Reid Ministries). Michael and his late wife Ruth Reid were missionaries travelling the world spreading the gospel of Jesus Christ. They ministered in African countries like Cameroon and planted the vastly successful Peniel Church. He founded Peniel College allowing many students to train and graduate in Theology. He resigned from the role of pastor at Peniel Church in April 2008 after personal issues arose. The Church is now known as Trinity.",
"William Hamilton Reid\n Rise and Dissolution purported to trace the connections, dating from the 17th century, between religious enthusiasm and secular reform organisations. Reid associated Priestley's rational dissent with the opinions of David Williams, supporter of the Octagon Chapel liturgy and \"unconditional philosophical liberty\". He tended to blur distinctions between reformers, unbelievers, deists and millenarians, all of whom were accorded a hearing in the Unitarian tradition of unbounded debate. He characterized the \"Society of Ancient Deists\", who met near Hoxton in the period 1770 to 1790, as \"infidel mystics\". Reid also described as dangerous the staid deist and political debating clubs run by Williams. In the context of the Corresponding ",
"Ira De Augustine Reid\n Ira De Augustine Reid (July 2, 1901 – August 15, 1968 ) was a prominent sociologist and author who wrote extensively on the lives of black immigrants and communities in the United States. He was also influential in the field of educational sociology. He held faculty appointments at Atlanta University, New York University, and Haverford College, one of very few African American faculty members in the United States at white institutions during the era of \"separate but equal.\"",
"Michael Reid (evangelist)\n Along with his wife, Rev. Ruth Reid, they travelled the globe and there were many miraculous healings through his ministry, although a 1999 investigation by the Advertising Standards Authority was unable to substantiate the claims. He is the author and co-author of several books and a founder member of the Christian Congress for Traditional Values (CCTV) to monitor challenges to family life and traditional belief in the UK. He was also a leading figure in the organisation's campaign challenging the BBC over its decision to screen Jerry Springer - The Opera on television. In April 2008, Reid admitted to an extramarital sexual relationship and resigned from the leadership of Peniel Pentecostal Church, stating that \"It is with great sorrow and regret that I have resigned from the church board and have stepped down from official duties. I confess that I have sinned by committing adultery. I recognize that I have failed in my duties and acted in a way that harmed the Church. I take full responsibility for my actions and so I resigned. I apologize to my wife and family and all of you whose trust I have betrayed and ask for your forgiveness and prayers.\"",
"Richard Reid (Northern Ireland politician)\n Richard Reid is a former Ulster unionist politician. Reid worked as a farmer in Pomeroy, County Tyrone. An evangelical Protestant, he became friendly with Norman Porter, secretary of the National Union of Protestants. In 1950, he arranged a meeting at the town courthouse for Monica Farrell, and through this, became acquainted with Ian Paisley. He subsequently joined Paisley's Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster, and, although there was no local congregation, he became a church elder. In 1975, Reid stood for Paisley's Democratic Unionist Party in Mid Ulster, and was elected to the Northern Ireland Constitutional Convention. He was also elected to Cookstown District Council at the 1977 Northern Ireland local elections. From the 1980s on, Reid withdrew from formal politics, but he was active in the Orange Order, where he became known as a leading traditionalist during the Drumcree conflict.",
"Alfred Reid (bishop)\n Alfred Charles Reid, O.J. (died 2 December 2019) served the Anglican Diocese of Jamaica as a bishop for over 30 years. He was educated at St Peter's College Jamaica and ordained in 1960. His first post was a curacy in Montego Bay after which he held incumbencies at Vere and Stony Hill. He was Suffragan Bishop of Montego Bay from 1980 to 2000 when he became the diocesan bishop, a position he held until 2012.",
"Steven Reid\nSource: ",
"Alf Reid\n Alfred J. Reid was a college football player and chemist. A native of Lake Charles, he was a prominent fullback for the LSU Tigers. He was selected All-Southern in 1913. He was captain of the 1915 team.",
"Scott Reid (politician)\n Reid was born in Hull, Quebec. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in political science and a Master of Arts in Russian history from Carleton University in Ottawa, and has written on federalism and the Canadian constitution. He was raised in his father's Unitarian church, and remains a member of that faith. His mother is Jewish. Reid lives in Perth with his wife, Robyn Mulcahy. He separated from his earlier spouse, Lynda Cuff-Reid, early in 2013. Reid also serves on the board of directors of Giant Tiger Stores Ltd., a family-owned business founded by his father, Gordon Reid.",
"Alan Reid (journalist)\n Alan Douglas Joseph Reid (19 December 1914 – 1 September 1987), nicknamed the Red Fox, was an Australian political journalist, who worked in the Federal Parliamentary Press Gallery from 1937 to 1985. He is noted for his role in the Australian Labor Party split of 1955 and his coinage of the term \"36 faceless men\" to describe the members of the Australian Labor Party's Federal Conference.",
"Robert Reid (Australian politician, born 1842)\n Robert Reid (18 October 1842 – 12 May 1904) was a Scottish-born Australian politician. Born in Leven, Fife, he migrated to Australia, arriving Hobson's Bay on the Ralph Waller from Liverpool, 7 April 1855, the ship having struck an iceberg near the Island of Desolation. He worked in the retail trade before becoming a businessman. In 1891, after the death of Nunn, co-owner with Buckley of Buckley & Nunn store, Reid bought the business and sold it on in London in 1892 for £300,000. In October 1892 Reid was elected to the Victorian Legislative Council for Melbourne Province as a Free Trader, becoming Minister for Defence and ",
"Ira De Augustine Reid\n Reid was born in Clifton Forge, Virginia, the son of a Baptist minister, but grew up in Harrisburg and Germantown, Philadelphia. He attended integrated public schools. While at the University of Pittsburgh, Reid met and wed Gladys Russell Scott, with whom he adopted a child. In 1950, Reid and his wife joined the Society of Friends, in which Reid was very active with educational works. Gladys Russell Scott died in 1956 and Reid remarried, to Anna \"Anne\" Margaret Cooke in 1958. Reid died in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania on August 15, 1968.",
"George Watson MacGregor Reid\n George Watson McGregor Reid was a Scottish modern Druid who established and led the Church of the Universal Bond. Little is known of Reid's early life although he may have been born in Scotland. He embarked on a nautical career and by 1888 was involved in trade union activities for seamen.",
"Bruce Willis\n Willis was a Lutheran at some point, but no longer practices. In a July 1998 interview with George magazine, he stated: \"Organized religions in general, in my opinion, are dying forms. They were all very important when we didn't know why the sun moved, why weather changed, why hurricanes occurred, or volcanoes happened. Modern religion is the end trail of modern mythology. But there are people who interpret the Bible literally. Literally! I choose not to believe that's the way. And that's what makes America cool, you know?\"",
"W. Stanford Reid\n William Stanford Reid (13 September 1913 – 28 December 1996), usually cited as W. Stanford Reid, was a professor of history at McGill University and the University of Guelph and a Presbyterian Church in Canada minister. He held a Doctor of Philosophy degree from the University of Pennsylvania (1941). He also had a divinity degree from Westminster Theological Seminary, studying under the Presbyterian scholar J. Gresham Machen.",
"Rose Marie Reid\n Rose Marie Reid was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. She shared her faith with neighbors and business associates. She also had many Jewish friends with whom she shared her beliefs. She did some of this work in the 1950s in cooperation with LeGrand Richards and Hugh Nibley. Reid suggested that Richards title his book Israel! Do You Know? (instead of the original ''Judah! Do Yo Know?''). With Richards' encouragement, Reid authored a lesson plan for explaining Mormonism to Jewish investigators. Rose Marie also helped with many fundraising efforts for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, including fundraising for the construction of church buildings and the Los Angeles California Temple ",
"Escott Reid\n Born in Campbellford, Ontario, he was the son of Shropshire native Rev. Alfred John Reid (1861–1957), by his wife Morna Irvine Meredith (1871–1962), the youngest daughter of Edmund Allen Meredith and a god-daughter of George Irvine. His Meredith grandfather had served as Deputy Under-Secretary of Canada, and Reid later occupied his very same offices at Parliament Hill. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science from Trinity College, in the University of Toronto in 1927. A Rhodes scholar, he received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1929 and a Master of Arts degree in 1935 from Christ Church, Oxford. Though academic jobs were scarce in 1930, he had won a Rockefeller Fellowship which enabled him to study the Canadian party and electoral systems in general and Saskatchewan's in particular. At Oxford he had met and married Ruth Herriot, of Winnipeg, and they had three children: Patrick Reid; Morna Reid; and Tim Reid (b. 1936), a Canadian educator, civil servant, and executive.",
"Alan Reid (journalist)\n A biography of Reid, Alan 'The Red Fox' Reid: Pressman Par Excellence, by Ross Fitzgerald and Stephen Holt, with a foreword by Laurie Oakes, was published in 2010. In 2015 Reid's novel The Bandar Log was posthumously published. It was written in 1958 and inspired by the 1955 Labor split. Not only had Reid been unable to find a publisher, but in 1961 the District Court had ruled that it was defamatory, despite being unpublished. The manuscript was found in Reid's papers at the Mitchell Library by his biographer Ross Fitzgerald, who edited it and arranged its publication over 27 years after the author's death."
] |
What is the religion of Simon Ntamwana? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Simon Ntamwana | 4,245,583 | 82 | [
{
"id": "30547675",
"title": "Simon Ntamwana",
"text": " Simon Ntamwana (born 3 June 1946) has been the Roman Catholic archbishop of the Archdiocese of Gitega in Burundi since 1997. Ntamwana was ordained as a priest on 24 March 1974 and from 1988 to 1997 he was the bishop of the diocese in Bujumbura. In 1997 he succeeded Joachim Ruhuna as the archbishop of Gitega. In 2009, he defended Pope Benedict XVI over a controversy on the refusal to give any kind of approval to condoms in the fight against AIDS.",
"score": "1.6801343"
},
{
"id": "12544549",
"title": "Christianity in the Democratic Republic of the Congo",
"text": " Kimbanguism, officially the Church of Jesus Christ on Earth by His Special Envoy Simon Kimbangu, is a major Christian new religious movement indigenous to the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It holds that Simon Kimbangu (1887–1951) was a prophet but shares commonalities with Baptist Christianity. It is headquartered in Nkamba, Kongo Central which was Kimbangu's birthplace and is known as \"New Jerusalem\". It is estimated that as many as 10 percent of the Congo's population are followers.",
"score": "1.4910823"
},
{
"id": "26719239",
"title": "Dawn Faith",
"text": " Dawn Faith Mackay (née Mlotshwa, born 16 January 1982 in KwaMashu, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa) is an author, musician, speaker, social activist and the host of her own TV show titled Deep & Meaningful. She started her music career in 2008 working with a local artists in South Africa and has since released her debut EP in 2015 titled \"Audience of One\". In 2016, she established a TV production company, MYZIZI Productions, named after her daughter Zinhle (Zizi) Grace, who was born around four months premature and died aged three months. in Melbourne, Australia.",
"score": "1.417743"
},
{
"id": "8902750",
"title": "Simon-Pierre Mpadi",
"text": " Mpadi argued that his movement could only be a church, not a missionary movement in their own land. The movement later came to be known as the \"Eglise des Noirs Afrique\" (Church of Black people in Africa), with its headquarters at Ntendesi, later Songa-Ntela near Kasangulu, DRC. Mpadi's sermons and religious message emphasized the messianic and prophetic leadership of Simon Kimbangu as the liberator of all Black people in the world. From the mid-70s, though still monotheist he oriented his movement towards more traditional beliefs and history of past African prophets and warriors, no longer referring to Christianity or the Bible. He claimed that the new approach was not in contradiction with Kimbangu, but was Kimbangu's true philosophy. In the 21st Century, there were still a few hundred followers of the movement.",
"score": "1.4167993"
},
{
"id": "4885571",
"title": "Tswana people",
"text": "Frederick Samuel Modise – founder of the International Pentecostal Holiness Church ; Glayton Modise – the International Pentecostal Holiness Church leader ",
"score": "1.4013026"
},
{
"id": "11224444",
"title": "Religion in Lesotho",
"text": " The traditional Sotho religion is traceable with archaeological evidence to around the 10th century. They share themes with the Tswana traditional religion. The Chief of a Sotho community was also their spiritual leader. Ancestor spirits called Badimo worship practices were a significant part of the Sotho community, along with rituals such as rainmaking dance. The Sotho had developed the concept of Modimo, the Supreme Being. The Modimo, in Sotho theology, created lesser deities with powers to interact with human beings.",
"score": "1.4011592"
},
{
"id": "12692254",
"title": "Simon Kapwepwe",
"text": " Simon Kapwepwe was born on 12 April 1922 in the Chinsali district of the Northern Province of Northern Rhodesia (which then included the present day [[Muchinga province) . Although Chinsali was remote from the country's urban centres, it was an area of early educational development, because of the presence of two rival missions, the Presbyterian Livingstonia Mission of the United Free Church of Scotland based at Lubwa (next to the Kolwe River from 1913) and the Roman Catholic White Fathers' Mission (based at Ilondola from 1934). Chinsali's first missionary was David Kaunda from Malawi, the father of Kenneth Kaunda (who became the first African Prime Minister of Northern Rhodesia in 1963 and ",
"score": "1.4003379"
},
{
"id": "25325749",
"title": "Simon Muzenda",
"text": " Muzenda was born in the Gutu District of the Victoria Province of Southern Rhodesia as a son of a peasant farmer, and brought up by his grandmother Mbuya Maweni, who ensured his regular attendance for his primary education at Nyamandi Primary School. A relatively bright child, he was sent for teacher training after spending his teenage years herding in Makonese Village under Chief Nyamandi, and, following the advice of his tutor, travelled to the Marianhill mission in Natal, South Africa, where he showed proficiency in carpentry. Between completing his carpentry course and furthering his studies, Muzenda became aware of politics during contacts ",
"score": "1.399914"
},
{
"id": "29631363",
"title": "Simon Khaya-Moyo",
"text": " Simon Khaya-Moyo was born on 1 October 1945 in the Bukalanga Sanzukwi area of Bulilima in Matabeleland South Province. He did his secondary education studies at Fletcher High School in Gweru and left in 1965. From 1966 to 1967, he served as a research assistant at Mpilo Hospital in Bulawayo.",
"score": "1.3974428"
},
{
"id": "11774196",
"title": "Indigenous religion in Zimbabwe",
"text": " Zimbabweans believe in God the Supreme Being who is referred to by many names depending on the tribe and occasion. Ndebele call him, uNkulunkulu, uThixo, uMdali or uMvelinqangi. The Shona call him Mwari and Ishe.",
"score": "1.394533"
},
{
"id": "28681758",
"title": "Sotho-Tswana peoples",
"text": " President of the COPE ; Hlaudi Motsoeneng - South African radio personality and broadcasting executive ; Kgalema Motlanthe - 3rd President of South Africa ; Lesetja Kganyago – Governor of the South African Reserve Bank. ; Edward Lekganyane - the Zion Christian Church (ZCC) leader ; Engenas Lekganyane -the founder of Zion Christian Church (ZCC) ; Sefako Makgatho - second President of the African National Congress, born in Ga-Mphahlele village ; Malegapuru William Makgoba - Doctor ; Thabo Makgoba - South African Anglican Archbishop of Cape Town ; David Makhura – premier of Gauteng Province ; Julius Malema – political leader. Former ",
"score": "1.3943095"
},
{
"id": "4976774",
"title": "Senzeni Zokwana",
"text": " Senzeni Zokwana is a South African politician. He is a former Member of Parliament and served until May 2019 as the Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, having been appointed by President Jacob Zuma in May 2014. He previously served as the President of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM).",
"score": "1.3937962"
},
{
"id": "1975425",
"title": "Motlatsi Mafatshe",
"text": " He was born on 1984 in Soweto, South Africa to a political family. He is married to Millicent Nkangane, a fashion designer since November 2014. They first met in a church.",
"score": "1.3910767"
},
{
"id": "5007202",
"title": "Ngonini",
"text": "Fitzpatrick, M., Blond, B., Pitcher, G., Richmond, S., and Warren, M. (2004) South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland. Footscray, VIC: Lonely Planet. Ebenezer A.M.E church Its an open map area situated along Piggs Peak -Matsamo road ...at Mgobodzi before Cleopas station just on your right when going to matsamo Its an African Methodist Church which was officially opened in 2018 by Bishop Stafford Wicker from the United States of America. Its made of few families when opening the church Bro Mphumuzi Shongwe was the Trustees Proterm and sister Glenrose Mahlangu was the Steward Proterm under Rev Mehluko S Ndlangamandla ",
"score": "1.3908845"
},
{
"id": "4666475",
"title": "Nzambi a Mpungu",
"text": " In the religion of Kumina there is a high creator god is known as \"King Zombi\" which is a derivative of Nzambi Mpungu.",
"score": "1.3850892"
},
{
"id": "30283852",
"title": "Dini Ya Msambwa",
"text": " the old tribal religion or African traditional religion and hence it too was also undermined. Left in a spiritual vacuum, many Bukusu and luhya, insecure in the rapidly-changing world, gravitated naturally into Christianity. Masinde being an elder refused to convert. The religion was founded by Elijah Masinde in 1936. After Kenyan independence 1968 Dini ya Msambwa was declared illegal and Masinde was arrested for fomenting hatred of the Christian religion. Dini Ya Msambwa takes the form of an African traditional religion; its followers worshipping Through Ancestral Spirits (Msambwa) in shrines. The veneration of ancestors is an important part of the religion.",
"score": "1.3837008"
},
{
"id": "26290275",
"title": "John Chilembwe",
"text": " independent African churches, including Seventh Day Baptist and Churches of Christ congregations, with the aim of uniting some or all of these African churches with his own mission church at the centre. Some of Chilembwe's congregation had formerly been Watchtower followers and he maintained contact with Elliot Kamwana, but the influence of Watchtower's millennial beliefs on him is minimised by most authors except the Lindens. Although the vast majority of those found guilty of rebellion and sentenced to death or to long terms of imprisonment were members of Chilembwe's church, a few other members of the Churches of Christ in Zomba were also found guilty.",
"score": "1.3784491"
},
{
"id": "29631362",
"title": "Simon Khaya-Moyo",
"text": " Simon Khaya-Moyo (1 October 1945 – 14 November 2021) was a Zimbabwean politician and Chairman of ZANU-PF at the time of his death. He was the Ambassador of Zimbabwe to South Africa from 2007 to 2011. He was appointed Media, Information and Broadcasting Services Minister in October 2017, taking over from Christopher Mushohwe. However, he was later removed from the Zimbabwe Cabinet in September 2018. Khaya-Moyo was placed on the United States sanctions list in 2003. He died on 14 November 2021 due to cancer at Mater Dei Hospital in Bulawayo.",
"score": "1.3775806"
},
{
"id": "27976001",
"title": "Simon Mazorodze",
"text": " Simon Charles Mazorodze (MCh.B) was a Zimbabwean cabinet minister and a medical doctor by profession. He is also widely credited as one of the founders of the Zimbabwe African National Union Patriotic Front, which has been ruling the country since independence.",
"score": "1.3769258"
},
{
"id": "25360680",
"title": "Shona people",
"text": " The religion of Shona people is centred on Mwari (God), also known as Musikavanhu (Creator of man/people) or Nyadenga (one who lives high up). God communicates with his people on earth directly or through chosen holy people. At times God uses natural phenomena and the environment to communicate with his people. Some of the chosen people have powers to prophecy, heal and bless. People can also communicate with God directly through prayer. When someone dies, according to Shona religion, they join the spiritual world. In the spiritual world, they can enjoy their afterlife or become bad spirits. No one wants to be a bad spirit, so during life, ",
"score": "1.3761647"
}
] | [
"Simon Ntamwana\n Simon Ntamwana (born 3 June 1946) has been the Roman Catholic archbishop of the Archdiocese of Gitega in Burundi since 1997. Ntamwana was ordained as a priest on 24 March 1974 and from 1988 to 1997 he was the bishop of the diocese in Bujumbura. In 1997 he succeeded Joachim Ruhuna as the archbishop of Gitega. In 2009, he defended Pope Benedict XVI over a controversy on the refusal to give any kind of approval to condoms in the fight against AIDS.",
"Christianity in the Democratic Republic of the Congo\n Kimbanguism, officially the Church of Jesus Christ on Earth by His Special Envoy Simon Kimbangu, is a major Christian new religious movement indigenous to the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It holds that Simon Kimbangu (1887–1951) was a prophet but shares commonalities with Baptist Christianity. It is headquartered in Nkamba, Kongo Central which was Kimbangu's birthplace and is known as \"New Jerusalem\". It is estimated that as many as 10 percent of the Congo's population are followers.",
"Dawn Faith\n Dawn Faith Mackay (née Mlotshwa, born 16 January 1982 in KwaMashu, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa) is an author, musician, speaker, social activist and the host of her own TV show titled Deep & Meaningful. She started her music career in 2008 working with a local artists in South Africa and has since released her debut EP in 2015 titled \"Audience of One\". In 2016, she established a TV production company, MYZIZI Productions, named after her daughter Zinhle (Zizi) Grace, who was born around four months premature and died aged three months. in Melbourne, Australia.",
"Simon-Pierre Mpadi\n Mpadi argued that his movement could only be a church, not a missionary movement in their own land. The movement later came to be known as the \"Eglise des Noirs Afrique\" (Church of Black people in Africa), with its headquarters at Ntendesi, later Songa-Ntela near Kasangulu, DRC. Mpadi's sermons and religious message emphasized the messianic and prophetic leadership of Simon Kimbangu as the liberator of all Black people in the world. From the mid-70s, though still monotheist he oriented his movement towards more traditional beliefs and history of past African prophets and warriors, no longer referring to Christianity or the Bible. He claimed that the new approach was not in contradiction with Kimbangu, but was Kimbangu's true philosophy. In the 21st Century, there were still a few hundred followers of the movement.",
"Tswana people\nFrederick Samuel Modise – founder of the International Pentecostal Holiness Church ; Glayton Modise – the International Pentecostal Holiness Church leader ",
"Religion in Lesotho\n The traditional Sotho religion is traceable with archaeological evidence to around the 10th century. They share themes with the Tswana traditional religion. The Chief of a Sotho community was also their spiritual leader. Ancestor spirits called Badimo worship practices were a significant part of the Sotho community, along with rituals such as rainmaking dance. The Sotho had developed the concept of Modimo, the Supreme Being. The Modimo, in Sotho theology, created lesser deities with powers to interact with human beings.",
"Simon Kapwepwe\n Simon Kapwepwe was born on 12 April 1922 in the Chinsali district of the Northern Province of Northern Rhodesia (which then included the present day [[Muchinga province) . Although Chinsali was remote from the country's urban centres, it was an area of early educational development, because of the presence of two rival missions, the Presbyterian Livingstonia Mission of the United Free Church of Scotland based at Lubwa (next to the Kolwe River from 1913) and the Roman Catholic White Fathers' Mission (based at Ilondola from 1934). Chinsali's first missionary was David Kaunda from Malawi, the father of Kenneth Kaunda (who became the first African Prime Minister of Northern Rhodesia in 1963 and ",
"Simon Muzenda\n Muzenda was born in the Gutu District of the Victoria Province of Southern Rhodesia as a son of a peasant farmer, and brought up by his grandmother Mbuya Maweni, who ensured his regular attendance for his primary education at Nyamandi Primary School. A relatively bright child, he was sent for teacher training after spending his teenage years herding in Makonese Village under Chief Nyamandi, and, following the advice of his tutor, travelled to the Marianhill mission in Natal, South Africa, where he showed proficiency in carpentry. Between completing his carpentry course and furthering his studies, Muzenda became aware of politics during contacts ",
"Simon Khaya-Moyo\n Simon Khaya-Moyo was born on 1 October 1945 in the Bukalanga Sanzukwi area of Bulilima in Matabeleland South Province. He did his secondary education studies at Fletcher High School in Gweru and left in 1965. From 1966 to 1967, he served as a research assistant at Mpilo Hospital in Bulawayo.",
"Indigenous religion in Zimbabwe\n Zimbabweans believe in God the Supreme Being who is referred to by many names depending on the tribe and occasion. Ndebele call him, uNkulunkulu, uThixo, uMdali or uMvelinqangi. The Shona call him Mwari and Ishe.",
"Sotho-Tswana peoples\n President of the COPE ; Hlaudi Motsoeneng - South African radio personality and broadcasting executive ; Kgalema Motlanthe - 3rd President of South Africa ; Lesetja Kganyago – Governor of the South African Reserve Bank. ; Edward Lekganyane - the Zion Christian Church (ZCC) leader ; Engenas Lekganyane -the founder of Zion Christian Church (ZCC) ; Sefako Makgatho - second President of the African National Congress, born in Ga-Mphahlele village ; Malegapuru William Makgoba - Doctor ; Thabo Makgoba - South African Anglican Archbishop of Cape Town ; David Makhura – premier of Gauteng Province ; Julius Malema – political leader. Former ",
"Senzeni Zokwana\n Senzeni Zokwana is a South African politician. He is a former Member of Parliament and served until May 2019 as the Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, having been appointed by President Jacob Zuma in May 2014. He previously served as the President of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM).",
"Motlatsi Mafatshe\n He was born on 1984 in Soweto, South Africa to a political family. He is married to Millicent Nkangane, a fashion designer since November 2014. They first met in a church.",
"Ngonini\nFitzpatrick, M., Blond, B., Pitcher, G., Richmond, S., and Warren, M. (2004) South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland. Footscray, VIC: Lonely Planet. Ebenezer A.M.E church Its an open map area situated along Piggs Peak -Matsamo road ...at Mgobodzi before Cleopas station just on your right when going to matsamo Its an African Methodist Church which was officially opened in 2018 by Bishop Stafford Wicker from the United States of America. Its made of few families when opening the church Bro Mphumuzi Shongwe was the Trustees Proterm and sister Glenrose Mahlangu was the Steward Proterm under Rev Mehluko S Ndlangamandla ",
"Nzambi a Mpungu\n In the religion of Kumina there is a high creator god is known as \"King Zombi\" which is a derivative of Nzambi Mpungu.",
"Dini Ya Msambwa\n the old tribal religion or African traditional religion and hence it too was also undermined. Left in a spiritual vacuum, many Bukusu and luhya, insecure in the rapidly-changing world, gravitated naturally into Christianity. Masinde being an elder refused to convert. The religion was founded by Elijah Masinde in 1936. After Kenyan independence 1968 Dini ya Msambwa was declared illegal and Masinde was arrested for fomenting hatred of the Christian religion. Dini Ya Msambwa takes the form of an African traditional religion; its followers worshipping Through Ancestral Spirits (Msambwa) in shrines. The veneration of ancestors is an important part of the religion.",
"John Chilembwe\n independent African churches, including Seventh Day Baptist and Churches of Christ congregations, with the aim of uniting some or all of these African churches with his own mission church at the centre. Some of Chilembwe's congregation had formerly been Watchtower followers and he maintained contact with Elliot Kamwana, but the influence of Watchtower's millennial beliefs on him is minimised by most authors except the Lindens. Although the vast majority of those found guilty of rebellion and sentenced to death or to long terms of imprisonment were members of Chilembwe's church, a few other members of the Churches of Christ in Zomba were also found guilty.",
"Simon Khaya-Moyo\n Simon Khaya-Moyo (1 October 1945 – 14 November 2021) was a Zimbabwean politician and Chairman of ZANU-PF at the time of his death. He was the Ambassador of Zimbabwe to South Africa from 2007 to 2011. He was appointed Media, Information and Broadcasting Services Minister in October 2017, taking over from Christopher Mushohwe. However, he was later removed from the Zimbabwe Cabinet in September 2018. Khaya-Moyo was placed on the United States sanctions list in 2003. He died on 14 November 2021 due to cancer at Mater Dei Hospital in Bulawayo.",
"Simon Mazorodze\n Simon Charles Mazorodze (MCh.B) was a Zimbabwean cabinet minister and a medical doctor by profession. He is also widely credited as one of the founders of the Zimbabwe African National Union Patriotic Front, which has been ruling the country since independence.",
"Shona people\n The religion of Shona people is centred on Mwari (God), also known as Musikavanhu (Creator of man/people) or Nyadenga (one who lives high up). God communicates with his people on earth directly or through chosen holy people. At times God uses natural phenomena and the environment to communicate with his people. Some of the chosen people have powers to prophecy, heal and bless. People can also communicate with God directly through prayer. When someone dies, according to Shona religion, they join the spiritual world. In the spiritual world, they can enjoy their afterlife or become bad spirits. No one wants to be a bad spirit, so during life, "
] |
What is the religion of Kenneth Kennedy? | [
"Anglicanism",
"Anglicanism, Anglican Church"
] | religion | Kenneth Kennedy (bishop) | 4,840,191 | 35 | [
{
"id": "10011234",
"title": "Kenneth A. R. Kennedy",
"text": " Kenneth Adrian Raine Kennedy (June 26, 1930 – April 23, 2014) was an anthropologist who studied at the University of California, Berkeley. He was Professor Emeritus of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Anthropology and Asian Studies in the Division of Biological Sciences at Cornell University. Among his areas of interest have been forensic anthropology and human skeletal biology. He died in Ithaca, New York on April 23, 2014.",
"score": "1.5497522"
},
{
"id": "30266719",
"title": "James Kennedy (historian)",
"text": " a professor of the history of the Netherlands. In 2009 he succeeded professor Piet de Rooy, head of the section of the history of the Netherlands. As of 1 October 2015, Kennedy is Dean of University College Utrecht. Kennedy takes a special interest in post-war Dutch history. Because of his Christian belief he considers himself a Christian historian although he is reserved to point out how God is guiding human history. Politically, he characterizes himself as an independent. However, in the presidential campaign of 2004 he was in favor of John Kerry, the presidential candidate of the Democrats. James Kennedy is married to Simone Kennedy-Doornbos, a local Dutch politician for the ChristianUnion in Amersfoort. They have three children. The Kennedy family is a member of the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands (Liberated), an orthodox reformed denomination.",
"score": "1.4510458"
},
{
"id": "1031931",
"title": "Kenneth Kennedy (bishop)",
"text": " Notes",
"score": "1.4409618"
},
{
"id": "2995984",
"title": "Ethne Kennedy",
"text": " Ethne Kennedy (November 13, 1921 – March 13, 2005) was an American religious worker and activist. Kennedy was the daughter of parents who had emigrated to the United States from Ireland early in the twentieth century; among her siblings was the literary scholar Sighle Kennedy. A member of the Society of Helpers, she was the founding president of the National Assembly of Religious Women, and after the Second Vatican Council worked to ensure that women could participate fully in the workings of the Roman Catholic Church. She also was editor of Probe, the newsletter put out by the organization of sisters' councils in the United ",
"score": "1.4316103"
},
{
"id": "11977972",
"title": "Myles Kennedy",
"text": " Kennedy currently resides in Spokane, Washington with his wife, Selena, whom he married on June 14, 2003. According to Alter Bridge lead guitarist Mark Tremonti, Kennedy is an atheist, although in an article titled Losing My Religion from a November 2010 issue of Kerrang! magazine, Kennedy said he places himself \"somewhere in the middle\" between being an atheist and a Christian. In an interview on the Blairing Out with Eric Blair Show at NAMM 2009, Kennedy mentioned that despite being raised in a Christian household, he is not a religious person and he does not believe in any organized religion. In an interview with CraveOnline, he said \"I would consider myself a part of the growing segment of people who question authority and scrutinize concepts that no longer seem as ",
"score": "1.4242114"
},
{
"id": "13546049",
"title": "Robert F. Kennedy",
"text": " Kennedy's Catholicism was central to his politics and personal attitude to life and its purpose; he inherited his faith from his family. He was more religious than his brothers and approached his duties with a Catholic worldview. Throughout his life, he made reference to his faith, how it informed every area of his life, and how it gave him the strength to re-enter politics following his older brother's assassination. His was not an unresponsive and staid faith, but the faith of a Catholic Radical, perhaps the first successful Catholic Radical in American political history. In the last years of his life, he also found great solace in the playwrights and poets of ancient Greece, especially the writings of Aeschylus, suggested to him by Jacqueline after JFK's death. In his Indianapolis speech on April 4, 1968, on the day of the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., Kennedy quoted these lines from Aeschylus: \"Even in our sleep, pain which cannot forget falls drop by drop upon the heart, until, in our own despair, against our will, comes wisdom through the awful grace of God.\"",
"score": "1.4182379"
},
{
"id": "9307493",
"title": "D. James Kennedy",
"text": " Many of his public messages focused on American history and the faith of the Founding Fathers of the United States in relation to a Christian worldview. For instance, Kennedy cited John Quincy Adams' claim that Christianity is \"indissolubly linked\" to the founding of America. Kennedy wrote the foreword to the 1987 book Christianity and the Constitution: The Faith of Our Founding Fathers authored by law professor John Eidsmoe.",
"score": "1.4155304"
},
{
"id": "26123128",
"title": "Kenneth O'Donnell",
"text": " Kenneth Patrick O'Donnell (March 4, 1924 – September 9, 1977) was an American political consultant and the special assistant and appointments secretary to President John F. Kennedy from 1961 until Kennedy's assassination in November 1963. O'Donnell was a close friend of President Kennedy and his younger brother Robert F. Kennedy, and was part of the group of Kennedy's close advisers dubbed the “Irish Mafia.” O'Donnell also served as an aide to President Lyndon B. Johnson from 1963 to 1965. He later served as an adviser to Robert Kennedy's 1968 presidential campaign.",
"score": "1.4129735"
},
{
"id": "25540332",
"title": "Quintin Kennedy",
"text": " Kennedy is considered to have innovated as a theologian, restating orthodox Catholic eucharistic doctrine for his times. In 1558 he published A Compendious treatise, conform to the Scriptures of Almighty God, to Reason and Authority, declaring the nearest and only Way to establish the Conscience of a Christian Man, in all Matters which are in Debate concerning Faith and Religion. In 1561 he wrote a treatise against the reformed ministers, printed in 1812 from manuscript, and a manuscript work on the mass.",
"score": "1.4078188"
},
{
"id": "4280704",
"title": "Ted Kennedy (priest)",
"text": " Aborigines whose culture struggles to survive\". Kennedy wrote a book, Who is Worthy, The role of conscience in restoring hope to the Church, in response to controversy in the Archdiocese of Sydney over the proper role of individual conscience. This was a public debate triggered by comments from Cardinal George Pell, who had argued that the \"doctrine of the primacy of conscience should be quietly ditched, at least in our schools, or comprehensively restated\" largely because of his concerns that too many liberties were being taken in a society that over-emphasised the philosophy of individualism. But Kennedy was focused on what he considered was the chief problem of clericalism. In the book he argued that the Australian church has corrupted the basic teachings of Christ and has become a church of exclusion rather than inclusion, so that a process of reformation was required.",
"score": "1.4072568"
},
{
"id": "9307483",
"title": "D. James Kennedy",
"text": " Initially ordained in 1959 by the Presbyterian Church in the United States, Kennedy later became an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church in America after he and his church left the PCUS in 1978. Adhering to traditional Calvinist theology, Kennedy's theological works include Why I Believe, What If Jesus Had Never Been Born, Skeptics Answered, and Truths That Transform. In 1971, he founded the Westminster Academy in Fort Lauderdale and in 1989, he founded Knox Theological Seminary. Kennedy was a conservative evangelical minister and an outspoken advocate for the moral and social values championed by the Christian right. He wrote, with Jerry Newcombe, What if America Were a Christian Nation Again? and frequently preached messages that argued that the United States was founded as a Christian nation. Kennedy started the Center for Christian Statesmanship, an evangelical ministry on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. The Center closed in 2007 by Coral Ridge Ministries but quickly reopened under the auspices of Evangelism Explosion International, as the non-partisan Christian outreach to members of the United States Congress. In 2005, the National Religious Broadcasters association inducted Kennedy into its Hall of Fame.",
"score": "1.4021292"
},
{
"id": "13876268",
"title": "American Council of Christian Churches",
"text": "Clyde J. Kennedy (1958–1961) ",
"score": "1.3897672"
},
{
"id": "5731611",
"title": "Dominion theology",
"text": " and legal arguments in support of that statement. Kennedy characterized his perspective on Christian political involvement as more akin to participatory democracy than to dominionism. In an interview with NPR's Terry Gross, Kennedy was asked whether he wanted all public office holders to be Christians. Kennedy answered, \"We have people who are secular and humanist and unbelievers who are constantly supporting in every way possible other people who share those views. And I don't object to that. That's their privilege. And I think that Christians should be allowed the same privilege to vote for people whom they believe share their views about life and government. And that's all I'm talking about.\"",
"score": "1.3881758"
},
{
"id": "32363193",
"title": "John P. Kennedy",
"text": " in Maryland, throughout all this wide world of Christendom, was there an altar erected and truly dedicated to the freedom of Christian worship. Let those who first reared it enjoy the renown to which it has entitled them.\" \"John Pendleton Kennedy, On memorializing the birth of religious freedom in St. Mary's City Maryland\" Earlier, when he was in the Maryland state legislature, Kennedy was instrumental in repealing a law that discriminated against Jewish people in court and trial procedures in Maryland. Jewish people were a tiny population in the state at the time and Kennedy was not Jewish, so there was no political or personal advantage to his ",
"score": "1.3845989"
},
{
"id": "15274432",
"title": "John Kennedy (theologian)",
"text": "The Divine Life (1858) ; The Resurrection of Jesus Christ, An Historical Fact; with an Examination of Naturalistic Hypotheses (1871) ; A Brief Defence of Supernatural Christianity (1875) ; The Gospels: Their Age and Authorship (1880) ; A Popular Handbook of Christian Evidences (1880) ; The Pentateuch: Its Age and Authorship (1884) ; Old Testament Criticism and the Rights of Non-Experts (1897) Kennedy was also the editor of The Christian Witness (1866–73) and The Evangelical Magazine (1887–90).",
"score": "1.3833083"
},
{
"id": "30266717",
"title": "James Kennedy (historian)",
"text": " James Carleton Kennedy (born 1963 in Orange City, Iowa) is an American historian. He is the son of E.W. (Bill) and Nella Kennedy. The elder Dr. Kennedy was for years an eminent professor of religion at Northwestern College (Iowa).",
"score": "1.3821677"
},
{
"id": "15274429",
"title": "John Kennedy (theologian)",
"text": " John Kennedy (1813–6 February 1900) was a Scottish Congregational minister and author.",
"score": "1.3801067"
},
{
"id": "6190211",
"title": "Marilyn Musgrave",
"text": " That Transform,\" she said, \"I was so encouraged that there was a minister of the Gospel that said what was right and what was wrong, and what our responsibility was as Christians in this great nation. Those kind of things just grew in me through the years, and then, here I am [today] voting on moral issues. I just want to say to the Christian Statesman staff, Dr. Kennedy is a hero for me.\" In the 2002 Republican primary debate with opponent Jeff Beddingfield in Greeley, Colorado, Musgrave stated that the First Amendment does not offer \"freedom from religion.\" In a 2003 interview with Today's Pentecostal ",
"score": "1.3781433"
},
{
"id": "9023950",
"title": "Stetson Kennedy",
"text": " William Stetson Kennedy (October 5, 1916 – August 27, 2011) was an American author, folklorist and human rights activist. One of the pioneer folklore collectors during the first half of the 20th century, he is remembered for having infiltrated the Ku Klux Klan in the 1940s, exposing its secrets to authorities and the outside world. His actions led to the 1947 revocation by the state of Georgia of the Klan's national corporate charter. Kennedy wrote or co-wrote ten books.",
"score": "1.3777614"
},
{
"id": "9307499",
"title": "D. James Kennedy",
"text": " on the left. He was a formidable creator of an opposition to what people like I believe.\" In an interview with NPR's Terry Gross, Kennedy was asked whether he wanted all public office holders to be Christians. Kennedy answered, \"We have people who are secular and humanist and unbelievers who are constantly supporting in every way possible other people who share those views. And I don't object to that. That's their privilege. And I think that Christians should be allowed the same privilege to vote for people whom they believe share their views about life and government. And that's all I'm talking about.\"",
"score": "1.3756506"
}
] | [
"Kenneth A. R. Kennedy\n Kenneth Adrian Raine Kennedy (June 26, 1930 – April 23, 2014) was an anthropologist who studied at the University of California, Berkeley. He was Professor Emeritus of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Anthropology and Asian Studies in the Division of Biological Sciences at Cornell University. Among his areas of interest have been forensic anthropology and human skeletal biology. He died in Ithaca, New York on April 23, 2014.",
"James Kennedy (historian)\n a professor of the history of the Netherlands. In 2009 he succeeded professor Piet de Rooy, head of the section of the history of the Netherlands. As of 1 October 2015, Kennedy is Dean of University College Utrecht. Kennedy takes a special interest in post-war Dutch history. Because of his Christian belief he considers himself a Christian historian although he is reserved to point out how God is guiding human history. Politically, he characterizes himself as an independent. However, in the presidential campaign of 2004 he was in favor of John Kerry, the presidential candidate of the Democrats. James Kennedy is married to Simone Kennedy-Doornbos, a local Dutch politician for the ChristianUnion in Amersfoort. They have three children. The Kennedy family is a member of the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands (Liberated), an orthodox reformed denomination.",
"Kenneth Kennedy (bishop)\n Notes",
"Ethne Kennedy\n Ethne Kennedy (November 13, 1921 – March 13, 2005) was an American religious worker and activist. Kennedy was the daughter of parents who had emigrated to the United States from Ireland early in the twentieth century; among her siblings was the literary scholar Sighle Kennedy. A member of the Society of Helpers, she was the founding president of the National Assembly of Religious Women, and after the Second Vatican Council worked to ensure that women could participate fully in the workings of the Roman Catholic Church. She also was editor of Probe, the newsletter put out by the organization of sisters' councils in the United ",
"Myles Kennedy\n Kennedy currently resides in Spokane, Washington with his wife, Selena, whom he married on June 14, 2003. According to Alter Bridge lead guitarist Mark Tremonti, Kennedy is an atheist, although in an article titled Losing My Religion from a November 2010 issue of Kerrang! magazine, Kennedy said he places himself \"somewhere in the middle\" between being an atheist and a Christian. In an interview on the Blairing Out with Eric Blair Show at NAMM 2009, Kennedy mentioned that despite being raised in a Christian household, he is not a religious person and he does not believe in any organized religion. In an interview with CraveOnline, he said \"I would consider myself a part of the growing segment of people who question authority and scrutinize concepts that no longer seem as ",
"Robert F. Kennedy\n Kennedy's Catholicism was central to his politics and personal attitude to life and its purpose; he inherited his faith from his family. He was more religious than his brothers and approached his duties with a Catholic worldview. Throughout his life, he made reference to his faith, how it informed every area of his life, and how it gave him the strength to re-enter politics following his older brother's assassination. His was not an unresponsive and staid faith, but the faith of a Catholic Radical, perhaps the first successful Catholic Radical in American political history. In the last years of his life, he also found great solace in the playwrights and poets of ancient Greece, especially the writings of Aeschylus, suggested to him by Jacqueline after JFK's death. In his Indianapolis speech on April 4, 1968, on the day of the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., Kennedy quoted these lines from Aeschylus: \"Even in our sleep, pain which cannot forget falls drop by drop upon the heart, until, in our own despair, against our will, comes wisdom through the awful grace of God.\"",
"D. James Kennedy\n Many of his public messages focused on American history and the faith of the Founding Fathers of the United States in relation to a Christian worldview. For instance, Kennedy cited John Quincy Adams' claim that Christianity is \"indissolubly linked\" to the founding of America. Kennedy wrote the foreword to the 1987 book Christianity and the Constitution: The Faith of Our Founding Fathers authored by law professor John Eidsmoe.",
"Kenneth O'Donnell\n Kenneth Patrick O'Donnell (March 4, 1924 – September 9, 1977) was an American political consultant and the special assistant and appointments secretary to President John F. Kennedy from 1961 until Kennedy's assassination in November 1963. O'Donnell was a close friend of President Kennedy and his younger brother Robert F. Kennedy, and was part of the group of Kennedy's close advisers dubbed the “Irish Mafia.” O'Donnell also served as an aide to President Lyndon B. Johnson from 1963 to 1965. He later served as an adviser to Robert Kennedy's 1968 presidential campaign.",
"Quintin Kennedy\n Kennedy is considered to have innovated as a theologian, restating orthodox Catholic eucharistic doctrine for his times. In 1558 he published A Compendious treatise, conform to the Scriptures of Almighty God, to Reason and Authority, declaring the nearest and only Way to establish the Conscience of a Christian Man, in all Matters which are in Debate concerning Faith and Religion. In 1561 he wrote a treatise against the reformed ministers, printed in 1812 from manuscript, and a manuscript work on the mass.",
"Ted Kennedy (priest)\n Aborigines whose culture struggles to survive\". Kennedy wrote a book, Who is Worthy, The role of conscience in restoring hope to the Church, in response to controversy in the Archdiocese of Sydney over the proper role of individual conscience. This was a public debate triggered by comments from Cardinal George Pell, who had argued that the \"doctrine of the primacy of conscience should be quietly ditched, at least in our schools, or comprehensively restated\" largely because of his concerns that too many liberties were being taken in a society that over-emphasised the philosophy of individualism. But Kennedy was focused on what he considered was the chief problem of clericalism. In the book he argued that the Australian church has corrupted the basic teachings of Christ and has become a church of exclusion rather than inclusion, so that a process of reformation was required.",
"D. James Kennedy\n Initially ordained in 1959 by the Presbyterian Church in the United States, Kennedy later became an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church in America after he and his church left the PCUS in 1978. Adhering to traditional Calvinist theology, Kennedy's theological works include Why I Believe, What If Jesus Had Never Been Born, Skeptics Answered, and Truths That Transform. In 1971, he founded the Westminster Academy in Fort Lauderdale and in 1989, he founded Knox Theological Seminary. Kennedy was a conservative evangelical minister and an outspoken advocate for the moral and social values championed by the Christian right. He wrote, with Jerry Newcombe, What if America Were a Christian Nation Again? and frequently preached messages that argued that the United States was founded as a Christian nation. Kennedy started the Center for Christian Statesmanship, an evangelical ministry on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. The Center closed in 2007 by Coral Ridge Ministries but quickly reopened under the auspices of Evangelism Explosion International, as the non-partisan Christian outreach to members of the United States Congress. In 2005, the National Religious Broadcasters association inducted Kennedy into its Hall of Fame.",
"American Council of Christian Churches\nClyde J. Kennedy (1958–1961) ",
"Dominion theology\n and legal arguments in support of that statement. Kennedy characterized his perspective on Christian political involvement as more akin to participatory democracy than to dominionism. In an interview with NPR's Terry Gross, Kennedy was asked whether he wanted all public office holders to be Christians. Kennedy answered, \"We have people who are secular and humanist and unbelievers who are constantly supporting in every way possible other people who share those views. And I don't object to that. That's their privilege. And I think that Christians should be allowed the same privilege to vote for people whom they believe share their views about life and government. And that's all I'm talking about.\"",
"John P. Kennedy\n in Maryland, throughout all this wide world of Christendom, was there an altar erected and truly dedicated to the freedom of Christian worship. Let those who first reared it enjoy the renown to which it has entitled them.\" \"John Pendleton Kennedy, On memorializing the birth of religious freedom in St. Mary's City Maryland\" Earlier, when he was in the Maryland state legislature, Kennedy was instrumental in repealing a law that discriminated against Jewish people in court and trial procedures in Maryland. Jewish people were a tiny population in the state at the time and Kennedy was not Jewish, so there was no political or personal advantage to his ",
"John Kennedy (theologian)\nThe Divine Life (1858) ; The Resurrection of Jesus Christ, An Historical Fact; with an Examination of Naturalistic Hypotheses (1871) ; A Brief Defence of Supernatural Christianity (1875) ; The Gospels: Their Age and Authorship (1880) ; A Popular Handbook of Christian Evidences (1880) ; The Pentateuch: Its Age and Authorship (1884) ; Old Testament Criticism and the Rights of Non-Experts (1897) Kennedy was also the editor of The Christian Witness (1866–73) and The Evangelical Magazine (1887–90).",
"James Kennedy (historian)\n James Carleton Kennedy (born 1963 in Orange City, Iowa) is an American historian. He is the son of E.W. (Bill) and Nella Kennedy. The elder Dr. Kennedy was for years an eminent professor of religion at Northwestern College (Iowa).",
"John Kennedy (theologian)\n John Kennedy (1813–6 February 1900) was a Scottish Congregational minister and author.",
"Marilyn Musgrave\n That Transform,\" she said, \"I was so encouraged that there was a minister of the Gospel that said what was right and what was wrong, and what our responsibility was as Christians in this great nation. Those kind of things just grew in me through the years, and then, here I am [today] voting on moral issues. I just want to say to the Christian Statesman staff, Dr. Kennedy is a hero for me.\" In the 2002 Republican primary debate with opponent Jeff Beddingfield in Greeley, Colorado, Musgrave stated that the First Amendment does not offer \"freedom from religion.\" In a 2003 interview with Today's Pentecostal ",
"Stetson Kennedy\n William Stetson Kennedy (October 5, 1916 – August 27, 2011) was an American author, folklorist and human rights activist. One of the pioneer folklore collectors during the first half of the 20th century, he is remembered for having infiltrated the Ku Klux Klan in the 1940s, exposing its secrets to authorities and the outside world. His actions led to the 1947 revocation by the state of Georgia of the Klan's national corporate charter. Kennedy wrote or co-wrote ten books.",
"D. James Kennedy\n on the left. He was a formidable creator of an opposition to what people like I believe.\" In an interview with NPR's Terry Gross, Kennedy was asked whether he wanted all public office holders to be Christians. Kennedy answered, \"We have people who are secular and humanist and unbelievers who are constantly supporting in every way possible other people who share those views. And I don't object to that. That's their privilege. And I think that Christians should be allowed the same privilege to vote for people whom they believe share their views about life and government. And that's all I'm talking about.\""
] |
What is the religion of Guadalupe Missionaries? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Guadalupe Missionaries | 4,292,396 | 87 | [
{
"id": "31490175",
"title": "Guadalupe Missionaries",
"text": " Guadalupe Missionaries (Misioneros de Guadalupe, official name: Instituto de Santa María de Guadalupe para las Misiones Extranjeras), also known by their abbreviation MG, is a Roman Catholic missionary society in Mexico. It was founded on October 7, 1949. The headquarters are located in Mexico City The members of the Society are secular and devote their lives to the mission Ad gentes. The first Superior General of the Society was Bishop Alonso M. Escalante, a Mexican who worked previously for years in China and Bolivia.",
"score": "1.6495347"
},
{
"id": "3272479",
"title": "Valle de Guadalupe",
"text": " The community was founded in 1834 by Dominican missionary Félix Caballero as Misión de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe del Norte, making it the last mission established in the Californias. Caballero had to abandon the mission in 1840, under attacks from the indigenous peoples. From 1905 to 1910, a mixture of Spiritual Christian faiths, mostly Pryguny from Transcaucasia, South Russia, settled in 4 farming colonies near Ensenada, Baja California Norte Territory, Mexico. Guadalupe was the main colony of about 20+ square miles purchased in 1905. Most owned or rented land communally. Not all were ethnic Russians, and were of various folk-Protestant (non-Orthodox) faiths. A few Russian Orthodox immigrants, had no priest or church, lived in Ensenada and were confused with the Spiritual Christians. To make ",
"score": "1.4931707"
},
{
"id": "28010898",
"title": "Misión Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe de Huasinapi",
"text": " Mission Guadalupe was established by the Jesuit Everardo Helen in 1720, at the Cochimí settlement of Huasinapí in the Sierra de la Giganta about 40 kilometers west of Mulegé, Baja California Sur, Mexico. The mission went through a typical trajectory of demographic decline experienced by the Baja California missions, as the neophyte population dwindled under the impact of Old World diseases. The mission was abandoned in the Dominican period, in 1795, when its residents were transferred to La Purísima. Surviving traces of Mission Guadalupe include building walls, dams, and graveyards. Mission site: 26.91931°N, -112.40572°W Road access: travel west from Mulegé about 25 miles (40 km) [intersection is at 26.76333°N, -112.26203°W] then north about 12 miles (19 km). The road is rough but passable.",
"score": "1.4244394"
},
{
"id": "9527061",
"title": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Trinidad and Tobago",
"text": " Wisdom. Kevin Diaz, chief executive of the Boy Scouts of Trinidad and head of civil service training for the government, visited the fair, learned more about the LDS Church and was later baptized. After he was baptized, he learned missionaries could only stay for short periods of time using tourist visas. Through government contacts, he arranged for as many as ten missionaries to stay for a period of one year at a time, and in special cases, longer. For 14 years and prior to retiring, he was manager of organization planning and development for British West Indian Airways. In addition to work and scouting, he served ",
"score": "1.3998501"
},
{
"id": "9916696",
"title": "Our Lady of Guadalupe",
"text": " occurred. Days later, Fray Francisco de Bustamante, local head of the Franciscan order, delivered a sermon denouncing the native belief and believers. He expressed concern that the Catholic Archbishop was promoting a superstitious regard for an indigenous image: \"The devotion at the chapel... to which they have given the name Guadalupe was prejudicial to the Indians because they believed that the image itself worked miracles, contrary to what the missionary friars had been teaching them, and because many were disappointed when it did not.\" Archbishop Montúfar opened an inquiry into the matter at which the Franciscans repeated their position that the image encouraged idolatry and superstition, and four witnesses testified ",
"score": "1.3957603"
},
{
"id": "1221290",
"title": "Christianity in Houston",
"text": " oblate mission in Magnolia Park, on the second floor of the residence of Emilio Aranda. A permanent two-story building, funded by the community, opened in 1926. In the 1920s, a group of Louisiana Creole people attended the Hispanic Our Lady of Guadalupe Church because OLG was the closest church to the Frenchtown area of the Fifth Ward. Because the OLG church treated the Creole people in a discriminatory manner, by forcing them to confess and take communion after people of other races did so and after forcing them to take the back pews, the Creoles opted to build their own church. ",
"score": "1.3808742"
},
{
"id": "33055043",
"title": "Inaja Band of Diegueno Mission Indians",
"text": " The Roman Catholic church plays a very vital role in every day living amongst the Inaja community, with 1.27 billion members of the church worldwide, the Inaja band mission Indians are a part of this religious practice. The adoption of Roman Catholicism being the oldest religious institutions in the world, has played a very vital role in shaping the way the Inaja band mission Indians beliefs. ↔Ethnic Groups↔ The Kumeyaay, or called the Tipai-Ipai and Kamia or Diegueño, are seen as the native people of the southwestern California region. These clans of natives inhabit southern California and Baja California in Mexico. The Cocopah, or called the Cocopá or Kwapa, are also clans who live in Baja ",
"score": "1.3711383"
},
{
"id": "9916738",
"title": "Our Lady of Guadalupe",
"text": " rubble and the columns of the ancient pagan temples, so they often borrowed pagan customs for their own cult purposes.\" The author Judy King asserts that Guadalupe is a \"common denominator\" uniting Mexicans. Writing that Mexico is composed of a vast patchwork of differences—linguistic, ethnic, and class-based—King says \"The Virgin of Guadalupe is the rubber band that binds this disparate nation into a whole.\" The Mexican novelist, Carlos Fuentes, once said that \"you cannot truly be considered a Mexican unless you believe in the Virgin of Guadalupe.\" Nobel Literature laureate Octavio Paz wrote in 1974 that \"The Mexican people, after more than two centuries of experiments and defeats, have faith only in the Virgin of Guadalupe and the National Lottery.\"",
"score": "1.368921"
},
{
"id": "28673368",
"title": "Catholic Church in Latin America",
"text": " a mixture of the cultures which blend to form Mexico, both racially and religiously Guadalupe is sometimes called the \"first mestiza\" or \"the first Mexican\". Mary O'Connor writes that Guadalupe \"bring[s] together people of distinct cultural heritages, while at the same time affirming their distinctness.\" One theory is that the Virgin of Guadalupe was presented to the Aztecs as a sort of \"Christianized\" Tonantzin, necessary for the clergymen to convert the indigenous people to their faith. As Jacques Lafaye wrote in Quetzalcoatl and Guadalupe, \"...as the Christians built their first churches with the rubble and the columns of the ancient pagan temples, so they often borrowed pagan customs for their own cult purposes. Such Virgins appeared in most of the other evangelized ",
"score": "1.3554751"
},
{
"id": "26843205",
"title": "Guadalupe, California",
"text": " Guadalupe is a small town with a diverse culture and history. In addition to the Dunes Center, the town contains an art museum, the Rancho de Guadalupe Historical Society, a public library, veteran's memorial, and the Masatani Mansion. Nuestra Señora De Guadalupe is the main Catholic church, located on 11th Street and Obispo Street. There are three other Christian churches in town, as well as an old Buddhist temple. The historic building occupied by city hall and the police department used to be an elementary school. There is a very small historic jail building at the park near the train tracks where the water tower stands. Every year on September 16, there is a parade on Guadalupe Street to celebrate Mexico's independence from Spain. Guadalupe is also home to the historic Royal Theater, which was a single-screen 510-seat movie ",
"score": "1.3529754"
},
{
"id": "4544288",
"title": "Religious syncretism",
"text": " Catholicism in Central and South America has been integrated with a number of elements derived from indigenous and slave cultures in those areas (see the Caribbean and modern sections); while many African Initiated Churches demonstrate an integration of Protestant and traditional African beliefs. The Catholic Church allows some symbols and traditions to be carried over from older belief systems, so long as they are remade to conform (rather than conflict) with a Christian worldview; syncretism of other religions with the Catholic faith, such as Voudun or Santería, is expressly condemned by the Roman Catholic Church. The image of Our Lady of Guadalupe and the subsequent devotion to her are seen as assimilating some elements of native Mexican culture into Christianity. Santa Muerte, a female deity of death, has also ",
"score": "1.3447013"
},
{
"id": "32358039",
"title": "Carnoviste",
"text": " Carnoviste (1825 ca. – 1876) was a southern (Guadalupe) Mescalero chief, his band—presumably Tsehitcihéndé or Niit'ahénde—lived in the Texan Big Bend Country, ranging on both sides of the Rio Grande from the Guadalupe Mountains towards east of the Limpia Mountains (also known as Davis Mountains) onto the edge of the Southern Plains.",
"score": "1.3436165"
},
{
"id": "27798165",
"title": "Roman Catholic Diocese of Ecatepec",
"text": " (Assistant Pastor) of the Parish of \"Santa Maria, Mother of the Church\", in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Monterrey, in Monterrey, Mexico. From 1986 to 1991, then-Father Couttolenc was a Missionary for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Ngong in Ngong, Kenya, near Nairobi, Kenya. From 1991 to 1993, he served as Treasurer General of the Missionaries of Guadalupe and Administrative and Legal Director of the Intercontinental University of Mexico, his alma mater. Then, from 2003 to 2007, he was Vicar General of the Missionaries of Guadalupe. On March 27, 2007, he was appointed Bishop of Tlapa by Pope Benedict, receiving episcopal ordination on the following June 11.",
"score": "1.3424885"
},
{
"id": "12022231",
"title": "Around the World in 80 Faiths",
"text": "Faith 61: Roman Catholicism in Mexico: Attends Midnight Mass at the basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Mexico City, Mexico ; Faith 62: Santa Muerte, Folk Catholicism: Witnesses prayers to Santa Muerte (Spanish for Saint Death, which is a sacred figure and feminine skeletal folk saint), Barrio de Tepito, Mexico City. Also sees devotee of Santa Muerte being tattooed. Faith 63: El Tio: Witnesses offerings to El Tio figure, a mine god at Cerro Rico mine, Bolivia ; Faith 64: Pachamama: Witnesses llama sacrifice on hill above Sampaya, Bolivia ; Faith 65: Roman Catholic Church: Automobile blessing outside the basilica of the Virgen de la Candelaria, Copacabana, Bolivia ; Faith 66: Pentecostalism: Cleansing and exorcism of prisoners at Benfica detention centre, Leopoldina, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil by Assemblies of God minister. Minister later exorcises ",
"score": "1.3416167"
},
{
"id": "4096123",
"title": "Tepehuán",
"text": " The Tepehuan have accepted Catholicism while maintaining aspects of their original religious precepts, an example of what anthropologists call \"compartmentalism.\" This means that the two religions are practiced separately at different times of the year, with different rituals, and for different purposes. Catholics are served by a resident priest at San Bernardino, who also serves the surrounding areas. Other communities are served by visiting missionaries who arrive before Easter Sunday and stay several weeks. A traditional pantheon of gods is syncretized in name and ritual with Catholic religious figures. Dios Padre (God the Father) is associated with the sun, whereas Jesús Nazareno (Jesus the Nazarene) is identified ",
"score": "1.3411678"
},
{
"id": "10195352",
"title": "Traditionalist Mexican-American Catholic Church",
"text": " Due to the connection between Santa Muerte and drug trafficking in Mexico, the Mexican government ruled that the Church did not have the qualifications for a religion and removed the Church from the list of officially recognized religions. Protests arose in 2006 among church members, yet the Church can legally worship without recognition from the government.",
"score": "1.3356564"
},
{
"id": "30653025",
"title": "History of Mexico City",
"text": " reflected in the natives' practice of the new faith. Franciscan friar Bernardino de Sahagún suspected that the emerging cult of the Virgin of Guadalupe, which is said to have originated with the vision at Tepeyac Hill to the north of the city's borders in 1531, represented a post-Conquest adoption of the Aztec cult of Tonantzin. He was also concerned that the prior cult of Quetzalcoatl would find its way into the new religion by equating this god with the Apostle Thomas, as an earlier attempt to evangelize the Indians before the Spanish conquest. The Spanish also brought with them the Inquisition as a ",
"score": "1.3338816"
},
{
"id": "28007340",
"title": "Pame people",
"text": " the Pame, before embarking on a \"preaching mission across Mexico.\" In the 1760s, missionary Juan Guadalupe Soriano who had \"gained the greatest knowledge of their knowledge,\" recorded: \"The more one deals with them, the less one knows about them.\" Following what had now been decades of indoctrination attempts by missionaries and ongoing violence by Spanish military officers, Soriano confessed that \"the Pame were still 'inclined to idolatry' and that virtually all of them still followed their own religious leaders and still practiced their traditional dances.\" Francisco Palóu's account of the eighteenth century missionary period presents an image \"in which the missionization of the ",
"score": "1.3333528"
},
{
"id": "10195350",
"title": "Traditionalist Mexican-American Catholic Church",
"text": " The Church follows both the Nicene Creed and the Athanasian Creed, maintains the seven sacraments, an all-male priesthood, are open to homosexuals in the faithful and, generally speaking, are socially conservative on abortion but do not practice clerical celibacy, allow contraceptives and do not require chastity before marriage. They also maintain their veneration of the Mexican folk saint Santa Muerte, which the Catholic Church had condemned as blasphemy and as Satanic. They reject Papal infallibility, the Immaculate Conception, and the Assumption of the Virgin Mary. Church services are conducted every Sunday and attendees often invoke the name of the Santa Muerte to intercede before God, rather than other saints, and leave offerings to the folk saint. The church follow the Roman Catholic practice of baptism, holy communion, confirmations, weddings, exorcisms and the praying of rosaries.",
"score": "1.3333006"
},
{
"id": "1221289",
"title": "Christianity in Houston",
"text": " Diocese of Galveston brought the Oblates of Mary Immaculate, a series of priests intended to minister to the Mexican population of Houston. In 1912 Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church, the first Mexican Catholic church, opened. Due to an increase in demand in Catholic services, oblates established missions in various Mexican-American neighborhoods. The Roman Catholic Church established Our Lady of Guadalupe so that white people accustomed to segregation of races would not be offended by the presence of Mexican people in their churches. The second Mexican Catholic church, Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church, opened in the 1920s. It originated as ",
"score": "1.3332925"
}
] | [
"Guadalupe Missionaries\n Guadalupe Missionaries (Misioneros de Guadalupe, official name: Instituto de Santa María de Guadalupe para las Misiones Extranjeras), also known by their abbreviation MG, is a Roman Catholic missionary society in Mexico. It was founded on October 7, 1949. The headquarters are located in Mexico City The members of the Society are secular and devote their lives to the mission Ad gentes. The first Superior General of the Society was Bishop Alonso M. Escalante, a Mexican who worked previously for years in China and Bolivia.",
"Valle de Guadalupe\n The community was founded in 1834 by Dominican missionary Félix Caballero as Misión de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe del Norte, making it the last mission established in the Californias. Caballero had to abandon the mission in 1840, under attacks from the indigenous peoples. From 1905 to 1910, a mixture of Spiritual Christian faiths, mostly Pryguny from Transcaucasia, South Russia, settled in 4 farming colonies near Ensenada, Baja California Norte Territory, Mexico. Guadalupe was the main colony of about 20+ square miles purchased in 1905. Most owned or rented land communally. Not all were ethnic Russians, and were of various folk-Protestant (non-Orthodox) faiths. A few Russian Orthodox immigrants, had no priest or church, lived in Ensenada and were confused with the Spiritual Christians. To make ",
"Misión Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe de Huasinapi\n Mission Guadalupe was established by the Jesuit Everardo Helen in 1720, at the Cochimí settlement of Huasinapí in the Sierra de la Giganta about 40 kilometers west of Mulegé, Baja California Sur, Mexico. The mission went through a typical trajectory of demographic decline experienced by the Baja California missions, as the neophyte population dwindled under the impact of Old World diseases. The mission was abandoned in the Dominican period, in 1795, when its residents were transferred to La Purísima. Surviving traces of Mission Guadalupe include building walls, dams, and graveyards. Mission site: 26.91931°N, -112.40572°W Road access: travel west from Mulegé about 25 miles (40 km) [intersection is at 26.76333°N, -112.26203°W] then north about 12 miles (19 km). The road is rough but passable.",
"The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Trinidad and Tobago\n Wisdom. Kevin Diaz, chief executive of the Boy Scouts of Trinidad and head of civil service training for the government, visited the fair, learned more about the LDS Church and was later baptized. After he was baptized, he learned missionaries could only stay for short periods of time using tourist visas. Through government contacts, he arranged for as many as ten missionaries to stay for a period of one year at a time, and in special cases, longer. For 14 years and prior to retiring, he was manager of organization planning and development for British West Indian Airways. In addition to work and scouting, he served ",
"Our Lady of Guadalupe\n occurred. Days later, Fray Francisco de Bustamante, local head of the Franciscan order, delivered a sermon denouncing the native belief and believers. He expressed concern that the Catholic Archbishop was promoting a superstitious regard for an indigenous image: \"The devotion at the chapel... to which they have given the name Guadalupe was prejudicial to the Indians because they believed that the image itself worked miracles, contrary to what the missionary friars had been teaching them, and because many were disappointed when it did not.\" Archbishop Montúfar opened an inquiry into the matter at which the Franciscans repeated their position that the image encouraged idolatry and superstition, and four witnesses testified ",
"Christianity in Houston\n oblate mission in Magnolia Park, on the second floor of the residence of Emilio Aranda. A permanent two-story building, funded by the community, opened in 1926. In the 1920s, a group of Louisiana Creole people attended the Hispanic Our Lady of Guadalupe Church because OLG was the closest church to the Frenchtown area of the Fifth Ward. Because the OLG church treated the Creole people in a discriminatory manner, by forcing them to confess and take communion after people of other races did so and after forcing them to take the back pews, the Creoles opted to build their own church. ",
"Inaja Band of Diegueno Mission Indians\n The Roman Catholic church plays a very vital role in every day living amongst the Inaja community, with 1.27 billion members of the church worldwide, the Inaja band mission Indians are a part of this religious practice. The adoption of Roman Catholicism being the oldest religious institutions in the world, has played a very vital role in shaping the way the Inaja band mission Indians beliefs. ↔Ethnic Groups↔ The Kumeyaay, or called the Tipai-Ipai and Kamia or Diegueño, are seen as the native people of the southwestern California region. These clans of natives inhabit southern California and Baja California in Mexico. The Cocopah, or called the Cocopá or Kwapa, are also clans who live in Baja ",
"Our Lady of Guadalupe\n rubble and the columns of the ancient pagan temples, so they often borrowed pagan customs for their own cult purposes.\" The author Judy King asserts that Guadalupe is a \"common denominator\" uniting Mexicans. Writing that Mexico is composed of a vast patchwork of differences—linguistic, ethnic, and class-based—King says \"The Virgin of Guadalupe is the rubber band that binds this disparate nation into a whole.\" The Mexican novelist, Carlos Fuentes, once said that \"you cannot truly be considered a Mexican unless you believe in the Virgin of Guadalupe.\" Nobel Literature laureate Octavio Paz wrote in 1974 that \"The Mexican people, after more than two centuries of experiments and defeats, have faith only in the Virgin of Guadalupe and the National Lottery.\"",
"Catholic Church in Latin America\n a mixture of the cultures which blend to form Mexico, both racially and religiously Guadalupe is sometimes called the \"first mestiza\" or \"the first Mexican\". Mary O'Connor writes that Guadalupe \"bring[s] together people of distinct cultural heritages, while at the same time affirming their distinctness.\" One theory is that the Virgin of Guadalupe was presented to the Aztecs as a sort of \"Christianized\" Tonantzin, necessary for the clergymen to convert the indigenous people to their faith. As Jacques Lafaye wrote in Quetzalcoatl and Guadalupe, \"...as the Christians built their first churches with the rubble and the columns of the ancient pagan temples, so they often borrowed pagan customs for their own cult purposes. Such Virgins appeared in most of the other evangelized ",
"Guadalupe, California\n Guadalupe is a small town with a diverse culture and history. In addition to the Dunes Center, the town contains an art museum, the Rancho de Guadalupe Historical Society, a public library, veteran's memorial, and the Masatani Mansion. Nuestra Señora De Guadalupe is the main Catholic church, located on 11th Street and Obispo Street. There are three other Christian churches in town, as well as an old Buddhist temple. The historic building occupied by city hall and the police department used to be an elementary school. There is a very small historic jail building at the park near the train tracks where the water tower stands. Every year on September 16, there is a parade on Guadalupe Street to celebrate Mexico's independence from Spain. Guadalupe is also home to the historic Royal Theater, which was a single-screen 510-seat movie ",
"Religious syncretism\n Catholicism in Central and South America has been integrated with a number of elements derived from indigenous and slave cultures in those areas (see the Caribbean and modern sections); while many African Initiated Churches demonstrate an integration of Protestant and traditional African beliefs. The Catholic Church allows some symbols and traditions to be carried over from older belief systems, so long as they are remade to conform (rather than conflict) with a Christian worldview; syncretism of other religions with the Catholic faith, such as Voudun or Santería, is expressly condemned by the Roman Catholic Church. The image of Our Lady of Guadalupe and the subsequent devotion to her are seen as assimilating some elements of native Mexican culture into Christianity. Santa Muerte, a female deity of death, has also ",
"Carnoviste\n Carnoviste (1825 ca. – 1876) was a southern (Guadalupe) Mescalero chief, his band—presumably Tsehitcihéndé or Niit'ahénde—lived in the Texan Big Bend Country, ranging on both sides of the Rio Grande from the Guadalupe Mountains towards east of the Limpia Mountains (also known as Davis Mountains) onto the edge of the Southern Plains.",
"Roman Catholic Diocese of Ecatepec\n (Assistant Pastor) of the Parish of \"Santa Maria, Mother of the Church\", in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Monterrey, in Monterrey, Mexico. From 1986 to 1991, then-Father Couttolenc was a Missionary for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Ngong in Ngong, Kenya, near Nairobi, Kenya. From 1991 to 1993, he served as Treasurer General of the Missionaries of Guadalupe and Administrative and Legal Director of the Intercontinental University of Mexico, his alma mater. Then, from 2003 to 2007, he was Vicar General of the Missionaries of Guadalupe. On March 27, 2007, he was appointed Bishop of Tlapa by Pope Benedict, receiving episcopal ordination on the following June 11.",
"Around the World in 80 Faiths\nFaith 61: Roman Catholicism in Mexico: Attends Midnight Mass at the basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Mexico City, Mexico ; Faith 62: Santa Muerte, Folk Catholicism: Witnesses prayers to Santa Muerte (Spanish for Saint Death, which is a sacred figure and feminine skeletal folk saint), Barrio de Tepito, Mexico City. Also sees devotee of Santa Muerte being tattooed. Faith 63: El Tio: Witnesses offerings to El Tio figure, a mine god at Cerro Rico mine, Bolivia ; Faith 64: Pachamama: Witnesses llama sacrifice on hill above Sampaya, Bolivia ; Faith 65: Roman Catholic Church: Automobile blessing outside the basilica of the Virgen de la Candelaria, Copacabana, Bolivia ; Faith 66: Pentecostalism: Cleansing and exorcism of prisoners at Benfica detention centre, Leopoldina, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil by Assemblies of God minister. Minister later exorcises ",
"Tepehuán\n The Tepehuan have accepted Catholicism while maintaining aspects of their original religious precepts, an example of what anthropologists call \"compartmentalism.\" This means that the two religions are practiced separately at different times of the year, with different rituals, and for different purposes. Catholics are served by a resident priest at San Bernardino, who also serves the surrounding areas. Other communities are served by visiting missionaries who arrive before Easter Sunday and stay several weeks. A traditional pantheon of gods is syncretized in name and ritual with Catholic religious figures. Dios Padre (God the Father) is associated with the sun, whereas Jesús Nazareno (Jesus the Nazarene) is identified ",
"Traditionalist Mexican-American Catholic Church\n Due to the connection between Santa Muerte and drug trafficking in Mexico, the Mexican government ruled that the Church did not have the qualifications for a religion and removed the Church from the list of officially recognized religions. Protests arose in 2006 among church members, yet the Church can legally worship without recognition from the government.",
"History of Mexico City\n reflected in the natives' practice of the new faith. Franciscan friar Bernardino de Sahagún suspected that the emerging cult of the Virgin of Guadalupe, which is said to have originated with the vision at Tepeyac Hill to the north of the city's borders in 1531, represented a post-Conquest adoption of the Aztec cult of Tonantzin. He was also concerned that the prior cult of Quetzalcoatl would find its way into the new religion by equating this god with the Apostle Thomas, as an earlier attempt to evangelize the Indians before the Spanish conquest. The Spanish also brought with them the Inquisition as a ",
"Pame people\n the Pame, before embarking on a \"preaching mission across Mexico.\" In the 1760s, missionary Juan Guadalupe Soriano who had \"gained the greatest knowledge of their knowledge,\" recorded: \"The more one deals with them, the less one knows about them.\" Following what had now been decades of indoctrination attempts by missionaries and ongoing violence by Spanish military officers, Soriano confessed that \"the Pame were still 'inclined to idolatry' and that virtually all of them still followed their own religious leaders and still practiced their traditional dances.\" Francisco Palóu's account of the eighteenth century missionary period presents an image \"in which the missionization of the ",
"Traditionalist Mexican-American Catholic Church\n The Church follows both the Nicene Creed and the Athanasian Creed, maintains the seven sacraments, an all-male priesthood, are open to homosexuals in the faithful and, generally speaking, are socially conservative on abortion but do not practice clerical celibacy, allow contraceptives and do not require chastity before marriage. They also maintain their veneration of the Mexican folk saint Santa Muerte, which the Catholic Church had condemned as blasphemy and as Satanic. They reject Papal infallibility, the Immaculate Conception, and the Assumption of the Virgin Mary. Church services are conducted every Sunday and attendees often invoke the name of the Santa Muerte to intercede before God, rather than other saints, and leave offerings to the folk saint. The church follow the Roman Catholic practice of baptism, holy communion, confirmations, weddings, exorcisms and the praying of rosaries.",
"Christianity in Houston\n Diocese of Galveston brought the Oblates of Mary Immaculate, a series of priests intended to minister to the Mexican population of Houston. In 1912 Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church, the first Mexican Catholic church, opened. Due to an increase in demand in Catholic services, oblates established missions in various Mexican-American neighborhoods. The Roman Catholic Church established Our Lady of Guadalupe so that white people accustomed to segregation of races would not be offended by the presence of Mexican people in their churches. The second Mexican Catholic church, Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church, opened in the 1920s. It originated as "
] |
What is the religion of John Richardson? | [
"Anglicanism",
"Anglicanism, Anglican Church"
] | religion | John Richardson (bishop of Bedford) | 4,732,699 | 84 | [
{
"id": "7103777",
"title": "John Richardson (philosopher)",
"text": " John Richardson (born 1951) is a professor of philosophy at New York University. He is best known for his books on Heidegger and Nietzsche.",
"score": "1.6110363"
},
{
"id": "3704008",
"title": "John Richardson (Quaker)",
"text": " John Richardson (1667–1753) was an English Quaker minister and autobiographer.",
"score": "1.5700487"
},
{
"id": "10142238",
"title": "J. I. Richardson",
"text": " J. I. Richardson was a Baptist Pastor who served as a missionary in India through the Canadian Baptist Ministries. Richardson came to India in 1945 and after more than a decade and half he was elected President of Convention of Baptist Churches of Northern Circars in 1958 In the continuing year, Richardson was replaced by Rev. A. B. Masilamani. After a period of missionary service in India, Richardson returned to Canada and in 1961 became Dean of Carey Hall at the University of British Columbia. In addition to his responsibilities as Dean of Carey Hall, Richardson was also Chaplain to the University of British Columbia as well as Lecturer of Oriental Religions.",
"score": "1.5582314"
},
{
"id": "3704009",
"title": "John Richardson (Quaker)",
"text": " John Richardson was born in 1667, probably in the village of North Cave, East Riding of Yorkshire, where his father, William Richardson (1614–1679), a shepherd, had been converted to Quakerism by William Dewsberry or Dewsbury in about 1652. He was twelve when his father died, leaving his mother with a livestock farm to run and five children. John had one older sister, who died about 1682, and three younger brothers, of whom the youngest was born about 1676.",
"score": "1.545608"
},
{
"id": "12169302",
"title": "John Richardson (born 1886)",
"text": " John Richardson (September 30, 1886 – January 24, 1976) was an American attorney and political figure from Massachusetts.",
"score": "1.5428516"
},
{
"id": "7103778",
"title": "John Richardson (philosopher)",
"text": " A graduate of Harvard University in 1972, he earned his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley in 1981 under the supervision of Hubert Dreyfus. He has taught at New York University since 1981.",
"score": "1.5428116"
},
{
"id": "3704012",
"title": "John Richardson (Quaker)",
"text": " Leaving his two surviving children with foster parents, Richardson set out for America as an evangelist, arriving in Maryland in 1701 after a 16-week crossing. He spent more than two years there, ceaselessly touring and disputing with Quakers and non-Quakers, on one occasion accompanying William Penn to treat with some American Indians, who made a favourable impression on him. He also visited Bermuda and Barbados.",
"score": "1.5381082"
},
{
"id": "11283328",
"title": "Don Richardson (missionary)",
"text": " Don Richardson (June 23, 1935 – December 23, 2018 ) was a Canadian Christian missionary, teacher, author and international speaker who worked among people of Western New Guinea, Indonesia. He argued in his writings that, hidden among tribal cultures, there are usually some practices or understandings, which he calls \"redemptive analogies\", which can be used to illustrate the meaning of the Christian Gospel, contextualizing the biblical representation of the incarnation of Jesus.",
"score": "1.5289536"
},
{
"id": "28367533",
"title": "John Richardson (Australian politician)",
"text": " was also a script-writer for the children's shows Magic Circle Club and Adventure Island, as well as the author of five children's books. In 1976, Richardson was elected to the Victorian Parliament for Forest Hill as a member of the Liberal Party. In 1982 he became Shadow Minister for Educational Services, but later that year was moved to Consumer Affairs, with the additional portfolio of Assistant to the Leader of the Opposition. In 1983 he moved to Ethnic Affairs, but left the front bench in 1985. In 1989 he returned as Shadow Minister for Education, moving to Community Services, Housing and Aboriginal Affairs in 1990. He left the front bench again in 1991. Richardson remained a backbencher until his retirement in 2002.",
"score": "1.5287614"
},
{
"id": "3704010",
"title": "John Richardson (Quaker)",
"text": " Richardson records in his Life an initial \"aversion in me to the people called in scorn Quakers, and also to their strict living, and demeanour, plainness of habit, and language, so none of these I learned from them.\" He became converted at the age of 16, which entailed being \"weaned from all my companions and lovers.\" Richardson disapproved of his mother's remarriage in about 1785 to an unnamed Presbyterian, who tried to prevent him from attending Quaker meetings, turned him out of the house, and eventually left him just five shillings in his will.\" Richardson became a weaver's apprentice, and then took to clock and watch mending from a ",
"score": "1.5286357"
},
{
"id": "7141269",
"title": "John Richardson (translator)",
"text": " John Richardson (born Linton, Cambridgeshire, c. 1564 – 1625) was a Biblical scholar and a Master of Trinity College, Cambridge from 1615 until his death.",
"score": "1.502954"
},
{
"id": "13403021",
"title": "John V. Richardson Jr.",
"text": " John Vinson Richardson Jr. is an American professor of information studies at University of California, Los Angeles, with a significant record of research and publications on intelligent question answering systems, reference service, and history of librarianship. His current research focuses on assessment and evaluation issues related to virtual reference (i.e., chat) such as time in queue, service duration, content analysis or microanalysis of questions, as well as user satisfaction. Currently, Richardson also serves as an adjunct professor in the School of Information Studies at Charles Sturt University in NSW, Australia.",
"score": "1.4997085"
},
{
"id": "8360197",
"title": "John Richardson (author)",
"text": " John Richardson (4 October 1796 – 12 May 1852) was a Canadian officer in the British Army who became the first Canadian-born novelist to achieve international recognition.",
"score": "1.4969127"
},
{
"id": "33168168",
"title": "John Richardson (actor)",
"text": " John Richardson (19 January 1934 – 5 January 2021) was an English actor who appeared in movies from the late 1950s until the early 1990s. He was a male lead in Italian genre films, most notably Mario Bava's Black Sunday (1960) with Barbara Steele, but he was best known for playing the love interest of Ursula Andress in She (1965) and then of Raquel Welch in One Million Years B.C. (1966).",
"score": "1.4930618"
},
{
"id": "12169305",
"title": "John Richardson (born 1886)",
"text": " Richardson served in the United States Army during World War I, rising from the rank to private to captain. He also worked in the United States Food Administration under the direction of Herbert Hoover.",
"score": "1.4887531"
},
{
"id": "26246087",
"title": "John Richardson (New South Wales politician)",
"text": " Richardson was the son of a Presbyterian minister and was educated at parish schools. He initially worked in London as a linen draper and emigrated to Sydney in 1838. By 1842 he had established a store in Brisbane and also developed a shipping agency. Philosophically a liberal, he became politically active during the 1840s and 1850s and opposed the importation of cheap labour, whether coolie or convict and also opposed the conservative constitution proposed by William Wentworth. Richardson developed a number of pastoral stations in the Darling Downs region and also owned a large general store in Armidale.",
"score": "1.4872426"
},
{
"id": "27402873",
"title": "William J. Richardson",
"text": " William John Richardson, S.J. (2 November 1920 – 10 December 2016) was an American philosopher, who was among the first to write a comprehensive study of the philosophy of Martin Heidegger, featuring an important preface by Heidegger himself. In addition to his specialization in Heidegger, Richardson was also, as a trained psychoanalyst, a specialist in the thought of Jacques Lacan. He was a Jesuit priest (entering the order on 14 August 1941, he was ordained a priest on 15 August 1953). He taught philosophy at Fordham University and since 1981, at Boston College, where he was, at the time of his death, emeritus professor of philosophy. He died in December 2016 in Weston, Massachusetts at the age of 96.",
"score": "1.4845366"
},
{
"id": "7141271",
"title": "John Richardson (translator)",
"text": " were among the first of the Cambridge divines who maintained the doctrine Arminianism in opposition to the Calvinists. He resigned in 1617 as a results of increasing anti-Arminian pressure. He then served in 1617 and 1618 as vice-chancellor of the university. Richardson was a skilled hebraist and he served in the \"First Cambridge Company\", charged by James I of England with the translation of the books of the Old Testament from the Books of Chronicles to Song of Songs (comprising most of the Ketuvim) for the King James Version of the Bible. At his death, Richardson left a bequest of £100 to Peterhouse.",
"score": "1.4764578"
},
{
"id": "11847401",
"title": "John Richardson (bishop of Car Nicobar)",
"text": " In 1952 Richardson was nominated by the President of India to represent the Andaman and Nicobar Islands in the 1st Lok Sabha (the lower house of the parliament of India). At the time he was the sole Anglican bishop to have served as member of the lower house of a national parliament.",
"score": "1.4751829"
},
{
"id": "13967151",
"title": "John Richardson Major",
"text": " John Richardson Major (1797 – 29 February 1876) was a Church of England clergyman who spent most of his life as a schoolmaster. He served as Master of Wisbech Grammar School and later as the first head master of King's College School, London.",
"score": "1.4739482"
}
] | [
"John Richardson (philosopher)\n John Richardson (born 1951) is a professor of philosophy at New York University. He is best known for his books on Heidegger and Nietzsche.",
"John Richardson (Quaker)\n John Richardson (1667–1753) was an English Quaker minister and autobiographer.",
"J. I. Richardson\n J. I. Richardson was a Baptist Pastor who served as a missionary in India through the Canadian Baptist Ministries. Richardson came to India in 1945 and after more than a decade and half he was elected President of Convention of Baptist Churches of Northern Circars in 1958 In the continuing year, Richardson was replaced by Rev. A. B. Masilamani. After a period of missionary service in India, Richardson returned to Canada and in 1961 became Dean of Carey Hall at the University of British Columbia. In addition to his responsibilities as Dean of Carey Hall, Richardson was also Chaplain to the University of British Columbia as well as Lecturer of Oriental Religions.",
"John Richardson (Quaker)\n John Richardson was born in 1667, probably in the village of North Cave, East Riding of Yorkshire, where his father, William Richardson (1614–1679), a shepherd, had been converted to Quakerism by William Dewsberry or Dewsbury in about 1652. He was twelve when his father died, leaving his mother with a livestock farm to run and five children. John had one older sister, who died about 1682, and three younger brothers, of whom the youngest was born about 1676.",
"John Richardson (born 1886)\n John Richardson (September 30, 1886 – January 24, 1976) was an American attorney and political figure from Massachusetts.",
"John Richardson (philosopher)\n A graduate of Harvard University in 1972, he earned his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley in 1981 under the supervision of Hubert Dreyfus. He has taught at New York University since 1981.",
"John Richardson (Quaker)\n Leaving his two surviving children with foster parents, Richardson set out for America as an evangelist, arriving in Maryland in 1701 after a 16-week crossing. He spent more than two years there, ceaselessly touring and disputing with Quakers and non-Quakers, on one occasion accompanying William Penn to treat with some American Indians, who made a favourable impression on him. He also visited Bermuda and Barbados.",
"Don Richardson (missionary)\n Don Richardson (June 23, 1935 – December 23, 2018 ) was a Canadian Christian missionary, teacher, author and international speaker who worked among people of Western New Guinea, Indonesia. He argued in his writings that, hidden among tribal cultures, there are usually some practices or understandings, which he calls \"redemptive analogies\", which can be used to illustrate the meaning of the Christian Gospel, contextualizing the biblical representation of the incarnation of Jesus.",
"John Richardson (Australian politician)\n was also a script-writer for the children's shows Magic Circle Club and Adventure Island, as well as the author of five children's books. In 1976, Richardson was elected to the Victorian Parliament for Forest Hill as a member of the Liberal Party. In 1982 he became Shadow Minister for Educational Services, but later that year was moved to Consumer Affairs, with the additional portfolio of Assistant to the Leader of the Opposition. In 1983 he moved to Ethnic Affairs, but left the front bench in 1985. In 1989 he returned as Shadow Minister for Education, moving to Community Services, Housing and Aboriginal Affairs in 1990. He left the front bench again in 1991. Richardson remained a backbencher until his retirement in 2002.",
"John Richardson (Quaker)\n Richardson records in his Life an initial \"aversion in me to the people called in scorn Quakers, and also to their strict living, and demeanour, plainness of habit, and language, so none of these I learned from them.\" He became converted at the age of 16, which entailed being \"weaned from all my companions and lovers.\" Richardson disapproved of his mother's remarriage in about 1785 to an unnamed Presbyterian, who tried to prevent him from attending Quaker meetings, turned him out of the house, and eventually left him just five shillings in his will.\" Richardson became a weaver's apprentice, and then took to clock and watch mending from a ",
"John Richardson (translator)\n John Richardson (born Linton, Cambridgeshire, c. 1564 – 1625) was a Biblical scholar and a Master of Trinity College, Cambridge from 1615 until his death.",
"John V. Richardson Jr.\n John Vinson Richardson Jr. is an American professor of information studies at University of California, Los Angeles, with a significant record of research and publications on intelligent question answering systems, reference service, and history of librarianship. His current research focuses on assessment and evaluation issues related to virtual reference (i.e., chat) such as time in queue, service duration, content analysis or microanalysis of questions, as well as user satisfaction. Currently, Richardson also serves as an adjunct professor in the School of Information Studies at Charles Sturt University in NSW, Australia.",
"John Richardson (author)\n John Richardson (4 October 1796 – 12 May 1852) was a Canadian officer in the British Army who became the first Canadian-born novelist to achieve international recognition.",
"John Richardson (actor)\n John Richardson (19 January 1934 – 5 January 2021) was an English actor who appeared in movies from the late 1950s until the early 1990s. He was a male lead in Italian genre films, most notably Mario Bava's Black Sunday (1960) with Barbara Steele, but he was best known for playing the love interest of Ursula Andress in She (1965) and then of Raquel Welch in One Million Years B.C. (1966).",
"John Richardson (born 1886)\n Richardson served in the United States Army during World War I, rising from the rank to private to captain. He also worked in the United States Food Administration under the direction of Herbert Hoover.",
"John Richardson (New South Wales politician)\n Richardson was the son of a Presbyterian minister and was educated at parish schools. He initially worked in London as a linen draper and emigrated to Sydney in 1838. By 1842 he had established a store in Brisbane and also developed a shipping agency. Philosophically a liberal, he became politically active during the 1840s and 1850s and opposed the importation of cheap labour, whether coolie or convict and also opposed the conservative constitution proposed by William Wentworth. Richardson developed a number of pastoral stations in the Darling Downs region and also owned a large general store in Armidale.",
"William J. Richardson\n William John Richardson, S.J. (2 November 1920 – 10 December 2016) was an American philosopher, who was among the first to write a comprehensive study of the philosophy of Martin Heidegger, featuring an important preface by Heidegger himself. In addition to his specialization in Heidegger, Richardson was also, as a trained psychoanalyst, a specialist in the thought of Jacques Lacan. He was a Jesuit priest (entering the order on 14 August 1941, he was ordained a priest on 15 August 1953). He taught philosophy at Fordham University and since 1981, at Boston College, where he was, at the time of his death, emeritus professor of philosophy. He died in December 2016 in Weston, Massachusetts at the age of 96.",
"John Richardson (translator)\n were among the first of the Cambridge divines who maintained the doctrine Arminianism in opposition to the Calvinists. He resigned in 1617 as a results of increasing anti-Arminian pressure. He then served in 1617 and 1618 as vice-chancellor of the university. Richardson was a skilled hebraist and he served in the \"First Cambridge Company\", charged by James I of England with the translation of the books of the Old Testament from the Books of Chronicles to Song of Songs (comprising most of the Ketuvim) for the King James Version of the Bible. At his death, Richardson left a bequest of £100 to Peterhouse.",
"John Richardson (bishop of Car Nicobar)\n In 1952 Richardson was nominated by the President of India to represent the Andaman and Nicobar Islands in the 1st Lok Sabha (the lower house of the parliament of India). At the time he was the sole Anglican bishop to have served as member of the lower house of a national parliament.",
"John Richardson Major\n John Richardson Major (1797 – 29 February 1876) was a Church of England clergyman who spent most of his life as a schoolmaster. He served as Master of Wisbech Grammar School and later as the first head master of King's College School, London."
] |
What is the religion of Gabriel Sharma? | [
"Anglicanism",
"Anglicanism, Anglican Church"
] | religion | Gabriel Sharma | 4,180,934 | 49 | [
{
"id": "13908063",
"title": "Gabriel Sharma",
"text": " Sharma, who hails from a farming family in the village of Korokoro in Nadroga-Navosa Province, was raised as a Hindu but converted to Christianity after meeting Ana, whom he married in 1985.",
"score": "1.676364"
},
{
"id": "13908062",
"title": "Gabriel Sharma",
"text": " Gabriel Sharma is an Anglican Bishop in Fiji. On 1 May 2005, he became the first Indo-Fijian to be consecrated as an Anglican Bishop, the first ethnic Indian Bishop in the Province of Aotearoa, of which Fiji forms a part, and the first Bishop specifically assigned to Fiji's Western Division, when he was installed as Bishop of Viti Levu West. On 10 April 2005, in a service at Suva's Holy Trinity Cathedral, he was consecrated together with Apimeleki Qiliho, who became Bishop of Vanua Levu, and Dr Winston Halapua, who was installed as Bishop of the Diocese of Polynesia, which covers New Zealand. He resigned his See in 2013, but returned in 2017.",
"score": "1.5645733"
},
{
"id": "6161238",
"title": "Arvind Sharma",
"text": " Arvind Sharma is the Birks Professor of Comparative Religion at McGill University. Sharma's works focus on Hinduism, philosophy of religion. In editing books his works include Our Religions and Women in World Religions, Feminism in World Religions was selected as a Choice Outstanding Academic Book (1999).",
"score": "1.4051931"
},
{
"id": "6918147",
"title": "A Jihad for Love",
"text": " India and although he does have some feeling for his religion, he is by no means devout. However, as a resident of the US, post 9/11, he says he felt he had to do something in the battle to represent Islam. He declares that his religion was hijacked by extremists who preach violence and hatred, and he is not referring to Fox TV or George Bush. He means the radical clerics who have become the face of Islam in the West. Sharma sought to prove that his religion was a peaceful and loving one, and in effect, that not all Muslims are terrorists. Some are even gay.\"",
"score": "1.3868246"
},
{
"id": "29034331",
"title": "Ramakrishna Mission School, Sidhgora Jamshedpur",
"text": " For Unity of Faiths: May He Who is the Father in Heaven of the Christians, Holy One of the Jews, Allah of the Muhammadans, Buddha of the Buddhists, Tao of the Chinese, Ahura Mazda of the Zoroastrians and Brahman of the Hindus lead us from the unreal to the Real, from darkness to light, from disease and death to immortality. May the All-Loving Being manifest Himself unto us, and grant us abiding understanding and all-consuming divine love. Peace, Peace. Peace be unto all.",
"score": "1.3596944"
},
{
"id": "11641757",
"title": "Gabriel",
"text": "Including, but not limited to: Yazidism, Mormonism, Rastafari, Bábism and the Bahá'í Faith. ",
"score": "1.3463821"
},
{
"id": "6918161",
"title": "A Jihad for Love",
"text": " to appear widely in the news media to defend and explain the thesis of the film, which according to him reclaimed the meaning of Jihad and was not an anti-Islam film. The New Yorker said, \"Sharma, the filmmaker, grew up twenty minutes from the Darul Uloom, an important center of Islamic learning in Uttar Pradesh, in northern India. Aware of his sexual orientation since puberty, he said the center's daily calls to prayer haunted him. He came to the United States in 2000, but still faces discrimination. 'I attend the Ninety-sixth Street mosque, in Manhattan,' he told me. 'You can't imagine the kind of sermons I've heard.'\"",
"score": "1.3417634"
},
{
"id": "6918011",
"title": "Parvez Sharma",
"text": " Sharma is best known for directing the films ''A Jihad for Love and A Sinner in Mecca. A Jihad for Love'' is a documentary that seeks to refute the belief that LGBT Muslims do not exist. This film was preceded by a short film called In the Name of Allah. Sharma, director and cinematographer of the film, came up with the idea after listening to the stories of gay Muslims when he attended American University. He decided to give a voice \"to a community that really needed to be heard, and that until now hadn't been. It was about going where the silence was strongest.\" The ",
"score": "1.3384533"
},
{
"id": "6200962",
"title": "Manav Dayal I.C.Sharma",
"text": " Ishar Chander Sharma was a saint from Manavta Mandir Hoshiarpur, Punjab, India. Baba Faqir Chand, a sant of the Sant Mat tradition, appointed him as a successor through his will dated 20 April 1980. With a PhD on Jain Philosopshy under PT Raju, Sharma specialized in epistemology and ethical philosophies of India. Sharma was a philosopher by profession. He held various academic positions at the Claremont College (visiting professor), University of Rajasthan, University of Udaipur (Chairman, Department of Philosophy), Christopher Newport, Virginia (visiting professor), Lynchburg College, visiting professor Cleveland State University, Ohio]]Visiting professor, Dyke College, Cleveland and Old Dominion University, Virginia. He also served as the president of the Indian Philosophical Congress for some time. Sharma first met his guru, Baba Faqir Chand, when Faqir ",
"score": "1.3230515"
},
{
"id": "6917996",
"title": "Parvez Sharma",
"text": " Parvez Sharma is a New York-based Indian filmmaker, author, and journalist. He is a recipient of the 2018 Guggenheim Fellowship in the film/video category. He was amongst the 173 fellows selected from 3000 applicants in the 94th year of the fellowship, which originally started in 1925. In an official press release by the foundation, president Edward Hirsch said, \"The winners of the 94th annual competition as \"the best of the best...This diverse group of scholars, artists, and scientists are appointed on the basis of prior achievement and exceptional promise.\" Sharma is best known for his two films A Jihad for Love , A Sinner in Mecca , and his 2017 book A Sinner in Mecca: A Gay Muslim's Hajj of Defiance. A Jihad for Love was the world's ",
"score": "1.3143206"
},
{
"id": "10021367",
"title": "A Sinner in Mecca: A Gay Muslim's Hajj of Defiance",
"text": " In the book Sharma sharply veers away from the subject of the film of the same name and instead focuses on Wahhabi Islam, Daesh, Saudi Arabia, the Indian sub-continent and more. Sharma has called the book as the final product of his \"Islam Trilogy\" in various interviews.",
"score": "1.3046362"
},
{
"id": "6161239",
"title": "Arvind Sharma",
"text": " Arvind Sharma was born on 13 January 1940 in Varanasi, India. He served in civil services in Gujarat until 1968 he went to US to pursue higher studies in economics at the Syracuse University, obtaining a Masters in economics in 1970. While pursuing the role of non-economic factors in economic development he became interested in religion and joined Harvard Divinity School in 1972. After obtaining a Masters in Theological Studies, he earned his PhD from the Department of Sanskrit and Indian Studies in 1978. While at Harvard he was recruited in 1976 by the newly founded Department of Studies in Religion at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia. In 1980 he moved to the University of Sydney. In 1994 he was appointed the Birks Professor of Comparative Religion at McGill University, where he teaches. The archives fonds of Arvind Sharma is held at McGill University Archives (MUA).",
"score": "1.3036735"
},
{
"id": "6918016",
"title": "Parvez Sharma",
"text": " US on 4 September 2015. The film won Best Documentary at Outfest Los Angeles in July 2015. A Sinner in Mecca received press and audience attention but also lead to online abuse, death threats and hate mail. Even though both his films were banned in Singapore and parts of the Middle East and led to theological condemnation in many countries, Sharma is a leading spokesperson on defending Islam yet being able to speak for urgent reform, as a Muslim. He has conducted more than 200 live events across the world, talking about Islam and, in part, its relation to topics ranging from ISIS to homosexuality.",
"score": "1.3026903"
},
{
"id": "5108667",
"title": "Sheikh Muhammad",
"text": " which are rooted in Islam. He describes Hindu gods as formless (Nirakari), unmanifest (Avyakta), without form or qualities (Nirguna), and invisible (alaksa) (see Hindu views on monotheism). Sheikh Muhammad preaches the Oneness of God: \"In fifty-six languages one God is exalted with different words... cleavages arise because of harangues in different tongues ... I salute the sacred Om by which the God creator (Narayan, a name of Vishnu) is known. Muslims salute him as ya Allah...\" - Yoga-samgrama Even though Sheikh Muhammad identified himself as Muslim by birth, he had chosen the Hindu god Vithoba, a form of Krishna-Vishnu in Maharashtra, as his patron deity. His \"socio-religious awareness\" is evident in ",
"score": "1.2992332"
},
{
"id": "13762971",
"title": "Islam and Mormonism",
"text": " Quran calls \"Isa\") was a Messiah in his own right, but insists that he was only a mortal man (an important Prophet) but not a divine being, not the Son of God and that the Archangel Gabriel is the Holy Spirit (الروح القدس). Despite great opposition from many other Christian branches, Latter-day Saints identify themselves as a Christian religion, the \"restoration\" of primitive Christianity. Islam does not refer to itself as \"Christian\"; it asserts that Jesus and all true followers of Christ's teachings were (and are) actually Muslims – a term that means \"submitters to God\" – in their belief, not Christians as that term is used today.",
"score": "1.2954686"
},
{
"id": "12570416",
"title": "Akhil Sharma",
"text": " Akhil Sharma (born July 22, 1971) is an Indian-American author and professor of creative writing. His first published novel An Obedient Father won the 2001 Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award. His second, Family Life, won the 2015 Folio Prize and 2016 International Dublin Literary Award.",
"score": "1.2916934"
},
{
"id": "6200963",
"title": "Manav Dayal I.C.Sharma",
"text": " delivering a sermon in New Delhi. Sharma said that his meeting with Faqir was unusual because Faqir interrupted the sermon to shout Sharma's name, asking Sharma to join him on the stage. Sharma could not understand how this sant knew his name as they had never met or known about each other before this meeting. Later, Faqir told Sharma that he had been waiting for him. Faqir visited Sharma in the US on many occasions and nominated him to work in his place in presence or absence of Bhagat Munshi Ram, a co-successor, once he retired from teaching and returned to India. Sharma traveled worldwide to propagate the teachings of Faqir, Radha Soami Mat and Surat Shabd Yoga until his death in December 2000.",
"score": "1.2872486"
},
{
"id": "13908064",
"title": "Gabriel Sharma",
"text": " After the 2006 coup, Sharma told Anglicans in Sydney that Fijian Christians were praying especially that no one would be harmed. He said that the majority of Fijians believed that the coup was illegal, but that a silent minority thought that the coup was \"the only thing that could have happened.\" He called on the outside world to try to understand the situation. \"We have heard a number of negative remarks [about the situation in Fiji], but this will not help the people,\" he said. Sharma said that many churchgoers in his region had been laid off as hotel visits had slumped. He said that many people were still hopeful for a democratic resolution, but requested that Sydney Anglicans continued to pray.",
"score": "1.2866323"
},
{
"id": "6918022",
"title": "Parvez Sharma",
"text": " emotion.\" It adds, \"Parvez Sharma is a proud gay Muslim whose first film, A Jihad For Love, was the first ever made about Islam and homosexuality. It made him the subject of death threats throughout the Arab world.\" In the book Sharma sharply veers away from the subject of the film of the same name and instead focuses on Wahhabi Islam, Daesh, Saudi Arabia, the Indian sub-continent and more. Sharma has called the book as the final product of his \"Islam Trilogy\" in various interviews. In one titled \"A Jihad for Love and Equality: A Chat with trailblazer, Parvez Sharma\" he explains this as,\"The Islam Trilogy is my contribution to history which ",
"score": "1.2861993"
},
{
"id": "712018",
"title": "Baba Rampuri",
"text": " In 2004 he was admitted to the Council of Elders of Datt Akhara in Ujjain, Central India, and has become the special envoy of its Pir (usually the title of a Muslim Sufi leader, but it is also the title of the abbot of Datt Akhara in Ujjain. He hosts an international camp at the Kumbh Mela (the most recent being the Ardh Kumbh Mela in Allahabad, 2007), as well as retreats, teachings, and initiations in India, and abroad. In 2007 he was part of the documentary \"India Trip\" by film-director Lev Victorov (Moscow).",
"score": "1.2830291"
}
] | [
"Gabriel Sharma\n Sharma, who hails from a farming family in the village of Korokoro in Nadroga-Navosa Province, was raised as a Hindu but converted to Christianity after meeting Ana, whom he married in 1985.",
"Gabriel Sharma\n Gabriel Sharma is an Anglican Bishop in Fiji. On 1 May 2005, he became the first Indo-Fijian to be consecrated as an Anglican Bishop, the first ethnic Indian Bishop in the Province of Aotearoa, of which Fiji forms a part, and the first Bishop specifically assigned to Fiji's Western Division, when he was installed as Bishop of Viti Levu West. On 10 April 2005, in a service at Suva's Holy Trinity Cathedral, he was consecrated together with Apimeleki Qiliho, who became Bishop of Vanua Levu, and Dr Winston Halapua, who was installed as Bishop of the Diocese of Polynesia, which covers New Zealand. He resigned his See in 2013, but returned in 2017.",
"Arvind Sharma\n Arvind Sharma is the Birks Professor of Comparative Religion at McGill University. Sharma's works focus on Hinduism, philosophy of religion. In editing books his works include Our Religions and Women in World Religions, Feminism in World Religions was selected as a Choice Outstanding Academic Book (1999).",
"A Jihad for Love\n India and although he does have some feeling for his religion, he is by no means devout. However, as a resident of the US, post 9/11, he says he felt he had to do something in the battle to represent Islam. He declares that his religion was hijacked by extremists who preach violence and hatred, and he is not referring to Fox TV or George Bush. He means the radical clerics who have become the face of Islam in the West. Sharma sought to prove that his religion was a peaceful and loving one, and in effect, that not all Muslims are terrorists. Some are even gay.\"",
"Ramakrishna Mission School, Sidhgora Jamshedpur\n For Unity of Faiths: May He Who is the Father in Heaven of the Christians, Holy One of the Jews, Allah of the Muhammadans, Buddha of the Buddhists, Tao of the Chinese, Ahura Mazda of the Zoroastrians and Brahman of the Hindus lead us from the unreal to the Real, from darkness to light, from disease and death to immortality. May the All-Loving Being manifest Himself unto us, and grant us abiding understanding and all-consuming divine love. Peace, Peace. Peace be unto all.",
"Gabriel\nIncluding, but not limited to: Yazidism, Mormonism, Rastafari, Bábism and the Bahá'í Faith. ",
"A Jihad for Love\n to appear widely in the news media to defend and explain the thesis of the film, which according to him reclaimed the meaning of Jihad and was not an anti-Islam film. The New Yorker said, \"Sharma, the filmmaker, grew up twenty minutes from the Darul Uloom, an important center of Islamic learning in Uttar Pradesh, in northern India. Aware of his sexual orientation since puberty, he said the center's daily calls to prayer haunted him. He came to the United States in 2000, but still faces discrimination. 'I attend the Ninety-sixth Street mosque, in Manhattan,' he told me. 'You can't imagine the kind of sermons I've heard.'\"",
"Parvez Sharma\n Sharma is best known for directing the films ''A Jihad for Love and A Sinner in Mecca. A Jihad for Love'' is a documentary that seeks to refute the belief that LGBT Muslims do not exist. This film was preceded by a short film called In the Name of Allah. Sharma, director and cinematographer of the film, came up with the idea after listening to the stories of gay Muslims when he attended American University. He decided to give a voice \"to a community that really needed to be heard, and that until now hadn't been. It was about going where the silence was strongest.\" The ",
"Manav Dayal I.C.Sharma\n Ishar Chander Sharma was a saint from Manavta Mandir Hoshiarpur, Punjab, India. Baba Faqir Chand, a sant of the Sant Mat tradition, appointed him as a successor through his will dated 20 April 1980. With a PhD on Jain Philosopshy under PT Raju, Sharma specialized in epistemology and ethical philosophies of India. Sharma was a philosopher by profession. He held various academic positions at the Claremont College (visiting professor), University of Rajasthan, University of Udaipur (Chairman, Department of Philosophy), Christopher Newport, Virginia (visiting professor), Lynchburg College, visiting professor Cleveland State University, Ohio]]Visiting professor, Dyke College, Cleveland and Old Dominion University, Virginia. He also served as the president of the Indian Philosophical Congress for some time. Sharma first met his guru, Baba Faqir Chand, when Faqir ",
"Parvez Sharma\n Parvez Sharma is a New York-based Indian filmmaker, author, and journalist. He is a recipient of the 2018 Guggenheim Fellowship in the film/video category. He was amongst the 173 fellows selected from 3000 applicants in the 94th year of the fellowship, which originally started in 1925. In an official press release by the foundation, president Edward Hirsch said, \"The winners of the 94th annual competition as \"the best of the best...This diverse group of scholars, artists, and scientists are appointed on the basis of prior achievement and exceptional promise.\" Sharma is best known for his two films A Jihad for Love , A Sinner in Mecca , and his 2017 book A Sinner in Mecca: A Gay Muslim's Hajj of Defiance. A Jihad for Love was the world's ",
"A Sinner in Mecca: A Gay Muslim's Hajj of Defiance\n In the book Sharma sharply veers away from the subject of the film of the same name and instead focuses on Wahhabi Islam, Daesh, Saudi Arabia, the Indian sub-continent and more. Sharma has called the book as the final product of his \"Islam Trilogy\" in various interviews.",
"Arvind Sharma\n Arvind Sharma was born on 13 January 1940 in Varanasi, India. He served in civil services in Gujarat until 1968 he went to US to pursue higher studies in economics at the Syracuse University, obtaining a Masters in economics in 1970. While pursuing the role of non-economic factors in economic development he became interested in religion and joined Harvard Divinity School in 1972. After obtaining a Masters in Theological Studies, he earned his PhD from the Department of Sanskrit and Indian Studies in 1978. While at Harvard he was recruited in 1976 by the newly founded Department of Studies in Religion at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia. In 1980 he moved to the University of Sydney. In 1994 he was appointed the Birks Professor of Comparative Religion at McGill University, where he teaches. The archives fonds of Arvind Sharma is held at McGill University Archives (MUA).",
"Parvez Sharma\n US on 4 September 2015. The film won Best Documentary at Outfest Los Angeles in July 2015. A Sinner in Mecca received press and audience attention but also lead to online abuse, death threats and hate mail. Even though both his films were banned in Singapore and parts of the Middle East and led to theological condemnation in many countries, Sharma is a leading spokesperson on defending Islam yet being able to speak for urgent reform, as a Muslim. He has conducted more than 200 live events across the world, talking about Islam and, in part, its relation to topics ranging from ISIS to homosexuality.",
"Sheikh Muhammad\n which are rooted in Islam. He describes Hindu gods as formless (Nirakari), unmanifest (Avyakta), without form or qualities (Nirguna), and invisible (alaksa) (see Hindu views on monotheism). Sheikh Muhammad preaches the Oneness of God: \"In fifty-six languages one God is exalted with different words... cleavages arise because of harangues in different tongues ... I salute the sacred Om by which the God creator (Narayan, a name of Vishnu) is known. Muslims salute him as ya Allah...\" - Yoga-samgrama Even though Sheikh Muhammad identified himself as Muslim by birth, he had chosen the Hindu god Vithoba, a form of Krishna-Vishnu in Maharashtra, as his patron deity. His \"socio-religious awareness\" is evident in ",
"Islam and Mormonism\n Quran calls \"Isa\") was a Messiah in his own right, but insists that he was only a mortal man (an important Prophet) but not a divine being, not the Son of God and that the Archangel Gabriel is the Holy Spirit (الروح القدس). Despite great opposition from many other Christian branches, Latter-day Saints identify themselves as a Christian religion, the \"restoration\" of primitive Christianity. Islam does not refer to itself as \"Christian\"; it asserts that Jesus and all true followers of Christ's teachings were (and are) actually Muslims – a term that means \"submitters to God\" – in their belief, not Christians as that term is used today.",
"Akhil Sharma\n Akhil Sharma (born July 22, 1971) is an Indian-American author and professor of creative writing. His first published novel An Obedient Father won the 2001 Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award. His second, Family Life, won the 2015 Folio Prize and 2016 International Dublin Literary Award.",
"Manav Dayal I.C.Sharma\n delivering a sermon in New Delhi. Sharma said that his meeting with Faqir was unusual because Faqir interrupted the sermon to shout Sharma's name, asking Sharma to join him on the stage. Sharma could not understand how this sant knew his name as they had never met or known about each other before this meeting. Later, Faqir told Sharma that he had been waiting for him. Faqir visited Sharma in the US on many occasions and nominated him to work in his place in presence or absence of Bhagat Munshi Ram, a co-successor, once he retired from teaching and returned to India. Sharma traveled worldwide to propagate the teachings of Faqir, Radha Soami Mat and Surat Shabd Yoga until his death in December 2000.",
"Gabriel Sharma\n After the 2006 coup, Sharma told Anglicans in Sydney that Fijian Christians were praying especially that no one would be harmed. He said that the majority of Fijians believed that the coup was illegal, but that a silent minority thought that the coup was \"the only thing that could have happened.\" He called on the outside world to try to understand the situation. \"We have heard a number of negative remarks [about the situation in Fiji], but this will not help the people,\" he said. Sharma said that many churchgoers in his region had been laid off as hotel visits had slumped. He said that many people were still hopeful for a democratic resolution, but requested that Sydney Anglicans continued to pray.",
"Parvez Sharma\n emotion.\" It adds, \"Parvez Sharma is a proud gay Muslim whose first film, A Jihad For Love, was the first ever made about Islam and homosexuality. It made him the subject of death threats throughout the Arab world.\" In the book Sharma sharply veers away from the subject of the film of the same name and instead focuses on Wahhabi Islam, Daesh, Saudi Arabia, the Indian sub-continent and more. Sharma has called the book as the final product of his \"Islam Trilogy\" in various interviews. In one titled \"A Jihad for Love and Equality: A Chat with trailblazer, Parvez Sharma\" he explains this as,\"The Islam Trilogy is my contribution to history which ",
"Baba Rampuri\n In 2004 he was admitted to the Council of Elders of Datt Akhara in Ujjain, Central India, and has become the special envoy of its Pir (usually the title of a Muslim Sufi leader, but it is also the title of the abbot of Datt Akhara in Ujjain. He hosts an international camp at the Kumbh Mela (the most recent being the Ardh Kumbh Mela in Allahabad, 2007), as well as retreats, teachings, and initiations in India, and abroad. In 2007 he was part of the documentary \"India Trip\" by film-director Lev Victorov (Moscow)."
] |
What is the religion of Carlo Curis? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Carlo Curis | 3,198,188 | 85 | [
{
"id": "32361672",
"title": "Edmondo De Amicis",
"text": " representation of his theatral drama titled San Paolo, interpreted by the Italian actor and mason Giovanni Emanuel. His book Cuore has been considered for decades an educative textbook largely read and studied in the Italian public schools. Some literary critics noted it substituted the traditional Roman Catholic doctrine with a lay civil religion where heroes took the place of Christian martyrs, the Statuto Albertino displaced the Gospels, the Church, its believers and the Ten Commandments were respectively deleted in favour of the State, the figure of the citizen and the protection of the Italian codes of laws. The Grand Orient of Italy recognized De Amicis as one of his most notable past members.",
"score": "1.500308"
},
{
"id": "2459304",
"title": "Carlo Maria Curci",
"text": " Carlo Maria Curci (1810 in Naples – June 8, 1891 in Florence) was an Italian theologian from Naples.",
"score": "1.4895313"
},
{
"id": "1870976",
"title": "Carlo Chenis",
"text": " Carlo was born in Turin, Italy on April 20, 1954, and later completed his studies in philosophy and theology at the Pontifical Salesian University. On May 26, 1984 he was ordained a priest in Cuorgne for the Salesians of Don Bosco, and later obtained an academic degree in materials science with a specialization in literary arts at the University of Turin in 1989. He held numerous positions in the administrative academic when he became a professor of theoretical philosophy at the Pontifical Salesian University. He later became a coordinator of the Secretariat Relations Students and chaplain of the University from 1986 to 1998. During his job as a coordinator, he was appointed secretary of the Pontifical Commission for the Cultural Heritage of the Church in 1995.",
"score": "1.4688146"
},
{
"id": "2459306",
"title": "Carlo Maria Curci",
"text": " Conflict between the Church and Italy\" (Il Moderno Dissidio tra la Chiesa e l'Italia, published in 1878) he called for the separation of church and state in Italy. This was followed by \"The New Italy and The Old Zealots\" (La Nuova Italia ed i Vecchi Zelanti, published in 1881), another attack on the Vatican policy; and by his \"Royal Vatican\" (Vaticano Regio, published in 1883), in which he accuses the Vatican of selling sacred objects and declares that secularism came from the false principles accepted by the Curia. Curci's work in Naples eventually drew him to Christian Socialism. He was condemned in Rome, and in a letter to The Times (September 10, 1884), ",
"score": "1.4682047"
},
{
"id": "2459305",
"title": "Carlo Maria Curci",
"text": " Curci joined the Society of Jesus in 1826, and was devoted to the education and care of the poor and prisoners. Curci became one of the first editors of the Jesuit periodical, La Civiltà Cattolica. He later wrote for Vincenzo Gioberti, Antonio Rosmini-Serbati and other advocates for reform; Cerci wrote a preface to Gioberti's Primato (1843), but dissented from his Prolegomena. In the 1870s, Curci delivered a course on Christian philosophy in Florence and published several Scriptural works. In his edition of the New Testament, Curci harshly criticized Italian clergy for neglecting to study Scripture. In the meantime, he began to attack the Vatican for its role in politics. In his work \"The ",
"score": "1.4321282"
},
{
"id": "27681769",
"title": "Gian Carlo Michelini",
"text": " Gian Carlo Michelini, M.I. (born 7 July 1935) is an Italian-Taiwanese Roman Catholic priest. He moved to Taiwan in 1964, where he founded the Lanyang Dance Troupe. In 1996, Michelini helped establish the Yilan International Children's Folklore and Folkgame Festival.",
"score": "1.4112929"
},
{
"id": "32657018",
"title": "CESNUR",
"text": " CESNUR (Centro Studi sulle Nuove Religioni, \"Center for Studies on New Religions\"), is a non-profit organization based in Turin, Italy that studies new religious movements and opposes the anti-cult movement. It was established in 1988 by Massimo Introvigne, Jean-François Mayer and Ernesto Zucchini. Its first president was Giuseppe Casale. Later, Luigi Berzano became CESNUR's president. CESNUR has been described as \"the highest profile lobbying and information group for controversial religions\". CESNUR's scholars have defended such diverse groups as the Unification Church (\"Moonies\"), the Church of Scientology, Chinese church Eastern Lightning (accused of ties to the 2014 murder of Wu Shuoyan), the Order of the Solar Temple (responsible for 74 deaths in mass murder-suicide), Aum Shinrikyo (responsible for the 1995 Tokyo sarin gas attack), and Shincheonji Church of Jesus, accused of ",
"score": "1.386087"
},
{
"id": "27786522",
"title": "Carlo Acutis",
"text": " Carlo Acutis (3 May 1991 – 12 October 2006) was an English-born Italian Catholic youth and amateur computer programmer, who is best known for documenting Eucharistic miracles around the world and cataloguing them onto a website, miracolieucaristici.org, which he created before his death from leukemia. He was noted for his cheerfulness, computer skills, and deep devotion to the Eucharist, which becomes a core theme of his life. He was beatified on 10 October 2020.",
"score": "1.3772777"
},
{
"id": "14141025",
"title": "Carlo Severi",
"text": " Carlo Severi (born December 9, 1952) is an Italian anthropologist who is Professor at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS). He is noted for his studies of ritual, image/imagination, and social memory",
"score": "1.3709557"
},
{
"id": "7620717",
"title": "Anastasio Cuschieri",
"text": " Cuschieri was also engaged in party politics. His early commitments were characterised by his love of the Latin culture, and, together with others, decided that Malta's own culture should be defined in Latin, rather than in Anglo-Saxon, terms. This pitched him against the Protestant British colonial government of Malta. Nonetheless, his political commitment had a pronounced social edge. In 1921, when his political activity became more manifest, he was encouraged by a visit to Malta made by the Jesuit Charles Plater to accept an invitation by the Unione Cattolica San Giuseppe (St. Joseph Catholic Workers' Union) to become the first Director of a Study Club which had the intention of educating workers. This society was ",
"score": "1.366538"
},
{
"id": "8530047",
"title": "Massimo Introvigne",
"text": " Massimo Introvigne (born June 14, 1955, in Rome) is an Italian Roman Catholic sociologist of religion and intellectual property attorney. He is a founder and the managing director of the Center for Studies on New Religions (CESNUR), a Turin-based organization which has been described as \"the highest profile lobbying and information group for controversial religions\".",
"score": "1.3656785"
},
{
"id": "12115328",
"title": "San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane",
"text": " The church of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane (Saint Charles at the Four Fountains), also called San Carlino, is a Roman Catholic church in Rome, Italy. The church was designed by the architect Francesco Borromini and it was his first independent commission. It is an iconic masterpiece of Baroque architecture, built as part of a complex of monastic buildings on the Quirinal Hill for the Spanish Trinitarians, an order dedicated to the freeing of Christian slaves. He received the commission in 1634, under the patronage of Cardinal Francesco Barberini, whose palace was across the road. However, this financial backing did not last and subsequently the building project suffered various financial difficulties. It is one of at least three churches in Rome dedicated to San Carlo, including San Carlo ai Catinari and San Carlo al Corso.",
"score": "1.3654048"
},
{
"id": "33067675",
"title": "Carlo Emanuele Muzzarelli",
"text": " Carlo Emanuele dei conti Muzzarelli (19 April 1797 – 1856) was an Italian clergyman, a member of the Roman Catholic curia under Pope Pius IX, who had the reputation of a liberal as well as a man of letters.",
"score": "1.3640712"
},
{
"id": "31632182",
"title": "San Carlo ai Catinari",
"text": " San Carlo ai Catinari, also called Santi Biagio e Carlo ai Catinari (\"Saints Blaise and Charles at the Bowl-Makers\") is an early-Baroque style church in Rome, Italy. It is located on Piazza Benedetto Cairoli, 117 just off the corner of Via Arenula and Via dei Falegnami, a few blocks south of the church of Sant'Andrea della Valle. The attribute ai Catinari refers to the presence, at the time of its construction, of the many makers of wooden basins (Italian catini) who worked in the area. The church was commissioned by the Order of the Barnabites and funded by the Milanese community in Rome to honour their fellow Milanese St. Charles Borromeo (Italian: San Carlo). It is one of at least three Roman churches dedicated to him, including San Carlo al Corso and San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane (San Carlino).",
"score": "1.3582308"
},
{
"id": "5981795",
"title": "Carlo Tullio Altan",
"text": " Carlo Tullio Altan (30 March 1916 – 15 February 2005) was an Italian anthropologist, sociologist and philosopher. He was particularly known for his studies on the Italian national character, and was considered one of the pioneers of Italian cultural anthropology. Altan was born at San Vito al Tagliamento, in Friuli. His son Francesco Tullio Altan is a popular comic books creator and satirist.",
"score": "1.3546996"
},
{
"id": "9004619",
"title": "Carlo Gnocchi",
"text": " families of the deceased. He went into the Alpine Valleys to find the relatives of fallen comrades. After becoming part of the O.S.C.A.R., Catholic association for aid to refugees, he helped Jews and escaped Allied POWs flee to Switzerland. He wrote articles in the illegal magazine Il Ribelle (Rebel) and in the diocesan newspaper L'Italia (Italy). He was imprisoned more than once in the San Vittore prison, but obtained the liberation by the intervention of the archbishop of Milan, Alfredo Ildefonso Schuster. In those years the idea arose to create a charitable center that would take care of the victims of this war, which in the future developed as the origin of the Pro Juventute.",
"score": "1.3531964"
},
{
"id": "13759769",
"title": "Alberto Quadrio Curzio",
"text": " a member of the EIB Prize Committee (1995-2000) and President of the Bank of Italy's revolving selection committee for the “Paolo Baffi Lectures on Money and Finance” (2003). In 2002 he was part of the Reflection Group on the “Reflection Group on the Spiritual and Cultural Dimension of Europe” initiated by the President of the European Commission, Romano Prodi, which considered the most relevant values necessary to the European unification process. His approach to politico-economic and social-institutional issues are embraced within social liberalism and liberal solidarism which led to a longstanding collaboration with Carlo Maria Martini, Archbishop of Milan. He is Chairman of ",
"score": "1.3528683"
},
{
"id": "30085146",
"title": "Carlo Curci",
"text": " Carlo Curci (Trentola-Ducenta, August 30, 1846 - Trani, after 1916) was an Italian painter, mainly of seascapes. He also was active in painting portraits in a Renaissance style.",
"score": "1.3483105"
},
{
"id": "26432239",
"title": "Giuseppe Francesco Borri",
"text": " Borri also began his propaganda, both messianic and political, with the purpose of returning to an evangelically pure religion. Borri believed religion to be the foundation of every science and scientific investigation. For him the whole world (Christian and non-Christian) should be conquered and ruled by a Papal theocracy, that should trailblaze the Kingdom to come: a sort of heavenly world, a new Golden Age, where the values of a renewed and universal Christianity would triumph. Borri considered himself (at least according to the later Inquisition's records) Prochristus, the prophet and herald of the new era.",
"score": "1.3481377"
},
{
"id": "9925555",
"title": "Giosuè Carducci",
"text": " In his youth he was an atheist, whose political views were vehemently hostile to the Catholic Church. In the course of his life his views on religion shifted towards a socially oriented theism which he exposed in his famous \"Discorso sulla libertà perpetua di San Marino\" (\"A Speech on San Marino's Perpetual Freedom\"), pronounced on September the 30th, 1894 before the authorities and people of that ancient Republic and celebrating \"the Universal God of Peoples, Mazzini's and Washington's God\". His anti-clerical revolutionary vehemence was prominently showcased in one famous poem, the deliberately blasphemous and provocative \"Inno a Satana\" (\"Hymn to Satan\"). \"Satan\" / \"Lucifer\" was considered by Italian leftists of the time as a metaphor ",
"score": "1.3478487"
}
] | [
"Edmondo De Amicis\n representation of his theatral drama titled San Paolo, interpreted by the Italian actor and mason Giovanni Emanuel. His book Cuore has been considered for decades an educative textbook largely read and studied in the Italian public schools. Some literary critics noted it substituted the traditional Roman Catholic doctrine with a lay civil religion where heroes took the place of Christian martyrs, the Statuto Albertino displaced the Gospels, the Church, its believers and the Ten Commandments were respectively deleted in favour of the State, the figure of the citizen and the protection of the Italian codes of laws. The Grand Orient of Italy recognized De Amicis as one of his most notable past members.",
"Carlo Maria Curci\n Carlo Maria Curci (1810 in Naples – June 8, 1891 in Florence) was an Italian theologian from Naples.",
"Carlo Chenis\n Carlo was born in Turin, Italy on April 20, 1954, and later completed his studies in philosophy and theology at the Pontifical Salesian University. On May 26, 1984 he was ordained a priest in Cuorgne for the Salesians of Don Bosco, and later obtained an academic degree in materials science with a specialization in literary arts at the University of Turin in 1989. He held numerous positions in the administrative academic when he became a professor of theoretical philosophy at the Pontifical Salesian University. He later became a coordinator of the Secretariat Relations Students and chaplain of the University from 1986 to 1998. During his job as a coordinator, he was appointed secretary of the Pontifical Commission for the Cultural Heritage of the Church in 1995.",
"Carlo Maria Curci\n Conflict between the Church and Italy\" (Il Moderno Dissidio tra la Chiesa e l'Italia, published in 1878) he called for the separation of church and state in Italy. This was followed by \"The New Italy and The Old Zealots\" (La Nuova Italia ed i Vecchi Zelanti, published in 1881), another attack on the Vatican policy; and by his \"Royal Vatican\" (Vaticano Regio, published in 1883), in which he accuses the Vatican of selling sacred objects and declares that secularism came from the false principles accepted by the Curia. Curci's work in Naples eventually drew him to Christian Socialism. He was condemned in Rome, and in a letter to The Times (September 10, 1884), ",
"Carlo Maria Curci\n Curci joined the Society of Jesus in 1826, and was devoted to the education and care of the poor and prisoners. Curci became one of the first editors of the Jesuit periodical, La Civiltà Cattolica. He later wrote for Vincenzo Gioberti, Antonio Rosmini-Serbati and other advocates for reform; Cerci wrote a preface to Gioberti's Primato (1843), but dissented from his Prolegomena. In the 1870s, Curci delivered a course on Christian philosophy in Florence and published several Scriptural works. In his edition of the New Testament, Curci harshly criticized Italian clergy for neglecting to study Scripture. In the meantime, he began to attack the Vatican for its role in politics. In his work \"The ",
"Gian Carlo Michelini\n Gian Carlo Michelini, M.I. (born 7 July 1935) is an Italian-Taiwanese Roman Catholic priest. He moved to Taiwan in 1964, where he founded the Lanyang Dance Troupe. In 1996, Michelini helped establish the Yilan International Children's Folklore and Folkgame Festival.",
"CESNUR\n CESNUR (Centro Studi sulle Nuove Religioni, \"Center for Studies on New Religions\"), is a non-profit organization based in Turin, Italy that studies new religious movements and opposes the anti-cult movement. It was established in 1988 by Massimo Introvigne, Jean-François Mayer and Ernesto Zucchini. Its first president was Giuseppe Casale. Later, Luigi Berzano became CESNUR's president. CESNUR has been described as \"the highest profile lobbying and information group for controversial religions\". CESNUR's scholars have defended such diverse groups as the Unification Church (\"Moonies\"), the Church of Scientology, Chinese church Eastern Lightning (accused of ties to the 2014 murder of Wu Shuoyan), the Order of the Solar Temple (responsible for 74 deaths in mass murder-suicide), Aum Shinrikyo (responsible for the 1995 Tokyo sarin gas attack), and Shincheonji Church of Jesus, accused of ",
"Carlo Acutis\n Carlo Acutis (3 May 1991 – 12 October 2006) was an English-born Italian Catholic youth and amateur computer programmer, who is best known for documenting Eucharistic miracles around the world and cataloguing them onto a website, miracolieucaristici.org, which he created before his death from leukemia. He was noted for his cheerfulness, computer skills, and deep devotion to the Eucharist, which becomes a core theme of his life. He was beatified on 10 October 2020.",
"Carlo Severi\n Carlo Severi (born December 9, 1952) is an Italian anthropologist who is Professor at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS). He is noted for his studies of ritual, image/imagination, and social memory",
"Anastasio Cuschieri\n Cuschieri was also engaged in party politics. His early commitments were characterised by his love of the Latin culture, and, together with others, decided that Malta's own culture should be defined in Latin, rather than in Anglo-Saxon, terms. This pitched him against the Protestant British colonial government of Malta. Nonetheless, his political commitment had a pronounced social edge. In 1921, when his political activity became more manifest, he was encouraged by a visit to Malta made by the Jesuit Charles Plater to accept an invitation by the Unione Cattolica San Giuseppe (St. Joseph Catholic Workers' Union) to become the first Director of a Study Club which had the intention of educating workers. This society was ",
"Massimo Introvigne\n Massimo Introvigne (born June 14, 1955, in Rome) is an Italian Roman Catholic sociologist of religion and intellectual property attorney. He is a founder and the managing director of the Center for Studies on New Religions (CESNUR), a Turin-based organization which has been described as \"the highest profile lobbying and information group for controversial religions\".",
"San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane\n The church of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane (Saint Charles at the Four Fountains), also called San Carlino, is a Roman Catholic church in Rome, Italy. The church was designed by the architect Francesco Borromini and it was his first independent commission. It is an iconic masterpiece of Baroque architecture, built as part of a complex of monastic buildings on the Quirinal Hill for the Spanish Trinitarians, an order dedicated to the freeing of Christian slaves. He received the commission in 1634, under the patronage of Cardinal Francesco Barberini, whose palace was across the road. However, this financial backing did not last and subsequently the building project suffered various financial difficulties. It is one of at least three churches in Rome dedicated to San Carlo, including San Carlo ai Catinari and San Carlo al Corso.",
"Carlo Emanuele Muzzarelli\n Carlo Emanuele dei conti Muzzarelli (19 April 1797 – 1856) was an Italian clergyman, a member of the Roman Catholic curia under Pope Pius IX, who had the reputation of a liberal as well as a man of letters.",
"San Carlo ai Catinari\n San Carlo ai Catinari, also called Santi Biagio e Carlo ai Catinari (\"Saints Blaise and Charles at the Bowl-Makers\") is an early-Baroque style church in Rome, Italy. It is located on Piazza Benedetto Cairoli, 117 just off the corner of Via Arenula and Via dei Falegnami, a few blocks south of the church of Sant'Andrea della Valle. The attribute ai Catinari refers to the presence, at the time of its construction, of the many makers of wooden basins (Italian catini) who worked in the area. The church was commissioned by the Order of the Barnabites and funded by the Milanese community in Rome to honour their fellow Milanese St. Charles Borromeo (Italian: San Carlo). It is one of at least three Roman churches dedicated to him, including San Carlo al Corso and San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane (San Carlino).",
"Carlo Tullio Altan\n Carlo Tullio Altan (30 March 1916 – 15 February 2005) was an Italian anthropologist, sociologist and philosopher. He was particularly known for his studies on the Italian national character, and was considered one of the pioneers of Italian cultural anthropology. Altan was born at San Vito al Tagliamento, in Friuli. His son Francesco Tullio Altan is a popular comic books creator and satirist.",
"Carlo Gnocchi\n families of the deceased. He went into the Alpine Valleys to find the relatives of fallen comrades. After becoming part of the O.S.C.A.R., Catholic association for aid to refugees, he helped Jews and escaped Allied POWs flee to Switzerland. He wrote articles in the illegal magazine Il Ribelle (Rebel) and in the diocesan newspaper L'Italia (Italy). He was imprisoned more than once in the San Vittore prison, but obtained the liberation by the intervention of the archbishop of Milan, Alfredo Ildefonso Schuster. In those years the idea arose to create a charitable center that would take care of the victims of this war, which in the future developed as the origin of the Pro Juventute.",
"Alberto Quadrio Curzio\n a member of the EIB Prize Committee (1995-2000) and President of the Bank of Italy's revolving selection committee for the “Paolo Baffi Lectures on Money and Finance” (2003). In 2002 he was part of the Reflection Group on the “Reflection Group on the Spiritual and Cultural Dimension of Europe” initiated by the President of the European Commission, Romano Prodi, which considered the most relevant values necessary to the European unification process. His approach to politico-economic and social-institutional issues are embraced within social liberalism and liberal solidarism which led to a longstanding collaboration with Carlo Maria Martini, Archbishop of Milan. He is Chairman of ",
"Carlo Curci\n Carlo Curci (Trentola-Ducenta, August 30, 1846 - Trani, after 1916) was an Italian painter, mainly of seascapes. He also was active in painting portraits in a Renaissance style.",
"Giuseppe Francesco Borri\n Borri also began his propaganda, both messianic and political, with the purpose of returning to an evangelically pure religion. Borri believed religion to be the foundation of every science and scientific investigation. For him the whole world (Christian and non-Christian) should be conquered and ruled by a Papal theocracy, that should trailblaze the Kingdom to come: a sort of heavenly world, a new Golden Age, where the values of a renewed and universal Christianity would triumph. Borri considered himself (at least according to the later Inquisition's records) Prochristus, the prophet and herald of the new era.",
"Giosuè Carducci\n In his youth he was an atheist, whose political views were vehemently hostile to the Catholic Church. In the course of his life his views on religion shifted towards a socially oriented theism which he exposed in his famous \"Discorso sulla libertà perpetua di San Marino\" (\"A Speech on San Marino's Perpetual Freedom\"), pronounced on September the 30th, 1894 before the authorities and people of that ancient Republic and celebrating \"the Universal God of Peoples, Mazzini's and Washington's God\". His anti-clerical revolutionary vehemence was prominently showcased in one famous poem, the deliberately blasphemous and provocative \"Inno a Satana\" (\"Hymn to Satan\"). \"Satan\" / \"Lucifer\" was considered by Italian leftists of the time as a metaphor "
] |
What is the religion of John Gwynn? | [
"Anglicanism",
"Anglicanism, Anglican Church"
] | religion | John Gwynn (priest) | 4,715,094 | 17 | [
{
"id": "2390031",
"title": "John Gwynn (Syriacist)",
"text": " sons of Anthony Trollope, the novelist, were admitted to St Columba's in 1858, but were withdrawn the following year after John Gwynn had sent one of them home in disgrace, accused of a serious misdemeanour. John continued studying while working. He took his MA in 1854 and became a Bachelor of Divinity in 1861. After taking holy orders he spent the next twenty years (1863 to 1883) working as a clergyman in County Donegal and County Londonderry. He was much involved in the process of \"disestablishment\" of the Church of Ireland, which took place in 1869. Simultaneously he was preparing to take his Doctorate ",
"score": "1.543453"
},
{
"id": "2390026",
"title": "John Gwynn (Syriacist)",
"text": " John Gwynn (1827 in Larne – 1917 in Dublin) was an Irish Syriacist. He was Regius Professor of Divinity at Trinity College, Dublin (the University of Dublin) from 1888 to 1907.",
"score": "1.50521"
},
{
"id": "30021745",
"title": "John Gwynn (architect)",
"text": " John Gwynn (1713 – 28 February 1786) was an English architect and civil engineer, who became one of the founder members of the Royal Academy in 1768. He advocated greater control over planning in London, for which he produced detailed suggestions. His buildings include Magdalen Bridge and the Covered Market in Oxford, and several bridges over the River Severn.",
"score": "1.4733062"
},
{
"id": "2390027",
"title": "John Gwynn (Syriacist)",
"text": " John Gwynn (1827-1917) was the eldest son of the Reverend Stephen Gwynne (1792-1873). The Gwynne family had been settled in Ulster since the 17th century. The spelling of the family surname had varied throughout the earlier years; it was John Gwynn, the subject of this article, who settled on \"Gwynn\" with no \"e\". John’s grandfather John Gwynne (1761-1852) had studied at Trinity College, Dublin. after taking a degree in Divinity he was ordained and became Rector of Kilroot near Carrickfergus, County Antrim. His elder son Stephen (1792-1873), John Gwynn’s father, followed a similar career route, graduating from Trinity College, Dublin and becoming Rector of Larne, ",
"score": "1.4584277"
},
{
"id": "2390032",
"title": "John Gwynn (Syriacist)",
"text": " Divinity from Trinity, which he achieved in 1880. Then in 1883 he returned to Trinity College as a Divinity Lecturer; five years later he was appointed Regius Professor of Divinity. A meticulous scholar and linguist, John had mastered Latin, Greek and Hebrew while an undergraduate student, and later taught himself Syriac. He studied Syriac while commuting by train between Ulster and Dublin, partly in order to give himself some mental occupation during the journey. Over the years he published numerous learned articles. His greatest work, which took him twenty years to complete, was a landmark annotated edition of a ninth century Irish manuscript written ",
"score": "1.452507"
},
{
"id": "2390037",
"title": "John Gwynn (Syriacist)",
"text": " In the 1880s John Gwynn corresponded with relatives in an effort to clarify the relationship of the well known Derry benefactor John Gwyn to his own branch of the family. John Gwyn had died in 1829, leaving a substantial bequest with which the Gwyn Charitable Institution had been set up in Derry. The exact line of kinship connecting John Gwyn to John Gwynn was never established, but Mrs Ellen M. Green, John Gwynn’s third cousin and the sister of John Gwynne, a Judge of the Canadian Supreme Court, testified that John Gwyn the benefactor had regarded her late father (Rev William Gwynne DD) as his closest relative. Thus there is every reason to suppose that John Gwynn the professor and John Gwyn the philanthropist were indeed related. E.M. Green's letter to John Gwynn reads: \"I know that my Father was the nearest & best loved relative of Mr John Gwynne who founded the Institution...\" She further mentions that her brother John was the Derry benefactor's godson and inherited a gold watch from him.",
"score": "1.440894"
},
{
"id": "2390038",
"title": "John Gwynn (Syriacist)",
"text": "The Book of Armagh: Liber Ardmachanus, Dublin, 1913 ; Two memoirs on the Syriac versions of the New Testament, , Dublin. 1893 ; The Apocalypse of St. John: In a Syriac Version Hitherto Unknown, Dublin, 1897 ",
"score": "1.4171448"
},
{
"id": "2390028",
"title": "John Gwynn (Syriacist)",
"text": " Antrim, and then Rector of Portstewart, County Londonderry. When John Gwynn was only ten years old his mother Mary Stevenson was drowned, together with her maid, while bathing off the rocks on the Londonderry coast. The two daughters and four young sons were later taken in hand by a stepmother. John was educated at Enniskillen Royal School in Ulster, and then followed family tradition by going to Trinity College, Dublin. His father's diary (still preserved at Trinity) records John's success in the entrance examinations, in the winter of 1845: \"November 12 ... After considerable delay, we received the announcement, viz. John at the head ",
"score": "1.4135731"
},
{
"id": "2390035",
"title": "John Gwynn (Syriacist)",
"text": " Gwynn (1864-1950), the eldest and most famous of the sons, was an MP, a prominent Irish patriot and a prolific writer. He married his first cousin, Mary Louise (1865-1941), known as May Gwynn, who was the eldest daughter of the Reverend James Gwynn (1829-1869), pastor of the fashionable Octagon Chapel in Bath. May, with her children, entered the Roman Catholic church while in her thirties, and her second son Aubrey Osborn Gwynn SJ later became a Jesuit priest. Other sons were Edward John Gwynn (1868-1941), an academic like his father, sometime Provost of Trinity College, Dublin; Major General Sir Charles William Gwynn KCB (1870-1963), sometime Commandant of the Staff College, ",
"score": "1.4117625"
},
{
"id": "30021746",
"title": "John Gwynn (architect)",
"text": " Gwynn was born and died in Shrewsbury, Shropshire. He worked initially as a carpenter, but then decided to practice as a (largely self-taught) architect and town planner, moving to London, where he became a friend of Samuel Johnson. In 1749, when Sir Christopher Wren's drawings were sold, Gwynn obtained Wren's plan for the rebuilding of the City of London, and published it, adding some comments of his own. Seventeen years later, in 1766, he published London and Westminster Improved, It was passed in June of the same year. in which he criticised the loose control over building in the West End, saying that \"the finest part of town is left to ignorant and capricious persons\", and called for development to ",
"score": "1.402724"
},
{
"id": "6611223",
"title": "John Gwyn (philanthropist)",
"text": " for his thrift and his philanthropy. Frugality was a habit with him, and he persisted with it even after becoming extremely wealthy. According to a clergyman who knew him he counted every penny, always drove a hard bargain and went out of his way to avoid even the smallest unnecessary expense., Gwyn (with the spelling 'John Gwynne') was recorded as the owner or occupier of the premises in Bishop Street (Lot 26) in surveys of the city dated 1824 and 1826. Gwyn never married. He died on 1 August 1829 and was buried next to his parents in Muff churchyard. He bequeathed the bulk of his considerable fortune to establish a charitable trust for the benefit of poor boys.",
"score": "1.3918877"
},
{
"id": "2390036",
"title": "John Gwynn (Syriacist)",
"text": " Lucius Henry Gwynn (1873-1902), another Trinity academic as well as a brilliant cricketer and footballer, who died of TB at an early age; Arthur Percival Gwynn (1875-1898), again a talented cricketer, who joined the Indian Civil Service, was sent out to Burma and died there, of septicaemia, at the age of twenty-one; Robert (Robin) Malcolm Gwynn (1877-1962), a cleric-academic like his father, who was a long-serving, very active Fellow of Trinity College and a bold champion of liberal causes; John Tudor Gwynn (1881-1956), at various times Indian Civil Servant, journalist and writer, and head of Baymount Preparatory School near Dublin; and Brian James Gwynn (1883-1972), soldier then Irish civil servant.",
"score": "1.3862312"
},
{
"id": "4551203",
"title": "Robert Gwynn",
"text": " Rev Robert Malcolm Gwynn (Ramelton, County Donegal 26 April 1877 – 25 June 1962 Dublin) was a Church of Ireland clergyman and academic whose entire working life was spent at Trinity College Dublin. In his youth he was also an outstanding cricketer.",
"score": "1.3850513"
},
{
"id": "2390030",
"title": "John Gwynn (Syriacist)",
"text": " Warden (Headmaster) of St Columba's College at Rathfarnham in County Dublin, a secondary school for sons of the gentry, on the lines of an English public school, which had been founded fourteen years earlier. Around the time John took up this post in 1856, William Smith O'Brien was allowed to return to Ireland and rejoin his family. Two of O'Brien's sons had already been attending St Columba's and a third was due to start there. And so John Gwynn finally met the man he had watched marching in chains a few years earlier. Six years later John married O'Brien's eldest daughter, Lucy Josephine. The ",
"score": "1.3814332"
},
{
"id": "6611221",
"title": "John Gwyn (philanthropist)",
"text": " John Gwyn was born in the village of Drumskellan, near Muff in County Donegal, a few miles from Derry. The date of his birth is unknown; his tombstone records that he died on 1 August 1829 \"in his seventy-fourth year\", implying that he was born in 1755 or 1756. His father William Gwyn was a tenant farmer. His mother's Christian name was Margaret; no record of her maiden surname is extant. William Gwyn died on 26 September 1766 \"in the thirty-sixth year of his age\"; at the time of John's birth William's age would therefore have been about twenty-five, and when William died John was a mere eleven years old. He was apparently the only surviving child; five siblings of ",
"score": "1.373548"
},
{
"id": "9213529",
"title": "J. P. L. Gwynn",
"text": " John Peter Lucius Gwynn (22 June 1916 – 14 September 1999) was a British civil servant, whose career spanned the colonial Indian Civil Service, the independent Civil Services of India, and the British Civil Service.",
"score": "1.3731356"
},
{
"id": "8611255",
"title": "R. S. Gwynn",
"text": " Robert Samuel \"Sam\" Gwynn (born 1948, Eden, North Carolina) is an American poet and anthologist associated with New Formalism.",
"score": "1.3727779"
},
{
"id": "2390029",
"title": "John Gwynn (Syriacist)",
"text": " all the candidates from all the schools, his numbers being 25 ahead of the second best man.\" Four years later, as an undergraduate, John Gwynn stood outside Trinity College and watched William Smith O'Brien and other political prisoners being marched through the streets of Dublin on their way to Kingstown (Dún Laoghaire), where a convict ship was waiting to transport them to Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania). At TCD, John studied mathematics, and was awarded a BA in that subject in 1850. He soon became a Fellow of Trinity, spending the years 1853 to 1856 in minor academic posts at the university. He was then ",
"score": "1.3712745"
},
{
"id": "2390033",
"title": "John Gwynn (Syriacist)",
"text": " Latin and known as the Book of Armagh. John Gwynn also produced editions of the five books missing from the traditional canon of the New Testament which are found in the Aramaic New Testament of the Peshitta: 2 John, 3 John, 2 Peter, Jude (all in 1893), and Revelation (in 1897). He worked from twenty different manuscripts for the epistles, but had to rely on only one, the Crawford Aramaic New Testament manuscript, for Revelation. These were later added to the Gospels and Epistles of Philip E. Pusey and George Gwilliam to produce the 1905 United Bible Societies standard edition of the Syriac Peshitta.",
"score": "1.3698003"
},
{
"id": "13425026",
"title": "John Gwynneth",
"text": " John Gwynneth (or Guinete) (fl. 1511–1557), was a clergyman of Welsh nationality originating from Gwynedd, and was a composer of religious and liturgical vocal music for which he was awarded a doctorate in the University of Oxford. He held benefices in England in Northamptonshire, Bedfordshire and London, and in North Wales at Clynnog Fawr. Although he was a polemicist for the Catholic faith, he maintained his ministry through the reigns of Henry VIII, Edward VI and Queen Mary, and was brother-in-law and executor of Stephen Vaughan (a supporter of the English Reformation). He is principally remembered, from the age of Thomas Tallis, as one of the other exponents of early Tudor period polyphony.",
"score": "1.3653343"
}
] | [
"John Gwynn (Syriacist)\n sons of Anthony Trollope, the novelist, were admitted to St Columba's in 1858, but were withdrawn the following year after John Gwynn had sent one of them home in disgrace, accused of a serious misdemeanour. John continued studying while working. He took his MA in 1854 and became a Bachelor of Divinity in 1861. After taking holy orders he spent the next twenty years (1863 to 1883) working as a clergyman in County Donegal and County Londonderry. He was much involved in the process of \"disestablishment\" of the Church of Ireland, which took place in 1869. Simultaneously he was preparing to take his Doctorate ",
"John Gwynn (Syriacist)\n John Gwynn (1827 in Larne – 1917 in Dublin) was an Irish Syriacist. He was Regius Professor of Divinity at Trinity College, Dublin (the University of Dublin) from 1888 to 1907.",
"John Gwynn (architect)\n John Gwynn (1713 – 28 February 1786) was an English architect and civil engineer, who became one of the founder members of the Royal Academy in 1768. He advocated greater control over planning in London, for which he produced detailed suggestions. His buildings include Magdalen Bridge and the Covered Market in Oxford, and several bridges over the River Severn.",
"John Gwynn (Syriacist)\n John Gwynn (1827-1917) was the eldest son of the Reverend Stephen Gwynne (1792-1873). The Gwynne family had been settled in Ulster since the 17th century. The spelling of the family surname had varied throughout the earlier years; it was John Gwynn, the subject of this article, who settled on \"Gwynn\" with no \"e\". John’s grandfather John Gwynne (1761-1852) had studied at Trinity College, Dublin. after taking a degree in Divinity he was ordained and became Rector of Kilroot near Carrickfergus, County Antrim. His elder son Stephen (1792-1873), John Gwynn’s father, followed a similar career route, graduating from Trinity College, Dublin and becoming Rector of Larne, ",
"John Gwynn (Syriacist)\n Divinity from Trinity, which he achieved in 1880. Then in 1883 he returned to Trinity College as a Divinity Lecturer; five years later he was appointed Regius Professor of Divinity. A meticulous scholar and linguist, John had mastered Latin, Greek and Hebrew while an undergraduate student, and later taught himself Syriac. He studied Syriac while commuting by train between Ulster and Dublin, partly in order to give himself some mental occupation during the journey. Over the years he published numerous learned articles. His greatest work, which took him twenty years to complete, was a landmark annotated edition of a ninth century Irish manuscript written ",
"John Gwynn (Syriacist)\n In the 1880s John Gwynn corresponded with relatives in an effort to clarify the relationship of the well known Derry benefactor John Gwyn to his own branch of the family. John Gwyn had died in 1829, leaving a substantial bequest with which the Gwyn Charitable Institution had been set up in Derry. The exact line of kinship connecting John Gwyn to John Gwynn was never established, but Mrs Ellen M. Green, John Gwynn’s third cousin and the sister of John Gwynne, a Judge of the Canadian Supreme Court, testified that John Gwyn the benefactor had regarded her late father (Rev William Gwynne DD) as his closest relative. Thus there is every reason to suppose that John Gwynn the professor and John Gwyn the philanthropist were indeed related. E.M. Green's letter to John Gwynn reads: \"I know that my Father was the nearest & best loved relative of Mr John Gwynne who founded the Institution...\" She further mentions that her brother John was the Derry benefactor's godson and inherited a gold watch from him.",
"John Gwynn (Syriacist)\nThe Book of Armagh: Liber Ardmachanus, Dublin, 1913 ; Two memoirs on the Syriac versions of the New Testament, , Dublin. 1893 ; The Apocalypse of St. John: In a Syriac Version Hitherto Unknown, Dublin, 1897 ",
"John Gwynn (Syriacist)\n Antrim, and then Rector of Portstewart, County Londonderry. When John Gwynn was only ten years old his mother Mary Stevenson was drowned, together with her maid, while bathing off the rocks on the Londonderry coast. The two daughters and four young sons were later taken in hand by a stepmother. John was educated at Enniskillen Royal School in Ulster, and then followed family tradition by going to Trinity College, Dublin. His father's diary (still preserved at Trinity) records John's success in the entrance examinations, in the winter of 1845: \"November 12 ... After considerable delay, we received the announcement, viz. John at the head ",
"John Gwynn (Syriacist)\n Gwynn (1864-1950), the eldest and most famous of the sons, was an MP, a prominent Irish patriot and a prolific writer. He married his first cousin, Mary Louise (1865-1941), known as May Gwynn, who was the eldest daughter of the Reverend James Gwynn (1829-1869), pastor of the fashionable Octagon Chapel in Bath. May, with her children, entered the Roman Catholic church while in her thirties, and her second son Aubrey Osborn Gwynn SJ later became a Jesuit priest. Other sons were Edward John Gwynn (1868-1941), an academic like his father, sometime Provost of Trinity College, Dublin; Major General Sir Charles William Gwynn KCB (1870-1963), sometime Commandant of the Staff College, ",
"John Gwynn (architect)\n Gwynn was born and died in Shrewsbury, Shropshire. He worked initially as a carpenter, but then decided to practice as a (largely self-taught) architect and town planner, moving to London, where he became a friend of Samuel Johnson. In 1749, when Sir Christopher Wren's drawings were sold, Gwynn obtained Wren's plan for the rebuilding of the City of London, and published it, adding some comments of his own. Seventeen years later, in 1766, he published London and Westminster Improved, It was passed in June of the same year. in which he criticised the loose control over building in the West End, saying that \"the finest part of town is left to ignorant and capricious persons\", and called for development to ",
"John Gwyn (philanthropist)\n for his thrift and his philanthropy. Frugality was a habit with him, and he persisted with it even after becoming extremely wealthy. According to a clergyman who knew him he counted every penny, always drove a hard bargain and went out of his way to avoid even the smallest unnecessary expense., Gwyn (with the spelling 'John Gwynne') was recorded as the owner or occupier of the premises in Bishop Street (Lot 26) in surveys of the city dated 1824 and 1826. Gwyn never married. He died on 1 August 1829 and was buried next to his parents in Muff churchyard. He bequeathed the bulk of his considerable fortune to establish a charitable trust for the benefit of poor boys.",
"John Gwynn (Syriacist)\n Lucius Henry Gwynn (1873-1902), another Trinity academic as well as a brilliant cricketer and footballer, who died of TB at an early age; Arthur Percival Gwynn (1875-1898), again a talented cricketer, who joined the Indian Civil Service, was sent out to Burma and died there, of septicaemia, at the age of twenty-one; Robert (Robin) Malcolm Gwynn (1877-1962), a cleric-academic like his father, who was a long-serving, very active Fellow of Trinity College and a bold champion of liberal causes; John Tudor Gwynn (1881-1956), at various times Indian Civil Servant, journalist and writer, and head of Baymount Preparatory School near Dublin; and Brian James Gwynn (1883-1972), soldier then Irish civil servant.",
"Robert Gwynn\n Rev Robert Malcolm Gwynn (Ramelton, County Donegal 26 April 1877 – 25 June 1962 Dublin) was a Church of Ireland clergyman and academic whose entire working life was spent at Trinity College Dublin. In his youth he was also an outstanding cricketer.",
"John Gwynn (Syriacist)\n Warden (Headmaster) of St Columba's College at Rathfarnham in County Dublin, a secondary school for sons of the gentry, on the lines of an English public school, which had been founded fourteen years earlier. Around the time John took up this post in 1856, William Smith O'Brien was allowed to return to Ireland and rejoin his family. Two of O'Brien's sons had already been attending St Columba's and a third was due to start there. And so John Gwynn finally met the man he had watched marching in chains a few years earlier. Six years later John married O'Brien's eldest daughter, Lucy Josephine. The ",
"John Gwyn (philanthropist)\n John Gwyn was born in the village of Drumskellan, near Muff in County Donegal, a few miles from Derry. The date of his birth is unknown; his tombstone records that he died on 1 August 1829 \"in his seventy-fourth year\", implying that he was born in 1755 or 1756. His father William Gwyn was a tenant farmer. His mother's Christian name was Margaret; no record of her maiden surname is extant. William Gwyn died on 26 September 1766 \"in the thirty-sixth year of his age\"; at the time of John's birth William's age would therefore have been about twenty-five, and when William died John was a mere eleven years old. He was apparently the only surviving child; five siblings of ",
"J. P. L. Gwynn\n John Peter Lucius Gwynn (22 June 1916 – 14 September 1999) was a British civil servant, whose career spanned the colonial Indian Civil Service, the independent Civil Services of India, and the British Civil Service.",
"R. S. Gwynn\n Robert Samuel \"Sam\" Gwynn (born 1948, Eden, North Carolina) is an American poet and anthologist associated with New Formalism.",
"John Gwynn (Syriacist)\n all the candidates from all the schools, his numbers being 25 ahead of the second best man.\" Four years later, as an undergraduate, John Gwynn stood outside Trinity College and watched William Smith O'Brien and other political prisoners being marched through the streets of Dublin on their way to Kingstown (Dún Laoghaire), where a convict ship was waiting to transport them to Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania). At TCD, John studied mathematics, and was awarded a BA in that subject in 1850. He soon became a Fellow of Trinity, spending the years 1853 to 1856 in minor academic posts at the university. He was then ",
"John Gwynn (Syriacist)\n Latin and known as the Book of Armagh. John Gwynn also produced editions of the five books missing from the traditional canon of the New Testament which are found in the Aramaic New Testament of the Peshitta: 2 John, 3 John, 2 Peter, Jude (all in 1893), and Revelation (in 1897). He worked from twenty different manuscripts for the epistles, but had to rely on only one, the Crawford Aramaic New Testament manuscript, for Revelation. These were later added to the Gospels and Epistles of Philip E. Pusey and George Gwilliam to produce the 1905 United Bible Societies standard edition of the Syriac Peshitta.",
"John Gwynneth\n John Gwynneth (or Guinete) (fl. 1511–1557), was a clergyman of Welsh nationality originating from Gwynedd, and was a composer of religious and liturgical vocal music for which he was awarded a doctorate in the University of Oxford. He held benefices in England in Northamptonshire, Bedfordshire and London, and in North Wales at Clynnog Fawr. Although he was a polemicist for the Catholic faith, he maintained his ministry through the reigns of Henry VIII, Edward VI and Queen Mary, and was brother-in-law and executor of Stephen Vaughan (a supporter of the English Reformation). He is principally remembered, from the age of Thomas Tallis, as one of the other exponents of early Tudor period polyphony."
] |
What is the religion of Joseph Schubert? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Joseph Schubert (bishop) | 6,270,618 | 77 | [
{
"id": "11689173",
"title": "Joseph Schubert (bishop)",
"text": " Joseph Schubert (24 June 1890 – 4 April 1969) was a Romanian cleric and a titular bishop of the Roman Catholic Church.",
"score": "1.5998136"
},
{
"id": "7382967",
"title": "Joseph Schubert (politician)",
"text": " Joseph Schubert (1889 - 7 March 1952) was a Canadian politician, who served on Montreal City Council from 1924 to 1939. Originally from Romania, Schubert was a prominent labour unionist in the city, and was the only Labour Party representative on Montreal's city council. One of his first prominent actions as a city councillor was a speech protesting police harassment of participants in the city's 1924 May Day parade. In 1931, he built a public bathhouse at the corner of Bagg and St. Lawrence, which still stands today as the Schubert Bath (official French name: Bain Schubert). He served for three months as the city's acting mayor, commencing August 29, 1927, under mayor Médéric Martin. (Despite the title \"acting mayor\", however, he was never the city's official leader; in modern terms, his role would be more accurately understood as that of a deputy mayor or a mayor pro tem.) Until the appointment of Michael Applebaum as interim mayor in 2012, he was the highest ranking Jewish official in the history of Montreal's municipal government.",
"score": "1.5217464"
},
{
"id": "11689174",
"title": "Joseph Schubert (bishop)",
"text": " Born to an ethnic German family in Bucharest, he studied theology at Innsbruck, becoming doctor of theology and being ordained a priest in 1916. After returning to Romania, he was assigned as parish priest in Caramurat, and in 1931 as a priest attached to the Bucharest cathedral. He also taught at the theological seminary in his native city. Following the 1949 arrest of Anton Durcovici by the authorities of the new Communist regime, he was made Apostolic Administrator of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Bucharest, being consecrated titular bishop of Ceramus by Gerald Patrick O'Hara in June 1950. Arrested in February ",
"score": "1.5073838"
},
{
"id": "33053304",
"title": "Franz Mair",
"text": " society\"). It was originally affiliated to a teachers' association, to which its 86 founding members belonged. The reference to Franz Schubert was significant in that Schubert was from a family of teachers, himself having been at one time a teacher. In 1870 the choir left the teachers' association, and was renamed Schubertbund. (In 1922, to distinguish the choir from others with a similar name, it became the Wiener Schubertbund.) He directed the choir until 1890. From 1867 to 1874 and from 1879 to 1890 he was director of the Singer's Association of Lower Austria. Mair died in Vienna in 1893.",
"score": "1.5041668"
},
{
"id": "29420359",
"title": "Joseph Schubert (composer)",
"text": " Joseph Schubert (20 December 1754 – 28 July 1837) was a German composer, violinist, and violist. Schubert was born in Varnsdorf, Bohemia (now Czech Republic) to a musical family. He received his early musical education from his father, who was a cantor, and then in Prague. In 1778, he moved to Berlin to study the violin with Paul Kohn, director of the royal orchestra there. In 1779, Schubert obtained a position as violinist in the court of Heinrich Friedrich, the Margrave of Brandenburg-Schwedt. In 1788, he accepted a post as violist in the court orchestra of Dresden, where he remained until his death in 1837. Schubert gained recognition as a versatile composer, cited in the 1812 edition of Ernst Ludwig Gerber's lexicon of composers. His œuvre includes 15 masses, 4 operas, 17 sonatas, and 49 concertos for solo instruments. The Saxon State Library in Dresden holds the manuscripts of three viola concertos attributed to him.",
"score": "1.4813678"
},
{
"id": "9216178",
"title": "Alex Joseph",
"text": " Alex Joseph (1936 – September 27, 1998) (born Alec Richard Joseph; also referred to as Ronald Ellison) was an American outspoken polygamist and founder of the Confederate Nations of Israel, a Mormon fundamentalist sect. As mayor of Big Water, Utah, Joseph was the first Libertarian Party mayor of a community in the United States.",
"score": "1.4810615"
},
{
"id": "31851553",
"title": "Bernhard Müller",
"text": " Müller wrote to the Harmony Society (and other communes in the United States as well as numerous leaders in Europe) in 1829 proclaiming himself to be the \"Lion of Judah\" and a prophet in possession of the Philosopher's stone. As well as giving himself numerous fictitious names and titles, like Count de Leon, Archduke Maximilian von Este, and Proli, he claimed that he and his followers were the true Philadelphians and were ready to make a home for themselves with the Harmonites in Old Economy, Pennsylvania. The Harmonites, being religious searchers looking for a hopeful sign, and eager to justify their own religious prophesies, ",
"score": "1.4653599"
},
{
"id": "2540795",
"title": "Austrian Jewish Museum",
"text": " Schubert was a Catholic professor who chaired the Judaic studies department at the University of Vienna during the post-World War II era. Due to the climate in Austria following the war, many projects regarding Judaism were private enterprises, as was the museum. It was situated in Eisenstadt, rather than Vienna, due to budgetary constraints. It catered to an academic clientele, rather than the general public, and initially were focused around annual symposiums held by the museum. Its creation paved the way for later museums in Austria dealing with Jewish topics, such as the Jewish Museum Vienna. The museum is housed today in the Wertheimerhaus, also called the Wertheimer'schen Freihaus, which was commissioned and financed by Esterhazy family and built by Samson Wertheimer in 1719, who earned the commission through service to the aristocratic family. Wertheimer was an important businessman and served both the court in Vienna and the high rabbi in Hungary. This house was built in Eisenstadt during his own service as a high rabbi and housed a private synagoge with a separate room for women only. The synagoge is part of the museum exhibition.",
"score": "1.4383202"
},
{
"id": "2632880",
"title": "Steve Schubert",
"text": " Schubert was born in Brooklyn, New York, to Charles Schubert Jr. and Alice Pappas.",
"score": "1.422417"
},
{
"id": "33053302",
"title": "Franz Mair",
"text": " Franz Mair (15 March 1821 – 30 November 1893) was an Austrian composer and choral conductor, and founder of the Wiener Schubertbund, a choir that still exists today.",
"score": "1.4194489"
},
{
"id": "15804279",
"title": "Joseph C. Schubert",
"text": " Joseph C. Schubert (1871–1959) was Mayor of Madison, Wisconsin. He held the office from 1906 to 1911. Schubert was a Democrat.",
"score": "1.4192736"
},
{
"id": "28744482",
"title": "Gotthilf Heinrich von Schubert",
"text": " interpretation of the cosmos. Contemporaries that included Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Jean Paul, Justinus Kerner and Heinrich von Kleist were favorable to his work. His masterpiece, Symbolism of Dreams (1814) was one of the most famous books of its time, exercising influence over E. T. A. Hoffmann, and later on, Sigmund Freud and C. G. Jung. Schubert advocated an ecumenical \"awakened Christianity\" which found evidence for God both in Nature and in the human soul. Synthesising the Bible with the philosophy of Schelling, he was a major figure in the \"later Enlightenment\". In his History of the Soul (1830), Schubert again attempted to fuse the philosophy of Herder and Schelling with the Christian tradition. In 1824 Carl Friedrich Philipp von Martius named the plant genus Schubertia (family Apocynaceae) in his honor.",
"score": "1.4134389"
},
{
"id": "29470508",
"title": "Joseph Krauskopf",
"text": " patriot had well-night been buried\" and thus \"after eighteen hundred years of cruel separation, Christian and Jew are drawing closer to each other.\" He argued that \"Unitarian and Reformed Jewish Churches\" were \"the advance guard of both factions have met.\" Krauskopf believed that Christianity – and especially the New Testament – had been corrupted by \"foreign material and falsified history, of pagan mythology and Persian demonology and Egyptian mysticism.\" He argued that one modern Christianity purged itself of this invasive material Christianity would move back toward its Jewish roots based on \"the Judaism that was taught by a Jewish prophet, and patriot and martyr, the Rabbi of Nazareth.\"",
"score": "1.4113321"
},
{
"id": "27553122",
"title": "Schubert M. Ogden",
"text": " Schubert Miles Ogden (March 2, 1928 – June 6, 2019) was an American Protestant theologian who proposed an interpretation of the Christian faith that he believes is both appropriate to the earliest apostolic witness found in the New Testament and also credible in the light of common human experience. He has written eleven books and been awarded many honors including the John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, a Fulbright research scholarship, as well as honorary degrees from Ohio Wesleyan University, the University of Chicago, and Southern Methodist University. He has been invited to many titled lectureships in universities in Europe and the United States, made President of the American Academy of Religion (1976-7), and elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1985).",
"score": "1.4077959"
},
{
"id": "581980",
"title": "Olaf Schubert",
"text": " Schubert works as comedian and musician on German broadcasters and radios.",
"score": "1.405314"
},
{
"id": "8844444",
"title": "Josephinism",
"text": " Viennese ecclesiastical order of services was made obligatory, \"in accordance with which all musical litanies, novenas, octaves, the ancient touching devotions, also processions, vespers, and similar ceremonies, were done away with.\" Numerous churches and chapels were closed and put to secular uses; the greater part of the old religious foundations and monasteries were suppressed as early as 1784. Nevertheless there could be no durable peace with the bureaucratic civil authorities, and Bishop Ernest Johann Nepomuk von Herberstein was repeatedly obliged to complain to the emperor of the tutelage in which the Church was kept, but the complaints bore little fruit. Catholic historians said there was an alliance between Joseph and anti-clerical Freemasons.",
"score": "1.4041876"
},
{
"id": "11689175",
"title": "Joseph Schubert (bishop)",
"text": " he was sentenced to hard labor for life and freed in August 1964. Sighet prison was among the places where he was incarcerated. Forced to reside at first in Timişu de Sus, he was under constant surveillance from agents of the Religious Affairs Department. In January 1969 he was allowed to emigrate to Western Europe, meeting Pope Paul VI the following month and dying in Munich in April. It was Schubert who consecrated Alexandru Todea bishop in 1950. Prior to leaving Romania, he transferred his administrative duties to Iosif Gonciu, who in turn left them to Ioan Robu in 1983.",
"score": "1.402257"
},
{
"id": "15337407",
"title": "Max Schubert",
"text": " Schubert was born to Lutheran parents in a German community on the fringes of the Barossa Valley, a region renowned for its winemaking. He joined Penfolds in 1931 as a messenger boy and became Penfolds' first chief winemaker in 1948 at the age of 33, a position he held until 1975. Schubert spent his entire working life with Penfolds. He was described as \"a true company man, devoted to Penfolds, (...) a humble and loyal servant of the Penfold family, and later of the public company.\" Schubert served in the Second World War, volunteering against the wishes of his managing director at Penfolds. He is believed to have saved the life of another Australia soldier when Stuka dive-bombers wiped out his convoy in north Africa, killing 200 men. He went on to serve in Greece, Crete, the Middle East, Ceylon and New Guinea, where he contracted malaria. Schubert died in 1994, aged 79, at his home in Adelaide, South Australia. In his obituary The New York Times noted that his Grange had won more wine show prizes than any other Australian red wine, and was regarded as the flagship of Australia's wine industry.",
"score": "1.3998137"
},
{
"id": "29012914",
"title": "Joseph Wolff",
"text": " Wolff was born to David Wolff (b. 1760) and his wife in 1795. David Wolff became a rabbi in Weilersbach in 1794, and also served in Kissingen, Halle upon Saale and Uehlfeld, moving to Jebenhausen, Württemberg in 1806, from where he sent his son to the Lutheran lyceum at Stuttgart. Wolff's initial interest in Christianity came about through hearing conversations between his father and Jewish friends, but since he was not happy with his father's concept of Jesus, he began standing outside churches and listening to the sermons. In his writings (written in the third person), Wolff told about his early conviction that Jesus is the Messiah: \"When only seven years old, he was boasting to an aged Christian neighbour of ",
"score": "1.3993146"
},
{
"id": "29420360",
"title": "Joseph Schubert (composer)",
"text": "Concerto for Viola and Orchestra in C major (Schott Music, ed. Karlheinz Schultz-Hauser) ",
"score": "1.3930433"
}
] | [
"Joseph Schubert (bishop)\n Joseph Schubert (24 June 1890 – 4 April 1969) was a Romanian cleric and a titular bishop of the Roman Catholic Church.",
"Joseph Schubert (politician)\n Joseph Schubert (1889 - 7 March 1952) was a Canadian politician, who served on Montreal City Council from 1924 to 1939. Originally from Romania, Schubert was a prominent labour unionist in the city, and was the only Labour Party representative on Montreal's city council. One of his first prominent actions as a city councillor was a speech protesting police harassment of participants in the city's 1924 May Day parade. In 1931, he built a public bathhouse at the corner of Bagg and St. Lawrence, which still stands today as the Schubert Bath (official French name: Bain Schubert). He served for three months as the city's acting mayor, commencing August 29, 1927, under mayor Médéric Martin. (Despite the title \"acting mayor\", however, he was never the city's official leader; in modern terms, his role would be more accurately understood as that of a deputy mayor or a mayor pro tem.) Until the appointment of Michael Applebaum as interim mayor in 2012, he was the highest ranking Jewish official in the history of Montreal's municipal government.",
"Joseph Schubert (bishop)\n Born to an ethnic German family in Bucharest, he studied theology at Innsbruck, becoming doctor of theology and being ordained a priest in 1916. After returning to Romania, he was assigned as parish priest in Caramurat, and in 1931 as a priest attached to the Bucharest cathedral. He also taught at the theological seminary in his native city. Following the 1949 arrest of Anton Durcovici by the authorities of the new Communist regime, he was made Apostolic Administrator of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Bucharest, being consecrated titular bishop of Ceramus by Gerald Patrick O'Hara in June 1950. Arrested in February ",
"Franz Mair\n society\"). It was originally affiliated to a teachers' association, to which its 86 founding members belonged. The reference to Franz Schubert was significant in that Schubert was from a family of teachers, himself having been at one time a teacher. In 1870 the choir left the teachers' association, and was renamed Schubertbund. (In 1922, to distinguish the choir from others with a similar name, it became the Wiener Schubertbund.) He directed the choir until 1890. From 1867 to 1874 and from 1879 to 1890 he was director of the Singer's Association of Lower Austria. Mair died in Vienna in 1893.",
"Joseph Schubert (composer)\n Joseph Schubert (20 December 1754 – 28 July 1837) was a German composer, violinist, and violist. Schubert was born in Varnsdorf, Bohemia (now Czech Republic) to a musical family. He received his early musical education from his father, who was a cantor, and then in Prague. In 1778, he moved to Berlin to study the violin with Paul Kohn, director of the royal orchestra there. In 1779, Schubert obtained a position as violinist in the court of Heinrich Friedrich, the Margrave of Brandenburg-Schwedt. In 1788, he accepted a post as violist in the court orchestra of Dresden, where he remained until his death in 1837. Schubert gained recognition as a versatile composer, cited in the 1812 edition of Ernst Ludwig Gerber's lexicon of composers. His œuvre includes 15 masses, 4 operas, 17 sonatas, and 49 concertos for solo instruments. The Saxon State Library in Dresden holds the manuscripts of three viola concertos attributed to him.",
"Alex Joseph\n Alex Joseph (1936 – September 27, 1998) (born Alec Richard Joseph; also referred to as Ronald Ellison) was an American outspoken polygamist and founder of the Confederate Nations of Israel, a Mormon fundamentalist sect. As mayor of Big Water, Utah, Joseph was the first Libertarian Party mayor of a community in the United States.",
"Bernhard Müller\n Müller wrote to the Harmony Society (and other communes in the United States as well as numerous leaders in Europe) in 1829 proclaiming himself to be the \"Lion of Judah\" and a prophet in possession of the Philosopher's stone. As well as giving himself numerous fictitious names and titles, like Count de Leon, Archduke Maximilian von Este, and Proli, he claimed that he and his followers were the true Philadelphians and were ready to make a home for themselves with the Harmonites in Old Economy, Pennsylvania. The Harmonites, being religious searchers looking for a hopeful sign, and eager to justify their own religious prophesies, ",
"Austrian Jewish Museum\n Schubert was a Catholic professor who chaired the Judaic studies department at the University of Vienna during the post-World War II era. Due to the climate in Austria following the war, many projects regarding Judaism were private enterprises, as was the museum. It was situated in Eisenstadt, rather than Vienna, due to budgetary constraints. It catered to an academic clientele, rather than the general public, and initially were focused around annual symposiums held by the museum. Its creation paved the way for later museums in Austria dealing with Jewish topics, such as the Jewish Museum Vienna. The museum is housed today in the Wertheimerhaus, also called the Wertheimer'schen Freihaus, which was commissioned and financed by Esterhazy family and built by Samson Wertheimer in 1719, who earned the commission through service to the aristocratic family. Wertheimer was an important businessman and served both the court in Vienna and the high rabbi in Hungary. This house was built in Eisenstadt during his own service as a high rabbi and housed a private synagoge with a separate room for women only. The synagoge is part of the museum exhibition.",
"Steve Schubert\n Schubert was born in Brooklyn, New York, to Charles Schubert Jr. and Alice Pappas.",
"Franz Mair\n Franz Mair (15 March 1821 – 30 November 1893) was an Austrian composer and choral conductor, and founder of the Wiener Schubertbund, a choir that still exists today.",
"Joseph C. Schubert\n Joseph C. Schubert (1871–1959) was Mayor of Madison, Wisconsin. He held the office from 1906 to 1911. Schubert was a Democrat.",
"Gotthilf Heinrich von Schubert\n interpretation of the cosmos. Contemporaries that included Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Jean Paul, Justinus Kerner and Heinrich von Kleist were favorable to his work. His masterpiece, Symbolism of Dreams (1814) was one of the most famous books of its time, exercising influence over E. T. A. Hoffmann, and later on, Sigmund Freud and C. G. Jung. Schubert advocated an ecumenical \"awakened Christianity\" which found evidence for God both in Nature and in the human soul. Synthesising the Bible with the philosophy of Schelling, he was a major figure in the \"later Enlightenment\". In his History of the Soul (1830), Schubert again attempted to fuse the philosophy of Herder and Schelling with the Christian tradition. In 1824 Carl Friedrich Philipp von Martius named the plant genus Schubertia (family Apocynaceae) in his honor.",
"Joseph Krauskopf\n patriot had well-night been buried\" and thus \"after eighteen hundred years of cruel separation, Christian and Jew are drawing closer to each other.\" He argued that \"Unitarian and Reformed Jewish Churches\" were \"the advance guard of both factions have met.\" Krauskopf believed that Christianity – and especially the New Testament – had been corrupted by \"foreign material and falsified history, of pagan mythology and Persian demonology and Egyptian mysticism.\" He argued that one modern Christianity purged itself of this invasive material Christianity would move back toward its Jewish roots based on \"the Judaism that was taught by a Jewish prophet, and patriot and martyr, the Rabbi of Nazareth.\"",
"Schubert M. Ogden\n Schubert Miles Ogden (March 2, 1928 – June 6, 2019) was an American Protestant theologian who proposed an interpretation of the Christian faith that he believes is both appropriate to the earliest apostolic witness found in the New Testament and also credible in the light of common human experience. He has written eleven books and been awarded many honors including the John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, a Fulbright research scholarship, as well as honorary degrees from Ohio Wesleyan University, the University of Chicago, and Southern Methodist University. He has been invited to many titled lectureships in universities in Europe and the United States, made President of the American Academy of Religion (1976-7), and elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1985).",
"Olaf Schubert\n Schubert works as comedian and musician on German broadcasters and radios.",
"Josephinism\n Viennese ecclesiastical order of services was made obligatory, \"in accordance with which all musical litanies, novenas, octaves, the ancient touching devotions, also processions, vespers, and similar ceremonies, were done away with.\" Numerous churches and chapels were closed and put to secular uses; the greater part of the old religious foundations and monasteries were suppressed as early as 1784. Nevertheless there could be no durable peace with the bureaucratic civil authorities, and Bishop Ernest Johann Nepomuk von Herberstein was repeatedly obliged to complain to the emperor of the tutelage in which the Church was kept, but the complaints bore little fruit. Catholic historians said there was an alliance between Joseph and anti-clerical Freemasons.",
"Joseph Schubert (bishop)\n he was sentenced to hard labor for life and freed in August 1964. Sighet prison was among the places where he was incarcerated. Forced to reside at first in Timişu de Sus, he was under constant surveillance from agents of the Religious Affairs Department. In January 1969 he was allowed to emigrate to Western Europe, meeting Pope Paul VI the following month and dying in Munich in April. It was Schubert who consecrated Alexandru Todea bishop in 1950. Prior to leaving Romania, he transferred his administrative duties to Iosif Gonciu, who in turn left them to Ioan Robu in 1983.",
"Max Schubert\n Schubert was born to Lutheran parents in a German community on the fringes of the Barossa Valley, a region renowned for its winemaking. He joined Penfolds in 1931 as a messenger boy and became Penfolds' first chief winemaker in 1948 at the age of 33, a position he held until 1975. Schubert spent his entire working life with Penfolds. He was described as \"a true company man, devoted to Penfolds, (...) a humble and loyal servant of the Penfold family, and later of the public company.\" Schubert served in the Second World War, volunteering against the wishes of his managing director at Penfolds. He is believed to have saved the life of another Australia soldier when Stuka dive-bombers wiped out his convoy in north Africa, killing 200 men. He went on to serve in Greece, Crete, the Middle East, Ceylon and New Guinea, where he contracted malaria. Schubert died in 1994, aged 79, at his home in Adelaide, South Australia. In his obituary The New York Times noted that his Grange had won more wine show prizes than any other Australian red wine, and was regarded as the flagship of Australia's wine industry.",
"Joseph Wolff\n Wolff was born to David Wolff (b. 1760) and his wife in 1795. David Wolff became a rabbi in Weilersbach in 1794, and also served in Kissingen, Halle upon Saale and Uehlfeld, moving to Jebenhausen, Württemberg in 1806, from where he sent his son to the Lutheran lyceum at Stuttgart. Wolff's initial interest in Christianity came about through hearing conversations between his father and Jewish friends, but since he was not happy with his father's concept of Jesus, he began standing outside churches and listening to the sermons. In his writings (written in the third person), Wolff told about his early conviction that Jesus is the Messiah: \"When only seven years old, he was boasting to an aged Christian neighbour of ",
"Joseph Schubert (composer)\nConcerto for Viola and Orchestra in C major (Schott Music, ed. Karlheinz Schultz-Hauser) "
] |
What is the religion of Bellino Giusto Ghirard? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Bellino Giusto Ghirard | 6,262,080 | 37 | [
{
"id": "26195313",
"title": "Bellino Giusto Ghirard",
"text": " Bellino Giusto Ghirard (22 May 1935 − 26 July 2013) was a French Roman Catholic bishop. Ordained to the priesthood in 1962, Ghirard was appointed coadjutor bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Rodez, France, in 1990 and succeeded to the diocese in 1991 retiring in 2011.",
"score": "1.7627611"
},
{
"id": "8181943",
"title": "Gherardo Gnoli",
"text": " Gherardo Gnoli (6 December 1937 in Rome – 7 March 2012 in Cagli) was a historian of Italian religions and Iran expert.",
"score": "1.4167895"
},
{
"id": "12156119",
"title": "Ghirardi",
"text": "Giovanni Battista Pinello di Ghirardi (c. 1544-1587), Italian music composer and Kapellmeister of the Italian Renaissance ; Giancarlo Ghirardi (1935–2018), Italian physicist and emeritus professor of theoretical physics ; Lea Ghirardi (born 1974), French tennis player ; Tommaso Ghirardi (born 1975), Italian businessman in the mechanics industry. Also known for having served as chairman (of BoD) and owner of Italian association football club Parma F.C. from January 2007 to December 2014. Ghirardi is a surname. It may refer to: ",
"score": "1.3970307"
},
{
"id": "31897083",
"title": "Costantino della Gherardesca",
"text": " Costantino della Gherardesca Verecondi Scortecci (born 29 January 1977, in Rome), or simply Costantino della Gherardesca, is an Italian actor, journalist, radio presenter, television personality and presenter. Gherardesca is part of a notable aristocratic family and graduated in philosophy from King's College London, and entered show business at the start of the 2000s. Along with Giorgio Bozzo of P-Nuts he is best known for his participation as a commentator in television shows conducted by Piero Chiambretti, and currently presents Pechino Express and Boss in incognito for RAI and Discovery. Scortecci is the descendant of Count Ugolino della Gherardesca. He is gay and interested in the preservation of the environment.",
"score": "1.3897948"
},
{
"id": "30086730",
"title": "Maurizio Gherardini",
"text": " Maurizio 'Mo' Gherardini (born September 22, 1955) is an Italian sportsman, currently serving as a general manager of Fenerbahçe. In 2017, he was named the EuroLeague Executive of the Year in a year in which his club Fenerbahçe won the EuroLeague championship.",
"score": "1.3740201"
},
{
"id": "27988132",
"title": "Domingo Ghirardelli",
"text": " Domenico Ghirardelli was born on February 21, 1817, in Rapallo, Italy, to Giuseppe and Maddalena ( Ferretto) Ghirardelli. His father was a spice merchant in Genoa. In his teens, he apprenticed at Romanengo, a noted chocolatier in Genoa. At about the age of twenty, in 1838, he moved to Uruguay, then in 1838 to Lima, Peru, where he established a confectionery, and began using the Spanish equivalent of his Italian name, Domingo. In 1849 he moved to California on the recommendation of his former neighbor, James Lick, who had brought 600 pounds of chocolate with him to San Francisco in 1848. Caught up in the California Gold Rush, he opened his first store in a mining camp to sell sweets and treats to miners who were lacking the small pleasures of life. Ghirardelli spent a few months in the gold fields near Sonora and Jamestown, before deciding to become a merchant in Hornitos, California.",
"score": "1.3688867"
},
{
"id": "29143486",
"title": "Baháʼí Faith in Italy",
"text": " Bergamo noting his religion as Baháʼí in. A Sinti gypsy, Vittorio Mayer Custodino, (known as \"Spatzo\" or \"Sparrow\") came in contact with the religion while in prison in Sicily. Through him a number of Sicilian Sinti joined the religion by March 1978. In 1989 the first member of the Arbëreshë, Pietro Pandolfini, from Gela, joined the religion. In 1990 some sixty youth gathered in Gela for a conference. Respecting its regional autonomy and the depth of the Baháʼí community in 1995 the Baháʼís of Sicily elected its own National Assembly. In September 2003 the Baháʼís of Sicily celebrated the golden jubilee of the arrival of the religion there and which in 2003 had eleven assemblies.",
"score": "1.3682697"
},
{
"id": "2006756",
"title": "Gherardi",
"text": "Alessandro Gherardi (born 1988), Italian footballer ; Anna Maria Gherardi (1939–2014), Italian actress and voice actress ; Antonio Gherardi (1638–1702), Italian painter, architect and sculptor ; Bancroft Gherardi (1832–1903), U.S. Navy rear admiral ; Bancroft Gherardi, Jr. (1873–1941), American electrical engineer ; Cristofano Gherardi (1508–1556), Italian painter ; Évariste Gherardi (1663-1700), Italian actor and playwright ; Filippo Gherardi (1643–1704), Italian painter ; Francesca Gherardi (1955-2013), Italian zoologist, ethologist, and ecologist ; Giuseppe Gherardi (1750-1828), Italian painter, active in the Neoclassic style ; Lorenzo Gherardi (1645-1727), Roman Catholic prelate who served as Bishop of Recanati e Loreto ; Maffeo Gherardi (1406–1492), Cardinal of Venice ; Marcella Gherardi Michelangeli (born 1943), Italian former actress and singer ; Piero Gherardi (1909–1971), Italian film costume ",
"score": "1.3674228"
},
{
"id": "8181945",
"title": "Gherardo Gnoli",
"text": " 1995. From 1995 until his death, Gherardo Gnoli was also the president of the Italian Society for the History of Religions. His brother, Raniero Gnoli was Sanskrit and a dentist. Gherardo Gnoli was an international enthusiast to understand Iran. He was also a partner Lincei Academy in France, Russia and Hungary and an honorary member of Paris’s Asian Society, Ancient India and Iran Trust of Cambridge and Institute de France. His name is recorded as number 318 on the list of members of the Masonic lodge P2. He always acted as though he was ignorant about the issues. He was among those without an identification card, an address or any other element which would identify him. As is clear from his parliamentary actions, beginning in September 1981, his positions, even relating to administrative issues, were ultimately archived.",
"score": "1.3602871"
},
{
"id": "26879797",
"title": "Guiscard Bustari",
"text": " Guiscard Bustari was a Florentine Italian adventurer and ambassador, who was employed by the Mongol Il Khan ruler Ghazan. In the summer 1300, Guiscard Bustari is recorded to have led an embassy of one hundred Mongols sent by Ghazan to Pope Boniface VIII. The Mongols, clad in traditional clothes, participated to the Jubilee organized by the Pope, and made a sensation. Ghazan asked Pope to send troops, priests, and peasants, in order to make the Holy Land a Frank state again.",
"score": "1.3563535"
},
{
"id": "20387",
"title": "Raniero Gnoli",
"text": " The Count Raniero Gnoli (born January 20, 1930 in Rome) is an Italian Orientalist, Indologist and historian of religion.",
"score": "1.3539588"
},
{
"id": "8681741",
"title": "Ugolino della Gherardesca",
"text": " Ugolino was born in Pisa into the della Gherardesca family, a noble family of Germanic origins whose alliance with the Hohenstaufen Emperors had brought to prominence in Tuscany and made them the leaders of the Ghibellines in Pisa. Between 1256 and 1258 he participated in the war against the philo-Genoese giudicato of Cagliari, in Sardinia. Ugolino then obtained the south-western portion of the former giudical territory, with its rich silver mines, where he founded the important city of Villa di Chiesa, today Iglesias. As head of his family, the Ghibelline party and podestà of Pisa, Ugolino took action to preserve his power in the face of the political ",
"score": "1.3498164"
},
{
"id": "31907673",
"title": "Alessandro Gherardini",
"text": " Alessandro Gherardini (16 November 1655 – 1726 ) was an Italian painter of the Baroque period, active mainly in Florence. He was the pupil of the painter Alessandro Rosi. In Florence, he painted a Crucifixion for the Monastery of the Augustines adjacent to Santa Maria dei Candeli; and frescoes from the Life of St. Anthony for the Convent of San Marco. He painted frescoes on the Life of Alexander the Great for Casa Orlandini. He is described as a competitor for commissions in Florence with Anton Domenico Gabbiani. Among Gherardini's pupils was Sebastiano Galeotti, who later moved to Genoa.",
"score": "1.3452091"
},
{
"id": "5041493",
"title": "Enrico",
"text": " Italian singer ; Enrico Gilardi (born 1957), Italian former basketball player ; Enrico Giovannini (born 1957), Italian economist and statistician ; Enrico Haffner (1640–1702), Italian painter ; Enrico Hillyer Giglioli (1845–1909), Italian zoologist and anthropologist ; Enrico Kern (born 1979), German football player ; Enrico Komning (born 1968), German politician ; Enrico Kühn (born 1977), German bobsledder ; Enrico Letta (born 1966), Italian politician ; Enrico Lo Verso (born 1964), Italian actor ; Enrico Lorenzetti (1911–1989), Italian professional Grand Prix motorcycle road racer ; Enrico Macias (born 1938), Algerian-born French Jewish singer ; Enrico Mainardi (1897–1976), Italian cellist, composer, and conductor ; Enrico Marconi (1792–1863), Italian-born architect ; Enrico Maria ",
"score": "1.3447891"
},
{
"id": "10877241",
"title": "Ghirardelli Square",
"text": " Lawrence Halprin and William Wurster were architects of Ghirardelli Square.",
"score": "1.3446484"
},
{
"id": "14292661",
"title": "Church of San Giusto, Volterra",
"text": " of Cunincpert, 7th-century king of the Lombards, and the steward of the bishop Gaudenziano Alchis, founder of the first temple dedicated to St Giusto. Placed in an urn on the altar are the relics of the evangelists and martyrs, Carissimo, Dolcissimo and Crescenzio, with 17th-century statues by Francesco Franchi. A chapel houses a canvas paining of Elijah asleep (1631) by Baldassarre Franceschini and the church has altarpieces of St Francis Xavier preaches in India (1743) by Giovanni Domenico Ferretti and a Visitation by Cosimo Daddi. The painting of the Madonna delle Grazie (1451), by Neri di Bicci, originally in this church is now housed in the Diocesan Museum of Sacred Art in Volterra.",
"score": "1.3390853"
},
{
"id": "26499149",
"title": "Gherardini",
"text": "Gherardini family of Montagliari, aristocratic family of Florence ; Alessandro Gherardini (1655–1723), Italian painter of Baroque Florence ; Jacopo Schettini Gherardini (born 1965), Italian economist ; Maurizio Gherardini (b. 1955), Italian sportsman, general manager for the Fenerbahçe Basketball ; Lisa Gherardini (1479–1542), woman depicted in the Mona Lisa painting ; Melchiorre Gherardini (1607-1668), Italian painter, known as Ceranino ; Stefano Gherardini (1695–1755), Italian genre painter ; Tommaso Gherardini (1715–1797), Italian painter of late 18th-century Florence Gherardini is an Italian surname. Notable people with the surname include: ",
"score": "1.336643"
},
{
"id": "6902018",
"title": "Stefano Ghirardelli",
"text": " Stefano Ghirardelli was born in Rome, Italy in 1633. On 14 June 1683, he was appointed during the papacy of Pope Innocent XI as Bishop of Alatri. On 20 June 1683, he was consecrated bishop by Alessandro Crescenzi (cardinal), Cardinal-Priest of Santa Prisca, with Pier Antonio Capobianco, Bishop Emeritus of Lacedonia, and Francesco Maria Giannotti, Bishop of Segni, serving as co-consecrators. He served as Bishop of Alatri until his death in February 1708.",
"score": "1.3264177"
},
{
"id": "6786814",
"title": "Gherardini family",
"text": " life between 1100 and 1300. In 1300 it was exiled from the city when Florence began its transformation into a Signoria. In his Divine Comedy, Dante Alighieri, who was exiled with the Gherardinis, placed the family in Paradise's V Sphere. Following its exile from Tuscany, the family joined the Great Council of Venice (Venice's Chamber of Peers) and until 1800 kept some fiefs between Tuscany and Emilia Romagna. Arms of this family is a quarterly Barry of six vair and gules and imperial eagles. The oldest knightly tomb in Tuscany (in the Church of Sant'Appiano, near Barberino Val d'Elsa) belongs to this family.",
"score": "1.3244708"
},
{
"id": "11646543",
"title": "Franco Venturi",
"text": " The Italian philosopher and sociologist of religions Edoardo Grendi discussed a PhD dissertation on the Benedetto Croce aesthetics under the supervision of Venturi, before moving to the London School of Economics where he was already working on the history of British labour movement between the 189th and the 20th century. Grendi continued the studies of Gabriel Le Bras to investigate statutes and real life of the Roman Catholic local and lay confraternities. He affirmed they werent't originated by the ecclesiastical hierarchy, but by a natural process of group devotion which made lay confraternities the main center of the Ligurian popular spirituality until the suppression decreed by Napoleon in the Enlightment century.",
"score": "1.3234822"
}
] | [
"Bellino Giusto Ghirard\n Bellino Giusto Ghirard (22 May 1935 − 26 July 2013) was a French Roman Catholic bishop. Ordained to the priesthood in 1962, Ghirard was appointed coadjutor bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Rodez, France, in 1990 and succeeded to the diocese in 1991 retiring in 2011.",
"Gherardo Gnoli\n Gherardo Gnoli (6 December 1937 in Rome – 7 March 2012 in Cagli) was a historian of Italian religions and Iran expert.",
"Ghirardi\nGiovanni Battista Pinello di Ghirardi (c. 1544-1587), Italian music composer and Kapellmeister of the Italian Renaissance ; Giancarlo Ghirardi (1935–2018), Italian physicist and emeritus professor of theoretical physics ; Lea Ghirardi (born 1974), French tennis player ; Tommaso Ghirardi (born 1975), Italian businessman in the mechanics industry. Also known for having served as chairman (of BoD) and owner of Italian association football club Parma F.C. from January 2007 to December 2014. Ghirardi is a surname. It may refer to: ",
"Costantino della Gherardesca\n Costantino della Gherardesca Verecondi Scortecci (born 29 January 1977, in Rome), or simply Costantino della Gherardesca, is an Italian actor, journalist, radio presenter, television personality and presenter. Gherardesca is part of a notable aristocratic family and graduated in philosophy from King's College London, and entered show business at the start of the 2000s. Along with Giorgio Bozzo of P-Nuts he is best known for his participation as a commentator in television shows conducted by Piero Chiambretti, and currently presents Pechino Express and Boss in incognito for RAI and Discovery. Scortecci is the descendant of Count Ugolino della Gherardesca. He is gay and interested in the preservation of the environment.",
"Maurizio Gherardini\n Maurizio 'Mo' Gherardini (born September 22, 1955) is an Italian sportsman, currently serving as a general manager of Fenerbahçe. In 2017, he was named the EuroLeague Executive of the Year in a year in which his club Fenerbahçe won the EuroLeague championship.",
"Domingo Ghirardelli\n Domenico Ghirardelli was born on February 21, 1817, in Rapallo, Italy, to Giuseppe and Maddalena ( Ferretto) Ghirardelli. His father was a spice merchant in Genoa. In his teens, he apprenticed at Romanengo, a noted chocolatier in Genoa. At about the age of twenty, in 1838, he moved to Uruguay, then in 1838 to Lima, Peru, where he established a confectionery, and began using the Spanish equivalent of his Italian name, Domingo. In 1849 he moved to California on the recommendation of his former neighbor, James Lick, who had brought 600 pounds of chocolate with him to San Francisco in 1848. Caught up in the California Gold Rush, he opened his first store in a mining camp to sell sweets and treats to miners who were lacking the small pleasures of life. Ghirardelli spent a few months in the gold fields near Sonora and Jamestown, before deciding to become a merchant in Hornitos, California.",
"Baháʼí Faith in Italy\n Bergamo noting his religion as Baháʼí in. A Sinti gypsy, Vittorio Mayer Custodino, (known as \"Spatzo\" or \"Sparrow\") came in contact with the religion while in prison in Sicily. Through him a number of Sicilian Sinti joined the religion by March 1978. In 1989 the first member of the Arbëreshë, Pietro Pandolfini, from Gela, joined the religion. In 1990 some sixty youth gathered in Gela for a conference. Respecting its regional autonomy and the depth of the Baháʼí community in 1995 the Baháʼís of Sicily elected its own National Assembly. In September 2003 the Baháʼís of Sicily celebrated the golden jubilee of the arrival of the religion there and which in 2003 had eleven assemblies.",
"Gherardi\nAlessandro Gherardi (born 1988), Italian footballer ; Anna Maria Gherardi (1939–2014), Italian actress and voice actress ; Antonio Gherardi (1638–1702), Italian painter, architect and sculptor ; Bancroft Gherardi (1832–1903), U.S. Navy rear admiral ; Bancroft Gherardi, Jr. (1873–1941), American electrical engineer ; Cristofano Gherardi (1508–1556), Italian painter ; Évariste Gherardi (1663-1700), Italian actor and playwright ; Filippo Gherardi (1643–1704), Italian painter ; Francesca Gherardi (1955-2013), Italian zoologist, ethologist, and ecologist ; Giuseppe Gherardi (1750-1828), Italian painter, active in the Neoclassic style ; Lorenzo Gherardi (1645-1727), Roman Catholic prelate who served as Bishop of Recanati e Loreto ; Maffeo Gherardi (1406–1492), Cardinal of Venice ; Marcella Gherardi Michelangeli (born 1943), Italian former actress and singer ; Piero Gherardi (1909–1971), Italian film costume ",
"Gherardo Gnoli\n 1995. From 1995 until his death, Gherardo Gnoli was also the president of the Italian Society for the History of Religions. His brother, Raniero Gnoli was Sanskrit and a dentist. Gherardo Gnoli was an international enthusiast to understand Iran. He was also a partner Lincei Academy in France, Russia and Hungary and an honorary member of Paris’s Asian Society, Ancient India and Iran Trust of Cambridge and Institute de France. His name is recorded as number 318 on the list of members of the Masonic lodge P2. He always acted as though he was ignorant about the issues. He was among those without an identification card, an address or any other element which would identify him. As is clear from his parliamentary actions, beginning in September 1981, his positions, even relating to administrative issues, were ultimately archived.",
"Guiscard Bustari\n Guiscard Bustari was a Florentine Italian adventurer and ambassador, who was employed by the Mongol Il Khan ruler Ghazan. In the summer 1300, Guiscard Bustari is recorded to have led an embassy of one hundred Mongols sent by Ghazan to Pope Boniface VIII. The Mongols, clad in traditional clothes, participated to the Jubilee organized by the Pope, and made a sensation. Ghazan asked Pope to send troops, priests, and peasants, in order to make the Holy Land a Frank state again.",
"Raniero Gnoli\n The Count Raniero Gnoli (born January 20, 1930 in Rome) is an Italian Orientalist, Indologist and historian of religion.",
"Ugolino della Gherardesca\n Ugolino was born in Pisa into the della Gherardesca family, a noble family of Germanic origins whose alliance with the Hohenstaufen Emperors had brought to prominence in Tuscany and made them the leaders of the Ghibellines in Pisa. Between 1256 and 1258 he participated in the war against the philo-Genoese giudicato of Cagliari, in Sardinia. Ugolino then obtained the south-western portion of the former giudical territory, with its rich silver mines, where he founded the important city of Villa di Chiesa, today Iglesias. As head of his family, the Ghibelline party and podestà of Pisa, Ugolino took action to preserve his power in the face of the political ",
"Alessandro Gherardini\n Alessandro Gherardini (16 November 1655 – 1726 ) was an Italian painter of the Baroque period, active mainly in Florence. He was the pupil of the painter Alessandro Rosi. In Florence, he painted a Crucifixion for the Monastery of the Augustines adjacent to Santa Maria dei Candeli; and frescoes from the Life of St. Anthony for the Convent of San Marco. He painted frescoes on the Life of Alexander the Great for Casa Orlandini. He is described as a competitor for commissions in Florence with Anton Domenico Gabbiani. Among Gherardini's pupils was Sebastiano Galeotti, who later moved to Genoa.",
"Enrico\n Italian singer ; Enrico Gilardi (born 1957), Italian former basketball player ; Enrico Giovannini (born 1957), Italian economist and statistician ; Enrico Haffner (1640–1702), Italian painter ; Enrico Hillyer Giglioli (1845–1909), Italian zoologist and anthropologist ; Enrico Kern (born 1979), German football player ; Enrico Komning (born 1968), German politician ; Enrico Kühn (born 1977), German bobsledder ; Enrico Letta (born 1966), Italian politician ; Enrico Lo Verso (born 1964), Italian actor ; Enrico Lorenzetti (1911–1989), Italian professional Grand Prix motorcycle road racer ; Enrico Macias (born 1938), Algerian-born French Jewish singer ; Enrico Mainardi (1897–1976), Italian cellist, composer, and conductor ; Enrico Marconi (1792–1863), Italian-born architect ; Enrico Maria ",
"Ghirardelli Square\n Lawrence Halprin and William Wurster were architects of Ghirardelli Square.",
"Church of San Giusto, Volterra\n of Cunincpert, 7th-century king of the Lombards, and the steward of the bishop Gaudenziano Alchis, founder of the first temple dedicated to St Giusto. Placed in an urn on the altar are the relics of the evangelists and martyrs, Carissimo, Dolcissimo and Crescenzio, with 17th-century statues by Francesco Franchi. A chapel houses a canvas paining of Elijah asleep (1631) by Baldassarre Franceschini and the church has altarpieces of St Francis Xavier preaches in India (1743) by Giovanni Domenico Ferretti and a Visitation by Cosimo Daddi. The painting of the Madonna delle Grazie (1451), by Neri di Bicci, originally in this church is now housed in the Diocesan Museum of Sacred Art in Volterra.",
"Gherardini\nGherardini family of Montagliari, aristocratic family of Florence ; Alessandro Gherardini (1655–1723), Italian painter of Baroque Florence ; Jacopo Schettini Gherardini (born 1965), Italian economist ; Maurizio Gherardini (b. 1955), Italian sportsman, general manager for the Fenerbahçe Basketball ; Lisa Gherardini (1479–1542), woman depicted in the Mona Lisa painting ; Melchiorre Gherardini (1607-1668), Italian painter, known as Ceranino ; Stefano Gherardini (1695–1755), Italian genre painter ; Tommaso Gherardini (1715–1797), Italian painter of late 18th-century Florence Gherardini is an Italian surname. Notable people with the surname include: ",
"Stefano Ghirardelli\n Stefano Ghirardelli was born in Rome, Italy in 1633. On 14 June 1683, he was appointed during the papacy of Pope Innocent XI as Bishop of Alatri. On 20 June 1683, he was consecrated bishop by Alessandro Crescenzi (cardinal), Cardinal-Priest of Santa Prisca, with Pier Antonio Capobianco, Bishop Emeritus of Lacedonia, and Francesco Maria Giannotti, Bishop of Segni, serving as co-consecrators. He served as Bishop of Alatri until his death in February 1708.",
"Gherardini family\n life between 1100 and 1300. In 1300 it was exiled from the city when Florence began its transformation into a Signoria. In his Divine Comedy, Dante Alighieri, who was exiled with the Gherardinis, placed the family in Paradise's V Sphere. Following its exile from Tuscany, the family joined the Great Council of Venice (Venice's Chamber of Peers) and until 1800 kept some fiefs between Tuscany and Emilia Romagna. Arms of this family is a quarterly Barry of six vair and gules and imperial eagles. The oldest knightly tomb in Tuscany (in the Church of Sant'Appiano, near Barberino Val d'Elsa) belongs to this family.",
"Franco Venturi\n The Italian philosopher and sociologist of religions Edoardo Grendi discussed a PhD dissertation on the Benedetto Croce aesthetics under the supervision of Venturi, before moving to the London School of Economics where he was already working on the history of British labour movement between the 189th and the 20th century. Grendi continued the studies of Gabriel Le Bras to investigate statutes and real life of the Roman Catholic local and lay confraternities. He affirmed they werent't originated by the ecclesiastical hierarchy, but by a natural process of group devotion which made lay confraternities the main center of the Ligurian popular spirituality until the suppression decreed by Napoleon in the Enlightment century."
] |
What is the religion of Heinrich Fasching? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Heinrich Fasching | 6,370,984 | 20 | [
{
"id": "2833467",
"title": "Heinrich Fasching",
"text": " Heinrich Fasching (24 May 1929 – 1 June 2014) was a Roman Catholic bishop. Ordained to the priesthood in 1954, Fasching was named titular bishop of Acci and auxiliary bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Sankt Pölten in 1993. He retired in 2004.",
"score": "1.7544323"
},
{
"id": "10144931",
"title": "Heinrich Pesch",
"text": " Heinrich Pesch, S.J. (17 September 1854 – 1 April 1926) was a German Roman Catholic ethicist and economist of the Solidarist school. His major work, Lehrbuch der Nationalökonomie, is generally regarded as a source for Pope Pius XI's social encyclical Quadragesimo anno.",
"score": "1.5584383"
},
{
"id": "31089504",
"title": "Jakob Wilhelm Hauer",
"text": " with Ernst Graf zu Reventlow in this endeavour and in 1934 founded the German Faith Movement (Deutsche Glaubensbewegung), which combined a number of existing communities in a Völkisch faith influenced by Hinduism. Hauer's admiration for Hinduism centred on the Bhagavad Gita, to which he had been particularly drawn. He described it as \"a work of imperishable significance\", arguing that it called on people to \"master the riddle of life\". By July 1934 the religion had been ratified as Hauer celebrated his first wedding without other clergy. It had initially been hoped that it might be adopted as the state religion of the Third Reich but ",
"score": "1.5011001"
},
{
"id": "8611195",
"title": "Ludwig Fahrenkrog",
"text": " The first group started by Fahrenkrog was the Deutscher Bund für Persönlichkeitskultur (German League for the Culture of the Personality), which also supported a publication called Mehr Licht! (\"More Light!\", the famous last words of Goethe). He was also involved with the Deutsche Religionsgemeinschaft (German Religious Community [DRG]), which would later change its name several times, first in 1912 to Germanisch-Deutsche Religionsgemeinschaft (Germanic-German Religious Community [GDRG]), then in 1915, following a split in the membership, to the Deutschgläubige Gemeinschaft (Association of the German Faithful [DGG]). Fahrenkrog remained with the GDRG after several members left following disagreements over the place of the old Germanic gods and the inclusion of a partly Jewish member, and shortly thereafter the group changed its name to the Germanische Glaubens-Gemeinschaft (Germanic Faith-Community [GGG]), its final form. In 1916, the group set out ten points of common belief which they ",
"score": "1.4988006"
},
{
"id": "10837294",
"title": "Bernd Fasching",
"text": " Bernd Fasching (born 18 July 1955 in Vienna, Austria) is an Austrian painter and sculptor. He lives and works in Vienna.",
"score": "1.491116"
},
{
"id": "10144932",
"title": "Heinrich Pesch",
"text": " After studying law at Bonn, Pesch entered the Society of Jesus in 1876. He made his novitiate with exiled German Jesuits in the Netherlands. For his studies of philosophy (1878-1881) Pesch was sent to Bleijenbeek, also in the Netherlands. He completed his theological studies at Ditton Hall (1884-1888). While in England, Pesch lectured for a few years at the Stella Matutina school. He was ordained priest in 1888. From 1892 until 1900 Pesch was spiritual director at the Mainz seminary, where he wrote his first book Liberalism, Socialism and Christian Order. Through lectures of the publicist Rudolf Meyer Pesch became acquainted with the teachings of Marx and Rodbertus. After a renewed study of economics with Schmoller and Wagner in Berlin (1900-1902), Pesch moved to Luxembourg and worked on his major opus Lehrbuch der Nationalökonomie. He died in 1926.",
"score": "1.4772532"
},
{
"id": "26373593",
"title": "Arthur Drews",
"text": " A thorough description of this religious movement was presented by Ulrich Nanko in his 1993 book on the movement. Many adventurers were trying to ride the coattails of the Nazi success to establish new spiritual/religious movements. Among them were the founders of the new German Faith Movement (Deutsche Glaubensbewegung), founded by Jakob W. Hauer (1881–1962), and Ernst Graf zu Reventlow (1869–1943). Hauer had been a Protestant missionary in India, who had turned into a Sanskrit scholar imbued with the spirituality of Hinduism and a professor at the University of Tübingen. His friend Ernst Graf zu Reventlow had been a navy officer, a journalist, and a Reichstag deputy ",
"score": "1.4501126"
},
{
"id": "26235577",
"title": "Heathenry (new religious movement)",
"text": " Fahrenkrog supported his claims, resulting in the formation of both the Bund für Persönlichkeitskultur (League for the Culture of the Personality) and the Deutscher Orden in 1911 and then the Germanische-Deutsche Religionsgemeinschaft (Germanic-German Religious Community) in 1912. Another development of Heathenry emerged within the occult völkisch movement known as Ariosophy. One of these völkisch Ariosophists was the Austrian occultist Guido von List, who established a religion that he termed \"Wotanism\", with an inner core that he referred to as \"Armanism\". List's Wotanism was based heavily on the Eddas, although over time it was increasingly influenced by the Theosophical Society's teachings. List's ideas were transmitted in Germany by prominent right-wingers, and adherents to his ideas were ",
"score": "1.447988"
},
{
"id": "13691167",
"title": "Herman Wirth",
"text": " der Menschheit. Between 1933 and 1935, there was a large philosophical clash encouraged by the Nazi party between the churches, and neo-paganism supported by völkisch theories. Wirth was among those who tried to reinterpret Christianity in terms of ethnic Nordic origin of original monotheism. The free-thinking neo-pagans founded a supporting group in 1933, and included Wirth, Jakob Wilhelm Hauer, and until 1934 Ernst Bergmann and numerous ex-Communists. In 1934, Wirth advanced plans to create an organization called Deutsches Ahnenerbe e.V. which was intended to host and exhibit his collection. Although he was supported by Roselius, the Verein was seemingly never set up. But von Leers had brought Wirth into contact with Heinrich ",
"score": "1.4360298"
},
{
"id": "12404082",
"title": "Karl Marx",
"text": " vineyards, in addition to his income as an attorney. Prior to his son's birth and after the abrogation of Jewish emancipation in the Rhineland, Herschel converted from Judaism to join the state Evangelical Church of Prussia, taking on the German forename Heinrich over the Yiddish Herschel. Largely non-religious, Heinrich was a man of the Enlightenment, interested in the ideas of the philosophers Immanuel Kant and Voltaire. A classical liberal, he took part in agitation for a constitution and reforms in Prussia, which was then an absolute monarchy. In 1815, Heinrich Marx began working as an attorney and in 1819 moved his family to a ten-room property near the Porta Nigra. His wife, Henriette Pressburg, was a Dutch Jewish ",
"score": "1.4359651"
},
{
"id": "31132385",
"title": "Clark Heinrich",
"text": " Clark Heinrich (born 1945) is an American author living in the coastal mountains of California, specializing in comparative religion and ethno-botany since 1974. He has reportedly studied with masters of yoga and Western mysticism. He is known for his views on consuming the mushroom fly agaric or Amanita muscaria as a hallucinogenic to achieve religious ecstasy. His book Magic Mushrooms in Religion and Alchemy, which is an improved second edition of his earlier Strange Fruit, explores the role that Amanita muscaria may have played in various mythologies, belief systems and religious art throughout history, such as Native American Anishinaabeg mythology, the Rig Veda, the Puranas, the biblical Old Testament and New Testament, Gnosticism, the Holy Grail legend, Alchemy and Renaissance painting. The book The Apples of Apollo: Pagan and Christian Mysteries of the Eucharist deals with possible occurrences of entheogens in general, and Amanita muscaria in particular, in Greek and biblical mythology and later on in Renaissance painting, most notably in the Isenheim Altarpiece by Matthias Grünewald.",
"score": "1.4335984"
},
{
"id": "10007080",
"title": "Henry Nicholis",
"text": " Hendrik Nicholis (or Hendrik Niclaes, Henry Nichlaes, Heinrich Niclaes; c. 1501 – c. 1580) was a German mystic and founder of the Christian sect \"Familia Caritatis\" (a.k.a. \"Family of Love\",\"Familia Caritatis\" or \"Hus der Lieften\").",
"score": "1.4335825"
},
{
"id": "4198592",
"title": "Esotericism in Germany and Austria",
"text": " The German Faith Movement led by Jakob Wilhelm Hauer during 1933-1945 propagated a move away from Christianity towards an \"Aryan-Nordic religion\", partly inspired by Hinduism.",
"score": "1.4334412"
},
{
"id": "8611193",
"title": "Ludwig Fahrenkrog",
"text": " Ludwig Fahrenkrog (20 October 1867 – 27 October 1952) was a German painter, illustrator, sculptor and writer. He was born in Rendsburg, Prussia, in 1867. He started his career as an artist in his youth, and attended the Berlin Royal Art Academy before being appointed a professor in 1913. He taught at the School of Arts and Crafts in Bremen from 1898 to 1931. He was also involved in the founding of a series of modern Pagan religious groups in the early 20th century, as part of a movement to create what its adherents referred to as a \"Germanic religious community\".",
"score": "1.4331788"
},
{
"id": "26235579",
"title": "Heathenry (new religious movement)",
"text": " intellectuals, including journalists, artists, illustrators, scholars, and teachers, and thus exerted a wider influence on German society. The völkisch occultists—among them Pagans like List and Christians like Jörg Lanz von Liebenfels—\"contributed importantly to the mood of the Nazi era\". Few had a direct influence on the Nazi Party leadership, with one prominent exception: Karl Maria Wiligut was both a friend and a key influence on the Schutzstaffel (SS) leader Heinrich Himmler. Wiligut professed ancestral-clairvoyant memories of ancient German society, proclaiming that \"Wotanism\" was in conflict with another ancient religion, \"Irminenschaft\", which was devoted to a messianic Germanic figure known as Krist, who was later wrongly transformed into the figure of Jesus. Many Heathen groups ",
"score": "1.4269665"
},
{
"id": "1690846",
"title": "Bagrationovsk",
"text": "Hugo Falkenheim (1856–1945), medical doctor and last Chairman of the Jewish parish of Königsberg ; Konrad Theodor Preuss (1869–1938), ethnologist ; Robert Kudicke (1876-1961), physician and epidemiologist specializing in tropical medicine, university lecturer in Guangdong and Frankfurt am Main ",
"score": "1.4237266"
},
{
"id": "3992353",
"title": "Catholic bishops in Nazi Germany",
"text": " three Advent sermons of 1933, entitled Judaism, Christianity, and Germany, affirmed the Jewish origins of the Christian religion, the continuity of the Old and New Testaments of the Bible, and the importance of the Christian tradition to Germany. According to the Encyclopædia Britannica, \"Throughout his sermons until the collapse (1945) of the Third Reich, Faulhaber vigorously criticized Nazism, despite governmental opposition. Attempts on his life were made in 1934 and in 1938. He worked with American occupation forces after the war, and received the West German Republic's highest award, the Grand Cross of the Order of Merit. On November 4, 1936, Hitler ",
"score": "1.4228443"
},
{
"id": "27320618",
"title": "Josef Frings",
"text": " Frings was born as the first of eight children of Heinrich, a weaving industrialist and manufacturer, and Maria (née Sels) Frings, in Neuss. He was baptised on 10 August 1887. After 1905 he studied Catholic theology in Munich, Innsbruck, Freiburg and Bonn. On 10 August 1910, he received his ordination to the priesthood. At first he worked as a chaplain in Cologne-Zollstock until 1913, followed by a study visit in Rome until 1915. In 1916, he earned a doctorate in theology in Freiburg. From 1915 to 1922, he was community Reverend in Cologne-Fühlingen. Then, he worked as a principal of an orphanage in Neuss from 1922 to 1924. Until 1937, he was the community reverend of Cologne-Braunsfeld. ",
"score": "1.4213556"
},
{
"id": "13245621",
"title": "Rolf Wilhelm Brednich",
"text": " of the Folktale and co-editor of the journal Fabula. Between 1983 and 1999 he was head of the Volkskundliche Kommission für Niedersachsen e.V. and from 1991 through 1999 head of the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Volkskunde e.V.. In 2000 he was designated Senior Honorary Research Fellow at Stout Centre of the Victoria University of Wellington in New Zealand. Since 2005 he has been Visiting Professor of Anthropology at the School of Social and Cultural Studies at that university. He has carried out research in Germany, Canada, and New Zealand. Among the general German-speaking public, he made his name with collections of urban legends, starting with Die Spinne in der Yucca-Palme.",
"score": "1.4182291"
},
{
"id": "6966234",
"title": "Carl Friedrich Christian Fasch",
"text": " Carl Friedrich Christian Fasch (1736–1800) was a German composer and harpsichordist. Born in Zerbst, he was the son of the composer Johann Friedrich Fasch. He was initially taught by his father. In 1756 he began service at the court of Frederick the Great of Prussia, where he served as deputy to Court harpsichordist C.P.E. Bach, whose post he attained when Bach left the court for Hamburg in 1767. In 1791 he founded the Sing-Akademie in Berlin which quickly became an important centre of Berlin's musical life. In its concerts Fasch promoted the music of J.S. Bach and other masters of the Baroque period, as well as contemporary music. The Akademie was visited by Beethoven in 1796. Fasch also composed numerous works for the Sing-Akademie. His Mass for sixteen voices, a virtuosic mass accompanied solely by organ continuo, is a choral masterpiece of the late 18th century. Fasch died in Berlin in 1800. His grave is preserved in the Protestant Friedhof I der Jerusalems- und Neuen Kirchengemeinde (Cemetery No. I of the congregations of Jerusalem's Church and New Church) in Berlin-Kreuzberg, south of Hallesches Tor. He was succeeded as head of the Akademie by Carl Friedrich Zelter.",
"score": "1.4163847"
}
] | [
"Heinrich Fasching\n Heinrich Fasching (24 May 1929 – 1 June 2014) was a Roman Catholic bishop. Ordained to the priesthood in 1954, Fasching was named titular bishop of Acci and auxiliary bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Sankt Pölten in 1993. He retired in 2004.",
"Heinrich Pesch\n Heinrich Pesch, S.J. (17 September 1854 – 1 April 1926) was a German Roman Catholic ethicist and economist of the Solidarist school. His major work, Lehrbuch der Nationalökonomie, is generally regarded as a source for Pope Pius XI's social encyclical Quadragesimo anno.",
"Jakob Wilhelm Hauer\n with Ernst Graf zu Reventlow in this endeavour and in 1934 founded the German Faith Movement (Deutsche Glaubensbewegung), which combined a number of existing communities in a Völkisch faith influenced by Hinduism. Hauer's admiration for Hinduism centred on the Bhagavad Gita, to which he had been particularly drawn. He described it as \"a work of imperishable significance\", arguing that it called on people to \"master the riddle of life\". By July 1934 the religion had been ratified as Hauer celebrated his first wedding without other clergy. It had initially been hoped that it might be adopted as the state religion of the Third Reich but ",
"Ludwig Fahrenkrog\n The first group started by Fahrenkrog was the Deutscher Bund für Persönlichkeitskultur (German League for the Culture of the Personality), which also supported a publication called Mehr Licht! (\"More Light!\", the famous last words of Goethe). He was also involved with the Deutsche Religionsgemeinschaft (German Religious Community [DRG]), which would later change its name several times, first in 1912 to Germanisch-Deutsche Religionsgemeinschaft (Germanic-German Religious Community [GDRG]), then in 1915, following a split in the membership, to the Deutschgläubige Gemeinschaft (Association of the German Faithful [DGG]). Fahrenkrog remained with the GDRG after several members left following disagreements over the place of the old Germanic gods and the inclusion of a partly Jewish member, and shortly thereafter the group changed its name to the Germanische Glaubens-Gemeinschaft (Germanic Faith-Community [GGG]), its final form. In 1916, the group set out ten points of common belief which they ",
"Bernd Fasching\n Bernd Fasching (born 18 July 1955 in Vienna, Austria) is an Austrian painter and sculptor. He lives and works in Vienna.",
"Heinrich Pesch\n After studying law at Bonn, Pesch entered the Society of Jesus in 1876. He made his novitiate with exiled German Jesuits in the Netherlands. For his studies of philosophy (1878-1881) Pesch was sent to Bleijenbeek, also in the Netherlands. He completed his theological studies at Ditton Hall (1884-1888). While in England, Pesch lectured for a few years at the Stella Matutina school. He was ordained priest in 1888. From 1892 until 1900 Pesch was spiritual director at the Mainz seminary, where he wrote his first book Liberalism, Socialism and Christian Order. Through lectures of the publicist Rudolf Meyer Pesch became acquainted with the teachings of Marx and Rodbertus. After a renewed study of economics with Schmoller and Wagner in Berlin (1900-1902), Pesch moved to Luxembourg and worked on his major opus Lehrbuch der Nationalökonomie. He died in 1926.",
"Arthur Drews\n A thorough description of this religious movement was presented by Ulrich Nanko in his 1993 book on the movement. Many adventurers were trying to ride the coattails of the Nazi success to establish new spiritual/religious movements. Among them were the founders of the new German Faith Movement (Deutsche Glaubensbewegung), founded by Jakob W. Hauer (1881–1962), and Ernst Graf zu Reventlow (1869–1943). Hauer had been a Protestant missionary in India, who had turned into a Sanskrit scholar imbued with the spirituality of Hinduism and a professor at the University of Tübingen. His friend Ernst Graf zu Reventlow had been a navy officer, a journalist, and a Reichstag deputy ",
"Heathenry (new religious movement)\n Fahrenkrog supported his claims, resulting in the formation of both the Bund für Persönlichkeitskultur (League for the Culture of the Personality) and the Deutscher Orden in 1911 and then the Germanische-Deutsche Religionsgemeinschaft (Germanic-German Religious Community) in 1912. Another development of Heathenry emerged within the occult völkisch movement known as Ariosophy. One of these völkisch Ariosophists was the Austrian occultist Guido von List, who established a religion that he termed \"Wotanism\", with an inner core that he referred to as \"Armanism\". List's Wotanism was based heavily on the Eddas, although over time it was increasingly influenced by the Theosophical Society's teachings. List's ideas were transmitted in Germany by prominent right-wingers, and adherents to his ideas were ",
"Herman Wirth\n der Menschheit. Between 1933 and 1935, there was a large philosophical clash encouraged by the Nazi party between the churches, and neo-paganism supported by völkisch theories. Wirth was among those who tried to reinterpret Christianity in terms of ethnic Nordic origin of original monotheism. The free-thinking neo-pagans founded a supporting group in 1933, and included Wirth, Jakob Wilhelm Hauer, and until 1934 Ernst Bergmann and numerous ex-Communists. In 1934, Wirth advanced plans to create an organization called Deutsches Ahnenerbe e.V. which was intended to host and exhibit his collection. Although he was supported by Roselius, the Verein was seemingly never set up. But von Leers had brought Wirth into contact with Heinrich ",
"Karl Marx\n vineyards, in addition to his income as an attorney. Prior to his son's birth and after the abrogation of Jewish emancipation in the Rhineland, Herschel converted from Judaism to join the state Evangelical Church of Prussia, taking on the German forename Heinrich over the Yiddish Herschel. Largely non-religious, Heinrich was a man of the Enlightenment, interested in the ideas of the philosophers Immanuel Kant and Voltaire. A classical liberal, he took part in agitation for a constitution and reforms in Prussia, which was then an absolute monarchy. In 1815, Heinrich Marx began working as an attorney and in 1819 moved his family to a ten-room property near the Porta Nigra. His wife, Henriette Pressburg, was a Dutch Jewish ",
"Clark Heinrich\n Clark Heinrich (born 1945) is an American author living in the coastal mountains of California, specializing in comparative religion and ethno-botany since 1974. He has reportedly studied with masters of yoga and Western mysticism. He is known for his views on consuming the mushroom fly agaric or Amanita muscaria as a hallucinogenic to achieve religious ecstasy. His book Magic Mushrooms in Religion and Alchemy, which is an improved second edition of his earlier Strange Fruit, explores the role that Amanita muscaria may have played in various mythologies, belief systems and religious art throughout history, such as Native American Anishinaabeg mythology, the Rig Veda, the Puranas, the biblical Old Testament and New Testament, Gnosticism, the Holy Grail legend, Alchemy and Renaissance painting. The book The Apples of Apollo: Pagan and Christian Mysteries of the Eucharist deals with possible occurrences of entheogens in general, and Amanita muscaria in particular, in Greek and biblical mythology and later on in Renaissance painting, most notably in the Isenheim Altarpiece by Matthias Grünewald.",
"Henry Nicholis\n Hendrik Nicholis (or Hendrik Niclaes, Henry Nichlaes, Heinrich Niclaes; c. 1501 – c. 1580) was a German mystic and founder of the Christian sect \"Familia Caritatis\" (a.k.a. \"Family of Love\",\"Familia Caritatis\" or \"Hus der Lieften\").",
"Esotericism in Germany and Austria\n The German Faith Movement led by Jakob Wilhelm Hauer during 1933-1945 propagated a move away from Christianity towards an \"Aryan-Nordic religion\", partly inspired by Hinduism.",
"Ludwig Fahrenkrog\n Ludwig Fahrenkrog (20 October 1867 – 27 October 1952) was a German painter, illustrator, sculptor and writer. He was born in Rendsburg, Prussia, in 1867. He started his career as an artist in his youth, and attended the Berlin Royal Art Academy before being appointed a professor in 1913. He taught at the School of Arts and Crafts in Bremen from 1898 to 1931. He was also involved in the founding of a series of modern Pagan religious groups in the early 20th century, as part of a movement to create what its adherents referred to as a \"Germanic religious community\".",
"Heathenry (new religious movement)\n intellectuals, including journalists, artists, illustrators, scholars, and teachers, and thus exerted a wider influence on German society. The völkisch occultists—among them Pagans like List and Christians like Jörg Lanz von Liebenfels—\"contributed importantly to the mood of the Nazi era\". Few had a direct influence on the Nazi Party leadership, with one prominent exception: Karl Maria Wiligut was both a friend and a key influence on the Schutzstaffel (SS) leader Heinrich Himmler. Wiligut professed ancestral-clairvoyant memories of ancient German society, proclaiming that \"Wotanism\" was in conflict with another ancient religion, \"Irminenschaft\", which was devoted to a messianic Germanic figure known as Krist, who was later wrongly transformed into the figure of Jesus. Many Heathen groups ",
"Bagrationovsk\nHugo Falkenheim (1856–1945), medical doctor and last Chairman of the Jewish parish of Königsberg ; Konrad Theodor Preuss (1869–1938), ethnologist ; Robert Kudicke (1876-1961), physician and epidemiologist specializing in tropical medicine, university lecturer in Guangdong and Frankfurt am Main ",
"Catholic bishops in Nazi Germany\n three Advent sermons of 1933, entitled Judaism, Christianity, and Germany, affirmed the Jewish origins of the Christian religion, the continuity of the Old and New Testaments of the Bible, and the importance of the Christian tradition to Germany. According to the Encyclopædia Britannica, \"Throughout his sermons until the collapse (1945) of the Third Reich, Faulhaber vigorously criticized Nazism, despite governmental opposition. Attempts on his life were made in 1934 and in 1938. He worked with American occupation forces after the war, and received the West German Republic's highest award, the Grand Cross of the Order of Merit. On November 4, 1936, Hitler ",
"Josef Frings\n Frings was born as the first of eight children of Heinrich, a weaving industrialist and manufacturer, and Maria (née Sels) Frings, in Neuss. He was baptised on 10 August 1887. After 1905 he studied Catholic theology in Munich, Innsbruck, Freiburg and Bonn. On 10 August 1910, he received his ordination to the priesthood. At first he worked as a chaplain in Cologne-Zollstock until 1913, followed by a study visit in Rome until 1915. In 1916, he earned a doctorate in theology in Freiburg. From 1915 to 1922, he was community Reverend in Cologne-Fühlingen. Then, he worked as a principal of an orphanage in Neuss from 1922 to 1924. Until 1937, he was the community reverend of Cologne-Braunsfeld. ",
"Rolf Wilhelm Brednich\n of the Folktale and co-editor of the journal Fabula. Between 1983 and 1999 he was head of the Volkskundliche Kommission für Niedersachsen e.V. and from 1991 through 1999 head of the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Volkskunde e.V.. In 2000 he was designated Senior Honorary Research Fellow at Stout Centre of the Victoria University of Wellington in New Zealand. Since 2005 he has been Visiting Professor of Anthropology at the School of Social and Cultural Studies at that university. He has carried out research in Germany, Canada, and New Zealand. Among the general German-speaking public, he made his name with collections of urban legends, starting with Die Spinne in der Yucca-Palme.",
"Carl Friedrich Christian Fasch\n Carl Friedrich Christian Fasch (1736–1800) was a German composer and harpsichordist. Born in Zerbst, he was the son of the composer Johann Friedrich Fasch. He was initially taught by his father. In 1756 he began service at the court of Frederick the Great of Prussia, where he served as deputy to Court harpsichordist C.P.E. Bach, whose post he attained when Bach left the court for Hamburg in 1767. In 1791 he founded the Sing-Akademie in Berlin which quickly became an important centre of Berlin's musical life. In its concerts Fasch promoted the music of J.S. Bach and other masters of the Baroque period, as well as contemporary music. The Akademie was visited by Beethoven in 1796. Fasch also composed numerous works for the Sing-Akademie. His Mass for sixteen voices, a virtuosic mass accompanied solely by organ continuo, is a choral masterpiece of the late 18th century. Fasch died in Berlin in 1800. His grave is preserved in the Protestant Friedhof I der Jerusalems- und Neuen Kirchengemeinde (Cemetery No. I of the congregations of Jerusalem's Church and New Church) in Berlin-Kreuzberg, south of Hallesches Tor. He was succeeded as head of the Akademie by Carl Friedrich Zelter."
] |
What is the religion of Angelo Maria Rivato? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Angelo Maria Rivato | 4,018,345 | 44 | [
{
"id": "11700368",
"title": "Angelo Maria Rivato",
"text": " Angelo Maria Rivato (December 3, 1924 – August 20, 2011) was the first Catholic bishop of the Diocese of Ponta de Pedras, Brazil. Born in Italy, Rivato was ordained to the priesthood for the Society of Jesus. In 1967 he was ordained as bishop and was appointed the first bishop of the Ponta de Pedras Diocese.",
"score": "1.6979306"
},
{
"id": "1309335",
"title": "Angelo Rizzo",
"text": " Angelo Rizzo (April 11, 1926, Montedoro, Province of Caltanissetta - July 16, 2009, Montedoro) was the Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Ragusa, Sicily from February 2, 1974 until his retirement on February 16, 2002. He was succeeded as bishop by Paolo Urso. Rizzo died on July 16, 2009, in his native Montedoro of 83.",
"score": "1.4179654"
},
{
"id": "985894",
"title": "Self-crucifixion of Mattio Lovat",
"text": " Mattio Lovat was born in Casale, at the territory of Belluno, in 1761, in Italy. A son of poor parents, he was a shoemaker. On November 13, 1802 he went to Venice, where a younger brother named Angelo conducted Mattio to the house of a widow, the relict of Andrew Osgualda, with whom he lodged, until September 21, 1803. On the mentioned day, he made an attempt to crucify himself, in the middle of the street called Cross of Biri.",
"score": "1.4134383"
},
{
"id": "9281992",
"title": "Angelo Maria Angeli",
"text": " Angelo Maria Angelo Flavio Comneno (Latin: Angelus Maria Angelus Flavius Comnenus; 1600–1678) was the Grand Master of the Constantinian Order of Saint George from 1634 to 1678. Angelo Maria's family, the Angelo Flavio Comneno, claimed descent from the Angelos dynasty of Byzantine emperors, and Angelo Maria also claimed the titles \"Prince of Macedonia and Thessaly\" and \"Duke and Count of Drivasto and Durazzo\".",
"score": "1.4042618"
},
{
"id": "12944412",
"title": "Ángelo Martino",
"text": " .",
"score": "1.3742424"
},
{
"id": "7190362",
"title": "Angelo Flavio Comneno",
"text": " The Angelo Flavio Comneno or Angeli family were an Italian noble family of Albanian descent who claimed descent from the Angelos dynasty of the Byzantine Empire. In the 16th century, the family founded the Sacred Military Constantinian Order of Saint George, a knightly order with invented Byzantine connections. From the 16th century onwards, the heads of the family styled themselves as \"Prince of Macedonia, Duke and Count of Drivasto and Durazzo\", though other titles were also sometimes used. It is possible that their claims to descent from the Angeloi were genuine, but their own genealogies, which professed descent from Emperor Isaac II Angelos ((r. undefined – undefined)1185–1195 and 1203–1204) ",
"score": "1.3563421"
},
{
"id": "13902897",
"title": "Santa Maria in Montesanto (Rome)",
"text": " Angelo Roncalli, the future Pope John XXIII, was ordained a priest; the event is remembered by a plaque affixed during his pontificate. Since 1953 the church has become the seat of the \"Mass of the artists\", a singular initiative conceived in 1941 by presbyter and art historian Ennio Francia; after changing several places for worship, the liturgical event took place in the church in Piazza del Popolo, where every Sunday, for over sixty years, this Eucharistic celebration has been celebrated with representatives of the world of culture and art. It is also in this church that the funeral of people linked to the world of culture and television is often celebrated. For these reasons, it is also known as \"Church of the artists\".",
"score": "1.3552349"
},
{
"id": "1273783",
"title": "Angelo Cuniberti",
"text": " Angelo Cuniberti, I.M.C. (6 February 1921 – 26 June 2012) was an Italian Prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. Cuniberti was born in Mondovì, Italy and was ordained a priest on 29 June 1944 of the religious order of Consolata Missionary. Cuniberti was appointed Prelate to the Florencia Diocese on 18 April 1961 and resigned as prelate on 15 November 1978. Cuniberti was appointed Titular Bishop of Arsinoë in Cypro on 18 April 1961 and ordained on 21 May 1961.",
"score": "1.3545568"
},
{
"id": "9281993",
"title": "Angelo Maria Angeli",
"text": " Angelo Maria was born in 1600 as the eldest son of Michele Angeli, who in turn was the eldest son of Girolamo I Angeli. Angelo Maria had a younger brother, Marco, as well as three sisters; Ursula, Maria Altadonna and Laura. Angelo Maria's family, the Angelo Flavio Comneno, claimed descent from the Angelos dynasty of Byzantine emperors. In the mid-15th century, Michele's uncles Andrea and Paolo were officially acknowledged as descendants of the Angelos emperors by Pope Paul III ((r. undefined – undefined)1534–1549) and founded the Sacred Military Constantinian Order of Saint George, a chivalric order with invented Byzantine connections. Angelo Maria's father Michele was technically of illegitimate birth, having been born while his mother, Ursula Bini, was ",
"score": "1.3539758"
},
{
"id": "4671806",
"title": "Angelo Vincenzo Zani",
"text": " Zani was born in Pralboino, Brescia, Italy, on 24 March 1950. He studied philosophy and theology at the seminary of Brescia, the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum and the Pontifical Lateran University where he was awarded a doctorate in theology. Zani was ordained to the priesthood on 20 September 1975 by Luigi Morstabilini, Bishop of Brescia. He then attended the Pontifical Gregorian University and earned a license in social science. He returned to Brescia and served as vice-rector. From 1983 to 1995 he taught at the Salesian Philosophical-Theological Institute and \"Sociology of Religion\" at the Paul VI Theological Institute. He assisted in the foundation of the Institute of Religious Studies at the Catholic University of Brescia ",
"score": "1.353598"
},
{
"id": "25547764",
"title": "Angeline of Marsciano",
"text": " Angelina of Marsciano, T.O.R. (or Angelina of Montegiove; 1357 – 14 July 1435) was an Italian Religious Sister and foundress, and is a beata of the Roman Catholic Church. She founded a congregation of Religious Sisters of the Franciscan Third Order Regular, known today as the Franciscan Sisters of Blessed Angelina. She is generally credited with the founding of the Third Order Regular for women, as her religious congregation marked the establishment of the first Franciscan community of women living under the Rule of the Third Order Regular authorized by Pope Nicholas V. Unlike the Second Order of the Franciscan movement, the Poor Clare nuns, they were not an enclosed religious order, but have been active in serving the poor around them for much of their history. She is commemorated by the Franciscans on June 4; her liturgical feast is July 13.",
"score": "1.3444221"
},
{
"id": "1309336",
"title": "Angelo Rizzo",
"text": "Catholic Hierarchy: Bishop Angelo Rizzo † ; Corriere di Ragusa: Angelo Rizzo obituary (Italian) ",
"score": "1.3390472"
},
{
"id": "15229599",
"title": "Angelo Spinillo",
"text": " He obtained a license in prophetic pastoral theology at the Pontifical Theological Faculty of Southern Italy. On 15 July 1978 he was ordained priest by the bishop Umberto Altomare.",
"score": "1.3334613"
},
{
"id": "29143486",
"title": "Baháʼí Faith in Italy",
"text": " Bergamo noting his religion as Baháʼí in. A Sinti gypsy, Vittorio Mayer Custodino, (known as \"Spatzo\" or \"Sparrow\") came in contact with the religion while in prison in Sicily. Through him a number of Sicilian Sinti joined the religion by March 1978. In 1989 the first member of the Arbëreshë, Pietro Pandolfini, from Gela, joined the religion. In 1990 some sixty youth gathered in Gela for a conference. Respecting its regional autonomy and the depth of the Baháʼí community in 1995 the Baháʼís of Sicily elected its own National Assembly. In September 2003 the Baháʼís of Sicily celebrated the golden jubilee of the arrival of the religion there and which in 2003 had eleven assemblies.",
"score": "1.3330085"
},
{
"id": "11348917",
"title": "Angelo Scola",
"text": " Angelo Scola (born 7 November 1941) is an Italian Cardinal of the Catholic Church, philosopher and theologian. He was Archbishop of Milan from 2011 to 2017. He had served as Patriarch of Venice from 2002 to 2011. He has been a cardinal since 2003 and a bishop since 1991.",
"score": "1.3319073"
},
{
"id": "7129396",
"title": "Antonio De Rosso",
"text": " Antonio De Rosso (Farra di Soligo, 8 February 1941 – Aprilia, Lazio, 20 February 2009) was an Italian priest and Christian leader who successively belonged to various Christian denominations. After initial priestly service in the Catholic Church, he changed several affiliations. Eventually, he became Eastern Orthodox bishop (1986), founder of the Orthodox Church in Italy (1991), Metropolitan of Ravenna and Italy (1997-2009), and Archbishop of L'Aquila (2009). He was associated with various independent (noncanonical) jurisdictions. Main goal of his religious activity was to create a national church in Italy.",
"score": "1.3309901"
},
{
"id": "15816678",
"title": "Angelo Pirotta",
"text": "Relazioni fuk iz-Zwieg “Mixtæ Religionis” (Report on mixed marriages; 1913?) – Presented at the Eucharistic Congress of the diocese of Malta at Floriana and Sliema. ; Panegirico di Maria Assunta in Cielo (Laudatory discourse [in honour] of the Assumption of [the Blessed] Mary in Heaven; undated) ; Panegierku ta San Filep d’Agira (Laudatory discourse [in honour] of St. Philip of Hegira; undated) ; Panegierku ta Maria Bambina (Laudatory discourse [in honour] of the Birth of [the Blessed] Mary; undated) ; Panegierku Madonna tad Duttrina (Laudatory discourse [in honour] of Our Lady of Good Teaching; undated) ; Panegierku tal Kalb Imkaddsa ta’ Gesù (Laudatory discourse [in honour] of the Blessed Heart of Jesus; undated) ; ",
"score": "1.3305956"
},
{
"id": "29322969",
"title": "Antonino Raspanti",
"text": " Maria del Monte Carmelo\" (Confraternity of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Mount Carmel), formed by priests and laymen devoted to a life of personal prayer and spiritual reading. During his 27 years of teaching at the Faculty of Theology of Palermo, he dedicated himself to dogmatic theology and later to spirituality, publishing the results of his research in articles, volumes and reviews; including a 2009 book published by Glossa Editrice, a translation, with an introduction and notes, of the \"La pratica facile per elevare l'anima a Dio\" (The Easy Practice to Elevate One’s Soul to God) of the 17th century French mystic ",
"score": "1.3228815"
},
{
"id": "29322968",
"title": "Antonino Raspanti",
"text": " Born in Alcamo (province of Trapani) into a family of practicing Catholics, he attended the Classical Lyceum of his town, obtaining a diploma in 1977, before entering the Seminary of Trapani. In 1982, he obtained a Baccalaureate at the Pontifical Faculty of Theology of Sicily \"San Giovanni Evangelista\" and became a deacon on 6 March 1982. On 7 September 1982, he was ordained a priest by the Bishop of Trapani, Emanuele Romano. Later, in 1990, he completed his academic studies with a Doctorate in Theology from the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome. In 2003, he created a religious association called \"Confraternita Beata ",
"score": "1.3225887"
},
{
"id": "3108502",
"title": "Jeff Angelo",
"text": " Angelo is a Christian.",
"score": "1.3207893"
}
] | [
"Angelo Maria Rivato\n Angelo Maria Rivato (December 3, 1924 – August 20, 2011) was the first Catholic bishop of the Diocese of Ponta de Pedras, Brazil. Born in Italy, Rivato was ordained to the priesthood for the Society of Jesus. In 1967 he was ordained as bishop and was appointed the first bishop of the Ponta de Pedras Diocese.",
"Angelo Rizzo\n Angelo Rizzo (April 11, 1926, Montedoro, Province of Caltanissetta - July 16, 2009, Montedoro) was the Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Ragusa, Sicily from February 2, 1974 until his retirement on February 16, 2002. He was succeeded as bishop by Paolo Urso. Rizzo died on July 16, 2009, in his native Montedoro of 83.",
"Self-crucifixion of Mattio Lovat\n Mattio Lovat was born in Casale, at the territory of Belluno, in 1761, in Italy. A son of poor parents, he was a shoemaker. On November 13, 1802 he went to Venice, where a younger brother named Angelo conducted Mattio to the house of a widow, the relict of Andrew Osgualda, with whom he lodged, until September 21, 1803. On the mentioned day, he made an attempt to crucify himself, in the middle of the street called Cross of Biri.",
"Angelo Maria Angeli\n Angelo Maria Angelo Flavio Comneno (Latin: Angelus Maria Angelus Flavius Comnenus; 1600–1678) was the Grand Master of the Constantinian Order of Saint George from 1634 to 1678. Angelo Maria's family, the Angelo Flavio Comneno, claimed descent from the Angelos dynasty of Byzantine emperors, and Angelo Maria also claimed the titles \"Prince of Macedonia and Thessaly\" and \"Duke and Count of Drivasto and Durazzo\".",
"Ángelo Martino\n .",
"Angelo Flavio Comneno\n The Angelo Flavio Comneno or Angeli family were an Italian noble family of Albanian descent who claimed descent from the Angelos dynasty of the Byzantine Empire. In the 16th century, the family founded the Sacred Military Constantinian Order of Saint George, a knightly order with invented Byzantine connections. From the 16th century onwards, the heads of the family styled themselves as \"Prince of Macedonia, Duke and Count of Drivasto and Durazzo\", though other titles were also sometimes used. It is possible that their claims to descent from the Angeloi were genuine, but their own genealogies, which professed descent from Emperor Isaac II Angelos ((r. undefined – undefined)1185–1195 and 1203–1204) ",
"Santa Maria in Montesanto (Rome)\n Angelo Roncalli, the future Pope John XXIII, was ordained a priest; the event is remembered by a plaque affixed during his pontificate. Since 1953 the church has become the seat of the \"Mass of the artists\", a singular initiative conceived in 1941 by presbyter and art historian Ennio Francia; after changing several places for worship, the liturgical event took place in the church in Piazza del Popolo, where every Sunday, for over sixty years, this Eucharistic celebration has been celebrated with representatives of the world of culture and art. It is also in this church that the funeral of people linked to the world of culture and television is often celebrated. For these reasons, it is also known as \"Church of the artists\".",
"Angelo Cuniberti\n Angelo Cuniberti, I.M.C. (6 February 1921 – 26 June 2012) was an Italian Prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. Cuniberti was born in Mondovì, Italy and was ordained a priest on 29 June 1944 of the religious order of Consolata Missionary. Cuniberti was appointed Prelate to the Florencia Diocese on 18 April 1961 and resigned as prelate on 15 November 1978. Cuniberti was appointed Titular Bishop of Arsinoë in Cypro on 18 April 1961 and ordained on 21 May 1961.",
"Angelo Maria Angeli\n Angelo Maria was born in 1600 as the eldest son of Michele Angeli, who in turn was the eldest son of Girolamo I Angeli. Angelo Maria had a younger brother, Marco, as well as three sisters; Ursula, Maria Altadonna and Laura. Angelo Maria's family, the Angelo Flavio Comneno, claimed descent from the Angelos dynasty of Byzantine emperors. In the mid-15th century, Michele's uncles Andrea and Paolo were officially acknowledged as descendants of the Angelos emperors by Pope Paul III ((r. undefined – undefined)1534–1549) and founded the Sacred Military Constantinian Order of Saint George, a chivalric order with invented Byzantine connections. Angelo Maria's father Michele was technically of illegitimate birth, having been born while his mother, Ursula Bini, was ",
"Angelo Vincenzo Zani\n Zani was born in Pralboino, Brescia, Italy, on 24 March 1950. He studied philosophy and theology at the seminary of Brescia, the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum and the Pontifical Lateran University where he was awarded a doctorate in theology. Zani was ordained to the priesthood on 20 September 1975 by Luigi Morstabilini, Bishop of Brescia. He then attended the Pontifical Gregorian University and earned a license in social science. He returned to Brescia and served as vice-rector. From 1983 to 1995 he taught at the Salesian Philosophical-Theological Institute and \"Sociology of Religion\" at the Paul VI Theological Institute. He assisted in the foundation of the Institute of Religious Studies at the Catholic University of Brescia ",
"Angeline of Marsciano\n Angelina of Marsciano, T.O.R. (or Angelina of Montegiove; 1357 – 14 July 1435) was an Italian Religious Sister and foundress, and is a beata of the Roman Catholic Church. She founded a congregation of Religious Sisters of the Franciscan Third Order Regular, known today as the Franciscan Sisters of Blessed Angelina. She is generally credited with the founding of the Third Order Regular for women, as her religious congregation marked the establishment of the first Franciscan community of women living under the Rule of the Third Order Regular authorized by Pope Nicholas V. Unlike the Second Order of the Franciscan movement, the Poor Clare nuns, they were not an enclosed religious order, but have been active in serving the poor around them for much of their history. She is commemorated by the Franciscans on June 4; her liturgical feast is July 13.",
"Angelo Rizzo\nCatholic Hierarchy: Bishop Angelo Rizzo † ; Corriere di Ragusa: Angelo Rizzo obituary (Italian) ",
"Angelo Spinillo\n He obtained a license in prophetic pastoral theology at the Pontifical Theological Faculty of Southern Italy. On 15 July 1978 he was ordained priest by the bishop Umberto Altomare.",
"Baháʼí Faith in Italy\n Bergamo noting his religion as Baháʼí in. A Sinti gypsy, Vittorio Mayer Custodino, (known as \"Spatzo\" or \"Sparrow\") came in contact with the religion while in prison in Sicily. Through him a number of Sicilian Sinti joined the religion by March 1978. In 1989 the first member of the Arbëreshë, Pietro Pandolfini, from Gela, joined the religion. In 1990 some sixty youth gathered in Gela for a conference. Respecting its regional autonomy and the depth of the Baháʼí community in 1995 the Baháʼís of Sicily elected its own National Assembly. In September 2003 the Baháʼís of Sicily celebrated the golden jubilee of the arrival of the religion there and which in 2003 had eleven assemblies.",
"Angelo Scola\n Angelo Scola (born 7 November 1941) is an Italian Cardinal of the Catholic Church, philosopher and theologian. He was Archbishop of Milan from 2011 to 2017. He had served as Patriarch of Venice from 2002 to 2011. He has been a cardinal since 2003 and a bishop since 1991.",
"Antonio De Rosso\n Antonio De Rosso (Farra di Soligo, 8 February 1941 – Aprilia, Lazio, 20 February 2009) was an Italian priest and Christian leader who successively belonged to various Christian denominations. After initial priestly service in the Catholic Church, he changed several affiliations. Eventually, he became Eastern Orthodox bishop (1986), founder of the Orthodox Church in Italy (1991), Metropolitan of Ravenna and Italy (1997-2009), and Archbishop of L'Aquila (2009). He was associated with various independent (noncanonical) jurisdictions. Main goal of his religious activity was to create a national church in Italy.",
"Angelo Pirotta\nRelazioni fuk iz-Zwieg “Mixtæ Religionis” (Report on mixed marriages; 1913?) – Presented at the Eucharistic Congress of the diocese of Malta at Floriana and Sliema. ; Panegirico di Maria Assunta in Cielo (Laudatory discourse [in honour] of the Assumption of [the Blessed] Mary in Heaven; undated) ; Panegierku ta San Filep d’Agira (Laudatory discourse [in honour] of St. Philip of Hegira; undated) ; Panegierku ta Maria Bambina (Laudatory discourse [in honour] of the Birth of [the Blessed] Mary; undated) ; Panegierku Madonna tad Duttrina (Laudatory discourse [in honour] of Our Lady of Good Teaching; undated) ; Panegierku tal Kalb Imkaddsa ta’ Gesù (Laudatory discourse [in honour] of the Blessed Heart of Jesus; undated) ; ",
"Antonino Raspanti\n Maria del Monte Carmelo\" (Confraternity of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Mount Carmel), formed by priests and laymen devoted to a life of personal prayer and spiritual reading. During his 27 years of teaching at the Faculty of Theology of Palermo, he dedicated himself to dogmatic theology and later to spirituality, publishing the results of his research in articles, volumes and reviews; including a 2009 book published by Glossa Editrice, a translation, with an introduction and notes, of the \"La pratica facile per elevare l'anima a Dio\" (The Easy Practice to Elevate One’s Soul to God) of the 17th century French mystic ",
"Antonino Raspanti\n Born in Alcamo (province of Trapani) into a family of practicing Catholics, he attended the Classical Lyceum of his town, obtaining a diploma in 1977, before entering the Seminary of Trapani. In 1982, he obtained a Baccalaureate at the Pontifical Faculty of Theology of Sicily \"San Giovanni Evangelista\" and became a deacon on 6 March 1982. On 7 September 1982, he was ordained a priest by the Bishop of Trapani, Emanuele Romano. Later, in 1990, he completed his academic studies with a Doctorate in Theology from the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome. In 2003, he created a religious association called \"Confraternita Beata ",
"Jeff Angelo\n Angelo is a Christian."
] |
What is the religion of Walter James Fitzgerald? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Walter James Fitzgerald | 6,139,600 | 70 | [
{
"id": "28963888",
"title": "Walter James Fitzgerald",
"text": " Walter James Fitzgerald, S.J. (November 17, 1883 – July 19, 1947) was an American prelate of the Catholic Church. He served as Vicar Apostolic of Alaska from 1945 until his death in 1947. A Jesuit, he also served as President of Gonzaga University from 1921 to 1927 and of Seattle University from 1929 to 1931.",
"score": "1.7812855"
},
{
"id": "6375082",
"title": "Peola, Washington",
"text": "Walter James Fitzgerald, American Roman Catholic bishop ",
"score": "1.6585666"
},
{
"id": "28963889",
"title": "Walter James Fitzgerald",
"text": " Fitzgerald was born at Peola, in Garfield County, Washington, to Patrick Sarsfield and Johanna Frances (née Kirk) Fitzgerald. He entered the Society of Jesus (more commonly known as the Jesuits) in 1902, and graduated from the normal school in Los Gatos, California, in 1906. He then returned to Washington and served as a professor at Seattle College until 1909, when he enrolled at Gonzaga University in Spokane. He earned his Bachelor of Arts (1910) and Master of Arts (1912) degrees from Gonzaga. From 1912 to 1920, he was a professor at Gonzaga, although his service was interrupted by a period of study at Immaculate Conception College in Montreal, Quebec, Canada (1915–19) to receive his Doctor of Sacred Theology degree. Fitzgerald was ordained to the priesthood on May 16, 1918. After teaching ",
"score": "1.653111"
},
{
"id": "10708528",
"title": "James Newbury FitzGerald",
"text": " James Newbury FitzGerald (1837 – 1907) was an American bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, elected in 1888. Born at Newark, N. J. He received the degree of D. D. from Wesleyan University in 1880 and that of LL. D. from Hamline University in 1889. In 1895 he made the episcopal visitation to the South American and European conferences. He died at Hong Kong, on an episcopal visitation to the Oriental mission conferences.",
"score": "1.5212115"
},
{
"id": "2626367",
"title": "Walter Fitzgerald (politician)",
"text": " Walter Ronald Fitzgerald (May 8, 1936 – October 11, 2014) was a Canadian politician.",
"score": "1.5207863"
},
{
"id": "11473854",
"title": "Michael O. Fitzgerald",
"text": " family provides ongoing financial contributions that include underwriting Crow language textbooks and the establishment of a permanent endowment for the Language Conservancy with the Bloomington Community Foundation. Fitzgerald has now authored or co-edited more than fifteen books on world religions, sacred art, culture, and philosophy that have received more than thirty awards, including the ForeWord Book of the Year Award and the Ben Franklin Award. His books have been published in six different languages, and at least ten of his books and two documentary films produced by him are used in university classes. A selected bibliography is listed below.",
"score": "1.503124"
},
{
"id": "9998798",
"title": "Paul J. Fitzgerald",
"text": " The Reverend Paul Joseph Fitzgerald, S.J. is a Roman Catholic priest and member of the Society of Jesus. Father Fitzgerald is the 28th president of the University of San Francisco.",
"score": "1.4949869"
},
{
"id": "2911712",
"title": "Ernest A. Fitzgerald",
"text": " He was born in Crouse, North Carolina. He married Sarah Frances Perry of Wingate, North Carolina 24 August 1945. The Fitzgeralds have two children: son Jimmy and wife Phyllis; and daughter Patty and husband Charles Poole. The Fitzgeralds also have three grandchildren. Bishop Fitzgerald died on September 27, 2001, in Winston-Salem, N.C. from pulmonary fibrosis.",
"score": "1.4819417"
},
{
"id": "2626370",
"title": "Walter Fitzgerald (politician)",
"text": " He died on October 11, 2014 in the early morning hours, of heart problems at a hospital in Halifax.",
"score": "1.4818287"
},
{
"id": "2911714",
"title": "Ernest A. Fitzgerald",
"text": " During his college years, Ernest pastored the Webster Circuit of the Western North Carolina Annual Conference of the Methodist Church, of which he became a Member in Full Connection and was ordained Elder in 1949. He subsequently served the following pastorates in this conference: Liberty Circuit (1947–50); Calvary Church in Asheboro (1950–55); Abernathy Church in Asheville (1955–59); Purcell Church in Charlotte (1959–64); Grace Church in Greensboro (1964–66); Centenary Church in Winston-Salem (1966–82); and the West Market Street Church in Greensboro. Rev. Fitzgerald was elected a delegate to the Southeastern Jurisdictional Conference of the U.M. Church, 1968–84, and to the General Conference, 1980-84. He also attended the World Methodist Conferences of 1966 and 1971. The author of numerous books, Rev. Fitzgerald also was a regular contributor to the Piedmont Airlines inflight magazine, the Jaycees publication, and Amtrak. He has also written for United Methodist Church publications. In 1983 he was the Preacher for the Methodist series of the radio program \"The Protestant Hour.\"",
"score": "1.473908"
},
{
"id": "11473850",
"title": "Michael O. Fitzgerald",
"text": " enshrined in the Montana Hall of Fame, when he was Joseph Epes Brown’s graduate teaching assistant at Indiana University, Bloomington, for “Religious Traditions of the North American Indians”. Fitzgerald spent the summer of 1971 living with Thomas and Susie Yellowtail on the Crow Indian Reservation in Wyola, Montana, where he participated in the tribal Sun Dance and was adopted into the Yellowtail family and the Crow tribe. Following Dr. Brown’s 1972 departure to Montana, Fitzgerald taught a course of the same name in the Indiana University (Bloomington) Continuing Studies Department for two years. Fitzgerald married his wife, Judith, in ",
"score": "1.4641752"
},
{
"id": "12460205",
"title": "Michael L. Fitzgerald",
"text": " was involved in the creation of Encounter, Documents for Christian-Muslim Understanding, a periodical publication on Islam, and supervised the launch of Islamochristiana, a scholarly journal specialised in Christian-Muslim relations and interreligious dialogue. In 1972 he became consultor of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, then known as Secretariat for Non-Christians. In 1978 he returned to Africa to carry out parish work in the Sudan, in the town of New Halfa (Archdiocese of Khartoum). His duties included ministering to the Christian population while also cooperating with the Muslim community. In 1980 he was elected to the General Council of the Missionaries of Africa in Rome, where he spent six years managing and organising.",
"score": "1.4593875"
},
{
"id": "30527255",
"title": "George Francis FitzGerald",
"text": " FitzGerald was born at No. 19, Lower Mount Street in Dublin on 3 August 1851 to the Reverend William FitzGerald and his wife Anne Frances Stoney (sister of George Johnstone Stoney and Bindon Blood Stoney). Professor of Moral Philosophy in Trinity and vicar of St Anne's, Dawson Street, at the time of his son's birth, William FitzGerald was consecrated Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross in 1857 and translated to Killaloe and Clonfert in 1862. George returned to Dublin and entered TCD as a student at the age of 16, winning a scholarship in 1870 and graduating in 1871 in Mathematics and Experimental Science. He became a Fellow of Trinity in 1877 and spent the rest of his career there, becoming Erasmus Smith's Professor of Natural and Experimental Philosophy in 1881. Along with Oliver Lodge, Oliver Heaviside and Heinrich Hertz, FitzGerald was a leading figure among the group of ",
"score": "1.4478891"
},
{
"id": "13362040",
"title": "Steve Fitzgerald",
"text": " In his speech during a meeting of the Leavenworth County Republican Party on 2 July 2018, Fitzgerald asserted that \"We are being told that Western civilization is the problem in the world. Outside of Western civilization there is only barbarism.\"",
"score": "1.4461441"
},
{
"id": "11473859",
"title": "Michael O. Fitzgerald",
"text": " of Christian Art: Illustrated, by Titus Burckhardt, edited by Michael Fitzgerald 2006. ; Winner Midwest Book Award for “Interior Layout” ; Silver Benjamin Franklin Award for “Arts” ; Native Spirit: The Sun Dance Way, by Thomas Yellowtail, recorded and edited by Michael Fitzgerald, 2007. ; Winner Midwest Book Award for “Culture” ; Midwest Book Award for “Religion/Philosophy/Inspiration” ; Silver Benjamin Franklin Award “New Age/Metaphysics/Spirituality” ; The Essential Charles Eastman (Ohiyesa): Light on the Indian World (revised & updated edition), by Charles Eastman (Ohiyesa), edited by Michael Fitzgerald, 2007. ; Silver Midwest Book Award for “Religion/Philosophy/Inspiration” ; The Spiritual Legacy of the American Indian: Commemorative Edition With Letters ",
"score": "1.4438546"
},
{
"id": "13038472",
"title": "James Edward Fitzgerald (bishop)",
"text": " James Edward Fitzgerald (December 30, 1938 – September 11, 2003) was an American Roman Catholic cleric who served as the Bishop of Joliet in Joliet, Illinois. James Edward Fitzgerald, Jr. was born on December 30, 1938, in Chicago to James E. and Winifred (Wade) Fitzgerald. He attended Our Lady of Peace School and St. Philip Neri School in Chicago, St. Michael School in Wheaton, and Marmion Military Academy in Aurora. He received a S.T.B. from Conception Seminary in Missouri and a M.Ed. in administration from DePaul University in Chicago. Following ordination to the priesthood by Bishop Cletus O’Donnell at the Cathedral of ",
"score": "1.4431508"
},
{
"id": "27876447",
"title": "James FitzGerald (artist)",
"text": " James Herbert FitzGerald (1910–1973) was an American sculptor from Seattle, Washington. He received a degree in architecture at University of Washington and worked at Spokane Art Center. He has been called \"[one] of the Pacific Northwest's preeminent artists of [his] period\", and \"among the most innovative modern artists active in the Pacific Northwest.\" He was born and raised in Seattle, graduating from the University of Washington in 1935. FitzGerald went on to study at Yale University in 1938, where he received a Carnegie Graduate Fellowship, and at the Kansas City Art Institute. He created works for the Treasury Relief Art Project (TRAP) and the Department of Justice in the 1930s with Boardman Robinson; and worked on other Works Progress Administration art programs in Washington state. While he also studied as a painter, FitzGerald switched primarily to bronze sculpture in 1959 and became a well-known fountain designer. He established his own foundry in 1964. FitzGerald married Margaret Tomkins, a painter, and had three children.",
"score": "1.4407073"
},
{
"id": "2911713",
"title": "Ernest A. Fitzgerald",
"text": " Fitzgerald earned the A.B. degree from Western Carolina University (1947). He earned the Bachelor of Divinity degree from Duke Divinity School (1951). He has honorary doctorates from High Point College (1969), Pfeiffer College (1986), Greensboro College (1993) and Union College (1994). In addition, he received Distinguished Alumni Awards from Western Carolina (1981) and Duke Divinity School (1983).",
"score": "1.4362476"
},
{
"id": "11473851",
"title": "Michael O. Fitzgerald",
"text": " The Yellowtails introduced the Fitzgeralds to many spiritual leaders of other American Indian tribes. Over the next forty years Judith and Michael Fitzgerald spent extended periods of time visiting reservations and attending sacred ceremonies throughout the American West, including the sacred rites of the Crow, Sioux, Cheyenne, Shoshone, Bannock, and Apache Tribes. Janine Pease, founding president of the Little Big Horn College, National Indian Educator of the Year and a McArthur Genius Award winner, had this to say about Fitzgerald's relationship with Indian people and cultures: “Michael Fitzgerald has heard the poignant narratives of the American Indian people, and ",
"score": "1.4337602"
},
{
"id": "13038474",
"title": "James Edward Fitzgerald (bishop)",
"text": " of Joliet. He was ordained a bishop on March 19, 2002, at the Cathedral of St. Raymond Nonnatus in Joliet by Bishop Joseph L. Imesch, with Bishop Roger Kaffer and Bishop Daniel Ryan serving as the principal co-consecrators. Ten months later, Fitzgerald was diagnosed with a degenerative neurological disease. The Pope accepted his resignation as auxiliary bishop on June 5, 2003; Fitzgerald died in his home on September 11, 2003. The Mass of Christian burial was offered on September 16, 2003, at the Cathedral of St. Raymond Nonnatus, and interment took place in the mausoleum in Resurrection Cemetery in Romeoville, Illinois.",
"score": "1.4329071"
}
] | [
"Walter James Fitzgerald\n Walter James Fitzgerald, S.J. (November 17, 1883 – July 19, 1947) was an American prelate of the Catholic Church. He served as Vicar Apostolic of Alaska from 1945 until his death in 1947. A Jesuit, he also served as President of Gonzaga University from 1921 to 1927 and of Seattle University from 1929 to 1931.",
"Peola, Washington\nWalter James Fitzgerald, American Roman Catholic bishop ",
"Walter James Fitzgerald\n Fitzgerald was born at Peola, in Garfield County, Washington, to Patrick Sarsfield and Johanna Frances (née Kirk) Fitzgerald. He entered the Society of Jesus (more commonly known as the Jesuits) in 1902, and graduated from the normal school in Los Gatos, California, in 1906. He then returned to Washington and served as a professor at Seattle College until 1909, when he enrolled at Gonzaga University in Spokane. He earned his Bachelor of Arts (1910) and Master of Arts (1912) degrees from Gonzaga. From 1912 to 1920, he was a professor at Gonzaga, although his service was interrupted by a period of study at Immaculate Conception College in Montreal, Quebec, Canada (1915–19) to receive his Doctor of Sacred Theology degree. Fitzgerald was ordained to the priesthood on May 16, 1918. After teaching ",
"James Newbury FitzGerald\n James Newbury FitzGerald (1837 – 1907) was an American bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, elected in 1888. Born at Newark, N. J. He received the degree of D. D. from Wesleyan University in 1880 and that of LL. D. from Hamline University in 1889. In 1895 he made the episcopal visitation to the South American and European conferences. He died at Hong Kong, on an episcopal visitation to the Oriental mission conferences.",
"Walter Fitzgerald (politician)\n Walter Ronald Fitzgerald (May 8, 1936 – October 11, 2014) was a Canadian politician.",
"Michael O. Fitzgerald\n family provides ongoing financial contributions that include underwriting Crow language textbooks and the establishment of a permanent endowment for the Language Conservancy with the Bloomington Community Foundation. Fitzgerald has now authored or co-edited more than fifteen books on world religions, sacred art, culture, and philosophy that have received more than thirty awards, including the ForeWord Book of the Year Award and the Ben Franklin Award. His books have been published in six different languages, and at least ten of his books and two documentary films produced by him are used in university classes. A selected bibliography is listed below.",
"Paul J. Fitzgerald\n The Reverend Paul Joseph Fitzgerald, S.J. is a Roman Catholic priest and member of the Society of Jesus. Father Fitzgerald is the 28th president of the University of San Francisco.",
"Ernest A. Fitzgerald\n He was born in Crouse, North Carolina. He married Sarah Frances Perry of Wingate, North Carolina 24 August 1945. The Fitzgeralds have two children: son Jimmy and wife Phyllis; and daughter Patty and husband Charles Poole. The Fitzgeralds also have three grandchildren. Bishop Fitzgerald died on September 27, 2001, in Winston-Salem, N.C. from pulmonary fibrosis.",
"Walter Fitzgerald (politician)\n He died on October 11, 2014 in the early morning hours, of heart problems at a hospital in Halifax.",
"Ernest A. Fitzgerald\n During his college years, Ernest pastored the Webster Circuit of the Western North Carolina Annual Conference of the Methodist Church, of which he became a Member in Full Connection and was ordained Elder in 1949. He subsequently served the following pastorates in this conference: Liberty Circuit (1947–50); Calvary Church in Asheboro (1950–55); Abernathy Church in Asheville (1955–59); Purcell Church in Charlotte (1959–64); Grace Church in Greensboro (1964–66); Centenary Church in Winston-Salem (1966–82); and the West Market Street Church in Greensboro. Rev. Fitzgerald was elected a delegate to the Southeastern Jurisdictional Conference of the U.M. Church, 1968–84, and to the General Conference, 1980-84. He also attended the World Methodist Conferences of 1966 and 1971. The author of numerous books, Rev. Fitzgerald also was a regular contributor to the Piedmont Airlines inflight magazine, the Jaycees publication, and Amtrak. He has also written for United Methodist Church publications. In 1983 he was the Preacher for the Methodist series of the radio program \"The Protestant Hour.\"",
"Michael O. Fitzgerald\n enshrined in the Montana Hall of Fame, when he was Joseph Epes Brown’s graduate teaching assistant at Indiana University, Bloomington, for “Religious Traditions of the North American Indians”. Fitzgerald spent the summer of 1971 living with Thomas and Susie Yellowtail on the Crow Indian Reservation in Wyola, Montana, where he participated in the tribal Sun Dance and was adopted into the Yellowtail family and the Crow tribe. Following Dr. Brown’s 1972 departure to Montana, Fitzgerald taught a course of the same name in the Indiana University (Bloomington) Continuing Studies Department for two years. Fitzgerald married his wife, Judith, in ",
"Michael L. Fitzgerald\n was involved in the creation of Encounter, Documents for Christian-Muslim Understanding, a periodical publication on Islam, and supervised the launch of Islamochristiana, a scholarly journal specialised in Christian-Muslim relations and interreligious dialogue. In 1972 he became consultor of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, then known as Secretariat for Non-Christians. In 1978 he returned to Africa to carry out parish work in the Sudan, in the town of New Halfa (Archdiocese of Khartoum). His duties included ministering to the Christian population while also cooperating with the Muslim community. In 1980 he was elected to the General Council of the Missionaries of Africa in Rome, where he spent six years managing and organising.",
"George Francis FitzGerald\n FitzGerald was born at No. 19, Lower Mount Street in Dublin on 3 August 1851 to the Reverend William FitzGerald and his wife Anne Frances Stoney (sister of George Johnstone Stoney and Bindon Blood Stoney). Professor of Moral Philosophy in Trinity and vicar of St Anne's, Dawson Street, at the time of his son's birth, William FitzGerald was consecrated Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross in 1857 and translated to Killaloe and Clonfert in 1862. George returned to Dublin and entered TCD as a student at the age of 16, winning a scholarship in 1870 and graduating in 1871 in Mathematics and Experimental Science. He became a Fellow of Trinity in 1877 and spent the rest of his career there, becoming Erasmus Smith's Professor of Natural and Experimental Philosophy in 1881. Along with Oliver Lodge, Oliver Heaviside and Heinrich Hertz, FitzGerald was a leading figure among the group of ",
"Steve Fitzgerald\n In his speech during a meeting of the Leavenworth County Republican Party on 2 July 2018, Fitzgerald asserted that \"We are being told that Western civilization is the problem in the world. Outside of Western civilization there is only barbarism.\"",
"Michael O. Fitzgerald\n of Christian Art: Illustrated, by Titus Burckhardt, edited by Michael Fitzgerald 2006. ; Winner Midwest Book Award for “Interior Layout” ; Silver Benjamin Franklin Award for “Arts” ; Native Spirit: The Sun Dance Way, by Thomas Yellowtail, recorded and edited by Michael Fitzgerald, 2007. ; Winner Midwest Book Award for “Culture” ; Midwest Book Award for “Religion/Philosophy/Inspiration” ; Silver Benjamin Franklin Award “New Age/Metaphysics/Spirituality” ; The Essential Charles Eastman (Ohiyesa): Light on the Indian World (revised & updated edition), by Charles Eastman (Ohiyesa), edited by Michael Fitzgerald, 2007. ; Silver Midwest Book Award for “Religion/Philosophy/Inspiration” ; The Spiritual Legacy of the American Indian: Commemorative Edition With Letters ",
"James Edward Fitzgerald (bishop)\n James Edward Fitzgerald (December 30, 1938 – September 11, 2003) was an American Roman Catholic cleric who served as the Bishop of Joliet in Joliet, Illinois. James Edward Fitzgerald, Jr. was born on December 30, 1938, in Chicago to James E. and Winifred (Wade) Fitzgerald. He attended Our Lady of Peace School and St. Philip Neri School in Chicago, St. Michael School in Wheaton, and Marmion Military Academy in Aurora. He received a S.T.B. from Conception Seminary in Missouri and a M.Ed. in administration from DePaul University in Chicago. Following ordination to the priesthood by Bishop Cletus O’Donnell at the Cathedral of ",
"James FitzGerald (artist)\n James Herbert FitzGerald (1910–1973) was an American sculptor from Seattle, Washington. He received a degree in architecture at University of Washington and worked at Spokane Art Center. He has been called \"[one] of the Pacific Northwest's preeminent artists of [his] period\", and \"among the most innovative modern artists active in the Pacific Northwest.\" He was born and raised in Seattle, graduating from the University of Washington in 1935. FitzGerald went on to study at Yale University in 1938, where he received a Carnegie Graduate Fellowship, and at the Kansas City Art Institute. He created works for the Treasury Relief Art Project (TRAP) and the Department of Justice in the 1930s with Boardman Robinson; and worked on other Works Progress Administration art programs in Washington state. While he also studied as a painter, FitzGerald switched primarily to bronze sculpture in 1959 and became a well-known fountain designer. He established his own foundry in 1964. FitzGerald married Margaret Tomkins, a painter, and had three children.",
"Ernest A. Fitzgerald\n Fitzgerald earned the A.B. degree from Western Carolina University (1947). He earned the Bachelor of Divinity degree from Duke Divinity School (1951). He has honorary doctorates from High Point College (1969), Pfeiffer College (1986), Greensboro College (1993) and Union College (1994). In addition, he received Distinguished Alumni Awards from Western Carolina (1981) and Duke Divinity School (1983).",
"Michael O. Fitzgerald\n The Yellowtails introduced the Fitzgeralds to many spiritual leaders of other American Indian tribes. Over the next forty years Judith and Michael Fitzgerald spent extended periods of time visiting reservations and attending sacred ceremonies throughout the American West, including the sacred rites of the Crow, Sioux, Cheyenne, Shoshone, Bannock, and Apache Tribes. Janine Pease, founding president of the Little Big Horn College, National Indian Educator of the Year and a McArthur Genius Award winner, had this to say about Fitzgerald's relationship with Indian people and cultures: “Michael Fitzgerald has heard the poignant narratives of the American Indian people, and ",
"James Edward Fitzgerald (bishop)\n of Joliet. He was ordained a bishop on March 19, 2002, at the Cathedral of St. Raymond Nonnatus in Joliet by Bishop Joseph L. Imesch, with Bishop Roger Kaffer and Bishop Daniel Ryan serving as the principal co-consecrators. Ten months later, Fitzgerald was diagnosed with a degenerative neurological disease. The Pope accepted his resignation as auxiliary bishop on June 5, 2003; Fitzgerald died in his home on September 11, 2003. The Mass of Christian burial was offered on September 16, 2003, at the Cathedral of St. Raymond Nonnatus, and interment took place in the mausoleum in Resurrection Cemetery in Romeoville, Illinois."
] |
What is the religion of John Peter Jukes? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | John Jukes | 767,720 | 77 | [
{
"id": "3684688",
"title": "Peter Jukes",
"text": " Jukes has been a book reviewer and feature writer for both The Independent and the New Statesman on themes as diverse as nationalism, art in the computer age, and apocalyptic religion. During the 1980s and 90s, Jukes was an active member of the Labour Party and was involved in the investigations around the cash for questions scandal. More recently Jukes became an active Barack Obama supporter during the 2008 Democratic Party presidential primaries in the US, writing for Daily Kos and then MyDD when it became a pro-Hillary Clinton site. Later he recorded his online experiences of the Primary 'Flame Wars' for Prospect. Following the primaries, he was one of 25 regular bloggers who began writing for a new political blog, The Motley Moose. During the News International phone hacking scandal trial of Rebekah Brooks, Andy Coulson and others, Peter Jukes used the crowdfunding tool Indiegogo to raise donations to allow him to livetweet the trial from start to finish. In 2018, Jukes and Stephen Colegrave founded Byline Times.",
"score": "1.6552937"
},
{
"id": "3684679",
"title": "Peter Jukes",
"text": " Peter Jukes (born 13 October 1960) is an English author, screenwriter, playwright, literary critic and blogger. He is the co-founder and executive editor of Byline Times.",
"score": "1.5998485"
},
{
"id": "3684686",
"title": "Peter Jukes",
"text": " by John Berger a \"dream of a book\" following the traditions of Walter Benjamin: \"Benjamin dreamed of making a book entirely of quotations, and there have been some remarkable books which are creative responses to that idea, like Peter Jukes's A Shout in the Street.\" Following through in these themes of urbanism and city development Jukes also co-authored, along with Anna Whyatt, Stephen O'Brien and the sociologist Manuel Castells, the monograph Creative Capital: 21st Century Regions. Jukes is the author of The Fall of the House of Murdoch, published by Unbound, a crowd-funded publisher, in August 2012. Since 2016, Peter Jukes collaborates with Deeivya Meir on the podcast series Untold - The Daniel Morgan Murder. He also co-hosted the podcast Dial M for Mueller with journalist Carole Cadwalladr.",
"score": "1.5220042"
},
{
"id": "3684680",
"title": "Peter Jukes",
"text": " Born in Swindon and attended Queens' College, Cambridge. His mother was an Armenian and the daughter of a man fleeing the Armenian genocide; she was later adopted by his grandfather.",
"score": "1.5182221"
},
{
"id": "11552604",
"title": "Jukes",
"text": "Andrew Jukes (theologian) (1815–1901) ; Andrew Jukes (missionary) (1847–1931), Anglican missionary ; Betty Jukes (1910–2006), British sculptor ; Bill Jukes (c.1883–1939), English rugby league footballer who played in the 1900s and 1910s ; Francis Jukes (1745–1812), engraver and publisher ; David Jukes (born 1956), English cricketer ; Hamilton Jukes (1895–1951), British ice hockey player who competed in the 1924 Winter Olympics ; John Peter Jukes (1923–2011), English Prelate of the Roman Catholic Church ; Joseph Beete Jukes (1811–1869), British geologist ; Keith Jukes (1954–2013), Dean of Ripon ; Mavis Jukes (born 1947), American author ; Norman Jukes (born 1932), English professional ",
"score": "1.5063794"
},
{
"id": "27501583",
"title": "Keith Jukes",
"text": " Jukes was ordained in the Church of England as a deacon in 1978 and as a priest on 30 June 1979. His first two postings were as a curate in the Diocese of Lichfield; the first from 1978 to 1981 and the second from 1981 to 1983. From 1983 to 1990, he was Curate-in-Charge of St Martin's Church, Stonydelph, Tamworth, Staffordshire: it is a jointly Anglican and Methodist church. In 1990, a team ministry was created joining St Martin's and two other churches. From 1990 to 1991, he served as Team Rector of the new parish and Rural Dean of Tamworth. Then, from 1991 ",
"score": "1.5060073"
},
{
"id": "27501585",
"title": "Keith Jukes",
"text": " On 21 May 2013, Jukes died from stomach cancer at Harrogate District Hospital, Harrogate, North Yorkshire. He had announced his illness on 19 May, the previous Sunday. On 31 May, his funeral was held at Ripon Cathedral and led by John Packer, the then Bishop of Ripon and Leeds.",
"score": "1.4985349"
},
{
"id": "7851741",
"title": "John Jukes (cartoonist)",
"text": " For the Catholic priest with the same name see John Jukes John Jukes (1900-1972) was an English artist notable for his work in British comics. Jukes was born in Ladywood. He was a contemporary of Arthur Ferrier at Art School. He worked for the Amalgamated Press from the 1920s to the 1950s. Amongst others he drew for Comic Cuts, Funny Wonder, Radio Fun and Whizzer and Chips. He died in Cornwall on 31 October 1972. He is the grandfather of the author and journalist Peter Jukes",
"score": "1.495697"
},
{
"id": "27501582",
"title": "Keith Jukes",
"text": " Jukes was born on 18 February 1954. He studied theology at the University of Leeds and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree in 1976. From 1977 to 1978, he spent a year at Lincoln Theological College, an Anglican theological college, to prepare for ordained ministry.",
"score": "1.494108"
},
{
"id": "27501581",
"title": "Keith Jukes",
"text": " Keith Michael Jukes (18 February 1954 – 21 May 2013) was a senior Church of England priest. From 2007 to 2013, he was the Dean of Ripon.",
"score": "1.4628987"
},
{
"id": "26314822",
"title": "Peter Vaughan (police officer)",
"text": " Matt Jukes",
"score": "1.4507926"
},
{
"id": "27501586",
"title": "Keith Jukes",
"text": " In 1978, Jukes married Susanne (née Weatherhogg). Together they had two children: Laura and Matthew.",
"score": "1.4364614"
},
{
"id": "11552605",
"title": "Jukes",
"text": " ; Peter Jukes (born 1960), a British author and screenwriter ; Reginald Jukes, rugby league footballer who played in the 1930s and 1940s ; Richard Jukes (1804–1867), Primitive Methodist Minister and hymn writer ; Thomas H. Jukes (1906–1999), British-American biologist ; The Jukes family, a New York hill family that was the subject of Eugenics studies ; Alfred John Jukes-Browne (1851–1914), British invertebrate paleontologist ; Sylvia Jukes Morris (1935–2020), a British biographer ; Gabriella Francesca Jukes Miss World Wales 2019 James Jukes (1990 - present), a British Armed Forces soldier Jukes is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ",
"score": "1.430725"
},
{
"id": "16232623",
"title": "Richard Jukes",
"text": " Rev. Richard Jukes (1804–1867) was a popular Primitive Methodist minister and hymn writer. This article provides a brief biography, and a summary of his work as a popular minister and hymn writer during the first half-century of Primitive Methodism.",
"score": "1.4065583"
},
{
"id": "15735111",
"title": "Joseph Jukes",
"text": " Joseph Beete Jukes (10 October 1811 – 29 July 1869), born to John and Sophia Jukes at Summer Hill, Birmingham, England, was a renowned geologist, author of several geological manuals and served as a naturalist on the expeditions of (under the command of Francis Price Blackwood). Correspondents and friends addressed him as Beete Jukes.",
"score": "1.3971081"
},
{
"id": "24963215",
"title": "Peter J. Gomes",
"text": " Peter John Gomes (May 22, 1942 – February 28, 2011) was an American preacher and theologian, the Plummer Professor of Christian Morals at Harvard Divinity School and Pusey Minister at Harvard's Memorial Church — in the words of Harvard's president \"one of the great preachers of our generation, and a living symbol of courage and conviction.\"",
"score": "1.3841217"
},
{
"id": "3684681",
"title": "Peter Jukes",
"text": " Jukes' television writing has mainly been in the genre of prime time thrillers or TV detective fiction, with 90-minute or two-hour long stories being broadcast by the BBC. Jukes devised and wrote most of the three seasons of the BBC One prime time undercover thriller In Deep starring Nick Berry and Stephen Tompkinson; two 90-minute film length episodes of the BBC One series The Inspector Lynley Mysteries;. Burn Out, the two-hour first episode of the first season of the Emmy Award winning 'cold-case' series Waking the Dead; achieved 8.4m viewers and a 38% share. He and Ed Whitmore wrote the second series of the paranormal/science thriller Sea of Souls which ",
"score": "1.3766236"
},
{
"id": "14401489",
"title": "Roger Finke",
"text": " Professor Finke co-authored two books with sociologist of religion Rodney Stark. The Churching of America, 1776-1990: Winners and Losers in Our Religious Economy received the 1993 Distinguished Book Award from the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion. Acts of Faith: Explaining the Human Side of Religion received the 2001 Book Award from the American Sociological Association's Sociology of Religion Section. These books extended what is often called the New Paradigm or the Rational Choice theoretical perspective, conceptualizing denominations as competitors in a religious market. The Churching of America was methodologically noteworthy for demonstrating the utility of quantitative historical data on church membership. Additionally, Finke is the co-author of The ",
"score": "1.375279"
},
{
"id": "11438062",
"title": "Guy Juke",
"text": " William De White (born September 4, 1951), better known as Guy Juke, is a Austin, Texas–based graphic artist and musician. As a poster artist he created memorable imagery for nightclubs such as Armadillo World Headquarters and was one of the 'Armadillo Art Squad'. His work is recognized for its blocky, sharp-edged figures on angular, geometric settings. Often darkly detailed, his work include shadowy and angular figures inspired by horror films, haunting western landscapes, and loopy cartoon characters.",
"score": "1.3672826"
},
{
"id": "29122054",
"title": "Roger Jupp",
"text": " In 2003, Jupp was elected Bishop of Popondota. On 23 February 2003, he was consecrated a bishop in Resurrection Cathedral, Papua New Guinea. The following year he was diagnosed with a serious heart condition requiring a triple bypass and ill health forced his resignation in 2005. In 2005, Jupp returned to the Diocese of Chichester, and served as an Honorary Assistant Bishop between 2005 and 2012. In addition, he served as Priest-in-Charge of Christ Church, St Leonards-on-Sea. He was made Rector of the parish in 2006. From 2012 until 2018, he was Vicar of St. Laurence's Church, Long Eaton and Priest-in-Charge of Holy Trinity Church, Ilkeston; both in the Diocese of Derby. The Bishop of Derby did not however grant him a position as Honorary Assistant Bishop. He retired in November 2018. Jupp is also the Superior-General of the Confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament, and a member of the Council of Bishops of The Society.",
"score": "1.3666761"
}
] | [
"Peter Jukes\n Jukes has been a book reviewer and feature writer for both The Independent and the New Statesman on themes as diverse as nationalism, art in the computer age, and apocalyptic religion. During the 1980s and 90s, Jukes was an active member of the Labour Party and was involved in the investigations around the cash for questions scandal. More recently Jukes became an active Barack Obama supporter during the 2008 Democratic Party presidential primaries in the US, writing for Daily Kos and then MyDD when it became a pro-Hillary Clinton site. Later he recorded his online experiences of the Primary 'Flame Wars' for Prospect. Following the primaries, he was one of 25 regular bloggers who began writing for a new political blog, The Motley Moose. During the News International phone hacking scandal trial of Rebekah Brooks, Andy Coulson and others, Peter Jukes used the crowdfunding tool Indiegogo to raise donations to allow him to livetweet the trial from start to finish. In 2018, Jukes and Stephen Colegrave founded Byline Times.",
"Peter Jukes\n Peter Jukes (born 13 October 1960) is an English author, screenwriter, playwright, literary critic and blogger. He is the co-founder and executive editor of Byline Times.",
"Peter Jukes\n by John Berger a \"dream of a book\" following the traditions of Walter Benjamin: \"Benjamin dreamed of making a book entirely of quotations, and there have been some remarkable books which are creative responses to that idea, like Peter Jukes's A Shout in the Street.\" Following through in these themes of urbanism and city development Jukes also co-authored, along with Anna Whyatt, Stephen O'Brien and the sociologist Manuel Castells, the monograph Creative Capital: 21st Century Regions. Jukes is the author of The Fall of the House of Murdoch, published by Unbound, a crowd-funded publisher, in August 2012. Since 2016, Peter Jukes collaborates with Deeivya Meir on the podcast series Untold - The Daniel Morgan Murder. He also co-hosted the podcast Dial M for Mueller with journalist Carole Cadwalladr.",
"Peter Jukes\n Born in Swindon and attended Queens' College, Cambridge. His mother was an Armenian and the daughter of a man fleeing the Armenian genocide; she was later adopted by his grandfather.",
"Jukes\nAndrew Jukes (theologian) (1815–1901) ; Andrew Jukes (missionary) (1847–1931), Anglican missionary ; Betty Jukes (1910–2006), British sculptor ; Bill Jukes (c.1883–1939), English rugby league footballer who played in the 1900s and 1910s ; Francis Jukes (1745–1812), engraver and publisher ; David Jukes (born 1956), English cricketer ; Hamilton Jukes (1895–1951), British ice hockey player who competed in the 1924 Winter Olympics ; John Peter Jukes (1923–2011), English Prelate of the Roman Catholic Church ; Joseph Beete Jukes (1811–1869), British geologist ; Keith Jukes (1954–2013), Dean of Ripon ; Mavis Jukes (born 1947), American author ; Norman Jukes (born 1932), English professional ",
"Keith Jukes\n Jukes was ordained in the Church of England as a deacon in 1978 and as a priest on 30 June 1979. His first two postings were as a curate in the Diocese of Lichfield; the first from 1978 to 1981 and the second from 1981 to 1983. From 1983 to 1990, he was Curate-in-Charge of St Martin's Church, Stonydelph, Tamworth, Staffordshire: it is a jointly Anglican and Methodist church. In 1990, a team ministry was created joining St Martin's and two other churches. From 1990 to 1991, he served as Team Rector of the new parish and Rural Dean of Tamworth. Then, from 1991 ",
"Keith Jukes\n On 21 May 2013, Jukes died from stomach cancer at Harrogate District Hospital, Harrogate, North Yorkshire. He had announced his illness on 19 May, the previous Sunday. On 31 May, his funeral was held at Ripon Cathedral and led by John Packer, the then Bishop of Ripon and Leeds.",
"John Jukes (cartoonist)\n For the Catholic priest with the same name see John Jukes John Jukes (1900-1972) was an English artist notable for his work in British comics. Jukes was born in Ladywood. He was a contemporary of Arthur Ferrier at Art School. He worked for the Amalgamated Press from the 1920s to the 1950s. Amongst others he drew for Comic Cuts, Funny Wonder, Radio Fun and Whizzer and Chips. He died in Cornwall on 31 October 1972. He is the grandfather of the author and journalist Peter Jukes",
"Keith Jukes\n Jukes was born on 18 February 1954. He studied theology at the University of Leeds and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree in 1976. From 1977 to 1978, he spent a year at Lincoln Theological College, an Anglican theological college, to prepare for ordained ministry.",
"Keith Jukes\n Keith Michael Jukes (18 February 1954 – 21 May 2013) was a senior Church of England priest. From 2007 to 2013, he was the Dean of Ripon.",
"Peter Vaughan (police officer)\n Matt Jukes",
"Keith Jukes\n In 1978, Jukes married Susanne (née Weatherhogg). Together they had two children: Laura and Matthew.",
"Jukes\n ; Peter Jukes (born 1960), a British author and screenwriter ; Reginald Jukes, rugby league footballer who played in the 1930s and 1940s ; Richard Jukes (1804–1867), Primitive Methodist Minister and hymn writer ; Thomas H. Jukes (1906–1999), British-American biologist ; The Jukes family, a New York hill family that was the subject of Eugenics studies ; Alfred John Jukes-Browne (1851–1914), British invertebrate paleontologist ; Sylvia Jukes Morris (1935–2020), a British biographer ; Gabriella Francesca Jukes Miss World Wales 2019 James Jukes (1990 - present), a British Armed Forces soldier Jukes is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ",
"Richard Jukes\n Rev. Richard Jukes (1804–1867) was a popular Primitive Methodist minister and hymn writer. This article provides a brief biography, and a summary of his work as a popular minister and hymn writer during the first half-century of Primitive Methodism.",
"Joseph Jukes\n Joseph Beete Jukes (10 October 1811 – 29 July 1869), born to John and Sophia Jukes at Summer Hill, Birmingham, England, was a renowned geologist, author of several geological manuals and served as a naturalist on the expeditions of (under the command of Francis Price Blackwood). Correspondents and friends addressed him as Beete Jukes.",
"Peter J. Gomes\n Peter John Gomes (May 22, 1942 – February 28, 2011) was an American preacher and theologian, the Plummer Professor of Christian Morals at Harvard Divinity School and Pusey Minister at Harvard's Memorial Church — in the words of Harvard's president \"one of the great preachers of our generation, and a living symbol of courage and conviction.\"",
"Peter Jukes\n Jukes' television writing has mainly been in the genre of prime time thrillers or TV detective fiction, with 90-minute or two-hour long stories being broadcast by the BBC. Jukes devised and wrote most of the three seasons of the BBC One prime time undercover thriller In Deep starring Nick Berry and Stephen Tompkinson; two 90-minute film length episodes of the BBC One series The Inspector Lynley Mysteries;. Burn Out, the two-hour first episode of the first season of the Emmy Award winning 'cold-case' series Waking the Dead; achieved 8.4m viewers and a 38% share. He and Ed Whitmore wrote the second series of the paranormal/science thriller Sea of Souls which ",
"Roger Finke\n Professor Finke co-authored two books with sociologist of religion Rodney Stark. The Churching of America, 1776-1990: Winners and Losers in Our Religious Economy received the 1993 Distinguished Book Award from the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion. Acts of Faith: Explaining the Human Side of Religion received the 2001 Book Award from the American Sociological Association's Sociology of Religion Section. These books extended what is often called the New Paradigm or the Rational Choice theoretical perspective, conceptualizing denominations as competitors in a religious market. The Churching of America was methodologically noteworthy for demonstrating the utility of quantitative historical data on church membership. Additionally, Finke is the co-author of The ",
"Guy Juke\n William De White (born September 4, 1951), better known as Guy Juke, is a Austin, Texas–based graphic artist and musician. As a poster artist he created memorable imagery for nightclubs such as Armadillo World Headquarters and was one of the 'Armadillo Art Squad'. His work is recognized for its blocky, sharp-edged figures on angular, geometric settings. Often darkly detailed, his work include shadowy and angular figures inspired by horror films, haunting western landscapes, and loopy cartoon characters.",
"Roger Jupp\n In 2003, Jupp was elected Bishop of Popondota. On 23 February 2003, he was consecrated a bishop in Resurrection Cathedral, Papua New Guinea. The following year he was diagnosed with a serious heart condition requiring a triple bypass and ill health forced his resignation in 2005. In 2005, Jupp returned to the Diocese of Chichester, and served as an Honorary Assistant Bishop between 2005 and 2012. In addition, he served as Priest-in-Charge of Christ Church, St Leonards-on-Sea. He was made Rector of the parish in 2006. From 2012 until 2018, he was Vicar of St. Laurence's Church, Long Eaton and Priest-in-Charge of Holy Trinity Church, Ilkeston; both in the Diocese of Derby. The Bishop of Derby did not however grant him a position as Honorary Assistant Bishop. He retired in November 2018. Jupp is also the Superior-General of the Confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament, and a member of the Council of Bishops of The Society."
] |
What is the religion of François Gayot? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | François Gayot | 6,521,985 | 71 | [
{
"id": "11201258",
"title": "François Gayot",
"text": " François Gayot (July 17, 1927 – December 16, 2010) was the Catholic archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cap-Haïtien. Haiti. Ordained to the priesthood in 1954, Gayot was named bishop of the then Cap-Haïtien Diocese. In 1988 the Diocese was elevated to an archdiocese. Archbishop Gayot retired in 2003 and died in 2010.",
"score": "1.562228"
},
{
"id": "10833027",
"title": "Francisque Gay",
"text": " Francisque Gay was born on 2 May 1885 in Roanne, Loire, son of a plumbing contractor. He was educated by the Marists of Charlieu, then by the Lazarists of Lyon. In 1903, when he was aged 18, Gay helped at the national congress of the Cercles d'études (Study Circles) in Lyon. There he was impressed by the views of Marc Sangnier, founder of Le Sillon (The Furrow). He went to Paris to visit Sangnier at his home on the boulevard Raspail and to offer his help with Le Sillon. He was deeply influenced by Sangnier's views on Social Catholicism, and founded a branch of Le Sillon in Roanne. He contributed to Le Sillon's journal, Démocratie. Gay became more deeply involved in Catholicism, and in 1905 entered the Major Seminary of Francheville. He left when the seminary closed in December 1906 and moved to Paris, where he studied at the Sorbonne faculty of letters. He then moved to Montpellier where he was accepted as an English teacher by a religious college.",
"score": "1.5057344"
},
{
"id": "29949648",
"title": "Jean Baubérot",
"text": " Baubérot is the son of teachers. He attended his secondary education at the Lycée Gay-Lussac in Limoges. At the Paris-Sorbonne University, he was awarded doctor for history (under the direction of Jean-Marie Mayeur) for letters and human sciences, he graduated from the École pratique des hautes études (EPHE). He started as technical contributor at the EPHE in 1967, then he became research assistant in 1971, then director of studies in 1978. He chaired the Section of Religious Sciences between 1986 and 1994. He was appointed Chairman of the School in 1999. He founded in 1995 and directed in 2001 the Group of Sociology of religion and secularism (EPHE-CNRS). Between 1997 and 1998, he was appointed technical adviser to the cabinet of Ségolène Royal. He was the sole member of the Stasi Commission to have abstained on the vote of the report which led to the development of the French law on secularity and conspicuous religious symbols in schools. He is also a member of the Société internationale de sociologie de la religion (SISR) and chaired the Ernest Renan society in 1995 and 1996. Baubérot was awarded Chevalier of the Légion d'honneur.",
"score": "1.4879138"
},
{
"id": "10856910",
"title": "François Blanchetière",
"text": " François Blanchetière is a French New Testament scholar. He is known for his view on continuity between Second Temple period Judaism and Jewish Christianity and considers that Jesus cannot be considered as a \"founder\" of a religion. Blanchetière considers that \"Nazarene\" religion was a religious movement of Semitic character within Judaism. His position is often linked to that of Simon Claude Mimouni.",
"score": "1.4652617"
},
{
"id": "10833026",
"title": "Francisque Gay",
"text": " Francisque Gay (2 May 1885 – 22 October 1963) was a French editor, politician and diplomat. He was committed to the Catholic Church and to Christian democracy. He ran the Bloud et Gay publishing house for many years, and edited the influential journals La Vie Catholique (Catholic Life) and l'Aube (The Dawn). He helped publish clandestine journals during the German occupation of France in World War II (1939–45). After the war he was a deputy from 1945 to 1951, and participated in three cabinets in 1945–46.",
"score": "1.4566677"
},
{
"id": "6786178",
"title": "François Gayot de Pitaval",
"text": " François Gayot de Pitaval (1673–1743) was a French advocate. He compiled a famous collection of causes célèbres. Later the literary genre of true crime collections became known as Pitaval.",
"score": "1.4306817"
},
{
"id": "13626023",
"title": "Jean-Jacques Pillot",
"text": " Jean-Jacques Pillot was born in Vaux-Lavalette. He came from a pious family of humble means, entered the seminary at Marennes and became a priest. However, he deplored the role of the Catholic Church in propping up the Restoration régime and became increasingly doubtful about the existence of God. In the 1830s he underwent a crisis of conscience and prepared his exit from the Church by studying medicine. In 1837 he renounced his priesthood and became a doctor in Paris. He also proclaimed himself an atheist, a republican and a communist. Pillot increasingly devoted himself to political activism and journalism. From 1839 on contributed to and later edited the journal La Tribune du Peuple. He was an admirer of François-Noël 'Gracchus' Babeuf, the utopian communist revolutionary who had revolted against the Directory in 1796. Pillot called for a revolutionary coup d'état and the establishment of a republican régime that would collectivise all property and guarantee every citizen an equal share of the necessities of life. He is usually mentioned as a representative of Neo-Babouvism, along with writers like Philippe Buonarroti.",
"score": "1.428605"
},
{
"id": "6786179",
"title": "François Gayot de Pitaval",
"text": "Causes célèbres et intéressantes, avec les jugemens qui les ont décidées (1734-1741 in 18 volumes) ",
"score": "1.4195025"
},
{
"id": "29949647",
"title": "Jean Baubérot",
"text": " Jean Baubérot (born 26 July 1941 in Châteauponsac, Haute-Vienne), is a French historian and sociologist specializing in sociology of religions. He is the founder of the sociology of secularism. After holding the chair of \"History and Sociology of Protestantism\" (1978–1990), he held the chair of \"History and Sociology of secularism \"(since 1991) at the École pratique des hautes études, where he was the honorary president. He wrote twenty books, including a historical novel. He is coauthor of the Déclaration internationale sur la laïcité, signed by 250 scholars from 30 countries.",
"score": "1.4192706"
},
{
"id": "14867201",
"title": "Alexandre Du Mège",
"text": " Vaissète by supplying a new complete edition of Histoire générale de Languedoc (General History of Languedoc) to publisher Jean-Baptiste Paya, generally considered unreliable and faulty. From 1836 to his death, he was the maintainer of the Consistori del Gay Saber. In 1852, he imagined a Neo-Gothic decoration for the crypts of the Basilica of Saint-Sernin. It was destroyed during the resumption of restoration work in the 1960s. In spite of the faults that can be attributed to him, especially his lack of scientific rigor, he remains one of the main founders of the archeology of southern France, a character halfway between science and myth, uniting erudition and imagination, fiction and reality.",
"score": "1.4078965"
},
{
"id": "15728087",
"title": "Jean-Claude Gayssot",
"text": " Jean-Claude Gayssot (born 6 September 1944, in Béziers, Hérault) is a French politician. A member of the French Communist Party (PCF), he was Minister of Transportation in the government of Lionel Jospin of the Socialist Party from 1997 to 2002. He gave his name to the 1990 Gayssot Act repressing Holocaust denial and speech in favor of racial discrimination. He is also responsible for the Act on housing projects (loi SRU), which imposes a 20% housing projects limit in each town lest they pay a penalty fine, in an attempt to struggle against spatial segregation (Neuilly-sur-Seine, one of the wealthiest communes of France, is an often cited example of a commune which prefers to pay rather than respect the limit).",
"score": "1.4067712"
},
{
"id": "9263909",
"title": "University of Bordeaux",
"text": "Jean Baptiste Gay, vicomte de Martignac (1778–1832), French statesman ; Jean Ybarnégaray (1883–1956), Basque–French politician ; Jean-Fernand Audeguil (1887–1956), French politician ; Ba Maw (1893–1977), Head of State of Burma ; Michel Kafando (b. 1942), Burkinabé diplomat ; Xavier Darcos (b. 1947), French politician, scholar, civil servant and former Minister of Labour ; Jean-Paul Gonzalez (b. 1947), French virologist ; Mario Aoun (b. 1951), Lebanese politician ; Alain Vidalies (b. 1951), the French Secretary of State for Transport, the Sea and Fisheries ; Nagoum Yamassoum (b. 1954), Chadian politician and former Prime Minister of Chad ; Anicet-Georges Dologuélé (b. 1957), Central African politician ; Reza Taghipour (b. 1957), Iranian conservative politician ; Thierry Santa (b. 1967), French Polynesian politician in New Caledonia ; Germaine Kouméalo Anaté (b. 1968), Togolese government minister, scholar and writer ; Olivier Falorni (b. 1972), French politician ; Myriam El Khomri (b. 1978), French politician ",
"score": "1.4006181"
},
{
"id": "31184380",
"title": "Dominique Avon",
"text": " Dominique Avon is a French historian of religion and professor at the University of Maine, France. He studies the interactions between monotheistic religions in the Mediterranean Basin, and has written several books on Catholic religious orders such as the Society of Jesus and the Order of Preachers and on Muslim groups such as the Hezbollah (Hezbollah: A History of the \"Party of God\", written with Anas-Trissa Khatchadourian). He is also the author of La Fragilité des clercs (\"The Frailty of the Intellectuals\", untranslated), an essay in which he analyses the thought of Samuel P. Huntington, Tariq Ramadan, Georges Corm, Alain Besançon and Alain Finkielkraut, and criticizes their perceived warmongering tendencies and inability to reason dispassionately about religious matters. The ",
"score": "1.4000609"
},
{
"id": "1706552",
"title": "François Bellot",
"text": " François Bellot (born February 8, 1954 in Jemelle, Rochefort, Belgium) is a Belgian politician. He is a member of the Reformist Movement (MR) party. He served as the Federal Minister for Mobility and Transport in the Wilmès' caretaker Government from April 17, 2016 to October 1, 2020.",
"score": "1.399514"
},
{
"id": "5515306",
"title": "Stéphane François",
"text": " Born on 1 January 1973, Stéphane François attended Lille 2 University of Health and Law, where he obtained a PhD in political science after a doctoral thesis on the \"Paganism of the Nouvelle Droite.\" An associate member of the CNRS, he has been a member of the Observatoire des radicalités politiques (\"Observatory of political radicalism\") since 2014, and a researcher in the Groupe Sociétés, Religions, Laïcités (\"Societies, Religions, Secularism Group\"). François is also a lecturer in contemporary history and political science at the University of Valenciennes.",
"score": "1.3965575"
},
{
"id": "33016360",
"title": "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in France",
"text": " religion and philosopher Christian Euvrard, also member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, revealed that Mormons of France are demographically and politically similar to other French people. 30% were regular churchgoers, and their marriage rate, as well as their birth rate, were higher than the national average. Primarily urban and with foreign origins, they considered the hardest doctrine of their religion is the order of not drinking alcohol, coffee, tea. Only 30% of them participated in an association and 83% believed that all religions have some truth. However, LDS differed from French people in their moral choices: 93% of them are opposed to gay marriage.",
"score": "1.3961273"
},
{
"id": "12385314",
"title": "Jean Joseph Marie Amiot",
"text": " Joseph Marie Amiot was born at Toulon. He entered the Society of Jesus in 1737 and was sent in 1750 as a missionary to China. He soon won the confidence of the Qianlong Emperor and spent the remainder of his life at Beijing. He was a correspondent of the Académie des Sciences, official translator of Western languages for the Qianlong Emperor, and the spiritual leader of the French mission in Peking. He died in Peking in 1793, two days after the departure of the British Macartney Embassy. He could not meet Lord Macartney, but exhorted him to patience in two letters, explaining that \"this world is the reverse of our own\". He used a Chinese name (Qian De-Ming 錢德明) while he was in China.",
"score": "1.391031"
},
{
"id": "13626028",
"title": "Jean-Jacques Pillot",
"text": " Jean-Jacques Pillot is often grouped with Théodore Dézamy (1805–1850), Richard Lahautière (1813–1882), Albert Laponneraye (1808–1849) and Jules Gay (1807–1887) as a representative of materialist communism in France and was cited as a forerunner by Karl Marx. Pillot was not only a metaphysical materialist but is also credited with a rudimentary class analysis of political conflict. Pillot thus represents one of the links from Babouvism and utopian Jacobin communism to Marxism.",
"score": "1.3901045"
},
{
"id": "24917189",
"title": "Jean-François Parot",
"text": " Coming from a family closely connected with the cinema (as a child, he knew Jean Gabin, his mother worked for Marcel Carné and his grandfather was editor of Abel Gance's Napoléon ), Parot has a BA and an MA in history and completed postgraduate studies in anthropology, specializing in Egyptian mummification techniques, the myths of the Pacific Islanders, and the social history of eighteenth century Paris. He is the author of a study Structures sociales des quartiers de Grève, Saint-Avoye et Saint-Antoine, 1780–1785 (published on microfiche by Hachette, 1974). Following his military service, working in Saint-Louis, Senegal, Parot was launched into diplomacy \"by chance\" ",
"score": "1.3883468"
},
{
"id": "27041449",
"title": "Antoine Banier",
"text": " In the ambitious Histoire générale des cérémonies, moeurs, et coutumes religieuses de tous les peuples du monde, in seven volumes (Paris, 1741), for which the engravings had been supplied by the late Bernard Picart, Banier and his collaborator, the abbé Jean-Baptiste Le Mascrier, aimed to describe all religions of the known world, their origins and doctrines and especially their rites: \"It reflects in content and tone the learning, urbanity and self-confidence of the Catholic Church of the Ancien Régime,\" the producers of a lavish modern facsimile have termed it. In the work, Banier and Le Mascrier were in fact revising and enlarging an earlier Cérémonies et coutumes religieuses de tous les peoples du monde, which had been compiled by the satirical Huguenot writer and printer, Jean-Frédéric ",
"score": "1.3882588"
}
] | [
"François Gayot\n François Gayot (July 17, 1927 – December 16, 2010) was the Catholic archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cap-Haïtien. Haiti. Ordained to the priesthood in 1954, Gayot was named bishop of the then Cap-Haïtien Diocese. In 1988 the Diocese was elevated to an archdiocese. Archbishop Gayot retired in 2003 and died in 2010.",
"Francisque Gay\n Francisque Gay was born on 2 May 1885 in Roanne, Loire, son of a plumbing contractor. He was educated by the Marists of Charlieu, then by the Lazarists of Lyon. In 1903, when he was aged 18, Gay helped at the national congress of the Cercles d'études (Study Circles) in Lyon. There he was impressed by the views of Marc Sangnier, founder of Le Sillon (The Furrow). He went to Paris to visit Sangnier at his home on the boulevard Raspail and to offer his help with Le Sillon. He was deeply influenced by Sangnier's views on Social Catholicism, and founded a branch of Le Sillon in Roanne. He contributed to Le Sillon's journal, Démocratie. Gay became more deeply involved in Catholicism, and in 1905 entered the Major Seminary of Francheville. He left when the seminary closed in December 1906 and moved to Paris, where he studied at the Sorbonne faculty of letters. He then moved to Montpellier where he was accepted as an English teacher by a religious college.",
"Jean Baubérot\n Baubérot is the son of teachers. He attended his secondary education at the Lycée Gay-Lussac in Limoges. At the Paris-Sorbonne University, he was awarded doctor for history (under the direction of Jean-Marie Mayeur) for letters and human sciences, he graduated from the École pratique des hautes études (EPHE). He started as technical contributor at the EPHE in 1967, then he became research assistant in 1971, then director of studies in 1978. He chaired the Section of Religious Sciences between 1986 and 1994. He was appointed Chairman of the School in 1999. He founded in 1995 and directed in 2001 the Group of Sociology of religion and secularism (EPHE-CNRS). Between 1997 and 1998, he was appointed technical adviser to the cabinet of Ségolène Royal. He was the sole member of the Stasi Commission to have abstained on the vote of the report which led to the development of the French law on secularity and conspicuous religious symbols in schools. He is also a member of the Société internationale de sociologie de la religion (SISR) and chaired the Ernest Renan society in 1995 and 1996. Baubérot was awarded Chevalier of the Légion d'honneur.",
"François Blanchetière\n François Blanchetière is a French New Testament scholar. He is known for his view on continuity between Second Temple period Judaism and Jewish Christianity and considers that Jesus cannot be considered as a \"founder\" of a religion. Blanchetière considers that \"Nazarene\" religion was a religious movement of Semitic character within Judaism. His position is often linked to that of Simon Claude Mimouni.",
"Francisque Gay\n Francisque Gay (2 May 1885 – 22 October 1963) was a French editor, politician and diplomat. He was committed to the Catholic Church and to Christian democracy. He ran the Bloud et Gay publishing house for many years, and edited the influential journals La Vie Catholique (Catholic Life) and l'Aube (The Dawn). He helped publish clandestine journals during the German occupation of France in World War II (1939–45). After the war he was a deputy from 1945 to 1951, and participated in three cabinets in 1945–46.",
"François Gayot de Pitaval\n François Gayot de Pitaval (1673–1743) was a French advocate. He compiled a famous collection of causes célèbres. Later the literary genre of true crime collections became known as Pitaval.",
"Jean-Jacques Pillot\n Jean-Jacques Pillot was born in Vaux-Lavalette. He came from a pious family of humble means, entered the seminary at Marennes and became a priest. However, he deplored the role of the Catholic Church in propping up the Restoration régime and became increasingly doubtful about the existence of God. In the 1830s he underwent a crisis of conscience and prepared his exit from the Church by studying medicine. In 1837 he renounced his priesthood and became a doctor in Paris. He also proclaimed himself an atheist, a republican and a communist. Pillot increasingly devoted himself to political activism and journalism. From 1839 on contributed to and later edited the journal La Tribune du Peuple. He was an admirer of François-Noël 'Gracchus' Babeuf, the utopian communist revolutionary who had revolted against the Directory in 1796. Pillot called for a revolutionary coup d'état and the establishment of a republican régime that would collectivise all property and guarantee every citizen an equal share of the necessities of life. He is usually mentioned as a representative of Neo-Babouvism, along with writers like Philippe Buonarroti.",
"François Gayot de Pitaval\nCauses célèbres et intéressantes, avec les jugemens qui les ont décidées (1734-1741 in 18 volumes) ",
"Jean Baubérot\n Jean Baubérot (born 26 July 1941 in Châteauponsac, Haute-Vienne), is a French historian and sociologist specializing in sociology of religions. He is the founder of the sociology of secularism. After holding the chair of \"History and Sociology of Protestantism\" (1978–1990), he held the chair of \"History and Sociology of secularism \"(since 1991) at the École pratique des hautes études, where he was the honorary president. He wrote twenty books, including a historical novel. He is coauthor of the Déclaration internationale sur la laïcité, signed by 250 scholars from 30 countries.",
"Alexandre Du Mège\n Vaissète by supplying a new complete edition of Histoire générale de Languedoc (General History of Languedoc) to publisher Jean-Baptiste Paya, generally considered unreliable and faulty. From 1836 to his death, he was the maintainer of the Consistori del Gay Saber. In 1852, he imagined a Neo-Gothic decoration for the crypts of the Basilica of Saint-Sernin. It was destroyed during the resumption of restoration work in the 1960s. In spite of the faults that can be attributed to him, especially his lack of scientific rigor, he remains one of the main founders of the archeology of southern France, a character halfway between science and myth, uniting erudition and imagination, fiction and reality.",
"Jean-Claude Gayssot\n Jean-Claude Gayssot (born 6 September 1944, in Béziers, Hérault) is a French politician. A member of the French Communist Party (PCF), he was Minister of Transportation in the government of Lionel Jospin of the Socialist Party from 1997 to 2002. He gave his name to the 1990 Gayssot Act repressing Holocaust denial and speech in favor of racial discrimination. He is also responsible for the Act on housing projects (loi SRU), which imposes a 20% housing projects limit in each town lest they pay a penalty fine, in an attempt to struggle against spatial segregation (Neuilly-sur-Seine, one of the wealthiest communes of France, is an often cited example of a commune which prefers to pay rather than respect the limit).",
"University of Bordeaux\nJean Baptiste Gay, vicomte de Martignac (1778–1832), French statesman ; Jean Ybarnégaray (1883–1956), Basque–French politician ; Jean-Fernand Audeguil (1887–1956), French politician ; Ba Maw (1893–1977), Head of State of Burma ; Michel Kafando (b. 1942), Burkinabé diplomat ; Xavier Darcos (b. 1947), French politician, scholar, civil servant and former Minister of Labour ; Jean-Paul Gonzalez (b. 1947), French virologist ; Mario Aoun (b. 1951), Lebanese politician ; Alain Vidalies (b. 1951), the French Secretary of State for Transport, the Sea and Fisheries ; Nagoum Yamassoum (b. 1954), Chadian politician and former Prime Minister of Chad ; Anicet-Georges Dologuélé (b. 1957), Central African politician ; Reza Taghipour (b. 1957), Iranian conservative politician ; Thierry Santa (b. 1967), French Polynesian politician in New Caledonia ; Germaine Kouméalo Anaté (b. 1968), Togolese government minister, scholar and writer ; Olivier Falorni (b. 1972), French politician ; Myriam El Khomri (b. 1978), French politician ",
"Dominique Avon\n Dominique Avon is a French historian of religion and professor at the University of Maine, France. He studies the interactions between monotheistic religions in the Mediterranean Basin, and has written several books on Catholic religious orders such as the Society of Jesus and the Order of Preachers and on Muslim groups such as the Hezbollah (Hezbollah: A History of the \"Party of God\", written with Anas-Trissa Khatchadourian). He is also the author of La Fragilité des clercs (\"The Frailty of the Intellectuals\", untranslated), an essay in which he analyses the thought of Samuel P. Huntington, Tariq Ramadan, Georges Corm, Alain Besançon and Alain Finkielkraut, and criticizes their perceived warmongering tendencies and inability to reason dispassionately about religious matters. The ",
"François Bellot\n François Bellot (born February 8, 1954 in Jemelle, Rochefort, Belgium) is a Belgian politician. He is a member of the Reformist Movement (MR) party. He served as the Federal Minister for Mobility and Transport in the Wilmès' caretaker Government from April 17, 2016 to October 1, 2020.",
"Stéphane François\n Born on 1 January 1973, Stéphane François attended Lille 2 University of Health and Law, where he obtained a PhD in political science after a doctoral thesis on the \"Paganism of the Nouvelle Droite.\" An associate member of the CNRS, he has been a member of the Observatoire des radicalités politiques (\"Observatory of political radicalism\") since 2014, and a researcher in the Groupe Sociétés, Religions, Laïcités (\"Societies, Religions, Secularism Group\"). François is also a lecturer in contemporary history and political science at the University of Valenciennes.",
"The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in France\n religion and philosopher Christian Euvrard, also member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, revealed that Mormons of France are demographically and politically similar to other French people. 30% were regular churchgoers, and their marriage rate, as well as their birth rate, were higher than the national average. Primarily urban and with foreign origins, they considered the hardest doctrine of their religion is the order of not drinking alcohol, coffee, tea. Only 30% of them participated in an association and 83% believed that all religions have some truth. However, LDS differed from French people in their moral choices: 93% of them are opposed to gay marriage.",
"Jean Joseph Marie Amiot\n Joseph Marie Amiot was born at Toulon. He entered the Society of Jesus in 1737 and was sent in 1750 as a missionary to China. He soon won the confidence of the Qianlong Emperor and spent the remainder of his life at Beijing. He was a correspondent of the Académie des Sciences, official translator of Western languages for the Qianlong Emperor, and the spiritual leader of the French mission in Peking. He died in Peking in 1793, two days after the departure of the British Macartney Embassy. He could not meet Lord Macartney, but exhorted him to patience in two letters, explaining that \"this world is the reverse of our own\". He used a Chinese name (Qian De-Ming 錢德明) while he was in China.",
"Jean-Jacques Pillot\n Jean-Jacques Pillot is often grouped with Théodore Dézamy (1805–1850), Richard Lahautière (1813–1882), Albert Laponneraye (1808–1849) and Jules Gay (1807–1887) as a representative of materialist communism in France and was cited as a forerunner by Karl Marx. Pillot was not only a metaphysical materialist but is also credited with a rudimentary class analysis of political conflict. Pillot thus represents one of the links from Babouvism and utopian Jacobin communism to Marxism.",
"Jean-François Parot\n Coming from a family closely connected with the cinema (as a child, he knew Jean Gabin, his mother worked for Marcel Carné and his grandfather was editor of Abel Gance's Napoléon ), Parot has a BA and an MA in history and completed postgraduate studies in anthropology, specializing in Egyptian mummification techniques, the myths of the Pacific Islanders, and the social history of eighteenth century Paris. He is the author of a study Structures sociales des quartiers de Grève, Saint-Avoye et Saint-Antoine, 1780–1785 (published on microfiche by Hachette, 1974). Following his military service, working in Saint-Louis, Senegal, Parot was launched into diplomacy \"by chance\" ",
"Antoine Banier\n In the ambitious Histoire générale des cérémonies, moeurs, et coutumes religieuses de tous les peuples du monde, in seven volumes (Paris, 1741), for which the engravings had been supplied by the late Bernard Picart, Banier and his collaborator, the abbé Jean-Baptiste Le Mascrier, aimed to describe all religions of the known world, their origins and doctrines and especially their rites: \"It reflects in content and tone the learning, urbanity and self-confidence of the Catholic Church of the Ancien Régime,\" the producers of a lavish modern facsimile have termed it. In the work, Banier and Le Mascrier were in fact revising and enlarging an earlier Cérémonies et coutumes religieuses de tous les peoples du monde, which had been compiled by the satirical Huguenot writer and printer, Jean-Frédéric "
] |
What is the religion of Ricardo Watty Urquidi? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Ricardo Watty Urquidi | 461,016 | 75 | [
{
"id": "9143726",
"title": "Ricardo Watty Urquidi",
"text": " Ricardo Watty Urquidi (July 16, 1938 – November 1, 2011) was the Roman Catholic bishop of the Diocese of Tepic in Nayarit, Mexico. Born in San Diego, California, he was ordained to the priesthood in 1968. In 1980 he was named bishop. He died in Tepic on November 1, 2011, aged 73, from pancreatic cancer.",
"score": "1.7966602"
},
{
"id": "25865552",
"title": "Luis Urquidi",
"text": " Luis Enrique Urquidi Holberton (3 October 1935−3 March 1994) was a Chilean musician and folklorist. Despite he was born in Antofagasta, Urquidi was grew up in Valparaíso, where then joined the Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaíso School of Law, career which he didn't end. Similarly, he was part of the nationalist band Los Cuatro Cuartos in the 1960s, decade where he helped to Willy Bascuñán to compose Los Viejos Estandartes («The Old Military Banners»), song which later was officialy established as the anthem of the Chilean Army (1976). A strong oppositor to the socialist president Salvador Allende, after the 1973 coup d'état, he supported the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet through the creation of other marches like «Alborada», which honored the coup with allusions to September 11th. By the other hand, in 1971 he already was ruler of Santiago and in 1989 he failed to be elected as deputy for the 19th District composed by Independencia and Recoleta.",
"score": "1.4123249"
},
{
"id": "27402765",
"title": "Roman Catholic Diocese of Nuevo Laredo",
"text": "Ricardo Watty Urquidi, M.Sp.S. (1989–2008), appointed Bishop of Tepic, Nayarit ; Gustavo Rodríguez Vega (2008-2015), appointed Archbishop of Yucatán ; Enrique Sanchez Martinez (2015- ) ",
"score": "1.3778638"
},
{
"id": "2088736",
"title": "Mestre Irineu",
"text": " Raimundo Irineu Serra, also known as Mestre (Master) Irineu, (December 15, 1892 São Vicente Ferrer, Maranhão, Brazil — July 6, 1971) was the founder of a syncretic religion known as Santo Daime. Irineu was raised Roman Catholic. He later moved to the state of Acre where he worked on rubber plantations. In the city of Brasiléia, which is close to the border of Bolivia, he was in contact with other people from his home state of Maranhão as well as Bolivians, from whom he learned the use of ayahuasca. In these early experiences he encountered the Virgin Mary (the Queen of the Forest) and began receiving the guidance which developed into a religious doctrine throughout the remainder of his long life.",
"score": "1.3411654"
},
{
"id": "1623014",
"title": "Ricardo Duchesne",
"text": " Ricardo Duchesne is a Puerto Rican-born Canadian historical sociologist and former professor at the University of New Brunswick. His main research interests are Western civilization, the rise of the West, and multiculturalism. Duchesne's views on immigration and multiculturalism have been described as racist and white nationalist. He has denied being a racist to the mainstream press, but has described himself as being \"the only academic in Canada, and possibly the Western world, who questions the ideology of diversity while advocating white identity politics.\"",
"score": "1.3194581"
},
{
"id": "6572833",
"title": "Religion in Argentina",
"text": " Besides mainstream religious practices, there are also a number of unconventional practices, usually part of local folklore. One of the most famous is the veneration of La Difunta Correa (\"The Deceased Correa\"). Many other beliefs in advocations of the Virgin, saints and other religious characters exist throughout the country, which are locally or regionally popular and church-endorsed. Another popular cult is that of the Gauchito Gil (\"the little gaucho Gil\", Antonio Mamerto Gil Núñez), born in the province of Corrientes (allegedly in 1847). Gil was forced to enlist to fight in the civil war, but he deserted and became an outlaw à la Robin Hood. From the Río Negro Province, Ceferino Namuncurá, son of the Mapuche cacique Manuel Namuncurá, is also ",
"score": "1.3142867"
},
{
"id": "28332079",
"title": "Evo Morales and the Catholic Church",
"text": " In June 2006, Felix Patzi incurred organizational opposition against the Morales government's ideas when he declared that \"Catholicism would no longer be 'the official' religion taught at schools.\" Patzi said that he wanted to end \"the religious monopoly\" of the Catholic faith in schools and allow all faiths to be taught, \"from oriental religions to those practiced by our native peoples.\" He said he would end the policy that made Catholic religious classes obligatory for students, and called the existing system \"colonial\". In an interview with the newspaper La Razon, Patz said, \"In Bolivia the people are not only Catholic, but also of other religious faiths.\" He stated ",
"score": "1.3116865"
},
{
"id": "9446502",
"title": "Domestic policy of the Evo Morales administration",
"text": " In June 2005, Minister Felix Patzi brought organizational opposition against the Morales governments' ideas when he declared that \"Catholicism would no longer be 'the official' religion taught at schools.\" After mass protests led by the Catholic hierarchy this proposal was shelved by Morales.",
"score": "1.3058836"
},
{
"id": "4544296",
"title": "Religious syncretism",
"text": " Many historical Native American religious movements have incorporated Christian European influence, like the Native American Church, the Ghost Dance, and the religion of Handsome Lake. Santo Daime is a syncretic religion founded in Brazil that incorporates elements of several religious or spiritual traditions including Folk Catholicism, Kardecist Spiritism, African animism and indigenous South American shamanism, including vegetalismo. Unitarian Universalism also provides an example of a modern syncretic religion. It traces its roots to Universalist and Unitarian Christian congregations. However, modern Unitarian Universalism freely incorporates elements from other religious and non-religious traditions, so that it no longer identifies as \"Christian.\" The Theosophical Society professes to go beyond being a syncretic movement that combines deities into an elaborate Spiritual Hierarchy, and assembles evidence that points to ",
"score": "1.2992032"
},
{
"id": "8944865",
"title": "Religion in South America",
"text": " Brazil is the country with more practitioners in the world of Allan Kardec's codification of the Spiritism, followed by over 12 million people, with 30 to 45 million sympathizers. Most followers of the Spiritism are people that were mostly Catholic, Protestants and Atheists respectively. Chico Xavier wrote over 490 books, which complements the spiritualist doctrine.",
"score": "1.29562"
},
{
"id": "3388528",
"title": "Republicans (Brazil)",
"text": " and Candomblé religions. Edir Macedo considered participating in presidential elections in order to transform Brazil into a theocratic state. As mayor of Rio de Janeiro, Crivella called the Carnival of Rio de Janeiro an \"un-Christian excess\" and ordered severe financial cuts for the organisers. Furthermore, he is known for statements of religious intolerance. In his 1999 book Evangelizing Africa, he claimed that homosexuality is a \"terrible evil,\" that Catholics are \"demonic\", that African religions are based on \"evil spirits,\" and that Hindus drink their children's blood. He has since tried to distance himself from the book, saying that it was the work of a young, immature missionary.",
"score": "1.2914405"
},
{
"id": "2993256",
"title": "Mestre Gabriel",
"text": " José Gabriel da Costa, later known as Mestre Gabriel, (1922–1971), is the founder of the União do Vegetal, a Christian religious sect that considers Hoasca (more commonly referred to as \"ayahuasca\") to be its main sacrament. This beverage is made by boiling two plants, Mariri (Banisteriopsis caapi) and Chacrona (Psychotria viridis), both of which are found in the Amazon rainforest. Mestre Gabriel was born on February 10 in Coração de Maria, in the state of Bahia, Brazil. He received minimal education and moved to Acre, Brazil, later becoming a rubber tapper in the Amazon region. It was through his work as a rubber tapper that Mestre Gabriel first encountered Hoasca; receiving what he believed to be revelations, he created the UDV on July 22, 1961, on the border between Brazil and Bolivia, organizing a coherent ",
"score": "1.2885977"
},
{
"id": "4995411",
"title": "Diablada",
"text": " animals that appear in Uru mythology such as ants, lizards, toads, and snakes. Bolivian anthropologist Milton Eyzaguirre adds that the ancient cultures of the Bolivian Andes practiced a death cult called cupay, with that term eventually evolving into supay or the devil figure in the modern Diablada. Due to syncretism caused by Spanish influence in later centuries, Tiw was eventually associated with the devil; Spanish authorities also outlawed several of the ancient traditions but incorporated others into Christian theology. Local and regional Diablada festivals arose during the Spanish colonial period and were eventually consolidated as the Carnaval de Oruro in the modern city of that name. ...The Spanish banned these ceremonies in the seventeenth century, but ",
"score": "1.2776415"
},
{
"id": "804858",
"title": "Ricardo Forster",
"text": " Ricardo Forster (born 26 September 1957) is an Argentine philosopher, historian of ideas and political critic. He is professor and researcher at Universidad de Buenos Aires and University of Maryland. He is also member of the editorial board of Pensamiento de los Confines magazine. Along with Horacio Verbitsky, Nicolás Casullo and others created Espacio Carta Abierta (\"Open Letter Spot\"), a propagandistic group in defense of the Kirchner government, in 2008, after an attempt to raise taxes on agricultural exports led to large street protests. He also had a small incursion in television as presenter of \"Grandes pensadores del siglo XX\" (\"Greatest thinkers of 20th-century\") in Encuentro, in years 2009–2010. In 2013, he ran for National Deputy representing the city of Buenos Aires. He was fourth on the list ",
"score": "1.2768849"
},
{
"id": "28332058",
"title": "Evo Morales and the Catholic Church",
"text": " a Catholic. Morales, like many rural Bolivians, was raised with a combination of Catholicism and belief in the Pachamama in addition to Ekeko. Other indigenous leaders, such as Felix Patzi, follow a pure indigenous faith and reject Christianity. Even though there are leaders within this faith, there has not been a shift amongst Bolivians to become 'indigenous-belief only'. Morales later commented that he is only a Roman Catholic in order to attend wedding ceremonies and when asked if he believed in God, he responded: \"I believe in the land. In my father and my mother. And in cuchi-cuchi (sexual activity).\" The special status that used to be given to Catholicism in Bolivia can be seen in Article 3 of the former Bolivian Constitution (1967), which says, ",
"score": "1.2768567"
},
{
"id": "3306241",
"title": "Manuel Jacques",
"text": " Manuel Jacques Parraguez, is a Chilean lawyer, academic and politician. He is President of the Izquierda Cristiana (Christian Left Party of Chile) and a professor at the Universidad Bolivariana de Chile. For the 2005 Chilean presidential election he competed in the primary election for the Juntos Podemos Más electoral pact. The pact was ultimately represented by Tomás Hirsch, who won around 5% of the vote.",
"score": "1.2766374"
},
{
"id": "2399487",
"title": "Baháʼí Faith in Paraguay",
"text": " joined the religion in 1964. Segundo was a member of a Guarani tribe, the Chaco . In 1965 actual contact with the Chaco tribe began. In 1966 a Paraguayan pioneer reached a goal location - Ushuaia. By 1968 there were 8 local assemblies and in 1969 members of the Chulupi speaking and Lengua tribes had converted to the religion and first all-Indian institute in northern Gran Chaco area, in Paraguay with members of the Guarani, Guasurango, (a Tapieté speaking) and Chulupi attending. In 1970 the first Yanaigua (another Tapieté speaking) tribe member joined the religion and that year was first time an indigenous Baháʼí was elected to the national assembly, (in 1982 there were three indigenous members of the national assembly.) And in 1977 a radio campaign began.",
"score": "1.2763159"
},
{
"id": "28764965",
"title": "José Manuel Rodríguez Uribes",
"text": " José Manuel Rodríguez Uribes (born 9 October 1968) is a Spanish philosopher of law and politician of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) who has been serving as Minister of Culture and Sport in the government of Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez since 2020. He is also a member of the PSOE's federal executive board. Rodríguez Uribes was a member of the Assembly of Madrid from 2019 to 2020. He served as Government Delegate in the Community of Madrid between 2018 and 2019.",
"score": "1.2714233"
},
{
"id": "6795718",
"title": "Juan Francisco Urquidi",
"text": " Urquidi was born on 16 July 1881 in Mexico City into a wealthy family with ancestry in Chihuahua. His father was Francisco de Paula Urquidi Cárdeña (1821-1881) and his mother Catalina Márquez Barraza (1835-1896). He completed high school at Dean Academy in Franklin, Massachusetts, and eventually graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a bachelor's degree in civil engineering. He died on 14 December 1938 in Mexico City.",
"score": "1.2709332"
},
{
"id": "7508008",
"title": "Evangelical Association of the Israelite Mission of the New Universal Covenant",
"text": " The movement has been described as being syncretic in nature, combining Jewish and Adventist theology with Inca mysticism and spirituality together with a Maoist view on politics and economics. During his lifetime Atacusi gradually diminished the spiritual importance of Jesus Christ in the religion and elevated his own. The Guardian described him as \"a self-styled spiritual leader who called himself the 'Christ of the west'\". The movement has also had strong apocalyptic beliefs, as Ataucusi would often state that the end of the world was nearing and would preach that he had personally delayed such end-of-the-world events. Members of the Evangelical Association of the Israelite Mission of the New Universal Covenant adhere to strict interpretation of the Old Testament, and observe the Shabbat, ceasing all secular actives such as business or sports from sunset on Friday to sunset on Saturday. In addition to following the dress code prescribed in the Bible, they also believe in the separation of sexes, including at religious services. They also believe in offering animal sacrifices in their religious ceremonies. Similar to other followers of Incan spirituality, many ascribe mystical qualities to the coca plant, although members may not smoke tobacco or drink alcohol.",
"score": "1.2707851"
}
] | [
"Ricardo Watty Urquidi\n Ricardo Watty Urquidi (July 16, 1938 – November 1, 2011) was the Roman Catholic bishop of the Diocese of Tepic in Nayarit, Mexico. Born in San Diego, California, he was ordained to the priesthood in 1968. In 1980 he was named bishop. He died in Tepic on November 1, 2011, aged 73, from pancreatic cancer.",
"Luis Urquidi\n Luis Enrique Urquidi Holberton (3 October 1935−3 March 1994) was a Chilean musician and folklorist. Despite he was born in Antofagasta, Urquidi was grew up in Valparaíso, where then joined the Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaíso School of Law, career which he didn't end. Similarly, he was part of the nationalist band Los Cuatro Cuartos in the 1960s, decade where he helped to Willy Bascuñán to compose Los Viejos Estandartes («The Old Military Banners»), song which later was officialy established as the anthem of the Chilean Army (1976). A strong oppositor to the socialist president Salvador Allende, after the 1973 coup d'état, he supported the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet through the creation of other marches like «Alborada», which honored the coup with allusions to September 11th. By the other hand, in 1971 he already was ruler of Santiago and in 1989 he failed to be elected as deputy for the 19th District composed by Independencia and Recoleta.",
"Roman Catholic Diocese of Nuevo Laredo\nRicardo Watty Urquidi, M.Sp.S. (1989–2008), appointed Bishop of Tepic, Nayarit ; Gustavo Rodríguez Vega (2008-2015), appointed Archbishop of Yucatán ; Enrique Sanchez Martinez (2015- ) ",
"Mestre Irineu\n Raimundo Irineu Serra, also known as Mestre (Master) Irineu, (December 15, 1892 São Vicente Ferrer, Maranhão, Brazil — July 6, 1971) was the founder of a syncretic religion known as Santo Daime. Irineu was raised Roman Catholic. He later moved to the state of Acre where he worked on rubber plantations. In the city of Brasiléia, which is close to the border of Bolivia, he was in contact with other people from his home state of Maranhão as well as Bolivians, from whom he learned the use of ayahuasca. In these early experiences he encountered the Virgin Mary (the Queen of the Forest) and began receiving the guidance which developed into a religious doctrine throughout the remainder of his long life.",
"Ricardo Duchesne\n Ricardo Duchesne is a Puerto Rican-born Canadian historical sociologist and former professor at the University of New Brunswick. His main research interests are Western civilization, the rise of the West, and multiculturalism. Duchesne's views on immigration and multiculturalism have been described as racist and white nationalist. He has denied being a racist to the mainstream press, but has described himself as being \"the only academic in Canada, and possibly the Western world, who questions the ideology of diversity while advocating white identity politics.\"",
"Religion in Argentina\n Besides mainstream religious practices, there are also a number of unconventional practices, usually part of local folklore. One of the most famous is the veneration of La Difunta Correa (\"The Deceased Correa\"). Many other beliefs in advocations of the Virgin, saints and other religious characters exist throughout the country, which are locally or regionally popular and church-endorsed. Another popular cult is that of the Gauchito Gil (\"the little gaucho Gil\", Antonio Mamerto Gil Núñez), born in the province of Corrientes (allegedly in 1847). Gil was forced to enlist to fight in the civil war, but he deserted and became an outlaw à la Robin Hood. From the Río Negro Province, Ceferino Namuncurá, son of the Mapuche cacique Manuel Namuncurá, is also ",
"Evo Morales and the Catholic Church\n In June 2006, Felix Patzi incurred organizational opposition against the Morales government's ideas when he declared that \"Catholicism would no longer be 'the official' religion taught at schools.\" Patzi said that he wanted to end \"the religious monopoly\" of the Catholic faith in schools and allow all faiths to be taught, \"from oriental religions to those practiced by our native peoples.\" He said he would end the policy that made Catholic religious classes obligatory for students, and called the existing system \"colonial\". In an interview with the newspaper La Razon, Patz said, \"In Bolivia the people are not only Catholic, but also of other religious faiths.\" He stated ",
"Domestic policy of the Evo Morales administration\n In June 2005, Minister Felix Patzi brought organizational opposition against the Morales governments' ideas when he declared that \"Catholicism would no longer be 'the official' religion taught at schools.\" After mass protests led by the Catholic hierarchy this proposal was shelved by Morales.",
"Religious syncretism\n Many historical Native American religious movements have incorporated Christian European influence, like the Native American Church, the Ghost Dance, and the religion of Handsome Lake. Santo Daime is a syncretic religion founded in Brazil that incorporates elements of several religious or spiritual traditions including Folk Catholicism, Kardecist Spiritism, African animism and indigenous South American shamanism, including vegetalismo. Unitarian Universalism also provides an example of a modern syncretic religion. It traces its roots to Universalist and Unitarian Christian congregations. However, modern Unitarian Universalism freely incorporates elements from other religious and non-religious traditions, so that it no longer identifies as \"Christian.\" The Theosophical Society professes to go beyond being a syncretic movement that combines deities into an elaborate Spiritual Hierarchy, and assembles evidence that points to ",
"Religion in South America\n Brazil is the country with more practitioners in the world of Allan Kardec's codification of the Spiritism, followed by over 12 million people, with 30 to 45 million sympathizers. Most followers of the Spiritism are people that were mostly Catholic, Protestants and Atheists respectively. Chico Xavier wrote over 490 books, which complements the spiritualist doctrine.",
"Republicans (Brazil)\n and Candomblé religions. Edir Macedo considered participating in presidential elections in order to transform Brazil into a theocratic state. As mayor of Rio de Janeiro, Crivella called the Carnival of Rio de Janeiro an \"un-Christian excess\" and ordered severe financial cuts for the organisers. Furthermore, he is known for statements of religious intolerance. In his 1999 book Evangelizing Africa, he claimed that homosexuality is a \"terrible evil,\" that Catholics are \"demonic\", that African religions are based on \"evil spirits,\" and that Hindus drink their children's blood. He has since tried to distance himself from the book, saying that it was the work of a young, immature missionary.",
"Mestre Gabriel\n José Gabriel da Costa, later known as Mestre Gabriel, (1922–1971), is the founder of the União do Vegetal, a Christian religious sect that considers Hoasca (more commonly referred to as \"ayahuasca\") to be its main sacrament. This beverage is made by boiling two plants, Mariri (Banisteriopsis caapi) and Chacrona (Psychotria viridis), both of which are found in the Amazon rainforest. Mestre Gabriel was born on February 10 in Coração de Maria, in the state of Bahia, Brazil. He received minimal education and moved to Acre, Brazil, later becoming a rubber tapper in the Amazon region. It was through his work as a rubber tapper that Mestre Gabriel first encountered Hoasca; receiving what he believed to be revelations, he created the UDV on July 22, 1961, on the border between Brazil and Bolivia, organizing a coherent ",
"Diablada\n animals that appear in Uru mythology such as ants, lizards, toads, and snakes. Bolivian anthropologist Milton Eyzaguirre adds that the ancient cultures of the Bolivian Andes practiced a death cult called cupay, with that term eventually evolving into supay or the devil figure in the modern Diablada. Due to syncretism caused by Spanish influence in later centuries, Tiw was eventually associated with the devil; Spanish authorities also outlawed several of the ancient traditions but incorporated others into Christian theology. Local and regional Diablada festivals arose during the Spanish colonial period and were eventually consolidated as the Carnaval de Oruro in the modern city of that name. ...The Spanish banned these ceremonies in the seventeenth century, but ",
"Ricardo Forster\n Ricardo Forster (born 26 September 1957) is an Argentine philosopher, historian of ideas and political critic. He is professor and researcher at Universidad de Buenos Aires and University of Maryland. He is also member of the editorial board of Pensamiento de los Confines magazine. Along with Horacio Verbitsky, Nicolás Casullo and others created Espacio Carta Abierta (\"Open Letter Spot\"), a propagandistic group in defense of the Kirchner government, in 2008, after an attempt to raise taxes on agricultural exports led to large street protests. He also had a small incursion in television as presenter of \"Grandes pensadores del siglo XX\" (\"Greatest thinkers of 20th-century\") in Encuentro, in years 2009–2010. In 2013, he ran for National Deputy representing the city of Buenos Aires. He was fourth on the list ",
"Evo Morales and the Catholic Church\n a Catholic. Morales, like many rural Bolivians, was raised with a combination of Catholicism and belief in the Pachamama in addition to Ekeko. Other indigenous leaders, such as Felix Patzi, follow a pure indigenous faith and reject Christianity. Even though there are leaders within this faith, there has not been a shift amongst Bolivians to become 'indigenous-belief only'. Morales later commented that he is only a Roman Catholic in order to attend wedding ceremonies and when asked if he believed in God, he responded: \"I believe in the land. In my father and my mother. And in cuchi-cuchi (sexual activity).\" The special status that used to be given to Catholicism in Bolivia can be seen in Article 3 of the former Bolivian Constitution (1967), which says, ",
"Manuel Jacques\n Manuel Jacques Parraguez, is a Chilean lawyer, academic and politician. He is President of the Izquierda Cristiana (Christian Left Party of Chile) and a professor at the Universidad Bolivariana de Chile. For the 2005 Chilean presidential election he competed in the primary election for the Juntos Podemos Más electoral pact. The pact was ultimately represented by Tomás Hirsch, who won around 5% of the vote.",
"Baháʼí Faith in Paraguay\n joined the religion in 1964. Segundo was a member of a Guarani tribe, the Chaco . In 1965 actual contact with the Chaco tribe began. In 1966 a Paraguayan pioneer reached a goal location - Ushuaia. By 1968 there were 8 local assemblies and in 1969 members of the Chulupi speaking and Lengua tribes had converted to the religion and first all-Indian institute in northern Gran Chaco area, in Paraguay with members of the Guarani, Guasurango, (a Tapieté speaking) and Chulupi attending. In 1970 the first Yanaigua (another Tapieté speaking) tribe member joined the religion and that year was first time an indigenous Baháʼí was elected to the national assembly, (in 1982 there were three indigenous members of the national assembly.) And in 1977 a radio campaign began.",
"José Manuel Rodríguez Uribes\n José Manuel Rodríguez Uribes (born 9 October 1968) is a Spanish philosopher of law and politician of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) who has been serving as Minister of Culture and Sport in the government of Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez since 2020. He is also a member of the PSOE's federal executive board. Rodríguez Uribes was a member of the Assembly of Madrid from 2019 to 2020. He served as Government Delegate in the Community of Madrid between 2018 and 2019.",
"Juan Francisco Urquidi\n Urquidi was born on 16 July 1881 in Mexico City into a wealthy family with ancestry in Chihuahua. His father was Francisco de Paula Urquidi Cárdeña (1821-1881) and his mother Catalina Márquez Barraza (1835-1896). He completed high school at Dean Academy in Franklin, Massachusetts, and eventually graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a bachelor's degree in civil engineering. He died on 14 December 1938 in Mexico City.",
"Evangelical Association of the Israelite Mission of the New Universal Covenant\n The movement has been described as being syncretic in nature, combining Jewish and Adventist theology with Inca mysticism and spirituality together with a Maoist view on politics and economics. During his lifetime Atacusi gradually diminished the spiritual importance of Jesus Christ in the religion and elevated his own. The Guardian described him as \"a self-styled spiritual leader who called himself the 'Christ of the west'\". The movement has also had strong apocalyptic beliefs, as Ataucusi would often state that the end of the world was nearing and would preach that he had personally delayed such end-of-the-world events. Members of the Evangelical Association of the Israelite Mission of the New Universal Covenant adhere to strict interpretation of the Old Testament, and observe the Shabbat, ceasing all secular actives such as business or sports from sunset on Friday to sunset on Saturday. In addition to following the dress code prescribed in the Bible, they also believe in the separation of sexes, including at religious services. They also believe in offering animal sacrifices in their religious ceremonies. Similar to other followers of Incan spirituality, many ascribe mystical qualities to the coca plant, although members may not smoke tobacco or drink alcohol."
] |
What is the religion of William Preston? | [
"Anglicanism",
"Anglicanism, Anglican Church"
] | religion | William Preston (bishop) | 6,194,855 | 72 | [
{
"id": "1901464",
"title": "William Preston (Freemason)",
"text": " William Preston (7 August 1742 – 1 April 1818) was a Scottish author, editor and lecturer, born in Edinburgh. After attending school and college he became secretary to the linguist Thomas Ruddiman, who became his guardian on the death of his father. On the death of Thomas, Preston became a printer for Walter Ruddiman, Thomas' brother. In 1760 he moved to London and started a distinguished career with the printer William Strahan. He became a Freemason, instituting a system of lectures of instruction, and publishing Illustrations of Masonry, which ran to several editions. It was under Preston that the Lodge of Antiquity seceded from the Moderns Grand Lodge to become \"The Grand Lodge of All England South of the River Trent\" for ten years. He died on 1 April 1818, after a long illness, and was buried in St Paul's Cathedral.",
"score": "1.6446586"
},
{
"id": "1901465",
"title": "William Preston (Freemason)",
"text": " Preston was a born in Edinburgh, on 7 August 1742. His father, also William Preston, was a Writer to the Signet, a form of solicitor. His second, and only surviving child, was encouraged in Classical studies, entering the Royal High School, Edinburgh at six, where he shone in Latin, and would also have studied Greek. He continued his classical studies at college, before becoming secretary to Thomas Ruddiman, a classical scholar whose blindness now necessitated such help. Meanwhile, Preston senior's health and fortunes declined, due to bad investments and supporting the wrong side in the 1745 rebellion. On his death, in 1751, Ruddiman became young William's guardian. He was apprenticed to the printer, Walter Ruddiman, Thomas' brother, but until Thomas' death in 1757 spent most of his time reading to him, and transcribing and copy-editing his work. In 1760, furnished with letters of introduction by Ruddiman, Preston arrived in London, where he took employment with William Strahan, later to become the King's Printer, and a former pupil of the same school as Preston. Here he would spend his professional life as an editor, earning the respect of writers such as David Hume and Edward Gibbon.",
"score": "1.5837436"
},
{
"id": "28919589",
"title": "William Preston (poet)",
"text": "Attribution ",
"score": "1.5567963"
},
{
"id": "1901469",
"title": "William Preston (Freemason)",
"text": " 1774 he organised his material into lecture courses, delivered by him at the Mitre Tavern, Fleet Street. There were twelve lectures per degree, at one guinea per degree. Present at the Gala were two members of the Lodge of Antiquity (once, as the Goose and Gridiron, a founder of the Grand Lodge). John Bottomley was then the Master, and John Noorthouck a colleague of Preston at Strahan's printing firm. Antiquity was suffering from declining membership, and these two men conceived the idea of reviving their lodge by recruiting Preston. He was elected a member, in absentia, on 1 June 1774. On his first attendance as a member, a fortnight later, he was elected Master of the lodge. The ",
"score": "1.5250628"
},
{
"id": "1601638",
"title": "Andrew Preston (historian)",
"text": " Andrew Malcolm Preston (born 1973) is a Canadian historian, who won the 2013 Charles Taylor Prize for his book Sword of the Spirit, Shield of Faith: Religion in American War and Diplomacy. He is also a fellow at Clare College, Cambridge.",
"score": "1.51138"
},
{
"id": "1901473",
"title": "William Preston (Freemason)",
"text": " Preston's expulsion from Grand Lodge signaled a great reduction in his contribution to Freemasonry. He had been absent from lodge for a year when he resigned in 1781. His brethren persuaded him to return five years later, which halted another period of decline. He claimed to have warranted several lodges in his period of exile in a rebel grand lodge, but only two have been verified. About the time of his re-admission to the Moderns, he founded the Order (or Grand Chapter) of Harodim, which was a vehicle for his own ideas about masonry as expressed in his lectures. This died out in about 1800. Preston took no part, and passed no public comment, in the long process of unification of the two Grand Lodges. His major masonic legacy must be ",
"score": "1.5094852"
},
{
"id": "25575423",
"title": "William Preston (Kentucky soldier)",
"text": " William Preston (October 16, 1816 – September 21, 1887) was an American lawyer, politician, and ambassador. He also was a brigadier general in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War.",
"score": "1.5070038"
},
{
"id": "1901474",
"title": "William Preston (Freemason)",
"text": " to be his Illustrations of Masonry, which continued to new editions after his death, after a long illness, in 1818. While Preston is remembered as a masonic scholar, few modern masons have read his work. His history of freemasonry is every bit as far fetched as Anderson's, although it starts far later with Athelstan, and his lectures and explanations must be read as a work of its time, relating the Freemasonry of the late Eighteenth century to the people of that time. Preston's lasting impact is in drawing the perception of Freemasonry away from the bar and the dining table, and giving it a more cerebral appeal. Preston is also associated, with Grand Secretary James Heseltine and Thomas Dunckerley, with the movement of Masonic meetings from taverns into dedicated Masonic buildings.",
"score": "1.5069058"
},
{
"id": "1901471",
"title": "William Preston (Freemason)",
"text": " On 27 December 1777, some members of the Lodge of Antiquity, including Preston, returned from church wearing their masonic regalia. This amounted to little more than crossing the road. Certain of the original members of Antiquity who were not present (and who included the two men who had persuaded Preston to join Antiquity) chose to report the incident to Grand Lodge as a proscribed Masonic procession. Instead of playing down the occasion, Preston chose to defend the actions of himself and his brethren by emphasising the seniority of his own lodge. As the Goose and Gridiron, Antiquity had been one of the founders of Grand Lodge. Preston argued that his lodge had ",
"score": "1.5052416"
},
{
"id": "15854540",
"title": "William Edward Hayter Preston",
"text": " William Edward Hayter Preston (1891–1964) was a British literary editor, journalist, poet and author of several books. W. E. Hayter Preston was from adolescence interested in freethought, socialism and the occult. In 1906 he became a friend of Victor Benjamin Neuburg, who introduced him to Aleister Crowley. In 1912 Preston joined Crowley's group Mysteria Mystica Maxima but left the group in 1914 following an argument with Crowley. Starting in 1925, Preston wrote a column for The Sunday Referee under the pseudonym \"Vanoc II\" — the columnist \"Vanoc I\" was Arnold White (who died in February 1925). Preston became the literary editor for The Sunday Referee. In April 1940 he was one of the founders of the Surrealist Group in London.",
"score": "1.491334"
},
{
"id": "1601641",
"title": "Andrew Preston (historian)",
"text": " In 2013, Preston was awarded the Charles Taylor Prize in Non-Fiction Books for his book Sword of the Spirit, Shield of Faith: Religion in American War and Diplomacy.",
"score": "1.4801607"
},
{
"id": "1901466",
"title": "William Preston (Freemason)",
"text": " Shortly after Preston's arrival in London, a group of Edinburgh Freemasons living in the English capital decided to form themselves into a lodge. The Grand Lodge of Scotland felt they could not grant them a constitution, as they recognised the jurisdiction of the Antient's Grand Lodge in the capital. They were accordingly constituted as Lodge no. 111 at the \"White Hart\" in the Strand on 20 April 1763. It may have been at this meeting that Preston became their second initiate. Unhappy with the status of the relatively new Grand Lodge which they found themselves part of, Preston and some others began attending a lodge attached to the original Grand Lodge of England, and persuaded their brethren to ",
"score": "1.4787139"
},
{
"id": "5663421",
"title": "William Preston (Virginia soldier)",
"text": " Colonel William Preston (December 25, 1729 – June 28, 1783) played a crucial role in surveying and developing the western colonies, exerted great influence in the colonial affairs of his time, enslaved many people on his plantation, and founded a dynasty whose progeny would supply leaders of the South for nearly a century. He served in the Virginia House of Burgesses and was a colonel in the militia during the American Revolutionary War. He was one of the fifteen signatories of the Fincastle Resolutions. He was a founding trustee of Liberty Hall (later Washington and Lee University) when it was made into a college in 1776.",
"score": "1.4688394"
},
{
"id": "30763826",
"title": "Rachel Oakes Preston",
"text": " Rachel's influence, Frederick Wheeler (1811–1910), an ordained minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and promoter of the prophetic teachings of William Miller, preached his first sermon on seventh-day Sabbath to his \"Christian Brethren\" congregation on March 16, 1844. Further due to Rachel's influence, William Farnsworth (1807–1888), after the Great Disappointment of October 22, 1844, stated publicly to the \"Christian Brethren\" congregation his conviction that Saturday, being the seventh day of the week, was Sabbath. His brother Cyrus (who became the husband of Rachel's daughter Delight), and several others, also made their convictions known. Later, when Rachel married Nathan T. Preston, she was referred to as Rachel Oakes Preston.",
"score": "1.4663715"
},
{
"id": "1901468",
"title": "William Preston (Freemason)",
"text": " with Freemasons in Britain and overseas, he built a vast storehouse of masonic knowledge, which he applied initially to explaining and organising the lectures attached to the three degrees of Freemasonry. He met with friends once or twice a week to test and refine his presentation, and on 21 May 1772 he organised a Gala at the Crown and Anchor in the Strand at his own considerable expense, to introduce the Grand Officers and other prominent masons to his system. The success of his oration on that day led to the publication, later that year, of his Illustrations of Masonry, which ran to twelve English editions in the authors lifetime, as well as being translated into other languages. ",
"score": "1.4569831"
},
{
"id": "6168821",
"title": "George Preston",
"text": "Attribution ",
"score": "1.4536846"
},
{
"id": "5663428",
"title": "William Preston (Virginia soldier)",
"text": "The Smithfield Review, Volumes I-XV. ; Johnson, Patricia Givens, William Preston and the Allegheny Patriots. 1976 ; Osborn, Richard Charles, William Preston of Virginia, 1727–1783: The Making of a Frontier Elite. UMI Dissertation Services. 1990 ",
"score": "1.4528806"
},
{
"id": "32976744",
"title": "William Preston (British politician)",
"text": " William Preston (February 1874 - 22 November 1941) was a British industrialist and Conservative politician.",
"score": "1.4507043"
},
{
"id": "32426572",
"title": "William Preston Hall",
"text": " William Preston Hall (1864–1932) aka \"The Colonel\", \"Diamond Billy\", and \"Horse King of the World\" was an American showman, businessman, and circus impresario. The William P. Hall House in Lancaster, Missouri is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.",
"score": "1.4465141"
},
{
"id": "90234",
"title": "Richard Preston (clergyman)",
"text": " Richard Preston, (c. 1791 – 16 July 1861), was a religious leader and abolitionist. He escaped slavery in Virginia to become an important leader for the African Nova Scotian community and in the international struggle against slavery. He established the Cornwallis Street Baptist Church, the African Abolition Society and African Baptist Association.",
"score": "1.44205"
}
] | [
"William Preston (Freemason)\n William Preston (7 August 1742 – 1 April 1818) was a Scottish author, editor and lecturer, born in Edinburgh. After attending school and college he became secretary to the linguist Thomas Ruddiman, who became his guardian on the death of his father. On the death of Thomas, Preston became a printer for Walter Ruddiman, Thomas' brother. In 1760 he moved to London and started a distinguished career with the printer William Strahan. He became a Freemason, instituting a system of lectures of instruction, and publishing Illustrations of Masonry, which ran to several editions. It was under Preston that the Lodge of Antiquity seceded from the Moderns Grand Lodge to become \"The Grand Lodge of All England South of the River Trent\" for ten years. He died on 1 April 1818, after a long illness, and was buried in St Paul's Cathedral.",
"William Preston (Freemason)\n Preston was a born in Edinburgh, on 7 August 1742. His father, also William Preston, was a Writer to the Signet, a form of solicitor. His second, and only surviving child, was encouraged in Classical studies, entering the Royal High School, Edinburgh at six, where he shone in Latin, and would also have studied Greek. He continued his classical studies at college, before becoming secretary to Thomas Ruddiman, a classical scholar whose blindness now necessitated such help. Meanwhile, Preston senior's health and fortunes declined, due to bad investments and supporting the wrong side in the 1745 rebellion. On his death, in 1751, Ruddiman became young William's guardian. He was apprenticed to the printer, Walter Ruddiman, Thomas' brother, but until Thomas' death in 1757 spent most of his time reading to him, and transcribing and copy-editing his work. In 1760, furnished with letters of introduction by Ruddiman, Preston arrived in London, where he took employment with William Strahan, later to become the King's Printer, and a former pupil of the same school as Preston. Here he would spend his professional life as an editor, earning the respect of writers such as David Hume and Edward Gibbon.",
"William Preston (poet)\nAttribution ",
"William Preston (Freemason)\n 1774 he organised his material into lecture courses, delivered by him at the Mitre Tavern, Fleet Street. There were twelve lectures per degree, at one guinea per degree. Present at the Gala were two members of the Lodge of Antiquity (once, as the Goose and Gridiron, a founder of the Grand Lodge). John Bottomley was then the Master, and John Noorthouck a colleague of Preston at Strahan's printing firm. Antiquity was suffering from declining membership, and these two men conceived the idea of reviving their lodge by recruiting Preston. He was elected a member, in absentia, on 1 June 1774. On his first attendance as a member, a fortnight later, he was elected Master of the lodge. The ",
"Andrew Preston (historian)\n Andrew Malcolm Preston (born 1973) is a Canadian historian, who won the 2013 Charles Taylor Prize for his book Sword of the Spirit, Shield of Faith: Religion in American War and Diplomacy. He is also a fellow at Clare College, Cambridge.",
"William Preston (Freemason)\n Preston's expulsion from Grand Lodge signaled a great reduction in his contribution to Freemasonry. He had been absent from lodge for a year when he resigned in 1781. His brethren persuaded him to return five years later, which halted another period of decline. He claimed to have warranted several lodges in his period of exile in a rebel grand lodge, but only two have been verified. About the time of his re-admission to the Moderns, he founded the Order (or Grand Chapter) of Harodim, which was a vehicle for his own ideas about masonry as expressed in his lectures. This died out in about 1800. Preston took no part, and passed no public comment, in the long process of unification of the two Grand Lodges. His major masonic legacy must be ",
"William Preston (Kentucky soldier)\n William Preston (October 16, 1816 – September 21, 1887) was an American lawyer, politician, and ambassador. He also was a brigadier general in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War.",
"William Preston (Freemason)\n to be his Illustrations of Masonry, which continued to new editions after his death, after a long illness, in 1818. While Preston is remembered as a masonic scholar, few modern masons have read his work. His history of freemasonry is every bit as far fetched as Anderson's, although it starts far later with Athelstan, and his lectures and explanations must be read as a work of its time, relating the Freemasonry of the late Eighteenth century to the people of that time. Preston's lasting impact is in drawing the perception of Freemasonry away from the bar and the dining table, and giving it a more cerebral appeal. Preston is also associated, with Grand Secretary James Heseltine and Thomas Dunckerley, with the movement of Masonic meetings from taverns into dedicated Masonic buildings.",
"William Preston (Freemason)\n On 27 December 1777, some members of the Lodge of Antiquity, including Preston, returned from church wearing their masonic regalia. This amounted to little more than crossing the road. Certain of the original members of Antiquity who were not present (and who included the two men who had persuaded Preston to join Antiquity) chose to report the incident to Grand Lodge as a proscribed Masonic procession. Instead of playing down the occasion, Preston chose to defend the actions of himself and his brethren by emphasising the seniority of his own lodge. As the Goose and Gridiron, Antiquity had been one of the founders of Grand Lodge. Preston argued that his lodge had ",
"William Edward Hayter Preston\n William Edward Hayter Preston (1891–1964) was a British literary editor, journalist, poet and author of several books. W. E. Hayter Preston was from adolescence interested in freethought, socialism and the occult. In 1906 he became a friend of Victor Benjamin Neuburg, who introduced him to Aleister Crowley. In 1912 Preston joined Crowley's group Mysteria Mystica Maxima but left the group in 1914 following an argument with Crowley. Starting in 1925, Preston wrote a column for The Sunday Referee under the pseudonym \"Vanoc II\" — the columnist \"Vanoc I\" was Arnold White (who died in February 1925). Preston became the literary editor for The Sunday Referee. In April 1940 he was one of the founders of the Surrealist Group in London.",
"Andrew Preston (historian)\n In 2013, Preston was awarded the Charles Taylor Prize in Non-Fiction Books for his book Sword of the Spirit, Shield of Faith: Religion in American War and Diplomacy.",
"William Preston (Freemason)\n Shortly after Preston's arrival in London, a group of Edinburgh Freemasons living in the English capital decided to form themselves into a lodge. The Grand Lodge of Scotland felt they could not grant them a constitution, as they recognised the jurisdiction of the Antient's Grand Lodge in the capital. They were accordingly constituted as Lodge no. 111 at the \"White Hart\" in the Strand on 20 April 1763. It may have been at this meeting that Preston became their second initiate. Unhappy with the status of the relatively new Grand Lodge which they found themselves part of, Preston and some others began attending a lodge attached to the original Grand Lodge of England, and persuaded their brethren to ",
"William Preston (Virginia soldier)\n Colonel William Preston (December 25, 1729 – June 28, 1783) played a crucial role in surveying and developing the western colonies, exerted great influence in the colonial affairs of his time, enslaved many people on his plantation, and founded a dynasty whose progeny would supply leaders of the South for nearly a century. He served in the Virginia House of Burgesses and was a colonel in the militia during the American Revolutionary War. He was one of the fifteen signatories of the Fincastle Resolutions. He was a founding trustee of Liberty Hall (later Washington and Lee University) when it was made into a college in 1776.",
"Rachel Oakes Preston\n Rachel's influence, Frederick Wheeler (1811–1910), an ordained minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and promoter of the prophetic teachings of William Miller, preached his first sermon on seventh-day Sabbath to his \"Christian Brethren\" congregation on March 16, 1844. Further due to Rachel's influence, William Farnsworth (1807–1888), after the Great Disappointment of October 22, 1844, stated publicly to the \"Christian Brethren\" congregation his conviction that Saturday, being the seventh day of the week, was Sabbath. His brother Cyrus (who became the husband of Rachel's daughter Delight), and several others, also made their convictions known. Later, when Rachel married Nathan T. Preston, she was referred to as Rachel Oakes Preston.",
"William Preston (Freemason)\n with Freemasons in Britain and overseas, he built a vast storehouse of masonic knowledge, which he applied initially to explaining and organising the lectures attached to the three degrees of Freemasonry. He met with friends once or twice a week to test and refine his presentation, and on 21 May 1772 he organised a Gala at the Crown and Anchor in the Strand at his own considerable expense, to introduce the Grand Officers and other prominent masons to his system. The success of his oration on that day led to the publication, later that year, of his Illustrations of Masonry, which ran to twelve English editions in the authors lifetime, as well as being translated into other languages. ",
"George Preston\nAttribution ",
"William Preston (Virginia soldier)\nThe Smithfield Review, Volumes I-XV. ; Johnson, Patricia Givens, William Preston and the Allegheny Patriots. 1976 ; Osborn, Richard Charles, William Preston of Virginia, 1727–1783: The Making of a Frontier Elite. UMI Dissertation Services. 1990 ",
"William Preston (British politician)\n William Preston (February 1874 - 22 November 1941) was a British industrialist and Conservative politician.",
"William Preston Hall\n William Preston Hall (1864–1932) aka \"The Colonel\", \"Diamond Billy\", and \"Horse King of the World\" was an American showman, businessman, and circus impresario. The William P. Hall House in Lancaster, Missouri is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.",
"Richard Preston (clergyman)\n Richard Preston, (c. 1791 – 16 July 1861), was a religious leader and abolitionist. He escaped slavery in Virginia to become an important leader for the African Nova Scotian community and in the international struggle against slavery. He established the Cornwallis Street Baptist Church, the African Abolition Society and African Baptist Association."
] |
What is the religion of Cosmo Francesco Ruppi? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Cosmo Francesco Ruppi | 196,395 | 45 | [
{
"id": "12618366",
"title": "Cosmo Francesco Ruppi",
"text": " Cosmo Francesco Ruppi (6 June 1932 – 29 May 2011) was the Roman Catholic archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Lecce, Italy. Ordained in 1954, Ruppi was named a bishop and was appointed to the Lecce Archdiocese in 1988. Archbishop Ruppi retired in 2009.",
"score": "1.9731014"
},
{
"id": "5222323",
"title": "Christian Kabbalah",
"text": " Francesco Giorgi, (1467–1540) was a Venetian Franciscan friar and \"has been considered a central figure in sixteenth-century Christian Kabbalah both by his contemporaries and by modern scholars\". According to Giulio Busi, he was the most important Christian Kabbalist second to its founder Giovanni Pico della Mirandola. His, De harmonia mundi, was \"a massive and curious book, all Hermetic, Platonic, Cabalistic, and Pinchian\".",
"score": "1.515187"
},
{
"id": "5028512",
"title": "Francesco Follo",
"text": " Society of Jesus in Milan. He was also from 1976 to 1983 a spiritual advisor to students of the Polytechnic Institute, the Academy of Fine Arts Brera and the Conservatory of Music \"Giuseppe Verdi\" in Milan. He became a member of the Order of Journalists in 1978. In 1982 he held the post of deputy director of the weekly La Vita Cattolica. From 1978 to 1983, he was Professor of Cultural Anthropology and Philosophy at the Catholic University of Milan and at the Higher Institute of Education Assistants in Milan. He joined the staff of the Section for General Affairs of ",
"score": "1.4313767"
},
{
"id": "16252940",
"title": "Flying Spaghetti Monster",
"text": " Pastafarianism, and the government has no right to decide which beliefs should be taken seriously and which should not, and that it is only up to the individual believers themselves to decide which elements of their religion to take seriously, and to what degree. On August 9, 2011 the chairman of the church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster Germany, Rüdiger Weida, obtained a driver's license with a picture of him wearing a pirate bandana. In contrast with the reasons given by the Austrian officials in the case of Niko Alm, the German officials allowed the headgear as a religious ",
"score": "1.4230781"
},
{
"id": "12317372",
"title": "Matteo Zuppi",
"text": " Zuppi was born on 11 October 1955 in Rome. He studied at the seminary in Palestrina and earned his degree in theology at the Pontifical Lateran University in Rome. He earned a doctorate at the Sapienza University of Rome, writing his thesis on the history of Christianity. He was ordained a priest on 9 May 1981. He worked with the Community of Sant'Egidio, a Catholic lay association devoted to ecumenism and conflict resolution. He participated with several colleagues in negotiations that helped end the civil war in Mozambique in 1992 and was made an honorary citizen of that country. On 31 January 2012, Pope Benedict XVI named him an Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese of Rome and titular bishop of Villa Nova. ",
"score": "1.4183588"
},
{
"id": "10870933",
"title": "Francesco Falconi",
"text": " Evelyn Starr, entitled The Queen of No Stars has been published by Piemme Edizioni. In the same period, Francesco Falconi enters the stable of Mondadori Editore with a new series for young adults entitled Muses. He currently works in Rome as a consultant for engineering and writer of children's novels, which have sold tens of thousands of copies. In November 2012, he comes back to publish a new story, kind of weird, titled Halo in the journal Effemme of FantasyMagazine. Since 2008 the jury of the Literary Award Trophy The Centuria and The Dead Zone, dedicated to the stories of the fantasy genre and whose ceremony is held every year in Savona. ",
"score": "1.4177947"
},
{
"id": "13535470",
"title": "Francesco Giorgi",
"text": " Francesco Giorgi Veneto (1466–1540) was an Italian Franciscan friar, and author of the work De harmonia mundi totius from 1525. In it Giorgio proposed an idea of the Universe created according to the universal system of proportion, which may be studied as laws of mathematics used by architects. The Cambridge History of Renaissance Philosophy describes him as 'idiosyncratic'. He wrote also In Scripturam Sacram Problemata (1536). Giorgi is extensively discussed in Frances Yates, The Occult Philosophy in the Elizabethan Age That Giorgi was a Christian Cabalist is a statement that means, not merely that he was influenced vaguely by the Cabalist literature, but that he believed that Cabala could prove, or already had proved, the truth of Christianity. She also discusses Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice in the light of the theory of Daniel Banes that Shakespeare was familiar with Giorgi's and related writings on the Cabala. A copy of De harmonia mundi is listed as once in the Library of Sir Thomas Browne. It is possible that Browne's copy was bequeathed to him from Arthur Dee. John Dee is also known to have possessed a copy of Giorgi's work.",
"score": "1.4170544"
},
{
"id": "1014282",
"title": "Cosmo Cosmolino",
"text": " Cosmo Cosmolino is a 1992 book by Australian writer Helen Garner. The book consists of three linked works: two short stories and a novella, though the author and critics have described it as a novel. It was first published in Australia by McPhee Gribble and was shortlisted for the 1993 Miles Franklin Award. It has been reported that the novel's title is Garner's favourite, and came to her in a dream.",
"score": "1.4126961"
},
{
"id": "4436546",
"title": "Cosmotheism",
"text": "Norman Lowell, Maltese founder of Imperium Europa ; Mordechai Nessyahu, Jewish-Israeli and Labor Party theorist ; William Luther Pierce, American founder of the white supremacist organization National Alliance \"Cosmotheism\" is an older term for pantheism and is associated with the beliefs adhered to by many including:",
"score": "1.4114914"
},
{
"id": "29898750",
"title": "Taoist Church of Italy",
"text": " The Taoist Church of Italy (TCI for short; in Italian: Chiesa Taoista d'Italia, \"CTI\" for short) is a religious body of Taoism established in 2013 by Vincenzo di Ieso, a fourteenth-generation Taoist master of the Xuanwu school of the Wudang Mountains (武当玄武派 Wǔdāng Xuánwǔ pài), into which he was initiated in 1993 with the ecclesiastical name of Li Xuanzong. Despite the founder's particular affiliation, the church intends to incorporate all forms of Taoism in Italy. The establishment of the church has been defined by a scholar of religious rights as a \"crucial event for both Taoism and religious freedom in Italy\".",
"score": "1.4050696"
},
{
"id": "25545927",
"title": "Mario Luigi Ciappi",
"text": " After studying at the convent of San Domenico in Pistoia, he attended the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum in Rome, where he obtained his doctorate in theology in 1933 with a thesis entitled De divina misericordia ut prima causa operum Dei. Ciappi was ordained a priest by Cardinal Francesco Marchetti-Selvaggiani on 26 March 1932. He continued his studies at the University of Louvain and University of Fribourg until 1935.",
"score": "1.3934116"
},
{
"id": "170458",
"title": "Fabrizio De André",
"text": " and the Church hierarchy is often sarcastic and highly critical about their contradictory behaviour, such as, for example, in the songs Un blasfemo, Il testamento di Tito, La ballata del Miché and the last verses of Bocca di rosa. \"I feel myself religious, and my religion is to feel part of a whole, in a chain that includes all creation and so to respect all elements, including plants and minerals, because, in my opinion, the balance is exactly given from the well-being in our surroundings. My religion does not seek the principle, you want to call it creator, regulator or chaos makes no difference. But I think that everything around us ",
"score": "1.3928003"
},
{
"id": "14897186",
"title": "UFO religion",
"text": " The Theosophical-influenced guru Benjamin Creme of Share International claimed that the Messiah figure he referred to as Maitreya is in telepathic contact with Nordic aliens. Creme believed that Nordic aliens live on the etheric plane of Venus and visited earth in flying saucers. Creme accepted George Adamski's UFO sightings as valid. According to Creme, the Venusians have mother ships up to four miles long. It is also believed by the Theosophists in general as well as Creme in particular that the governing deity of Earth, Sanat Kumara (who is believed to live in a city called Shamballa located above the Gobi desert on the etheric plane of Earth), is a Nordic alien who originally came from Venus 18,500,000 years ago. The followers of Benjamin Creme believe there is regular flying saucer traffic between Venus and Shamballah and that crop circles are mostly caused by flying saucers.",
"score": "1.3879488"
},
{
"id": "9355096",
"title": "Mario Borrelli",
"text": " of God could be incarnated in public life as a clan of groups of human interest that would use God as flag and tablecloth for their daily meal. In what way an elected boss, through his patronal-Mafia network, could bring God to the Neapolitans and make them more honest and good examples of Christianity. When I realized that this Church felt the message too metaphorically and remained distant and absent from the poor, I felt cheated in my vocation. I felt as a prisoner, a wheel of a mechanism that tended to save and perpetuate itself instead of saving and helping others.» Mario Borrelli, Tanquam Peripsema, Naples, 1970.",
"score": "1.3842608"
},
{
"id": "16252902",
"title": "Flying Spaghetti Monster",
"text": " The Flying Spaghetti Monster (FSM) is the deity of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, or Pastafarianism, a social movement that promotes a light-hearted view of religion and originated in opposition to the teaching of intelligent design in public schools. According to adherents, Pastafarianism (a portmanteau of pasta and Rastafarianism) is a \"real, legitimate religion, as much as any other\". It has received some limited recognition as such. The \"Flying Spaghetti Monster\" was first described in a satirical open letter written by Bobby Henderson in 2005 to protest the Kansas State Board of Education decision to permit teaching intelligent design as an alternative to evolution in public school science classes. In the letter, Henderson demanded ",
"score": "1.3840233"
},
{
"id": "7074680",
"title": "Bonaventura Cavalieri",
"text": " Towards the end of his life, Cavalieri published two books on astronomy. While they use the language of astrology, he states in the text that he did not believe in or practice astrology. Those books were the Nuova pratica astromlogica (1639) and the Trattato della ruota planetaria perpetua (1646).",
"score": "1.3837274"
},
{
"id": "11401598",
"title": "Stregheria",
"text": " of Herodias) was the object of a \"witch-cult\" in medieval Tuscany. Since 1998, Grimassi has been advocating what he calls the Arician tradition, described as an \"initiate level\" variant of the religion, involving an initiation ceremony. Author Paul Theroux has quoted Norman Lewis and Danilo Dolci by stating that the Sicilian strega is a useful, probably indispensable witch who \"arranges marriages, concocts potions, dabbles a little in black magic, clears up skin conditions, and casts out devils.\" Stregheria, proves to be at the root of witchcraft. Scholarly documents place Stregheria before witchcraft practiced in Celtic areas. Most of the old religion is passed on through family lines (in this case the folk religion of ancient and medieval Italy). Stregheria honors a pantheon centered on a Moon Goddess and a Horned God regarded as central, lending itself to Wiccan views of divinity.",
"score": "1.3836647"
},
{
"id": "24979603",
"title": "1616",
"text": " Paris. For his opinion that the world is eternal and governed by immanent laws, as expressed in this book, he is executed in 1619. ; Francesco Albani paints the ceiling frescoes of Apollo and the Seasons, at the Palazzo Verospi in Via del Corso, for Cardinal Fabrizio Verospi. ; Elizabethan polymath and alchemist Robert Fludd publishes Apologia Compendiaria, Fraternitatem de Rosea Cruce suspicionis … maculis aspersam, veritatis quasi Fluctibus abluens at Leiden, countering the arguments of Andreas Libavius. Fludd later becomes a cult figure, being linked with Rosicrucians and the Family of Love, without any historical evidence. ; Johannes Valentinus Andreae ",
"score": "1.3816855"
},
{
"id": "28497281",
"title": "Peter Kolosimo",
"text": " Peter Kolosimo, pseudonym of Pier Domenico Colosimo (15 December 1922 – 23 March 1984), was an Italian journalist and writer. He is ranked amongst the founders of pseudoarchaeology (in Italian: fantarcheologia), a controversial topic where interpretations of the past are made that are not accepted by the archaeological science community, which rejects the accepted data-gathering and analytical methods of the discipline. He also popularised ancient astronaut theories of contact between extraterrestrial beings and ancient human civilizations.",
"score": "1.3805285"
},
{
"id": "32533284",
"title": "Lucilio Vanini",
"text": " that the creators of the three monotheistic religions, Moses, Jesus and Muhammad, were nothing but impostors. In De Admirandis are found themes from Amphitheatrum, with refinements and developments that make it his masterpiece and the summary of his philosophy. Denying creation from nothing and the immortality of the soul, he saw God in Nature as its driving force and vital force, both eternal. The stars of heaven he considered a kind of intermediary between God and Nature. The true religion is therefore a \"religion of Nature\" that does not deny God but considers Him a spirit-force. The thought of Vanini is quite fragmented ",
"score": "1.3778391"
}
] | [
"Cosmo Francesco Ruppi\n Cosmo Francesco Ruppi (6 June 1932 – 29 May 2011) was the Roman Catholic archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Lecce, Italy. Ordained in 1954, Ruppi was named a bishop and was appointed to the Lecce Archdiocese in 1988. Archbishop Ruppi retired in 2009.",
"Christian Kabbalah\n Francesco Giorgi, (1467–1540) was a Venetian Franciscan friar and \"has been considered a central figure in sixteenth-century Christian Kabbalah both by his contemporaries and by modern scholars\". According to Giulio Busi, he was the most important Christian Kabbalist second to its founder Giovanni Pico della Mirandola. His, De harmonia mundi, was \"a massive and curious book, all Hermetic, Platonic, Cabalistic, and Pinchian\".",
"Francesco Follo\n Society of Jesus in Milan. He was also from 1976 to 1983 a spiritual advisor to students of the Polytechnic Institute, the Academy of Fine Arts Brera and the Conservatory of Music \"Giuseppe Verdi\" in Milan. He became a member of the Order of Journalists in 1978. In 1982 he held the post of deputy director of the weekly La Vita Cattolica. From 1978 to 1983, he was Professor of Cultural Anthropology and Philosophy at the Catholic University of Milan and at the Higher Institute of Education Assistants in Milan. He joined the staff of the Section for General Affairs of ",
"Flying Spaghetti Monster\n Pastafarianism, and the government has no right to decide which beliefs should be taken seriously and which should not, and that it is only up to the individual believers themselves to decide which elements of their religion to take seriously, and to what degree. On August 9, 2011 the chairman of the church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster Germany, Rüdiger Weida, obtained a driver's license with a picture of him wearing a pirate bandana. In contrast with the reasons given by the Austrian officials in the case of Niko Alm, the German officials allowed the headgear as a religious ",
"Matteo Zuppi\n Zuppi was born on 11 October 1955 in Rome. He studied at the seminary in Palestrina and earned his degree in theology at the Pontifical Lateran University in Rome. He earned a doctorate at the Sapienza University of Rome, writing his thesis on the history of Christianity. He was ordained a priest on 9 May 1981. He worked with the Community of Sant'Egidio, a Catholic lay association devoted to ecumenism and conflict resolution. He participated with several colleagues in negotiations that helped end the civil war in Mozambique in 1992 and was made an honorary citizen of that country. On 31 January 2012, Pope Benedict XVI named him an Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese of Rome and titular bishop of Villa Nova. ",
"Francesco Falconi\n Evelyn Starr, entitled The Queen of No Stars has been published by Piemme Edizioni. In the same period, Francesco Falconi enters the stable of Mondadori Editore with a new series for young adults entitled Muses. He currently works in Rome as a consultant for engineering and writer of children's novels, which have sold tens of thousands of copies. In November 2012, he comes back to publish a new story, kind of weird, titled Halo in the journal Effemme of FantasyMagazine. Since 2008 the jury of the Literary Award Trophy The Centuria and The Dead Zone, dedicated to the stories of the fantasy genre and whose ceremony is held every year in Savona. ",
"Francesco Giorgi\n Francesco Giorgi Veneto (1466–1540) was an Italian Franciscan friar, and author of the work De harmonia mundi totius from 1525. In it Giorgio proposed an idea of the Universe created according to the universal system of proportion, which may be studied as laws of mathematics used by architects. The Cambridge History of Renaissance Philosophy describes him as 'idiosyncratic'. He wrote also In Scripturam Sacram Problemata (1536). Giorgi is extensively discussed in Frances Yates, The Occult Philosophy in the Elizabethan Age That Giorgi was a Christian Cabalist is a statement that means, not merely that he was influenced vaguely by the Cabalist literature, but that he believed that Cabala could prove, or already had proved, the truth of Christianity. She also discusses Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice in the light of the theory of Daniel Banes that Shakespeare was familiar with Giorgi's and related writings on the Cabala. A copy of De harmonia mundi is listed as once in the Library of Sir Thomas Browne. It is possible that Browne's copy was bequeathed to him from Arthur Dee. John Dee is also known to have possessed a copy of Giorgi's work.",
"Cosmo Cosmolino\n Cosmo Cosmolino is a 1992 book by Australian writer Helen Garner. The book consists of three linked works: two short stories and a novella, though the author and critics have described it as a novel. It was first published in Australia by McPhee Gribble and was shortlisted for the 1993 Miles Franklin Award. It has been reported that the novel's title is Garner's favourite, and came to her in a dream.",
"Cosmotheism\nNorman Lowell, Maltese founder of Imperium Europa ; Mordechai Nessyahu, Jewish-Israeli and Labor Party theorist ; William Luther Pierce, American founder of the white supremacist organization National Alliance \"Cosmotheism\" is an older term for pantheism and is associated with the beliefs adhered to by many including:",
"Taoist Church of Italy\n The Taoist Church of Italy (TCI for short; in Italian: Chiesa Taoista d'Italia, \"CTI\" for short) is a religious body of Taoism established in 2013 by Vincenzo di Ieso, a fourteenth-generation Taoist master of the Xuanwu school of the Wudang Mountains (武当玄武派 Wǔdāng Xuánwǔ pài), into which he was initiated in 1993 with the ecclesiastical name of Li Xuanzong. Despite the founder's particular affiliation, the church intends to incorporate all forms of Taoism in Italy. The establishment of the church has been defined by a scholar of religious rights as a \"crucial event for both Taoism and religious freedom in Italy\".",
"Mario Luigi Ciappi\n After studying at the convent of San Domenico in Pistoia, he attended the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum in Rome, where he obtained his doctorate in theology in 1933 with a thesis entitled De divina misericordia ut prima causa operum Dei. Ciappi was ordained a priest by Cardinal Francesco Marchetti-Selvaggiani on 26 March 1932. He continued his studies at the University of Louvain and University of Fribourg until 1935.",
"Fabrizio De André\n and the Church hierarchy is often sarcastic and highly critical about their contradictory behaviour, such as, for example, in the songs Un blasfemo, Il testamento di Tito, La ballata del Miché and the last verses of Bocca di rosa. \"I feel myself religious, and my religion is to feel part of a whole, in a chain that includes all creation and so to respect all elements, including plants and minerals, because, in my opinion, the balance is exactly given from the well-being in our surroundings. My religion does not seek the principle, you want to call it creator, regulator or chaos makes no difference. But I think that everything around us ",
"UFO religion\n The Theosophical-influenced guru Benjamin Creme of Share International claimed that the Messiah figure he referred to as Maitreya is in telepathic contact with Nordic aliens. Creme believed that Nordic aliens live on the etheric plane of Venus and visited earth in flying saucers. Creme accepted George Adamski's UFO sightings as valid. According to Creme, the Venusians have mother ships up to four miles long. It is also believed by the Theosophists in general as well as Creme in particular that the governing deity of Earth, Sanat Kumara (who is believed to live in a city called Shamballa located above the Gobi desert on the etheric plane of Earth), is a Nordic alien who originally came from Venus 18,500,000 years ago. The followers of Benjamin Creme believe there is regular flying saucer traffic between Venus and Shamballah and that crop circles are mostly caused by flying saucers.",
"Mario Borrelli\n of God could be incarnated in public life as a clan of groups of human interest that would use God as flag and tablecloth for their daily meal. In what way an elected boss, through his patronal-Mafia network, could bring God to the Neapolitans and make them more honest and good examples of Christianity. When I realized that this Church felt the message too metaphorically and remained distant and absent from the poor, I felt cheated in my vocation. I felt as a prisoner, a wheel of a mechanism that tended to save and perpetuate itself instead of saving and helping others.» Mario Borrelli, Tanquam Peripsema, Naples, 1970.",
"Flying Spaghetti Monster\n The Flying Spaghetti Monster (FSM) is the deity of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, or Pastafarianism, a social movement that promotes a light-hearted view of religion and originated in opposition to the teaching of intelligent design in public schools. According to adherents, Pastafarianism (a portmanteau of pasta and Rastafarianism) is a \"real, legitimate religion, as much as any other\". It has received some limited recognition as such. The \"Flying Spaghetti Monster\" was first described in a satirical open letter written by Bobby Henderson in 2005 to protest the Kansas State Board of Education decision to permit teaching intelligent design as an alternative to evolution in public school science classes. In the letter, Henderson demanded ",
"Bonaventura Cavalieri\n Towards the end of his life, Cavalieri published two books on astronomy. While they use the language of astrology, he states in the text that he did not believe in or practice astrology. Those books were the Nuova pratica astromlogica (1639) and the Trattato della ruota planetaria perpetua (1646).",
"Stregheria\n of Herodias) was the object of a \"witch-cult\" in medieval Tuscany. Since 1998, Grimassi has been advocating what he calls the Arician tradition, described as an \"initiate level\" variant of the religion, involving an initiation ceremony. Author Paul Theroux has quoted Norman Lewis and Danilo Dolci by stating that the Sicilian strega is a useful, probably indispensable witch who \"arranges marriages, concocts potions, dabbles a little in black magic, clears up skin conditions, and casts out devils.\" Stregheria, proves to be at the root of witchcraft. Scholarly documents place Stregheria before witchcraft practiced in Celtic areas. Most of the old religion is passed on through family lines (in this case the folk religion of ancient and medieval Italy). Stregheria honors a pantheon centered on a Moon Goddess and a Horned God regarded as central, lending itself to Wiccan views of divinity.",
"1616\n Paris. For his opinion that the world is eternal and governed by immanent laws, as expressed in this book, he is executed in 1619. ; Francesco Albani paints the ceiling frescoes of Apollo and the Seasons, at the Palazzo Verospi in Via del Corso, for Cardinal Fabrizio Verospi. ; Elizabethan polymath and alchemist Robert Fludd publishes Apologia Compendiaria, Fraternitatem de Rosea Cruce suspicionis … maculis aspersam, veritatis quasi Fluctibus abluens at Leiden, countering the arguments of Andreas Libavius. Fludd later becomes a cult figure, being linked with Rosicrucians and the Family of Love, without any historical evidence. ; Johannes Valentinus Andreae ",
"Peter Kolosimo\n Peter Kolosimo, pseudonym of Pier Domenico Colosimo (15 December 1922 – 23 March 1984), was an Italian journalist and writer. He is ranked amongst the founders of pseudoarchaeology (in Italian: fantarcheologia), a controversial topic where interpretations of the past are made that are not accepted by the archaeological science community, which rejects the accepted data-gathering and analytical methods of the discipline. He also popularised ancient astronaut theories of contact between extraterrestrial beings and ancient human civilizations.",
"Lucilio Vanini\n that the creators of the three monotheistic religions, Moses, Jesus and Muhammad, were nothing but impostors. In De Admirandis are found themes from Amphitheatrum, with refinements and developments that make it his masterpiece and the summary of his philosophy. Denying creation from nothing and the immortality of the soul, he saw God in Nature as its driving force and vital force, both eternal. The stars of heaven he considered a kind of intermediary between God and Nature. The true religion is therefore a \"religion of Nature\" that does not deny God but considers Him a spirit-force. The thought of Vanini is quite fragmented "
] |
What is the religion of José Palmeira Lessa? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | José Palmeira Lessa | 1,177,081 | 46 | [
{
"id": "13783136",
"title": "José Palmeira Lessa",
"text": " José Palmeira Lessa (January 18, 1942) is a prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as auxiliary bishop of São Sebastião do Rio de Janeiro from 1982 till 1987, when he became bishop of Propriá. In 1996 he became coadjutor archbishop of Aracajú, succeeding as archbishop in 1998.",
"score": "1.924979"
},
{
"id": "13783137",
"title": "José Palmeira Lessa",
"text": " Born in Coruripe, Palmeira Lessa was ordained to the priesthood on July 3, 1968. On June 21, 1982, he was appointed auxiliary bishop of São Sebastião do Rio de Janeiro and titular bishop of Sita. Palmeira Lessa received his episcopal consecration on the following August 24 from Eugênio Cardinal de Araújo Sales, archbishop of São Sebastião do Rio de Janeiro, with the bishop of Guaxupé, José Alberto Lopes de Castro Pinto, and the bishop of Vitória da Conquista, Celso José Pinto da Silva, serving as co-consecrators. On October 30, 1987, he was appointed bishop of Propriá. He served in this position for nine years, before being appointed coadjutor archbishop of Aracajú on December 6, 1996, succeeding as archbishop on August 26, 1998 after the retirement of his predecessor Luciano José Cabral Duarte.",
"score": "1.7170985"
},
{
"id": "28003360",
"title": "Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Aracaju",
"text": "José Palmeira Lessa (1996-1998) ; João José da Costa, O. Carm. (2016-2017) ",
"score": "1.5967548"
},
{
"id": "4023698",
"title": "Carlos Lessa",
"text": " Carlos Francisco Theodoro Machado Ribeiro de Lessa, better known simply as Carlos Lessa (30 July 1936 – 5 June 2020) was a Brazilian economist and professor.",
"score": "1.5513127"
},
{
"id": "4023700",
"title": "Carlos Lessa",
"text": " Lessa was a huge fan of Brazilian Carnival and founded Minerva Assanhada, a Carnival block composed mostly of Federal University of Rio de Janeiro students and personnel. Lessa's son, Rodrigo Lessa is a singer-songwriter and Multi-instrumentalist. On 5 June 2020, Lessa died in Rio de Janeiro at the age of 83 due to complications brought on by COVID-19 during the COVID-19 pandemic in Brazil.",
"score": "1.4887443"
},
{
"id": "31470509",
"title": "Aureliano Lessa",
"text": " Aureliano José Lessa (1828–1861) was a Brazilian poet, adept of the \"Ultra-Romanticism\" movement. Born in Minas Gerais in 1828, he moved to São Paulo in 1847 to study Law, but received his bacharel degree at the Faculdade de Direito de Olinda, in Pernambuco, in 1851. He worked as attorney general in the city of Ouro Preto, and also as a lawyer in the cities of Diamantina and Serro. During his stay at São Paulo he met the authors Álvares de Azevedo and Bernardo Guimarães. With them, he planned a volume of poetry called As Três Liras (in The Three Lyres), that ended unsuccessful. Along with those and others, he was a member of a club named \"Sociedade Epicureia\" (\"Epicurean Society\"). Aureliano only wrote some texts to newspapers of São Paulo and Minas Gerais during his lifetime. His poems were compiled and published posthumously in 1873 by his brother, Francisco José Pedro Lessa, under the name of Poesias Póstumas (in Posthumous Poetry). A heavy drinker, Lessa died on February 21, 1861, because of a lesion in his heart, caused by his alcoholism. Aureliano was the uncle of Pedro Augusto Carneiro Lessa.",
"score": "1.4779154"
},
{
"id": "8875142",
"title": "João Maria (monk)",
"text": " The people of the region began to conflate José Maria and the João Marias, uniting them as one person. A socio-religious movement led by André Ferreira França began in Soledade, Rio Grande do Sul, in 1935. The group was persecuted and André França decided to withdraw, but was shot in a clash with the city's military brigade. There is a large literature about the monks called João Maria, but the devout population have little interest in their historicity and are much more concerned with the sacred characteristics attributed to them. There are people today who think that João Maria, now more than 200 years old, still wanders in the region and works his miracles. There are many places in the center and east of Paraná and Santa Catarina, the south of São Paulo and the north of Rio Grande do Sul, where a small altar or cross ",
"score": "1.4580935"
},
{
"id": "1230124",
"title": "Anderson Lessa",
"text": " José Anderson de Oliveira Lessa (born July 26, 1989), best known as Anderson Lessa, is a Brazilian footballer. He plays as a striker for Portuguesa.",
"score": "1.4390306"
},
{
"id": "1881691",
"title": "Universal Church of the Kingdom of God",
"text": " humble vocations and low pay, regardless of qualifications, skills or experience. Complementing her book, the paper examines the role of good and bad luck in the lives of believers, how the UCKG attempts to regulate the flow of money, and its relationship to older notions of prosperity, fate and good fortune. The UCKG has been accused of intolerance and demonisation of African-Brazilian religions such as Candomblé and Umbanda, with aggressive speech and attacks on temples. In 2005, a Brazilian court ordered that Macedo's book Orixás, Caboclos e Guias: Deuses ou Demônios? be removed from stores as prejudiced and attacking the religious freedom of members of religions of African origin; the judgement was reversed on freedom of expression grounds after a year of litigation.",
"score": "1.418874"
},
{
"id": "26385756",
"title": "Walter Pinheiro",
"text": " Pinheiro is a practicing Baptist, yet despite his religion he stated that faith was a personal matter for him and he did not allow his beliefs to influence politics and vice versa.",
"score": "1.4129629"
},
{
"id": "12951812",
"title": "José da Avé-Maria Leite da Costa e Silva",
"text": " interested himself with the indoctrination of the Christians and the morals and education of the Diocesan clerics. He exercised important actions with the Azorean clergy, reflecting the thoughts of the Church and pastoral communications from Pope Benedict XIV. In one of his pastoral communications, the Pope encouraged Azorean Catholics to live a better life in the following year (21 December 1786); reminded the clergy of their obligation to share with them the \"bread of the doctrine of Christ\" (9 May 1888); lamented that little was done about the frequency of moral lectures (25 May 1788); prohibited the abuses during the Easter week ceremonies (8 May 1791); and appealed that they should abandon ignorance, especially those ",
"score": "1.4124197"
},
{
"id": "8875140",
"title": "João Maria (monk)",
"text": " would provide the hermit's blessings after he had disappeared. During the Federalist Revolution of 1893–95 he attended wounded rebels. His teachings were prophetic and apocalyptic. He said God would punish mankind with plagues of insects and bloody wars. He thought the First Brazilian Republic of 1889 was the work of the devil, and defended restoration of the monarchy as the \"order of God\". He may have died in 1908 in hospital in Ponta Grossa, Paraná, or may be buried in Lagoa Vermelha, Rio Grande do Sul, but his devotees think he is still living in the Morro Taió, a hill in Santa Catarina. ",
"score": "1.4117172"
},
{
"id": "28062686",
"title": "José Wellington Bezerra da Costa",
"text": " José Wellington Bezerra da Costa (born São Luís do Curu, 14 October 1934) is a Brazilian Pentecostal pastor from the Assemblies of God Bethlehem Ministry in Brazil. Since January 1980, he has been the General Superintendent of the Assembleias de Deus (AD) the largest Latin American Pentecostal denomination, which is related to the Assembly of God. He also is a Pastor of the Assembly of God Bethlehem Ministry in São Paulo, Brazil. Today, the Assembly of God Bethlehem Ministry in Brazil exceeds 400,000 member and congregants. He is a member of the world commission of the World Assemblies of God Fellowship.",
"score": "1.4108222"
},
{
"id": "5889756",
"title": "Antônio Moreira Borges",
"text": " Antonio Moreira Borges, better known as Father Antônio Maria (17 August 1945), is a Catholic priest and Brazilian singer, having performed in duets with Roberto Carlos, Agnaldo Rayol and Angela Maria, as well as a presentation for the then Pope John Paul II.",
"score": "1.4097555"
},
{
"id": "4023699",
"title": "Carlos Lessa",
"text": " Born on 30 July 1936 in Rio de Janeiro to a wealthy family, Lessa studied at private schools in his native city. In 1959, he graduated in economics at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro and later got a Master's degree at Conselho Nacional de Economia. In 1980 he finished his doctor's degree in Human sciences at University of Campinas. Lessa worked as a professor at Federal University of Rio de Janeiro and at the Rio Branco Institute, the Brazilian diplomatic graduate school. In 2002, Lessa was elected Rector of the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. It was his post for a brief period of time between July 2002 and March 2003. In 2003, Lessa was appointed President of the Brazilian Development Bank by Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. His tenure lasted from January 2003 to November 2004 and his resignation was a result of multiple disagreements over economic policies with Central Bank of Brazil President Henrique Meirelles and Minister of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade Luiz Fernando Furlan",
"score": "1.4073876"
},
{
"id": "13240930",
"title": "João do Rio",
"text": " Between February and March 1904, he carried through a series of news articles entitled As religiões no Rio (The religions in Rio). Beyond its character of \"investigative journalism\", it constitutes an important anthropological and sociological analysis, early recognized as such, particularly by the four pioneering texts about African cults, which precedes in more than a quarter of century the publications by Nina Rodrigues on the subject (beyond that, the works of Rodrigues were in large measure restricted to the academic circles of Bahia). Scholars had pointed out similarities between \"As religiões no Rio\" and the book \"Les petites réligions de Paris\" (1898), by French writer Jules Bois. However, the similarity seems to be much more ",
"score": "1.4017265"
},
{
"id": "12813648",
"title": "Brasil para Todos",
"text": " The movement has received support from representatives of many faiths, such as monk Coen, Iyalorisa Sandra M. Epega (president of the Non-Governmental Organization Respeito Brasil Yourubá), Baptist priest Djalma Rosa Torres, Vaishnava Hindu priest Jagannatha Dhama Dasa and Milton R. Medran Moreira, president of the Pan-American Spiritism Confederation. Many legal experts, including judges and attorneys; artists such as cartoonist Laerte Coutinho; politicians such as city councilwoman Soninha Francine and even religious-oriented NGOs such as Católicas pelo Direito de Decidir have also manifested support for the initiative.",
"score": "1.3990678"
},
{
"id": "1724403",
"title": "Luciano José Cabral Duarte",
"text": " 1966, he was appointed auxiliary bishop of Aracajú and titular bishop of Gadiaufala. Palmeira Lessa received his episcopal consecration on the following October 2 from José Vicente Távora, archbishop of Aracajú, with the bishop of Estância, José Bezerra Coutinho, and the bishop of Propriá, José Brandão de Castro, serving as co-consecrators. He took the motto \"Scio Cui Credidi\". On February 12, 1971, he was appointed archbishop of Aracajú. He retired on August 26, 1998, and was succeeded by José Palmeira Lessa. Cabral Duarte lived at his residence in Aracaju, due to his fragile state of health, until he died in the afternoon of May 29, 2018, at the age of 93.",
"score": "1.3980316"
},
{
"id": "16281156",
"title": "José Tolentino de Mendonça",
"text": " spiritual writings, poems and sermons under the name José Tolentino Mendonça. This work addresses the major themes of the Christian canon by placing them in dialogue with life. The relationship between Christianity and culture is at the heart of his writings. As a theologian and religious thinker, he has sought to discover spiritual life in places which have not always been looked at, and he has striven to encourage the Church to be more relevant and more engaged there. His books have been great successes in Portugal and are increasingly translated and published abroad. He has received numerous literary prizes and awards.",
"score": "1.3891051"
},
{
"id": "13240946",
"title": "João do Rio",
"text": "Religions in Rio – Bilingual Edition (As Religiões no Rio), translated by Ana Lessa-Schmidt. Hanover, Conn.:New London Librarium, 2015. ISBN: 978-0-9905899-8-3 ; Vertiginous Life – Bilingual Edition (Vida Vertiginosa), translated by Ana Lessa-Schmidt. Hanover, Conn.:New London Librarium, 2017. ISBN: 978-0-9985436-0-4 ",
"score": "1.388685"
}
] | [
"José Palmeira Lessa\n José Palmeira Lessa (January 18, 1942) is a prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as auxiliary bishop of São Sebastião do Rio de Janeiro from 1982 till 1987, when he became bishop of Propriá. In 1996 he became coadjutor archbishop of Aracajú, succeeding as archbishop in 1998.",
"José Palmeira Lessa\n Born in Coruripe, Palmeira Lessa was ordained to the priesthood on July 3, 1968. On June 21, 1982, he was appointed auxiliary bishop of São Sebastião do Rio de Janeiro and titular bishop of Sita. Palmeira Lessa received his episcopal consecration on the following August 24 from Eugênio Cardinal de Araújo Sales, archbishop of São Sebastião do Rio de Janeiro, with the bishop of Guaxupé, José Alberto Lopes de Castro Pinto, and the bishop of Vitória da Conquista, Celso José Pinto da Silva, serving as co-consecrators. On October 30, 1987, he was appointed bishop of Propriá. He served in this position for nine years, before being appointed coadjutor archbishop of Aracajú on December 6, 1996, succeeding as archbishop on August 26, 1998 after the retirement of his predecessor Luciano José Cabral Duarte.",
"Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Aracaju\nJosé Palmeira Lessa (1996-1998) ; João José da Costa, O. Carm. (2016-2017) ",
"Carlos Lessa\n Carlos Francisco Theodoro Machado Ribeiro de Lessa, better known simply as Carlos Lessa (30 July 1936 – 5 June 2020) was a Brazilian economist and professor.",
"Carlos Lessa\n Lessa was a huge fan of Brazilian Carnival and founded Minerva Assanhada, a Carnival block composed mostly of Federal University of Rio de Janeiro students and personnel. Lessa's son, Rodrigo Lessa is a singer-songwriter and Multi-instrumentalist. On 5 June 2020, Lessa died in Rio de Janeiro at the age of 83 due to complications brought on by COVID-19 during the COVID-19 pandemic in Brazil.",
"Aureliano Lessa\n Aureliano José Lessa (1828–1861) was a Brazilian poet, adept of the \"Ultra-Romanticism\" movement. Born in Minas Gerais in 1828, he moved to São Paulo in 1847 to study Law, but received his bacharel degree at the Faculdade de Direito de Olinda, in Pernambuco, in 1851. He worked as attorney general in the city of Ouro Preto, and also as a lawyer in the cities of Diamantina and Serro. During his stay at São Paulo he met the authors Álvares de Azevedo and Bernardo Guimarães. With them, he planned a volume of poetry called As Três Liras (in The Three Lyres), that ended unsuccessful. Along with those and others, he was a member of a club named \"Sociedade Epicureia\" (\"Epicurean Society\"). Aureliano only wrote some texts to newspapers of São Paulo and Minas Gerais during his lifetime. His poems were compiled and published posthumously in 1873 by his brother, Francisco José Pedro Lessa, under the name of Poesias Póstumas (in Posthumous Poetry). A heavy drinker, Lessa died on February 21, 1861, because of a lesion in his heart, caused by his alcoholism. Aureliano was the uncle of Pedro Augusto Carneiro Lessa.",
"João Maria (monk)\n The people of the region began to conflate José Maria and the João Marias, uniting them as one person. A socio-religious movement led by André Ferreira França began in Soledade, Rio Grande do Sul, in 1935. The group was persecuted and André França decided to withdraw, but was shot in a clash with the city's military brigade. There is a large literature about the monks called João Maria, but the devout population have little interest in their historicity and are much more concerned with the sacred characteristics attributed to them. There are people today who think that João Maria, now more than 200 years old, still wanders in the region and works his miracles. There are many places in the center and east of Paraná and Santa Catarina, the south of São Paulo and the north of Rio Grande do Sul, where a small altar or cross ",
"Anderson Lessa\n José Anderson de Oliveira Lessa (born July 26, 1989), best known as Anderson Lessa, is a Brazilian footballer. He plays as a striker for Portuguesa.",
"Universal Church of the Kingdom of God\n humble vocations and low pay, regardless of qualifications, skills or experience. Complementing her book, the paper examines the role of good and bad luck in the lives of believers, how the UCKG attempts to regulate the flow of money, and its relationship to older notions of prosperity, fate and good fortune. The UCKG has been accused of intolerance and demonisation of African-Brazilian religions such as Candomblé and Umbanda, with aggressive speech and attacks on temples. In 2005, a Brazilian court ordered that Macedo's book Orixás, Caboclos e Guias: Deuses ou Demônios? be removed from stores as prejudiced and attacking the religious freedom of members of religions of African origin; the judgement was reversed on freedom of expression grounds after a year of litigation.",
"Walter Pinheiro\n Pinheiro is a practicing Baptist, yet despite his religion he stated that faith was a personal matter for him and he did not allow his beliefs to influence politics and vice versa.",
"José da Avé-Maria Leite da Costa e Silva\n interested himself with the indoctrination of the Christians and the morals and education of the Diocesan clerics. He exercised important actions with the Azorean clergy, reflecting the thoughts of the Church and pastoral communications from Pope Benedict XIV. In one of his pastoral communications, the Pope encouraged Azorean Catholics to live a better life in the following year (21 December 1786); reminded the clergy of their obligation to share with them the \"bread of the doctrine of Christ\" (9 May 1888); lamented that little was done about the frequency of moral lectures (25 May 1788); prohibited the abuses during the Easter week ceremonies (8 May 1791); and appealed that they should abandon ignorance, especially those ",
"João Maria (monk)\n would provide the hermit's blessings after he had disappeared. During the Federalist Revolution of 1893–95 he attended wounded rebels. His teachings were prophetic and apocalyptic. He said God would punish mankind with plagues of insects and bloody wars. He thought the First Brazilian Republic of 1889 was the work of the devil, and defended restoration of the monarchy as the \"order of God\". He may have died in 1908 in hospital in Ponta Grossa, Paraná, or may be buried in Lagoa Vermelha, Rio Grande do Sul, but his devotees think he is still living in the Morro Taió, a hill in Santa Catarina. ",
"José Wellington Bezerra da Costa\n José Wellington Bezerra da Costa (born São Luís do Curu, 14 October 1934) is a Brazilian Pentecostal pastor from the Assemblies of God Bethlehem Ministry in Brazil. Since January 1980, he has been the General Superintendent of the Assembleias de Deus (AD) the largest Latin American Pentecostal denomination, which is related to the Assembly of God. He also is a Pastor of the Assembly of God Bethlehem Ministry in São Paulo, Brazil. Today, the Assembly of God Bethlehem Ministry in Brazil exceeds 400,000 member and congregants. He is a member of the world commission of the World Assemblies of God Fellowship.",
"Antônio Moreira Borges\n Antonio Moreira Borges, better known as Father Antônio Maria (17 August 1945), is a Catholic priest and Brazilian singer, having performed in duets with Roberto Carlos, Agnaldo Rayol and Angela Maria, as well as a presentation for the then Pope John Paul II.",
"Carlos Lessa\n Born on 30 July 1936 in Rio de Janeiro to a wealthy family, Lessa studied at private schools in his native city. In 1959, he graduated in economics at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro and later got a Master's degree at Conselho Nacional de Economia. In 1980 he finished his doctor's degree in Human sciences at University of Campinas. Lessa worked as a professor at Federal University of Rio de Janeiro and at the Rio Branco Institute, the Brazilian diplomatic graduate school. In 2002, Lessa was elected Rector of the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. It was his post for a brief period of time between July 2002 and March 2003. In 2003, Lessa was appointed President of the Brazilian Development Bank by Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. His tenure lasted from January 2003 to November 2004 and his resignation was a result of multiple disagreements over economic policies with Central Bank of Brazil President Henrique Meirelles and Minister of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade Luiz Fernando Furlan",
"João do Rio\n Between February and March 1904, he carried through a series of news articles entitled As religiões no Rio (The religions in Rio). Beyond its character of \"investigative journalism\", it constitutes an important anthropological and sociological analysis, early recognized as such, particularly by the four pioneering texts about African cults, which precedes in more than a quarter of century the publications by Nina Rodrigues on the subject (beyond that, the works of Rodrigues were in large measure restricted to the academic circles of Bahia). Scholars had pointed out similarities between \"As religiões no Rio\" and the book \"Les petites réligions de Paris\" (1898), by French writer Jules Bois. However, the similarity seems to be much more ",
"Brasil para Todos\n The movement has received support from representatives of many faiths, such as monk Coen, Iyalorisa Sandra M. Epega (president of the Non-Governmental Organization Respeito Brasil Yourubá), Baptist priest Djalma Rosa Torres, Vaishnava Hindu priest Jagannatha Dhama Dasa and Milton R. Medran Moreira, president of the Pan-American Spiritism Confederation. Many legal experts, including judges and attorneys; artists such as cartoonist Laerte Coutinho; politicians such as city councilwoman Soninha Francine and even religious-oriented NGOs such as Católicas pelo Direito de Decidir have also manifested support for the initiative.",
"Luciano José Cabral Duarte\n 1966, he was appointed auxiliary bishop of Aracajú and titular bishop of Gadiaufala. Palmeira Lessa received his episcopal consecration on the following October 2 from José Vicente Távora, archbishop of Aracajú, with the bishop of Estância, José Bezerra Coutinho, and the bishop of Propriá, José Brandão de Castro, serving as co-consecrators. He took the motto \"Scio Cui Credidi\". On February 12, 1971, he was appointed archbishop of Aracajú. He retired on August 26, 1998, and was succeeded by José Palmeira Lessa. Cabral Duarte lived at his residence in Aracaju, due to his fragile state of health, until he died in the afternoon of May 29, 2018, at the age of 93.",
"José Tolentino de Mendonça\n spiritual writings, poems and sermons under the name José Tolentino Mendonça. This work addresses the major themes of the Christian canon by placing them in dialogue with life. The relationship between Christianity and culture is at the heart of his writings. As a theologian and religious thinker, he has sought to discover spiritual life in places which have not always been looked at, and he has striven to encourage the Church to be more relevant and more engaged there. His books have been great successes in Portugal and are increasingly translated and published abroad. He has received numerous literary prizes and awards.",
"João do Rio\nReligions in Rio – Bilingual Edition (As Religiões no Rio), translated by Ana Lessa-Schmidt. Hanover, Conn.:New London Librarium, 2015. ISBN: 978-0-9905899-8-3 ; Vertiginous Life – Bilingual Edition (Vida Vertiginosa), translated by Ana Lessa-Schmidt. Hanover, Conn.:New London Librarium, 2017. ISBN: 978-0-9985436-0-4 "
] |
What is the religion of Niccolò Marini? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Niccolò Marini | 1,563,085 | 90 | [
{
"id": "5921484",
"title": "Niccolò Marini",
"text": " Niccolò Marini (20 August 1843 – 27 July 1923) was an Italian Cardinal of the Catholic Church who served as secretary of the Congregation for the Oriental Churches from 1917 to 1922, and was elevated to the cardinalate in 1916.",
"score": "1.5688486"
},
{
"id": "5921487",
"title": "Niccolò Marini",
"text": " later. Marini was highly active in pursuing greater unity between the Eastern Christianity and the Western Church. It was this pursuit that took him on travels to the Holy Land, Egypt, Greece, and North Africa. Within the Roman Curia, he was made a consultor to the Sacred Congregation of Studies (10 October 1902), Pontifical Biblical Commission (1911), Commission for the Codification of Canon Law (9 March 1912), and to the liturgical section of the Sacred Congregation of Rites (26 March 1914). He was appointed Secretary of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signature on 20 October 1908. As Secretary, Marini served as ",
"score": "1.5547965"
},
{
"id": "5921485",
"title": "Niccolò Marini",
"text": " Marini was born in Rome, and was a relative of Pietro Cardinal Marini. He studied at the Collegio Capranica; the Pontifical Gregorian University, from where he obtained his doctorates in philosophy, in theology, and in canon and civil law; and the Royal University of Rome. He was ordained to the priesthood on 26 June 1866, and then did pastoral work in Rome. Founder of the Catholic daily Il buon senso, he also worked with Catholic Action in creating the women's club Gaetana Agnesi. He was later named vicar general of Cardinal Luigi Oreglia di Santo Stefano. He became an official of the ",
"score": "1.5428636"
},
{
"id": "5921488",
"title": "Niccolò Marini",
"text": " second-highest official of the dicastery, under Cardinal Vincenzo Vannutelli. He was highly decorated as well, having been made Commander of the Order of Isabella the Catholic (Spain), of the Order of the Crown of Prussia, and of the Order of the Holy Sepulchre, and an Officer of the Légion d'honneur. Pope Benedict XV created him Cardinal-Deacon of Santa Maria in Domnica in the consistory of 4 December 1916. Marini, who never became a bishop, was named to the Commission of Historical Studies on 4 January 1917. He was made Secretary of the Sacred Congregation for the Oriental Churches on 29 November ",
"score": "1.5070031"
},
{
"id": "30085445",
"title": "Antonio Marini",
"text": " Antonio Marini (27 May 1788 – 10 September 1861) was an Italian painter, mainly of sacred subjects for churches in Tuscany. He is distinct from the Antonio Maria Marini from Venice.",
"score": "1.4869657"
},
{
"id": "27443967",
"title": "Antoine Marini",
"text": " Antoine Marini was a 15th-century theologian and political thinker who, among other things, contemplated the establishing of a European Court of Justice and a pan-European parliament. He was born in Grenoble, France. He was in favor of curtailing the power of the Papacy on political matters, and in this capacity served as adviser to King George Podiebrad of Bohemia in his legal struggle against Pope Pius II. In 1461 he published a treatise calling for the establishment of a federal union of all Christian states in Europe for the purpose of deciding on political matters out of considerations for the common interests of Europe, while establishing counterweight to Papal authority.",
"score": "1.4790025"
},
{
"id": "14593899",
"title": "Luigi Gaetano Marini",
"text": " Brethren of ancient Rome brought to light so much that was new, and its appearance created a stir. His classification of five thousand inscriptions, both Christian and heathen, in the Galleria Lapidaria at the Vatican, earned for him the honorary title of \"Restorer\" of Latin epigraphics. Marini was a cleric, but not a priest. He often prayed for hours before the Blessed Sacrament, and went to communion three times a week. During his residence in Paris and living as an invalid, he gave away alms to the extent of 3000 scudi (dollars), a significant valuation at the time and for his situation.",
"score": "1.4529296"
},
{
"id": "26171948",
"title": "Piero Marini",
"text": " Marini was born in Valverde, Italy, and was ordained a priest of the Catholic Church on 27 June 1965. He holds a doctorate in liturgy from the Benedictine-run College of Sant'Anselmo. In 1975, Marini became personal secretary to Archbishop Annibale Bugnini, the chief architect of the liturgical reforms that followed Vatican II. From 1987 to 2007, Marini was the Master of the Office for the Liturgical Celebrations of the Supreme Pontiff, the group responsible for organizing the details of papal liturgies and other celebrations. He was seen at the pope's side in every such celebration. He was appointed Titular Bishop of Martirano on 14 February 1998 and was consecrated on 19 March by ",
"score": "1.4425108"
},
{
"id": "26171952",
"title": "Piero Marini",
"text": " Marini promoted Vatican II reforms including the \"simplification of rites that he believes facilitates active participation.\" He supports the integration of local customs into church rituals. At a celebration he oversaw in 1998, a group of scantily clad Pacific Islanders danced during the opening liturgy of the Synod for Oceania in St. Peter's Basilica; Pope John Paul II's visit to Mexico City in 2002, an indigenous Mexican shaman performed a purification ritual on the pope during Mass. In July 2007, when Pope Benedict gave broader permission for the celebration of the 1962 Tridentine Mass, Marini said that it \"does not intend ",
"score": "1.4105952"
},
{
"id": "12446669",
"title": "Pietro Marini",
"text": " Pietro Marini was born in 1794 in Rome, in what was then the Papal States. He was the son of Neapolitan architect Francesco Saverio Marini and Irene De Dominicis. Marini was baptised in the patriarchal Vatican basilica in 1794; his godfather was Cardinal Gregorio Barnaba Chiaramonti, O.S.B.Cas., the future Pope Pius VII. Marini is an ancestor of Cardinal Niccolò Marini. Marini studied letters and philosophy at the Pontifical Roman Seminary from 1804 to 1810; then, at La Sapienza University, Rome, obtaining a doctorate ad honorem in utroque iure (both canon and civil law) on 24 July 1816. He also obtained the title of advocate at the Roman Curia. Marini served as a civil assessor ",
"score": "1.3992703"
},
{
"id": "7174601",
"title": "Niccolò Sagundino",
"text": " Niccolò Sagundino (1402 – March 1464) was a Greek-born Venetian secretary, diplomat and humanist. He wrote numerous letters, as well as religious and philosophical treatises, mostly in Latin. Originally from Euboea, he was in Venetian service when he was wounded and captured by the Ottomans at the fall of Thessaloniki in 1430. He favoured the union between the Catholic and Orthodox churches and worked for the Papacy. He undertook several Venetian missions to the Ottoman court and to Greek lands, on one of which he suffered a shipwreck that killed several of his immediate family. He died in Venice.",
"score": "1.3906319"
},
{
"id": "10693740",
"title": "List of Italian inventions and discoveries",
"text": " Catholics, Lutherans and Calvinists. In his positions Bruno identified God as a God-Nature, as a reality that in itself subsists immanent in the guise of the Infinite, since infinity is the fundamental characteristic of the divine. For this reason and other beliefs considered heretic by the Catholic Church, such as negating Holy Trinity, he was dragged into court in Venice by local Inquisition, where he skillfully tried to defend himself stating that philosophers in their course of thoughts, according to \"the natural light of intellect\", can come to conflicting conclusions with the matters of faith, without having to be considered heretics. Roman Inquisition asked for ",
"score": "1.3905311"
},
{
"id": "26171947",
"title": "Piero Marini",
"text": " Piero Marini (born 13 January 1942) is a Roman Catholic archbishop who is president of the Pontifical Committee for International Eucharistic Congresses. For twenty years he served as Master of Pontifical Liturgical Celebrations, in charge of the Office for the Liturgical Celebrations of the Supreme Pontiff. In that capacity he worked for Popes John Paul II for 18 years and Benedict XVI for two years.",
"score": "1.3843669"
},
{
"id": "2504566",
"title": "Saint Marinus",
"text": " Tradition holds that he was a stonemason by trade who came from the island of Arba (today Rab), on the other side of the Adriatic Sea (in what is now part of modern-day Croatia, then part of the Roman Empire), fleeing persecution for his Christian beliefs in the Diocletianic Persecution. Known only by the single name Marinus (lit. of the sea), he became a Deacon, and was ordained by Gaudentius, the Bishop of Rimini; later, he was recognised and accused by an insane woman of being her estranged husband, so he quickly fled to Monte Titano to build a chapel-monastery and live as a hermit. Another version of the story says that hearing that the town of Rimini (Italy) was being rebuilt, he travelled there and ",
"score": "1.3831351"
},
{
"id": "12446668",
"title": "Pietro Marini",
"text": " Pietro Marini (5 October 1794 - 19 August 1863) was a Catholic cardinal.",
"score": "1.3698008"
},
{
"id": "32089341",
"title": "List of people who converted to paganism",
"text": "Marinus of Neapolis ",
"score": "1.369124"
},
{
"id": "11646543",
"title": "Franco Venturi",
"text": " The Italian philosopher and sociologist of religions Edoardo Grendi discussed a PhD dissertation on the Benedetto Croce aesthetics under the supervision of Venturi, before moving to the London School of Economics where he was already working on the history of British labour movement between the 189th and the 20th century. Grendi continued the studies of Gabriel Le Bras to investigate statutes and real life of the Roman Catholic local and lay confraternities. He affirmed they werent't originated by the ecclesiastical hierarchy, but by a natural process of group devotion which made lay confraternities the main center of the Ligurian popular spirituality until the suppression decreed by Napoleon in the Enlightment century.",
"score": "1.3656127"
},
{
"id": "24906218",
"title": "Marin Barleti",
"text": " Marin Barleti (Marinus Barletius, Marino Barlezio; c. 1450–1460 – c. 1512-1513) was a historian and Catholic priest from Shkodër. He is considered the first Albanian historian because of his 1504 eyewitness account of the 1478 siege of Shkodra. Barleti is better known for his second work, a biography on Skanderbeg, translated into many languages in the 16th to the 20th centuries.",
"score": "1.3624377"
},
{
"id": "2515522",
"title": "Niccolò Alamanni",
"text": " Niccolò Alamanni (Ancona, 12 January 1583 – Rome, 1626) was a Roman antiquarian of Greek origin. He was educated in Rome at the Greek College, founded by Gregory XIII, but was ordained deacon and priest according to the Latin rite. After teaching Greek for some time to persons of rank, he was appointed secretary to Cardinal Borghese, and afterwards made custodian of the Vatican Library. His death is said to have been caused by too close attendance at the erection of the high altar of St. Peter's, to which honorable duty he had been assigned with orders to see that the sepulchres of the holy martyrs were not interfered ",
"score": "1.3588016"
},
{
"id": "14593901",
"title": "Luigi Gaetano Marini",
"text": "Attribution ; Cites sources: ; MARINO MARINI. Degli. Aneddoti di Gaetano Marini: Commentario di suo nipote (Rome, 1822); ; MORONI, Dizionarzo di Erudizione Storico-Ecclesiatica, IV, 286; ; MARINO MARINI, Memorie Storiche dell' occupazione e restitutione degli Archivii della S. Sede e del riacquisto de' Codici e Museo Numismatico del Vaticano e de' Manoscritti e parte del Museo di Storia Naturale di Bologna (Rome, 1885) ",
"score": "1.354831"
}
] | [
"Niccolò Marini\n Niccolò Marini (20 August 1843 – 27 July 1923) was an Italian Cardinal of the Catholic Church who served as secretary of the Congregation for the Oriental Churches from 1917 to 1922, and was elevated to the cardinalate in 1916.",
"Niccolò Marini\n later. Marini was highly active in pursuing greater unity between the Eastern Christianity and the Western Church. It was this pursuit that took him on travels to the Holy Land, Egypt, Greece, and North Africa. Within the Roman Curia, he was made a consultor to the Sacred Congregation of Studies (10 October 1902), Pontifical Biblical Commission (1911), Commission for the Codification of Canon Law (9 March 1912), and to the liturgical section of the Sacred Congregation of Rites (26 March 1914). He was appointed Secretary of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signature on 20 October 1908. As Secretary, Marini served as ",
"Niccolò Marini\n Marini was born in Rome, and was a relative of Pietro Cardinal Marini. He studied at the Collegio Capranica; the Pontifical Gregorian University, from where he obtained his doctorates in philosophy, in theology, and in canon and civil law; and the Royal University of Rome. He was ordained to the priesthood on 26 June 1866, and then did pastoral work in Rome. Founder of the Catholic daily Il buon senso, he also worked with Catholic Action in creating the women's club Gaetana Agnesi. He was later named vicar general of Cardinal Luigi Oreglia di Santo Stefano. He became an official of the ",
"Niccolò Marini\n second-highest official of the dicastery, under Cardinal Vincenzo Vannutelli. He was highly decorated as well, having been made Commander of the Order of Isabella the Catholic (Spain), of the Order of the Crown of Prussia, and of the Order of the Holy Sepulchre, and an Officer of the Légion d'honneur. Pope Benedict XV created him Cardinal-Deacon of Santa Maria in Domnica in the consistory of 4 December 1916. Marini, who never became a bishop, was named to the Commission of Historical Studies on 4 January 1917. He was made Secretary of the Sacred Congregation for the Oriental Churches on 29 November ",
"Antonio Marini\n Antonio Marini (27 May 1788 – 10 September 1861) was an Italian painter, mainly of sacred subjects for churches in Tuscany. He is distinct from the Antonio Maria Marini from Venice.",
"Antoine Marini\n Antoine Marini was a 15th-century theologian and political thinker who, among other things, contemplated the establishing of a European Court of Justice and a pan-European parliament. He was born in Grenoble, France. He was in favor of curtailing the power of the Papacy on political matters, and in this capacity served as adviser to King George Podiebrad of Bohemia in his legal struggle against Pope Pius II. In 1461 he published a treatise calling for the establishment of a federal union of all Christian states in Europe for the purpose of deciding on political matters out of considerations for the common interests of Europe, while establishing counterweight to Papal authority.",
"Luigi Gaetano Marini\n Brethren of ancient Rome brought to light so much that was new, and its appearance created a stir. His classification of five thousand inscriptions, both Christian and heathen, in the Galleria Lapidaria at the Vatican, earned for him the honorary title of \"Restorer\" of Latin epigraphics. Marini was a cleric, but not a priest. He often prayed for hours before the Blessed Sacrament, and went to communion three times a week. During his residence in Paris and living as an invalid, he gave away alms to the extent of 3000 scudi (dollars), a significant valuation at the time and for his situation.",
"Piero Marini\n Marini was born in Valverde, Italy, and was ordained a priest of the Catholic Church on 27 June 1965. He holds a doctorate in liturgy from the Benedictine-run College of Sant'Anselmo. In 1975, Marini became personal secretary to Archbishop Annibale Bugnini, the chief architect of the liturgical reforms that followed Vatican II. From 1987 to 2007, Marini was the Master of the Office for the Liturgical Celebrations of the Supreme Pontiff, the group responsible for organizing the details of papal liturgies and other celebrations. He was seen at the pope's side in every such celebration. He was appointed Titular Bishop of Martirano on 14 February 1998 and was consecrated on 19 March by ",
"Piero Marini\n Marini promoted Vatican II reforms including the \"simplification of rites that he believes facilitates active participation.\" He supports the integration of local customs into church rituals. At a celebration he oversaw in 1998, a group of scantily clad Pacific Islanders danced during the opening liturgy of the Synod for Oceania in St. Peter's Basilica; Pope John Paul II's visit to Mexico City in 2002, an indigenous Mexican shaman performed a purification ritual on the pope during Mass. In July 2007, when Pope Benedict gave broader permission for the celebration of the 1962 Tridentine Mass, Marini said that it \"does not intend ",
"Pietro Marini\n Pietro Marini was born in 1794 in Rome, in what was then the Papal States. He was the son of Neapolitan architect Francesco Saverio Marini and Irene De Dominicis. Marini was baptised in the patriarchal Vatican basilica in 1794; his godfather was Cardinal Gregorio Barnaba Chiaramonti, O.S.B.Cas., the future Pope Pius VII. Marini is an ancestor of Cardinal Niccolò Marini. Marini studied letters and philosophy at the Pontifical Roman Seminary from 1804 to 1810; then, at La Sapienza University, Rome, obtaining a doctorate ad honorem in utroque iure (both canon and civil law) on 24 July 1816. He also obtained the title of advocate at the Roman Curia. Marini served as a civil assessor ",
"Niccolò Sagundino\n Niccolò Sagundino (1402 – March 1464) was a Greek-born Venetian secretary, diplomat and humanist. He wrote numerous letters, as well as religious and philosophical treatises, mostly in Latin. Originally from Euboea, he was in Venetian service when he was wounded and captured by the Ottomans at the fall of Thessaloniki in 1430. He favoured the union between the Catholic and Orthodox churches and worked for the Papacy. He undertook several Venetian missions to the Ottoman court and to Greek lands, on one of which he suffered a shipwreck that killed several of his immediate family. He died in Venice.",
"List of Italian inventions and discoveries\n Catholics, Lutherans and Calvinists. In his positions Bruno identified God as a God-Nature, as a reality that in itself subsists immanent in the guise of the Infinite, since infinity is the fundamental characteristic of the divine. For this reason and other beliefs considered heretic by the Catholic Church, such as negating Holy Trinity, he was dragged into court in Venice by local Inquisition, where he skillfully tried to defend himself stating that philosophers in their course of thoughts, according to \"the natural light of intellect\", can come to conflicting conclusions with the matters of faith, without having to be considered heretics. Roman Inquisition asked for ",
"Piero Marini\n Piero Marini (born 13 January 1942) is a Roman Catholic archbishop who is president of the Pontifical Committee for International Eucharistic Congresses. For twenty years he served as Master of Pontifical Liturgical Celebrations, in charge of the Office for the Liturgical Celebrations of the Supreme Pontiff. In that capacity he worked for Popes John Paul II for 18 years and Benedict XVI for two years.",
"Saint Marinus\n Tradition holds that he was a stonemason by trade who came from the island of Arba (today Rab), on the other side of the Adriatic Sea (in what is now part of modern-day Croatia, then part of the Roman Empire), fleeing persecution for his Christian beliefs in the Diocletianic Persecution. Known only by the single name Marinus (lit. of the sea), he became a Deacon, and was ordained by Gaudentius, the Bishop of Rimini; later, he was recognised and accused by an insane woman of being her estranged husband, so he quickly fled to Monte Titano to build a chapel-monastery and live as a hermit. Another version of the story says that hearing that the town of Rimini (Italy) was being rebuilt, he travelled there and ",
"Pietro Marini\n Pietro Marini (5 October 1794 - 19 August 1863) was a Catholic cardinal.",
"List of people who converted to paganism\nMarinus of Neapolis ",
"Franco Venturi\n The Italian philosopher and sociologist of religions Edoardo Grendi discussed a PhD dissertation on the Benedetto Croce aesthetics under the supervision of Venturi, before moving to the London School of Economics where he was already working on the history of British labour movement between the 189th and the 20th century. Grendi continued the studies of Gabriel Le Bras to investigate statutes and real life of the Roman Catholic local and lay confraternities. He affirmed they werent't originated by the ecclesiastical hierarchy, but by a natural process of group devotion which made lay confraternities the main center of the Ligurian popular spirituality until the suppression decreed by Napoleon in the Enlightment century.",
"Marin Barleti\n Marin Barleti (Marinus Barletius, Marino Barlezio; c. 1450–1460 – c. 1512-1513) was a historian and Catholic priest from Shkodër. He is considered the first Albanian historian because of his 1504 eyewitness account of the 1478 siege of Shkodra. Barleti is better known for his second work, a biography on Skanderbeg, translated into many languages in the 16th to the 20th centuries.",
"Niccolò Alamanni\n Niccolò Alamanni (Ancona, 12 January 1583 – Rome, 1626) was a Roman antiquarian of Greek origin. He was educated in Rome at the Greek College, founded by Gregory XIII, but was ordained deacon and priest according to the Latin rite. After teaching Greek for some time to persons of rank, he was appointed secretary to Cardinal Borghese, and afterwards made custodian of the Vatican Library. His death is said to have been caused by too close attendance at the erection of the high altar of St. Peter's, to which honorable duty he had been assigned with orders to see that the sepulchres of the holy martyrs were not interfered ",
"Luigi Gaetano Marini\nAttribution ; Cites sources: ; MARINO MARINI. Degli. Aneddoti di Gaetano Marini: Commentario di suo nipote (Rome, 1822); ; MORONI, Dizionarzo di Erudizione Storico-Ecclesiatica, IV, 286; ; MARINO MARINI, Memorie Storiche dell' occupazione e restitutione degli Archivii della S. Sede e del riacquisto de' Codici e Museo Numismatico del Vaticano e de' Manoscritti e parte del Museo di Storia Naturale di Bologna (Rome, 1885) "
] |
What is the religion of James MacManaway? | [
"Anglicanism",
"Anglicanism, Anglican Church"
] | religion | James MacManaway (bishop) | 4,626,857 | 68 | [
{
"id": "14264305",
"title": "J. G. MacManaway",
"text": " James Godfrey MacManaway, MBE (22 April 1898 – 3 November 1951) was a British Unionist politician and Church of Ireland cleric, notable for being disqualified as a Member of Parliament, owing to his status as a priest.",
"score": "1.588162"
},
{
"id": "14264306",
"title": "J. G. MacManaway",
"text": " James Godfrey MacManaway was born in County Tyrone in 1898, the youngest son of the Rt. Rev. James MacManaway, Church of Ireland Bishop of Clogher. He was educated at Campbell College, Belfast, and Trinity College, Dublin. He served in the Royal Flying Corps during the First World War, having enlisted at the age of 17. In 1925 MacManaway was ordained as a priest of the Church of Ireland by the Bishop of Armagh. He married Catherine Anne Swetenham Trench, née Lecky, in 1926. He was Rector of Christ Church, Derry from 1930 to 1947. He served as Chaplain to Forces during the Second World War. In 1945 he was awarded an MBE.",
"score": "1.5174048"
},
{
"id": "14264366",
"title": "James MacManaway (bishop)",
"text": " James MacManaway (1860 – 29 November 1947) was an Anglican bishop. Born in County Roscommon in 1860, MacManaway was educated at Trinity College, Dublin and ordained in 1888. He was Curate of Clanabogan then Rector of Termonmaguirk; and after that the incumbent at Fivemiletown. He became a Canon of St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, in 1912 and Archdeacon of Clogher in 1917. He was appointed Bishop of Clogher in 1923 and served the diocese for 20 years. He died on 29 November 1947. MacManaway married Sarah Thompson from Co. Kilkenny with whom he had sons Lancelot, Richard and James Godfrey and Daughter Mary. His son, James Godfrey MacManaway, was also a Church of Ireland clergyman and became a politician.",
"score": "1.4869777"
},
{
"id": "25862207",
"title": "James MacCash",
"text": " James MacCash (1834–1922) was the founder of the Order of Scottish Clans and founded it while celebrating his birthday in St. Louis in 1878. Born in Springburn, Glasgow, Scotland, he emigrated to the United States of America in 1865. He died at St. Louis, Missouri, and is interred at Bellefontaine Cemetery.",
"score": "1.4156016"
},
{
"id": "10931438",
"title": "James Maciver",
"text": " He was born in Aird Tong on the 9th of April, 1954 on the Isle of Lewis and studied Hebrew and Medieval History at Glasgow University from 1981 to 1984, graduating MA. After a year at London University he took a Diploma in Theology at the Free Church College, Edinburgh in 1987. In September 1987 he was ordained into the Free Church of East Kilbride. In 1997 he became minister of Knock on the Isle of Lewis. He was replaced there by Rev Iain Donald Campbell. In 2016 he moved to be minister of the Free Church on Kenneth Street in Stornoway to replace Rev Iver Martin.",
"score": "1.4132566"
},
{
"id": "14264307",
"title": "J. G. MacManaway",
"text": " In June 1947 MacManaway was elected to the Parliament of Northern Ireland, as Unionist member for the City of Londonderry. He then set his sights on Westminster, although, as a man of the cloth, there was some doubt as to his eligibility, owing to various historical statutes debarring clergymen of both the Established Church and the Roman Catholic Church from sitting as MPs in the British House of Commons. MacManaway sought legal advice from the Attorney General for Northern Ireland, Edmund Warnock. Warnock advised him that since the Church of Ireland had been disestablished in 1869, the statutory bars would not apply to MacManaway. MacManaway was selected by the Unionist party to contest Belfast West in the 1950 General Election. As a precaution, he resigned from his offices in the Church of Ireland. He won the election, defeating the sitting Irish Labour Party MP Jack Beattie by 3,378 votes. Among the activists working on this campaign was a young Ian Paisley.",
"score": "1.4124613"
},
{
"id": "3551460",
"title": "James Joseph Brown",
"text": " J.J. Brown was pagan who worshiped his own wife, who is supposedly a Gaelic deity.",
"score": "1.4071518"
},
{
"id": "4675399",
"title": "James MacKillop (author)",
"text": " James MacKillop (born May 31, 1939, Pontiac, Michigan) is an American scholar of Celtic and Irish studies, an arts journalist and an academic. A child of Gaelic-speaking Highland emigrants, he is also a near relative of St Mary MacKillop of Australia (1842-1909).",
"score": "1.4065679"
},
{
"id": "12267154",
"title": "James McDonald (writer)",
"text": " James McDonald is a British polymath: mathematician, etymologist, historian, theologian and non-fiction writer. He writes on a range of topics including Gnostic Dualism, the Cathars of the Languedoc and their theology, the Counts of Toulouse, Occitania, Medieval warfare and the Medieval Inquisition. His work is characterised by combining serious scholarship with an entertaining style. Something of a polymath, he has also written on subjects as diverse as computer simulation, mathematical problems, philosophy, etymology and comparative philology. For several years he wrote a weekly column on English word origins for the Sunday Express, a national newspaper in the UK. He has travelled extensively in Central Asia and Southern Asia, researching Zoroastrianism and other ancient religions. According to his publishers his book Beyond Belief took ",
"score": "1.3999183"
},
{
"id": "14763413",
"title": "James Mack (curator)",
"text": " James Mack (Galvan Kepler Macnamara; 1941 – 3 June 2004) was a curator, director, advisor and arts advocate in New Zealand and the Pacific.",
"score": "1.3913606"
},
{
"id": "11241696",
"title": "Alexander Mackennal",
"text": " Seven Churches of Asia, The Kingdom of the Lord Jesus and The Eternal God and the Human Sonship. These are contributions to exegetical study or to theological and progressive religious thought, and have elements of permanent value. He also made some useful contributions to religious history. In 1893 he published the Story of the English Separatists, and later the Homes and Haunts of the Pilgrim Fathers; he also wrote the life of Dr JA Macfadyen of Manchester. In 1901 he delivered a series of lectures at Hartford Theological Seminary, Connecticut, USA, published under the title The Evolution of Congregationalism. He died at Highgate on 23 June 1904. See D. Macfadyen, Life and Letters of Alexander Mackennal (1905).",
"score": "1.3846946"
},
{
"id": "26925646",
"title": "Scottish religion in the seventeenth century",
"text": " Andrew Melville as '...Thair is twa Kings and twa Kingdomes in Scotland... Chryst Jesus the King and this Kingdome the Kirk, whose subject King James the Saxt is.' Royalists tended to be 'traditionalists' in religion and politics but there were many other factors, including nationalist allegiance to the kirk and individual motives were very complex. In 1618, the General Assembly reluctantly approved the Five Articles of Perth; these included forms retained in England but largely abolished in Scotland and were widely resented. When Charles I succeeded James, unfamiliarity with Scotland made him even more reliant on the bishops, especially the Archbishop of St Andrews and prone to sudden decisions. The 1625 Act ",
"score": "1.3831396"
},
{
"id": "6738484",
"title": "James MacCaffrey",
"text": " Monsignor James MacCaffrey STL, PhD (1875 – 1935) was an Irish priest, theologian and historian.",
"score": "1.3800066"
},
{
"id": "8904532",
"title": "Donald MacQueen",
"text": " MacQueen was ordained in 1740 and was appointed minister of Kilmuir and of Kilmaluag. He was the author of a number of works including Reflections on Clanship (1763) and a Dissertation of the Government of the People of the Western Isles (1774). He was also employed by the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland to revise (with other selected ministers) the translation of the Pentateuch into Gaelic. On 13 February 1781 he was admitted as a corresponding member of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, which published some of his writings. MacQueen featured prominently in the accounts written by Dr Johnson and James Boswell of their tour ",
"score": "1.3725197"
},
{
"id": "1390064",
"title": "James William MacGauley",
"text": " Attribution",
"score": "1.3717139"
},
{
"id": "1541801",
"title": "James Mackay, Baron Mackay of Clashfern",
"text": " Mackay was raised a member of the Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland; as an adult he was an elder of the church. The church forbids its members to attend Catholic religious services; nevertheless Mackay attended two Catholic funeral masses for members of the judiciary (for Charles Ritchie Russell in 1986, and again for John Wheatley in 1988). Following the second mass Mackay was called before a church synod where he denied that he had broken the church's prohibition of showing \"support for the doctrine of Catholicism\", saying \"I went there purely with the purpose of paying my respects to my dead colleagues.\" The church suspended Mackay from the eldership and ",
"score": "1.3640444"
},
{
"id": "8874438",
"title": "Macrae Monument",
"text": " James Macrae (1677–1746) was most likely born in the parish of Ochiltree and escaped great poverty to become a sea captain and later an administrator who served as the Governor of Fort St George and in 1725 Governor of the Madras Presidency, modern day Chennai. He encountered the pirate Edward England and was noted for reforming the administration of Madras Presidency on behalf of the British East India Company. James returned from India with a fortune conservatively estimated at £100,000. He died unmarried at Monkton House that he had purchased circa 1739 and renamed 'Orangefield' and was buried in 1748 at Monkton Churchyard in, for reasons that are not entirely clear, an unmarked grave.",
"score": "1.3586895"
},
{
"id": "3246389",
"title": "James MacCallum",
"text": " James Metcalfe MacCallum (1860–1943) was a Canadian ophthalmologist and one of the most important patrons of Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven.",
"score": "1.3548393"
},
{
"id": "15604578",
"title": "E. O. James",
"text": " Edwin Oliver James (1888 – 1972) was an anthropologist in the field of comparative religion. He was Professor Emeritus of the History and Philosophy of Religion in the University of London, Fellow of University College London and Fellow of King's College London. During his long career he had been Professor of History and Philosophy of Religion at the University of Leeds, Lecturer at the University of Amsterdam and Wilde Lecturer at the University of Oxford. James received his education at Exeter College, Oxford and at University College London, where he studied under the noted egyptologist Sir William Matthew Flinders Petrie. James was also a member of the Folklore Society, serving as its President from 1930 to 1932.",
"score": "1.3527757"
},
{
"id": "26279893",
"title": "John Stuart Stuart-Glennie",
"text": " a just afterlife: the rise of what Stuart-Glennie called the “Hell religions.” Stuart-Glennie was also seen, by Shaw, as a successor to Henry Buckle, with a theory of origins of civilization and religious transformations going back some eight thousand years, and based on racial foundations. In his 1956 book, The Transformations of Man, Lewis Mumford credited him with anticipating Jaspers' Axial Age concept. Mumford became aware of Stuart-Glennie’s work around 1920, while editing The Sociological Review in London, through Stuart-Glennie’s friend and Mumford’s mentor sociologist Patrick Geddes. As a disciple of Buckle, with whom he travelled, Stuart-Glennie was heavily criticised by John Mackinnon ",
"score": "1.3521671"
}
] | [
"J. G. MacManaway\n James Godfrey MacManaway, MBE (22 April 1898 – 3 November 1951) was a British Unionist politician and Church of Ireland cleric, notable for being disqualified as a Member of Parliament, owing to his status as a priest.",
"J. G. MacManaway\n James Godfrey MacManaway was born in County Tyrone in 1898, the youngest son of the Rt. Rev. James MacManaway, Church of Ireland Bishop of Clogher. He was educated at Campbell College, Belfast, and Trinity College, Dublin. He served in the Royal Flying Corps during the First World War, having enlisted at the age of 17. In 1925 MacManaway was ordained as a priest of the Church of Ireland by the Bishop of Armagh. He married Catherine Anne Swetenham Trench, née Lecky, in 1926. He was Rector of Christ Church, Derry from 1930 to 1947. He served as Chaplain to Forces during the Second World War. In 1945 he was awarded an MBE.",
"James MacManaway (bishop)\n James MacManaway (1860 – 29 November 1947) was an Anglican bishop. Born in County Roscommon in 1860, MacManaway was educated at Trinity College, Dublin and ordained in 1888. He was Curate of Clanabogan then Rector of Termonmaguirk; and after that the incumbent at Fivemiletown. He became a Canon of St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, in 1912 and Archdeacon of Clogher in 1917. He was appointed Bishop of Clogher in 1923 and served the diocese for 20 years. He died on 29 November 1947. MacManaway married Sarah Thompson from Co. Kilkenny with whom he had sons Lancelot, Richard and James Godfrey and Daughter Mary. His son, James Godfrey MacManaway, was also a Church of Ireland clergyman and became a politician.",
"James MacCash\n James MacCash (1834–1922) was the founder of the Order of Scottish Clans and founded it while celebrating his birthday in St. Louis in 1878. Born in Springburn, Glasgow, Scotland, he emigrated to the United States of America in 1865. He died at St. Louis, Missouri, and is interred at Bellefontaine Cemetery.",
"James Maciver\n He was born in Aird Tong on the 9th of April, 1954 on the Isle of Lewis and studied Hebrew and Medieval History at Glasgow University from 1981 to 1984, graduating MA. After a year at London University he took a Diploma in Theology at the Free Church College, Edinburgh in 1987. In September 1987 he was ordained into the Free Church of East Kilbride. In 1997 he became minister of Knock on the Isle of Lewis. He was replaced there by Rev Iain Donald Campbell. In 2016 he moved to be minister of the Free Church on Kenneth Street in Stornoway to replace Rev Iver Martin.",
"J. G. MacManaway\n In June 1947 MacManaway was elected to the Parliament of Northern Ireland, as Unionist member for the City of Londonderry. He then set his sights on Westminster, although, as a man of the cloth, there was some doubt as to his eligibility, owing to various historical statutes debarring clergymen of both the Established Church and the Roman Catholic Church from sitting as MPs in the British House of Commons. MacManaway sought legal advice from the Attorney General for Northern Ireland, Edmund Warnock. Warnock advised him that since the Church of Ireland had been disestablished in 1869, the statutory bars would not apply to MacManaway. MacManaway was selected by the Unionist party to contest Belfast West in the 1950 General Election. As a precaution, he resigned from his offices in the Church of Ireland. He won the election, defeating the sitting Irish Labour Party MP Jack Beattie by 3,378 votes. Among the activists working on this campaign was a young Ian Paisley.",
"James Joseph Brown\n J.J. Brown was pagan who worshiped his own wife, who is supposedly a Gaelic deity.",
"James MacKillop (author)\n James MacKillop (born May 31, 1939, Pontiac, Michigan) is an American scholar of Celtic and Irish studies, an arts journalist and an academic. A child of Gaelic-speaking Highland emigrants, he is also a near relative of St Mary MacKillop of Australia (1842-1909).",
"James McDonald (writer)\n James McDonald is a British polymath: mathematician, etymologist, historian, theologian and non-fiction writer. He writes on a range of topics including Gnostic Dualism, the Cathars of the Languedoc and their theology, the Counts of Toulouse, Occitania, Medieval warfare and the Medieval Inquisition. His work is characterised by combining serious scholarship with an entertaining style. Something of a polymath, he has also written on subjects as diverse as computer simulation, mathematical problems, philosophy, etymology and comparative philology. For several years he wrote a weekly column on English word origins for the Sunday Express, a national newspaper in the UK. He has travelled extensively in Central Asia and Southern Asia, researching Zoroastrianism and other ancient religions. According to his publishers his book Beyond Belief took ",
"James Mack (curator)\n James Mack (Galvan Kepler Macnamara; 1941 – 3 June 2004) was a curator, director, advisor and arts advocate in New Zealand and the Pacific.",
"Alexander Mackennal\n Seven Churches of Asia, The Kingdom of the Lord Jesus and The Eternal God and the Human Sonship. These are contributions to exegetical study or to theological and progressive religious thought, and have elements of permanent value. He also made some useful contributions to religious history. In 1893 he published the Story of the English Separatists, and later the Homes and Haunts of the Pilgrim Fathers; he also wrote the life of Dr JA Macfadyen of Manchester. In 1901 he delivered a series of lectures at Hartford Theological Seminary, Connecticut, USA, published under the title The Evolution of Congregationalism. He died at Highgate on 23 June 1904. See D. Macfadyen, Life and Letters of Alexander Mackennal (1905).",
"Scottish religion in the seventeenth century\n Andrew Melville as '...Thair is twa Kings and twa Kingdomes in Scotland... Chryst Jesus the King and this Kingdome the Kirk, whose subject King James the Saxt is.' Royalists tended to be 'traditionalists' in religion and politics but there were many other factors, including nationalist allegiance to the kirk and individual motives were very complex. In 1618, the General Assembly reluctantly approved the Five Articles of Perth; these included forms retained in England but largely abolished in Scotland and were widely resented. When Charles I succeeded James, unfamiliarity with Scotland made him even more reliant on the bishops, especially the Archbishop of St Andrews and prone to sudden decisions. The 1625 Act ",
"James MacCaffrey\n Monsignor James MacCaffrey STL, PhD (1875 – 1935) was an Irish priest, theologian and historian.",
"Donald MacQueen\n MacQueen was ordained in 1740 and was appointed minister of Kilmuir and of Kilmaluag. He was the author of a number of works including Reflections on Clanship (1763) and a Dissertation of the Government of the People of the Western Isles (1774). He was also employed by the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland to revise (with other selected ministers) the translation of the Pentateuch into Gaelic. On 13 February 1781 he was admitted as a corresponding member of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, which published some of his writings. MacQueen featured prominently in the accounts written by Dr Johnson and James Boswell of their tour ",
"James William MacGauley\n Attribution",
"James Mackay, Baron Mackay of Clashfern\n Mackay was raised a member of the Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland; as an adult he was an elder of the church. The church forbids its members to attend Catholic religious services; nevertheless Mackay attended two Catholic funeral masses for members of the judiciary (for Charles Ritchie Russell in 1986, and again for John Wheatley in 1988). Following the second mass Mackay was called before a church synod where he denied that he had broken the church's prohibition of showing \"support for the doctrine of Catholicism\", saying \"I went there purely with the purpose of paying my respects to my dead colleagues.\" The church suspended Mackay from the eldership and ",
"Macrae Monument\n James Macrae (1677–1746) was most likely born in the parish of Ochiltree and escaped great poverty to become a sea captain and later an administrator who served as the Governor of Fort St George and in 1725 Governor of the Madras Presidency, modern day Chennai. He encountered the pirate Edward England and was noted for reforming the administration of Madras Presidency on behalf of the British East India Company. James returned from India with a fortune conservatively estimated at £100,000. He died unmarried at Monkton House that he had purchased circa 1739 and renamed 'Orangefield' and was buried in 1748 at Monkton Churchyard in, for reasons that are not entirely clear, an unmarked grave.",
"James MacCallum\n James Metcalfe MacCallum (1860–1943) was a Canadian ophthalmologist and one of the most important patrons of Tom Thomson and the Group of Seven.",
"E. O. James\n Edwin Oliver James (1888 – 1972) was an anthropologist in the field of comparative religion. He was Professor Emeritus of the History and Philosophy of Religion in the University of London, Fellow of University College London and Fellow of King's College London. During his long career he had been Professor of History and Philosophy of Religion at the University of Leeds, Lecturer at the University of Amsterdam and Wilde Lecturer at the University of Oxford. James received his education at Exeter College, Oxford and at University College London, where he studied under the noted egyptologist Sir William Matthew Flinders Petrie. James was also a member of the Folklore Society, serving as its President from 1930 to 1932.",
"John Stuart Stuart-Glennie\n a just afterlife: the rise of what Stuart-Glennie called the “Hell religions.” Stuart-Glennie was also seen, by Shaw, as a successor to Henry Buckle, with a theory of origins of civilization and religious transformations going back some eight thousand years, and based on racial foundations. In his 1956 book, The Transformations of Man, Lewis Mumford credited him with anticipating Jaspers' Axial Age concept. Mumford became aware of Stuart-Glennie’s work around 1920, while editing The Sociological Review in London, through Stuart-Glennie’s friend and Mumford’s mentor sociologist Patrick Geddes. As a disciple of Buckle, with whom he travelled, Stuart-Glennie was heavily criticised by John Mackinnon "
] |
What is the religion of Bernard Yago? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Bernard Yago | 6,272,276 | 76 | [
{
"id": "15959379",
"title": "Bernard Yago",
"text": " Bernard Yago (July 1916 – 5 October 1997) was an Ivoirian Cardinal of the Catholic Church. He served as Archbishop of Abidjan from 1960 to 1994 and was made cardinal in 1983.",
"score": "1.7388933"
},
{
"id": "15959380",
"title": "Bernard Yago",
"text": " Bernard Yago was born in Pass, Yopougon, and studied at the seminary in Abidjan before being ordained to the priesthood on 1 May 1947. He then served as a professor at the Minor Seminary of Bingerville and as director of the Pre-Seminary École de Petit Clerics until 1956, whence he began pastoral work in Abidjan until 1957. Yago furthered his studies at the Catholic Institute of Paris from 1957 to 1959. Upon his return to Côte d'Ivoire, he was Counselor of Catholic Action in Abidjan from until 1960. On 5 April 1960, Yago was appointed Archbishop of Abidjan by Pope John XXIII. He received his episcopal consecration on the following 8 May ",
"score": "1.7143508"
},
{
"id": "28703471",
"title": "Bernard Faure",
"text": " Bernard Faure (born 1948) is a Franco-American author and scholar of Asian religions, who focuses on Chan/Zen and Japanese esoteric Buddhism. His work draws on cultural theory, anthropology, and gender studies. He is currently a Kao Professor of Japanese Religion at Columbia University and an Emeritus Professor of Religious Studies (and formerly Professor of Chinese Religions) at Stanford University. He also previously taught at Cornell University, and has been a visiting a professor at the University of Tokyo, the University of Sydney, and the École Pratique des Hautes Études in Paris. He co-founded the Center for Buddhist Studies at Stanford University and the ARC: Asian Religions and Cultures Series within Stanford University Press. He is also the founder and co-director of the Columbia Center for Buddhism and East Asian Religions (C-BEAR). His work has been translated into several Asian and European languages.",
"score": "1.5525509"
},
{
"id": "11972866",
"title": "Bernard de Montréal",
"text": " Bernard de Montréal was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada on July 26, 1939. The author received his early education at Collège Sainte-Croix, a Catholic classical institution. After graduation, he went on to study anthropology at the University of Albuquerque in New Mexico. While in New Mexico, Bernard de Montréal experienced a transformation that was the starting point for his exploration of the human mind through telepsychism. From then onwards, he began conscious channeling, a practice that would launch his life's work, on a variety of topics ranging from paranormal phenomena to evolutionary psychology. In addition to three published books and numerous conferences and seminars, he was introduced to Quebec audiences by esotericist and ufologist Richard Glenn's TV show Ésotérisme expérimental in 1977. He thereafter continued teaching and speaking in public until his death in 2003.",
"score": "1.3919246"
},
{
"id": "6861667",
"title": "Bernard Karrica",
"text": " Karrica is a Christian, who crosses himself when entering the field.",
"score": "1.388917"
},
{
"id": "32431356",
"title": "Pierre Bernard (yogi)",
"text": " Pierre Arnold Bernard (October 31, 1875 – September 27, 1955) — known as \"The Great Oom\", \"The Omnipotent Oom\" and \"Oom the Magnificent\" — was a pioneering American yogi, scholar, occultist, philosopher, mystic and businessman.",
"score": "1.3789973"
},
{
"id": "32431362",
"title": "Pierre Bernard (yogi)",
"text": " society of New York throughout the 1920s and 30s. He married Blanche de Vries, who taught yoga in New York into her eighties, combining yoga with Eastern-inspired sensual dance and contributing to a shift in attitudes about women's autonomy and sexuality. Historian of religion Robert C. Fuller, has commented that Bernard's \"sexual teachings generated such scandal that he was eventually forced to discontinue his public promulgation of Tantrism. Yet by this time Bernard had succeeded in making lasting contributions to the history of American alternative spirituality.\" In his The Story of Yoga, the cultural historian Alistair Shearer acknowledges Bernard's importance, but states that he ",
"score": "1.3726279"
},
{
"id": "15959381",
"title": "Bernard Yago",
"text": " Pope John himself, with Bishops Napoléon-Alexandre Labrie, CIM and Fulton John Sheen serving as co-consecrators, in St. Peter's Basilica. Yago attended the Second Vatican Council from 1962 to 1965, and sat on the Council's Central Preparatory Commission. Pope John Paul II made him Cardinal-Priest of San Crisogono in the consistory of 2 February 1983. Yago, who was the first cardinal from Côte d'Ivoire, resigned his post as Archbishop on 19 December 1994, after 34 years. He lost the right to participate in a papal conclave upon reaching the age of eighty in July 1996. Cardinal Yago died in Abidjan at age 81. He is buried in the metropolitan cathedral of Abidjan.",
"score": "1.3682737"
},
{
"id": "1731335",
"title": "Giovani Bernard",
"text": " Bernard is Catholic.",
"score": "1.3658005"
},
{
"id": "3464907",
"title": "Bernard Illowy",
"text": " Rabbi Dr. Bernard (Yissochar Dov) Illowy (born 1814 in Kolín, Bohemia – d. June 22, 1871 in Cincinnati, Ohio) was a rabbi and leader of Orthodox Judaism in the United States.",
"score": "1.3571751"
},
{
"id": "32431358",
"title": "Pierre Bernard (yogi)",
"text": " so his body could be pierced with long surgical needles. He gave a public demonstration of what he termed the \"Kali Mudra\", a simulated death trance in January, 1898 to a group of physicians in San Francisco. During the demonstration, Dr. D. McMillan inserted a surgical needle \"slowly through one of Bernard's earlobes\". Needles were also pushed through his cheek, upper lip, and nostril. Bernard was featured on January 29, 1898, on the front page of The New York Times. Bernard took interest in hypnotism. In 1905, he founded the Bacchante Academy with Mortimer K. Hargis to teach hypnotism and sexual practices. The organization declined ",
"score": "1.3558643"
},
{
"id": "31934015",
"title": "Walter Siegmeister",
"text": " Walter Isidor Siegmeister (October 5 or 6, 1903 – September 10, 1965), later known as Raymond W. Bernard, was an early 20th-century American alternative health advocate and esoteric writer, who formed part of the alternative reality subculture. He is credited with the merger of the Hollow Earth theory and religious beliefs about UFOs.",
"score": "1.3545287"
},
{
"id": "32431357",
"title": "Pierre Bernard (yogi)",
"text": " Due to his practice of keeping his origins obscure, little is known for certain about his early life. He is reported to have been born Perry Arnold Baker or Peter Coon in Leon, Iowa, 31 October 1875, the son of a barber. He also used the name Homer Stansbury Leeds. Bernard was trained in yoga by an accomplished Tantric yogi known as Sylvais Hamati, under whom Bernard studied for years. He met Hamati in Lincoln, Nebraska in the late 1880s and they travelled together. Hamati taught Bernard body-control techniques of hatha yoga. After several years of study, Bernard was able to put himself into deep ",
"score": "1.3541867"
},
{
"id": "32047548",
"title": "Claude Bernard",
"text": " Bernard was born in 1813 in the village of Saint-Julien near Villefranche-sur-Saône. He received his early education in the Jesuit school of that town, and then proceeded to the college at Lyon, which, however, he soon left to become assistant in a druggist's shop. He is sometimes described as an agnostic and even humorously referred to by his colleagues as a \"great priest of atheism\". Despite this, after his death Cardinal Ferdinand Donnet claimed Bernard was a fervent Catholic, with a biographical entry in the Catholic Encyclopedia. His leisure hours were devoted to the composition of a vaudeville comedy, and the success it achieved moved ",
"score": "1.346309"
},
{
"id": "4028773",
"title": "Maurice Yaméogo",
"text": " According to his official biography, Maurice Yaméogo was born on 31 December 1921 at Koudougou, a town 98 km west of Ouagadougou, along with his twin sister Wamanegdo. He was the son of Mossi peasants, whom he described as a \"heathen family, completely given to a whole mob of superstitions.\" They gave him the name Naoua Laguemba (also spelt Nawalagma) which means \"he comes to unite them.\". From a very young age, Naoua Laguemba was very interested in Christianity. This inclination resulted in a great deal of bullying from his family. It is reported that the young Yaméogo received an emergency baptism on 28 July 1929, a year before schedule, after being struck by lightning. The priest Van der Shaegue who performed the baptism gave him Maurice as a patron saint. His mother died three days later, supposedly from the shock. After these events, ",
"score": "1.3462664"
},
{
"id": "32431359",
"title": "Pierre Bernard (yogi)",
"text": " of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, and their partnership dissolved. Bernard claimed to have traveled to Kashmir and Bengal before founding the Tantrik Order of America in 1905 or 1906, variously reported as starting in San Francisco, Seattle, Tacoma, Washington, or in Portland, Oregon; the New York Sanskrit College in 1910; and the Clarkstown Country Club (originally called the Braeburn Country Club), a seventy-two acre estate with a thirty-room mansion in Nyack, New York, a gift from a disciple, in 1918. He eventually expanded to a chain of tantric clinics in places such as Cleveland, Philadelphia, Chicago, and New York City. Bernard is widely ",
"score": "1.3408237"
},
{
"id": "28625663",
"title": "Bernard Mayes",
"text": " organized a sexuality study center for the Episcopal Diocese of California. This ministry, originally known as the Parsonage, was awarded the Episcopal Jubilee citation and later evolved into the present-day Oasis organization. In 1992 he abandoned religion and became an atheist. In 2012, despite his atheism he was later honored by the San Francisco Night Ministry and both the California Assembly and Senate for his public service. Invited in 1984 to join the Rhetoric and Communication Studies faculty of the University of Virginia, in 1991 he was appointed assistant dean in the College of Arts and Sciences, and then chair of the Communications department, finally founding ",
"score": "1.3372712"
},
{
"id": "10585842",
"title": "Guigo I",
"text": " a spiritual leader; Bernard of Clairvaux visited the Grande Chartreuse, probably in the 1120s, and wrote several letters to Guigo. He ruled the community until his death in 1136. He was a man of considerable learning, was known for his eloquence and great memory. He was a close friend of St. Bernard of Clairvaux and of Peter the Venerable, both of whom wrote of Guigo's sanctity. The treatise De vita contemplativa, also known as De Contemplatione has sometimes been attributed to Guigo I. However, it cannot have been written by Guigo I, because it refers to several writings of thirteenth-century scholastic theology, including Hugh of Balma's Viae Syon Lugent. It is acknowledged to be a late thirteenth-century text, with its author generally known as Guigo de Ponte.",
"score": "1.3371736"
},
{
"id": "32414923",
"title": "Yaw Bampoh",
"text": " He is a Christian.",
"score": "1.3345853"
},
{
"id": "11038176",
"title": "Bernard 18",
"text": "18T ; 18GR ",
"score": "1.3334823"
}
] | [
"Bernard Yago\n Bernard Yago (July 1916 – 5 October 1997) was an Ivoirian Cardinal of the Catholic Church. He served as Archbishop of Abidjan from 1960 to 1994 and was made cardinal in 1983.",
"Bernard Yago\n Bernard Yago was born in Pass, Yopougon, and studied at the seminary in Abidjan before being ordained to the priesthood on 1 May 1947. He then served as a professor at the Minor Seminary of Bingerville and as director of the Pre-Seminary École de Petit Clerics until 1956, whence he began pastoral work in Abidjan until 1957. Yago furthered his studies at the Catholic Institute of Paris from 1957 to 1959. Upon his return to Côte d'Ivoire, he was Counselor of Catholic Action in Abidjan from until 1960. On 5 April 1960, Yago was appointed Archbishop of Abidjan by Pope John XXIII. He received his episcopal consecration on the following 8 May ",
"Bernard Faure\n Bernard Faure (born 1948) is a Franco-American author and scholar of Asian religions, who focuses on Chan/Zen and Japanese esoteric Buddhism. His work draws on cultural theory, anthropology, and gender studies. He is currently a Kao Professor of Japanese Religion at Columbia University and an Emeritus Professor of Religious Studies (and formerly Professor of Chinese Religions) at Stanford University. He also previously taught at Cornell University, and has been a visiting a professor at the University of Tokyo, the University of Sydney, and the École Pratique des Hautes Études in Paris. He co-founded the Center for Buddhist Studies at Stanford University and the ARC: Asian Religions and Cultures Series within Stanford University Press. He is also the founder and co-director of the Columbia Center for Buddhism and East Asian Religions (C-BEAR). His work has been translated into several Asian and European languages.",
"Bernard de Montréal\n Bernard de Montréal was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada on July 26, 1939. The author received his early education at Collège Sainte-Croix, a Catholic classical institution. After graduation, he went on to study anthropology at the University of Albuquerque in New Mexico. While in New Mexico, Bernard de Montréal experienced a transformation that was the starting point for his exploration of the human mind through telepsychism. From then onwards, he began conscious channeling, a practice that would launch his life's work, on a variety of topics ranging from paranormal phenomena to evolutionary psychology. In addition to three published books and numerous conferences and seminars, he was introduced to Quebec audiences by esotericist and ufologist Richard Glenn's TV show Ésotérisme expérimental in 1977. He thereafter continued teaching and speaking in public until his death in 2003.",
"Bernard Karrica\n Karrica is a Christian, who crosses himself when entering the field.",
"Pierre Bernard (yogi)\n Pierre Arnold Bernard (October 31, 1875 – September 27, 1955) — known as \"The Great Oom\", \"The Omnipotent Oom\" and \"Oom the Magnificent\" — was a pioneering American yogi, scholar, occultist, philosopher, mystic and businessman.",
"Pierre Bernard (yogi)\n society of New York throughout the 1920s and 30s. He married Blanche de Vries, who taught yoga in New York into her eighties, combining yoga with Eastern-inspired sensual dance and contributing to a shift in attitudes about women's autonomy and sexuality. Historian of religion Robert C. Fuller, has commented that Bernard's \"sexual teachings generated such scandal that he was eventually forced to discontinue his public promulgation of Tantrism. Yet by this time Bernard had succeeded in making lasting contributions to the history of American alternative spirituality.\" In his The Story of Yoga, the cultural historian Alistair Shearer acknowledges Bernard's importance, but states that he ",
"Bernard Yago\n Pope John himself, with Bishops Napoléon-Alexandre Labrie, CIM and Fulton John Sheen serving as co-consecrators, in St. Peter's Basilica. Yago attended the Second Vatican Council from 1962 to 1965, and sat on the Council's Central Preparatory Commission. Pope John Paul II made him Cardinal-Priest of San Crisogono in the consistory of 2 February 1983. Yago, who was the first cardinal from Côte d'Ivoire, resigned his post as Archbishop on 19 December 1994, after 34 years. He lost the right to participate in a papal conclave upon reaching the age of eighty in July 1996. Cardinal Yago died in Abidjan at age 81. He is buried in the metropolitan cathedral of Abidjan.",
"Giovani Bernard\n Bernard is Catholic.",
"Bernard Illowy\n Rabbi Dr. Bernard (Yissochar Dov) Illowy (born 1814 in Kolín, Bohemia – d. June 22, 1871 in Cincinnati, Ohio) was a rabbi and leader of Orthodox Judaism in the United States.",
"Pierre Bernard (yogi)\n so his body could be pierced with long surgical needles. He gave a public demonstration of what he termed the \"Kali Mudra\", a simulated death trance in January, 1898 to a group of physicians in San Francisco. During the demonstration, Dr. D. McMillan inserted a surgical needle \"slowly through one of Bernard's earlobes\". Needles were also pushed through his cheek, upper lip, and nostril. Bernard was featured on January 29, 1898, on the front page of The New York Times. Bernard took interest in hypnotism. In 1905, he founded the Bacchante Academy with Mortimer K. Hargis to teach hypnotism and sexual practices. The organization declined ",
"Walter Siegmeister\n Walter Isidor Siegmeister (October 5 or 6, 1903 – September 10, 1965), later known as Raymond W. Bernard, was an early 20th-century American alternative health advocate and esoteric writer, who formed part of the alternative reality subculture. He is credited with the merger of the Hollow Earth theory and religious beliefs about UFOs.",
"Pierre Bernard (yogi)\n Due to his practice of keeping his origins obscure, little is known for certain about his early life. He is reported to have been born Perry Arnold Baker or Peter Coon in Leon, Iowa, 31 October 1875, the son of a barber. He also used the name Homer Stansbury Leeds. Bernard was trained in yoga by an accomplished Tantric yogi known as Sylvais Hamati, under whom Bernard studied for years. He met Hamati in Lincoln, Nebraska in the late 1880s and they travelled together. Hamati taught Bernard body-control techniques of hatha yoga. After several years of study, Bernard was able to put himself into deep ",
"Claude Bernard\n Bernard was born in 1813 in the village of Saint-Julien near Villefranche-sur-Saône. He received his early education in the Jesuit school of that town, and then proceeded to the college at Lyon, which, however, he soon left to become assistant in a druggist's shop. He is sometimes described as an agnostic and even humorously referred to by his colleagues as a \"great priest of atheism\". Despite this, after his death Cardinal Ferdinand Donnet claimed Bernard was a fervent Catholic, with a biographical entry in the Catholic Encyclopedia. His leisure hours were devoted to the composition of a vaudeville comedy, and the success it achieved moved ",
"Maurice Yaméogo\n According to his official biography, Maurice Yaméogo was born on 31 December 1921 at Koudougou, a town 98 km west of Ouagadougou, along with his twin sister Wamanegdo. He was the son of Mossi peasants, whom he described as a \"heathen family, completely given to a whole mob of superstitions.\" They gave him the name Naoua Laguemba (also spelt Nawalagma) which means \"he comes to unite them.\". From a very young age, Naoua Laguemba was very interested in Christianity. This inclination resulted in a great deal of bullying from his family. It is reported that the young Yaméogo received an emergency baptism on 28 July 1929, a year before schedule, after being struck by lightning. The priest Van der Shaegue who performed the baptism gave him Maurice as a patron saint. His mother died three days later, supposedly from the shock. After these events, ",
"Pierre Bernard (yogi)\n of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, and their partnership dissolved. Bernard claimed to have traveled to Kashmir and Bengal before founding the Tantrik Order of America in 1905 or 1906, variously reported as starting in San Francisco, Seattle, Tacoma, Washington, or in Portland, Oregon; the New York Sanskrit College in 1910; and the Clarkstown Country Club (originally called the Braeburn Country Club), a seventy-two acre estate with a thirty-room mansion in Nyack, New York, a gift from a disciple, in 1918. He eventually expanded to a chain of tantric clinics in places such as Cleveland, Philadelphia, Chicago, and New York City. Bernard is widely ",
"Bernard Mayes\n organized a sexuality study center for the Episcopal Diocese of California. This ministry, originally known as the Parsonage, was awarded the Episcopal Jubilee citation and later evolved into the present-day Oasis organization. In 1992 he abandoned religion and became an atheist. In 2012, despite his atheism he was later honored by the San Francisco Night Ministry and both the California Assembly and Senate for his public service. Invited in 1984 to join the Rhetoric and Communication Studies faculty of the University of Virginia, in 1991 he was appointed assistant dean in the College of Arts and Sciences, and then chair of the Communications department, finally founding ",
"Guigo I\n a spiritual leader; Bernard of Clairvaux visited the Grande Chartreuse, probably in the 1120s, and wrote several letters to Guigo. He ruled the community until his death in 1136. He was a man of considerable learning, was known for his eloquence and great memory. He was a close friend of St. Bernard of Clairvaux and of Peter the Venerable, both of whom wrote of Guigo's sanctity. The treatise De vita contemplativa, also known as De Contemplatione has sometimes been attributed to Guigo I. However, it cannot have been written by Guigo I, because it refers to several writings of thirteenth-century scholastic theology, including Hugh of Balma's Viae Syon Lugent. It is acknowledged to be a late thirteenth-century text, with its author generally known as Guigo de Ponte.",
"Yaw Bampoh\n He is a Christian.",
"Bernard 18\n18T ; 18GR "
] |
What is the religion of Bernard William Schmitt? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Bernard William Schmitt | 6,272,166 | 93 | [
{
"id": "12439790",
"title": "Jean-Claude Schmitt",
"text": " Jean-Claude Schmitt (born 4 March 1946 in Colmar) is a prominent French medievalist, the former student of Jacques Le Goff, associated with the work of the Annales School. He studies the socio-cultural aspects of medieval history in Western Europe and has made important contributions in his use of anthropological and art historical methods to interpret history. His most significant work has dealt with the relationships among elites and laymen in medieval life, particularly in the realm of religious culture, where he has focused on ideas and topics such as superstition, the occult and heresy in order to flesh out the differing world-views of the lay peasantry and the clerical elites who attempted to define religious practice. He has contributed numerous books, articles and encyclopedia entries on these and related topics. He has also written widely on the cult of saints, the idea of ",
"score": "1.4501591"
},
{
"id": "32825981",
"title": "Bernard Schweizer",
"text": " Bernard Schweizer (née Bernhard Schweizer, 1962-) is a professor of English at Long Island University, Brooklyn. He has published several books and essay collections on topics in British and European literatures. He is a leading Rebecca West scholar and has edited or co-edited a number of Rebecca West’s previously unpublished and uncollected works. In 2003, he founded the International Rebecca West Society in New York and was the second president of the Society. In 2013, Schweizer founded another scholarly organization, the International Society for Heresy Studies, whose vice-president he currently is. Heresy studies is designed to provide an intellectual platform for philosophers, literary critics, theologians, historians, and artists who are interested in the dialectic between heterodoxy and orthodoxy, and who want to ",
"score": "1.4250703"
},
{
"id": "6423126",
"title": "Bernard Schmitt (economist)",
"text": " Bernard Schmitt (1929 in Colmar, France – 2014 in Beaune, France) was a French economist, founder of the school of economic thought known as 'quantum macroeconomics'. During his doctoral research (Paris, 1958) he studies at the University of Cambridge (UK), under the supervision of Piero Sraffa and Dennis Robertson. In 1954, he becomes a member of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), in Paris. His works on macroeconomic theory and monetary analysis have been awarded with two medals by the CNRS, in 1961 and in 1973. He was professor in monetary macroeconomics at the University of Dijon, France, and at the University of Fribourg, Switzerland.",
"score": "1.4176805"
},
{
"id": "31934015",
"title": "Walter Siegmeister",
"text": " Walter Isidor Siegmeister (October 5 or 6, 1903 – September 10, 1965), later known as Raymond W. Bernard, was an early 20th-century American alternative health advocate and esoteric writer, who formed part of the alternative reality subculture. He is credited with the merger of the Hollow Earth theory and religious beliefs about UFOs.",
"score": "1.4068793"
},
{
"id": "29249538",
"title": "Adolph Schmitt",
"text": " Adolph Gregory Schmitt, C.M.M. (20 April 1905 – 5 December 1976) was German Prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He was killed by a black nationalist guerilla during the Rhodesian Bush War in 1976.",
"score": "1.405172"
},
{
"id": "14631895",
"title": "Aloysius Schmitt",
"text": " Father Aloysius H. Schmitt (December 4, 1909 – December 7, 1941) was a Roman Catholic priest of the Archdiocese of Dubuque, who served as a chaplain in the United States Navy at the beginning of World War II.",
"score": "1.3962485"
},
{
"id": "28703471",
"title": "Bernard Faure",
"text": " Bernard Faure (born 1948) is a Franco-American author and scholar of Asian religions, who focuses on Chan/Zen and Japanese esoteric Buddhism. His work draws on cultural theory, anthropology, and gender studies. He is currently a Kao Professor of Japanese Religion at Columbia University and an Emeritus Professor of Religious Studies (and formerly Professor of Chinese Religions) at Stanford University. He also previously taught at Cornell University, and has been a visiting a professor at the University of Tokyo, the University of Sydney, and the École Pratique des Hautes Études in Paris. He co-founded the Center for Buddhist Studies at Stanford University and the ARC: Asian Religions and Cultures Series within Stanford University Press. He is also the founder and co-director of the Columbia Center for Buddhism and East Asian Religions (C-BEAR). His work has been translated into several Asian and European languages.",
"score": "1.3931911"
},
{
"id": "59376",
"title": "Colin Schmitt",
"text": " Schmitt was born on Staten Island. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in politics with minors in theology and religious studies from the Catholic University of America.",
"score": "1.3835995"
},
{
"id": "9337542",
"title": "Rudolf Michael Schmitz",
"text": " Rudolf Michael Schmitz (born March 22, 1957 in Eitorf, North Rhine-Westphalia) is a German Traditionalist priest. He is currently the Vicar General for the Institute of Christ the King, Sovereign Priest in the America.",
"score": "1.3675203"
},
{
"id": "5306735",
"title": "Carl Schmitt",
"text": " religious derivation of political claims. Schmitt is described as a \"classic of political thought\" by Herfried Münkler, while in the same article Münkler speaks of his post-war writings as reflecting an: \"embittered, jealous, occasionally malicious man\" (\"verbitterten, eifersüchtigen, gelegentlich bösartigen Mann\"). Schmitt was termed the \"Crown Jurist of the Third Reich\" (\"Kronjurist des Dritten Reiches\") by Waldemar Gurian. Timothy D. Snyder has asserted that Schmitt's work has greatly influenced Eurasianist philosophy in Russia by revealing a counter to the liberal order. According to historian Renato Cristi in the writing of the 1980 Constitution of Chile, Pinochet collaborator Jaime Guzmán based his work on the pouvoir constituant concept used by Schmitt (as well as drawing inspiration in the ideas of market society of Friedrich Hayek). This way Guzmán would have enabled a framework for a dictatorial state combined with a free market economic system.",
"score": "1.3540536"
},
{
"id": "5306708",
"title": "Carl Schmitt",
"text": " As a young man, Schmitt was \"a devoted Catholic until his break with the church in the mid twenties.\" From around the end of the First World War, he began to describe his Catholicism as \"displaced\" and \"de-totalised\". Consequently, Gross argues that Schmitt's work \"cannot be reduced to Roman Catholic theology given a political turn. Rather, Schmitt should be understood as carrying an atheistic political-theological tradition to an extreme.\" Schmitt met Mircea Eliade, a Romanian religion historian, in Berlin in the summer of 1942 and later spoke to his friend Ernst Jünger of Eliade and his interest in Eliade's works.",
"score": "1.3446784"
},
{
"id": "32047548",
"title": "Claude Bernard",
"text": " Bernard was born in 1813 in the village of Saint-Julien near Villefranche-sur-Saône. He received his early education in the Jesuit school of that town, and then proceeded to the college at Lyon, which, however, he soon left to become assistant in a druggist's shop. He is sometimes described as an agnostic and even humorously referred to by his colleagues as a \"great priest of atheism\". Despite this, after his death Cardinal Ferdinand Donnet claimed Bernard was a fervent Catholic, with a biographical entry in the Catholic Encyclopedia. His leisure hours were devoted to the composition of a vaudeville comedy, and the success it achieved moved ",
"score": "1.344571"
},
{
"id": "26783135",
"title": "Jürgen Schmitt",
"text": " Jürgen Schmitt alias Schmitti (born 5 November 1949 in Bonn) is a German painter, photographer, and as \"Schmitti\", a composer, lyricist and Schlager-singer. He lives and works in the village of Scheven (population ca. 560) (Kall, North Rhine-Westphalia) and there he has his studios. Schmitt studied from 1970 to 1976 at the Art Academy in Düsseldorf under Professor Joseph Beuys and Professor Irmin Kamp and he was appointed in 1975 for his artistic achievements \"Meister Schüler\". He had many exhibitions in Germany and abroad.",
"score": "1.3444939"
},
{
"id": "32825982",
"title": "Bernard Schweizer",
"text": " dissenting and heretical ideas outside of both confessional and anti-religious frameworks. Schweizer is a proponent of sympathetic approaches to heterodox, rebellious, and challenging ideas expressed in literature and culture, and his most influential book to date, an interdisciplinary work titled Hating God: The Untold Story of Misotheism is devoted to humanists who believe in God yet deny that he is benevolent. Schweizer's most recent book, Christianity and the Triumph of Humor: From Dante to David Javerbaum traces the development of Christian religious comedy through the ages to show that humor was able to conquer all conceivable Christian taboos while delivering significant artistic and intellectual benefits. Using history, literary criticism, theology, philosophy, and social science, Schweizer demonstrates that what begun with grotesque scenes ",
"score": "1.3381262"
},
{
"id": "9714406",
"title": "Joseph W. Schmitt",
"text": " Joseph William Schmitt was born on January 2, 1916 in O'Fallon, Illinois to Benjamin Schmitt and Apollonia Berkel Schmitt. His father, a town marshal, was killed on duty shortly after Joseph's birth.",
"score": "1.3381112"
},
{
"id": "15374374",
"title": "S. W. Schmitthenner",
"text": " Samuel William Schmitthenner (February 23, 1928 – May 17, 2015) was a Lutheran who served as the President of the Protestant Andhra Evangelical Lutheran Church Society in Guntur District, Andhra Pradesh, India from 1969 to 1981. S. W. Schmitthenner initially served as a missionary to India from 1952 onwards.",
"score": "1.3364165"
},
{
"id": "3190937",
"title": "Bernard of Clairvaux",
"text": " Bernard was named a Doctor of the Church in 1830. At the 800th anniversary of his death, Pope Pius XII issued an encyclical about him, titled Doctor Mellifluus, in which he labeled him \"The Last of the Fathers.\" The central elements of Bernard's Mariology are how he explained the virginity of Mary, the \"Star of the Sea\", and her role as Mediatrix. The first abbot of Clairvaux developed a rich theology of sacred space and music, writing extensively on both. John Calvin and Martin Luther quoted Bernard several times in support of the doctrine of Sola Fide. Calvin also quotes him in setting forth his doctrine of a forensic alien righteousness, or as it is commonly called imputed righteousness.",
"score": "1.3334848"
},
{
"id": "25175412",
"title": "Schmitt (surname)",
"text": "Adam Schmitt (born 1968), American singer/songwriter ; Al Schmitt (1930–2021), American recorded music engineer ; Alain Schmitt (born 1983), French judoka ; Alfred Schmitt (1907–1973), French astronomer ; Allison Schmitt (born 1990), American Olympic swimmer ; Father Aloysius Schmitt (1909–1941), Roman Catholic priest who died at Pearl Harbor ; Antoine Schmitt (born 1961), French artist, programming engineer and designer ; Anton Schmitt (died 1916), German sailor killed during World War I ; Arnd Schmitt (born 1965), German fencer and Olympic champion ; Bernadotte Everly Schmitt (1886–1969), American historian Bernd Schmitt (born 1957), American scholar in marketing and business psychology ; C. L. Schmitt (1912–1993), Pennsylvania legislator ; Carl ",
"score": "1.3327943"
},
{
"id": "9714405",
"title": "Joseph W. Schmitt",
"text": " Joseph W. Schmitt (January 2, 1916 – September 25, 2017) was a spacesuit technician for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration human space exploration program in the 1960s and 70s. As \"suit tech\", he was on close terms with the astronauts and was usually the last person to have direct contact with them before their missions. Schmitt suited up Alan Shepard for his mission at the beginning of Project Mercury and continued to work on the Gemini, Apollo and Skylab programs, ending his career during the early Space Shuttle Program. As an essential part of the final stages of preparation for space flight, Schmitt was depicted in many photographs, leading to his inclusion in two works on the subject by Norman Rockwell.",
"score": "1.332727"
},
{
"id": "25175415",
"title": "Schmitt (surname)",
"text": " ; John Schmitt (American football) (born 1942), American football player ; John Schmitt (rower) (1901–1991), American Olympic rower ; Joseph Schmitt (1734–1791), German/Dutch composer, conductor, music director, publisher, music theorist and pedagogue ; Julie Schmitt (1913–2002), German Olympic gymnast ; Justin Schmitt (born 1974), Australian rules football field umpire ; Kurt Schmitt (1886–1950), German economic leader ; Logan Giulietti-Schmitt (born 1985), American ice dancer ; Ludwig Schmitt (1902–1980), German chess master ; Mark Schmitt, American political scientist and author ; Mark Francis Schmitt (1923–2011), American Roman Catholic bishop ; Martin Schmitt (born 1978), German ski jumper ; Matías Schmitt (born 1991), Argentine snowboarder ; Michael N. Schmitt (born ",
"score": "1.3308299"
}
] | [
"Jean-Claude Schmitt\n Jean-Claude Schmitt (born 4 March 1946 in Colmar) is a prominent French medievalist, the former student of Jacques Le Goff, associated with the work of the Annales School. He studies the socio-cultural aspects of medieval history in Western Europe and has made important contributions in his use of anthropological and art historical methods to interpret history. His most significant work has dealt with the relationships among elites and laymen in medieval life, particularly in the realm of religious culture, where he has focused on ideas and topics such as superstition, the occult and heresy in order to flesh out the differing world-views of the lay peasantry and the clerical elites who attempted to define religious practice. He has contributed numerous books, articles and encyclopedia entries on these and related topics. He has also written widely on the cult of saints, the idea of ",
"Bernard Schweizer\n Bernard Schweizer (née Bernhard Schweizer, 1962-) is a professor of English at Long Island University, Brooklyn. He has published several books and essay collections on topics in British and European literatures. He is a leading Rebecca West scholar and has edited or co-edited a number of Rebecca West’s previously unpublished and uncollected works. In 2003, he founded the International Rebecca West Society in New York and was the second president of the Society. In 2013, Schweizer founded another scholarly organization, the International Society for Heresy Studies, whose vice-president he currently is. Heresy studies is designed to provide an intellectual platform for philosophers, literary critics, theologians, historians, and artists who are interested in the dialectic between heterodoxy and orthodoxy, and who want to ",
"Bernard Schmitt (economist)\n Bernard Schmitt (1929 in Colmar, France – 2014 in Beaune, France) was a French economist, founder of the school of economic thought known as 'quantum macroeconomics'. During his doctoral research (Paris, 1958) he studies at the University of Cambridge (UK), under the supervision of Piero Sraffa and Dennis Robertson. In 1954, he becomes a member of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), in Paris. His works on macroeconomic theory and monetary analysis have been awarded with two medals by the CNRS, in 1961 and in 1973. He was professor in monetary macroeconomics at the University of Dijon, France, and at the University of Fribourg, Switzerland.",
"Walter Siegmeister\n Walter Isidor Siegmeister (October 5 or 6, 1903 – September 10, 1965), later known as Raymond W. Bernard, was an early 20th-century American alternative health advocate and esoteric writer, who formed part of the alternative reality subculture. He is credited with the merger of the Hollow Earth theory and religious beliefs about UFOs.",
"Adolph Schmitt\n Adolph Gregory Schmitt, C.M.M. (20 April 1905 – 5 December 1976) was German Prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He was killed by a black nationalist guerilla during the Rhodesian Bush War in 1976.",
"Aloysius Schmitt\n Father Aloysius H. Schmitt (December 4, 1909 – December 7, 1941) was a Roman Catholic priest of the Archdiocese of Dubuque, who served as a chaplain in the United States Navy at the beginning of World War II.",
"Bernard Faure\n Bernard Faure (born 1948) is a Franco-American author and scholar of Asian religions, who focuses on Chan/Zen and Japanese esoteric Buddhism. His work draws on cultural theory, anthropology, and gender studies. He is currently a Kao Professor of Japanese Religion at Columbia University and an Emeritus Professor of Religious Studies (and formerly Professor of Chinese Religions) at Stanford University. He also previously taught at Cornell University, and has been a visiting a professor at the University of Tokyo, the University of Sydney, and the École Pratique des Hautes Études in Paris. He co-founded the Center for Buddhist Studies at Stanford University and the ARC: Asian Religions and Cultures Series within Stanford University Press. He is also the founder and co-director of the Columbia Center for Buddhism and East Asian Religions (C-BEAR). His work has been translated into several Asian and European languages.",
"Colin Schmitt\n Schmitt was born on Staten Island. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in politics with minors in theology and religious studies from the Catholic University of America.",
"Rudolf Michael Schmitz\n Rudolf Michael Schmitz (born March 22, 1957 in Eitorf, North Rhine-Westphalia) is a German Traditionalist priest. He is currently the Vicar General for the Institute of Christ the King, Sovereign Priest in the America.",
"Carl Schmitt\n religious derivation of political claims. Schmitt is described as a \"classic of political thought\" by Herfried Münkler, while in the same article Münkler speaks of his post-war writings as reflecting an: \"embittered, jealous, occasionally malicious man\" (\"verbitterten, eifersüchtigen, gelegentlich bösartigen Mann\"). Schmitt was termed the \"Crown Jurist of the Third Reich\" (\"Kronjurist des Dritten Reiches\") by Waldemar Gurian. Timothy D. Snyder has asserted that Schmitt's work has greatly influenced Eurasianist philosophy in Russia by revealing a counter to the liberal order. According to historian Renato Cristi in the writing of the 1980 Constitution of Chile, Pinochet collaborator Jaime Guzmán based his work on the pouvoir constituant concept used by Schmitt (as well as drawing inspiration in the ideas of market society of Friedrich Hayek). This way Guzmán would have enabled a framework for a dictatorial state combined with a free market economic system.",
"Carl Schmitt\n As a young man, Schmitt was \"a devoted Catholic until his break with the church in the mid twenties.\" From around the end of the First World War, he began to describe his Catholicism as \"displaced\" and \"de-totalised\". Consequently, Gross argues that Schmitt's work \"cannot be reduced to Roman Catholic theology given a political turn. Rather, Schmitt should be understood as carrying an atheistic political-theological tradition to an extreme.\" Schmitt met Mircea Eliade, a Romanian religion historian, in Berlin in the summer of 1942 and later spoke to his friend Ernst Jünger of Eliade and his interest in Eliade's works.",
"Claude Bernard\n Bernard was born in 1813 in the village of Saint-Julien near Villefranche-sur-Saône. He received his early education in the Jesuit school of that town, and then proceeded to the college at Lyon, which, however, he soon left to become assistant in a druggist's shop. He is sometimes described as an agnostic and even humorously referred to by his colleagues as a \"great priest of atheism\". Despite this, after his death Cardinal Ferdinand Donnet claimed Bernard was a fervent Catholic, with a biographical entry in the Catholic Encyclopedia. His leisure hours were devoted to the composition of a vaudeville comedy, and the success it achieved moved ",
"Jürgen Schmitt\n Jürgen Schmitt alias Schmitti (born 5 November 1949 in Bonn) is a German painter, photographer, and as \"Schmitti\", a composer, lyricist and Schlager-singer. He lives and works in the village of Scheven (population ca. 560) (Kall, North Rhine-Westphalia) and there he has his studios. Schmitt studied from 1970 to 1976 at the Art Academy in Düsseldorf under Professor Joseph Beuys and Professor Irmin Kamp and he was appointed in 1975 for his artistic achievements \"Meister Schüler\". He had many exhibitions in Germany and abroad.",
"Bernard Schweizer\n dissenting and heretical ideas outside of both confessional and anti-religious frameworks. Schweizer is a proponent of sympathetic approaches to heterodox, rebellious, and challenging ideas expressed in literature and culture, and his most influential book to date, an interdisciplinary work titled Hating God: The Untold Story of Misotheism is devoted to humanists who believe in God yet deny that he is benevolent. Schweizer's most recent book, Christianity and the Triumph of Humor: From Dante to David Javerbaum traces the development of Christian religious comedy through the ages to show that humor was able to conquer all conceivable Christian taboos while delivering significant artistic and intellectual benefits. Using history, literary criticism, theology, philosophy, and social science, Schweizer demonstrates that what begun with grotesque scenes ",
"Joseph W. Schmitt\n Joseph William Schmitt was born on January 2, 1916 in O'Fallon, Illinois to Benjamin Schmitt and Apollonia Berkel Schmitt. His father, a town marshal, was killed on duty shortly after Joseph's birth.",
"S. W. Schmitthenner\n Samuel William Schmitthenner (February 23, 1928 – May 17, 2015) was a Lutheran who served as the President of the Protestant Andhra Evangelical Lutheran Church Society in Guntur District, Andhra Pradesh, India from 1969 to 1981. S. W. Schmitthenner initially served as a missionary to India from 1952 onwards.",
"Bernard of Clairvaux\n Bernard was named a Doctor of the Church in 1830. At the 800th anniversary of his death, Pope Pius XII issued an encyclical about him, titled Doctor Mellifluus, in which he labeled him \"The Last of the Fathers.\" The central elements of Bernard's Mariology are how he explained the virginity of Mary, the \"Star of the Sea\", and her role as Mediatrix. The first abbot of Clairvaux developed a rich theology of sacred space and music, writing extensively on both. John Calvin and Martin Luther quoted Bernard several times in support of the doctrine of Sola Fide. Calvin also quotes him in setting forth his doctrine of a forensic alien righteousness, or as it is commonly called imputed righteousness.",
"Schmitt (surname)\nAdam Schmitt (born 1968), American singer/songwriter ; Al Schmitt (1930–2021), American recorded music engineer ; Alain Schmitt (born 1983), French judoka ; Alfred Schmitt (1907–1973), French astronomer ; Allison Schmitt (born 1990), American Olympic swimmer ; Father Aloysius Schmitt (1909–1941), Roman Catholic priest who died at Pearl Harbor ; Antoine Schmitt (born 1961), French artist, programming engineer and designer ; Anton Schmitt (died 1916), German sailor killed during World War I ; Arnd Schmitt (born 1965), German fencer and Olympic champion ; Bernadotte Everly Schmitt (1886–1969), American historian Bernd Schmitt (born 1957), American scholar in marketing and business psychology ; C. L. Schmitt (1912–1993), Pennsylvania legislator ; Carl ",
"Joseph W. Schmitt\n Joseph W. Schmitt (January 2, 1916 – September 25, 2017) was a spacesuit technician for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration human space exploration program in the 1960s and 70s. As \"suit tech\", he was on close terms with the astronauts and was usually the last person to have direct contact with them before their missions. Schmitt suited up Alan Shepard for his mission at the beginning of Project Mercury and continued to work on the Gemini, Apollo and Skylab programs, ending his career during the early Space Shuttle Program. As an essential part of the final stages of preparation for space flight, Schmitt was depicted in many photographs, leading to his inclusion in two works on the subject by Norman Rockwell.",
"Schmitt (surname)\n ; John Schmitt (American football) (born 1942), American football player ; John Schmitt (rower) (1901–1991), American Olympic rower ; Joseph Schmitt (1734–1791), German/Dutch composer, conductor, music director, publisher, music theorist and pedagogue ; Julie Schmitt (1913–2002), German Olympic gymnast ; Justin Schmitt (born 1974), Australian rules football field umpire ; Kurt Schmitt (1886–1950), German economic leader ; Logan Giulietti-Schmitt (born 1985), American ice dancer ; Ludwig Schmitt (1902–1980), German chess master ; Mark Schmitt, American political scientist and author ; Mark Francis Schmitt (1923–2011), American Roman Catholic bishop ; Martin Schmitt (born 1978), German ski jumper ; Matías Schmitt (born 1991), Argentine snowboarder ; Michael N. Schmitt (born "
] |
What is the religion of James Uno? | [
"Anglicanism",
"Anglicanism, Anglican Church"
] | religion | James Uno | 4,633,156 | 34 | [
{
"id": "33031863",
"title": "James Uno",
"text": " James Toru Uno was the Anglican Bishop of Osaka prior to the consecration of Samuel Osamu Onishi in September 2008.",
"score": "1.5950816"
},
{
"id": "15604578",
"title": "E. O. James",
"text": " Edwin Oliver James (1888 – 1972) was an anthropologist in the field of comparative religion. He was Professor Emeritus of the History and Philosophy of Religion in the University of London, Fellow of University College London and Fellow of King's College London. During his long career he had been Professor of History and Philosophy of Religion at the University of Leeds, Lecturer at the University of Amsterdam and Wilde Lecturer at the University of Oxford. James received his education at Exeter College, Oxford and at University College London, where he studied under the noted egyptologist Sir William Matthew Flinders Petrie. James was also a member of the Folklore Society, serving as its President from 1930 to 1932.",
"score": "1.5494598"
},
{
"id": "33164943",
"title": "Fob James",
"text": " James was frequently criticized for expressing too much of his religious beliefs in his governing. At a 1995 Alabama State Board of Education meeting, James criticized the teaching of evolution in textbooks by imitating a \"slump-shouldered ape turning into an upright human\". He supported the adoption of a textbook warning sticker that said, among other things, that \"No one was present when life first appeared on earth. Therefore, any statement about life's origins should be considered as theory, not fact.\" James's most publicized religious battle was the lengthy controversy surrounding Etowah County Judge Roy S. Moore's posting of the Ten Commandments in his courtroom and the offering of a daily Christian prayer before proceedings. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) sued to have the practice stopped as unconstitutional. U.S. District Court Judge Ira DeMent, an appointee ",
"score": "1.4085343"
},
{
"id": "194116",
"title": "James Appietu-Ankrah",
"text": " Ankrah is a Christian.",
"score": "1.3982625"
},
{
"id": "32620496",
"title": "James Ackah Cobbinah",
"text": " He is a Christian.",
"score": "1.3883646"
},
{
"id": "16338524",
"title": "United American Indians of New England",
"text": " The United American Indians of New England (UAINE) is a Native American activist organization founded by Frank James (1924-2001). Also known as Wamsutta, Frank James was the leader of the Wampanoag people. He founded the United American Indians of New England in 1970 after being “uninvited” to make a speech at a celebration hosted by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. The Commonwealth wanted to celebrate the friendly relations of their forefathers and the Wampanoag people; however, when the speech that James was going to give was reviewed, it was deemed inappropriate for the celebration because it focused on the negative ways the Wampanoag ",
"score": "1.3840384"
},
{
"id": "5440582",
"title": "James S. Bielo",
"text": " James S. Bielo (born 1980) is an American socio-cultural anthropologist, specializing in the Anthropology of Religion, the Anthropology of Christianity, American Religion, Urban Anthropology, Linguistic Anthropology, and the study of Material Religion. He is an associate professor at the Department of Anthropology at Miami University, and has previously worked at Michigan State University and Grand Valley State University. He was awarded his Ph.D. in anthropology in 2007 from Michigan State University. With Carrie M. Lane, he is the series founder and co-editor of the “Anthropology of Contemporary North America\" book series at the University of Nebraska Press. He is one of the founders of the AnthroCyBib, an online bibliographic resource for the anthropology ",
"score": "1.3824732"
},
{
"id": "31204811",
"title": "James Cutsinger",
"text": " James Sherman Cutsinger (May 4, 1953 – February 19, 2020) was an author, editor, and professor of religious studies (emeritus) at the University of South Carolina, whose works focused primarily on comparative religion, the modern Traditionalist School of perennial philosophy, Eastern Christian spirituality, and the mystical tradition of the Eastern Orthodox Church.",
"score": "1.3788894"
},
{
"id": "25728920",
"title": "Psychology of religion",
"text": " American psychologist and philosopher William James (1842–1910) is regarded by most psychologists of religion as the founder of the field. He served as president of the American Psychological Association, and wrote one of the first psychology textbooks. In the psychology of religion, James' influence endures. His Varieties of Religious Experience is considered to be the classic work in the field, and references to James' ideas are common at professional conferences. James distinguished between institutional religion and personal religion. Institutional religion refers to the religious group or organization and plays an important part in a society's culture. Personal religion, in which the individual has mystical experience, can be experienced regardless of the culture. James was most interested in understanding personal religious experience. In studying personal religious experiences, James made a distinction between healthy-minded and sick-souled religiousness. Individuals ",
"score": "1.3780773"
},
{
"id": "9023936",
"title": "United Nation of Islam",
"text": " Royall Jenkins was born in 1942 in South Carolina and grew up in eastern Maryland, later moving to New York and then Chicago, while working as a long-distance truck driver delivering publications of the Nation of Islam (NOI). He remained a member until after the death of Elijah Muhammad but split from the organization in 1978. According to Jenkins, he spent time on a spaceship with angels, where he learned that he was the Supreme Being and how to govern the world. Public records show Jenkins working as a truck driver and living mostly with friends as he tried to recruit followers, including his daughter Maureen, who joined him in 1985 in a house in Waldorf, Maryland. The house was rented for them by Joseph Kelly, one of Jenkins' first converts. The UNOI eventually grew, and was incorporated as a nonprofit organization in New Jersey in 1993. Between 1996 and 2002, the group relocated to its current Kansas City location. The UNOI is very controversial and currently has a membership of a few hundred people.",
"score": "1.3770945"
},
{
"id": "3551460",
"title": "James Joseph Brown",
"text": " J.J. Brown was pagan who worshiped his own wife, who is supposedly a Gaelic deity.",
"score": "1.3658055"
},
{
"id": "15658838",
"title": "James B. Nies",
"text": " James Buchanan Nies (22 November 1856 - 1922) was an American episcopal minister and Assyriologist. He was president of the American Oriental Society in 1921.",
"score": "1.36086"
},
{
"id": "12394862",
"title": "James Randi",
"text": " Randi's parents were members of the Anglican Church but rarely attended services. He attended Sunday School at St. Cuthbert's Church in Toronto a few times as a child, but he independently decided to stop going when he was not answered when he asked for proof of the teachings of the Church. In his essay \"Why I Deny Religion, How Silly and Fantastic It Is, and Why I'm a Dedicated and Vociferous Bright\", Randi, who identified himself as an atheist, opined that many accounts in religious texts, including the virgin birth, the miracles of Jesus Christ, and the parting of the Red Sea by Moses, are not ",
"score": "1.3603153"
},
{
"id": "4850194",
"title": "Islam in the United States",
"text": " The United Nation of Islam (UNOI) is a group based in Kansas City, Kansas. It was founded circa 1978 by Royall Jenkins, who continues to be the leader of the group and styles himself \"Royall, Allah in Person\".",
"score": "1.3580781"
},
{
"id": "9023935",
"title": "United Nation of Islam",
"text": " The United Nation of Islam (UNOI) is an African American religious movement based in Kansas City, Kansas. It was founded in 1978 as an offshoot of the Nation of Islam by Royall Jenkins, who continues to be the group's leader and styles himself \"Royall, Allah in Person\". Since its founding, the group has undergone numerous name changes and is currently known as the Value Creators.",
"score": "1.3580205"
},
{
"id": "15401058",
"title": "African-American Muslims",
"text": " The United Nation of Islam (UNOI) is a group based in Kansas City, Kansas. It was founded in 1978 by Royall Jenkins, who continues to be the leader of the group and styles himself \"Royall, Allah in Person\".",
"score": "1.3494539"
},
{
"id": "9421963",
"title": "James Udy",
"text": " Jim Udy was a Methodist minister, and one of three brothers who became ministers of religion. Gloster Udy was his older brother, and Richard Udy was his younger brother. James attended Newington College (1930), North Sydney Boys High School, Maitland High School, University of Sydney and took a PhD at Boston University. James married Anne Benua after meeting on a European bike tour that he took and together they had six children.",
"score": "1.348284"
},
{
"id": "16152319",
"title": "James the Great",
"text": " The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) teaches that in 1829 John the Baptist and later the Apostles James, Peter and John appeared as heavenly messengers to Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery and conferred upon them both, and thus restored, the Aaronic and the Melchizedek priesthood authority of apostolic succession to them and thus exclusively on earth to their organization.",
"score": "1.3436595"
},
{
"id": "254301",
"title": "James White (theologian)",
"text": " White served as an elder of Phoenix Reformed Baptist Church in Phoenix, Arizona, from 1998 until 2018. He became Scholar-in-Residence at Apologia Church in Tempe, Arizona in 2018, and was installed as one of the pastor/elders in 2019. White is the director of Alpha and Omega Ministries, a Christian apologetics organization based in Phoenix, Arizona. As director of Alpha and Omega Ministries, White also hosts a daily Dividing Line Podcast and radio show on the Alpha and Omega Ministries YouTube Channel. He received a BA from Grand Canyon College, and an MA from Fuller Theological Seminary. He was also a critical consultant for the Lockman Foundation's New American Standard Bible. White often engages in public debate, having participated in more than 150 public moderated debates, covering topics such as Calvinism, Roman Catholicism, Islam, Mormonism, the King James Only movement, Jehovah's Witnesses, and atheism. His debate opponents have included scholars such as Bart Ehrman, John Dominic Crossan, Marcus Borg, Robert M. Price, Joe Ventilacion of Iglesia ni Cristo and popularizers such as Dan Barker and John Shelby Spong as well as Islamic scholar Shabir Ally and South African Muslim apologist Yusuf Ismail.",
"score": "1.3388109"
},
{
"id": "7094013",
"title": "Thomas Davidson (philosopher)",
"text": " of the divine within themselves, so they became increasingly moral. James believed this individualistic religion made Davidson \"indifferent...to socialisms and general administrative panaceas.\" According to James, Davidson taught that \"Life must be flexible. You ask for a free man and these Utopias give you an interchangeable part, with a fixed number, in a rule-bound social organism.\" Apeirotheism called for the release of each individual's potential divinity through self-cultivation and the nurturing of others rather than through changes in one's material conditions. Davidson was convinced that this release would lead to the only true reform of human society; it was to this task that he devoted the rest of his life.",
"score": "1.3362205"
}
] | [
"James Uno\n James Toru Uno was the Anglican Bishop of Osaka prior to the consecration of Samuel Osamu Onishi in September 2008.",
"E. O. James\n Edwin Oliver James (1888 – 1972) was an anthropologist in the field of comparative religion. He was Professor Emeritus of the History and Philosophy of Religion in the University of London, Fellow of University College London and Fellow of King's College London. During his long career he had been Professor of History and Philosophy of Religion at the University of Leeds, Lecturer at the University of Amsterdam and Wilde Lecturer at the University of Oxford. James received his education at Exeter College, Oxford and at University College London, where he studied under the noted egyptologist Sir William Matthew Flinders Petrie. James was also a member of the Folklore Society, serving as its President from 1930 to 1932.",
"Fob James\n James was frequently criticized for expressing too much of his religious beliefs in his governing. At a 1995 Alabama State Board of Education meeting, James criticized the teaching of evolution in textbooks by imitating a \"slump-shouldered ape turning into an upright human\". He supported the adoption of a textbook warning sticker that said, among other things, that \"No one was present when life first appeared on earth. Therefore, any statement about life's origins should be considered as theory, not fact.\" James's most publicized religious battle was the lengthy controversy surrounding Etowah County Judge Roy S. Moore's posting of the Ten Commandments in his courtroom and the offering of a daily Christian prayer before proceedings. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) sued to have the practice stopped as unconstitutional. U.S. District Court Judge Ira DeMent, an appointee ",
"James Appietu-Ankrah\n Ankrah is a Christian.",
"James Ackah Cobbinah\n He is a Christian.",
"United American Indians of New England\n The United American Indians of New England (UAINE) is a Native American activist organization founded by Frank James (1924-2001). Also known as Wamsutta, Frank James was the leader of the Wampanoag people. He founded the United American Indians of New England in 1970 after being “uninvited” to make a speech at a celebration hosted by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. The Commonwealth wanted to celebrate the friendly relations of their forefathers and the Wampanoag people; however, when the speech that James was going to give was reviewed, it was deemed inappropriate for the celebration because it focused on the negative ways the Wampanoag ",
"James S. Bielo\n James S. Bielo (born 1980) is an American socio-cultural anthropologist, specializing in the Anthropology of Religion, the Anthropology of Christianity, American Religion, Urban Anthropology, Linguistic Anthropology, and the study of Material Religion. He is an associate professor at the Department of Anthropology at Miami University, and has previously worked at Michigan State University and Grand Valley State University. He was awarded his Ph.D. in anthropology in 2007 from Michigan State University. With Carrie M. Lane, he is the series founder and co-editor of the “Anthropology of Contemporary North America\" book series at the University of Nebraska Press. He is one of the founders of the AnthroCyBib, an online bibliographic resource for the anthropology ",
"James Cutsinger\n James Sherman Cutsinger (May 4, 1953 – February 19, 2020) was an author, editor, and professor of religious studies (emeritus) at the University of South Carolina, whose works focused primarily on comparative religion, the modern Traditionalist School of perennial philosophy, Eastern Christian spirituality, and the mystical tradition of the Eastern Orthodox Church.",
"Psychology of religion\n American psychologist and philosopher William James (1842–1910) is regarded by most psychologists of religion as the founder of the field. He served as president of the American Psychological Association, and wrote one of the first psychology textbooks. In the psychology of religion, James' influence endures. His Varieties of Religious Experience is considered to be the classic work in the field, and references to James' ideas are common at professional conferences. James distinguished between institutional religion and personal religion. Institutional religion refers to the religious group or organization and plays an important part in a society's culture. Personal religion, in which the individual has mystical experience, can be experienced regardless of the culture. James was most interested in understanding personal religious experience. In studying personal religious experiences, James made a distinction between healthy-minded and sick-souled religiousness. Individuals ",
"United Nation of Islam\n Royall Jenkins was born in 1942 in South Carolina and grew up in eastern Maryland, later moving to New York and then Chicago, while working as a long-distance truck driver delivering publications of the Nation of Islam (NOI). He remained a member until after the death of Elijah Muhammad but split from the organization in 1978. According to Jenkins, he spent time on a spaceship with angels, where he learned that he was the Supreme Being and how to govern the world. Public records show Jenkins working as a truck driver and living mostly with friends as he tried to recruit followers, including his daughter Maureen, who joined him in 1985 in a house in Waldorf, Maryland. The house was rented for them by Joseph Kelly, one of Jenkins' first converts. The UNOI eventually grew, and was incorporated as a nonprofit organization in New Jersey in 1993. Between 1996 and 2002, the group relocated to its current Kansas City location. The UNOI is very controversial and currently has a membership of a few hundred people.",
"James Joseph Brown\n J.J. Brown was pagan who worshiped his own wife, who is supposedly a Gaelic deity.",
"James B. Nies\n James Buchanan Nies (22 November 1856 - 1922) was an American episcopal minister and Assyriologist. He was president of the American Oriental Society in 1921.",
"James Randi\n Randi's parents were members of the Anglican Church but rarely attended services. He attended Sunday School at St. Cuthbert's Church in Toronto a few times as a child, but he independently decided to stop going when he was not answered when he asked for proof of the teachings of the Church. In his essay \"Why I Deny Religion, How Silly and Fantastic It Is, and Why I'm a Dedicated and Vociferous Bright\", Randi, who identified himself as an atheist, opined that many accounts in religious texts, including the virgin birth, the miracles of Jesus Christ, and the parting of the Red Sea by Moses, are not ",
"Islam in the United States\n The United Nation of Islam (UNOI) is a group based in Kansas City, Kansas. It was founded circa 1978 by Royall Jenkins, who continues to be the leader of the group and styles himself \"Royall, Allah in Person\".",
"United Nation of Islam\n The United Nation of Islam (UNOI) is an African American religious movement based in Kansas City, Kansas. It was founded in 1978 as an offshoot of the Nation of Islam by Royall Jenkins, who continues to be the group's leader and styles himself \"Royall, Allah in Person\". Since its founding, the group has undergone numerous name changes and is currently known as the Value Creators.",
"African-American Muslims\n The United Nation of Islam (UNOI) is a group based in Kansas City, Kansas. It was founded in 1978 by Royall Jenkins, who continues to be the leader of the group and styles himself \"Royall, Allah in Person\".",
"James Udy\n Jim Udy was a Methodist minister, and one of three brothers who became ministers of religion. Gloster Udy was his older brother, and Richard Udy was his younger brother. James attended Newington College (1930), North Sydney Boys High School, Maitland High School, University of Sydney and took a PhD at Boston University. James married Anne Benua after meeting on a European bike tour that he took and together they had six children.",
"James the Great\n The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) teaches that in 1829 John the Baptist and later the Apostles James, Peter and John appeared as heavenly messengers to Joseph Smith and Oliver Cowdery and conferred upon them both, and thus restored, the Aaronic and the Melchizedek priesthood authority of apostolic succession to them and thus exclusively on earth to their organization.",
"James White (theologian)\n White served as an elder of Phoenix Reformed Baptist Church in Phoenix, Arizona, from 1998 until 2018. He became Scholar-in-Residence at Apologia Church in Tempe, Arizona in 2018, and was installed as one of the pastor/elders in 2019. White is the director of Alpha and Omega Ministries, a Christian apologetics organization based in Phoenix, Arizona. As director of Alpha and Omega Ministries, White also hosts a daily Dividing Line Podcast and radio show on the Alpha and Omega Ministries YouTube Channel. He received a BA from Grand Canyon College, and an MA from Fuller Theological Seminary. He was also a critical consultant for the Lockman Foundation's New American Standard Bible. White often engages in public debate, having participated in more than 150 public moderated debates, covering topics such as Calvinism, Roman Catholicism, Islam, Mormonism, the King James Only movement, Jehovah's Witnesses, and atheism. His debate opponents have included scholars such as Bart Ehrman, John Dominic Crossan, Marcus Borg, Robert M. Price, Joe Ventilacion of Iglesia ni Cristo and popularizers such as Dan Barker and John Shelby Spong as well as Islamic scholar Shabir Ally and South African Muslim apologist Yusuf Ismail.",
"Thomas Davidson (philosopher)\n of the divine within themselves, so they became increasingly moral. James believed this individualistic religion made Davidson \"indifferent...to socialisms and general administrative panaceas.\" According to James, Davidson taught that \"Life must be flexible. You ask for a free man and these Utopias give you an interchangeable part, with a fixed number, in a rule-bound social organism.\" Apeirotheism called for the release of each individual's potential divinity through self-cultivation and the nurturing of others rather than through changes in one's material conditions. Davidson was convinced that this release would lead to the only true reform of human society; it was to this task that he devoted the rest of his life."
] |
What is the religion of Pedro Lisímaco de Jesús Vílchez Vílchez? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Pedro Lisímaco de Jesús Vílchez Vílchez | 1,631,002 | 28 | [
{
"id": "3195103",
"title": "Pedro Lisímaco de Jesús Vílchez Vílchez",
"text": " Pedro Lisímaco de Jesús Vílchez Vílchez (May 19, 1929 – February 19, 2013) was the first Roman Catholic Bishop and Bishop Emeritus of the Diocese of Jinotega.",
"score": "1.9334304"
},
{
"id": "3195104",
"title": "Pedro Lisímaco de Jesús Vílchez Vílchez",
"text": " He was born in Jinotega on May 19, 1929 to Fidel Vilchez Zelaya and Pastora Vilchez. He was baptized in the San Juan de Jinotega parish by the priest Alberto Valencia of that same year. Ordained to the priesthood in 1958, he was named bishop of the Diocese of Jinotega, Nicaragua, in 1984 and retired in 2005.",
"score": "1.8823457"
},
{
"id": "13477897",
"title": "Roman Catholic Diocese of Matagalpa",
"text": "Pedro Lisímaco de Jesús Vílchez Vílchez, appointed Bishop of Jinotega in 1982 ",
"score": "1.5521622"
},
{
"id": "6533586",
"title": "Vílchez",
"text": "Francisco Javier Rodríguez Vílchez (born 1978), Spanish footballer who currently plays for Alicante CF, as a striker ; Manuel Vilchez (born 1961), former Venezuelan boxer ; Nidia Vílchez, Peruvian politician and Congresswoman representing Junín for the 2006–2011 term ; Oscar Vílchez (born 1986), Peruvian football attacking midfielder, currently playing for Alianza Lima ; Walter Vílchez (born 1982), Peruvian football player Vílchez or Vilchez is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ",
"score": "1.5409591"
},
{
"id": "13477761",
"title": "Roman Catholic Diocese of Jinotega",
"text": "Pedro Lisímaco de Jesús Vílchez Vílchez (1982–2005) ; Carlos Enrique Herrera Gutiérrez, O.F.M. (2005– ) ",
"score": "1.5220791"
},
{
"id": "6293208",
"title": "Martín Fernández de Vilches",
"text": " Of humble origins, he was born in the Kingdom of Jaén. He worked as a bureaucrat during the reign of John II of Castile, and advanced to become counsellor for Henry IV of Castile. In 1436, he served as master of the Capella de Reyes Nuevos de la catedral de Toledo and canon de Jaén from 1449 until 1452. After the ascent of Henry IV to the throne (1454), he was named Canceller Major de La Poridad, replacing Rodrigo de Villacorta, who was in disagreement with the monarch. In 1456, he was nominated by the king as Roman Catholic Diocese of Ávila and confirmed by Pope Paul II, vacant since the death of Alonso Tostado, where he served until his death in 1469. During the Spanish civil war against Alfonso of Castile, he was a supporter of Henry IV of Castile.",
"score": "1.514069"
},
{
"id": "8915622",
"title": "José María Vigil (theologian)",
"text": " José María Vigil (Zaragoza, Spain, August 22, 1946) is a Latin American theologian highly recognized in the fields of the theology and spirituality of liberation, theology of religious pluralism, and new paradigms. He has been a Roman Catholic priest of the Claretian Missionaries since 1964 and since 1971 has been a naturalized Nicaraguan citizen who currently is based in Panama. He is known for his numerous writings, his editorial and cybernetic activity, his services from the \"Association of Theologians of the Third World (EATWOT)\" as the general editor of their Theological Journal \"VOICES\" ; also for his coordination of the yearly edition of the \"World Latin American Agenda\" and for his theology of religious pluralism.",
"score": "1.4211309"
},
{
"id": "6429978",
"title": "Francis Xavier (name)",
"text": " Francisco Javier Rodríguez Vílchez (born 1978), Spanish professional football player ; Francisco Javier Rodríguez (born 1981), Mexican professional football player ; Francisco Javier Salazar Sáenz (contemporary), Mexican politician; government minister ; Francisco Javier Sánchez Broto (born 1971), Spanish professional footballer ; Francisco Javier Torres (born 1983), Mexican professional football player ; Francisco Javier Uría (born 1950), Spanish professional football player ; Francisco Javier Venegas, marqués de la Reunión y de Nueva España (1760–1838), Spanish military officer and viceroy of New Spain 1810–13 ; Francisco Javier Vergara y Velasco (1860–1914), Colombian geographer, cartographer, and historian ; Francisco Javier Zaldúa (Francisco Javier Martínez de ",
"score": "1.4177037"
},
{
"id": "32696857",
"title": "Edu Vílchez",
"text": " Eduard 'Edu' Vílchez Ortiz (born 22 September 1967) is a Spanish retired footballer who played as a forward, and is a manager.",
"score": "1.4120604"
},
{
"id": "31254891",
"title": "Cayetano María Huarte Ruiz de Briviesca",
"text": " Union of Modern Theology with Philosophy, Damaging the Religion of Our Lord Jesus Christ]. Various features of this author's work allow him to be included in the Jansenist movement that spread through Spain in the last years of the 18th century. These include his biblical and patristic culture, his rejection of superstitions and legends without historical foundation, his critical spirit, rejection of probabilism and laxity, which he identifies as Jesuit doctrines, his moral rigorism, and his love for the primitive Church. His philosophy displays the vitality, the cultural openness and the desire for intellectual renewal of the best works in Cadiz at the time.",
"score": "1.4113717"
},
{
"id": "27792291",
"title": "Estelí",
"text": " de Vílchez y Cabrera, bishop of Leon and responsible for the completion of the Cathedral of the Assumption of Mary of León, Nicaragua. Born in Pueblo Nuevo. ; Oscar Corea Molina, Born in Esteli, Nicaragua. Owner and Founder Of Liceo Samuel Meza and Instituto Rio Piedra, He is also a Radio Personality who created the number one radio show \"Trampolin 43\" In Radio Onda Segoviana, secretary treasure of Lions Club International, he currently lives California USA. ; Clara Isabel Alegría Vides, born in Esteli, is a Nicaraguan poet, essayist, novelist, and journalist who is a major voice in the literature of contemporary Central America. She writes under the pseudonym Claribel Alegría.[2] She was awarded the 2006 Neustadt International Prize for Literature, and the ",
"score": "1.4066257"
},
{
"id": "29516864",
"title": "Adonism",
"text": " to Adonis, Molchos is believed by Adonists to be malevolent, and to be responsible for the enslavement of humanity through monotheistic religions such as Judaism, Christianity and Islam: the religion therefore has \"a pronounced anti-Christian bias\". Born into the Bohemian region of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Franz Sättler proved himself to be a talented linguist, gaining a doctorate in the subject and publishing the world's first Persian-German dictionary. Subsequently travelling across much of Europe, he was imprisoned by the French during the First World War, where he first came across Theosophy and the occult, topics which greatly interested him. Briefly becoming an intelligence agent for the Czechoslovak government, he was ",
"score": "1.405654"
},
{
"id": "6134997",
"title": "Solomon Molcho",
"text": " Solomon Molcho (שלמה מולכו Shelomo Molkho), or Molkho, originally Diogo Pires (c. 1500 – 13 December 1532) was a Portuguese Jewish mystic and messiah claimant. When he met with Holy Roman Emperor Charles V to urge the creation of a Jewish army, the emperor turned him over to the Inquisition and he was burned at the stake.",
"score": "1.4010854"
},
{
"id": "24962870",
"title": "Huei tlamahuiçoltica",
"text": " Luis Laso de la Vega does not mention either him or Antonio Valeriano as authors. The traditions recounted in the 1649 tract were first published in the Spanish book Imagen de la Virgen María, Madre de Dios de Guadalupe (\"Image of the Virgin Mary, Mother of God of Guadalupe\"), written by Miguel Sánchez in 1648 and being a theological dissertation linking the Guadalupan Image to. There is an equally contentious and much shorter manuscript in Nahuatl preceding the Nican Mopohua, which is titled the Inin Huey Tlamahuiçoltzin (\"This Is the Great Marvel\"), also known as \"The Primitive Relation\" of the apparitions. It is in The National Library of México.",
"score": "1.4007502"
},
{
"id": "30611543",
"title": "Carlos Andrés Segovia",
"text": " Carlos Andrés Segovia y Corral, 2nd Marquis of Salobreña (born 22 May 1970), is a Spanish nobleman and academic specialising in philosophy and religious studies. Segovia y Corral is an independent philosopher and scholar, formerly (between 2013 and 2020) associate professor of religious studies at Saint Louis University in Madrid, Spain. While over the past ten years he has mostly worked on late-antique religion (with special emphasis on the intertwining of group-identity markers, sectarian boundaries, discursive strategies, and more generally the conceptualisation of hybridity and ambiguity in religious origins, as a means to counter present-day religious fundamentalism, ethnocentrism, and xenophobia), Segovia y Corral's current research focuses instead on contemporary philosophy at the crossroads of religious studies and anthropological theory along three intersecting axes: (1) the analysis of capitalism’s religious matrix and semiotic ",
"score": "1.3994921"
},
{
"id": "13430816",
"title": "Pedro de Alvarado",
"text": "He is portrayed in Lew Wallace's novel The Fair God. One of Montezuma's daughters falls in love with him in a dream before she had ever seen him, when they do meet he returns her love and gives her an iron cross necklace so she can convert to Christianity. She is killed during the battle of La Noche Triste. ; C. S. Forester's 1937 novel The Happy Return, set in Central America in 1808, features a character El Supremo who claims to be a descendant of Alvarado by a (fictional) marriage to a daughter of Moctezuma. ; Pedro de Alvarado is a ",
"score": "1.3948405"
},
{
"id": "29925288",
"title": "Manuel Vilchez",
"text": " Manuel Vilchez (born October 21, 1961) is a former Venezuelan boxer. At the 1984 Summer Olympics he lost in the first round of the men's bantamweight division (– 54 kg) to Uganda's John Siryakibbe. A year earlier he claimed the gold medal in the same division at the Pan American Games by defeating Pedro Nolasco of the Dominican Republic in the final. Vilchez challenged Louie Espinoza for the World Boxing Association super-bantamweight title at Phoenix, Arizona, United States in 1987, but he lost by a 15th-round knockout.",
"score": "1.3910884"
},
{
"id": "8915630",
"title": "José María Vigil (theologian)",
"text": " lecture at many courses or international events, such as \"Courses for empowering\" organized by the CONFER of Peru (2011–2015) and that of Mexico (2015); the Multicultural Dialogue in Guadalajara, Mexico (2015); Regional Meetings of CEB's in Latin America, and the Congress of the Popular Christian Communities of Spain, the National Christian Forum d'Avui (Valencia, Spain, 2013), the International Buddhist-Christian Conference (New York, Theological Seminary, 2013), the Religious Forum in Vitoria Spain 2014, among others. For two consecutive terms (1998–2005) he has been the Secretary General of CICLA, the Latin American International Confederation of the Claretian Congregation, now called MICLA.9 During that time he coordinated the creation and dissemination10 of the Diario Bíblico in all Latin American countries.",
"score": "1.3901367"
},
{
"id": "12703938",
"title": "Bernardo Borbón Vilches",
"text": " Bernardo Borbón Vilches (born 3 July 1941) is a Mexican politician from the National Action Party. From 2000 to 2003 he served as Deputy of the LVIII Legislature of the Mexican Congress representing Baja California.",
"score": "1.3871396"
},
{
"id": "6624263",
"title": "Irreligion in Mexico",
"text": "Guillermo Arriaga, screenwriter and novelist ; Hector Avalos, religion researcher ; Narciso Bassols, co-founded the Popular Party ; Luis Buñuel, Spanish-Mexican filmmaker ; Plutarco Elías Calles, president (1924–1928) ; Venustiano Carranza, President ; Leonora Carrington, artist ; Ricardo Flores Magón, anarchist revolutionary activist from the early 20th century ; Carlos Frenk, cosmologist ; Tomás Garrido Canabal, politician ; Frida Kahlo, painter ; Guillermo Kahlo ; Manuel de Landa, philosopher and artist ; Germán List Arzubide, poet and revolutionary ; Carlos A. Madrazo, politician ; Subcomandante Marcos, activist ; Juan O'Gorman, artist ; Ignacio Ramírez, \"El Nigromante\" also known as the Voltaire of Mexico ; Rius, cartoonist and highly critical of the Catholic Church ; Diego Rivera, muralist and Marxist ; Guillermo del Toro, filmmaker, author and actor ; Remedios Varo, Spanish-Mexican surrealist artist ; Alvaro Obregon, President ; Fernando Vallejo, Colombian-Mexican writer ; Jorge Volpi, author ",
"score": "1.3860283"
}
] | [
"Pedro Lisímaco de Jesús Vílchez Vílchez\n Pedro Lisímaco de Jesús Vílchez Vílchez (May 19, 1929 – February 19, 2013) was the first Roman Catholic Bishop and Bishop Emeritus of the Diocese of Jinotega.",
"Pedro Lisímaco de Jesús Vílchez Vílchez\n He was born in Jinotega on May 19, 1929 to Fidel Vilchez Zelaya and Pastora Vilchez. He was baptized in the San Juan de Jinotega parish by the priest Alberto Valencia of that same year. Ordained to the priesthood in 1958, he was named bishop of the Diocese of Jinotega, Nicaragua, in 1984 and retired in 2005.",
"Roman Catholic Diocese of Matagalpa\nPedro Lisímaco de Jesús Vílchez Vílchez, appointed Bishop of Jinotega in 1982 ",
"Vílchez\nFrancisco Javier Rodríguez Vílchez (born 1978), Spanish footballer who currently plays for Alicante CF, as a striker ; Manuel Vilchez (born 1961), former Venezuelan boxer ; Nidia Vílchez, Peruvian politician and Congresswoman representing Junín for the 2006–2011 term ; Oscar Vílchez (born 1986), Peruvian football attacking midfielder, currently playing for Alianza Lima ; Walter Vílchez (born 1982), Peruvian football player Vílchez or Vilchez is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ",
"Roman Catholic Diocese of Jinotega\nPedro Lisímaco de Jesús Vílchez Vílchez (1982–2005) ; Carlos Enrique Herrera Gutiérrez, O.F.M. (2005– ) ",
"Martín Fernández de Vilches\n Of humble origins, he was born in the Kingdom of Jaén. He worked as a bureaucrat during the reign of John II of Castile, and advanced to become counsellor for Henry IV of Castile. In 1436, he served as master of the Capella de Reyes Nuevos de la catedral de Toledo and canon de Jaén from 1449 until 1452. After the ascent of Henry IV to the throne (1454), he was named Canceller Major de La Poridad, replacing Rodrigo de Villacorta, who was in disagreement with the monarch. In 1456, he was nominated by the king as Roman Catholic Diocese of Ávila and confirmed by Pope Paul II, vacant since the death of Alonso Tostado, where he served until his death in 1469. During the Spanish civil war against Alfonso of Castile, he was a supporter of Henry IV of Castile.",
"José María Vigil (theologian)\n José María Vigil (Zaragoza, Spain, August 22, 1946) is a Latin American theologian highly recognized in the fields of the theology and spirituality of liberation, theology of religious pluralism, and new paradigms. He has been a Roman Catholic priest of the Claretian Missionaries since 1964 and since 1971 has been a naturalized Nicaraguan citizen who currently is based in Panama. He is known for his numerous writings, his editorial and cybernetic activity, his services from the \"Association of Theologians of the Third World (EATWOT)\" as the general editor of their Theological Journal \"VOICES\" ; also for his coordination of the yearly edition of the \"World Latin American Agenda\" and for his theology of religious pluralism.",
"Francis Xavier (name)\n Francisco Javier Rodríguez Vílchez (born 1978), Spanish professional football player ; Francisco Javier Rodríguez (born 1981), Mexican professional football player ; Francisco Javier Salazar Sáenz (contemporary), Mexican politician; government minister ; Francisco Javier Sánchez Broto (born 1971), Spanish professional footballer ; Francisco Javier Torres (born 1983), Mexican professional football player ; Francisco Javier Uría (born 1950), Spanish professional football player ; Francisco Javier Venegas, marqués de la Reunión y de Nueva España (1760–1838), Spanish military officer and viceroy of New Spain 1810–13 ; Francisco Javier Vergara y Velasco (1860–1914), Colombian geographer, cartographer, and historian ; Francisco Javier Zaldúa (Francisco Javier Martínez de ",
"Edu Vílchez\n Eduard 'Edu' Vílchez Ortiz (born 22 September 1967) is a Spanish retired footballer who played as a forward, and is a manager.",
"Cayetano María Huarte Ruiz de Briviesca\n Union of Modern Theology with Philosophy, Damaging the Religion of Our Lord Jesus Christ]. Various features of this author's work allow him to be included in the Jansenist movement that spread through Spain in the last years of the 18th century. These include his biblical and patristic culture, his rejection of superstitions and legends without historical foundation, his critical spirit, rejection of probabilism and laxity, which he identifies as Jesuit doctrines, his moral rigorism, and his love for the primitive Church. His philosophy displays the vitality, the cultural openness and the desire for intellectual renewal of the best works in Cadiz at the time.",
"Estelí\n de Vílchez y Cabrera, bishop of Leon and responsible for the completion of the Cathedral of the Assumption of Mary of León, Nicaragua. Born in Pueblo Nuevo. ; Oscar Corea Molina, Born in Esteli, Nicaragua. Owner and Founder Of Liceo Samuel Meza and Instituto Rio Piedra, He is also a Radio Personality who created the number one radio show \"Trampolin 43\" In Radio Onda Segoviana, secretary treasure of Lions Club International, he currently lives California USA. ; Clara Isabel Alegría Vides, born in Esteli, is a Nicaraguan poet, essayist, novelist, and journalist who is a major voice in the literature of contemporary Central America. She writes under the pseudonym Claribel Alegría.[2] She was awarded the 2006 Neustadt International Prize for Literature, and the ",
"Adonism\n to Adonis, Molchos is believed by Adonists to be malevolent, and to be responsible for the enslavement of humanity through monotheistic religions such as Judaism, Christianity and Islam: the religion therefore has \"a pronounced anti-Christian bias\". Born into the Bohemian region of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Franz Sättler proved himself to be a talented linguist, gaining a doctorate in the subject and publishing the world's first Persian-German dictionary. Subsequently travelling across much of Europe, he was imprisoned by the French during the First World War, where he first came across Theosophy and the occult, topics which greatly interested him. Briefly becoming an intelligence agent for the Czechoslovak government, he was ",
"Solomon Molcho\n Solomon Molcho (שלמה מולכו Shelomo Molkho), or Molkho, originally Diogo Pires (c. 1500 – 13 December 1532) was a Portuguese Jewish mystic and messiah claimant. When he met with Holy Roman Emperor Charles V to urge the creation of a Jewish army, the emperor turned him over to the Inquisition and he was burned at the stake.",
"Huei tlamahuiçoltica\n Luis Laso de la Vega does not mention either him or Antonio Valeriano as authors. The traditions recounted in the 1649 tract were first published in the Spanish book Imagen de la Virgen María, Madre de Dios de Guadalupe (\"Image of the Virgin Mary, Mother of God of Guadalupe\"), written by Miguel Sánchez in 1648 and being a theological dissertation linking the Guadalupan Image to. There is an equally contentious and much shorter manuscript in Nahuatl preceding the Nican Mopohua, which is titled the Inin Huey Tlamahuiçoltzin (\"This Is the Great Marvel\"), also known as \"The Primitive Relation\" of the apparitions. It is in The National Library of México.",
"Carlos Andrés Segovia\n Carlos Andrés Segovia y Corral, 2nd Marquis of Salobreña (born 22 May 1970), is a Spanish nobleman and academic specialising in philosophy and religious studies. Segovia y Corral is an independent philosopher and scholar, formerly (between 2013 and 2020) associate professor of religious studies at Saint Louis University in Madrid, Spain. While over the past ten years he has mostly worked on late-antique religion (with special emphasis on the intertwining of group-identity markers, sectarian boundaries, discursive strategies, and more generally the conceptualisation of hybridity and ambiguity in religious origins, as a means to counter present-day religious fundamentalism, ethnocentrism, and xenophobia), Segovia y Corral's current research focuses instead on contemporary philosophy at the crossroads of religious studies and anthropological theory along three intersecting axes: (1) the analysis of capitalism’s religious matrix and semiotic ",
"Pedro de Alvarado\nHe is portrayed in Lew Wallace's novel The Fair God. One of Montezuma's daughters falls in love with him in a dream before she had ever seen him, when they do meet he returns her love and gives her an iron cross necklace so she can convert to Christianity. She is killed during the battle of La Noche Triste. ; C. S. Forester's 1937 novel The Happy Return, set in Central America in 1808, features a character El Supremo who claims to be a descendant of Alvarado by a (fictional) marriage to a daughter of Moctezuma. ; Pedro de Alvarado is a ",
"Manuel Vilchez\n Manuel Vilchez (born October 21, 1961) is a former Venezuelan boxer. At the 1984 Summer Olympics he lost in the first round of the men's bantamweight division (– 54 kg) to Uganda's John Siryakibbe. A year earlier he claimed the gold medal in the same division at the Pan American Games by defeating Pedro Nolasco of the Dominican Republic in the final. Vilchez challenged Louie Espinoza for the World Boxing Association super-bantamweight title at Phoenix, Arizona, United States in 1987, but he lost by a 15th-round knockout.",
"José María Vigil (theologian)\n lecture at many courses or international events, such as \"Courses for empowering\" organized by the CONFER of Peru (2011–2015) and that of Mexico (2015); the Multicultural Dialogue in Guadalajara, Mexico (2015); Regional Meetings of CEB's in Latin America, and the Congress of the Popular Christian Communities of Spain, the National Christian Forum d'Avui (Valencia, Spain, 2013), the International Buddhist-Christian Conference (New York, Theological Seminary, 2013), the Religious Forum in Vitoria Spain 2014, among others. For two consecutive terms (1998–2005) he has been the Secretary General of CICLA, the Latin American International Confederation of the Claretian Congregation, now called MICLA.9 During that time he coordinated the creation and dissemination10 of the Diario Bíblico in all Latin American countries.",
"Bernardo Borbón Vilches\n Bernardo Borbón Vilches (born 3 July 1941) is a Mexican politician from the National Action Party. From 2000 to 2003 he served as Deputy of the LVIII Legislature of the Mexican Congress representing Baja California.",
"Irreligion in Mexico\nGuillermo Arriaga, screenwriter and novelist ; Hector Avalos, religion researcher ; Narciso Bassols, co-founded the Popular Party ; Luis Buñuel, Spanish-Mexican filmmaker ; Plutarco Elías Calles, president (1924–1928) ; Venustiano Carranza, President ; Leonora Carrington, artist ; Ricardo Flores Magón, anarchist revolutionary activist from the early 20th century ; Carlos Frenk, cosmologist ; Tomás Garrido Canabal, politician ; Frida Kahlo, painter ; Guillermo Kahlo ; Manuel de Landa, philosopher and artist ; Germán List Arzubide, poet and revolutionary ; Carlos A. Madrazo, politician ; Subcomandante Marcos, activist ; Juan O'Gorman, artist ; Ignacio Ramírez, \"El Nigromante\" also known as the Voltaire of Mexico ; Rius, cartoonist and highly critical of the Catholic Church ; Diego Rivera, muralist and Marxist ; Guillermo del Toro, filmmaker, author and actor ; Remedios Varo, Spanish-Mexican surrealist artist ; Alvaro Obregon, President ; Fernando Vallejo, Colombian-Mexican writer ; Jorge Volpi, author "
] |
What is the religion of Robert Milman? | [
"Anglicanism",
"Anglicanism, Anglican Church"
] | religion | Robert Milman | 5,605,841 | 75 | [
{
"id": "16576891",
"title": "Robert Stockman",
"text": " Robert Stockman (born October 6, 1953) is a scholar specializing in Baháʼí studies who has been called \"the foremost historian of the Baháʼí Faith in America.\" He received his undergraduate degree from Wesleyan University (B.A., 1975) and a doctorate in religious studies from Harvard University (Th.D., 1990).",
"score": "1.4129672"
},
{
"id": "2056857",
"title": "Róbert Mak",
"text": " .",
"score": "1.3732381"
},
{
"id": "28379106",
"title": "Robert L. Backman",
"text": " Robert LeGrand Backman (born March 22, 1922) was a Utah lawyer and politician and has been a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) since 1978.",
"score": "1.362918"
},
{
"id": "32403018",
"title": "Robert Morey (pastor)",
"text": " Robert A. Morey (November 13, 1946 – January 5, 2019) was a Christian apologist and pastor who wrote a number of books and pamphlets. He criticized Islam, Wicca, and non-Evangelical Christian beliefs. He was the founder of the unaccredited California Biblical University and Seminary.",
"score": "1.3394561"
},
{
"id": "8596913",
"title": "Robert S. Wood",
"text": " Robert S. Wood (born December 25, 1936) has had a career in the dual areas of state and religion, both as a leader and advisor to senior civilian and military officials of the United States Government in the area of National security affairs, and as a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church).",
"score": "1.3365225"
},
{
"id": "26212440",
"title": "Robert E. Miles",
"text": " A major \"dualist\" religious leader, Miles allied himself with various groups that constituted the racist and anti-Semitic political-religious movement known as Christian Identity, including Aryan Nations, founding the Mountain Church of Jesus Christ the Savior on his property. Miles saw Earth as the site of a battle between a true God and a false god, with Jews acting as agents of the false God against the true \"chosen people\" that would be \"white Aryans\". According to political scientist Michael Barkun, his dualistic theology was important despite its idiosyncrasies, and \"the avuncular Miles functioned as a kind of elder statesman of the racial movement\". In 1971, Miles, former Grand Dragon of the Michigan Ku ",
"score": "1.335983"
},
{
"id": "26212439",
"title": "Robert E. Miles",
"text": " Robert E. \"Pastor Bob\" Miles (January 28, 1925 – August 16, 1992) was a white supremacist theologist and religious leader from Michigan.",
"score": "1.3315837"
},
{
"id": "5400042",
"title": "Pat Tillman",
"text": " Tillman was an atheist. According to speakers at his funeral, he was very well-read, having read a number of religious texts including the Bible, Quran and the Book of Mormon as well as transcendentalist authors such as Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau. However, responding to religious overtones at the funeral by Maria Shriver and John McCain, his youngest brother, Richard, asserted that \"Just make no mistake, he'd want me to say this: He's not with God, he's fucking dead, he's not religious.\" Richard added, \"Thanks for your thoughts, but he's fuckin' dead.\" Another article quotes Tillman as having told then-general manager of the Seattle Seahawks, Bob Ferguson, in December 2003, \"You know I'm not religious.\" The September 25, 2005, edition of the San Francisco Chronicle newspaper reported that Tillman held views which were critical of the Iraq War. According to Tillman's mother, a friend of Tillman had arranged a meeting for Tillman with author Noam Chomsky, a prominent critic ofAmerican foreign and military policy, to take place after his return from Afghanistan.",
"score": "1.3289559"
},
{
"id": "32077897",
"title": "Derek Milman",
"text": " Derek Milman (born March 21, 1979) is an American actor and novelist.",
"score": "1.326777"
},
{
"id": "287804",
"title": "Robert Van Kampen",
"text": " As an evangelical Christian, Van Kampen was known for applying biblical principles to the running of his business, and there was a strict code of personal conduct among his many employees. Divorce was frowned upon and the drinking of hard liquor discouraged.",
"score": "1.3225987"
},
{
"id": "2224174",
"title": "Robert Smith (priest)",
"text": " Robert S. Smith (February 7, 1932 – July 27, 2010) was an American Catholic priest, author, and educator. His interests ranged from philosophy and theology to the ethics of medical care to interfaith dialogue. Smith's homilies explored the mystery and challenge of religious faith, the relationship between modern culture and the struggle to pursue Christian life, and the paradoxical, complex nature of the spiritual journey. He founded the Sophia Center, devoted to engendering discourse among diverse scientific, cultural, and religious perspectives. He was the author of In the Image of God.",
"score": "1.3216555"
},
{
"id": "371687",
"title": "Henry Hart Milman",
"text": " Henry Hart Milman (10 February 1791 – 24 September 1868 ) was an English historian and ecclesiastic.",
"score": "1.3207299"
},
{
"id": "8596921",
"title": "Robert S. Wood",
"text": " Wood's career, both in church and state, was based on his strong belief that the United States was the model for the world in terms of how a separation of church and state — no state run or state established church — was good for both the church and the state, allowing a variety of religions to flourish. Speaking at the Toronto-based Center for New Religions, Wood said that the freedom of conscience and assembly allowed under such a system has led to a \"remarkable religiosity\" in the United States that isn't present in other industrialized nations. Wood believes that the U.S. operates on \"a sort of civic religion,\" which includes a generally shared belief in a creator who \"expects better of us.\" Beyond that, individuals are free to decide how they want to believe and fill in their own creeds and express their conscience. He calls this approach the \"genius of religious sentiment in the United States.\"",
"score": "1.319486"
},
{
"id": "14146653",
"title": "Milah Abraham",
"text": " Millah Abraham teaches that the major Abrahamic religions, including Judaism, Christianity and Islam, have been corrupted by humans, necessitating a sequence of new prophets. It claims to be the latest installation of the Abrahamic religions. Mushaddeq teaches that \"just as Judaism had given way to Christianity, and Christianity to Islam, it was Islam’s turn\" to give way to Gafatar, which will \"in turn be superseded by a new iteration of Abrahamic faith centuries from now.\"",
"score": "1.3149741"
},
{
"id": "29868373",
"title": "Robert Hamerton-Kelly",
"text": " Robert Gerald Hamerton-Kelly (December 26, 1938 – July 7, 2013) was a Christian theologian, ordained United Methodist pastor, ethics scholar, and author and editor of several books on religion and violence. He served as Dean of the Chapel at Stanford Memorial Church at Stanford University for 14 years and was on the faculty of the university for more than 30 years. A leading advocate of the work of René Girard's theory of mimetic desire, Hamerton-Kelly co-founded several organizations dedicated to the study of the theory and edited several important texts about it.",
"score": "1.3114228"
},
{
"id": "31949783",
"title": "David Kaylor",
"text": " Robert David Kaylor (born 1933) was James Sprunt Professor of Religion at Davidson College. He obtained his PhD at Duke University. In his book, Jesus the Prophet: His Vision of the Kingdom on Earth, Kaylor argues that Jesus was a social reformer who was driven by a desire to return a supposed pre-monarchical egalitarianism.",
"score": "1.3096092"
},
{
"id": "231817",
"title": "Robert Sirico",
"text": " Robert Alan Sirico (born June 23, 1951) is an American Roman Catholic priest, and the founder of the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty of Grand Rapids, Michigan. He is a political, religious, and cultural commentator. He is also a pastor of Sacred Heart Parish in Grand Rapids, Michigan.",
"score": "1.3086305"
},
{
"id": "7953209",
"title": "Robert S. Ellwood",
"text": " Robert S. Ellwood (born 1933) is an American academic, author and expert on world religions. He was educated at the University of Colorado, Berkeley Divinity School and was awarded a PhD in History of Religions from the University of Chicago in 1967. He was Professor of World Religions at the University of Southern California from 1967 until 1997 and is now professor emeritus.",
"score": "1.3074555"
},
{
"id": "15768857",
"title": "Robert Thieme",
"text": " Robert Bunger Thieme, Jr. (April 1, 1918 – August 16, 2009) was pastor of Berachah Church, a nondenominational Christian church in Houston, Texas, from 1950-2003. Affectionately called \"the Colonel\" by his congregation, he was a dispensationalist theologian who wrote over a hundred books and conducted over 10,000 sermons on various theological topics during his 55 years as a pastor.",
"score": "1.3058549"
},
{
"id": "32044460",
"title": "Robert Milham Hartley",
"text": " Hartley was a member of the Presbyterian Church since his youth and joined the Young People’s Missionary Society whilst in his teens. Living In New York in 1824 he became a member of the Central Presbyterian Church and helped to distribute religious literature. It was at this time that he saw the squalid living conditions that the poor had to contend with in the City. Hartley later became a ruling elder at the Central Presbyterian Church at Broome Street and was instrumental in the move to Madison Square in 1854.",
"score": "1.301728"
}
] | [
"Robert Stockman\n Robert Stockman (born October 6, 1953) is a scholar specializing in Baháʼí studies who has been called \"the foremost historian of the Baháʼí Faith in America.\" He received his undergraduate degree from Wesleyan University (B.A., 1975) and a doctorate in religious studies from Harvard University (Th.D., 1990).",
"Róbert Mak\n .",
"Robert L. Backman\n Robert LeGrand Backman (born March 22, 1922) was a Utah lawyer and politician and has been a general authority of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) since 1978.",
"Robert Morey (pastor)\n Robert A. Morey (November 13, 1946 – January 5, 2019) was a Christian apologist and pastor who wrote a number of books and pamphlets. He criticized Islam, Wicca, and non-Evangelical Christian beliefs. He was the founder of the unaccredited California Biblical University and Seminary.",
"Robert S. Wood\n Robert S. Wood (born December 25, 1936) has had a career in the dual areas of state and religion, both as a leader and advisor to senior civilian and military officials of the United States Government in the area of National security affairs, and as a leader in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church).",
"Robert E. Miles\n A major \"dualist\" religious leader, Miles allied himself with various groups that constituted the racist and anti-Semitic political-religious movement known as Christian Identity, including Aryan Nations, founding the Mountain Church of Jesus Christ the Savior on his property. Miles saw Earth as the site of a battle between a true God and a false god, with Jews acting as agents of the false God against the true \"chosen people\" that would be \"white Aryans\". According to political scientist Michael Barkun, his dualistic theology was important despite its idiosyncrasies, and \"the avuncular Miles functioned as a kind of elder statesman of the racial movement\". In 1971, Miles, former Grand Dragon of the Michigan Ku ",
"Robert E. Miles\n Robert E. \"Pastor Bob\" Miles (January 28, 1925 – August 16, 1992) was a white supremacist theologist and religious leader from Michigan.",
"Pat Tillman\n Tillman was an atheist. According to speakers at his funeral, he was very well-read, having read a number of religious texts including the Bible, Quran and the Book of Mormon as well as transcendentalist authors such as Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau. However, responding to religious overtones at the funeral by Maria Shriver and John McCain, his youngest brother, Richard, asserted that \"Just make no mistake, he'd want me to say this: He's not with God, he's fucking dead, he's not religious.\" Richard added, \"Thanks for your thoughts, but he's fuckin' dead.\" Another article quotes Tillman as having told then-general manager of the Seattle Seahawks, Bob Ferguson, in December 2003, \"You know I'm not religious.\" The September 25, 2005, edition of the San Francisco Chronicle newspaper reported that Tillman held views which were critical of the Iraq War. According to Tillman's mother, a friend of Tillman had arranged a meeting for Tillman with author Noam Chomsky, a prominent critic ofAmerican foreign and military policy, to take place after his return from Afghanistan.",
"Derek Milman\n Derek Milman (born March 21, 1979) is an American actor and novelist.",
"Robert Van Kampen\n As an evangelical Christian, Van Kampen was known for applying biblical principles to the running of his business, and there was a strict code of personal conduct among his many employees. Divorce was frowned upon and the drinking of hard liquor discouraged.",
"Robert Smith (priest)\n Robert S. Smith (February 7, 1932 – July 27, 2010) was an American Catholic priest, author, and educator. His interests ranged from philosophy and theology to the ethics of medical care to interfaith dialogue. Smith's homilies explored the mystery and challenge of religious faith, the relationship between modern culture and the struggle to pursue Christian life, and the paradoxical, complex nature of the spiritual journey. He founded the Sophia Center, devoted to engendering discourse among diverse scientific, cultural, and religious perspectives. He was the author of In the Image of God.",
"Henry Hart Milman\n Henry Hart Milman (10 February 1791 – 24 September 1868 ) was an English historian and ecclesiastic.",
"Robert S. Wood\n Wood's career, both in church and state, was based on his strong belief that the United States was the model for the world in terms of how a separation of church and state — no state run or state established church — was good for both the church and the state, allowing a variety of religions to flourish. Speaking at the Toronto-based Center for New Religions, Wood said that the freedom of conscience and assembly allowed under such a system has led to a \"remarkable religiosity\" in the United States that isn't present in other industrialized nations. Wood believes that the U.S. operates on \"a sort of civic religion,\" which includes a generally shared belief in a creator who \"expects better of us.\" Beyond that, individuals are free to decide how they want to believe and fill in their own creeds and express their conscience. He calls this approach the \"genius of religious sentiment in the United States.\"",
"Milah Abraham\n Millah Abraham teaches that the major Abrahamic religions, including Judaism, Christianity and Islam, have been corrupted by humans, necessitating a sequence of new prophets. It claims to be the latest installation of the Abrahamic religions. Mushaddeq teaches that \"just as Judaism had given way to Christianity, and Christianity to Islam, it was Islam’s turn\" to give way to Gafatar, which will \"in turn be superseded by a new iteration of Abrahamic faith centuries from now.\"",
"Robert Hamerton-Kelly\n Robert Gerald Hamerton-Kelly (December 26, 1938 – July 7, 2013) was a Christian theologian, ordained United Methodist pastor, ethics scholar, and author and editor of several books on religion and violence. He served as Dean of the Chapel at Stanford Memorial Church at Stanford University for 14 years and was on the faculty of the university for more than 30 years. A leading advocate of the work of René Girard's theory of mimetic desire, Hamerton-Kelly co-founded several organizations dedicated to the study of the theory and edited several important texts about it.",
"David Kaylor\n Robert David Kaylor (born 1933) was James Sprunt Professor of Religion at Davidson College. He obtained his PhD at Duke University. In his book, Jesus the Prophet: His Vision of the Kingdom on Earth, Kaylor argues that Jesus was a social reformer who was driven by a desire to return a supposed pre-monarchical egalitarianism.",
"Robert Sirico\n Robert Alan Sirico (born June 23, 1951) is an American Roman Catholic priest, and the founder of the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty of Grand Rapids, Michigan. He is a political, religious, and cultural commentator. He is also a pastor of Sacred Heart Parish in Grand Rapids, Michigan.",
"Robert S. Ellwood\n Robert S. Ellwood (born 1933) is an American academic, author and expert on world religions. He was educated at the University of Colorado, Berkeley Divinity School and was awarded a PhD in History of Religions from the University of Chicago in 1967. He was Professor of World Religions at the University of Southern California from 1967 until 1997 and is now professor emeritus.",
"Robert Thieme\n Robert Bunger Thieme, Jr. (April 1, 1918 – August 16, 2009) was pastor of Berachah Church, a nondenominational Christian church in Houston, Texas, from 1950-2003. Affectionately called \"the Colonel\" by his congregation, he was a dispensationalist theologian who wrote over a hundred books and conducted over 10,000 sermons on various theological topics during his 55 years as a pastor.",
"Robert Milham Hartley\n Hartley was a member of the Presbyterian Church since his youth and joined the Young People’s Missionary Society whilst in his teens. Living In New York in 1824 he became a member of the Central Presbyterian Church and helped to distribute religious literature. It was at this time that he saw the squalid living conditions that the poor had to contend with in the City. Hartley later became a ruling elder at the Central Presbyterian Church at Broome Street and was instrumental in the move to Madison Square in 1854."
] |
What is the religion of Kenneth Bevan? | [
"Anglicanism",
"Anglicanism, Anglican Church"
] | religion | Kenneth Bevan | 476,899 | 45 | [
{
"id": "5560156",
"title": "Kenneth Bevan",
"text": " Kenneth Graham Bevan (27 September 1898 – 3 December 1993) was an Anglican missionary bishop in China.",
"score": "1.6559348"
},
{
"id": "5560157",
"title": "Kenneth Bevan",
"text": " Bevan was born in 1898, in Hampstead, where his father was a curate. He was the son of the Rev. James Alfred Bevan, who had captained Wales in their first international rugby union match, and his wife Annie. He was educated at Great Yarmouth Grammar School and the London College of Divinity.",
"score": "1.6415892"
},
{
"id": "5560158",
"title": "Kenneth Bevan",
"text": " He was ordained deacon in 1923, and priest in 1924, and was then a curate at Holy Trinity, Tunbridge Wells (now Trinity Theatre) before missionary service with the Anglican-Episcopal Province of China from 1925. Consecrated a bishop in 1940 in Holy Trinity Cathedral, Shanghai, for 10 years he was Bishop of Eastern Szechwan. The obituary in the Church Times stated that: \"His diocese was wild and mountainous, and in travelling round it he was reduced, he said, to carrying only a Bible and a toothbrush.\" Following the end of the Chinese Civil War and the Communist takeover of China, Bevan returned to England and became the vicar of Woolhope (1951-1966)), during which time he was also rural dean of Hereford (1955-1966) and Prebendary de Moreton et Whaddon at Hereford Cathedral (1956-1966). On retirement in 1966 he became Master of Archbishop Holgate's Hospital in Hemsworth and then an assistant bishop in the Diocese of Wakefield for a further 11 years. During that time, he founded the Retired Clergy Association.",
"score": "1.6208663"
},
{
"id": "9920841",
"title": "Aneurin Bevan",
"text": " all religions – ancestor worship\". In Parliament, he became noticed as a harsh critic of those he felt opposed the working man and woman. His targets included the Conservative Winston Churchill and the Liberal David Lloyd George, as well as Ramsay MacDonald and Margaret Bondfield from his own Labour party (he targeted the latter for her unwillingness to increase unemployment benefits). He had solid support from his constituency, being one of the few Labour MPs to be unopposed in the 1931 General Election, and this support grew through the 1930s and the period of the Great Depression. Soon after Bevan entered Parliament, he was briefly ",
"score": "1.5393744"
},
{
"id": "27629045",
"title": "David Bevan (politician)",
"text": " Andrew David Gilroy Bevan (10 April 1928 – 12 October 1996) was a British Conservative politician. He was Member of Parliament for Birmingham Yardley from 1979, until he lost the seat by 162 votes to future Labour minister Estelle Morris in 1992. He was Chairman of the Parliamentary All-Party Tourism Committee and Chairman of the Conservative Parliamentary Backbench Tourism Committee for several successive parliaments until he lost his seat in 1992, and did much to promote the British tourism industry.",
"score": "1.4981902"
},
{
"id": "9920830",
"title": "Aneurin Bevan",
"text": " at construction and added several modern features when the family moved to 7 Charles Street, installing the first gas stove in the street, an inside toilet and running hot water. Both Bevan's parents were Nonconformists: his father was a Baptist and his mother a Methodist, although he became an atheist. Bevan had been a supporter of the Liberal Party in his youth, but was converted to socialism by the writings of Robert Blatchford in The Clarion and joined the Independent Labour Party. It was around this time that he first \"reject[ed] his chapel upbringing\" and became an atheist. He was a member of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion and ",
"score": "1.4927461"
},
{
"id": "10263688",
"title": "William Bevan (priest)",
"text": "Attribution ",
"score": "1.487684"
},
{
"id": "14900986",
"title": "Llewelyn David Bevan",
"text": " Bevan and his family arrived in Melbourne aboard the Valetta on 6 November 1886, Bevan was to be a leader of Protestant intellectual life in Melbourne for the next 23 years. Bevan was chairman of the Congregational Union of Victoria and a vice-president of Congregational international councils at London in 1891 and Boston in 1899. He was also chairman of the jury of education at the Melbourne Centennial International Exhibition, 1888, for which he was honoured by the French government; in 1891 Bevan served on a parliamentary committee to study the educational systems of Germany, France, and the United States. Bevan was also a supporter of Federation, some urged him to contest the seat of Corangamite but he declined. Bevan was also a collector of books and antique ceramics; and a recognized student of Henrik Ibsen. In February 1910 Bevan became principal of Parkin (Congregational) College, Adelaide, a position he held until his death.",
"score": "1.4786552"
},
{
"id": "30234096",
"title": "Michael W. Bevan",
"text": " Michael Webster Bevan (born 5 June 1952) is a Professor at the John Innes Centre, Norwich, UK.",
"score": "1.4785285"
},
{
"id": "3500605",
"title": "Bevan",
"text": "Bevan Congdon (1938-2018), New Zealand cricketer ; Bevan Davies, American musician ; Bevan Docherty (born 1977), New Zealand athlete ; Bevan Dufty (born 1955), American politician ; Bevan George (born 1977), Australian hockey player ; Bevan Griggs (born 1978), New Zealand cricketer ; Bevan Hari (born 1975), New Zealand hockey player ; Bevan Meredith (1927-2019), Australian Anglican Archbishop of Papua New Guinea ; Bevan Sharpless (1904–1950), American astronomer ; Bevan Slattery, Australian technology entrepreneur ; Bevan Spencer von Einem (born 1946), Australian criminal ",
"score": "1.4642596"
},
{
"id": "12682030",
"title": "John Bevan (rugby)",
"text": " John Charles Bevan (born 28 October 1950) is a Welsh international rugby footballer of the 1970s and 1980s. He is one of two John Bevans who played for Wales during the 1970s.",
"score": "1.4506428"
},
{
"id": "5560159",
"title": "Kenneth Bevan",
"text": " Bevan married Jocelyn Duncan (known as Joyce) Barber in 1927 in Shanghai Cathedral. They had three daughters. He died in 1993, aged 95.",
"score": "1.446439"
},
{
"id": "12682041",
"title": "John Bevan (rugby)",
"text": " He has taught at many schools including: Ferndale Boys School, Culcheth High School, English Martyrs School and Arnold School in Blackpool. In September 2000, after having stepped down as Director of Coaching for the Welsh Rugby Union, John Bevan joined the teaching staff at Monmouth School as a teacher of Religious Education and Director of Rugby Coaching. He currently coaches teams throughout the school, including the 1st XV who are unbeaten since he has been there. His catchphrase of \"my granny could do better than that\" meaning anything from tackle, to run, is perhaps the main reason for Monmouth's record of 123 games unbeaten. He remains a rugby legend and an inspiration to the boys.",
"score": "1.4418452"
},
{
"id": "3500606",
"title": "Bevan",
"text": "Alan Bevan, Canadian bagpipe player ; Alonza Bevan (born 1970), English bass player ; Aneurin Bevan (1897–1960), British Labour Party politician ; Benjamin Bevan (1773–1833), British civil engineer ; Bev Bevan (born 1945), English drummer ; Bill Bevan, American football player and coach, consensus All-American in 1934 ; Billy Bevan, Australian film actor ; Brian Bevan (1924–1991), Australian rugby player ; Bridget Bevan (1698–1779), Welsh philanthropist ; Christopher Bevan (born 1937), Rhodesian sailor ; C. W. L. Bevan (1920–1989), Welsh chemist and academic ; David Gilroy Bevan (1928–1996), English politician ; Donald Bevan (1920–2013), American playwright and caricaturist ; Edward Bevan (disambiguation), multiple people ; Edward John Bevan (1856–1921), English chemist ; Edwyn Bevan (1870–1943), English philosopher and historian ; Emily Bevan (born 1982), English actress ; Frederick Bevan (1856–1939), ",
"score": "1.4307147"
},
{
"id": "9778584",
"title": "John Bevan (rugby union)",
"text": " John David Bevan (12 March 1948 – 5 June 1986) was a Welsh international rugby union footballer, one of two John Bevans who played for Wales during the 1970s. Bevan was born in Neath. He played for Aberavon RFC, the British Lions and The Barbarians. He formed a formidable club half back partnership with Clive Shell, and was a player got the most out of players outside of him. During his playing career he rivalled Phil Bennett for the Welsh No 10 position. Bennett originally held the place but the club performances of Bevan put him in the ascendancy during the 1974-5 season. A fly half, capped four times for Wales, he won his first cap against France in Paris in January ",
"score": "1.4292243"
},
{
"id": "9920888",
"title": "Aneurin Bevan",
"text": " taken home to Wales. Tomorrow he will be cremated in keeping with his known views. [Nye] was never a hypocrite. No falsity must touch him once he is no longer available to defend his views. He was not a cold-blooded rationalist. He was no calculating machine. He was a great humanist whose religion lay in loving his fellow men and trying to serve them... He knelt reverently in respect to a friend or friend's faith, but he never pretended to be anything other than what he was, a humanist.\" - Jennie Lee to Michael Foot, 7 July 1960. In his 2014 biography, Nick Thomas-Symonds described \"an outpouring of national mourning\" that followed Bevan's ",
"score": "1.4286048"
},
{
"id": "9920887",
"title": "Aneurin Bevan",
"text": " visited Bevan at his home in Asheridge Farm (where Bevan was a keen amateur farmer, keeping cattle and pigs). Bevan died in his sleep at 4.10pm on 6 July 1960, at the age of 62, at his home, Asheridge Farm, Chesham, Buckinghamshire. His remains were cremated at Gwent Crematorium in Croesyceiliog in a private family ceremony. An open-air service was held in his constituency of Ebbw Vale and was presided over by Donald Soper. Jennie Lee explained in a letter to Michael Foot that Bevan had specifically chosen to have a non-religious funeral and not a Christian service, because he was a firm humanist. \"'Nye is asleep next door. Later today he will ",
"score": "1.426322"
},
{
"id": "24902315",
"title": "Hal Bevan-Petman",
"text": " Henry Charles 'Hal' Bevan-Petman (1894–1980) was a British painter, who made a career in British India and Pakistan. He stayed through during the Partition of India and chose to reside in Pakistan, till his demise on 9 May 1980 in Rawalpindi. He painted significant civil and military personalities, landscapes and still life. His works included many Pakistan Army officers, two of whom became Pakistan's Heads of State: Field Marshal Ayub Khan and General Yahya Khan. He is buried in the Christian Graveyard in Rawalpindi, Pakistan.",
"score": "1.4235588"
},
{
"id": "7894409",
"title": "John M. Bevan",
"text": " John M. \"Jack\" Bevan (December 5, 1924 - February 4, 2000) was an American academic and innovator in higher education.",
"score": "1.4232867"
},
{
"id": "26397990",
"title": "Edwyn Bevan",
"text": " Edwyn Robert Bevan OBE, FBA (15 February 1870 in London – 18 October 1943 in London ) was a versatile British philosopher and historian of the Hellenistic world.",
"score": "1.4133859"
}
] | [
"Kenneth Bevan\n Kenneth Graham Bevan (27 September 1898 – 3 December 1993) was an Anglican missionary bishop in China.",
"Kenneth Bevan\n Bevan was born in 1898, in Hampstead, where his father was a curate. He was the son of the Rev. James Alfred Bevan, who had captained Wales in their first international rugby union match, and his wife Annie. He was educated at Great Yarmouth Grammar School and the London College of Divinity.",
"Kenneth Bevan\n He was ordained deacon in 1923, and priest in 1924, and was then a curate at Holy Trinity, Tunbridge Wells (now Trinity Theatre) before missionary service with the Anglican-Episcopal Province of China from 1925. Consecrated a bishop in 1940 in Holy Trinity Cathedral, Shanghai, for 10 years he was Bishop of Eastern Szechwan. The obituary in the Church Times stated that: \"His diocese was wild and mountainous, and in travelling round it he was reduced, he said, to carrying only a Bible and a toothbrush.\" Following the end of the Chinese Civil War and the Communist takeover of China, Bevan returned to England and became the vicar of Woolhope (1951-1966)), during which time he was also rural dean of Hereford (1955-1966) and Prebendary de Moreton et Whaddon at Hereford Cathedral (1956-1966). On retirement in 1966 he became Master of Archbishop Holgate's Hospital in Hemsworth and then an assistant bishop in the Diocese of Wakefield for a further 11 years. During that time, he founded the Retired Clergy Association.",
"Aneurin Bevan\n all religions – ancestor worship\". In Parliament, he became noticed as a harsh critic of those he felt opposed the working man and woman. His targets included the Conservative Winston Churchill and the Liberal David Lloyd George, as well as Ramsay MacDonald and Margaret Bondfield from his own Labour party (he targeted the latter for her unwillingness to increase unemployment benefits). He had solid support from his constituency, being one of the few Labour MPs to be unopposed in the 1931 General Election, and this support grew through the 1930s and the period of the Great Depression. Soon after Bevan entered Parliament, he was briefly ",
"David Bevan (politician)\n Andrew David Gilroy Bevan (10 April 1928 – 12 October 1996) was a British Conservative politician. He was Member of Parliament for Birmingham Yardley from 1979, until he lost the seat by 162 votes to future Labour minister Estelle Morris in 1992. He was Chairman of the Parliamentary All-Party Tourism Committee and Chairman of the Conservative Parliamentary Backbench Tourism Committee for several successive parliaments until he lost his seat in 1992, and did much to promote the British tourism industry.",
"Aneurin Bevan\n at construction and added several modern features when the family moved to 7 Charles Street, installing the first gas stove in the street, an inside toilet and running hot water. Both Bevan's parents were Nonconformists: his father was a Baptist and his mother a Methodist, although he became an atheist. Bevan had been a supporter of the Liberal Party in his youth, but was converted to socialism by the writings of Robert Blatchford in The Clarion and joined the Independent Labour Party. It was around this time that he first \"reject[ed] his chapel upbringing\" and became an atheist. He was a member of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion and ",
"William Bevan (priest)\nAttribution ",
"Llewelyn David Bevan\n Bevan and his family arrived in Melbourne aboard the Valetta on 6 November 1886, Bevan was to be a leader of Protestant intellectual life in Melbourne for the next 23 years. Bevan was chairman of the Congregational Union of Victoria and a vice-president of Congregational international councils at London in 1891 and Boston in 1899. He was also chairman of the jury of education at the Melbourne Centennial International Exhibition, 1888, for which he was honoured by the French government; in 1891 Bevan served on a parliamentary committee to study the educational systems of Germany, France, and the United States. Bevan was also a supporter of Federation, some urged him to contest the seat of Corangamite but he declined. Bevan was also a collector of books and antique ceramics; and a recognized student of Henrik Ibsen. In February 1910 Bevan became principal of Parkin (Congregational) College, Adelaide, a position he held until his death.",
"Michael W. Bevan\n Michael Webster Bevan (born 5 June 1952) is a Professor at the John Innes Centre, Norwich, UK.",
"Bevan\nBevan Congdon (1938-2018), New Zealand cricketer ; Bevan Davies, American musician ; Bevan Docherty (born 1977), New Zealand athlete ; Bevan Dufty (born 1955), American politician ; Bevan George (born 1977), Australian hockey player ; Bevan Griggs (born 1978), New Zealand cricketer ; Bevan Hari (born 1975), New Zealand hockey player ; Bevan Meredith (1927-2019), Australian Anglican Archbishop of Papua New Guinea ; Bevan Sharpless (1904–1950), American astronomer ; Bevan Slattery, Australian technology entrepreneur ; Bevan Spencer von Einem (born 1946), Australian criminal ",
"John Bevan (rugby)\n John Charles Bevan (born 28 October 1950) is a Welsh international rugby footballer of the 1970s and 1980s. He is one of two John Bevans who played for Wales during the 1970s.",
"Kenneth Bevan\n Bevan married Jocelyn Duncan (known as Joyce) Barber in 1927 in Shanghai Cathedral. They had three daughters. He died in 1993, aged 95.",
"John Bevan (rugby)\n He has taught at many schools including: Ferndale Boys School, Culcheth High School, English Martyrs School and Arnold School in Blackpool. In September 2000, after having stepped down as Director of Coaching for the Welsh Rugby Union, John Bevan joined the teaching staff at Monmouth School as a teacher of Religious Education and Director of Rugby Coaching. He currently coaches teams throughout the school, including the 1st XV who are unbeaten since he has been there. His catchphrase of \"my granny could do better than that\" meaning anything from tackle, to run, is perhaps the main reason for Monmouth's record of 123 games unbeaten. He remains a rugby legend and an inspiration to the boys.",
"Bevan\nAlan Bevan, Canadian bagpipe player ; Alonza Bevan (born 1970), English bass player ; Aneurin Bevan (1897–1960), British Labour Party politician ; Benjamin Bevan (1773–1833), British civil engineer ; Bev Bevan (born 1945), English drummer ; Bill Bevan, American football player and coach, consensus All-American in 1934 ; Billy Bevan, Australian film actor ; Brian Bevan (1924–1991), Australian rugby player ; Bridget Bevan (1698–1779), Welsh philanthropist ; Christopher Bevan (born 1937), Rhodesian sailor ; C. W. L. Bevan (1920–1989), Welsh chemist and academic ; David Gilroy Bevan (1928–1996), English politician ; Donald Bevan (1920–2013), American playwright and caricaturist ; Edward Bevan (disambiguation), multiple people ; Edward John Bevan (1856–1921), English chemist ; Edwyn Bevan (1870–1943), English philosopher and historian ; Emily Bevan (born 1982), English actress ; Frederick Bevan (1856–1939), ",
"John Bevan (rugby union)\n John David Bevan (12 March 1948 – 5 June 1986) was a Welsh international rugby union footballer, one of two John Bevans who played for Wales during the 1970s. Bevan was born in Neath. He played for Aberavon RFC, the British Lions and The Barbarians. He formed a formidable club half back partnership with Clive Shell, and was a player got the most out of players outside of him. During his playing career he rivalled Phil Bennett for the Welsh No 10 position. Bennett originally held the place but the club performances of Bevan put him in the ascendancy during the 1974-5 season. A fly half, capped four times for Wales, he won his first cap against France in Paris in January ",
"Aneurin Bevan\n taken home to Wales. Tomorrow he will be cremated in keeping with his known views. [Nye] was never a hypocrite. No falsity must touch him once he is no longer available to defend his views. He was not a cold-blooded rationalist. He was no calculating machine. He was a great humanist whose religion lay in loving his fellow men and trying to serve them... He knelt reverently in respect to a friend or friend's faith, but he never pretended to be anything other than what he was, a humanist.\" - Jennie Lee to Michael Foot, 7 July 1960. In his 2014 biography, Nick Thomas-Symonds described \"an outpouring of national mourning\" that followed Bevan's ",
"Aneurin Bevan\n visited Bevan at his home in Asheridge Farm (where Bevan was a keen amateur farmer, keeping cattle and pigs). Bevan died in his sleep at 4.10pm on 6 July 1960, at the age of 62, at his home, Asheridge Farm, Chesham, Buckinghamshire. His remains were cremated at Gwent Crematorium in Croesyceiliog in a private family ceremony. An open-air service was held in his constituency of Ebbw Vale and was presided over by Donald Soper. Jennie Lee explained in a letter to Michael Foot that Bevan had specifically chosen to have a non-religious funeral and not a Christian service, because he was a firm humanist. \"'Nye is asleep next door. Later today he will ",
"Hal Bevan-Petman\n Henry Charles 'Hal' Bevan-Petman (1894–1980) was a British painter, who made a career in British India and Pakistan. He stayed through during the Partition of India and chose to reside in Pakistan, till his demise on 9 May 1980 in Rawalpindi. He painted significant civil and military personalities, landscapes and still life. His works included many Pakistan Army officers, two of whom became Pakistan's Heads of State: Field Marshal Ayub Khan and General Yahya Khan. He is buried in the Christian Graveyard in Rawalpindi, Pakistan.",
"John M. Bevan\n John M. \"Jack\" Bevan (December 5, 1924 - February 4, 2000) was an American academic and innovator in higher education.",
"Edwyn Bevan\n Edwyn Robert Bevan OBE, FBA (15 February 1870 in London – 18 October 1943 in London ) was a versatile British philosopher and historian of the Hellenistic world."
] |
What is the religion of Benjamin Marc Ramaroson? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Benjamin Marc Ramaroson | 2,488,535 | 38 | [
{
"id": "3688659",
"title": "Benjamin Marc Ramaroson",
"text": " Benjamin Marc Ramaroson, C.M. (born 25 April 1955 in Manakara) is Archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Antsiranana in Madagascar.",
"score": "1.7707295"
},
{
"id": "26208048",
"title": "Benjamin Marc Balthason Ramaroson",
"text": " Benjamin Marc Balthason Ramaroson (born 1955 in Manakara) is a Malagasy clergyman and prelate for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Farafangana, and later Antsiranana. He was appointed bishop in 2005. He moved dioceses in 2013.",
"score": "1.7556254"
},
{
"id": "3688660",
"title": "Benjamin Marc Ramaroson",
"text": " Ramaroson was ordained as a priest on 15 August 1984 for the Congregation of the Mission. He was appointed as bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Farafangana by Pope Benedict XVI and consecrated in November 2005. As was appointed Archbishop of Antsiranana in November 2013 upon the retirement of Archbishop Michel Melo.",
"score": "1.6485188"
},
{
"id": "970986",
"title": "Jon Benjamin (Jewish leader)",
"text": " Marc Jonathan Benjamin (born 31 October 1964) is a qualified lawyer and has held various leadership positions in NGOs and Jewish communal organisations, including as Chief Executive of the Board of Deputies of British Jews from January 2005 to May 2013 and Chief Operating Officer of World ORT from January 2014 to December 2015.",
"score": "1.4023981"
},
{
"id": "2433572",
"title": "Jonny Benjamin",
"text": "MBE ",
"score": "1.3705157"
},
{
"id": "25956279",
"title": "Benjamin Ramamonjisoa",
"text": " Benjamin Ramamonjisoa is a Malagasy politician. A member of the National Assembly of Madagascar, he was elected as a member of the Tiako I Madagasikara party; he represents the constituency of Antananarivo Atsimondrano.",
"score": "1.3643023"
},
{
"id": "31055803",
"title": "Marc Gafni",
"text": " Marc Gafni (born Marc Winiarz; 1960) is an American philosopher, author, and rabbi who became a New Age spiritual teacher with a focus on Integral Theory, Eros, and \"outrageous love\". Gafni is the author of over twelve books including the award-winning Your Unique Self: The Radical Path to Personal Enlightenment. He hosted a National television show in Israel called Tachat Gafno from 1999-2002. He has been the subject of multiple allegations of sexual misconduct over many years, which he has denied.",
"score": "1.3636732"
},
{
"id": "29416193",
"title": "Benjamin Rabenorolahy",
"text": " Benjamin Rabenorolahy (born 21 January 1940 in Morombe – 14 July 2020) was a Malagasy politician and pastor. He was the president of the Malagasy Lutheran Church (FLM - Fiangonana Loterana Malagasy) for 16 years before 2004. He was a member of the Senate of Madagascar for the Northwest Region, and did not represent any party. He died on 14 July 2020, in Antananarivo during the COVID-19 pandemic in Madagascar.",
"score": "1.360781"
},
{
"id": "9686449",
"title": "Benjamin Berton",
"text": " . Benjamin Berton (born 1974, Valenciennes) is a French writer.",
"score": "1.3591444"
},
{
"id": "9686450",
"title": "Benjamin Berton",
"text": " Benjamin Berton is graduated from the Institut d’études politiques de Paris and holder of a D.E.A. of social and cultural history. Sauvageons, a chronicle of the lives of northern teenagers in need of reference points, won the prix Goncourt du premier roman in 2000 as well as the Prix littéraire de la vocation the same year. He lives in Le Mans, where the action of La Chambre à remonter le temps takes place.",
"score": "1.3527434"
},
{
"id": "8988582",
"title": "Benjamin Brown (scholar)",
"text": " Benjamin Brown (born July 1, 1966 in Tel Aviv) is an Israeli professor, researcher of Judaism and Jewish thought, lecturer at the Department of Jewish thought at Hebrew University and a researcher at the Israel Democracy Institute. Brown is known for his studies on Orthodox Judaism, especially the ultra-Orthodox community, from the theological, Jewish-legal and historical perspectives. Among other topics, he was the first to trace the development of the concept Daas Torah and its various usages in the haredi (ultra-Orthodox) world. In addition, he published many papers about the Jewish legal ruling system (Halakhah), the Musar movement and the Hasidic movement. In his studies, Brown incorporates concepts, models and analytical tools originating from general philosophy, including legal philosophy.",
"score": "1.34727"
},
{
"id": "9583187",
"title": "Carl Benjamin",
"text": " Benjamin lives with his family in Swindon. He has stated that he is an atheist.",
"score": "1.338949"
},
{
"id": "2400430",
"title": "Benjamin Du Plan",
"text": " Benjamin Ribot, Seigneur du Caila et Du Plan (13 March 1688 – July 1763) was a leader of the French Huguenots. He was born into a Protestant family at the Château de la Favède, northwest of Alès. Receiving a military education, he became an officer under the name of Du Caila, but abandoned this profession in 1710 in order to promote the Protestant faith. In 1715, the same year that Louis XIV died, he met Antoine Court; they became friends and worked together, occasionally clashing on the subject of the inspirés, whom Du Plan admired. At the Synod of Nîmes in 1725 he was named Deputy General of the Reformed Churches of France. He spent four years at Geneva and one in Lausanne, where ",
"score": "1.338247"
},
{
"id": "11499336",
"title": "Witz (novel)",
"text": " In Witz, Joshua Cohen calls all religious Jews \"Affiliated\". After the sabbath meal a week before Christmas, Benjamin is born to Israel and Hanna Israelien in Joysey, the first son after 12 girls. This winter is particularly hard and in fact persists year round. Benjamin is born full grown (by a method explored by Flann O'Brien in At Swim-Two-Birds), with a beard and glasses. His foreskin continually sheds itself and grows back. Already too big for his father's shirts, he takes to his mother's maternity robes. On Christmas Eve, all of the Affiliated die except first-born sons. The Israelien's maid, Wanda, drives Benjamin down to Florida to live with his grandfather, Isaac, who is Unaffiliated. Meanwhile, a cabal of government operatives ",
"score": "1.335701"
},
{
"id": "31055809",
"title": "Marc Gafni",
"text": " , Gafni is the author of over twelve books on spirituality and religion. He wrote Radical Kabbalah, a two-volume work published by Integral Publishers in 2012. In 2012, he published Your Unique Self: The Radical Path to Personal Enlightenment with a foreword written by Wilber, which won a 2012 USA Best Book Awards in Spirituality: General category.",
"score": "1.3256752"
},
{
"id": "9583184",
"title": "Carl Benjamin",
"text": " Benjamin is an anti-feminist. He is also an advocate for Brexit and a critic of Islam. He has opposed online feminist movements such as the British group Reclaim the Internet, which he called \"social communism\". Following the 2014 Isla Vista killings, Benjamin said that social justice feminism was a \"disease of the modern age\" that had disenfranchised and radicalised young men, causing a rise in the number of mass murders. While on a panel in New York City in 2018, he said: \"Jewish people, unfortunately for them, have got to drop the identity politics. I'm sorry about the Holocaust but I don't give a shit. I'm sorry.\" In ",
"score": "1.3182164"
},
{
"id": "27831507",
"title": "Andrew S. Penson",
"text": " Penson is an Orthodox Jew. He observes the Jewish Sabbath and has raised funds for United Jewish Appeal. Penson and his wife Shannon are known for keeping a low profile and for not seeking publicity.",
"score": "1.3130673"
},
{
"id": "25195738",
"title": "Marc Michael Epstein",
"text": " Epstein is a scholar of religion, focusing on Jewish and Christian religious culture in the Middle Ages. The objects of his study are monuments of visual and material culture. He has written on various topics regarding Jewish visual and material culture, and many of his publications concern Medieval manuscript illumination. His book Skies of Parchment, Seas of Ink: Jewish Manuscript Illumination (2015) was awarded the Jewish Book Council's National Jewish Book Award (winner in Visual Arts and finalist in Scholarship. The Medieval Haggadah: Art, Narrative and Religious Imagination (2011), was named one of the “Best Books of the Year” by the London ",
"score": "1.3109269"
},
{
"id": "7839678",
"title": "Benjamin Blech",
"text": " Benjamin Blech, born in Zurich in 1933, is an Orthodox rabbi who now lives in New York City. Blech is a Professor of Talmud at Yeshiva University where he has taught since 1966, and was the rabbi of Young Israel of Oceanside for 37 years. In addition to his work in the rabbinate, Blech has written many books on Judaism and the Jewish people and speaks on Jewish topics to communities around the world.",
"score": "1.310816"
},
{
"id": "4179144",
"title": "Benjamin Maio Mackay",
"text": " Mackay is an atheist. He is bisexual and has discussed his sexuality both in diversity panels and on an episode of his podcast with Maria Lewis. He has acknowledged the lack of bisexual representation is mainstream media and is a supporter of Stephanie Beatriz's Brooklyn Nine-Nine character, as well as the positive representation on Crazy Ex-Girlfriend.",
"score": "1.3104118"
}
] | [
"Benjamin Marc Ramaroson\n Benjamin Marc Ramaroson, C.M. (born 25 April 1955 in Manakara) is Archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Antsiranana in Madagascar.",
"Benjamin Marc Balthason Ramaroson\n Benjamin Marc Balthason Ramaroson (born 1955 in Manakara) is a Malagasy clergyman and prelate for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Farafangana, and later Antsiranana. He was appointed bishop in 2005. He moved dioceses in 2013.",
"Benjamin Marc Ramaroson\n Ramaroson was ordained as a priest on 15 August 1984 for the Congregation of the Mission. He was appointed as bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Farafangana by Pope Benedict XVI and consecrated in November 2005. As was appointed Archbishop of Antsiranana in November 2013 upon the retirement of Archbishop Michel Melo.",
"Jon Benjamin (Jewish leader)\n Marc Jonathan Benjamin (born 31 October 1964) is a qualified lawyer and has held various leadership positions in NGOs and Jewish communal organisations, including as Chief Executive of the Board of Deputies of British Jews from January 2005 to May 2013 and Chief Operating Officer of World ORT from January 2014 to December 2015.",
"Jonny Benjamin\nMBE ",
"Benjamin Ramamonjisoa\n Benjamin Ramamonjisoa is a Malagasy politician. A member of the National Assembly of Madagascar, he was elected as a member of the Tiako I Madagasikara party; he represents the constituency of Antananarivo Atsimondrano.",
"Marc Gafni\n Marc Gafni (born Marc Winiarz; 1960) is an American philosopher, author, and rabbi who became a New Age spiritual teacher with a focus on Integral Theory, Eros, and \"outrageous love\". Gafni is the author of over twelve books including the award-winning Your Unique Self: The Radical Path to Personal Enlightenment. He hosted a National television show in Israel called Tachat Gafno from 1999-2002. He has been the subject of multiple allegations of sexual misconduct over many years, which he has denied.",
"Benjamin Rabenorolahy\n Benjamin Rabenorolahy (born 21 January 1940 in Morombe – 14 July 2020) was a Malagasy politician and pastor. He was the president of the Malagasy Lutheran Church (FLM - Fiangonana Loterana Malagasy) for 16 years before 2004. He was a member of the Senate of Madagascar for the Northwest Region, and did not represent any party. He died on 14 July 2020, in Antananarivo during the COVID-19 pandemic in Madagascar.",
"Benjamin Berton\n . Benjamin Berton (born 1974, Valenciennes) is a French writer.",
"Benjamin Berton\n Benjamin Berton is graduated from the Institut d’études politiques de Paris and holder of a D.E.A. of social and cultural history. Sauvageons, a chronicle of the lives of northern teenagers in need of reference points, won the prix Goncourt du premier roman in 2000 as well as the Prix littéraire de la vocation the same year. He lives in Le Mans, where the action of La Chambre à remonter le temps takes place.",
"Benjamin Brown (scholar)\n Benjamin Brown (born July 1, 1966 in Tel Aviv) is an Israeli professor, researcher of Judaism and Jewish thought, lecturer at the Department of Jewish thought at Hebrew University and a researcher at the Israel Democracy Institute. Brown is known for his studies on Orthodox Judaism, especially the ultra-Orthodox community, from the theological, Jewish-legal and historical perspectives. Among other topics, he was the first to trace the development of the concept Daas Torah and its various usages in the haredi (ultra-Orthodox) world. In addition, he published many papers about the Jewish legal ruling system (Halakhah), the Musar movement and the Hasidic movement. In his studies, Brown incorporates concepts, models and analytical tools originating from general philosophy, including legal philosophy.",
"Carl Benjamin\n Benjamin lives with his family in Swindon. He has stated that he is an atheist.",
"Benjamin Du Plan\n Benjamin Ribot, Seigneur du Caila et Du Plan (13 March 1688 – July 1763) was a leader of the French Huguenots. He was born into a Protestant family at the Château de la Favède, northwest of Alès. Receiving a military education, he became an officer under the name of Du Caila, but abandoned this profession in 1710 in order to promote the Protestant faith. In 1715, the same year that Louis XIV died, he met Antoine Court; they became friends and worked together, occasionally clashing on the subject of the inspirés, whom Du Plan admired. At the Synod of Nîmes in 1725 he was named Deputy General of the Reformed Churches of France. He spent four years at Geneva and one in Lausanne, where ",
"Witz (novel)\n In Witz, Joshua Cohen calls all religious Jews \"Affiliated\". After the sabbath meal a week before Christmas, Benjamin is born to Israel and Hanna Israelien in Joysey, the first son after 12 girls. This winter is particularly hard and in fact persists year round. Benjamin is born full grown (by a method explored by Flann O'Brien in At Swim-Two-Birds), with a beard and glasses. His foreskin continually sheds itself and grows back. Already too big for his father's shirts, he takes to his mother's maternity robes. On Christmas Eve, all of the Affiliated die except first-born sons. The Israelien's maid, Wanda, drives Benjamin down to Florida to live with his grandfather, Isaac, who is Unaffiliated. Meanwhile, a cabal of government operatives ",
"Marc Gafni\n , Gafni is the author of over twelve books on spirituality and religion. He wrote Radical Kabbalah, a two-volume work published by Integral Publishers in 2012. In 2012, he published Your Unique Self: The Radical Path to Personal Enlightenment with a foreword written by Wilber, which won a 2012 USA Best Book Awards in Spirituality: General category.",
"Carl Benjamin\n Benjamin is an anti-feminist. He is also an advocate for Brexit and a critic of Islam. He has opposed online feminist movements such as the British group Reclaim the Internet, which he called \"social communism\". Following the 2014 Isla Vista killings, Benjamin said that social justice feminism was a \"disease of the modern age\" that had disenfranchised and radicalised young men, causing a rise in the number of mass murders. While on a panel in New York City in 2018, he said: \"Jewish people, unfortunately for them, have got to drop the identity politics. I'm sorry about the Holocaust but I don't give a shit. I'm sorry.\" In ",
"Andrew S. Penson\n Penson is an Orthodox Jew. He observes the Jewish Sabbath and has raised funds for United Jewish Appeal. Penson and his wife Shannon are known for keeping a low profile and for not seeking publicity.",
"Marc Michael Epstein\n Epstein is a scholar of religion, focusing on Jewish and Christian religious culture in the Middle Ages. The objects of his study are monuments of visual and material culture. He has written on various topics regarding Jewish visual and material culture, and many of his publications concern Medieval manuscript illumination. His book Skies of Parchment, Seas of Ink: Jewish Manuscript Illumination (2015) was awarded the Jewish Book Council's National Jewish Book Award (winner in Visual Arts and finalist in Scholarship. The Medieval Haggadah: Art, Narrative and Religious Imagination (2011), was named one of the “Best Books of the Year” by the London ",
"Benjamin Blech\n Benjamin Blech, born in Zurich in 1933, is an Orthodox rabbi who now lives in New York City. Blech is a Professor of Talmud at Yeshiva University where he has taught since 1966, and was the rabbi of Young Israel of Oceanside for 37 years. In addition to his work in the rabbinate, Blech has written many books on Judaism and the Jewish people and speaks on Jewish topics to communities around the world.",
"Benjamin Maio Mackay\n Mackay is an atheist. He is bisexual and has discussed his sexuality both in diversity panels and on an episode of his podcast with Maria Lewis. He has acknowledged the lack of bisexual representation is mainstream media and is a supporter of Stephanie Beatriz's Brooklyn Nine-Nine character, as well as the positive representation on Crazy Ex-Girlfriend."
] |
What is the religion of Ecclesiastical Statistics? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Ecclesiastical statistics | 3,979,417 | 3 | [
{
"id": "33157386",
"title": "Institute for the Study of Secularism in Society and Culture",
"text": " Previously named the National Survey of Religious Identification in 1990, it was renamed the American Religious Identification Survey (ARIS) in 2001. The survey was originally created as a social experiment to record the response to the \"What is your religion?\" question. They found it was necessary to ask a series of questions such as \"Do you want to have a religious funeral?\" in order to get a better grasp of the answer to the main question. The 2001 survey intended to replicate the 1990 survey. Data was collected from over 50,000 households over a 4-month period. In 2008 the ARIS again randomly called over 50,000 households and questioned adults about their religious affiliations, if any. ARIS is the survey used by the U.S. Census in the Statistical Abstract of the U.S. to show the religious distribution of the U.S. Population. The results of the ARIS have been discussed in many news reports by ABC News, The Christian Science Monitor, and USA Today.",
"score": "1.4228618"
},
{
"id": "9769363",
"title": "American Catholic Church (1915)",
"text": " the Census Bureau collects its statistics directly from congregations rather than from the officers of corporations.\" So, \"direct comparisons between the bodies as reported at the two censuses are impossible, [...] because of numerous organic changes,\" according to the United States Census Bureau. Which also stated \"a reorganization since the census of 1916 makes it impossible to identify the whole group with any of the bodies formerly presented,\" in the 1916 data, under the name \"Old Catholic Churches\"; the reorganized ACC claimed 11 organizations, with a membership of 1,367 with two church edifices. There was one organization reporting a parsonage. ",
"score": "1.4195576"
},
{
"id": "32542353",
"title": "Catholic Directory",
"text": " this long-standing and well-founded complaint of inaccurate Catholic statistics, the archbishops of the United States, at their annual conference in 1907, resolved to co-operate with the United States Census Bureau in an effort to collect correct figures. Archbishop Glennon of St. Louis was appointed a special census official by the Government for this purpose, and under his direction an enumeration of the Catholics of every parish in the United States was made. The figures thus obtained were used in the \"Directory\" for 1909. It is the first, therefore, of these publications giving statistics of population on which any reliance can be placed in respect to accuracy of detail.",
"score": "1.3957481"
},
{
"id": "4558554",
"title": "Religion in the United Kingdom",
"text": " The Annual Population Survey is a combined statistical survey of households in Great Britain which is conducted quarterly by the Office for National Statistics and combines results from the Labour Force Survey and the English, Welsh and Scottish Labour Force Survey, gathers information about the religious affiliation, reported in the table below. The change in the religious affiliation between the 2010 APS and the 2011 APS is due to a question change, which significantly influenced the final results.",
"score": "1.3805399"
},
{
"id": "12238102",
"title": "Growth of religion",
"text": " Statistics on religious adherence are difficult to gather and often contradictory; statistics for the change of religious adherence are even more so, requiring multiple surveys separated by many years using the same data gathering rules. This has only been achieved in rare cases, and then only for particular countries, such as the American Religious Identification Survey in the United States, or census data from Australia (which has included a voluntary religious question since 1911).",
"score": "1.3777807"
},
{
"id": "32831724",
"title": "Faith in the City",
"text": " The report made 61 recommendations: 38 of them to the Church of England, and 23 to the government and nation. The church was asked to identify its \"urban priority area\" parishes, according to Department for the Environment indicators relating to 1981 census data. The six indicators were: levels of unemployment, overcrowding, households lacking basic amenities, pensioners living alone, ethnic origin, and single parent households. It was to pay attention to clergy staffing levels; to adequate training programmes for ordained and lay leaders; to liturgical needs; to styles of work with children and young people; to the use of its buildings. It was also to look at its work in industrial mission, social services, social responsibility, church schools and education. The Recommendations to Government and Nation were specific – taking in the Rate Support Grant, the Urban Programme, levels of overtime working, Community Programmes, Supplementary Benefit, Child Benefit, the taxation system, ethnic records and housing availability and allocation, homelessness, \"care in the community\", Law Centres and law enforcement.",
"score": "1.3647585"
},
{
"id": "1963841",
"title": "Association of Religion Data Archives",
"text": " The primary component of the ARDA, the data archive, contains around 775 quantitative data files. ARDA staff do not themselves collect the data encompassed in these files; rather, the surveys' principal investigators submit their data to the ARDA for processing and archiving. Thus, the data files currently included in the archive originate from almost 200 different sources. Major data file contributors include the Presbyterian Panel Survey, the Southern Focus Poll, the U.S. Congregational Life Survey, and the Middletown Area Study. Data from the General Social Survey, the American National Election Studies, the World Religion Dataset, and the Pew Research Center are also available. Among the most common topics of information included are public opinions regarding social issues (e.g. abortion, homosexuality, the role of women), survey respondents' perceptions of God/the divine, and ",
"score": "1.363855"
},
{
"id": "10020405",
"title": "Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies",
"text": " The Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies (ASARB) is an American non-profit organization that brings together statisticians from various religious groups in the United States, with the aim of compiling accurate statistics regarding all such groups. It was established in 1935 and is based in Lenexa, Kansas. Since 1990, it has sponsored the US Religion Census, a national survey of Americans' religious beliefs conducted independently of, but at the same time as, the United States Census. This survey had previously been conducted by the National Council of Churches. It has become increasingly important since the US Census stopped asking Americans about their religion after World War II.",
"score": "1.3620429"
},
{
"id": "11523293",
"title": "Demographics of the United States",
"text": " The United States government does not collect religious data in its census. The survey below, the American Religious Identification Survey (ARIS) 2008, was a random digit-dialed telephone survey of 54,461 American residential households in the contiguous United States. The 1990 sample size was 113,723; 2001 sample size was 50,281. Adult respondents were asked the open-ended question, \"What is your religion, if any?\". Interviewers did not prompt or offer a suggested list of potential answers. The religion of the spouse or partner was also asked. If the initial answer was \"Protestant\" or \"Christian\" further questions were asked to probe which particular denomination. About one-third of the sample was asked more detailed demographic questions. Religious Self-Identification of the U.S. Adult Population: 1990, 2001, 2008 Figures are not adjusted for refusals to reply; investigators suspect refusals are possibly more representative of \"no religion\" than any other group.",
"score": "1.3567001"
},
{
"id": "25632568",
"title": "Anglican Orthodox Church",
"text": " The Anglican Orthodox Church today firmly holds to the Thirty-nine Articles of Religion, the use of the 1928 Book of Common Prayer, The Books of Homilies, and the King James Version of the Bible. The Bible is believed by the AOC to be the divinely inspired word of God and to contain all that is necessary for salvation. Additionally, the church preaches the importance of biblical morality both in an individual's life and as public policy. The AOC strongly identifies itself as being in the Anglican Low Church tradition and rejects the use of the title \"Father\" for its clergy, many of the priestly vestments commonly used in other Anglican jurisdictions, and any veneration of the saints. The church has been led by Jerry L. Ogles of Enterprise, Alabama, since 22 October 2000. He is the Presiding ",
"score": "1.3525113"
},
{
"id": "29367657",
"title": "Religion in the United States",
"text": "The Catholic Church, 68,202,492 members ; The Southern Baptist Convention, 16,136,044 members ; The United Methodist Church, 7,679,850 members ; The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 6,157,238 members ; The Church of God in Christ, 5,499,875 members The most popular religion in the U.S. is Christianity, comprising the majority of the population (73.7% of adults in 2016). According to the Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies newsletter published March 2017, based on data from 2010, Christians were the largest religious population in all 3,143 counties in the country. Roughly 48.9% of Americans are Protestants, 23.0% are Catholics, 1.8% are Mormons (members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints). Christianity was introduced during the period of European colonization. The United States has the world's ",
"score": "1.343709"
},
{
"id": "1438770",
"title": "René Vilatte",
"text": " for the reason that the Census Bureau collects its statistics directly from congregations rather than from the officers of corporations.\" So, \"direct comparisons between the bodies as reported at the two censuses are impossible, [...] because of numerous organic changes\", according to the United States Census Bureau. Which also stated \"a reorganization since the census of 1916 makes it impossible to identify the whole group with any of the bodies formerly presented\", in the 1916 data, under the name \"Old Catholic Churches\"; the reorganized ACC claimed 11 organizations served by an unreported number of ministers, with a membership of 1,367 with ",
"score": "1.3435922"
},
{
"id": "3237966",
"title": "Great Britain",
"text": " Christianity has been the largest religion by number of adherents since the Early Middle Ages: it was introduced under the ancient Romans, developing as Celtic Christianity. According to tradition, Christianity arrived in the 1st or 2nd century. The most popular form is Anglicanism (known as Episcopalism in Scotland). Dating from the 16th-century Reformation, it regards itself as both Catholic and Reformed. The Head of the Church is the monarch of the United Kingdom, as the Supreme Governor. It has the status of established church in England. There are just over 26 million adherents to Anglicanism in Britain today, although only around one million regularly attend services. The second largest Christian practice is the Latin ",
"score": "1.3323114"
},
{
"id": "12238103",
"title": "Growth of religion",
"text": " The World Religion Database (WRD) is a peer-reviewed database of international religious statistics based on research conducted at the Institute on Culture, Religion & World Affairs at Boston University. It is published by Brill and is the most comprehensive database of religious demographics available to scholars, providing data for all of the world's countries. Adherence data is largely compiled from census and surveys. The database groups adherents into 18 broadly-defined categories: Agnostics, Atheists, Baháʼís, Buddhists, Chinese folk-religionists, Christians, Confucianists, Daoists, Ethnoreligionists, Hindus, Jains, Jews, Muslims, New Religionists, Shintoists, Sikhs, Spiritists, and Zoroastrians. The WRD is edited by demographers Todd M. Johnson and Brian J. Grim.",
"score": "1.3321943"
},
{
"id": "10804526",
"title": "Finnish Youth Survey Series",
"text": " created the world like it says in the Bible, that everything is predestined, etc. Feelings of life control and general satisfaction with life were charted. Views were also probed on what happens after death, and whether the Church is capable of providing good answers to moral, spiritual or social problems and needs. The respondents were asked how important they considered certain activities and services carried out by parishes to be. Voting behaviour in church elections was investigated. Background variables included the respondent's gender, age, household composition, vocational education, and the education, age and occupation of R's parents, R's current educational or employment situation, type of employment contract, economic activity and occupational status, region and province of residence, type of municipality.",
"score": "1.3314228"
},
{
"id": "5520748",
"title": "A Practical Reference to Religious Diversity for Operational Police and Emergency Services",
"text": " regarding religious determined behaviors and their impact on policing (see 1st ed. forward) in 1999. The first edition covered Buddhist, Hindu, Islamic, Jewish and Sikh faiths with participation of representatives of the various religions. Religion Statistics for National totals and by State and Territories from census 1996 were also included. It was sponsored by a collection of multicultural organizations from across Australia. It offered a two-page summary of the religion, issues on death, gender roles, sensitivity issues (gestures or interactions that cause offence), how to allow the taking of an oath, possible conflicts with religious calendars or events, and dealing with proper behavior at temples and members of its staff. The second edition added ",
"score": "1.3286896"
},
{
"id": "14338955",
"title": "Protestantism by country",
"text": "List of religious populations ; Buddhism by country ; Hinduism by country ; Islam by country ; Irreligion § Demographics ; Jewish population by country ; Bahá'í statistics ",
"score": "1.3284414"
},
{
"id": "4315962",
"title": "Church of England",
"text": " the Church of England has used English in the liturgy. The church contains several doctrinal strands, the main three being known as Anglo-Catholic, evangelical and broad church. Tensions between theological conservatives and progressives find expression in debates over the ordination of women and homosexuality. The church includes both liberal and conservative clergy and members. The governing structure of the church is based on dioceses, each presided over by a bishop. Within each diocese are local parishes. The General Synod of the Church of England is the legislative body for the church and comprises bishops, other clergy and laity. Its measures must be approved by both Houses of Parliament.",
"score": "1.3282087"
},
{
"id": "31189402",
"title": "Protestantism in the United Kingdom",
"text": " that the number of citizens who belonged to a religion and attended services at any church had decreased by 41% in 41 years, while those who said they did not belong to any religion and did not attend services increased by 35% in the same amount of time. These numbers point to the increasing secularization of the country. According to the 31st British Social Attitudes Survey, the percentage of people identifying as Church of England/Anglican has fallen from 27% in 2003 to 16% in 2013, a drop of 59%. The number of people who say they have no religion has increased by more than 16%, from 43% to 50%, overtaking the proportion of people who claim a religious affiliation. The report also ",
"score": "1.327152"
},
{
"id": "12238047",
"title": "Growth of religion",
"text": " 107 million Christians died, meaning that the natural increase in the Christian population – i.e., the number of births minus the number of deaths – was 116 million over this period\". According to Mark Jürgensmeyer of the University of California, popular Protestantism is one of the most dynamic religious movements in the contemporary world. According to various scholars and sources Pentecostalism – a Protestant Christian movement – is the fastest growing religion in the world, this growth is primarily due to religious conversion. According to Pulitzer Center 35,000 people become Pentecostal or \"Born again\" everyday. According to scholar Keith Smith of ",
"score": "1.3252037"
}
] | [
"Institute for the Study of Secularism in Society and Culture\n Previously named the National Survey of Religious Identification in 1990, it was renamed the American Religious Identification Survey (ARIS) in 2001. The survey was originally created as a social experiment to record the response to the \"What is your religion?\" question. They found it was necessary to ask a series of questions such as \"Do you want to have a religious funeral?\" in order to get a better grasp of the answer to the main question. The 2001 survey intended to replicate the 1990 survey. Data was collected from over 50,000 households over a 4-month period. In 2008 the ARIS again randomly called over 50,000 households and questioned adults about their religious affiliations, if any. ARIS is the survey used by the U.S. Census in the Statistical Abstract of the U.S. to show the religious distribution of the U.S. Population. The results of the ARIS have been discussed in many news reports by ABC News, The Christian Science Monitor, and USA Today.",
"American Catholic Church (1915)\n the Census Bureau collects its statistics directly from congregations rather than from the officers of corporations.\" So, \"direct comparisons between the bodies as reported at the two censuses are impossible, [...] because of numerous organic changes,\" according to the United States Census Bureau. Which also stated \"a reorganization since the census of 1916 makes it impossible to identify the whole group with any of the bodies formerly presented,\" in the 1916 data, under the name \"Old Catholic Churches\"; the reorganized ACC claimed 11 organizations, with a membership of 1,367 with two church edifices. There was one organization reporting a parsonage. ",
"Catholic Directory\n this long-standing and well-founded complaint of inaccurate Catholic statistics, the archbishops of the United States, at their annual conference in 1907, resolved to co-operate with the United States Census Bureau in an effort to collect correct figures. Archbishop Glennon of St. Louis was appointed a special census official by the Government for this purpose, and under his direction an enumeration of the Catholics of every parish in the United States was made. The figures thus obtained were used in the \"Directory\" for 1909. It is the first, therefore, of these publications giving statistics of population on which any reliance can be placed in respect to accuracy of detail.",
"Religion in the United Kingdom\n The Annual Population Survey is a combined statistical survey of households in Great Britain which is conducted quarterly by the Office for National Statistics and combines results from the Labour Force Survey and the English, Welsh and Scottish Labour Force Survey, gathers information about the religious affiliation, reported in the table below. The change in the religious affiliation between the 2010 APS and the 2011 APS is due to a question change, which significantly influenced the final results.",
"Growth of religion\n Statistics on religious adherence are difficult to gather and often contradictory; statistics for the change of religious adherence are even more so, requiring multiple surveys separated by many years using the same data gathering rules. This has only been achieved in rare cases, and then only for particular countries, such as the American Religious Identification Survey in the United States, or census data from Australia (which has included a voluntary religious question since 1911).",
"Faith in the City\n The report made 61 recommendations: 38 of them to the Church of England, and 23 to the government and nation. The church was asked to identify its \"urban priority area\" parishes, according to Department for the Environment indicators relating to 1981 census data. The six indicators were: levels of unemployment, overcrowding, households lacking basic amenities, pensioners living alone, ethnic origin, and single parent households. It was to pay attention to clergy staffing levels; to adequate training programmes for ordained and lay leaders; to liturgical needs; to styles of work with children and young people; to the use of its buildings. It was also to look at its work in industrial mission, social services, social responsibility, church schools and education. The Recommendations to Government and Nation were specific – taking in the Rate Support Grant, the Urban Programme, levels of overtime working, Community Programmes, Supplementary Benefit, Child Benefit, the taxation system, ethnic records and housing availability and allocation, homelessness, \"care in the community\", Law Centres and law enforcement.",
"Association of Religion Data Archives\n The primary component of the ARDA, the data archive, contains around 775 quantitative data files. ARDA staff do not themselves collect the data encompassed in these files; rather, the surveys' principal investigators submit their data to the ARDA for processing and archiving. Thus, the data files currently included in the archive originate from almost 200 different sources. Major data file contributors include the Presbyterian Panel Survey, the Southern Focus Poll, the U.S. Congregational Life Survey, and the Middletown Area Study. Data from the General Social Survey, the American National Election Studies, the World Religion Dataset, and the Pew Research Center are also available. Among the most common topics of information included are public opinions regarding social issues (e.g. abortion, homosexuality, the role of women), survey respondents' perceptions of God/the divine, and ",
"Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies\n The Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies (ASARB) is an American non-profit organization that brings together statisticians from various religious groups in the United States, with the aim of compiling accurate statistics regarding all such groups. It was established in 1935 and is based in Lenexa, Kansas. Since 1990, it has sponsored the US Religion Census, a national survey of Americans' religious beliefs conducted independently of, but at the same time as, the United States Census. This survey had previously been conducted by the National Council of Churches. It has become increasingly important since the US Census stopped asking Americans about their religion after World War II.",
"Demographics of the United States\n The United States government does not collect religious data in its census. The survey below, the American Religious Identification Survey (ARIS) 2008, was a random digit-dialed telephone survey of 54,461 American residential households in the contiguous United States. The 1990 sample size was 113,723; 2001 sample size was 50,281. Adult respondents were asked the open-ended question, \"What is your religion, if any?\". Interviewers did not prompt or offer a suggested list of potential answers. The religion of the spouse or partner was also asked. If the initial answer was \"Protestant\" or \"Christian\" further questions were asked to probe which particular denomination. About one-third of the sample was asked more detailed demographic questions. Religious Self-Identification of the U.S. Adult Population: 1990, 2001, 2008 Figures are not adjusted for refusals to reply; investigators suspect refusals are possibly more representative of \"no religion\" than any other group.",
"Anglican Orthodox Church\n The Anglican Orthodox Church today firmly holds to the Thirty-nine Articles of Religion, the use of the 1928 Book of Common Prayer, The Books of Homilies, and the King James Version of the Bible. The Bible is believed by the AOC to be the divinely inspired word of God and to contain all that is necessary for salvation. Additionally, the church preaches the importance of biblical morality both in an individual's life and as public policy. The AOC strongly identifies itself as being in the Anglican Low Church tradition and rejects the use of the title \"Father\" for its clergy, many of the priestly vestments commonly used in other Anglican jurisdictions, and any veneration of the saints. The church has been led by Jerry L. Ogles of Enterprise, Alabama, since 22 October 2000. He is the Presiding ",
"Religion in the United States\nThe Catholic Church, 68,202,492 members ; The Southern Baptist Convention, 16,136,044 members ; The United Methodist Church, 7,679,850 members ; The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 6,157,238 members ; The Church of God in Christ, 5,499,875 members The most popular religion in the U.S. is Christianity, comprising the majority of the population (73.7% of adults in 2016). According to the Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies newsletter published March 2017, based on data from 2010, Christians were the largest religious population in all 3,143 counties in the country. Roughly 48.9% of Americans are Protestants, 23.0% are Catholics, 1.8% are Mormons (members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints). Christianity was introduced during the period of European colonization. The United States has the world's ",
"René Vilatte\n for the reason that the Census Bureau collects its statistics directly from congregations rather than from the officers of corporations.\" So, \"direct comparisons between the bodies as reported at the two censuses are impossible, [...] because of numerous organic changes\", according to the United States Census Bureau. Which also stated \"a reorganization since the census of 1916 makes it impossible to identify the whole group with any of the bodies formerly presented\", in the 1916 data, under the name \"Old Catholic Churches\"; the reorganized ACC claimed 11 organizations served by an unreported number of ministers, with a membership of 1,367 with ",
"Great Britain\n Christianity has been the largest religion by number of adherents since the Early Middle Ages: it was introduced under the ancient Romans, developing as Celtic Christianity. According to tradition, Christianity arrived in the 1st or 2nd century. The most popular form is Anglicanism (known as Episcopalism in Scotland). Dating from the 16th-century Reformation, it regards itself as both Catholic and Reformed. The Head of the Church is the monarch of the United Kingdom, as the Supreme Governor. It has the status of established church in England. There are just over 26 million adherents to Anglicanism in Britain today, although only around one million regularly attend services. The second largest Christian practice is the Latin ",
"Growth of religion\n The World Religion Database (WRD) is a peer-reviewed database of international religious statistics based on research conducted at the Institute on Culture, Religion & World Affairs at Boston University. It is published by Brill and is the most comprehensive database of religious demographics available to scholars, providing data for all of the world's countries. Adherence data is largely compiled from census and surveys. The database groups adherents into 18 broadly-defined categories: Agnostics, Atheists, Baháʼís, Buddhists, Chinese folk-religionists, Christians, Confucianists, Daoists, Ethnoreligionists, Hindus, Jains, Jews, Muslims, New Religionists, Shintoists, Sikhs, Spiritists, and Zoroastrians. The WRD is edited by demographers Todd M. Johnson and Brian J. Grim.",
"Finnish Youth Survey Series\n created the world like it says in the Bible, that everything is predestined, etc. Feelings of life control and general satisfaction with life were charted. Views were also probed on what happens after death, and whether the Church is capable of providing good answers to moral, spiritual or social problems and needs. The respondents were asked how important they considered certain activities and services carried out by parishes to be. Voting behaviour in church elections was investigated. Background variables included the respondent's gender, age, household composition, vocational education, and the education, age and occupation of R's parents, R's current educational or employment situation, type of employment contract, economic activity and occupational status, region and province of residence, type of municipality.",
"A Practical Reference to Religious Diversity for Operational Police and Emergency Services\n regarding religious determined behaviors and their impact on policing (see 1st ed. forward) in 1999. The first edition covered Buddhist, Hindu, Islamic, Jewish and Sikh faiths with participation of representatives of the various religions. Religion Statistics for National totals and by State and Territories from census 1996 were also included. It was sponsored by a collection of multicultural organizations from across Australia. It offered a two-page summary of the religion, issues on death, gender roles, sensitivity issues (gestures or interactions that cause offence), how to allow the taking of an oath, possible conflicts with religious calendars or events, and dealing with proper behavior at temples and members of its staff. The second edition added ",
"Protestantism by country\nList of religious populations ; Buddhism by country ; Hinduism by country ; Islam by country ; Irreligion § Demographics ; Jewish population by country ; Bahá'í statistics ",
"Church of England\n the Church of England has used English in the liturgy. The church contains several doctrinal strands, the main three being known as Anglo-Catholic, evangelical and broad church. Tensions between theological conservatives and progressives find expression in debates over the ordination of women and homosexuality. The church includes both liberal and conservative clergy and members. The governing structure of the church is based on dioceses, each presided over by a bishop. Within each diocese are local parishes. The General Synod of the Church of England is the legislative body for the church and comprises bishops, other clergy and laity. Its measures must be approved by both Houses of Parliament.",
"Protestantism in the United Kingdom\n that the number of citizens who belonged to a religion and attended services at any church had decreased by 41% in 41 years, while those who said they did not belong to any religion and did not attend services increased by 35% in the same amount of time. These numbers point to the increasing secularization of the country. According to the 31st British Social Attitudes Survey, the percentage of people identifying as Church of England/Anglican has fallen from 27% in 2003 to 16% in 2013, a drop of 59%. The number of people who say they have no religion has increased by more than 16%, from 43% to 50%, overtaking the proportion of people who claim a religious affiliation. The report also ",
"Growth of religion\n 107 million Christians died, meaning that the natural increase in the Christian population – i.e., the number of births minus the number of deaths – was 116 million over this period\". According to Mark Jürgensmeyer of the University of California, popular Protestantism is one of the most dynamic religious movements in the contemporary world. According to various scholars and sources Pentecostalism – a Protestant Christian movement – is the fastest growing religion in the world, this growth is primarily due to religious conversion. According to Pulitzer Center 35,000 people become Pentecostal or \"Born again\" everyday. According to scholar Keith Smith of "
] |
What is the religion of Ioan Duma? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Ioan Duma | 4,570,888 | 86 | [
{
"id": "11689215",
"title": "Ioan Duma",
"text": " Ioan Duma (November 5, 1896 — July 16, 1981) was a Romanian cleric and a titular bishop of the Roman Catholic Church. Born in Valea Mare, Bacău County, he studied at the Franciscan seminary in Hălăucești and in Rome. Ordained there in 1924, he returned to Romania to serve in the parishes at Săbăoani and Hălăuceşti, also teaching at the seminary in the latter place, and officiating at Franciscan convents in Transylvania in 1944. In 1948, nuncio Gerald Patrick O'Hara consecrated him bishop in secret, without the approval of the new communist authorities. For the next two years, he undertook activities against the regime, and was arrested in 1951 by the Securitate secret police. Sentenced to four years' imprisonment for \"spying on behalf of the Vatican\", he was ",
"score": "1.7148743"
},
{
"id": "11689216",
"title": "Ioan Duma",
"text": " when his term expired in 1955 and forced to live and work as a parish priest first in Iaşi, then in Mihail Kogălniceanu, Constanţa County. In 1957, he was nearly arrested again, an order to the effect having been signed by Interior Minister Alexandru Drăghici. A year later, he was investigated after attending his mother's funeral near his native village, his personal papers confiscated. In 1960, wishing to isolate and watch him more closely, the Securitate sent him to live at Târgu Jiu. In 1971, he was allowed to visit Pope Paul VI in Rome. He was no longer under supervision after 1975, as the Securitate considered the aged and ill prelate no longer posed a threat. He died in Târgu Jiu and was buried in Valea Mare.",
"score": "1.518141"
},
{
"id": "28846889",
"title": "Faraoani",
"text": "Anton Coșa ; Ioan Duma ",
"score": "1.5101709"
},
{
"id": "29636159",
"title": "Religion in Moldova",
"text": " Although the Constitution declares the separation of church and state, the Moldovan Orthodox Church (Metropolis of Chișinău and All Moldova under the Russian Orthodox Church) is sometimes active in political debate. In June 2010 Metropolitan Vladimir featured in the campaign advertisements of Valeriu Pasat, apparently endorsing his candidacy. In October 2015 the same Orthodox Church leveraged its authority in a failed attempt to influence the trial of former prime minister Vlad Filat, who was accused of passive corruption and traffic of influence. In December 2015 the Metropolis of Chișinău and All Moldova challenged the State Tax Service of the Republic ",
"score": "1.4805112"
},
{
"id": "3575380",
"title": "Duma (epic)",
"text": " The relationship between the military and the religion with dumy originated in the Cossack rebellion of 1648. Ukraine fell under the control of the Catholic Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, that imposed discriminatory measures on the Eastern Orthodox Church. This rebellion was followed by “partition and eventual subjugation of the Ukrainian lands and the Ukrainian church. The Cossacks rebelled against the religious oppression and their lands were eventually lost to the oppressor. This causes a great dilemma in the church because the Cossacks were defenders of the faith, and since they lost, and the faith is infallible, the Cossacks themselves must have done something sinful. This is why dumy has a great religious undertone and is a song that tells of death and defeat, not of victory.",
"score": "1.4604219"
},
{
"id": "15610318",
"title": "Io (princely title)",
"text": " to ktitor Vasile Lupu as Io Vasilie voievod. During the 1860s and '70s, a period which resulted in the consolidation of union as the \"Kingdom of Romania\", the forgotten origins of Io became the object of scrutiny by historical linguists; this began in 1863 with an overview by Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu. Cuza was deposed by a \"monstrous coalition\" in early 1866, and Carol of Hohenzollern eventually took his place as Domnitor. In April of that year, Alexandru Papiu Ilarian, emphasizing the need to Romanianize this foreign arrival, proposed in Parliament that he be titled as Ioan Carol. In arguing for this, ",
"score": "1.4468871"
},
{
"id": "29636160",
"title": "Religion in Moldova",
"text": " Moldova, refusing to provide revenue reports, although religious organizations lost their tax-exempt status in 2013. In 2016, on the eve of the first round of the presidential elections, metropolitan bishop Vladimir called on church members to cast their votes for Igor Dodon, the pro-Russian leader of the Party of Socialists of the Republic of Moldova. A group of Moldovan clergy of the same church, headed by bishop Marchel, later called on citizens to vote for Igor Dodon in the November election runoff, stating that the Socialist candidate supported the Orthodox Church, while his competitor Maia Sandu would fight against it.",
"score": "1.435686"
},
{
"id": "30498606",
"title": "Irreligion in Russia",
"text": " a certain period of time, among the courtiers of the Russian Empire, the Empress was popular with jokes about religion, the demonstration of godlessness and the exaltation of Voltaire as a philosopher who came to the world in order to free him from superstition. Voltaire himself, referring to the state of religion in the Russian Empire, said: \"... the whole yard of the Russian Empire ... consists of deists, despite all the superstitions with which the Greek church is still permeated.\" The doctrine was successful not only among representatives of the higher class, like the princess Yekaterina Vorontsova-Dashkova, князь Alexander Michailowitsch Belosselski ",
"score": "1.4115548"
},
{
"id": "27360071",
"title": "2016 in Romania",
"text": "13 May – Doina Florica Ignat, politician, member of the Senate of Romania (b. 1938) ; 14 May – Neculai Alexandru Ursu, linguist, philologist and literary historian (b. 1926) ; 17 May – Alexandru Lăpușan, politician, Minister of Agriculture (b. 1955) ; 20 May ; Vasile Duță, politician, member of the Senate of Romania (b. 1955) ; Bogdan Ulmu, theatre director and writer (b. 1951) ; 22 May – Dan Condrea, businessman (b. 1975) ; 25 May – József Tempfli, Roman Catholic bishop (b. 1931) ; 26 May – Ted Dumitru, football manager (b. 1939) ; 30 May – Andrei Ciontu, engineer (b. 1933) ; 31 May – Mihail Gabriel Corgoja, economist (b. 1977) ",
"score": "1.4073172"
},
{
"id": "1085370",
"title": "Anti-religious campaign of Communist Romania",
"text": " the Pope and Ecumenical Patriarch. In 1963, the Society for the Dissemination of Science and Culture (an organization meant to promote atheism) published brochures against religion: 'Adam and Eve our Ancestors?', 'When and Why Did Religion Appear?', 'The Origin of Christianity', 'Anthology of Atheism in Romania' and 'The Bible in Pictures'. The work by the French atheist Léo Taxil, 'La Bible amusante', was also translated into Romanian and published. Romania's leader, Gheorghiu-Dej, told the Austrian ambassador in 1964: \"…as long as the church has no political power and the state has full control of the education of the young I am not against religion.\" In 1965, after Khrushchev had ",
"score": "1.4057543"
},
{
"id": "12637835",
"title": "Patriarch Miron of Romania",
"text": " state, for instance, in 1920, Cristea asked the clergymen to aid the state financially by encouraging the faithful to buy government bonds. Cristea's discourse incorporated nationalist and statist elements, arguing that Orthodox religion was integral to the Romanian soul, and he argued that the church's values include \"patriotism\" and \"obedience to [civil] authorities\" alongside \"faith and morality\". Cristea introduced reforms such as the Gregorian calendar to the church, including, briefly, the celebration of Pascha (Easter) on the same date as the Roman Catholic Church. This was opposed by various groups of traditionalists and Old Calendarists, especially in Moldavia, where Metropolitan Gurie Grosu ",
"score": "1.4024119"
},
{
"id": "8971255",
"title": "Sofronie of Cioara",
"text": " in a continuous present, in which ancient beliefs and practices were the models for everyday life. Religion determined their earthly frame of reference, for whenever they thought about membership in a larger community beyond the family or the village, they considered themselves part of the Orthodox world. An ethnic consciousness clearly existed -they were aware of the differences between themselves and the Serbs, for example, and they clung to their 'Wallachian religion'- but the idea of nation as the natural context within which they should live was foreign to them. The intellectuals linked with the Romanian Greek-Catholic Church had a ",
"score": "1.4005951"
},
{
"id": "7420083",
"title": "Dumitru C. Moruzi",
"text": " favorably of Romanian nationalism, trying to obtain Romania's support for a looming war between Russia and the Triple Alliance; he was also proposing the partition of Bessarabia and Bukovina between the two allied nations. Moruzi, who believed that Durnovo spoke for the Russian Government, welcomed the change of policy. He acknowledged that a liberal Russia was a comfortable ally for Romania, but asked for guarantees that Russian imperialism would be curbed. He also accused Durnovo of hypocrisy, noting that Bessarabia was not traditionally Russian, but had been colonized with \"Khokhols\". He therefore rejected partition on principle. As Iorga recalled, both of Moruzi's novels were accomplished and \"vibrated ",
"score": "1.3997577"
},
{
"id": "2053075",
"title": "Freedom of religion in Romania",
"text": " By law, there are 18 religious organizations recognized as \"religious denominations,\" all of which were in existence at the time the specific law on religion was enacted in 2006. They include the Romanian Orthodox Church; Orthodox Serb Bishopric of Timișoara; Roman Catholic Church; Greek Catholic Church; Old Rite Russian Christian (Orthodox) Church; Reformed (Protestant) Church; Christian Evangelical Church; Romanian Evangelical Church; Evangelical Augustinian Church; Lutheran Evangelical Church; Unitarian Church; the Baptist Church; Pentecostal Church; Seventh-day Adventist Church; Armenian Apostolic Church; Federation of Jewish Communities; Muslim Denomination (Sunni Islam); and Jehovah’s Witnesses. For additional organizations to obtain recognition as religious denominations, the law specifies they must demonstrate 12 years of continuous activity since the law’s passage, which cannot occur before 2018. After it demonstrates 12 years of continuous activity, a religious association is ",
"score": "1.392766"
},
{
"id": "29636154",
"title": "Religion in Moldova",
"text": " The primary religion is Christianity, 90.1% of the population nominally being Eastern Orthodox according to data of the 2014 census. Administratively, there are two autonomous churches belonging to two autocephalous churches (Russian and Romanian) within the Eastern Orthodox communion. The autonomous Metropolis of Chişinău and Moldova (belonging to the Russian Orthodox Church), according to the State Service on Religious Issues, has 1,194 parishes; the autonomous Metropolis of Bessarabia (belonging to the Romanian Orthodox Church) has 124 parishes. Besides followers of the Old Rite Russian Orthodox Church (Old Believers) make up approximately 0.09% of the population. The religious traditions of Eastern Orthodoxy are entwined with the culture and patrimony of the country. Many self-professed atheists routinely celebrate religious holidays, cross themselves, and even light candles and kiss icons if local tradition and the occasion demand. During the 2004 census, 93.34% of the population declared themselves to be Eastern Orthodox.",
"score": "1.3923954"
},
{
"id": "33067044",
"title": "Baháʼí Faith in Moldova",
"text": " Most of today's Republic of Moldova, formerly known as Bessarabia until 1812, was annexed by the Russian Empire. Moldavia was a Mediaeval principality in Europe which was part of the basis of the modern Romanian state; at various times, the state included the regions of Bessarabia. The western part of Moldavia is now part of Romania, the eastern part belongs to the independent state of Moldova, while the northern and south-eastern parts are territories of Ukraine. See History of Moldova and History of Moldavia. Additionally Transnistria is a breakaway republic within the internationally recognised borders of Moldova. Although not recognized by any state or international organisation and de jure part of Moldova, it is de facto independent.",
"score": "1.3900235"
},
{
"id": "1085352",
"title": "Anti-religious campaign of Communist Romania",
"text": " maintain institutions for general education, but may only operate special theological schools for training ministers necessary to their religious service under State control. The Romanian Orthodox Church is autocephalous and unitary in its organisation. The method of organisation and the functioning of the religious denominations will be established by law.\" The Ministry of Education ordered the removal of religious objects from schools (including many icons), and replaced them with pictures of communist leaders. The anti-religious work in the schools was resisted by parents who did not send their children to the schools at the beginning of the school year and by teachers ",
"score": "1.3864896"
},
{
"id": "29636153",
"title": "Religion in Moldova",
"text": " Religion in Moldova is predominantly Orthodox Christian. The Constitution of the Republic of Moldova provides for freedom of religion, and the national government generally respects this right in practice. Although Eastern Orthodoxy has a numerical preponderance, there is no state religion, and state and church are officially separate. The generally amicable relationship among religions in Moldovan society contributes to religious freedom; however, disputes among various branches of the Orthodox Church continue. Other religions practiced in Moldova include Judaism.",
"score": "1.3860756"
},
{
"id": "2053056",
"title": "Freedom of religion in Romania",
"text": " According to a 2011 government census, Romanian Orthodox Church adherents constitute 86.5 percent of the population and Roman Catholics almost 5 percent. According to the census, less than one percent of the population is Greek Catholic; however, Greek Catholics estimate their numbers at about 2 percent of the population. Other religious groups include Old Rite Russian Christians; Protestants, including Reformed Protestants, Pentecostals, Baptists, Seventh-day Adventists, and other Protestant denominations; Jews; Muslims; Jehovah’s Witnesses; Baháʼís; The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints; Zen Buddhists; the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification; and the International Society of Krishna Consciousness. Atheists and nonbelievers represent less than 1 percent of the population. According to the ",
"score": "1.3849711"
},
{
"id": "11629391",
"title": "Eastern Orthodoxy in Moldova",
"text": " Bessarabia, the eastern half of the Principality of Moldavia, was annexed by the Russian Empire in 1812, including the territory constituting the Chişinău Eparchy, which was reorganized and placed under the Russian Orthodox Church. Its first Metropolitan was Gavril Bănulescu-Bodoni, a popular promoter of the Romanian language and culture. Its last metropolitan was Anastasios, the future first-hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad.",
"score": "1.38477"
}
] | [
"Ioan Duma\n Ioan Duma (November 5, 1896 — July 16, 1981) was a Romanian cleric and a titular bishop of the Roman Catholic Church. Born in Valea Mare, Bacău County, he studied at the Franciscan seminary in Hălăucești and in Rome. Ordained there in 1924, he returned to Romania to serve in the parishes at Săbăoani and Hălăuceşti, also teaching at the seminary in the latter place, and officiating at Franciscan convents in Transylvania in 1944. In 1948, nuncio Gerald Patrick O'Hara consecrated him bishop in secret, without the approval of the new communist authorities. For the next two years, he undertook activities against the regime, and was arrested in 1951 by the Securitate secret police. Sentenced to four years' imprisonment for \"spying on behalf of the Vatican\", he was ",
"Ioan Duma\n when his term expired in 1955 and forced to live and work as a parish priest first in Iaşi, then in Mihail Kogălniceanu, Constanţa County. In 1957, he was nearly arrested again, an order to the effect having been signed by Interior Minister Alexandru Drăghici. A year later, he was investigated after attending his mother's funeral near his native village, his personal papers confiscated. In 1960, wishing to isolate and watch him more closely, the Securitate sent him to live at Târgu Jiu. In 1971, he was allowed to visit Pope Paul VI in Rome. He was no longer under supervision after 1975, as the Securitate considered the aged and ill prelate no longer posed a threat. He died in Târgu Jiu and was buried in Valea Mare.",
"Faraoani\nAnton Coșa ; Ioan Duma ",
"Religion in Moldova\n Although the Constitution declares the separation of church and state, the Moldovan Orthodox Church (Metropolis of Chișinău and All Moldova under the Russian Orthodox Church) is sometimes active in political debate. In June 2010 Metropolitan Vladimir featured in the campaign advertisements of Valeriu Pasat, apparently endorsing his candidacy. In October 2015 the same Orthodox Church leveraged its authority in a failed attempt to influence the trial of former prime minister Vlad Filat, who was accused of passive corruption and traffic of influence. In December 2015 the Metropolis of Chișinău and All Moldova challenged the State Tax Service of the Republic ",
"Duma (epic)\n The relationship between the military and the religion with dumy originated in the Cossack rebellion of 1648. Ukraine fell under the control of the Catholic Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, that imposed discriminatory measures on the Eastern Orthodox Church. This rebellion was followed by “partition and eventual subjugation of the Ukrainian lands and the Ukrainian church. The Cossacks rebelled against the religious oppression and their lands were eventually lost to the oppressor. This causes a great dilemma in the church because the Cossacks were defenders of the faith, and since they lost, and the faith is infallible, the Cossacks themselves must have done something sinful. This is why dumy has a great religious undertone and is a song that tells of death and defeat, not of victory.",
"Io (princely title)\n to ktitor Vasile Lupu as Io Vasilie voievod. During the 1860s and '70s, a period which resulted in the consolidation of union as the \"Kingdom of Romania\", the forgotten origins of Io became the object of scrutiny by historical linguists; this began in 1863 with an overview by Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu. Cuza was deposed by a \"monstrous coalition\" in early 1866, and Carol of Hohenzollern eventually took his place as Domnitor. In April of that year, Alexandru Papiu Ilarian, emphasizing the need to Romanianize this foreign arrival, proposed in Parliament that he be titled as Ioan Carol. In arguing for this, ",
"Religion in Moldova\n Moldova, refusing to provide revenue reports, although religious organizations lost their tax-exempt status in 2013. In 2016, on the eve of the first round of the presidential elections, metropolitan bishop Vladimir called on church members to cast their votes for Igor Dodon, the pro-Russian leader of the Party of Socialists of the Republic of Moldova. A group of Moldovan clergy of the same church, headed by bishop Marchel, later called on citizens to vote for Igor Dodon in the November election runoff, stating that the Socialist candidate supported the Orthodox Church, while his competitor Maia Sandu would fight against it.",
"Irreligion in Russia\n a certain period of time, among the courtiers of the Russian Empire, the Empress was popular with jokes about religion, the demonstration of godlessness and the exaltation of Voltaire as a philosopher who came to the world in order to free him from superstition. Voltaire himself, referring to the state of religion in the Russian Empire, said: \"... the whole yard of the Russian Empire ... consists of deists, despite all the superstitions with which the Greek church is still permeated.\" The doctrine was successful not only among representatives of the higher class, like the princess Yekaterina Vorontsova-Dashkova, князь Alexander Michailowitsch Belosselski ",
"2016 in Romania\n13 May – Doina Florica Ignat, politician, member of the Senate of Romania (b. 1938) ; 14 May – Neculai Alexandru Ursu, linguist, philologist and literary historian (b. 1926) ; 17 May – Alexandru Lăpușan, politician, Minister of Agriculture (b. 1955) ; 20 May ; Vasile Duță, politician, member of the Senate of Romania (b. 1955) ; Bogdan Ulmu, theatre director and writer (b. 1951) ; 22 May – Dan Condrea, businessman (b. 1975) ; 25 May – József Tempfli, Roman Catholic bishop (b. 1931) ; 26 May – Ted Dumitru, football manager (b. 1939) ; 30 May – Andrei Ciontu, engineer (b. 1933) ; 31 May – Mihail Gabriel Corgoja, economist (b. 1977) ",
"Anti-religious campaign of Communist Romania\n the Pope and Ecumenical Patriarch. In 1963, the Society for the Dissemination of Science and Culture (an organization meant to promote atheism) published brochures against religion: 'Adam and Eve our Ancestors?', 'When and Why Did Religion Appear?', 'The Origin of Christianity', 'Anthology of Atheism in Romania' and 'The Bible in Pictures'. The work by the French atheist Léo Taxil, 'La Bible amusante', was also translated into Romanian and published. Romania's leader, Gheorghiu-Dej, told the Austrian ambassador in 1964: \"…as long as the church has no political power and the state has full control of the education of the young I am not against religion.\" In 1965, after Khrushchev had ",
"Patriarch Miron of Romania\n state, for instance, in 1920, Cristea asked the clergymen to aid the state financially by encouraging the faithful to buy government bonds. Cristea's discourse incorporated nationalist and statist elements, arguing that Orthodox religion was integral to the Romanian soul, and he argued that the church's values include \"patriotism\" and \"obedience to [civil] authorities\" alongside \"faith and morality\". Cristea introduced reforms such as the Gregorian calendar to the church, including, briefly, the celebration of Pascha (Easter) on the same date as the Roman Catholic Church. This was opposed by various groups of traditionalists and Old Calendarists, especially in Moldavia, where Metropolitan Gurie Grosu ",
"Sofronie of Cioara\n in a continuous present, in which ancient beliefs and practices were the models for everyday life. Religion determined their earthly frame of reference, for whenever they thought about membership in a larger community beyond the family or the village, they considered themselves part of the Orthodox world. An ethnic consciousness clearly existed -they were aware of the differences between themselves and the Serbs, for example, and they clung to their 'Wallachian religion'- but the idea of nation as the natural context within which they should live was foreign to them. The intellectuals linked with the Romanian Greek-Catholic Church had a ",
"Dumitru C. Moruzi\n favorably of Romanian nationalism, trying to obtain Romania's support for a looming war between Russia and the Triple Alliance; he was also proposing the partition of Bessarabia and Bukovina between the two allied nations. Moruzi, who believed that Durnovo spoke for the Russian Government, welcomed the change of policy. He acknowledged that a liberal Russia was a comfortable ally for Romania, but asked for guarantees that Russian imperialism would be curbed. He also accused Durnovo of hypocrisy, noting that Bessarabia was not traditionally Russian, but had been colonized with \"Khokhols\". He therefore rejected partition on principle. As Iorga recalled, both of Moruzi's novels were accomplished and \"vibrated ",
"Freedom of religion in Romania\n By law, there are 18 religious organizations recognized as \"religious denominations,\" all of which were in existence at the time the specific law on religion was enacted in 2006. They include the Romanian Orthodox Church; Orthodox Serb Bishopric of Timișoara; Roman Catholic Church; Greek Catholic Church; Old Rite Russian Christian (Orthodox) Church; Reformed (Protestant) Church; Christian Evangelical Church; Romanian Evangelical Church; Evangelical Augustinian Church; Lutheran Evangelical Church; Unitarian Church; the Baptist Church; Pentecostal Church; Seventh-day Adventist Church; Armenian Apostolic Church; Federation of Jewish Communities; Muslim Denomination (Sunni Islam); and Jehovah’s Witnesses. For additional organizations to obtain recognition as religious denominations, the law specifies they must demonstrate 12 years of continuous activity since the law’s passage, which cannot occur before 2018. After it demonstrates 12 years of continuous activity, a religious association is ",
"Religion in Moldova\n The primary religion is Christianity, 90.1% of the population nominally being Eastern Orthodox according to data of the 2014 census. Administratively, there are two autonomous churches belonging to two autocephalous churches (Russian and Romanian) within the Eastern Orthodox communion. The autonomous Metropolis of Chişinău and Moldova (belonging to the Russian Orthodox Church), according to the State Service on Religious Issues, has 1,194 parishes; the autonomous Metropolis of Bessarabia (belonging to the Romanian Orthodox Church) has 124 parishes. Besides followers of the Old Rite Russian Orthodox Church (Old Believers) make up approximately 0.09% of the population. The religious traditions of Eastern Orthodoxy are entwined with the culture and patrimony of the country. Many self-professed atheists routinely celebrate religious holidays, cross themselves, and even light candles and kiss icons if local tradition and the occasion demand. During the 2004 census, 93.34% of the population declared themselves to be Eastern Orthodox.",
"Baháʼí Faith in Moldova\n Most of today's Republic of Moldova, formerly known as Bessarabia until 1812, was annexed by the Russian Empire. Moldavia was a Mediaeval principality in Europe which was part of the basis of the modern Romanian state; at various times, the state included the regions of Bessarabia. The western part of Moldavia is now part of Romania, the eastern part belongs to the independent state of Moldova, while the northern and south-eastern parts are territories of Ukraine. See History of Moldova and History of Moldavia. Additionally Transnistria is a breakaway republic within the internationally recognised borders of Moldova. Although not recognized by any state or international organisation and de jure part of Moldova, it is de facto independent.",
"Anti-religious campaign of Communist Romania\n maintain institutions for general education, but may only operate special theological schools for training ministers necessary to their religious service under State control. The Romanian Orthodox Church is autocephalous and unitary in its organisation. The method of organisation and the functioning of the religious denominations will be established by law.\" The Ministry of Education ordered the removal of religious objects from schools (including many icons), and replaced them with pictures of communist leaders. The anti-religious work in the schools was resisted by parents who did not send their children to the schools at the beginning of the school year and by teachers ",
"Religion in Moldova\n Religion in Moldova is predominantly Orthodox Christian. The Constitution of the Republic of Moldova provides for freedom of religion, and the national government generally respects this right in practice. Although Eastern Orthodoxy has a numerical preponderance, there is no state religion, and state and church are officially separate. The generally amicable relationship among religions in Moldovan society contributes to religious freedom; however, disputes among various branches of the Orthodox Church continue. Other religions practiced in Moldova include Judaism.",
"Freedom of religion in Romania\n According to a 2011 government census, Romanian Orthodox Church adherents constitute 86.5 percent of the population and Roman Catholics almost 5 percent. According to the census, less than one percent of the population is Greek Catholic; however, Greek Catholics estimate their numbers at about 2 percent of the population. Other religious groups include Old Rite Russian Christians; Protestants, including Reformed Protestants, Pentecostals, Baptists, Seventh-day Adventists, and other Protestant denominations; Jews; Muslims; Jehovah’s Witnesses; Baháʼís; The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints; Zen Buddhists; the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification; and the International Society of Krishna Consciousness. Atheists and nonbelievers represent less than 1 percent of the population. According to the ",
"Eastern Orthodoxy in Moldova\n Bessarabia, the eastern half of the Principality of Moldavia, was annexed by the Russian Empire in 1812, including the territory constituting the Chişinău Eparchy, which was reorganized and placed under the Russian Orthodox Church. Its first Metropolitan was Gavril Bănulescu-Bodoni, a popular promoter of the Romanian language and culture. Its last metropolitan was Anastasios, the future first-hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad."
] |
What is the religion of Arnaldo Ribeiro? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Arnaldo Ribeiro | 5,207,900 | 62 | [
{
"id": "26358159",
"title": "Arnaldo Ribeiro",
"text": " Arnaldo Ribeiro (January 7, 1930–December 15, 2009) was the Roman Catholic Archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Ribeirão Preto, Brazil. Ordained to the priesthood on March 13, 1954, in the Archdiocese of Belo Horizonte, Ribeiro was named auxiliary bishop of the Belo Horizonte Archdiocese on November 6, 1975, and was ordained bishop on December 27, 1975. On December 28, 1988, Ribeiro was named Archbishop of the Ribeirão Preto Archdiocese; he retired on April 5, 2006. Six years after the death of Archbp. Ribeiro, the Archdiocese of Ribeirão Preto formally opened his cause for beatification. His current status in the steps towards sainthood is Servant of God.",
"score": "1.6490324"
},
{
"id": "14888916",
"title": "Arnaldo Baptista",
"text": " Arnaldo Dias Baptista (, born July 6, 1948) is a Brazilian rock musician and composer.",
"score": "1.4818606"
},
{
"id": "10593964",
"title": "Manuel Ribeiro",
"text": " Manuel António Ribeiro (13 December 1878 – 27 November 1941) was a Portuguese writer, poet, and relevant political figure during the First Portuguese Republic. He is known for his role as an active proponent of syndicalism in the early 20th century, as the founder of the first Bolshevist organisation in Portugal (the Portuguese Maximalist Federation), as well as one of the first organisers of the Portuguese Communist Party. In 1926, having already shown a certain religious disquiet as well as a profound interest in sacred art and liturgy, he formally converted to Catholicism, which implied his abandonment of the socialist movement and of his partisan activity, but not of his social ",
"score": "1.3842256"
},
{
"id": "10593965",
"title": "Manuel Ribeiro",
"text": " he became aligned with Christian democratic sectors that espoused the modern Catholic social teaching of Pope Leo XIII's Rerum Novarum, he never denounced the labour movement, and denounced fascism. In 1932, he started publishing Era Nova, a religious and political weekly openly opposed to Salazar's ideology, that is soon after labelled as radical propaganda and shut down. His literary works, particularly his \"social trilogy\" consisting of A Catedral (\"The Cathedral\", 1920), O Deserto (\"The Desert\", 1922), and A Ressureição (\"The Resurrection\", 1923), made Manuel Ribeiro one of the most widely-read novelists in Portugal in the 1920s, but were deliberately obscured in the following decades by the authoritarian conservative Estado Novo regime.",
"score": "1.3823969"
},
{
"id": "4176568",
"title": "Arraiolos",
"text": "Joaquim Heliodoro da Cunha Rivara (1809 in Arraiolos – 1879 in Évora) a physician, professor, intellectual and politician ; Francisco José Caeiro (1890 in Vimieiro – 1976) a politician and former Minister and law professor. ",
"score": "1.3814112"
},
{
"id": "14376226",
"title": "Alberto Taveira Corrêa",
"text": " Belo Horizonte, Serafim Fernandes de Araújo, and the archbishop of Ribeirão Preto, Arnaldo Ribeiro, serving as co-consecrators. On 27 March 1996, he was appointed Archbishop of Palmas. He was named archbishop of Archbishop of Belém do Pará on 30 December 2009. He was installed on 25 March 2010. On 27 October 2012, Pope Benedict XVI named him a member of the Pontifical Council Cor Unum. On 6 February 2014, Pope Francis named him a consultor to the Pontifical Council for the Laity. In 2014, he said that the annual Catholic procession and festival centered on an image of Mary as Our Lady of Nazareth, the Círio de Nazaré, attracted many non-Catholics, saying \"Many people from other religious groups participate in Cirio and in it find a welcoming environment.\" He participated in the Synod on the Amazonian Region in 2019 and served as moderator of one of its discussion circles.",
"score": "1.3457687"
},
{
"id": "29861627",
"title": "Arnaldo",
"text": " on the Linux kernel ; Arnaldo Cézar Coelho (born 1943), the first Brazilian to take charge of the FIFA World Cup final ; Arnaldo Cohen, Brazilian pianist ; Arnaldo da Silva (born 1964), former Brazilian athlete ; Arnaldo de Oliveira Sales, GBM, OBE, JP, Chairman of the Hong Kong Olympic Academy ; Arnaldo Deserti (born 1979), Italian water polo player ; Arnaldo Edi Lopes da Silva (born 1982), Portuguese footballer of Guinea-Bissauan descent ; Arnaldo Espínola (born 1975), Paraguayan footballer ; Arnaldo Faustini (1872–1944), Italian polar geographer, writer, and cartographer ; Arnaldo Ferraro (born 1936), former Republican Party politician ",
"score": "1.3444654"
},
{
"id": "2201569",
"title": "Aquilino Ribeiro",
"text": " Aquilino Gomes Ribeiro, ComL (13 September 1885 – 27 May 1963, Lisbon), was a Portuguese writer and diplomat. He is generally considered to be one of the great Portuguese novelists of the 20th century. In 1960, he was nominated for the Nobel Literature Prize; having been nominated by the Sociedade Portuguesa de Escritores.",
"score": "1.3438494"
},
{
"id": "32260008",
"title": "Goldrofe of Arganil",
"text": " Goldrofe of Arganil, C.R.S.A. (São Goldrofe or Goldofre, alternatively, Golfredo or Guelindrofe; ) was a Portuguese Augustinian prior in what is today central Portugal. He is venerated as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church.",
"score": "1.3195858"
},
{
"id": "29861630",
"title": "Arnaldo",
"text": " player ; Arnaldo Orfila Reynal (1897–1997), Argentine chemist and academic ; Arnaldo Ribeiro (1930–2009), Roman Catholic Archbishop in Ribeirão Preto, Brazil ; Arnaldo Darío Rosado (1953–1978), activist for the independence of Puerto Rico from a very young age ; Arnaldo Salvi (born 1915), Italian professional football player ; Arnaldo Santos, Puerto Rican reggaeton and rock producer, singer and guitarist ; Arnaldo Sentimenti (1914–1997), former Italian football player and coach ; Arnaldo Silva (born 1944), former Portuguese footballer who played as midfielder ; Arnaldo Villalba (born 1978), Paraguayan footballer Arnaldo is a given name. Notable people with the name include: ",
"score": "1.3194015"
},
{
"id": "29208247",
"title": "António Ribeiro",
"text": " Dom António II Ribeiro (21 May 1928 – 24 March 1998) was a Portuguese Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church, who was Patriarch of Lisbon from 1971 until his death in 1998. Born at São Clemente de Basto, Celorico de Basto, son of José Ribeiro (born ca 1860) and wife Ana Gonçalves (born ca 1904), both from the same location, Ribeiro was ordained as a priest on 5 July 1953 in Braga. On 3 July 1967 he was appointed Auxiliary Bishop of Braga and Titular Bishop of Tigillava, and was consecrated a bishop on 17 September. Ribeiro graduated with a degree in theology from the Pontifical Gregorian University of Rome and lectured in the Superior Institute of Catholic Culture. His doctoral thesis, written in 1959, was The Doctrine of Errors in ",
"score": "1.3192432"
},
{
"id": "29452591",
"title": "Rebordões",
"text": "Joaquim Ferreira da Silva (born 1916), lieutenant and military chaplain, born to a long line of religious families that included one bishop, four priests and four nuns, he received a military service medal, for his service in Portuguese India; ; Armindo Araújo (born 1 September 1977) is a rally driver, responsible for winning the Production World Rally Championship two successive years (2009–2010), becoming the first pilot to receive this honour since its creation in 2002. ",
"score": "1.3191662"
},
{
"id": "9516460",
"title": "Arganil",
"text": "Goldrofe of Arganil a Portuguese Augustinian prior in the Monastery of Saint Peter, (Wiki PT), in Arganil in 1086 ; José Dias Ferreira (1837 in Pombeiro da Beira, Arganil – 1909, in Vidago) a Portuguese lawyer, politician and jurist ; José Simões Dias (1844 in Benfeita, Arganil – 1899) a poet, short-story writer and literary critic, as well as politician and pedagogue. ; Francisco Lopes (born 1955 in Vila Cova de Alva, Arganil) an electrician, politician and candidate in the 2011 Portuguese presidential election ",
"score": "1.3162575"
},
{
"id": "29861626",
"title": "Arnaldo",
"text": "Arnaldo Abrantes (born 1986), Portuguese track and field sprinter ; Arnaldo Alonso (born 1979), Paraguayan footballer ; Arnaldo André (born 1943), soap-opera Paraguayan actor ; Arnaldo Andreoli (1893–1952), Italian gymnast who competed in the 1920 Summer Olympics ; Arnaldo Maria Angelini (1909–1999), Italian scientist, working with Italy's power generation ; Arnaldo Antunes (born 1960), writer and composer from Brazil ; Arnaldo Baptista (born 1948), Brazilian rock musician and composer ; Arnaldo Villalba Benitez (born 1978), Paraguayan footballer ; Arnaldo Bonfanti (born 1978), footballer ; Arnaldo Carli (1901–1972), Italian racing cyclist and Olympic champion ; Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo, Brazilian developer ",
"score": "1.3156811"
},
{
"id": "3527513",
"title": "Arnaldo Antunes",
"text": " Arnaldo Antunes (, born Arnaldo Augusto Nora Antunes Filho, September 2, 1960) is a Brazilian musician, writer, and composer. He was a member of the rock band Titãs, which he co-founded in 1982 and left ten years later. After 1992, he embarked on a solo career. He has published poetry and had his first book published in 1983. He has worked with Marisa Monte, Tribalistas, and Carlinhos Brown.",
"score": "1.3089004"
},
{
"id": "8305650",
"title": "Fortaleza",
"text": " The prevailing religion of Fortaleza is the Roman Catholic branch of Christianity. ''Source: IBGE 2000. '' According to the census of 2010, 1,664,521 people, 67.88% of the population, followed Roman Catholicism, 523,456 (21.35%) were Protestant, 31,691 (1.29%) represented Spiritism and 162,985 (6.65%) had no religion whatsoever. Other religions, such as Umbanda, Candomblé, other Afro-Brazilian religions, Spiritualism, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, other Eastern religions, Esotericism and other Christian churches like The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints had a smaller number of adherents.",
"score": "1.3079001"
},
{
"id": "7224708",
"title": "Darcy Ribeiro",
"text": " Darcy Ribeiro (October 26, 1922 – February 17, 1997) was a Brazilian anthropologist, historian, sociologist, author and politician. His ideas have influenced several scholars of Brazilian and Latin American studies. As Minister of Education of Brazil he carried out profound reforms which led him to be invited to participate in university reforms in Chile, Peru, Venezuela, Mexico and Uruguay after leaving Brazil due to the 1964 coup d'état.",
"score": "1.3077412"
},
{
"id": "29962981",
"title": "List of Knights Templar",
"text": "Arnaldo da Rocha? (In the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries, some authors and chroniclers of the history of the Portuguese Templar Order and its continuer, the Order of Christ, possibly based on original medieval source material in Braga and Tomar, cite the Portuguese Pedro Arnaldo da Rocha, of Burgundian and French parentage, as having been one of the founding knights of the militia of the Poor Knights of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon in Jerusalem, alongside Gondemare, and then in Portugal) ; Gondamer or Gondemare? (the same authors identify one of the 9 founders of the Knights Templar, the Knight Gondemare, as having Portuguese origin – possibly from medieval Gundemar; also spelled Gundemari or Gondemare, present-day Gondomar, in the County of Portugal)) ; King Afonso I of Portugal, Templar Brother (13.03.1129); First King of Portugal (1139–1185) ; Raymond Bernard, known as Raimundo Bernardo in Portugal (1126–1135) ",
"score": "1.3025773"
},
{
"id": "1838953",
"title": "Mogadouro",
"text": "José Francisco Trindade Coelho (18 June 1861 — Lisbon; 18 August 1908), a writer, magistrate and politician, known for Republicanism and regionalist writings about the region of Trás-os-Montes, that was rustic and moralistic. ; Luis de Carvajal y de la Cueva (c. 1537 Mogadouro, Portugal –1591 Mexico City, Mexico), was governor of the Spanish province of Nuevo León in present-day Mexico. ; Manuel Martins Manso (21 November 1793 - 11 December 1871) was a Portuguese bishop, he was bishop of Funchal and of Guarda. ; Danny Roxo (1933–1976) was a Portuguese hunter, safari guide, and soldier. ",
"score": "1.3014019"
},
{
"id": "27910961",
"title": "Arnaldo de Novais Guedes Rebelo",
"text": " Arnaldo Nogueira de Novais Guedes Rebelo. (11 June 1847 – 1917) was a Portuguese colonial administrator and military officer. He was born on 11 June 1847 in Vitória, a parish of Porto. He was governor of Cape Verde between June 1900 and 1 October 1902, governor of Macau between 17 December 1902 and December 1903 and governor of Portuguese India from 8 November 1905 until 14 February 1907. He was appointed brigadier general in 1910.",
"score": "1.2995987"
}
] | [
"Arnaldo Ribeiro\n Arnaldo Ribeiro (January 7, 1930–December 15, 2009) was the Roman Catholic Archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Ribeirão Preto, Brazil. Ordained to the priesthood on March 13, 1954, in the Archdiocese of Belo Horizonte, Ribeiro was named auxiliary bishop of the Belo Horizonte Archdiocese on November 6, 1975, and was ordained bishop on December 27, 1975. On December 28, 1988, Ribeiro was named Archbishop of the Ribeirão Preto Archdiocese; he retired on April 5, 2006. Six years after the death of Archbp. Ribeiro, the Archdiocese of Ribeirão Preto formally opened his cause for beatification. His current status in the steps towards sainthood is Servant of God.",
"Arnaldo Baptista\n Arnaldo Dias Baptista (, born July 6, 1948) is a Brazilian rock musician and composer.",
"Manuel Ribeiro\n Manuel António Ribeiro (13 December 1878 – 27 November 1941) was a Portuguese writer, poet, and relevant political figure during the First Portuguese Republic. He is known for his role as an active proponent of syndicalism in the early 20th century, as the founder of the first Bolshevist organisation in Portugal (the Portuguese Maximalist Federation), as well as one of the first organisers of the Portuguese Communist Party. In 1926, having already shown a certain religious disquiet as well as a profound interest in sacred art and liturgy, he formally converted to Catholicism, which implied his abandonment of the socialist movement and of his partisan activity, but not of his social ",
"Manuel Ribeiro\n he became aligned with Christian democratic sectors that espoused the modern Catholic social teaching of Pope Leo XIII's Rerum Novarum, he never denounced the labour movement, and denounced fascism. In 1932, he started publishing Era Nova, a religious and political weekly openly opposed to Salazar's ideology, that is soon after labelled as radical propaganda and shut down. His literary works, particularly his \"social trilogy\" consisting of A Catedral (\"The Cathedral\", 1920), O Deserto (\"The Desert\", 1922), and A Ressureição (\"The Resurrection\", 1923), made Manuel Ribeiro one of the most widely-read novelists in Portugal in the 1920s, but were deliberately obscured in the following decades by the authoritarian conservative Estado Novo regime.",
"Arraiolos\nJoaquim Heliodoro da Cunha Rivara (1809 in Arraiolos – 1879 in Évora) a physician, professor, intellectual and politician ; Francisco José Caeiro (1890 in Vimieiro – 1976) a politician and former Minister and law professor. ",
"Alberto Taveira Corrêa\n Belo Horizonte, Serafim Fernandes de Araújo, and the archbishop of Ribeirão Preto, Arnaldo Ribeiro, serving as co-consecrators. On 27 March 1996, he was appointed Archbishop of Palmas. He was named archbishop of Archbishop of Belém do Pará on 30 December 2009. He was installed on 25 March 2010. On 27 October 2012, Pope Benedict XVI named him a member of the Pontifical Council Cor Unum. On 6 February 2014, Pope Francis named him a consultor to the Pontifical Council for the Laity. In 2014, he said that the annual Catholic procession and festival centered on an image of Mary as Our Lady of Nazareth, the Círio de Nazaré, attracted many non-Catholics, saying \"Many people from other religious groups participate in Cirio and in it find a welcoming environment.\" He participated in the Synod on the Amazonian Region in 2019 and served as moderator of one of its discussion circles.",
"Arnaldo\n on the Linux kernel ; Arnaldo Cézar Coelho (born 1943), the first Brazilian to take charge of the FIFA World Cup final ; Arnaldo Cohen, Brazilian pianist ; Arnaldo da Silva (born 1964), former Brazilian athlete ; Arnaldo de Oliveira Sales, GBM, OBE, JP, Chairman of the Hong Kong Olympic Academy ; Arnaldo Deserti (born 1979), Italian water polo player ; Arnaldo Edi Lopes da Silva (born 1982), Portuguese footballer of Guinea-Bissauan descent ; Arnaldo Espínola (born 1975), Paraguayan footballer ; Arnaldo Faustini (1872–1944), Italian polar geographer, writer, and cartographer ; Arnaldo Ferraro (born 1936), former Republican Party politician ",
"Aquilino Ribeiro\n Aquilino Gomes Ribeiro, ComL (13 September 1885 – 27 May 1963, Lisbon), was a Portuguese writer and diplomat. He is generally considered to be one of the great Portuguese novelists of the 20th century. In 1960, he was nominated for the Nobel Literature Prize; having been nominated by the Sociedade Portuguesa de Escritores.",
"Goldrofe of Arganil\n Goldrofe of Arganil, C.R.S.A. (São Goldrofe or Goldofre, alternatively, Golfredo or Guelindrofe; ) was a Portuguese Augustinian prior in what is today central Portugal. He is venerated as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church.",
"Arnaldo\n player ; Arnaldo Orfila Reynal (1897–1997), Argentine chemist and academic ; Arnaldo Ribeiro (1930–2009), Roman Catholic Archbishop in Ribeirão Preto, Brazil ; Arnaldo Darío Rosado (1953–1978), activist for the independence of Puerto Rico from a very young age ; Arnaldo Salvi (born 1915), Italian professional football player ; Arnaldo Santos, Puerto Rican reggaeton and rock producer, singer and guitarist ; Arnaldo Sentimenti (1914–1997), former Italian football player and coach ; Arnaldo Silva (born 1944), former Portuguese footballer who played as midfielder ; Arnaldo Villalba (born 1978), Paraguayan footballer Arnaldo is a given name. Notable people with the name include: ",
"António Ribeiro\n Dom António II Ribeiro (21 May 1928 – 24 March 1998) was a Portuguese Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church, who was Patriarch of Lisbon from 1971 until his death in 1998. Born at São Clemente de Basto, Celorico de Basto, son of José Ribeiro (born ca 1860) and wife Ana Gonçalves (born ca 1904), both from the same location, Ribeiro was ordained as a priest on 5 July 1953 in Braga. On 3 July 1967 he was appointed Auxiliary Bishop of Braga and Titular Bishop of Tigillava, and was consecrated a bishop on 17 September. Ribeiro graduated with a degree in theology from the Pontifical Gregorian University of Rome and lectured in the Superior Institute of Catholic Culture. His doctoral thesis, written in 1959, was The Doctrine of Errors in ",
"Rebordões\nJoaquim Ferreira da Silva (born 1916), lieutenant and military chaplain, born to a long line of religious families that included one bishop, four priests and four nuns, he received a military service medal, for his service in Portuguese India; ; Armindo Araújo (born 1 September 1977) is a rally driver, responsible for winning the Production World Rally Championship two successive years (2009–2010), becoming the first pilot to receive this honour since its creation in 2002. ",
"Arganil\nGoldrofe of Arganil a Portuguese Augustinian prior in the Monastery of Saint Peter, (Wiki PT), in Arganil in 1086 ; José Dias Ferreira (1837 in Pombeiro da Beira, Arganil – 1909, in Vidago) a Portuguese lawyer, politician and jurist ; José Simões Dias (1844 in Benfeita, Arganil – 1899) a poet, short-story writer and literary critic, as well as politician and pedagogue. ; Francisco Lopes (born 1955 in Vila Cova de Alva, Arganil) an electrician, politician and candidate in the 2011 Portuguese presidential election ",
"Arnaldo\nArnaldo Abrantes (born 1986), Portuguese track and field sprinter ; Arnaldo Alonso (born 1979), Paraguayan footballer ; Arnaldo André (born 1943), soap-opera Paraguayan actor ; Arnaldo Andreoli (1893–1952), Italian gymnast who competed in the 1920 Summer Olympics ; Arnaldo Maria Angelini (1909–1999), Italian scientist, working with Italy's power generation ; Arnaldo Antunes (born 1960), writer and composer from Brazil ; Arnaldo Baptista (born 1948), Brazilian rock musician and composer ; Arnaldo Villalba Benitez (born 1978), Paraguayan footballer ; Arnaldo Bonfanti (born 1978), footballer ; Arnaldo Carli (1901–1972), Italian racing cyclist and Olympic champion ; Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo, Brazilian developer ",
"Arnaldo Antunes\n Arnaldo Antunes (, born Arnaldo Augusto Nora Antunes Filho, September 2, 1960) is a Brazilian musician, writer, and composer. He was a member of the rock band Titãs, which he co-founded in 1982 and left ten years later. After 1992, he embarked on a solo career. He has published poetry and had his first book published in 1983. He has worked with Marisa Monte, Tribalistas, and Carlinhos Brown.",
"Fortaleza\n The prevailing religion of Fortaleza is the Roman Catholic branch of Christianity. ''Source: IBGE 2000. '' According to the census of 2010, 1,664,521 people, 67.88% of the population, followed Roman Catholicism, 523,456 (21.35%) were Protestant, 31,691 (1.29%) represented Spiritism and 162,985 (6.65%) had no religion whatsoever. Other religions, such as Umbanda, Candomblé, other Afro-Brazilian religions, Spiritualism, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, other Eastern religions, Esotericism and other Christian churches like The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints had a smaller number of adherents.",
"Darcy Ribeiro\n Darcy Ribeiro (October 26, 1922 – February 17, 1997) was a Brazilian anthropologist, historian, sociologist, author and politician. His ideas have influenced several scholars of Brazilian and Latin American studies. As Minister of Education of Brazil he carried out profound reforms which led him to be invited to participate in university reforms in Chile, Peru, Venezuela, Mexico and Uruguay after leaving Brazil due to the 1964 coup d'état.",
"List of Knights Templar\nArnaldo da Rocha? (In the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries, some authors and chroniclers of the history of the Portuguese Templar Order and its continuer, the Order of Christ, possibly based on original medieval source material in Braga and Tomar, cite the Portuguese Pedro Arnaldo da Rocha, of Burgundian and French parentage, as having been one of the founding knights of the militia of the Poor Knights of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon in Jerusalem, alongside Gondemare, and then in Portugal) ; Gondamer or Gondemare? (the same authors identify one of the 9 founders of the Knights Templar, the Knight Gondemare, as having Portuguese origin – possibly from medieval Gundemar; also spelled Gundemari or Gondemare, present-day Gondomar, in the County of Portugal)) ; King Afonso I of Portugal, Templar Brother (13.03.1129); First King of Portugal (1139–1185) ; Raymond Bernard, known as Raimundo Bernardo in Portugal (1126–1135) ",
"Mogadouro\nJosé Francisco Trindade Coelho (18 June 1861 — Lisbon; 18 August 1908), a writer, magistrate and politician, known for Republicanism and regionalist writings about the region of Trás-os-Montes, that was rustic and moralistic. ; Luis de Carvajal y de la Cueva (c. 1537 Mogadouro, Portugal –1591 Mexico City, Mexico), was governor of the Spanish province of Nuevo León in present-day Mexico. ; Manuel Martins Manso (21 November 1793 - 11 December 1871) was a Portuguese bishop, he was bishop of Funchal and of Guarda. ; Danny Roxo (1933–1976) was a Portuguese hunter, safari guide, and soldier. ",
"Arnaldo de Novais Guedes Rebelo\n Arnaldo Nogueira de Novais Guedes Rebelo. (11 June 1847 – 1917) was a Portuguese colonial administrator and military officer. He was born on 11 June 1847 in Vitória, a parish of Porto. He was governor of Cape Verde between June 1900 and 1 October 1902, governor of Macau between 17 December 1902 and December 1903 and governor of Portuguese India from 8 November 1905 until 14 February 1907. He was appointed brigadier general in 1910."
] |
What is the religion of Ignacy Tokarczuk? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Ignacy Tokarczuk | 3,051,449 | 67 | [
{
"id": "10947381",
"title": "Olga Tokarczuk",
"text": " Tokarczuk is a leftist, an atheist, and a feminist. She has been criticized by some nationalist groups in Poland as unpatriotic, anti-Christian and a promoter of eco-terrorism. She has denied the allegations, has described herself as a \"true patriot\" and said that groups criticizing her are xenophobic and damage Poland's international reputation. In 2015, after the publication of The Books of Jacob, Tokarczuk was criticized by the Nowa Ruda Patriots association, who demanded that the town's council revoke the writer's honorary citizenship of Nowa Ruda because, as the association claimed, she had tarnished the good name of the Polish nation. Those people's postulate was supported by Senator Waldemar Bonkowski of the Law and Justice Party, according to whom Tokarczuk's literary output and public statements are in \"absolute ",
"score": "1.5611535"
},
{
"id": "7239331",
"title": "Tokarczuk",
"text": "Byron Tokarchuk (born 1965), Canadian basketball player ; Ignacy Tokarczuk (1918–2012), Polish bishop ; Olga Tokarczuk (born 1962), Polish writer Tokarczuk or Tokarchuk (Russian or Ukrainian: Токарчук) is a gender-neutral Slavic surname that may refer to: ",
"score": "1.5264654"
},
{
"id": "15804546",
"title": "Ignacy",
"text": " Sachs (Warsaw, 1927), Polish, naturalized French economist ; Ignacy Schwarzbart (1888–1961), prominent Polish Zionist ; Ignacy Szymański (1806–1874), Polish and American soldier ; Ignacy Tłoczyński (1911–2000), Polish tennis player ; Ignacy Tokarczuk (born 1918), Polish prelate of the Roman Catholic Church ; Ignacy Witczak, GRU Illegal officer in the United States during World War II ; Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz (1885–1939), Polish playwright, novelist, painter, photographer and philosopher ; Adam Ignacy Zabellewicz (1784–1831), professor of philosophy at Warsaw University ; Ignacy Zaborowski (1754–1803), Polish mathematician and geodesist ; Ignacy Żagiell (1826–1891), physician, traveler and Polish-language writer ; Ignacy Wyssogota Zakrzewski (1745–1802), notable Polish nobleman and politician during the last years of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth Ignacy may refer to: ",
"score": "1.4704227"
},
{
"id": "10180605",
"title": "Michał Karaszewicz-Tokarzewski",
"text": " General Michał Tadeusz Karaszewicz-Tokarzewski, Coat of arms of Trąby pseudonym Doktor, Stolarski, Torwid (b. 5 January 1893 in Lemberg – 22 May 1964 in Casablanca, Morocco) was a Polish general, founder of the resistance movement \"Polish Victory Service\".",
"score": "1.4374676"
},
{
"id": "30063021",
"title": "Irreligion in Poland",
"text": " person could openly admit their atheism or agnosticism. The initiative aims to promote ideological assertiveness among the unbelievers, checking the presence of believers in the social life and the consolidation and strengthening of cooperation between free thinkers. Many leading Polish media have written dozens of articles about this initiative, causing a discussion on the situation of unbelievers in Poland (Gazeta Wyborcza, Cross-section, Overview, Republic, Newsweek, Tribune, Gazeta Pomorska, Kurier Lubelski, Wirtualna Polska, Życie Warszawy ), and on the radio TOK FM was a debate about atheism between the academic priest Gregory Michalczyk and the founder and then-president of the Polish Rationalist Association Mariusz Agnosiewicz. After two ",
"score": "1.4211109"
},
{
"id": "30063018",
"title": "Irreligion in Poland",
"text": " Warsaw Circle of Intellectuals. They were also issued a letter Rationalist. In the twentieth and twenty first centuries Poles declaring a lifelong or temporary atheistic worldview include Tadeusz Boy-Żeleński, Tadeusz Kotarbiński, Irena Krzywicka, Witold Gombrowicz, Władysław Gomułka, Jan Kott, Jeremi Przybora, Wisława Szymborska, Stanisław Lem, Tadeusz Różewicz, Marek Edelman, Jerzy Kawalerowicz, Zygmunt Bauman, Maria Janion, Tadeusz Łomnicki, Włodzimierz Ptak, Jacek Kuroń, Kazimierz Kutz, Jerzy Urban, Roman Polański, Jerzy Vetulani, Karol Modzelewski, Zbigniew Religa, Jan Woleński, Andrzej Sapkowski, Kora Jackowska, Lech Janerka, Wanda Nowicka, Magdalena Środa, Jacek Kaczmarski, Aleksander Kwaśniewski, Kazik Staszewski, Kuba Wojewódzki, Janusz Palikot, Jan Hartman, Maria Peszek, Dorota Nieznalska, Robert Biedroń. After World War ",
"score": "1.420001"
},
{
"id": "10180606",
"title": "Michał Karaszewicz-Tokarzewski",
"text": " Tokarzewski served in the Polish Legions from 1914 until 1917, then in the POW (Polish Military Organization). He was a commanding officer of the \"5th Infantry Legion Regiment\" during the Polish-Ukrainian War, which fought in Lwów. During the November–December 1918 pogroms in Poland, Tokarzewski was removed from his post by the Polish Government as District Commander of Przemysl for posting a notice in which he fined the Jewish population 3,000,000 crowns as punishment for allegedly fighting against the Polish army, despite their assertion of neutrality. This charge was never proven. The poster read: \"An appeal to the population of Przemysl of Mosaic Confession. (ie, the Jewish population) \"In view of a well-known fact that in the course of the struggle of ",
"score": "1.4173356"
},
{
"id": "10947382",
"title": "Olga Tokarczuk",
"text": " to the assumptions of the Polish historical politics\". Tokarczuk asserted that she is the true patriot, not the people and groups who criticize her, and whose alleged xenophobic and racist attitudes and actions are harmful to Poland and its image abroad. In 2020, she was one of the signatories alongside other prominent writers such as Margaret Atwood, John Banville and John Maxwell Coetzee of an open letter addressed to the President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, urging the European Union to \"to take immediate steps to defend core European values – equality, non-discrimination, respect for minorities – which are being blatantly violated in Poland\" and appealing to the Polish government to stop targeting sexual minorities and to withdraw support from organizations promoting homophobia.",
"score": "1.4115901"
},
{
"id": "10947364",
"title": "Olga Tokarczuk",
"text": " universities in Kraków and Opole. Tokarczuk joined the editorial team of Krytyka Polityczna (Eng. ed. Political Critique), a magazine as well as large pan-regional network of institutions and activists, and currently serves on the Board of trustees of its academic and research unit – Institute for Advance Study in Warsaw. She also travelled around the world. In 2009, Tokarczuk received literary scholarship from the Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, and during her stay at the NIAS' campus in Wassenaar she has written her novel Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead, which was published the same year. Roman Fingas, fellow psychologist, was Tokarczuk's first husband. They married when she was 23 and later divorced; their son Zbigniew was born in 1986. Grzegorz Zygadło is her second husband. She is a vegetarian.",
"score": "1.3937821"
},
{
"id": "10947385",
"title": "Olga Tokarczuk",
"text": " European peace, understanding and cooperation among people of different nationalities, cultures and viewpoints. Particularly appreciated by the jury was Tokarczuk's creation of literary bridges connecting people, generations and cultures, especially residents of the border territories of Poland, Germany and the Czech Republic, who have had often different existential and historical experiences. Also stressed was Tokarczuk's \"rediscovery\" and elucidation of the complex multinational and multicultural past of the Lower Silesia region, an area of great political conflicts. Attending the award ceremony in Görlitz, Tokarczuk was impressed by the positive and pragmatic attitude demonstrated by the mayor of the German town in regard to the current ",
"score": "1.3849357"
},
{
"id": "33155989",
"title": "List of atheists in politics and law",
"text": "Władysław Gomułka (1905–1982): Communist leader. ; Aleksander Kwaśniewski (1954–): former President of Poland (1995–2005). ; Zbigniew Religa (1938–2009): prominent cardiac surgeon, pioneer in human heart transplantation and a Minister of Health of the Republic of Poland. ; Włodzimierz Cimoszewicz (1950–): former Prime Minister of Poland (1996-1997) ; Gabriel Narutowicz (1865–1922) : first President of Poland (1922). ; Robert Biedroń (1975–): Mayor of Słupsk, member of parliament, LGBT rights activist. ; Bolesław Bierut (1892–1956): Communist leader. ",
"score": "1.3685069"
},
{
"id": "30203884",
"title": "Religion in Białystok",
"text": " The Muslim Religious Union in the Polish Republic was reactivated in 1947. It is currently involved in the Muslim religious community in Bialystok. The head of the Polish Muslims is mufti Tomasz Miskiewicz, Chairman of the Supreme College (based in Bialystok, Poland) was elected to that post - the first time in postwar history of a relationship - March 20, 2004 at the XV Congress of the Muslim Religious Association. Earlier, the presidents exercising the duties included Stefan Bajraszewski, Stefan Mucharski, Jan Sobolewski, and Stefan Korycki.",
"score": "1.367809"
},
{
"id": "16110310",
"title": "Stanisław Potrzebowski",
"text": " Stanisław Potrzebowski (born 9 February 1937) is the founder and Naczelnik (leader) of Rodzima Wiara, a Polish rodnover organisation, and of the European Congress of Ethnic Religions.",
"score": "1.3639097"
},
{
"id": "29167862",
"title": "Tokarski",
"text": "Dustin Tokarski (born 1989), Canadian ice hockey player ; Genowefa Tokarska (born 1949), Polish politician ; Joanna Tokarska-Bakir (born 1958), Polish cultural anthropologist ; Maja Tokarska (born 1991), Polish volleyball player ; Piotr Tokarski, Polish actor Tokarski (feminine Tokarska) is a Polish surname, it may refer to:",
"score": "1.354209"
},
{
"id": "11636338",
"title": "List of Polish people",
"text": " spiritual leader of the Polish Brethren ; Jerzy Popiełuszko, Catholic priest and dissident assassinated by the Polish security service in 1984, martyr of the Church ; Walenty Potocki (died 1749), Count; converted to Judaism as Avrohom ben Avrohom, the Ger Tzedek of Vilna ; Jan Puzyna, Bishop of Kraków, 1895–1911, Cardinal ; Jerzy Radziwiłł, Bishop of Kraków, Cardinal, 1591–1600 ; Sholom Rokeach, the first Belzer Rebbe, 1817–1855 ; Tadeusz Rydzyk, Redemptorist, broadcast radio controller ; St. Stanisław of Szczepanów, Bishop of Kraków, martyr 1079 ; Adam Stefan Sapieha, Bishop/Archbishop of Kraków, Cardinal, 1911–1951 ; Franciszka Siedliska, religious, founder of Congregation of ",
"score": "1.3518703"
},
{
"id": "10947374",
"title": "Olga Tokarczuk",
"text": " Polish Kłodzko Valley, eccentric in perception of other humans through astrology and fond of the poetry of William Blake, from whose work the title of the book is taken. She decides to investigate murders of members of local hunting club, and initially explains these deaths as caused by wild animals in vengeance on hunters. The novel has become one of the bestsellers in Poland. It was the basis of the crime film Spoor (2017) directed by Agnieszka Holland, which won the Alfred Bauer Prize (Silver Bear) at the 67th Berlin International Film Festival. English translation by Antonia Lloyd-Jones earned Tokarczuk ",
"score": "1.3515043"
},
{
"id": "10947359",
"title": "Olga Tokarczuk",
"text": " Olga Nawoja Tokarczuk (born 29 January 1962) is a Polish writer, activist, and public intellectual considered one of the most critically acclaimed and successful authors of her generation in Poland. In 2019 she was awarded the 2018 Nobel Prize in Literature as the first Polish female prose writer \"for a narrative imagination that with encyclopedic passion represents the crossing of boundaries as a form of life.\" For her novel Flights, Tokarczuk has been awarded the 2018 Man Booker International Prize (translated by Jennifer Croft). Her works include Primeval and Other Times, Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead, and The Books of Jacob. Tokarczuk is particularly noted for the mythical tone of her writing. A clinical psychologist from the University of Warsaw, she has published a collection of poems, several ",
"score": "1.3497282"
},
{
"id": "10180610",
"title": "Michał Karaszewicz-Tokarzewski",
"text": "Commander of the Virtuti Militari Order ; Commander of the Order of Polonia Restituta ; Krzyż Niepodległości (Cross of Independence), with Swords ; Krzyż Walecznych (Cross of Valour), 4 times ; Złoty Krzyż Zasługi z Mieczami (Gold Cross of Merit with Swords), twice ; Order of the White Eagle (posthumously in 1964 by the Polish authorities in exile) ",
"score": "1.3461955"
},
{
"id": "32596944",
"title": "National Movement (Poland)",
"text": "Tokarz, Grzegorz (2002). Ruch narodowy w Polsce w latach 1989-1997. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego ",
"score": "1.3461189"
},
{
"id": "10947377",
"title": "Olga Tokarczuk",
"text": " a series of mythic narratives, is transformed into a universal epic tale of the struggle against rigid thinking, either religious or philosophical, that ostracize and enslave people. An extensive and prolific work that warns against our inability to embrace an environment complex in its diversity, fueling a fanatical sectarianism which ends in disaster. The Books of Jacob, by telling the past with a dazzling virtuosity, helps us to better understand the world in which we live.\" In regard to the historical and ideological divides of Polish literature, the book has been characterized as anti-Sienkiewicz. It was soon acclaimed by critics ",
"score": "1.3457828"
}
] | [
"Olga Tokarczuk\n Tokarczuk is a leftist, an atheist, and a feminist. She has been criticized by some nationalist groups in Poland as unpatriotic, anti-Christian and a promoter of eco-terrorism. She has denied the allegations, has described herself as a \"true patriot\" and said that groups criticizing her are xenophobic and damage Poland's international reputation. In 2015, after the publication of The Books of Jacob, Tokarczuk was criticized by the Nowa Ruda Patriots association, who demanded that the town's council revoke the writer's honorary citizenship of Nowa Ruda because, as the association claimed, she had tarnished the good name of the Polish nation. Those people's postulate was supported by Senator Waldemar Bonkowski of the Law and Justice Party, according to whom Tokarczuk's literary output and public statements are in \"absolute ",
"Tokarczuk\nByron Tokarchuk (born 1965), Canadian basketball player ; Ignacy Tokarczuk (1918–2012), Polish bishop ; Olga Tokarczuk (born 1962), Polish writer Tokarczuk or Tokarchuk (Russian or Ukrainian: Токарчук) is a gender-neutral Slavic surname that may refer to: ",
"Ignacy\n Sachs (Warsaw, 1927), Polish, naturalized French economist ; Ignacy Schwarzbart (1888–1961), prominent Polish Zionist ; Ignacy Szymański (1806–1874), Polish and American soldier ; Ignacy Tłoczyński (1911–2000), Polish tennis player ; Ignacy Tokarczuk (born 1918), Polish prelate of the Roman Catholic Church ; Ignacy Witczak, GRU Illegal officer in the United States during World War II ; Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz (1885–1939), Polish playwright, novelist, painter, photographer and philosopher ; Adam Ignacy Zabellewicz (1784–1831), professor of philosophy at Warsaw University ; Ignacy Zaborowski (1754–1803), Polish mathematician and geodesist ; Ignacy Żagiell (1826–1891), physician, traveler and Polish-language writer ; Ignacy Wyssogota Zakrzewski (1745–1802), notable Polish nobleman and politician during the last years of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth Ignacy may refer to: ",
"Michał Karaszewicz-Tokarzewski\n General Michał Tadeusz Karaszewicz-Tokarzewski, Coat of arms of Trąby pseudonym Doktor, Stolarski, Torwid (b. 5 January 1893 in Lemberg – 22 May 1964 in Casablanca, Morocco) was a Polish general, founder of the resistance movement \"Polish Victory Service\".",
"Irreligion in Poland\n person could openly admit their atheism or agnosticism. The initiative aims to promote ideological assertiveness among the unbelievers, checking the presence of believers in the social life and the consolidation and strengthening of cooperation between free thinkers. Many leading Polish media have written dozens of articles about this initiative, causing a discussion on the situation of unbelievers in Poland (Gazeta Wyborcza, Cross-section, Overview, Republic, Newsweek, Tribune, Gazeta Pomorska, Kurier Lubelski, Wirtualna Polska, Życie Warszawy ), and on the radio TOK FM was a debate about atheism between the academic priest Gregory Michalczyk and the founder and then-president of the Polish Rationalist Association Mariusz Agnosiewicz. After two ",
"Irreligion in Poland\n Warsaw Circle of Intellectuals. They were also issued a letter Rationalist. In the twentieth and twenty first centuries Poles declaring a lifelong or temporary atheistic worldview include Tadeusz Boy-Żeleński, Tadeusz Kotarbiński, Irena Krzywicka, Witold Gombrowicz, Władysław Gomułka, Jan Kott, Jeremi Przybora, Wisława Szymborska, Stanisław Lem, Tadeusz Różewicz, Marek Edelman, Jerzy Kawalerowicz, Zygmunt Bauman, Maria Janion, Tadeusz Łomnicki, Włodzimierz Ptak, Jacek Kuroń, Kazimierz Kutz, Jerzy Urban, Roman Polański, Jerzy Vetulani, Karol Modzelewski, Zbigniew Religa, Jan Woleński, Andrzej Sapkowski, Kora Jackowska, Lech Janerka, Wanda Nowicka, Magdalena Środa, Jacek Kaczmarski, Aleksander Kwaśniewski, Kazik Staszewski, Kuba Wojewódzki, Janusz Palikot, Jan Hartman, Maria Peszek, Dorota Nieznalska, Robert Biedroń. After World War ",
"Michał Karaszewicz-Tokarzewski\n Tokarzewski served in the Polish Legions from 1914 until 1917, then in the POW (Polish Military Organization). He was a commanding officer of the \"5th Infantry Legion Regiment\" during the Polish-Ukrainian War, which fought in Lwów. During the November–December 1918 pogroms in Poland, Tokarzewski was removed from his post by the Polish Government as District Commander of Przemysl for posting a notice in which he fined the Jewish population 3,000,000 crowns as punishment for allegedly fighting against the Polish army, despite their assertion of neutrality. This charge was never proven. The poster read: \"An appeal to the population of Przemysl of Mosaic Confession. (ie, the Jewish population) \"In view of a well-known fact that in the course of the struggle of ",
"Olga Tokarczuk\n to the assumptions of the Polish historical politics\". Tokarczuk asserted that she is the true patriot, not the people and groups who criticize her, and whose alleged xenophobic and racist attitudes and actions are harmful to Poland and its image abroad. In 2020, she was one of the signatories alongside other prominent writers such as Margaret Atwood, John Banville and John Maxwell Coetzee of an open letter addressed to the President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, urging the European Union to \"to take immediate steps to defend core European values – equality, non-discrimination, respect for minorities – which are being blatantly violated in Poland\" and appealing to the Polish government to stop targeting sexual minorities and to withdraw support from organizations promoting homophobia.",
"Olga Tokarczuk\n universities in Kraków and Opole. Tokarczuk joined the editorial team of Krytyka Polityczna (Eng. ed. Political Critique), a magazine as well as large pan-regional network of institutions and activists, and currently serves on the Board of trustees of its academic and research unit – Institute for Advance Study in Warsaw. She also travelled around the world. In 2009, Tokarczuk received literary scholarship from the Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, and during her stay at the NIAS' campus in Wassenaar she has written her novel Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead, which was published the same year. Roman Fingas, fellow psychologist, was Tokarczuk's first husband. They married when she was 23 and later divorced; their son Zbigniew was born in 1986. Grzegorz Zygadło is her second husband. She is a vegetarian.",
"Olga Tokarczuk\n European peace, understanding and cooperation among people of different nationalities, cultures and viewpoints. Particularly appreciated by the jury was Tokarczuk's creation of literary bridges connecting people, generations and cultures, especially residents of the border territories of Poland, Germany and the Czech Republic, who have had often different existential and historical experiences. Also stressed was Tokarczuk's \"rediscovery\" and elucidation of the complex multinational and multicultural past of the Lower Silesia region, an area of great political conflicts. Attending the award ceremony in Görlitz, Tokarczuk was impressed by the positive and pragmatic attitude demonstrated by the mayor of the German town in regard to the current ",
"List of atheists in politics and law\nWładysław Gomułka (1905–1982): Communist leader. ; Aleksander Kwaśniewski (1954–): former President of Poland (1995–2005). ; Zbigniew Religa (1938–2009): prominent cardiac surgeon, pioneer in human heart transplantation and a Minister of Health of the Republic of Poland. ; Włodzimierz Cimoszewicz (1950–): former Prime Minister of Poland (1996-1997) ; Gabriel Narutowicz (1865–1922) : first President of Poland (1922). ; Robert Biedroń (1975–): Mayor of Słupsk, member of parliament, LGBT rights activist. ; Bolesław Bierut (1892–1956): Communist leader. ",
"Religion in Białystok\n The Muslim Religious Union in the Polish Republic was reactivated in 1947. It is currently involved in the Muslim religious community in Bialystok. The head of the Polish Muslims is mufti Tomasz Miskiewicz, Chairman of the Supreme College (based in Bialystok, Poland) was elected to that post - the first time in postwar history of a relationship - March 20, 2004 at the XV Congress of the Muslim Religious Association. Earlier, the presidents exercising the duties included Stefan Bajraszewski, Stefan Mucharski, Jan Sobolewski, and Stefan Korycki.",
"Stanisław Potrzebowski\n Stanisław Potrzebowski (born 9 February 1937) is the founder and Naczelnik (leader) of Rodzima Wiara, a Polish rodnover organisation, and of the European Congress of Ethnic Religions.",
"Tokarski\nDustin Tokarski (born 1989), Canadian ice hockey player ; Genowefa Tokarska (born 1949), Polish politician ; Joanna Tokarska-Bakir (born 1958), Polish cultural anthropologist ; Maja Tokarska (born 1991), Polish volleyball player ; Piotr Tokarski, Polish actor Tokarski (feminine Tokarska) is a Polish surname, it may refer to:",
"List of Polish people\n spiritual leader of the Polish Brethren ; Jerzy Popiełuszko, Catholic priest and dissident assassinated by the Polish security service in 1984, martyr of the Church ; Walenty Potocki (died 1749), Count; converted to Judaism as Avrohom ben Avrohom, the Ger Tzedek of Vilna ; Jan Puzyna, Bishop of Kraków, 1895–1911, Cardinal ; Jerzy Radziwiłł, Bishop of Kraków, Cardinal, 1591–1600 ; Sholom Rokeach, the first Belzer Rebbe, 1817–1855 ; Tadeusz Rydzyk, Redemptorist, broadcast radio controller ; St. Stanisław of Szczepanów, Bishop of Kraków, martyr 1079 ; Adam Stefan Sapieha, Bishop/Archbishop of Kraków, Cardinal, 1911–1951 ; Franciszka Siedliska, religious, founder of Congregation of ",
"Olga Tokarczuk\n Polish Kłodzko Valley, eccentric in perception of other humans through astrology and fond of the poetry of William Blake, from whose work the title of the book is taken. She decides to investigate murders of members of local hunting club, and initially explains these deaths as caused by wild animals in vengeance on hunters. The novel has become one of the bestsellers in Poland. It was the basis of the crime film Spoor (2017) directed by Agnieszka Holland, which won the Alfred Bauer Prize (Silver Bear) at the 67th Berlin International Film Festival. English translation by Antonia Lloyd-Jones earned Tokarczuk ",
"Olga Tokarczuk\n Olga Nawoja Tokarczuk (born 29 January 1962) is a Polish writer, activist, and public intellectual considered one of the most critically acclaimed and successful authors of her generation in Poland. In 2019 she was awarded the 2018 Nobel Prize in Literature as the first Polish female prose writer \"for a narrative imagination that with encyclopedic passion represents the crossing of boundaries as a form of life.\" For her novel Flights, Tokarczuk has been awarded the 2018 Man Booker International Prize (translated by Jennifer Croft). Her works include Primeval and Other Times, Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead, and The Books of Jacob. Tokarczuk is particularly noted for the mythical tone of her writing. A clinical psychologist from the University of Warsaw, she has published a collection of poems, several ",
"Michał Karaszewicz-Tokarzewski\nCommander of the Virtuti Militari Order ; Commander of the Order of Polonia Restituta ; Krzyż Niepodległości (Cross of Independence), with Swords ; Krzyż Walecznych (Cross of Valour), 4 times ; Złoty Krzyż Zasługi z Mieczami (Gold Cross of Merit with Swords), twice ; Order of the White Eagle (posthumously in 1964 by the Polish authorities in exile) ",
"National Movement (Poland)\nTokarz, Grzegorz (2002). Ruch narodowy w Polsce w latach 1989-1997. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego ",
"Olga Tokarczuk\n a series of mythic narratives, is transformed into a universal epic tale of the struggle against rigid thinking, either religious or philosophical, that ostracize and enslave people. An extensive and prolific work that warns against our inability to embrace an environment complex in its diversity, fueling a fanatical sectarianism which ends in disaster. The Books of Jacob, by telling the past with a dazzling virtuosity, helps us to better understand the world in which we live.\" In regard to the historical and ideological divides of Polish literature, the book has been characterized as anti-Sienkiewicz. It was soon acclaimed by critics "
] |
What is the religion of John Orr? | [
"Anglicanism",
"Anglicanism, Anglican Church"
] | religion | John Orr (bishop) | 4,729,181 | 48 | [
{
"id": "3630775",
"title": "Matt Orr",
"text": "Notes ",
"score": "1.8723071"
},
{
"id": "30943427",
"title": "J. Edwin Orr",
"text": " James Edwin Orr (January 15, 1912 – April 22, 1987) was a Baptist Christian minister, hymn-writer, professor, author and promoter of Church revival and renewal.",
"score": "1.603513"
},
{
"id": "4657492",
"title": "John Orr (bowls)",
"text": " He was a doctor by trade and lived in Park Terrace, Edinburgh.",
"score": "1.5809441"
},
{
"id": "9172510",
"title": "John Orr (scholar of French)",
"text": " John Orr, FBA (4 June 1885 – 10 August 1966) was an English-born Scottish-Australian scholar of French language and philology, and a translator of French literature.",
"score": "1.5635065"
},
{
"id": "30943429",
"title": "J. Edwin Orr",
"text": " marriage the Orrs evangelised in Australia (1939) China, Canada and the United States of America. In 1939 Orr enrolled at Northwest University. On 15 January 1940 he was ordained into the Baptist Christian ministry, at Newark, New Jersey, United States. He received his MA from Northwest University in 1941, and his Th.D. from Northern Baptist Seminary in 1943. During World War II he served as a chaplain in the US Air Force in the Pacific. After the war he continued his studies and took his Ph.D. at Oxford University in 1948, with a thesis on the second evangelical awakening in Britain. ",
"score": "1.5475557"
},
{
"id": "9300819",
"title": "Johnny Orr (basketball, born 1927)",
"text": " John Michael Orr (June 10, 1927 – December 30, 2013) was an American basketball player and coach, best known as the head coach of men's basketball at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, University of Michigan, and at Iowa State University. In the 1975–76 season, Orr was named National Coach of the Year.",
"score": "1.5319827"
},
{
"id": "15112584",
"title": "John Orr (bishop)",
"text": " The Most Rev John Orr was a 20th-century Anglican Bishop. Born in 1874 and educated at Trinity College, Dublin, he was ordained in 1900. He began his ministry with curacies at St John’s, Dublin and All Saints, Aghade, and St Nicholas, Dundalk and Kilmore Cathedral. In 1912 he became Rector of Sligo and in 1917 appointed Dean of Tuam. In 1923 he became Bishop of Tuam and in 1927 was translated to Meath. He died in post on 21 July 1938",
"score": "1.5168493"
},
{
"id": "8804561",
"title": "Lawrence Orr",
"text": " Orr was born at 2 Ulster Terrace in Belfast on 16 September 1918, the son of clerk William Robert Macauley Orr and the former Evelyn Sarah Storey. He was later chairman of the Ulster Unionist MPs in the House of Commons from 1964 to 1974 and also Imperial Grand Master of the Orange Order. He defended the influence of Orangemen in the UUP, saying they are \"neither bigoted nor uncharitable ... we do not seek to injure or upbraid a man on account of his religious opinions ... and that they treated those who differed from them with all the common courtesies of a civilised community.\" Orr warned members not to \"follow any narrow-minded part or copy the medieval Roman church in restricting the liberty of conscience of our members.\" He also resisted attempts by Westminster to interfere in Northern Ireland's affairs. He married Jean Hughes and she bore five children, William, Mary, John, Robin and Christopher.",
"score": "1.5149276"
},
{
"id": "14223562",
"title": "Orr (Catch-22)",
"text": " Orr's motivation throughout is to escape the squadron and the war. He is also known for being very mechanically adept and uses his skills to make his and Yossarian's tent as comfortable as possible. This is because Yossarian is his friend, and although it is Orr's intent to escape, he wants to make things comfortable and good for him.",
"score": "1.4997894"
},
{
"id": "9172511",
"title": "John Orr (scholar of French)",
"text": " Orr was born in 1885 in Cumberland to Scottish parents. When he was still a boy, the family migrated to Tasmania, where he attended Launceston High School and the University of Tasmania (he read classics at the latter). He won a Rhodes Scholarship to study at Balliol College, Oxford, beginning in 1905. He initially studied classics, switching to law for his finals, which he sat in 1909. A period of ill health led him to France and Switzerland for recuperation; there, he met his future wife, Augusta Berthe Brisac, and also developed an interest in French language and literature. In 1911, he was awarded the Licence-ès-Lettres by the University of Paris. He completed the BLitt at the University of Oxford in 1913.",
"score": "1.4997127"
},
{
"id": "10908397",
"title": "Don Orr",
"text": " Donald C. Orr was an American football player and official.",
"score": "1.4937043"
},
{
"id": "11799873",
"title": "John Orr (priest)",
"text": " John Orr was an 18th-century Irish Anglican priest. Barton was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, He was Rector of Maryborough then Archdeacon of Ferns from 1757 until his 1767.",
"score": "1.4921277"
},
{
"id": "876117",
"title": "James Orr (theologian)",
"text": " James Orr (1844–6 September 1913 ) was a Scottish Presbyterian minister and professor of church history and then theology. He was an influential defender of evangelical doctrine and a contributor to The Fundamentals.",
"score": "1.4895378"
},
{
"id": "876119",
"title": "James Orr (theologian)",
"text": " Orr was a vocal critic of theological liberalism (of Albrecht Ritschl especially) and helped establish Christian fundamentalism. His lectures and writings upheld the doctrines of the virgin birth and resurrection of Jesus, and the infallibility of the Bible. In contrast to modern fundamentalists and his friend B.B. Warfield, he did not agree with the stronger position of Biblical inerrancy. Like Warfield, but also unlike modern Christian fundamentalists, he advocated a position which he called \"theistic evolution\". Orr wrote that \"evolution is coming to be recognized as but a new name for 'creation', only that the creative power now works from within, instead of, as in the old conception, in an external plastic fashion.\" In his book Revelation and Inspiration (1910), he wrote that evolution is not in conflict with the Christian theistic view of the world.",
"score": "1.4879961"
},
{
"id": "31870381",
"title": "1966 in Ireland",
"text": "Sydney Sparkes Orr, Professor of Philosophy at the University of Tasmania (born 1914). ",
"score": "1.4836974"
},
{
"id": "5758712",
"title": "Orr (surname)",
"text": "Orr, bomber pilot in the novel Catch-22 by Joseph Heller ; George Orr, protagonist in the novel The Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K. Le Guin ; John Orr, protagonist in the novel The Bridge by Iain Banks ",
"score": "1.483078"
},
{
"id": "876118",
"title": "James Orr (theologian)",
"text": " Orr was born in Glasgow and spent his childhood in Manchester and Leeds. He was orphaned and became an apprentice bookbinder, but went on to enter Glasgow University in 1865. In 1870, he obtained an M.A. in Philosophy of Mind, and after graduating from the theological college of the United Presbyterian Church, he was ordained a minister in Hawick. In 1885 he received a D.D. from Glasgow University, and in the early 1890s delivered a series of lectures that later became the influential The Christian View of God and the World. He was appointed professor of Church history in 1891 at the theological college of the United Presbyterian Church. He was one of the primary promoters of the union of the United Presbyterian Church with the Free Church of Scotland, and he represented the United Presbyterians in the unification talks. After they joined in 1900, he moved to Free Church College (now Trinity College, Glasgow), as professor of apologetics and theology. He lectured widely in both Britain and the United States.",
"score": "1.4808292"
},
{
"id": "14223561",
"title": "Orr (Catch-22)",
"text": " Orr is a fictional character in the classic 1961 novel Catch-22 by Joseph Heller. Orr is a World War II bomber pilot who shares a tent with his good friend, the protagonist of the novel, Yossarian. Described as \"a warm-hearted, simple-minded gnome,\" Orr is generally considered crazy. His most notable feature is repeatedly being shot down over water, but, until his final flight, always managing to survive along with his entire crew. On his final flight, perhaps two-thirds of the way through the novel, he is again shot down into the Mediterranean, and is lost at sea. Only in the last ten pages of the novel does Heller reveal that Orr's crashes were part of an elaborate (and successful) plot to escape the war. Orr is the only airman of the group to successfully get away by the end of the novel.",
"score": "1.4807577"
},
{
"id": "9172514",
"title": "John Orr (scholar of French)",
"text": " Languages and Literatures from 1963 to 1966; he was Romance editor for the Modern Language Review from 1948 to 1958, and was among the founders of French Studies. Orr was the subject of a Festschrift: Studies in Romance Philology and French Literature Presented to John Orr by Pupils, Colleagues and Friends (1953). He was elected a fellow of the British Academy in 1952 and was awarded three honorary doctorates. He was a Commander of the French Legion of Honour and a Knight Commander of the Spanish Civil Order of Alfonso X, the Wise. He died in 1966; his wife and their only child had predeceased him.",
"score": "1.4749172"
},
{
"id": "9815603",
"title": "Ori Orr",
"text": " Orr was born in Kfar Haim, Mandatory Palestine, in 1939. He was awarded a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science & History from Tel Aviv University.",
"score": "1.4674275"
}
] | [
"Matt Orr\nNotes ",
"J. Edwin Orr\n James Edwin Orr (January 15, 1912 – April 22, 1987) was a Baptist Christian minister, hymn-writer, professor, author and promoter of Church revival and renewal.",
"John Orr (bowls)\n He was a doctor by trade and lived in Park Terrace, Edinburgh.",
"John Orr (scholar of French)\n John Orr, FBA (4 June 1885 – 10 August 1966) was an English-born Scottish-Australian scholar of French language and philology, and a translator of French literature.",
"J. Edwin Orr\n marriage the Orrs evangelised in Australia (1939) China, Canada and the United States of America. In 1939 Orr enrolled at Northwest University. On 15 January 1940 he was ordained into the Baptist Christian ministry, at Newark, New Jersey, United States. He received his MA from Northwest University in 1941, and his Th.D. from Northern Baptist Seminary in 1943. During World War II he served as a chaplain in the US Air Force in the Pacific. After the war he continued his studies and took his Ph.D. at Oxford University in 1948, with a thesis on the second evangelical awakening in Britain. ",
"Johnny Orr (basketball, born 1927)\n John Michael Orr (June 10, 1927 – December 30, 2013) was an American basketball player and coach, best known as the head coach of men's basketball at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, University of Michigan, and at Iowa State University. In the 1975–76 season, Orr was named National Coach of the Year.",
"John Orr (bishop)\n The Most Rev John Orr was a 20th-century Anglican Bishop. Born in 1874 and educated at Trinity College, Dublin, he was ordained in 1900. He began his ministry with curacies at St John’s, Dublin and All Saints, Aghade, and St Nicholas, Dundalk and Kilmore Cathedral. In 1912 he became Rector of Sligo and in 1917 appointed Dean of Tuam. In 1923 he became Bishop of Tuam and in 1927 was translated to Meath. He died in post on 21 July 1938",
"Lawrence Orr\n Orr was born at 2 Ulster Terrace in Belfast on 16 September 1918, the son of clerk William Robert Macauley Orr and the former Evelyn Sarah Storey. He was later chairman of the Ulster Unionist MPs in the House of Commons from 1964 to 1974 and also Imperial Grand Master of the Orange Order. He defended the influence of Orangemen in the UUP, saying they are \"neither bigoted nor uncharitable ... we do not seek to injure or upbraid a man on account of his religious opinions ... and that they treated those who differed from them with all the common courtesies of a civilised community.\" Orr warned members not to \"follow any narrow-minded part or copy the medieval Roman church in restricting the liberty of conscience of our members.\" He also resisted attempts by Westminster to interfere in Northern Ireland's affairs. He married Jean Hughes and she bore five children, William, Mary, John, Robin and Christopher.",
"Orr (Catch-22)\n Orr's motivation throughout is to escape the squadron and the war. He is also known for being very mechanically adept and uses his skills to make his and Yossarian's tent as comfortable as possible. This is because Yossarian is his friend, and although it is Orr's intent to escape, he wants to make things comfortable and good for him.",
"John Orr (scholar of French)\n Orr was born in 1885 in Cumberland to Scottish parents. When he was still a boy, the family migrated to Tasmania, where he attended Launceston High School and the University of Tasmania (he read classics at the latter). He won a Rhodes Scholarship to study at Balliol College, Oxford, beginning in 1905. He initially studied classics, switching to law for his finals, which he sat in 1909. A period of ill health led him to France and Switzerland for recuperation; there, he met his future wife, Augusta Berthe Brisac, and also developed an interest in French language and literature. In 1911, he was awarded the Licence-ès-Lettres by the University of Paris. He completed the BLitt at the University of Oxford in 1913.",
"Don Orr\n Donald C. Orr was an American football player and official.",
"John Orr (priest)\n John Orr was an 18th-century Irish Anglican priest. Barton was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, He was Rector of Maryborough then Archdeacon of Ferns from 1757 until his 1767.",
"James Orr (theologian)\n James Orr (1844–6 September 1913 ) was a Scottish Presbyterian minister and professor of church history and then theology. He was an influential defender of evangelical doctrine and a contributor to The Fundamentals.",
"James Orr (theologian)\n Orr was a vocal critic of theological liberalism (of Albrecht Ritschl especially) and helped establish Christian fundamentalism. His lectures and writings upheld the doctrines of the virgin birth and resurrection of Jesus, and the infallibility of the Bible. In contrast to modern fundamentalists and his friend B.B. Warfield, he did not agree with the stronger position of Biblical inerrancy. Like Warfield, but also unlike modern Christian fundamentalists, he advocated a position which he called \"theistic evolution\". Orr wrote that \"evolution is coming to be recognized as but a new name for 'creation', only that the creative power now works from within, instead of, as in the old conception, in an external plastic fashion.\" In his book Revelation and Inspiration (1910), he wrote that evolution is not in conflict with the Christian theistic view of the world.",
"1966 in Ireland\nSydney Sparkes Orr, Professor of Philosophy at the University of Tasmania (born 1914). ",
"Orr (surname)\nOrr, bomber pilot in the novel Catch-22 by Joseph Heller ; George Orr, protagonist in the novel The Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K. Le Guin ; John Orr, protagonist in the novel The Bridge by Iain Banks ",
"James Orr (theologian)\n Orr was born in Glasgow and spent his childhood in Manchester and Leeds. He was orphaned and became an apprentice bookbinder, but went on to enter Glasgow University in 1865. In 1870, he obtained an M.A. in Philosophy of Mind, and after graduating from the theological college of the United Presbyterian Church, he was ordained a minister in Hawick. In 1885 he received a D.D. from Glasgow University, and in the early 1890s delivered a series of lectures that later became the influential The Christian View of God and the World. He was appointed professor of Church history in 1891 at the theological college of the United Presbyterian Church. He was one of the primary promoters of the union of the United Presbyterian Church with the Free Church of Scotland, and he represented the United Presbyterians in the unification talks. After they joined in 1900, he moved to Free Church College (now Trinity College, Glasgow), as professor of apologetics and theology. He lectured widely in both Britain and the United States.",
"Orr (Catch-22)\n Orr is a fictional character in the classic 1961 novel Catch-22 by Joseph Heller. Orr is a World War II bomber pilot who shares a tent with his good friend, the protagonist of the novel, Yossarian. Described as \"a warm-hearted, simple-minded gnome,\" Orr is generally considered crazy. His most notable feature is repeatedly being shot down over water, but, until his final flight, always managing to survive along with his entire crew. On his final flight, perhaps two-thirds of the way through the novel, he is again shot down into the Mediterranean, and is lost at sea. Only in the last ten pages of the novel does Heller reveal that Orr's crashes were part of an elaborate (and successful) plot to escape the war. Orr is the only airman of the group to successfully get away by the end of the novel.",
"John Orr (scholar of French)\n Languages and Literatures from 1963 to 1966; he was Romance editor for the Modern Language Review from 1948 to 1958, and was among the founders of French Studies. Orr was the subject of a Festschrift: Studies in Romance Philology and French Literature Presented to John Orr by Pupils, Colleagues and Friends (1953). He was elected a fellow of the British Academy in 1952 and was awarded three honorary doctorates. He was a Commander of the French Legion of Honour and a Knight Commander of the Spanish Civil Order of Alfonso X, the Wise. He died in 1966; his wife and their only child had predeceased him.",
"Ori Orr\n Orr was born in Kfar Haim, Mandatory Palestine, in 1939. He was awarded a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science & History from Tel Aviv University."
] |
What is the religion of Benedito Domingos Vito Coscia? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Benedict D. Coscia | 6,263,561 | 52 | [
{
"id": "14506983",
"title": "Benedict D. Coscia",
"text": " Benedict D. Coscia, O.F.M. Benedito Domingos Coscia, (10 August 1922 − 30 April 2008) was an American Friar Minor and a Catholic bishop.",
"score": "1.6646888"
},
{
"id": "14506984",
"title": "Benedict D. Coscia",
"text": " He was born Vito Coscia in Brooklyn, New York, in 1922 and baptized at the Church of Our Lady, Help of Christians, on Staten Island. He attended Public School 104 in the Fort Hamilton section of Brooklyn for his elementary education (1928-1935) and then Immaculata High School in Manhattan (1935-1939). After graduation, he enrolled at St. Francis College in Brooklyn. Coscia then felt called to enter the Franciscans. He was admitted as a candidate for Holy Name Province, based in New York City, and entered St. Joseph Seraphic Seminary in Callicoon, New York, where he was admitted to the novitiate and given the religious name of Dominic Coscia. He made his initial profession of religious vows on December 8, 1943. He was then sent to complete his college studies at St. Bonaventure College (1943-1945), followed by seminary studies at Holy Name College in Washington, D.C. (1945-1949). During this same period, he earned a Master's degree in Latin American history (1945-1948). He was ordained to the priesthood on November 6, 1949.",
"score": "1.5164137"
},
{
"id": "16111664",
"title": "Gianni Coscia",
"text": " Gianni Coscia (born January 23, 1931 in Alessandria) is an Italian jazz accordionist. Originally a lawyer, Coscia began focusing full-time on jazz music. Expresses an interest in developing \"the remote values of cultural and popular tradition through the language of jazz.\" Has toured widely on the international jazz circuit. Of interest: the liner notes to his first CD were written by his former classmate Umberto Eco and he collaborated with Luciano Berio in the writing of the music of a stage show against antisemitism. Since 1995 he has collaborated with wood-player Gianluigi Trovesi mainly on the label ECM Records and since 2006 he has been a member of the Council of the Chigiana Music Academy in Siena.",
"score": "1.4135337"
},
{
"id": "8918415",
"title": "Niccolò Coscia",
"text": " Niccolò Coscia (1681 – 8 February 1755) was an Italian Roman Catholic cardinal. He was born at Pietradefusi, near Avellino. In 1725 he was appointed as Cardinal of Santa Maria in Domnica by Pope Benedict XIII, whose secretary he had been when the future pope was Archbishop of Benevento. Coscia held the effective government of the Papal States during Benedict's reign. He took advantage of his position to commit a long series of financial abuses, causing the ruin of the Papal treasury. According to Montesquieu, \"All the money of Rome goes to Benevento... as the Beneventani direct [Benedict's] weakness\". When Benedict died, Coscia fled Rome. In 1731 he was tried, excommunicated and condemned to ten years' imprisonment in Castel Sant'Angelo. However, he managed to have his sentence commuted to a fine. Restored, he took part in the conclaves of 1730 and 1740. He died in Naples in 1755.",
"score": "1.4104986"
},
{
"id": "26233777",
"title": "Angelo Antonino Pipitone",
"text": " Angelo Antonino Pipitone (born August 30, 1943 in Carini, Sicily) is a member of the Sicilian Mafia from Carini near Palermo. Pipitone is the boss of the cosca of Carini and was arrested on September 25, 2014 together with his wife Franca Pellerito, his daughter Epifania and her husband Benedetto Pipitone, his cousin Francesco Marco Pipitone as well as Angela Conigliaro, who according to the investigators is loyal to the Pipitone family.",
"score": "1.3932495"
},
{
"id": "26538453",
"title": "Benedito de Lira",
"text": " Benedito Lyra (born May 1, 1941) is a Brazilian politician from Alagoas, member of Progressistas (PP), former Senator for his state and incumbent Mayor of Barra de São Miguel.",
"score": "1.3774414"
},
{
"id": "14506985",
"title": "Benedict D. Coscia",
"text": " After his ordination, Coscia immediately volunteered to serve in the missions being established in South America by his province. He was sent to Brazil in 1950, where he assumed the name of Benedict Dominic Coscia to honor Benedict the Moor, a Franciscan friar and saint, whom he greatly revered. He initially served as a parish vicar in Anápolis, Goiás, for seven years. From 1957 to 1961 he then served as a pastor, high school teacher and the Guardian of the community of Friars Minor in Pires do Rio. In 1961, Coscia was selected to serve as the Bishop of Jataí by ",
"score": "1.3759844"
},
{
"id": "29143442",
"title": "Baháʼí Faith in Italy",
"text": " The early 1950s was a big period for development of the religion in Italy. The local assemblies of Florence and Naples were elected first in 1951. Orientalist Alessandro Bausani joined the religion before April 1951 - eventually he was Professor Emeritus and Director of the School of Oriental Studies and the Institute of Islamic Studies at the University of Rome \"La Sapienza\", and he was a member of the \"Lincei\" National Academy. He helped sustain every institution or committee, national or local, on which he was called to serve. Emily Maude Waterworth Bosio (\"Maud Bosio\") was 54 years of age when she joined the religion in January 1953. During her fifteen years of service, Bosio was usually a member of the assembly of Florence. And the Baháʼí community in Sicily began in 1953.",
"score": "1.374824"
},
{
"id": "8656549",
"title": "San Vito, Vizzini",
"text": " A place of worship at the site was present in the paleochristian era, aided by the presence of burial catacombs. Initially called the church of Spirito Santo (Holy Spirit). When the church was rebuilt, it incorporated also an oratory or church dedicated to San Vito. The interior contains an altar by the school of Antonello Gagini, and a 15th-century statue depicting St Michael Archangel. The facade has a decorative frieze and volutes linking to the aisles. The bell-tower has some moorish designs.",
"score": "1.3675689"
},
{
"id": "28531145",
"title": "Vito Carrera",
"text": " Vito Carrera (born in Trapani, active 1603 - died Palermo, 1623) was an Italian painter of the Baroque period, active mainly in Palermo. Also known as il Trapanese, since he was born in Trapani. Among his pupils were Pietro Novelli and Andrea Carreca. In Trapani, he painted for the church of the Dominicani, and the organ doors for the church of Santa Maria di Gesu.",
"score": "1.3587"
},
{
"id": "25620353",
"title": "Benedito Calixto",
"text": " Benedito Calixto de Jesus (14 October 1853 – 31 May 1927) was a Brazilian painter. His works usually depicted figures from Brazil and Brazilian culture, including a famous portrait of the bandeirante Domingos Jorge Velho in 1923, and scenes from the coastline of São Paulo. Unlike many artists of the time, Calixto's patron was an individual other than the state, who were \"the most dependable source of patronage.\"",
"score": "1.3497262"
},
{
"id": "32822201",
"title": "Vito De Filippo",
"text": " Vito De Filippo (born 27 August 1963 Sant'Arcangelo) is an Italian politician and member of the centrist party Italia Viva. He has served as the President of the Italian region of Basilicata from 6 May 2005 until his resignation on 24 April 2013 during his second term.",
"score": "1.3453616"
},
{
"id": "4544292",
"title": "Religious syncretism",
"text": " In Italy, especially within the Mezzogiorno, there is a syncretic Folk Catholic tradition known as Benedicaria. The origins of Benedicaria are not well known however, it could have potentially risen from the mixture between the forms of Roman Catholicism practiced by the common people and ancient Italian folk practices. Despite it being separated from mainstream Catholicism, followers still consider themselves to be devout Catholics.",
"score": "1.3447776"
},
{
"id": "3661116",
"title": "Gay pride",
"text": " Correio 24 horas. According to the website Notícias de Ipiau, Ederivaldo Benedito, known as Bené, said four police officers tried to convince him to delete the photos soon after they realized they were being photographed. When he refused, they ordered him to turn over the camera. When the photographer refused again, the police charged him with contempt and held him in jail for over 21 hours until he gave a statement. According to Chief Marlon Macedo, the police alleged that the photographer was interfering with their work, did not have identification, and became aggressive when he was asked to move. Bené denied the allegations, saying the police were belligerent and that the scene was witnessed by \"over 300 people\", reported Agência Estado.",
"score": "1.3432817"
},
{
"id": "1887584",
"title": "Coscia",
"text": "Agustín Coscia (born 1997), Argentine footballer ; Aristide Coscia (1918–1979), Italian footballer and manager ; Benedict D. Coscia (1922−2008), American-born Brazilian Franciscan friar and Roman Catholic bishop ; Gianni Coscia, Italian jazz accordionist ; Hugo Coscia (born 1952), Argentine footballer ; Niccolò Coscia (1681–1755), Italian cardinal ; Raffaele Coscia (born 1983), Italian footballer Coscia is an Italian surname. Notable people with the surname include: ",
"score": "1.3407533"
},
{
"id": "30651933",
"title": "Vito Bonsignore",
"text": " Vito Bonsignore (born 3 July 1943 in Bronte, Catania, Sicily) is an Italian politician.",
"score": "1.3324339"
},
{
"id": "5464847",
"title": "Vito Fazio Allmayer",
"text": " He was born in Palermo from Giuseppe Emanuele Fazio, originary from Alcamo (ex garibaldian and working at the National Museum of Palermo) and from Felicina Allmayer, of German origins but resident in Italy. Since a boy he was interested in the history of art; when he was 23 he graduated in Jurisprudence, but as he was fond of philosophy, he soon started the philosophical studies and attended the philosophical library of Palermo, where he met Giovanni Gentile. In 1910 Allmayer graduated in philosophy and started his career as teacher: in 1914 he moved to the liceo \"Umberto I\" in Palermo, where he started his rich essaystic production that made him famous in Italy. His career continued in Rome; soon after the fall of Fascism, in ",
"score": "1.3317401"
},
{
"id": "29143486",
"title": "Baháʼí Faith in Italy",
"text": " Bergamo noting his religion as Baháʼí in. A Sinti gypsy, Vittorio Mayer Custodino, (known as \"Spatzo\" or \"Sparrow\") came in contact with the religion while in prison in Sicily. Through him a number of Sicilian Sinti joined the religion by March 1978. In 1989 the first member of the Arbëreshë, Pietro Pandolfini, from Gela, joined the religion. In 1990 some sixty youth gathered in Gela for a conference. Respecting its regional autonomy and the depth of the Baháʼí community in 1995 the Baháʼís of Sicily elected its own National Assembly. In September 2003 the Baháʼís of Sicily celebrated the golden jubilee of the arrival of the religion there and which in 2003 had eleven assemblies.",
"score": "1.3287942"
},
{
"id": "30021781",
"title": "Benedetto Croce",
"text": " Croce was born in Pescasseroli in the Abruzzo region of Italy. His family was influential and wealthy, and he was raised in a very strict Catholic environment. Around the age of 16, he quit Catholicism and developed a personal philosophy of spiritual life, in which religion cannot be anything but a historical institution where the creative strength of mankind can be expressed. He kept this philosophy for the rest of his life. In 1883, an earthquake occurred in the village of Casamicciola on the island of Ischia near Naples, where he was on holiday with his family, destroying the home they lived in. His mother, father, and only sister were all killed, while he was buried for a long time and barely survived. After the earthquake he inherited his family's fortune and—much like Schopenhauer—was able to live the rest of his life in relative ",
"score": "1.327101"
},
{
"id": "170458",
"title": "Fabrizio De André",
"text": " and the Church hierarchy is often sarcastic and highly critical about their contradictory behaviour, such as, for example, in the songs Un blasfemo, Il testamento di Tito, La ballata del Miché and the last verses of Bocca di rosa. \"I feel myself religious, and my religion is to feel part of a whole, in a chain that includes all creation and so to respect all elements, including plants and minerals, because, in my opinion, the balance is exactly given from the well-being in our surroundings. My religion does not seek the principle, you want to call it creator, regulator or chaos makes no difference. But I think that everything around us ",
"score": "1.3221695"
}
] | [
"Benedict D. Coscia\n Benedict D. Coscia, O.F.M. Benedito Domingos Coscia, (10 August 1922 − 30 April 2008) was an American Friar Minor and a Catholic bishop.",
"Benedict D. Coscia\n He was born Vito Coscia in Brooklyn, New York, in 1922 and baptized at the Church of Our Lady, Help of Christians, on Staten Island. He attended Public School 104 in the Fort Hamilton section of Brooklyn for his elementary education (1928-1935) and then Immaculata High School in Manhattan (1935-1939). After graduation, he enrolled at St. Francis College in Brooklyn. Coscia then felt called to enter the Franciscans. He was admitted as a candidate for Holy Name Province, based in New York City, and entered St. Joseph Seraphic Seminary in Callicoon, New York, where he was admitted to the novitiate and given the religious name of Dominic Coscia. He made his initial profession of religious vows on December 8, 1943. He was then sent to complete his college studies at St. Bonaventure College (1943-1945), followed by seminary studies at Holy Name College in Washington, D.C. (1945-1949). During this same period, he earned a Master's degree in Latin American history (1945-1948). He was ordained to the priesthood on November 6, 1949.",
"Gianni Coscia\n Gianni Coscia (born January 23, 1931 in Alessandria) is an Italian jazz accordionist. Originally a lawyer, Coscia began focusing full-time on jazz music. Expresses an interest in developing \"the remote values of cultural and popular tradition through the language of jazz.\" Has toured widely on the international jazz circuit. Of interest: the liner notes to his first CD were written by his former classmate Umberto Eco and he collaborated with Luciano Berio in the writing of the music of a stage show against antisemitism. Since 1995 he has collaborated with wood-player Gianluigi Trovesi mainly on the label ECM Records and since 2006 he has been a member of the Council of the Chigiana Music Academy in Siena.",
"Niccolò Coscia\n Niccolò Coscia (1681 – 8 February 1755) was an Italian Roman Catholic cardinal. He was born at Pietradefusi, near Avellino. In 1725 he was appointed as Cardinal of Santa Maria in Domnica by Pope Benedict XIII, whose secretary he had been when the future pope was Archbishop of Benevento. Coscia held the effective government of the Papal States during Benedict's reign. He took advantage of his position to commit a long series of financial abuses, causing the ruin of the Papal treasury. According to Montesquieu, \"All the money of Rome goes to Benevento... as the Beneventani direct [Benedict's] weakness\". When Benedict died, Coscia fled Rome. In 1731 he was tried, excommunicated and condemned to ten years' imprisonment in Castel Sant'Angelo. However, he managed to have his sentence commuted to a fine. Restored, he took part in the conclaves of 1730 and 1740. He died in Naples in 1755.",
"Angelo Antonino Pipitone\n Angelo Antonino Pipitone (born August 30, 1943 in Carini, Sicily) is a member of the Sicilian Mafia from Carini near Palermo. Pipitone is the boss of the cosca of Carini and was arrested on September 25, 2014 together with his wife Franca Pellerito, his daughter Epifania and her husband Benedetto Pipitone, his cousin Francesco Marco Pipitone as well as Angela Conigliaro, who according to the investigators is loyal to the Pipitone family.",
"Benedito de Lira\n Benedito Lyra (born May 1, 1941) is a Brazilian politician from Alagoas, member of Progressistas (PP), former Senator for his state and incumbent Mayor of Barra de São Miguel.",
"Benedict D. Coscia\n After his ordination, Coscia immediately volunteered to serve in the missions being established in South America by his province. He was sent to Brazil in 1950, where he assumed the name of Benedict Dominic Coscia to honor Benedict the Moor, a Franciscan friar and saint, whom he greatly revered. He initially served as a parish vicar in Anápolis, Goiás, for seven years. From 1957 to 1961 he then served as a pastor, high school teacher and the Guardian of the community of Friars Minor in Pires do Rio. In 1961, Coscia was selected to serve as the Bishop of Jataí by ",
"Baháʼí Faith in Italy\n The early 1950s was a big period for development of the religion in Italy. The local assemblies of Florence and Naples were elected first in 1951. Orientalist Alessandro Bausani joined the religion before April 1951 - eventually he was Professor Emeritus and Director of the School of Oriental Studies and the Institute of Islamic Studies at the University of Rome \"La Sapienza\", and he was a member of the \"Lincei\" National Academy. He helped sustain every institution or committee, national or local, on which he was called to serve. Emily Maude Waterworth Bosio (\"Maud Bosio\") was 54 years of age when she joined the religion in January 1953. During her fifteen years of service, Bosio was usually a member of the assembly of Florence. And the Baháʼí community in Sicily began in 1953.",
"San Vito, Vizzini\n A place of worship at the site was present in the paleochristian era, aided by the presence of burial catacombs. Initially called the church of Spirito Santo (Holy Spirit). When the church was rebuilt, it incorporated also an oratory or church dedicated to San Vito. The interior contains an altar by the school of Antonello Gagini, and a 15th-century statue depicting St Michael Archangel. The facade has a decorative frieze and volutes linking to the aisles. The bell-tower has some moorish designs.",
"Vito Carrera\n Vito Carrera (born in Trapani, active 1603 - died Palermo, 1623) was an Italian painter of the Baroque period, active mainly in Palermo. Also known as il Trapanese, since he was born in Trapani. Among his pupils were Pietro Novelli and Andrea Carreca. In Trapani, he painted for the church of the Dominicani, and the organ doors for the church of Santa Maria di Gesu.",
"Benedito Calixto\n Benedito Calixto de Jesus (14 October 1853 – 31 May 1927) was a Brazilian painter. His works usually depicted figures from Brazil and Brazilian culture, including a famous portrait of the bandeirante Domingos Jorge Velho in 1923, and scenes from the coastline of São Paulo. Unlike many artists of the time, Calixto's patron was an individual other than the state, who were \"the most dependable source of patronage.\"",
"Vito De Filippo\n Vito De Filippo (born 27 August 1963 Sant'Arcangelo) is an Italian politician and member of the centrist party Italia Viva. He has served as the President of the Italian region of Basilicata from 6 May 2005 until his resignation on 24 April 2013 during his second term.",
"Religious syncretism\n In Italy, especially within the Mezzogiorno, there is a syncretic Folk Catholic tradition known as Benedicaria. The origins of Benedicaria are not well known however, it could have potentially risen from the mixture between the forms of Roman Catholicism practiced by the common people and ancient Italian folk practices. Despite it being separated from mainstream Catholicism, followers still consider themselves to be devout Catholics.",
"Gay pride\n Correio 24 horas. According to the website Notícias de Ipiau, Ederivaldo Benedito, known as Bené, said four police officers tried to convince him to delete the photos soon after they realized they were being photographed. When he refused, they ordered him to turn over the camera. When the photographer refused again, the police charged him with contempt and held him in jail for over 21 hours until he gave a statement. According to Chief Marlon Macedo, the police alleged that the photographer was interfering with their work, did not have identification, and became aggressive when he was asked to move. Bené denied the allegations, saying the police were belligerent and that the scene was witnessed by \"over 300 people\", reported Agência Estado.",
"Coscia\nAgustín Coscia (born 1997), Argentine footballer ; Aristide Coscia (1918–1979), Italian footballer and manager ; Benedict D. Coscia (1922−2008), American-born Brazilian Franciscan friar and Roman Catholic bishop ; Gianni Coscia, Italian jazz accordionist ; Hugo Coscia (born 1952), Argentine footballer ; Niccolò Coscia (1681–1755), Italian cardinal ; Raffaele Coscia (born 1983), Italian footballer Coscia is an Italian surname. Notable people with the surname include: ",
"Vito Bonsignore\n Vito Bonsignore (born 3 July 1943 in Bronte, Catania, Sicily) is an Italian politician.",
"Vito Fazio Allmayer\n He was born in Palermo from Giuseppe Emanuele Fazio, originary from Alcamo (ex garibaldian and working at the National Museum of Palermo) and from Felicina Allmayer, of German origins but resident in Italy. Since a boy he was interested in the history of art; when he was 23 he graduated in Jurisprudence, but as he was fond of philosophy, he soon started the philosophical studies and attended the philosophical library of Palermo, where he met Giovanni Gentile. In 1910 Allmayer graduated in philosophy and started his career as teacher: in 1914 he moved to the liceo \"Umberto I\" in Palermo, where he started his rich essaystic production that made him famous in Italy. His career continued in Rome; soon after the fall of Fascism, in ",
"Baháʼí Faith in Italy\n Bergamo noting his religion as Baháʼí in. A Sinti gypsy, Vittorio Mayer Custodino, (known as \"Spatzo\" or \"Sparrow\") came in contact with the religion while in prison in Sicily. Through him a number of Sicilian Sinti joined the religion by March 1978. In 1989 the first member of the Arbëreshë, Pietro Pandolfini, from Gela, joined the religion. In 1990 some sixty youth gathered in Gela for a conference. Respecting its regional autonomy and the depth of the Baháʼí community in 1995 the Baháʼís of Sicily elected its own National Assembly. In September 2003 the Baháʼís of Sicily celebrated the golden jubilee of the arrival of the religion there and which in 2003 had eleven assemblies.",
"Benedetto Croce\n Croce was born in Pescasseroli in the Abruzzo region of Italy. His family was influential and wealthy, and he was raised in a very strict Catholic environment. Around the age of 16, he quit Catholicism and developed a personal philosophy of spiritual life, in which religion cannot be anything but a historical institution where the creative strength of mankind can be expressed. He kept this philosophy for the rest of his life. In 1883, an earthquake occurred in the village of Casamicciola on the island of Ischia near Naples, where he was on holiday with his family, destroying the home they lived in. His mother, father, and only sister were all killed, while he was buried for a long time and barely survived. After the earthquake he inherited his family's fortune and—much like Schopenhauer—was able to live the rest of his life in relative ",
"Fabrizio De André\n and the Church hierarchy is often sarcastic and highly critical about their contradictory behaviour, such as, for example, in the songs Un blasfemo, Il testamento di Tito, La ballata del Miché and the last verses of Bocca di rosa. \"I feel myself religious, and my religion is to feel part of a whole, in a chain that includes all creation and so to respect all elements, including plants and minerals, because, in my opinion, the balance is exactly given from the well-being in our surroundings. My religion does not seek the principle, you want to call it creator, regulator or chaos makes no difference. But I think that everything around us "
] |
What sport does 2012 Georgetown Hoyas men's soccer team play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | 2012 Georgetown Hoyas men's soccer team | 3,175,769 | 46 | [
{
"id": "11311114",
"title": "2012 Georgetown Hoyas football team",
"text": " The 2012 Georgetown Hoyas football team represented Georgetown University in the 2012 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by seventh-year head coach Kevin Kelly and played their home games at Multi-Sport Field. They were a member of the Patriot League. They finished the season 5–6, 2–4 in Patriot League play to finish in a three-way tie for third place.",
"score": "1.8456168"
},
{
"id": "8847012",
"title": "Georgetown Hoyas men's soccer",
"text": " Georgetown broke onto the national stage in 2012, the most successful season to date in program history. The Hoyas went 19-4-3 with a mark of 6-2-0 in the Big East Conference. The squad was the third overall seed in the NCAA Tournament and the 19 wins were the most in program history. The Hoyas were the Big East Blue Division Champions, the Big East Championship runners-up and advanced to the national championship game in penalty kicks in a game against the University of Maryland. The Hoyas were runners-up to Indiana in the 2012 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship. Brian Wiese was selected as National Coach of the Year.",
"score": "1.8410805"
},
{
"id": "11203369",
"title": "2011–12 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team",
"text": " The 2011–12 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team represented Georgetown University in the 2011–2012 NCAA Division I basketball season. They were led by John Thompson III and played their home games at the Verizon Center. They are a member of the Big East Conference. Prior to the season, the Hoyas made a goodwill trip to China for several matches with local teams. U.S. Vice President Joe Biden attended their first game, a win over the Shanxi Zhongyu Brave Dragons. Their second game, against the Bayi Rockets, ended in a brawl, causing the team to leave the court while Chinese fans threw garbage and debris. Georgetown won their final games ",
"score": "1.8033946"
},
{
"id": "8847008",
"title": "Georgetown Hoyas men's soccer",
"text": " The Georgetown Hoyas men's soccer team represents Georgetown University in all men's Division I NCAA soccer competitions. The Georgetown Hoyas joined the new Big East Conference on July 1, 2013, with other private schools from the former Big East Conference in which they previously competed. They won a national championship in 2019, and was the national runner-up in 2012. They have made nine total appearances in the NCAA Men's Division I Soccer Championship, and have won the Big East conference tournament four times and the regular season title seven times.",
"score": "1.802316"
},
{
"id": "29782216",
"title": "2012–13 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team",
"text": " Georgetown's season had an unusual beginning. The Hoyas started off with a ranked opponent – No. 10 Florida, a team they had not faced since losing to the Gators in the 2006 NCAA Tournament – in the Carrier Classic. The game was played on November 9 in front of a crowd of nearly 3,500 people, including Olympic gold medalist swimmer Conor Dwyer, Jacksonville Jaguars players Paul Posluszny and Laurent Robinson, and United States Navy and United States Marine Corps personnel, on a court set up on the flight deck of the U.S. Navy amphibious assault ship USS Bataan (LHD-5), moored at Naval Station Mayport ",
"score": "1.7967663"
},
{
"id": "13655392",
"title": "2011 Georgetown Hoyas football team",
"text": " The 2011 Georgetown Hoyas football team represented Georgetown University in the 2011 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Hoyas were led by sixth-year head coach Kevin Kelly and played their home games at Multi-Sport Field. They were a member of the Patriot League. They finished the season 8–3, 4–2 in Patriot League play to finish in a tie for second place.",
"score": "1.7617972"
},
{
"id": "5739455",
"title": "2013 Georgetown Hoyas football team",
"text": " The 2013 Georgetown Hoyas football team represented Georgetown University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by eighth-year head coach Kevin Kelly and played their home games at Multi-Sport Field. They were a member of the Patriot League. They finished the season 2–9, 1–4 in Patriot League play to finish in a tie for fifth place. At the end of the season, Kelly resigned to become the defensive coordinator at Ball State.",
"score": "1.7395768"
},
{
"id": "11203433",
"title": "2011–12 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team",
"text": " was the twelfth Hoya player in seven seasons to leave the team prior to the end of his college eligibility. Consistently mounting one of the top defenses in the Big East, the 2011-12 Hoyas were an overachieving team that finished much higher in the Big East than projected and won Georgetown's first NCAA Tournament game in four years despite a youthful roster that included 10 freshmen and sophomores. However, they also continued the disappointing streak of early Georgetown exits from the NCAA Tournament at the hands of underdog teams. They finished with a record of 24–9, and their final ranking was No. 15 in the AP Poll and No. 17 in the Coaches Poll.",
"score": "1.7395157"
},
{
"id": "29782235",
"title": "2012–13 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team",
"text": " Playing its first game since December 22, Georgetown opened its Big East season on January 5, 2013, with an upset loss at Marquette that snapped the Hoyas′ winning streak at seven games. They dropped to No. 19 in the AP Poll, then suffered another upset loss at the hands of Pittsburgh three days later. The Hoyas′ early-season shooting woes continued. Marquette held Georgetown – which missed 10 of its first 12 shots – to 48 points, 16 points below the Hoyas' season average, and won by one point; Markel Starks led the Hoyas with 18 points against the Golden Eagles, while Otto ",
"score": "1.7304363"
},
{
"id": "8847011",
"title": "Georgetown Hoyas men's soccer",
"text": " GU captured its first-ever NCAA Tournament victory with a 2–1 triumph over Virginia Commonwealth on November 23. The Hoyas finished 1997 with a 15–7 overall record and were second in the competitive Big East Conference with a 9–2 mark.",
"score": "1.7242308"
},
{
"id": "8847010",
"title": "Georgetown Hoyas men's soccer",
"text": " In 1994, the Hoyas achieved an 18–4 record and the school's first-ever berth in the NCAA Championship as well as its first Big East regular season title. Keith Tabatznik was named the South Atlantic Region and Big East Coach of the Year.",
"score": "1.7141873"
},
{
"id": "11203377",
"title": "2011–12 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team",
"text": " A little less than three months after returning from China, Georgetown began the 2011–12 season with two easy wins at the Verizon Center. In the first, over a Savannah State team coached by former Hoya player Horace Broadnax, Henry Sims came off the bench to score a game-high and career-high 19 points and Hollis Thompson added 13, while Otto Porter grabbed a game-high eight rebounds. The second win was in a game played at the Verizon Center as part of the \"Opening Round\" of the Maui Invitational Tournament, a newly established round of play in which four teams headed for ",
"score": "1.7127335"
},
{
"id": "11203370",
"title": "2011–12 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team",
"text": " the Liaoning Dinosaurs and the Taiwanese national team without incident. Before the season began, the team was picked to finish tenth in the Big East Conference standings. However, early road wins against ranked teams like Memphis, Alabama, and Louisville made the team one of the biggest surprises of the 2011–2012 season, elevating their ranking into the top ten in the nation. With a 12–6 conference record, they finished in a three-way tie for fourth place, with tie breakers placing them fifth, over South Florida but behind Cincinnati. The team was ranked No. 15 in the seasons final Associated Press Poll and No. 17 in the postseason Coaches' Poll.",
"score": "1.7060776"
},
{
"id": "11203396",
"title": "2011–12 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team",
"text": " play. The Cardinals, who had rallied from deficits of seven or more nine times dating back to the previous season, mounted a comeback with an 11–0 run that tied the game at 63–63 with 2:01 left to play. Otto Porter followed a Henry Sims miss with a layup to put Georgetown back in the lead, 65–63, and Sims then hit two free throws to make the lead 67–63. Two Porter free throws stretched the lead to 69-63 before Louisville sophomore guard Russ Smith sank a three-pointer to close the gap to 69–66. Porter followed with two clutch free throws, and the ",
"score": "1.6990072"
},
{
"id": "11203414",
"title": "2011–12 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team",
"text": " Hoyas closed out their regular season with two games against ranked opponents. In the first, against No. 20 Notre Dame at the Verizon Center, the teams combined to make eight of their first 12 shots, then combined to make only three of their next 16. The Hoyas had a 7–0 run to take an 18–11 lead, the last two of those points on a layup by Henry Sims that started a stretch in which he scored or assisted on the next 10 Georgetown points, giving the Hoyas a 26–18 lead. Georgetown led 28–18 at halftime and continued to pull away ",
"score": "1.6913619"
},
{
"id": "29782213",
"title": "2012–13 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team",
"text": " The 2012–13 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team represented Georgetown University in the 2012–13 college basketball season. They were led by John Thompson III and played their home games at the Verizon Center. They were a member of the Big East Conference. Prior to the January 12 game at St. John's, the team's second leading scorer, Greg Whittington, was suspended indefinitely for academic issues. With a 61–39 win over their rival Syracuse Orange on March 9, 2013, the team clinched their 10th Big East Regular Season Championship. Georgetown lost to 15-seed and tournament newcomer Florida Gulf Coast University 78-68 in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. The team was ranked No. 8 in the final Associated Press Poll of the season and No. 17 in the postseason Coaches' Poll. This was Georgetowns last season as a member of the original Big East Conference. It had been a founding ",
"score": "1.6817415"
},
{
"id": "11203432",
"title": "2011–12 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team",
"text": " signed with several National Basketball Association teams, beginning with the New York Knicks. Hollis Thompson announced on March 27, 2012, that he would not return to Georgetown for his senior year the following season and would enter the 2012 NBA draft; he left Georgetown having played 99 games, 57 as a starter, with a career average of 8.7 points, 4.1 rebounds, 1.1 assists, and 24.6 minutes per game, shooting 47.8 percent overall from the field, and his three-point shooting percentage of 44 percent was the best in school history. He went undrafted in the NBA draft, but signed with the Oklahoma City Thunder in July 2012 and with the Philadelphia 76ers in September 2013. ",
"score": "1.6787376"
},
{
"id": "29782253",
"title": "2012–13 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team",
"text": " over 30,000 at the Carrier Dome, and the 17th game against Georgetown there to draw more than 30,000. Georgetown got off to a very poor start, with Syracuse outscoring the Hoyas in a 10-2 run early in the game and Georgetown scoring only one basket, a two-point jumper by Otto Porter, in the game's first nine minutes. The Hoyas missed their first eight three-point attempts. But then Porter came alive, scoring 14 points during a 17-3 Georgetown run that gave the Hoyas a 21-15 lead and quieted the crowd. Then Syracuse staged a rally in the last minute of the half, ",
"score": "1.6777754"
},
{
"id": "3172879",
"title": "2008 Georgetown Hoyas football team",
"text": " The 2008 Georgetown Hoyas football team was an American football team that represented Georgetown University during the 2008 NCAA Division I FCS football season. Georgetown finished last in the Patriot League. In their third year under head coach Kevin Kelly, the Hoyas compiled a 2–8 record. Daniel Matheny and Nicholas Umar were the team captains. The Hoyas were outscored 280 to 96. Their winless (0–5) conference record was the worst in the seven-team Patriot League standings. The Hoyas played only five Patriot League games because their October 4 matchup with Colgate was canceled following a norovirus outbreak at Georgetown. Georgetown played its home games at Multi-Sport Field on the university campus in Washington, D.C.",
"score": "1.6771412"
},
{
"id": "29782219",
"title": "2012–13 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team",
"text": " so slippery that both coaches reluctantly agreed to cease play and suspend the game for the sake of the players′ safety without beginning the second half. Although the teams discussed the possibility of resuming play on another date and possibly in another location, a mutually acceptable time and place proved elusive, and Georgetown announced on November 28 that it would not agree to schedule the game's completion. The game was canceled, and did not count in the record of either team. Georgetown followed this disappointing beginning to its season by participating for the first time in the Legends Classic, in which the Hoyas ",
"score": "1.6752295"
}
] | [
"2012 Georgetown Hoyas football team\n The 2012 Georgetown Hoyas football team represented Georgetown University in the 2012 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by seventh-year head coach Kevin Kelly and played their home games at Multi-Sport Field. They were a member of the Patriot League. They finished the season 5–6, 2–4 in Patriot League play to finish in a three-way tie for third place.",
"Georgetown Hoyas men's soccer\n Georgetown broke onto the national stage in 2012, the most successful season to date in program history. The Hoyas went 19-4-3 with a mark of 6-2-0 in the Big East Conference. The squad was the third overall seed in the NCAA Tournament and the 19 wins were the most in program history. The Hoyas were the Big East Blue Division Champions, the Big East Championship runners-up and advanced to the national championship game in penalty kicks in a game against the University of Maryland. The Hoyas were runners-up to Indiana in the 2012 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship. Brian Wiese was selected as National Coach of the Year.",
"2011–12 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team\n The 2011–12 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team represented Georgetown University in the 2011–2012 NCAA Division I basketball season. They were led by John Thompson III and played their home games at the Verizon Center. They are a member of the Big East Conference. Prior to the season, the Hoyas made a goodwill trip to China for several matches with local teams. U.S. Vice President Joe Biden attended their first game, a win over the Shanxi Zhongyu Brave Dragons. Their second game, against the Bayi Rockets, ended in a brawl, causing the team to leave the court while Chinese fans threw garbage and debris. Georgetown won their final games ",
"Georgetown Hoyas men's soccer\n The Georgetown Hoyas men's soccer team represents Georgetown University in all men's Division I NCAA soccer competitions. The Georgetown Hoyas joined the new Big East Conference on July 1, 2013, with other private schools from the former Big East Conference in which they previously competed. They won a national championship in 2019, and was the national runner-up in 2012. They have made nine total appearances in the NCAA Men's Division I Soccer Championship, and have won the Big East conference tournament four times and the regular season title seven times.",
"2012–13 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team\n Georgetown's season had an unusual beginning. The Hoyas started off with a ranked opponent – No. 10 Florida, a team they had not faced since losing to the Gators in the 2006 NCAA Tournament – in the Carrier Classic. The game was played on November 9 in front of a crowd of nearly 3,500 people, including Olympic gold medalist swimmer Conor Dwyer, Jacksonville Jaguars players Paul Posluszny and Laurent Robinson, and United States Navy and United States Marine Corps personnel, on a court set up on the flight deck of the U.S. Navy amphibious assault ship USS Bataan (LHD-5), moored at Naval Station Mayport ",
"2011 Georgetown Hoyas football team\n The 2011 Georgetown Hoyas football team represented Georgetown University in the 2011 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Hoyas were led by sixth-year head coach Kevin Kelly and played their home games at Multi-Sport Field. They were a member of the Patriot League. They finished the season 8–3, 4–2 in Patriot League play to finish in a tie for second place.",
"2013 Georgetown Hoyas football team\n The 2013 Georgetown Hoyas football team represented Georgetown University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by eighth-year head coach Kevin Kelly and played their home games at Multi-Sport Field. They were a member of the Patriot League. They finished the season 2–9, 1–4 in Patriot League play to finish in a tie for fifth place. At the end of the season, Kelly resigned to become the defensive coordinator at Ball State.",
"2011–12 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team\n was the twelfth Hoya player in seven seasons to leave the team prior to the end of his college eligibility. Consistently mounting one of the top defenses in the Big East, the 2011-12 Hoyas were an overachieving team that finished much higher in the Big East than projected and won Georgetown's first NCAA Tournament game in four years despite a youthful roster that included 10 freshmen and sophomores. However, they also continued the disappointing streak of early Georgetown exits from the NCAA Tournament at the hands of underdog teams. They finished with a record of 24–9, and their final ranking was No. 15 in the AP Poll and No. 17 in the Coaches Poll.",
"2012–13 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team\n Playing its first game since December 22, Georgetown opened its Big East season on January 5, 2013, with an upset loss at Marquette that snapped the Hoyas′ winning streak at seven games. They dropped to No. 19 in the AP Poll, then suffered another upset loss at the hands of Pittsburgh three days later. The Hoyas′ early-season shooting woes continued. Marquette held Georgetown – which missed 10 of its first 12 shots – to 48 points, 16 points below the Hoyas' season average, and won by one point; Markel Starks led the Hoyas with 18 points against the Golden Eagles, while Otto ",
"Georgetown Hoyas men's soccer\n GU captured its first-ever NCAA Tournament victory with a 2–1 triumph over Virginia Commonwealth on November 23. The Hoyas finished 1997 with a 15–7 overall record and were second in the competitive Big East Conference with a 9–2 mark.",
"Georgetown Hoyas men's soccer\n In 1994, the Hoyas achieved an 18–4 record and the school's first-ever berth in the NCAA Championship as well as its first Big East regular season title. Keith Tabatznik was named the South Atlantic Region and Big East Coach of the Year.",
"2011–12 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team\n A little less than three months after returning from China, Georgetown began the 2011–12 season with two easy wins at the Verizon Center. In the first, over a Savannah State team coached by former Hoya player Horace Broadnax, Henry Sims came off the bench to score a game-high and career-high 19 points and Hollis Thompson added 13, while Otto Porter grabbed a game-high eight rebounds. The second win was in a game played at the Verizon Center as part of the \"Opening Round\" of the Maui Invitational Tournament, a newly established round of play in which four teams headed for ",
"2011–12 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team\n the Liaoning Dinosaurs and the Taiwanese national team without incident. Before the season began, the team was picked to finish tenth in the Big East Conference standings. However, early road wins against ranked teams like Memphis, Alabama, and Louisville made the team one of the biggest surprises of the 2011–2012 season, elevating their ranking into the top ten in the nation. With a 12–6 conference record, they finished in a three-way tie for fourth place, with tie breakers placing them fifth, over South Florida but behind Cincinnati. The team was ranked No. 15 in the seasons final Associated Press Poll and No. 17 in the postseason Coaches' Poll.",
"2011–12 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team\n play. The Cardinals, who had rallied from deficits of seven or more nine times dating back to the previous season, mounted a comeback with an 11–0 run that tied the game at 63–63 with 2:01 left to play. Otto Porter followed a Henry Sims miss with a layup to put Georgetown back in the lead, 65–63, and Sims then hit two free throws to make the lead 67–63. Two Porter free throws stretched the lead to 69-63 before Louisville sophomore guard Russ Smith sank a three-pointer to close the gap to 69–66. Porter followed with two clutch free throws, and the ",
"2011–12 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team\n Hoyas closed out their regular season with two games against ranked opponents. In the first, against No. 20 Notre Dame at the Verizon Center, the teams combined to make eight of their first 12 shots, then combined to make only three of their next 16. The Hoyas had a 7–0 run to take an 18–11 lead, the last two of those points on a layup by Henry Sims that started a stretch in which he scored or assisted on the next 10 Georgetown points, giving the Hoyas a 26–18 lead. Georgetown led 28–18 at halftime and continued to pull away ",
"2012–13 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team\n The 2012–13 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team represented Georgetown University in the 2012–13 college basketball season. They were led by John Thompson III and played their home games at the Verizon Center. They were a member of the Big East Conference. Prior to the January 12 game at St. John's, the team's second leading scorer, Greg Whittington, was suspended indefinitely for academic issues. With a 61–39 win over their rival Syracuse Orange on March 9, 2013, the team clinched their 10th Big East Regular Season Championship. Georgetown lost to 15-seed and tournament newcomer Florida Gulf Coast University 78-68 in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. The team was ranked No. 8 in the final Associated Press Poll of the season and No. 17 in the postseason Coaches' Poll. This was Georgetowns last season as a member of the original Big East Conference. It had been a founding ",
"2011–12 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team\n signed with several National Basketball Association teams, beginning with the New York Knicks. Hollis Thompson announced on March 27, 2012, that he would not return to Georgetown for his senior year the following season and would enter the 2012 NBA draft; he left Georgetown having played 99 games, 57 as a starter, with a career average of 8.7 points, 4.1 rebounds, 1.1 assists, and 24.6 minutes per game, shooting 47.8 percent overall from the field, and his three-point shooting percentage of 44 percent was the best in school history. He went undrafted in the NBA draft, but signed with the Oklahoma City Thunder in July 2012 and with the Philadelphia 76ers in September 2013. ",
"2012–13 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team\n over 30,000 at the Carrier Dome, and the 17th game against Georgetown there to draw more than 30,000. Georgetown got off to a very poor start, with Syracuse outscoring the Hoyas in a 10-2 run early in the game and Georgetown scoring only one basket, a two-point jumper by Otto Porter, in the game's first nine minutes. The Hoyas missed their first eight three-point attempts. But then Porter came alive, scoring 14 points during a 17-3 Georgetown run that gave the Hoyas a 21-15 lead and quieted the crowd. Then Syracuse staged a rally in the last minute of the half, ",
"2008 Georgetown Hoyas football team\n The 2008 Georgetown Hoyas football team was an American football team that represented Georgetown University during the 2008 NCAA Division I FCS football season. Georgetown finished last in the Patriot League. In their third year under head coach Kevin Kelly, the Hoyas compiled a 2–8 record. Daniel Matheny and Nicholas Umar were the team captains. The Hoyas were outscored 280 to 96. Their winless (0–5) conference record was the worst in the seven-team Patriot League standings. The Hoyas played only five Patriot League games because their October 4 matchup with Colgate was canceled following a norovirus outbreak at Georgetown. Georgetown played its home games at Multi-Sport Field on the university campus in Washington, D.C.",
"2012–13 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team\n so slippery that both coaches reluctantly agreed to cease play and suspend the game for the sake of the players′ safety without beginning the second half. Although the teams discussed the possibility of resuming play on another date and possibly in another location, a mutually acceptable time and place proved elusive, and Georgetown announced on November 28 that it would not agree to schedule the game's completion. The game was canceled, and did not count in the record of either team. Georgetown followed this disappointing beginning to its season by participating for the first time in the Legends Classic, in which the Hoyas "
] |
What sport does Armand Raymond play? | [
"ice hockey"
] | sport | Armand Raymond | 3,375,629 | 70 | [
{
"id": "25851110",
"title": "Armand Raymond",
"text": " Armand Raymond (January 12, 1913 – January 22, 1993) was a Canadian professional ice hockey defenceman who played 22 games in the National Hockey League for the Montreal Canadiens. He was born, and died in Montreal, Quebec.",
"score": "1.8659217"
},
{
"id": "12937265",
"title": "Alain Raymond",
"text": " Alain Raymond (born June 24, 1965) is a Canadian retired professional ice hockey goaltender. He played one game in the National Hockey League with the Washington Capitals, giving up two goals in the two periods that he played. In his first full IHL season with the Fort Wayne Komets, Raymond won the James Norris Memorial Trophy, awarded to the goaltenders with the fewest goals against in the regular season. Raymond split most of his time during the 1989–90 season between two clubs. He played 31 games with the ECHL's Hampton Roads Admirals and played another 11 games with their parent club, the AHL's Baltimore Skipjacks. Raymond went 17–12–1 with a 3.60 GAA, earning him named the starting goalie on the East Coast Hockey League's all-star team. Raymond later became a goaltender coach with the Rimouski Oceanic of the QMJHL.",
"score": "1.6726967"
},
{
"id": "25681676",
"title": "Paul Raymond (ice hockey)",
"text": " Paul Marcel Raymond (February 27, 1913 – April 4, 1995) was a Canadian professional ice hockey forward who played 65 games in the National Hockey League for the Montreal Canadiens. He was born in Montreal, Quebec.",
"score": "1.627417"
},
{
"id": "13935278",
"title": "Raymond Basset",
"text": " Denis Raymond Basset (born 1883, date of death unknown) was a French tug of war competitor, who competed in the 1900 Summer Olympics. He participated in the tug of war competition and won a silver medal as a member of French team.",
"score": "1.6043438"
},
{
"id": "13049978",
"title": "Armand Save",
"text": " Save debuted in rugby union for Stadoceste Tarbais, where he took part at the 1950-51 French Rugby Union Championship before switching to rugby league and making a brilliant career for Bordeaux and France. He was Champion of France with Bordeaux in 1954, as well taking part to the 1954 Rugby League World Cup final lost against Australia, as well in the 1957 World Cup. At club level, he joined Saint-Gaudens. After his sports career, he became a butcher and trained the rugby union team of Bazet, the town of which he was municipal councillor between 1977 and 1983.",
"score": "1.5923687"
},
{
"id": "16208166",
"title": "Raymond Gruppi",
"text": " He spent most of his playing career at Villeneuve-sur-Lot, playing the French Championship, which eventually ended as runner-up in 1965, and at the Lord Derby Cup a season later. With his club performances, he was called up several times for the French national team between 1959 and 1971, taking part at the 1960 and 1970 World Cups. Later, he was appointed as coach for Villeneuve-sur-Lot with new successes with the victory at the Lord Derby Cup in 1979 and in the French Championship in 1980. He was also appointed as coach for France alongside Jean Panno debuting with a 24-16 win against Great Britain on 17 March 1985. He was called up for the France squad at the 1960 Rugby League World Cup alongside with his team mates Angélo Boldini, Jacques Dubon, André Lacaze and Jacques Merquey. Later, he was called up again to represent France at the 1970 Rugby League World Cup with his new team mates Jean-Pierre Clar, Gérard Cremoux, Daniel Pellerin and Christian Sabatié.",
"score": "1.5863881"
},
{
"id": "30704007",
"title": "Armand Delmonte",
"text": " Armand Romeo \"Dutch\" Delmonte (June 3, 1927 — April 7, 1981) was a Canadian professional ice hockey right winger who played in one National Hockey League game for the Boston Bruins during the 1945–46 season, on January 6, 1946 against the New York Rangers. Del Monte also played for the St. Catharines Falcons from 1943 to 1945, Boston Olympics from 1945 to 1948, Los Angeles Monarchs from 1946 to 1947, St. Paul Saints from 1947 to 1951, Tacoma Rockets from 1951 to 1952, Cleveland Barons from 1952 to 1953, Ottawa Senators from 1953 to 1954, and the Marion Barons from 1953 to 1954.",
"score": "1.5820258"
},
{
"id": "29135340",
"title": "Bertrand Raymond",
"text": " Bertrand Raymond (born November 2, 1943) is a Canadian sports author and journalist. A former columnist for Le Journal de Montréal, he won the Elmer Ferguson Memorial Award in 1990 and is a member of the media section of the Hockey Hall of Fame. Raymond started covering the Montreal Canadiens in 1971, and retired in 2010.",
"score": "1.5738595"
},
{
"id": "6038385",
"title": "Raymond Casimir",
"text": " Raymond Casimir (born 28 October 1976) is a former Dominican cricketer who played for the Windward Islands in West Indian domestic cricket. He played as a left-arm orthodox bowler who batted left-handed. Casimir appeared for the Rest of Windward Islands team in the 2002–03 Red Stripe Bowl, where Saint Vincent and the Grenadines were competing as a separate team. His first-class debut for the Windwards came almost six years later, against Jamaica in the 2007–08 Carib Beer Cup. Casimir's second and final match for the Windwards came the following season, against Trinidad and Tobago. He also represented Dominica in the 2008 edition of the Stanford 20/20, playing against the British Virgin Islands and Barbados.",
"score": "1.5727733"
},
{
"id": "13054695",
"title": "Claude Raymond",
"text": " Jean Claude Marc Raymond (born May 7, 1937) is a former pitcher for the Chicago White Sox (1959), Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves (1961–63, 1967–69), Houston Colt .45's/Astros (1964–67) and Montreal Expos (1969–71). He was one of the few baseball players to wear glasses during that era and as he came from the province of Quebec was nicknamed \"Frenchy\".",
"score": "1.571821"
},
{
"id": "33006419",
"title": "Sylvain Armand",
"text": " in favour of youngster Mamadou Sakho, who also became the youngest captain in the history of the PSG at the age of 17. Armand then gradually regained his best form, game after game. He provided two consecutive assists, both to Amara Diané, against Lens in Ligue 1 (3–0) then against Valenciennes in the Coupe de la Ligue (4–0) three days later. Rarely injured and suspended, he missed only eight domestic league games between 2004 and 2008, all the while playing in different positions on the pitch, including left-back, centre-back, defensive midfield, and left midfield. With PSG, Armand won the 2006 and 2010 Coupe de France and the 2008 ",
"score": "1.5693922"
},
{
"id": "33006416",
"title": "Sylvain Armand",
"text": " Born in Saint-Étienne, Loire, Armand started playing youth team football for AS Saint-Étienne in 1994. He wasn't retained for the club's senior squad and thus moved to Clermont Foot in 1999, where he received his professional debut.",
"score": "1.5690358"
},
{
"id": "28910529",
"title": "Raymond Milton",
"text": " Raymond Bernard \"Ray\" Milton (August 27, 1912 – September 17, 2003) was a Canadian ice hockey player who competed in the 1936 Winter Olympics. Milton was a member of the 1936 Port Arthur Bearcats, which won the silver medal for Canada in ice hockey at the 1936 Winter Olympics. In 1987 he was inducted into the Northwestern Ontario Sports Hall of Fame as a member of that Olympic team.",
"score": "1.5630314"
},
{
"id": "12936790",
"title": "Raymond Baratto",
"text": " Raymond Baratto (born 23 January 1934 in Amnéville, Moselle, France) is a former French footballer. He was part of France's squad for the 1960 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.5576453"
},
{
"id": "14033485",
"title": "Réginald Ray",
"text": " Ray spent the majority of his 15-year career in the French lower divisions. In 1991, while playing in the Championnat National with Montceau, he was the league's top scorer. Ray was top scorer again in 1998, this time in Ligue 2 while playing for Le Mans.",
"score": "1.5502238"
},
{
"id": "30346135",
"title": "Raymond Contrastin",
"text": " Raymond Contrastin (born in Condom, on 5 April 1925 - 1985) was a French rugby league footballer who played in the 1950s. A France international representative winger, he has been inducted into the International Rugby League Hall of Fame. He started playing rugby union for SA Condom until 1947, before joining RC Roanne XIII, with which he was French champion in 1928 and for Bordeaux XIII, with which he won the 1954 title. Contrastin featured in the 1951 French rugby league tour of Australia and New Zealand, Les Chanticleers first such tour, during which they lost four of their 28 games. He played for France during the 1954 Rugby League World Cup, including the final against Great Britain in which he scored a try.",
"score": "1.5477886"
},
{
"id": "8212984",
"title": "Lou Raymond",
"text": " Raymond was born Louis Anthony Raymondjack on December 11, 1894, in Buffalo, New York. Raymond began his professional play as a member of the International League (IL), appearing for the Double-A Syracuse Stars, who later moved during the season and became the Hamilton Tigers (Hamilton, Ontario). He also played a portion of the year for the Rochester Hustlers. Managed in part by Patsy Donovan, Raymond posted a .293 batting average for the entire IL season, with 89 hits in 304 at-bats. Of his hits, 17 went for extra bases—11 were doubles and 6 were triples. In 1919, Raymond advanced from the minor leagues to the majors, appearing with the Philadelphia Phillies, of Major League Baseball's National League (NL). That season, the Phillies posted a 47–90 win–loss record, finishing 47 ",
"score": "1.5469553"
},
{
"id": "3633620",
"title": "Bobby Raymond",
"text": " Raymond attended the Rochester Institute of Technology where he played four seasons of NCAA Division I college hockey with the RIT Tigers men's ice hockey team. He played for the Charlotte Checkers of the American Hockey League (AHL) on loan from the Florida Everblades of the ECHL during the 2012–13 season. On June 14, 2013, Raymond signed a one-year contract as a free agent abroad in Germany with the Iserlohn Roosters of the DEL. In the 2013–14 season with the Roosters, Raymond was a fixture on the blueline and compiled a productive 27 points in 52 games. After a post-season exit in the first round of the playoffs, Raymond announced signing a one-year contract with fellow DEL competitors, Adler Mannheim on April 4, 2014. In his only season ",
"score": "1.5448267"
},
{
"id": "16131052",
"title": "Raymond Bonney",
"text": " Raymond Leroy Bonney (April 5, 1892 – October 19, 1964) was an American ice hockey player who competed in the 1920 Summer Olympics. He was born in Phoenix, New York. He was the goaltender who competed in 1920 for the American ice hockey team, which won the silver medal.",
"score": "1.5410967"
},
{
"id": "13054697",
"title": "Claude Raymond",
"text": " After his playing career, Raymond worked as a French-language broadcaster with the Expos from 1972 to 2001. During the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Raymond was the public address announcer for baseball. The International Olympic Committee required that announcements at Olympic venues must also be made in French, which made Raymond, who had previously pitched in Atlanta, well-suited for the job. He was also an Expos English-language broadcaster in 2004, their last season in Montreal. Raymond joined the Expos staff as a roving coach in 2002 and served until the team left Montreal after the 2004 campaign to become the Washington Nationals.",
"score": "1.5392971"
}
] | [
"Armand Raymond\n Armand Raymond (January 12, 1913 – January 22, 1993) was a Canadian professional ice hockey defenceman who played 22 games in the National Hockey League for the Montreal Canadiens. He was born, and died in Montreal, Quebec.",
"Alain Raymond\n Alain Raymond (born June 24, 1965) is a Canadian retired professional ice hockey goaltender. He played one game in the National Hockey League with the Washington Capitals, giving up two goals in the two periods that he played. In his first full IHL season with the Fort Wayne Komets, Raymond won the James Norris Memorial Trophy, awarded to the goaltenders with the fewest goals against in the regular season. Raymond split most of his time during the 1989–90 season between two clubs. He played 31 games with the ECHL's Hampton Roads Admirals and played another 11 games with their parent club, the AHL's Baltimore Skipjacks. Raymond went 17–12–1 with a 3.60 GAA, earning him named the starting goalie on the East Coast Hockey League's all-star team. Raymond later became a goaltender coach with the Rimouski Oceanic of the QMJHL.",
"Paul Raymond (ice hockey)\n Paul Marcel Raymond (February 27, 1913 – April 4, 1995) was a Canadian professional ice hockey forward who played 65 games in the National Hockey League for the Montreal Canadiens. He was born in Montreal, Quebec.",
"Raymond Basset\n Denis Raymond Basset (born 1883, date of death unknown) was a French tug of war competitor, who competed in the 1900 Summer Olympics. He participated in the tug of war competition and won a silver medal as a member of French team.",
"Armand Save\n Save debuted in rugby union for Stadoceste Tarbais, where he took part at the 1950-51 French Rugby Union Championship before switching to rugby league and making a brilliant career for Bordeaux and France. He was Champion of France with Bordeaux in 1954, as well taking part to the 1954 Rugby League World Cup final lost against Australia, as well in the 1957 World Cup. At club level, he joined Saint-Gaudens. After his sports career, he became a butcher and trained the rugby union team of Bazet, the town of which he was municipal councillor between 1977 and 1983.",
"Raymond Gruppi\n He spent most of his playing career at Villeneuve-sur-Lot, playing the French Championship, which eventually ended as runner-up in 1965, and at the Lord Derby Cup a season later. With his club performances, he was called up several times for the French national team between 1959 and 1971, taking part at the 1960 and 1970 World Cups. Later, he was appointed as coach for Villeneuve-sur-Lot with new successes with the victory at the Lord Derby Cup in 1979 and in the French Championship in 1980. He was also appointed as coach for France alongside Jean Panno debuting with a 24-16 win against Great Britain on 17 March 1985. He was called up for the France squad at the 1960 Rugby League World Cup alongside with his team mates Angélo Boldini, Jacques Dubon, André Lacaze and Jacques Merquey. Later, he was called up again to represent France at the 1970 Rugby League World Cup with his new team mates Jean-Pierre Clar, Gérard Cremoux, Daniel Pellerin and Christian Sabatié.",
"Armand Delmonte\n Armand Romeo \"Dutch\" Delmonte (June 3, 1927 — April 7, 1981) was a Canadian professional ice hockey right winger who played in one National Hockey League game for the Boston Bruins during the 1945–46 season, on January 6, 1946 against the New York Rangers. Del Monte also played for the St. Catharines Falcons from 1943 to 1945, Boston Olympics from 1945 to 1948, Los Angeles Monarchs from 1946 to 1947, St. Paul Saints from 1947 to 1951, Tacoma Rockets from 1951 to 1952, Cleveland Barons from 1952 to 1953, Ottawa Senators from 1953 to 1954, and the Marion Barons from 1953 to 1954.",
"Bertrand Raymond\n Bertrand Raymond (born November 2, 1943) is a Canadian sports author and journalist. A former columnist for Le Journal de Montréal, he won the Elmer Ferguson Memorial Award in 1990 and is a member of the media section of the Hockey Hall of Fame. Raymond started covering the Montreal Canadiens in 1971, and retired in 2010.",
"Raymond Casimir\n Raymond Casimir (born 28 October 1976) is a former Dominican cricketer who played for the Windward Islands in West Indian domestic cricket. He played as a left-arm orthodox bowler who batted left-handed. Casimir appeared for the Rest of Windward Islands team in the 2002–03 Red Stripe Bowl, where Saint Vincent and the Grenadines were competing as a separate team. His first-class debut for the Windwards came almost six years later, against Jamaica in the 2007–08 Carib Beer Cup. Casimir's second and final match for the Windwards came the following season, against Trinidad and Tobago. He also represented Dominica in the 2008 edition of the Stanford 20/20, playing against the British Virgin Islands and Barbados.",
"Claude Raymond\n Jean Claude Marc Raymond (born May 7, 1937) is a former pitcher for the Chicago White Sox (1959), Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves (1961–63, 1967–69), Houston Colt .45's/Astros (1964–67) and Montreal Expos (1969–71). He was one of the few baseball players to wear glasses during that era and as he came from the province of Quebec was nicknamed \"Frenchy\".",
"Sylvain Armand\n in favour of youngster Mamadou Sakho, who also became the youngest captain in the history of the PSG at the age of 17. Armand then gradually regained his best form, game after game. He provided two consecutive assists, both to Amara Diané, against Lens in Ligue 1 (3–0) then against Valenciennes in the Coupe de la Ligue (4–0) three days later. Rarely injured and suspended, he missed only eight domestic league games between 2004 and 2008, all the while playing in different positions on the pitch, including left-back, centre-back, defensive midfield, and left midfield. With PSG, Armand won the 2006 and 2010 Coupe de France and the 2008 ",
"Sylvain Armand\n Born in Saint-Étienne, Loire, Armand started playing youth team football for AS Saint-Étienne in 1994. He wasn't retained for the club's senior squad and thus moved to Clermont Foot in 1999, where he received his professional debut.",
"Raymond Milton\n Raymond Bernard \"Ray\" Milton (August 27, 1912 – September 17, 2003) was a Canadian ice hockey player who competed in the 1936 Winter Olympics. Milton was a member of the 1936 Port Arthur Bearcats, which won the silver medal for Canada in ice hockey at the 1936 Winter Olympics. In 1987 he was inducted into the Northwestern Ontario Sports Hall of Fame as a member of that Olympic team.",
"Raymond Baratto\n Raymond Baratto (born 23 January 1934 in Amnéville, Moselle, France) is a former French footballer. He was part of France's squad for the 1960 Summer Olympics.",
"Réginald Ray\n Ray spent the majority of his 15-year career in the French lower divisions. In 1991, while playing in the Championnat National with Montceau, he was the league's top scorer. Ray was top scorer again in 1998, this time in Ligue 2 while playing for Le Mans.",
"Raymond Contrastin\n Raymond Contrastin (born in Condom, on 5 April 1925 - 1985) was a French rugby league footballer who played in the 1950s. A France international representative winger, he has been inducted into the International Rugby League Hall of Fame. He started playing rugby union for SA Condom until 1947, before joining RC Roanne XIII, with which he was French champion in 1928 and for Bordeaux XIII, with which he won the 1954 title. Contrastin featured in the 1951 French rugby league tour of Australia and New Zealand, Les Chanticleers first such tour, during which they lost four of their 28 games. He played for France during the 1954 Rugby League World Cup, including the final against Great Britain in which he scored a try.",
"Lou Raymond\n Raymond was born Louis Anthony Raymondjack on December 11, 1894, in Buffalo, New York. Raymond began his professional play as a member of the International League (IL), appearing for the Double-A Syracuse Stars, who later moved during the season and became the Hamilton Tigers (Hamilton, Ontario). He also played a portion of the year for the Rochester Hustlers. Managed in part by Patsy Donovan, Raymond posted a .293 batting average for the entire IL season, with 89 hits in 304 at-bats. Of his hits, 17 went for extra bases—11 were doubles and 6 were triples. In 1919, Raymond advanced from the minor leagues to the majors, appearing with the Philadelphia Phillies, of Major League Baseball's National League (NL). That season, the Phillies posted a 47–90 win–loss record, finishing 47 ",
"Bobby Raymond\n Raymond attended the Rochester Institute of Technology where he played four seasons of NCAA Division I college hockey with the RIT Tigers men's ice hockey team. He played for the Charlotte Checkers of the American Hockey League (AHL) on loan from the Florida Everblades of the ECHL during the 2012–13 season. On June 14, 2013, Raymond signed a one-year contract as a free agent abroad in Germany with the Iserlohn Roosters of the DEL. In the 2013–14 season with the Roosters, Raymond was a fixture on the blueline and compiled a productive 27 points in 52 games. After a post-season exit in the first round of the playoffs, Raymond announced signing a one-year contract with fellow DEL competitors, Adler Mannheim on April 4, 2014. In his only season ",
"Raymond Bonney\n Raymond Leroy Bonney (April 5, 1892 – October 19, 1964) was an American ice hockey player who competed in the 1920 Summer Olympics. He was born in Phoenix, New York. He was the goaltender who competed in 1920 for the American ice hockey team, which won the silver medal.",
"Claude Raymond\n After his playing career, Raymond worked as a French-language broadcaster with the Expos from 1972 to 2001. During the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Raymond was the public address announcer for baseball. The International Olympic Committee required that announcements at Olympic venues must also be made in French, which made Raymond, who had previously pitched in Atlanta, well-suited for the job. He was also an Expos English-language broadcaster in 2004, their last season in Montreal. Raymond joined the Expos staff as a roving coach in 2002 and served until the team left Montreal after the 2004 campaign to become the Washington Nationals."
] |
What sport does Luan Viana Patrocínio play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Luan Viana | 1,050,849 | 70 | [
{
"id": "1149003",
"title": "Luan Viana",
"text": " Luan Viana Patrocínio (born 14 January 1996), simply known as Luan, is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a forward.",
"score": "1.7653966"
},
{
"id": "1149006",
"title": "Luan Viana",
"text": "International ; Toulon Tournament: 2013 ",
"score": "1.6995618"
},
{
"id": "1149004",
"title": "Luan Viana",
"text": " Born in São Paulo, Luan graduated from Portuguesa's youth setup, and made his first-team debut on 13 February 2013, coming on as a late substitute in a 2–0 win at São José, for the Campeonato Paulista Série A2 championship. On 8 August, Luan was definitely promoted to the main squad in Série A. However, he failed to appear during the rest of the year. On 26 April 2014 Luan made his league debut for Lusa, playing the last 19 minutes of a 1–1 home draw against Santa Cruz, for the Série B championship. He scored his first professional goal on 8 November, netting the game's only through a header in a 1–0 home win over Luverdense, as his side were already relegated ",
"score": "1.5713575"
},
{
"id": "5123867",
"title": "João Viana",
"text": "For the similarly named Brazilian basketball player, see João Vianna João Nuno Duarte Viana (born 13 January 1992) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays for Swiss club FC Stade Nyonnais as a right back.",
"score": "1.5103351"
},
{
"id": "1149005",
"title": "Luan Viana",
"text": " Série C. On 9 January 2015 Luan left the club, after having unpaid wages. He joined Grêmio in March, returning to youth setup. On 6 September 2018 Luan signed a longterm contract with the Bulgarian 26 times champions Levski Sofia After failing to make it into the first team in the first half of the season, in January 2019 he was sent on loan to the Second League leaders Tsarsko Selo. He scored 2 goals in a friendly match against the Macedonian team FK Belasica played on 5 February. After spending first 3 matches from the league on the bench, Luan made his debut for the team in the league match against Chernomorets Balchik and scored a goal for the 3:1 win.",
"score": "1.4820321"
},
{
"id": "1943015",
"title": "Luan Silva",
"text": " Luan began playing football in Corinthians' youth system. He was loaned to Harrisburg City Islanders in 2014, and played in various Brazilian state leagues with Flamengo (SP), Cruzeiro (RS) and Boavista (RJ) before signing with Potiguar de Mossoró in early 2017.",
"score": "1.4625223"
},
{
"id": "11563544",
"title": "Luana Vicente",
"text": " Both Vicente and her sister began playing badminton through a programme set up by a coach to teach the sport to kids in the community. Vicente won a silver medal in the women's doubles at the 2015 Pan American Games held in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, playing alongside her sister. The pair defeated Daigenis Saturria and Bermary Altagracia Polanco Muñoz of the Dominican Republic in the quarterfinals then Alexander Bruce and Phyllis Chan of Canada in the semifinals. In the final they lost to the American pairing of Eva Lee and Paula Lynn Obanana by a score of 14−21, 6−21, to finish as runners-up. Vicente competed at the 2018 South American Games, winning the gold medal in the team event, and also the silver medals in the women's and mixed doubles event.",
"score": "1.434522"
},
{
"id": "6903214",
"title": "Carioca (footballer, born 1974)",
"text": " Alexander Antonio Viana (born 24 April 1974), commonly known as Carioca, is a retired Brazilian footballer who played for Partizani Tirana in the Albanian Superliga between 2001 and 2005. He became the first foreign player in the Albanian Superliga to score a hattrick and is currently one of two foreign players to have scored multiple hattricks in the league, alongside Croatian striker Pero Pejić.",
"score": "1.4313304"
},
{
"id": "1943014",
"title": "Luan Silva",
"text": " Luan Da Conceicao Silva (born May 28, 1993) is a Brazilian footballer who has played professionally in Brazil and the United States.",
"score": "1.4248989"
},
{
"id": "5695295",
"title": "Luan Michel de Louzã",
"text": " Born in Araras, Luan has played in Brazil and France for União São João, São Caetano, Toulouse and Palmeiras.",
"score": "1.4110372"
},
{
"id": "15828853",
"title": "Marcos Louzada Silva",
"text": " Louzada was born in Cachoeiro de Itapemirim in the Brazilian state of Espírito Santo. The first sport he played was futsal, but he decided to focus on basketball when he was 10 years old. Louzada saw immediate success playing basketball for his school and joined the Liga Urbana Social de Basquete (LUSB) at age seven. He moved to NBB club Franca in January 2015 and initially played for the under-16 team. After one season, he competed in the Liga de Desenvolvimento de Basquete (LDB), an under-22 league, and led his team to a championship. In August 2016, Louzada was one of 40 players invited to the National Basketball Association (NBA) Americas Team Camp in Mexico City.",
"score": "1.4103116"
},
{
"id": "6902839",
"title": "Ronaldo Viana",
"text": " Born in Vera Cruz do Oeste, he played with W Connection between 2002 and 2008. During the winter of the 2003–04 season, he was loaned to Serbian club FK Železnik along Gefferson Goulart. Both stayed till next winter, playing the second half of the 2003–04 and first half of the 2004–05 First League of Serbia and Montenegro seasons. He made two appearances in the 2004–05 season. He spent some time back in Brazil afzer leaving W Connection in 2007 and he played with Trindade Atlético Clube during first semester of 2009. He then returned to Trinidad and Tobago and signed a 10-month deal with San Juan Jabloteh in April 2010. By September 2010 he moved to Antigua and Barbuda and signed a 6-months deal with Parham. He played again with San Juan Jabloteh during the season 2012–13.",
"score": "1.4062428"
},
{
"id": "25545119",
"title": "G.D. Juventude de Viana (roller hockey)",
"text": " Grupo Desportivo Juventude de Viana, formerly Enama de Viana, is an Angolan sports club based in the municipality of Viana, Luanda. The club has a men's roller hockey team competing at the local level, at the Luanda Provincial Roller Hockey Championship and at the Angolan Roller Hockey Championship. Additionally, the team has been a regular contestant at the African Roller Hockey Clubs Championship. In the 2006 world roller hockey club championship held in Luanda, Angola, the club ranked 10th, among 12 teams whereas in 2008, in Reus, Spain, the club ranked 15th, among 16 teams. Juventude de Viana won the second edition of the African Roller Hockey Club Championship held in 2008 in Luanda, Angola whereas in the following edition, in 2010, in Pretoria, South Africa, it ranked second.",
"score": "1.4027722"
},
{
"id": "214719",
"title": "Shalom Luani",
"text": " Luani has played for ASFA Soccer League club Tafuna Jets since 2009, along with his brother Sumeo. In October 2011, Luani scored a hat-trick in Tafuna's 4–4 draw with Atu'u Broncos. In February 2011, Luani played for the Faga'itua Vikings in the inaugural ASHSAA Boys' Futsal tournament, held at Samoana High School. The Vikings won the tournament after defeating Tafuna Warriors 5–4 on February 22. Luani's brother Roy was also playing for the Vikings and Shalom assisted his sibling for the game's opening goal before scoring a free kick himself. The American Samoa Football Federation suggested that the brothers were the difference between the two teams, saying: \"Shalom Luani was everywhere, whether it ",
"score": "1.4010856"
},
{
"id": "31061127",
"title": "Isac Santos",
"text": " Isac Viana Santos (born 13 December 1990) is a Brazilian volleyball player. He is part of the Brazil men's national volleyball team. On club level, he plays for Sada Cruzeiro. Silver medallist of the 2018 World Championship, gold medallist of the 2019 World Cup, five–time Brazilian Champion (2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018).",
"score": "1.3932549"
},
{
"id": "15861096",
"title": "Luan Peres",
"text": " Luan Peres Petroni (born 19 July 1994), known as Luan Peres, is a Brazilian footballer who plays for French club Marseille. Mainly as a central defender, he can also play as a left back.",
"score": "1.3919657"
},
{
"id": "13693511",
"title": "Sandro Viana",
"text": " Sandro Ricardo Rodrigues Viana (born March 26, 1977 in Manaus) is a track and field sprint athlete who competes internationally for Brazil. Viana represented Brazil at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. He competed at the 100 metres sprint and placed 6th in his heat without advancing to the second round. He ran the distance in a time of 10.60 seconds. Together with José Carlos Moreira, Vicente de Lima and Bruno de Barros he also competed at the 4x100 metres relay. In their qualification heat they placed fourth behind Trinidad and Tobago, Japan and the Netherlands. Their time of 39.01 was the seventh out of sixteen participating nations in the first round and they qualified for the final. There they sprinted to a time of 38.24 seconds, the fourth time after the Jamaican, Trinidad ",
"score": "1.3892837"
},
{
"id": "28891003",
"title": "Rugby Viadana",
"text": "🇦🇷 Germán Araoz ; 🇦🇷 Julio-César García ; 🇦🇷 Juan Cruz Guillemaín ; 🇦🇷 Javier Rojas ; 🇦🇺 Tom Bowman ; 🇦🇺 Lloyd Johansson ; 🇨🇦 Phil Murphy ; 🏴 Tom Beim ; 🇫🇯 Isoa Neivua ; 🇭🇺–🇨🇭 Luca Tramontin ; 🇳🇿 Dion Waller ; 🇳🇿 Mark Finlay ; 🇳🇿 Brett Harvey ; 🇳🇿 Sam Harding ; 🇳🇿 Tana Umaga ; 🇼🇸 Daniel Farani ; 🇼🇸 Dominic Fe'aunati ; 🇼🇸 Ali Koko ; 🇼🇸 Siaosi Vaili ; Stuart Moffat ; 🇹🇴 Inoke Afeaki ; 🇹🇴 Pierre Hola ; 🇹🇴 Dave Tiueti ; 🇺🇸 Nick Civetta ; 🏴 Adrian Durston ; 🏴 Sonny Parker Former players who have played for Viadana and have caps for their respective country: ",
"score": "1.3872727"
},
{
"id": "4167579",
"title": "Luan Vieira",
"text": " Luan was born in São José do Rio Preto, São Paulo. After starting it out at futsal and playing for amateur clubs in his native state, he joined Tanabi. Luan scored two goals in nine appearances for Tanabi, being also a teammate of Túlio Maravilha. He subsequently represented his hometown club América-SP in 2013 Copa São Paulo de Futebol Júnior, while still owned by Tanabi. On 8 February 2013, Luan joined Catanduvense until the end of the year, for a fee of R$120,000. He made his maiden appearance for the club eight days later, coming on as a second-half substitute in a 1–3 home loss against Santo André.",
"score": "1.3831651"
},
{
"id": "5253424",
"title": "Patrick Luan",
"text": " Patrick Luan Dos Santos (born 31 October 1998), known as Patrick Luan, is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a forward for Swedish club Örebro on loan from the Swiss club FC Sion.",
"score": "1.3807693"
}
] | [
"Luan Viana\n Luan Viana Patrocínio (born 14 January 1996), simply known as Luan, is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a forward.",
"Luan Viana\nInternational ; Toulon Tournament: 2013 ",
"Luan Viana\n Born in São Paulo, Luan graduated from Portuguesa's youth setup, and made his first-team debut on 13 February 2013, coming on as a late substitute in a 2–0 win at São José, for the Campeonato Paulista Série A2 championship. On 8 August, Luan was definitely promoted to the main squad in Série A. However, he failed to appear during the rest of the year. On 26 April 2014 Luan made his league debut for Lusa, playing the last 19 minutes of a 1–1 home draw against Santa Cruz, for the Série B championship. He scored his first professional goal on 8 November, netting the game's only through a header in a 1–0 home win over Luverdense, as his side were already relegated ",
"João Viana\nFor the similarly named Brazilian basketball player, see João Vianna João Nuno Duarte Viana (born 13 January 1992) is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays for Swiss club FC Stade Nyonnais as a right back.",
"Luan Viana\n Série C. On 9 January 2015 Luan left the club, after having unpaid wages. He joined Grêmio in March, returning to youth setup. On 6 September 2018 Luan signed a longterm contract with the Bulgarian 26 times champions Levski Sofia After failing to make it into the first team in the first half of the season, in January 2019 he was sent on loan to the Second League leaders Tsarsko Selo. He scored 2 goals in a friendly match against the Macedonian team FK Belasica played on 5 February. After spending first 3 matches from the league on the bench, Luan made his debut for the team in the league match against Chernomorets Balchik and scored a goal for the 3:1 win.",
"Luan Silva\n Luan began playing football in Corinthians' youth system. He was loaned to Harrisburg City Islanders in 2014, and played in various Brazilian state leagues with Flamengo (SP), Cruzeiro (RS) and Boavista (RJ) before signing with Potiguar de Mossoró in early 2017.",
"Luana Vicente\n Both Vicente and her sister began playing badminton through a programme set up by a coach to teach the sport to kids in the community. Vicente won a silver medal in the women's doubles at the 2015 Pan American Games held in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, playing alongside her sister. The pair defeated Daigenis Saturria and Bermary Altagracia Polanco Muñoz of the Dominican Republic in the quarterfinals then Alexander Bruce and Phyllis Chan of Canada in the semifinals. In the final they lost to the American pairing of Eva Lee and Paula Lynn Obanana by a score of 14−21, 6−21, to finish as runners-up. Vicente competed at the 2018 South American Games, winning the gold medal in the team event, and also the silver medals in the women's and mixed doubles event.",
"Carioca (footballer, born 1974)\n Alexander Antonio Viana (born 24 April 1974), commonly known as Carioca, is a retired Brazilian footballer who played for Partizani Tirana in the Albanian Superliga between 2001 and 2005. He became the first foreign player in the Albanian Superliga to score a hattrick and is currently one of two foreign players to have scored multiple hattricks in the league, alongside Croatian striker Pero Pejić.",
"Luan Silva\n Luan Da Conceicao Silva (born May 28, 1993) is a Brazilian footballer who has played professionally in Brazil and the United States.",
"Luan Michel de Louzã\n Born in Araras, Luan has played in Brazil and France for União São João, São Caetano, Toulouse and Palmeiras.",
"Marcos Louzada Silva\n Louzada was born in Cachoeiro de Itapemirim in the Brazilian state of Espírito Santo. The first sport he played was futsal, but he decided to focus on basketball when he was 10 years old. Louzada saw immediate success playing basketball for his school and joined the Liga Urbana Social de Basquete (LUSB) at age seven. He moved to NBB club Franca in January 2015 and initially played for the under-16 team. After one season, he competed in the Liga de Desenvolvimento de Basquete (LDB), an under-22 league, and led his team to a championship. In August 2016, Louzada was one of 40 players invited to the National Basketball Association (NBA) Americas Team Camp in Mexico City.",
"Ronaldo Viana\n Born in Vera Cruz do Oeste, he played with W Connection between 2002 and 2008. During the winter of the 2003–04 season, he was loaned to Serbian club FK Železnik along Gefferson Goulart. Both stayed till next winter, playing the second half of the 2003–04 and first half of the 2004–05 First League of Serbia and Montenegro seasons. He made two appearances in the 2004–05 season. He spent some time back in Brazil afzer leaving W Connection in 2007 and he played with Trindade Atlético Clube during first semester of 2009. He then returned to Trinidad and Tobago and signed a 10-month deal with San Juan Jabloteh in April 2010. By September 2010 he moved to Antigua and Barbuda and signed a 6-months deal with Parham. He played again with San Juan Jabloteh during the season 2012–13.",
"G.D. Juventude de Viana (roller hockey)\n Grupo Desportivo Juventude de Viana, formerly Enama de Viana, is an Angolan sports club based in the municipality of Viana, Luanda. The club has a men's roller hockey team competing at the local level, at the Luanda Provincial Roller Hockey Championship and at the Angolan Roller Hockey Championship. Additionally, the team has been a regular contestant at the African Roller Hockey Clubs Championship. In the 2006 world roller hockey club championship held in Luanda, Angola, the club ranked 10th, among 12 teams whereas in 2008, in Reus, Spain, the club ranked 15th, among 16 teams. Juventude de Viana won the second edition of the African Roller Hockey Club Championship held in 2008 in Luanda, Angola whereas in the following edition, in 2010, in Pretoria, South Africa, it ranked second.",
"Shalom Luani\n Luani has played for ASFA Soccer League club Tafuna Jets since 2009, along with his brother Sumeo. In October 2011, Luani scored a hat-trick in Tafuna's 4–4 draw with Atu'u Broncos. In February 2011, Luani played for the Faga'itua Vikings in the inaugural ASHSAA Boys' Futsal tournament, held at Samoana High School. The Vikings won the tournament after defeating Tafuna Warriors 5–4 on February 22. Luani's brother Roy was also playing for the Vikings and Shalom assisted his sibling for the game's opening goal before scoring a free kick himself. The American Samoa Football Federation suggested that the brothers were the difference between the two teams, saying: \"Shalom Luani was everywhere, whether it ",
"Isac Santos\n Isac Viana Santos (born 13 December 1990) is a Brazilian volleyball player. He is part of the Brazil men's national volleyball team. On club level, he plays for Sada Cruzeiro. Silver medallist of the 2018 World Championship, gold medallist of the 2019 World Cup, five–time Brazilian Champion (2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018).",
"Luan Peres\n Luan Peres Petroni (born 19 July 1994), known as Luan Peres, is a Brazilian footballer who plays for French club Marseille. Mainly as a central defender, he can also play as a left back.",
"Sandro Viana\n Sandro Ricardo Rodrigues Viana (born March 26, 1977 in Manaus) is a track and field sprint athlete who competes internationally for Brazil. Viana represented Brazil at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. He competed at the 100 metres sprint and placed 6th in his heat without advancing to the second round. He ran the distance in a time of 10.60 seconds. Together with José Carlos Moreira, Vicente de Lima and Bruno de Barros he also competed at the 4x100 metres relay. In their qualification heat they placed fourth behind Trinidad and Tobago, Japan and the Netherlands. Their time of 39.01 was the seventh out of sixteen participating nations in the first round and they qualified for the final. There they sprinted to a time of 38.24 seconds, the fourth time after the Jamaican, Trinidad ",
"Rugby Viadana\n🇦🇷 Germán Araoz ; 🇦🇷 Julio-César García ; 🇦🇷 Juan Cruz Guillemaín ; 🇦🇷 Javier Rojas ; 🇦🇺 Tom Bowman ; 🇦🇺 Lloyd Johansson ; 🇨🇦 Phil Murphy ; 🏴 Tom Beim ; 🇫🇯 Isoa Neivua ; 🇭🇺–🇨🇭 Luca Tramontin ; 🇳🇿 Dion Waller ; 🇳🇿 Mark Finlay ; 🇳🇿 Brett Harvey ; 🇳🇿 Sam Harding ; 🇳🇿 Tana Umaga ; 🇼🇸 Daniel Farani ; 🇼🇸 Dominic Fe'aunati ; 🇼🇸 Ali Koko ; 🇼🇸 Siaosi Vaili ; Stuart Moffat ; 🇹🇴 Inoke Afeaki ; 🇹🇴 Pierre Hola ; 🇹🇴 Dave Tiueti ; 🇺🇸 Nick Civetta ; 🏴 Adrian Durston ; 🏴 Sonny Parker Former players who have played for Viadana and have caps for their respective country: ",
"Luan Vieira\n Luan was born in São José do Rio Preto, São Paulo. After starting it out at futsal and playing for amateur clubs in his native state, he joined Tanabi. Luan scored two goals in nine appearances for Tanabi, being also a teammate of Túlio Maravilha. He subsequently represented his hometown club América-SP in 2013 Copa São Paulo de Futebol Júnior, while still owned by Tanabi. On 8 February 2013, Luan joined Catanduvense until the end of the year, for a fee of R$120,000. He made his maiden appearance for the club eight days later, coming on as a second-half substitute in a 1–3 home loss against Santo André.",
"Patrick Luan\n Patrick Luan Dos Santos (born 31 October 1998), known as Patrick Luan, is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a forward for Swedish club Örebro on loan from the Swiss club FC Sion."
] |
What sport does Alain Rakotondramanana play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Alain Rakotondramanana | 3,255,098 | 49 | [
{
"id": "26007314",
"title": "Alain Rakotondramanana",
"text": " Alain Rakotondramanana (born April 16, 1970) is a Malagasy footballer currently plays for USCA Foot.",
"score": "2.091705"
},
{
"id": "8134722",
"title": "José Rakoto",
"text": " José Rakotoarisoa Harison, known as José Rakoto (born 11 December 1980) is a Malagasy rugby union player. He plays as a fly-half and as a fullback. Harison first played in F.I.T.A.M.I.B.A., from 1997/98 to 1999/2000, moving then to XV Simpatiques, where he would play from 2000/01 to 2002/03. He then would represent 3F.B., one of the best teams of Madagascar, from 2003/04 to 2004/05. He won three National Championship titles during his three-season first presence at 3F.B.. He then had the chance to move to France, playing for a season at Rugby Club Chateaurenard (2005/06), in the Fédérale 1. He returned to 3F.B. for 2006/07, where he's been playing since then. He won the National Championship titles for 2006/07 and 2007/08. Harison is an international player for Madagascar since 2002. He was twice runners-up for the title of Africa Champions in 2005 and 2007. He played at the winning team at the 2012 Africa Cup, scoring two tries and six conversions at the 57–54 win over Namibia. He played in the 2007 Rugby World Cup and 2011 Rugby World Cup qualifyings. As of March 2020 he is the top scorer for his National Team.",
"score": "1.8754644"
},
{
"id": "28600063",
"title": "Sidonie Rakotoarisoa",
"text": " Lantoniaina Sidonie Rakotoarisoa (born 26 April 1983) is a Malagasy rugby union player. He plays as a wing, centre or fly-half. He is the brother of teammate José Rakoto. Rakotoarisoa played for XV Sympathique, moving to 3F.B. in 2004/05. He has won National Championship titles in 2004/05, 2005/06, and 2007/08. Rakotoarisoa currently plays for Madagascar, where he won the title of vice-champion of Africa in 2005 and 2007, and the title of Africa champions in 2012.",
"score": "1.8190997"
},
{
"id": "13880270",
"title": "Antso Rakotondramanga",
"text": " Antso Rakotondramanga (born 14 July 1988) is a Malagasy tennis player who was born in Paris, France. Rakotondramanga has a career high ATP singles ranking of 1009 achieved on 29 April 2013. He also has a career high ATP doubles ranking of 734 achieved on 4 November 2013. Rakotondramanga represents Madagascar at the Davis Cup where he has a W/L record of 27–19. Rakotondramanga also earned himself a silver medal in the Men's Singles at the 2013 Summer Universiade. Rakotondramanga also competed in the Men's Doubles at the same games with V. Rakotondramanga.",
"score": "1.8101187"
},
{
"id": "3548290",
"title": "Dominique Rakotorahalahy",
"text": " Dominique Rakotorahalahy (born 3 August 1944) is a Malagasy athlete. He competed in the men's decathlon at the 1968 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.7631686"
},
{
"id": "27268686",
"title": "Praxis Rabemananjara",
"text": " Stéphane Praxis Rabemananjara (born September 9, 1983 in Madagascar) is a Malagasy football striker currently playing for Saint-Denis FC. He is a member of the Madagascar national football team.",
"score": "1.7567259"
},
{
"id": "25831956",
"title": "Eric-Julien Rakotondrabe",
"text": " Eric-Julien Rakotondrabe (born December 1, 1980) is a Malagasy footballer currently plays for Fanilo Japan Actuels.",
"score": "1.7443957"
},
{
"id": "3722120",
"title": "Éric Rabésandratana",
"text": " In 2007, Rabésandratana played for the Madagascar national team in a friendly with Toulouse FC, but this was never sanctioned by FIFA.",
"score": "1.7369411"
},
{
"id": "3722118",
"title": "Éric Rabésandratana",
"text": " Éric Rabésandratana (born 18 September 1972) is a professional football manager and former player who is the caretaker manager of the Madagascar national team. He played mainly as a defensive midfielder – he could also operate as a central defender. Born in France, he represented Madagascar internationally. In a 17-year professional career he appeared in 191 Ligue 1 games over the course of seven seasons (15 goals), in representation of Nancy and Paris Saint-Germain.",
"score": "1.7318003"
},
{
"id": "25832022",
"title": "Pascal Razakanantenaina",
"text": "Football at the Indian Ocean Island Games silver medal: 2007 ; Knight Order of Madagascar: 2019 ",
"score": "1.6917636"
},
{
"id": "24992049",
"title": "Baggio Rakotonomenjanahary",
"text": " Rakotonomenjanahary has played for Academie Ny Antsika, Stade Tamponnaise, Concordia Basel, Old Boys and Sukhothai. In 2021 he signed for Port. He made his international debut for Madagascar in 2011.",
"score": "1.6888472"
},
{
"id": "25831927",
"title": "Jean-Chrysostome Raharison",
"text": " Born in Antananarivo, Madagascar, Farro has played club football in Madagascar and Réunion for DSA Antananarivo, USCA Foot, FC Ilakaka, AS Marsouins and SS Saint-Louisienne.",
"score": "1.6707346"
},
{
"id": "2258965",
"title": "Nathalia Rakotondramanana",
"text": " Harinelina Nathalia Rakotondramanana (born 15 January 1989, in Antananarivo) is a female weightlifter. She represented Madagascar at the 2012 Summer Olympics held in London, United Kingdom. She is one of three sportspeople on the team to qualify for the Olympics rather than win a wild-card spot. She is also only the second Olympic weightlifter to represent her country. She ultimately finished last of those that finished as she fell on a lift.",
"score": "1.6620945"
},
{
"id": "25685741",
"title": "Emilson Rakotonarivo",
"text": " Emilson Rakotonarivo (born 24 October 1972) is a retired Malagasy football defender.",
"score": "1.6514189"
},
{
"id": "25831926",
"title": "Jean-Chrysostome Raharison",
"text": " Jean-Chrysostome Raharison (born 23 August 1979), commonly referred to as Bota, is a Malagasy international footballer who plays for AS Excelsior, as a goalkeeper.",
"score": "1.6481624"
},
{
"id": "15712492",
"title": "Alain (given name)",
"text": "Alain Raguel (born 1976), French football player ; Alain Rakotondramanana (born 1970), Malagasy footballer ; Alain Ramadier (born 1958), French politician ; Alain Rayes (born 1971), Canadian politician ; Alain Razahasoa (born 1966), Malagasy long-distance runner ; Alain Rémond (born 1946), French humor columnist ; Alain Resnais (born 1922), French New Wave film director ; Alain Rey (born 1928), French linguist, lexicographer and radio personality ; Alain Rey (born 1982), Swiss ski mountaineer ; Alain Richard (born 1945), French politician ; Alain Richard (born 1985), Swiss ski mountaineer ; Alain Robbe-Grillet (1922–2008), French writer and filmmaker ; Alain Robert (born 1962), French rock and urban climber ; Alain Robidoux (born 1960), Canadian snooker player ; Alain Roca (born 1976), retired volleyball player from Cuba ; Alain Rochat (born 1983), Swiss footballer ; Alain Roche, former French football defender ; Alain Rohr (born 1971), Swiss athlete who specializes in the 400 metres hurdles ; Alain Rolland (born 1966), former Irish rugby union footballer and current international referee ; Alain Romans (1905–1988), French jazz composer ; Alain Rousset (born 1951), the Socialist president of the Aquitaine region of France ",
"score": "1.6359253"
},
{
"id": "24913266",
"title": "Stéphan Raheriharimanana",
"text": " Raheriharimanana was called up to the Madagascar national football team in 2016 and made his international debut in an AFCON qualification tie against Angola which ended 1–1 in September 2016.",
"score": "1.6316986"
},
{
"id": "9712659",
"title": "Ahmad Ahmad",
"text": " Ahmad Ahmad began his career at Tambohorano College (1986–1988) and Mahajanga High School (1988–1989) where he was a Physical and Sports Education (PES) teacher. In 1989, he became a coach at AC Sotema, the Mahajanga football club. In 1988, he became involved in local politics, becoming head of the sports department of the City of Mahajanga until 1993. At the same time, he was Regional Technical Advisor for Football. After one year as Director of Population and Social Development at the Ministry of Population (1993–1994), Ahmad Ahmad was appointed to the Malagasy Government as Secretary of state in charge of sports (1994–1995). He was then Technical Advisor to the National Assembly (1995–1996), then Director of Cabinet of the Minister of Fisheries and Fishery Resources (1996–1998). ",
"score": "1.6199229"
},
{
"id": "25832019",
"title": "Pascal Razakanantenaina",
"text": " Pascal Razakanantenaina (born 19 April 1987) is a Malagasy professional footballer who plays as a centre back for JS Saint-Pierroise.",
"score": "1.6167026"
},
{
"id": "25455242",
"title": "Valéry Rakotoarinosy",
"text": " Valéry Rakotoarinosy (born 9 April 1986) is a Malagasy football defender who currently plays for Disciples FC.",
"score": "1.6144518"
}
] | [
"Alain Rakotondramanana\n Alain Rakotondramanana (born April 16, 1970) is a Malagasy footballer currently plays for USCA Foot.",
"José Rakoto\n José Rakotoarisoa Harison, known as José Rakoto (born 11 December 1980) is a Malagasy rugby union player. He plays as a fly-half and as a fullback. Harison first played in F.I.T.A.M.I.B.A., from 1997/98 to 1999/2000, moving then to XV Simpatiques, where he would play from 2000/01 to 2002/03. He then would represent 3F.B., one of the best teams of Madagascar, from 2003/04 to 2004/05. He won three National Championship titles during his three-season first presence at 3F.B.. He then had the chance to move to France, playing for a season at Rugby Club Chateaurenard (2005/06), in the Fédérale 1. He returned to 3F.B. for 2006/07, where he's been playing since then. He won the National Championship titles for 2006/07 and 2007/08. Harison is an international player for Madagascar since 2002. He was twice runners-up for the title of Africa Champions in 2005 and 2007. He played at the winning team at the 2012 Africa Cup, scoring two tries and six conversions at the 57–54 win over Namibia. He played in the 2007 Rugby World Cup and 2011 Rugby World Cup qualifyings. As of March 2020 he is the top scorer for his National Team.",
"Sidonie Rakotoarisoa\n Lantoniaina Sidonie Rakotoarisoa (born 26 April 1983) is a Malagasy rugby union player. He plays as a wing, centre or fly-half. He is the brother of teammate José Rakoto. Rakotoarisoa played for XV Sympathique, moving to 3F.B. in 2004/05. He has won National Championship titles in 2004/05, 2005/06, and 2007/08. Rakotoarisoa currently plays for Madagascar, where he won the title of vice-champion of Africa in 2005 and 2007, and the title of Africa champions in 2012.",
"Antso Rakotondramanga\n Antso Rakotondramanga (born 14 July 1988) is a Malagasy tennis player who was born in Paris, France. Rakotondramanga has a career high ATP singles ranking of 1009 achieved on 29 April 2013. He also has a career high ATP doubles ranking of 734 achieved on 4 November 2013. Rakotondramanga represents Madagascar at the Davis Cup where he has a W/L record of 27–19. Rakotondramanga also earned himself a silver medal in the Men's Singles at the 2013 Summer Universiade. Rakotondramanga also competed in the Men's Doubles at the same games with V. Rakotondramanga.",
"Dominique Rakotorahalahy\n Dominique Rakotorahalahy (born 3 August 1944) is a Malagasy athlete. He competed in the men's decathlon at the 1968 Summer Olympics.",
"Praxis Rabemananjara\n Stéphane Praxis Rabemananjara (born September 9, 1983 in Madagascar) is a Malagasy football striker currently playing for Saint-Denis FC. He is a member of the Madagascar national football team.",
"Eric-Julien Rakotondrabe\n Eric-Julien Rakotondrabe (born December 1, 1980) is a Malagasy footballer currently plays for Fanilo Japan Actuels.",
"Éric Rabésandratana\n In 2007, Rabésandratana played for the Madagascar national team in a friendly with Toulouse FC, but this was never sanctioned by FIFA.",
"Éric Rabésandratana\n Éric Rabésandratana (born 18 September 1972) is a professional football manager and former player who is the caretaker manager of the Madagascar national team. He played mainly as a defensive midfielder – he could also operate as a central defender. Born in France, he represented Madagascar internationally. In a 17-year professional career he appeared in 191 Ligue 1 games over the course of seven seasons (15 goals), in representation of Nancy and Paris Saint-Germain.",
"Pascal Razakanantenaina\nFootball at the Indian Ocean Island Games silver medal: 2007 ; Knight Order of Madagascar: 2019 ",
"Baggio Rakotonomenjanahary\n Rakotonomenjanahary has played for Academie Ny Antsika, Stade Tamponnaise, Concordia Basel, Old Boys and Sukhothai. In 2021 he signed for Port. He made his international debut for Madagascar in 2011.",
"Jean-Chrysostome Raharison\n Born in Antananarivo, Madagascar, Farro has played club football in Madagascar and Réunion for DSA Antananarivo, USCA Foot, FC Ilakaka, AS Marsouins and SS Saint-Louisienne.",
"Nathalia Rakotondramanana\n Harinelina Nathalia Rakotondramanana (born 15 January 1989, in Antananarivo) is a female weightlifter. She represented Madagascar at the 2012 Summer Olympics held in London, United Kingdom. She is one of three sportspeople on the team to qualify for the Olympics rather than win a wild-card spot. She is also only the second Olympic weightlifter to represent her country. She ultimately finished last of those that finished as she fell on a lift.",
"Emilson Rakotonarivo\n Emilson Rakotonarivo (born 24 October 1972) is a retired Malagasy football defender.",
"Jean-Chrysostome Raharison\n Jean-Chrysostome Raharison (born 23 August 1979), commonly referred to as Bota, is a Malagasy international footballer who plays for AS Excelsior, as a goalkeeper.",
"Alain (given name)\nAlain Raguel (born 1976), French football player ; Alain Rakotondramanana (born 1970), Malagasy footballer ; Alain Ramadier (born 1958), French politician ; Alain Rayes (born 1971), Canadian politician ; Alain Razahasoa (born 1966), Malagasy long-distance runner ; Alain Rémond (born 1946), French humor columnist ; Alain Resnais (born 1922), French New Wave film director ; Alain Rey (born 1928), French linguist, lexicographer and radio personality ; Alain Rey (born 1982), Swiss ski mountaineer ; Alain Richard (born 1945), French politician ; Alain Richard (born 1985), Swiss ski mountaineer ; Alain Robbe-Grillet (1922–2008), French writer and filmmaker ; Alain Robert (born 1962), French rock and urban climber ; Alain Robidoux (born 1960), Canadian snooker player ; Alain Roca (born 1976), retired volleyball player from Cuba ; Alain Rochat (born 1983), Swiss footballer ; Alain Roche, former French football defender ; Alain Rohr (born 1971), Swiss athlete who specializes in the 400 metres hurdles ; Alain Rolland (born 1966), former Irish rugby union footballer and current international referee ; Alain Romans (1905–1988), French jazz composer ; Alain Rousset (born 1951), the Socialist president of the Aquitaine region of France ",
"Stéphan Raheriharimanana\n Raheriharimanana was called up to the Madagascar national football team in 2016 and made his international debut in an AFCON qualification tie against Angola which ended 1–1 in September 2016.",
"Ahmad Ahmad\n Ahmad Ahmad began his career at Tambohorano College (1986–1988) and Mahajanga High School (1988–1989) where he was a Physical and Sports Education (PES) teacher. In 1989, he became a coach at AC Sotema, the Mahajanga football club. In 1988, he became involved in local politics, becoming head of the sports department of the City of Mahajanga until 1993. At the same time, he was Regional Technical Advisor for Football. After one year as Director of Population and Social Development at the Ministry of Population (1993–1994), Ahmad Ahmad was appointed to the Malagasy Government as Secretary of state in charge of sports (1994–1995). He was then Technical Advisor to the National Assembly (1995–1996), then Director of Cabinet of the Minister of Fisheries and Fishery Resources (1996–1998). ",
"Pascal Razakanantenaina\n Pascal Razakanantenaina (born 19 April 1987) is a Malagasy professional footballer who plays as a centre back for JS Saint-Pierroise.",
"Valéry Rakotoarinosy\n Valéry Rakotoarinosy (born 9 April 1986) is a Malagasy football defender who currently plays for Disciples FC."
] |
What sport does Radik Zhaparov play? | [
"ski jumping"
] | sport | Radik Zhaparov | 6,423,635 | 84 | [
{
"id": "29564744",
"title": "Radik Zhaparov",
"text": " Radik Zhaparov (born February 29, 1984) is a Kazakh ski jumper who has competed since 2003. At the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, he finished 11th in the team large hill and 26th in the individual normal hill events. At the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships, Zhaparov has finished 11th in team events three times (2005: large, normal; 2007: large) and 24th in the individual normal hill (2007) events. Zharparov's best individual World Cup finish was 11th in a large hill event in Finland in 2007. His best individual career finish was second in an FIS Cup normal hill event in Austria, also in 2007.",
"score": "1.9366429"
},
{
"id": "7055096",
"title": "Ruslan Zhaparov",
"text": " Ruslan Zhaparov (born 27 May 1996) is a Kazakh heavyweight taekwondo competitor. He represented Kazakhstan at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, in the men's +80 kg. He was defeated by Azerbaijan's Radik Isaev in the round of 16 and South Korea's Cha Dong-min in the repechages. Zhaparov was the flag bearer for Kazakhstan during the Parade of Nations. In 2018 Zhaparov won a bronze medal at the Asian Games and a silver at the Asian Championships.",
"score": "1.7241035"
},
{
"id": "1794593",
"title": "Teodor Salparov",
"text": " Teodor Salparov (Теодор Салпаров born 16 August 1982) is a Bulgarian volleyball player, a member of the Bulgaria men's national volleyball team and the Bulgarian club VC Hebar Pazardzhik. He was a participant in the Olympic Games (Beijing 2008, London 2012), and was a bronze medalist in the 2006 World Championship, 2007 World Cup and 2009 European Championship.",
"score": "1.6772709"
},
{
"id": "4128756",
"title": "Zhaparov",
"text": "Marat Zhaparov (born 1985), Kazakhstani ski jumper ; Radik Zhaparov (born 1984), Kazakhstani ski jumper, brother of Marat ; Ruslan Zhaparov (born 1996), Kazakhstani taekwondo competitor ; Sadyr Japarov (born 1968), Kyrgyz politician Zhaparov or Japarov (Cyrillic: Жапаров) is a Kazakhstani masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Zhaparova or Japarova. It may refer to ",
"score": "1.6446146"
},
{
"id": "15371312",
"title": "Aleksey Rastvortsev",
"text": " Aleksey Petrovich Rastvortsev (Алексей Петрович Растворцев; born August 8, 1978) is a Russian handball player who competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics (bronze winner) and in the 2008 Summer Olympics. He played for the Russian National Handball Team 251 match and scored over 900 goals. In his career he played for HC Neva (St. Peterburg), HC Energija (Voronez), HC Chekhovskie Medvedi (Chekhov, Moskovskaja oblast), RK Vardar (Skopje) and RK Vojvodina (Novi Sad). He finished his active sports career in 2016 and since then he is deputy sport director in RK Vardar; they won the EHF Champions League in 2017.",
"score": "1.5728754"
},
{
"id": "1794595",
"title": "Teodor Salparov",
"text": " On September 4, 2009 Bulgarian national team, including Salparov, won the bronze medal at the European Championship 2009. They beat Italy in 3rd place match 3-0.",
"score": "1.549103"
},
{
"id": "28868878",
"title": "Ivaylo Asparuhov",
"text": " Ivaylo Lyubchev Asparuhov (Ивайло Любчев Аспарухов) (born 31 March 1971 in Sofia) was a Bulgarian football player, striker and currently coach in the North West Regional Youth team, new project of Bulgarian Football Union. As a coach Asparuhov presented with their teams attacking, aggressive football. Pointed out is the way in professional football players like Bojan Tabakov, Borislav Baldzhiyski, Simeon Ivanov.",
"score": "1.5169442"
},
{
"id": "13453014",
"title": "Artur Razhabov",
"text": " Artur Dovlatzhonovich Razhabov (Артур Довлатжонович Ражабов; born 28 April 1989) is a Russian curler from Saint Petersburg. He currently plays second for the Russian national curling team. Razhabov was a member of the Russian team at the 2011 and 2014 European Curling Championships. He played lead for Alexey Tselousov at the 2011 European Curling Championships, finishing 11th place. At the 2014 European Curling Championships, he played second for Evgeny Arkhipov, finishing sixth. The placement qualified the team to represent Russia at the 2015 Ford World Men's Curling Championship, Razhabov's first. Also in 2015, Razhabov was a member of the Russian team (skipped by Arkhipov) that won a silver medal at the 2015 Winter Universiade.",
"score": "1.5131469"
},
{
"id": "7650088",
"title": "Georgi Asparuhov",
"text": " Georgi Asparuhov Rangelov (Георги Аспарухов Рангелов; 4 May 1943 – 30 June 1971), nicknamed Gundi, was a Bulgarian footballer who played as a striker. A prolific forward of his generation, Asparuhov was renowned for his finishing, technique and heading ability. He was voted the best Bulgarian footballer of the 20th century and Europe's 40th best player of the century, a position shared with Paolo Rossi. Asparuhov was also nominated for the 1965 Ballon d'Or award, finishing eighth in the final standings. In international football, Asparuhov made his Bulgaria debut on 6 May 1962 at the age of 19. He made 49 appearances in total, appearing at three FIFA World Cup tournaments, in 1962, 1966 and 1970, and scoring 18 goals. Asparuhov's career was cut short in 1971 at the age of 28 when he died in a vehicle accident. Levski Sofia's stadium is named in his honour.",
"score": "1.500044"
},
{
"id": "26321701",
"title": "Tihomir Dovramadjiev",
"text": " Varna Sport Universiade in the chess section. In 1997, he won 1st place with the team of \"Kaissa\" (Varna) at the youth team championship in Plovdiv. He then competed for teams from Varna, as well as for \"Lokomotiv\" (Plovdiv, Bulgaria). He then he played in German team league, where he competed for SV Nashuatec (Berlin, Germany), where they won the German Landesliga for the 2003/2004 season, defeating the team of \"Gillette\" in the decisive match. For the team of \"Nashuatec\", he recorded a result of 22 wins, 2 draws and 0 defeats. He has successfully participated in a number of online championships, repeatedly ranking in the top three of tournaments held by ChessBase / Playchess Germany. His FIDE Elo rating is 2356 (November 2011).",
"score": "1.4991306"
},
{
"id": "32434838",
"title": "Vugar Rahimov",
"text": " Vugar Hamidullovych Rahimov (also Vyugar Ragymov, Вьюгар Гамидуллович Рагімов; born February 5, 1986 in Baku, Azerbaijan SSR) is a Ukrainian Greco-Roman wrestler of Azerbaijani descent, who played for the men's featherweight category. He captured a silver medal for his division at the 2011 European Wrestling Championships in Dortmund, Germany, losing out to Armenia's Roman Amoyan. Ragymov is currently a member of the wrestling team for Metallurg Zaporzhye in his current residence Zaporizhia, and is coached and trained by Evgeny Chertkov. Rakhimov represented Ukraine at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, where he competed for the men's 55 kg class. Unfortunately, he lost the qualifying round match to China's Li Shujin, with a three-set technical score (0–4, 2–0, 0–2), and a classification point score of 1–3.",
"score": "1.4954245"
},
{
"id": "15555611",
"title": "Radik Vodopyanov",
"text": " Radik Vodopyanov (born 20 August 1984, Водопьянов Радик Юрьевич) is a former Kyrgystani footballer, having represented the national team from 2004 to 2007.",
"score": "1.4948514"
},
{
"id": "33039604",
"title": "Alzhan Zharmukhamedov",
"text": " Jarmuhamedov played club with CSKA Moscow (1970–1980). In 1971, he earned the title of Master of Sports of the USSR, International Class, and a year later, he was awarded the Order of the Badge of Honor.",
"score": "1.490382"
},
{
"id": "11649644",
"title": "Almaty",
"text": " soccer player ; Alexander Parygin (born 1973), olympic athlete ; Alexander Petrenko (1976–2006), basketball representative for Russia ; Boris Polak (born 1954), Israeli world champion and Olympic sport shooter ; Vadim Sayutin (born 1970), ice speed skater in Russia ; Thomas Schertwitis (born 1972), water polo ; Olga Shishigina (born 1968), Olympic Champion in hurdling ; Konstantin Sokolenko (born 1987), Nordic combined skier/ski jumper ; Igor Sysoev (born 1970) open-source software engineer, founder of nginx, Inc. ; Elena Likhovtseva (born 1975), tennis player ; Denis Ten (1993-2018), figure skater ; Yernar Yerimbetov (1980), gymnast ; Anatoly Vaisser (born 1949), French chess grandmaster ; Radik Zhaparov (born 1984), ski jumper ; Vladimir Zhirinovsky (born 1946), politician ; Elena Zoubareva (born 1972), opera singer ; Alexandra Elbakyan (born 1988), intellectual property activist, creator of Sci-Hub ",
"score": "1.4862002"
},
{
"id": "14564215",
"title": "Rauan Isaliyev",
"text": " Isaliyev was born 13 May 1988 in Oral, West Kazakhstan Region, and started his bandy career in 2002 with Akzhayik Sports Club until 2008. He spent his next two seasons with Vodnik in Arkhangelsk, then two seasons with Start in Nizhny Novgorod. With the national bandy team, Isaliyev has won bronze medals at the Bandy World Championship (2012, 2013, 2014, 2015). At the 2011 Asian Winter Games, he was top goalscorer in the bandy tournament, and Kazakhstan won the goal medal on home ice at the Medeu in Almaty. He was the flag bearer at the closing ceremony. After the 2012–13 league season he was elected best player in Start. Following the 2018–19 season he achieved that feat with Sibselmash for the third year in a row. At the 2018 World Championship he was the topscorer in Division A.",
"score": "1.4820583"
},
{
"id": "1794594",
"title": "Teodor Salparov",
"text": " In 2014 went to Russian Zenit Kazan. In March 2015 he achieved gold medal of 2014–15 CEV Champions League with Russian club. In 2017 Salparov signed for Bulgarian Neftochimic. His teammates in Bulgaria national team Georgi Bratoev and Valentin Bratoev signed for the Burgas team the same year. With the Bulgarian team, Salparov became 2 time national champion.",
"score": "1.4738111"
},
{
"id": "29928801",
"title": "Sport in Uzbekistan",
"text": "Djamolidine Abdoujaparov, cyclist ; Artur Taymazov, wrestler ; Ruslan Chagaev, boxer ; Lina Cheryazova, freestyle skier ; Elvira Saadi, gymnast ; Maksim Shatskikh, footballer ",
"score": "1.4701438"
},
{
"id": "13154940",
"title": "Radik Zakiev",
"text": " Radik Zakiev (born 23 December, 1986) is a Russian former professional ice hockey forward who played in the Kontinental Hockey League. He most notably led Amur Khabarovsk in scoring with 12 goals and 25 points in 54 games during the 2010–11 season.",
"score": "1.4697268"
},
{
"id": "4822459",
"title": "Server Djeparov",
"text": " Server Reshatovich Djeparov (Uzbek: Server Jeparov, Uzbek Cyrillic: Сервер Жепаров, ; born 3 October 1982), is an Uzbek former professional football playmaker who is the head coach of Uzbekistan U-14 and the assistant coach of Uzbekistan. He has won the Asian Footballer of the Year award twice, first in 2008 and the other in 2011.",
"score": "1.4559312"
},
{
"id": "10435380",
"title": "Yuri Zhirkov",
"text": " Zhirkov joined CSKA Moscow in January 2004. His first official match was on 7 March 2004 in the Russian Super Cup against Spartak Moscow. CSKA's 3–1 victory gave him his first trophy. Zhirkov made his debut in the UEFA Champions League on 27 July against Neftchi Baku. He also appeared in the third qualifying round against Rangers. Zhirkov made his debut in the CIS Cup against Gomel and was replaced in the 70th minute. The final score was 2–2. In his second match, against Pakhtakor Tashkent, he played all 90 minutes, with the final score being 2–1. In the last qualifying match against Regar-TadAZ Tursunzoda, which also ended 2–1, Zhirkov played all 90 minutes. After the cup, Yuri Adzhem claimed Zhirkov had a good chance to receive a ",
"score": "1.4548862"
}
] | [
"Radik Zhaparov\n Radik Zhaparov (born February 29, 1984) is a Kazakh ski jumper who has competed since 2003. At the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, he finished 11th in the team large hill and 26th in the individual normal hill events. At the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships, Zhaparov has finished 11th in team events three times (2005: large, normal; 2007: large) and 24th in the individual normal hill (2007) events. Zharparov's best individual World Cup finish was 11th in a large hill event in Finland in 2007. His best individual career finish was second in an FIS Cup normal hill event in Austria, also in 2007.",
"Ruslan Zhaparov\n Ruslan Zhaparov (born 27 May 1996) is a Kazakh heavyweight taekwondo competitor. He represented Kazakhstan at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, in the men's +80 kg. He was defeated by Azerbaijan's Radik Isaev in the round of 16 and South Korea's Cha Dong-min in the repechages. Zhaparov was the flag bearer for Kazakhstan during the Parade of Nations. In 2018 Zhaparov won a bronze medal at the Asian Games and a silver at the Asian Championships.",
"Teodor Salparov\n Teodor Salparov (Теодор Салпаров born 16 August 1982) is a Bulgarian volleyball player, a member of the Bulgaria men's national volleyball team and the Bulgarian club VC Hebar Pazardzhik. He was a participant in the Olympic Games (Beijing 2008, London 2012), and was a bronze medalist in the 2006 World Championship, 2007 World Cup and 2009 European Championship.",
"Zhaparov\nMarat Zhaparov (born 1985), Kazakhstani ski jumper ; Radik Zhaparov (born 1984), Kazakhstani ski jumper, brother of Marat ; Ruslan Zhaparov (born 1996), Kazakhstani taekwondo competitor ; Sadyr Japarov (born 1968), Kyrgyz politician Zhaparov or Japarov (Cyrillic: Жапаров) is a Kazakhstani masculine surname, its feminine counterpart is Zhaparova or Japarova. It may refer to ",
"Aleksey Rastvortsev\n Aleksey Petrovich Rastvortsev (Алексей Петрович Растворцев; born August 8, 1978) is a Russian handball player who competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics (bronze winner) and in the 2008 Summer Olympics. He played for the Russian National Handball Team 251 match and scored over 900 goals. In his career he played for HC Neva (St. Peterburg), HC Energija (Voronez), HC Chekhovskie Medvedi (Chekhov, Moskovskaja oblast), RK Vardar (Skopje) and RK Vojvodina (Novi Sad). He finished his active sports career in 2016 and since then he is deputy sport director in RK Vardar; they won the EHF Champions League in 2017.",
"Teodor Salparov\n On September 4, 2009 Bulgarian national team, including Salparov, won the bronze medal at the European Championship 2009. They beat Italy in 3rd place match 3-0.",
"Ivaylo Asparuhov\n Ivaylo Lyubchev Asparuhov (Ивайло Любчев Аспарухов) (born 31 March 1971 in Sofia) was a Bulgarian football player, striker and currently coach in the North West Regional Youth team, new project of Bulgarian Football Union. As a coach Asparuhov presented with their teams attacking, aggressive football. Pointed out is the way in professional football players like Bojan Tabakov, Borislav Baldzhiyski, Simeon Ivanov.",
"Artur Razhabov\n Artur Dovlatzhonovich Razhabov (Артур Довлатжонович Ражабов; born 28 April 1989) is a Russian curler from Saint Petersburg. He currently plays second for the Russian national curling team. Razhabov was a member of the Russian team at the 2011 and 2014 European Curling Championships. He played lead for Alexey Tselousov at the 2011 European Curling Championships, finishing 11th place. At the 2014 European Curling Championships, he played second for Evgeny Arkhipov, finishing sixth. The placement qualified the team to represent Russia at the 2015 Ford World Men's Curling Championship, Razhabov's first. Also in 2015, Razhabov was a member of the Russian team (skipped by Arkhipov) that won a silver medal at the 2015 Winter Universiade.",
"Georgi Asparuhov\n Georgi Asparuhov Rangelov (Георги Аспарухов Рангелов; 4 May 1943 – 30 June 1971), nicknamed Gundi, was a Bulgarian footballer who played as a striker. A prolific forward of his generation, Asparuhov was renowned for his finishing, technique and heading ability. He was voted the best Bulgarian footballer of the 20th century and Europe's 40th best player of the century, a position shared with Paolo Rossi. Asparuhov was also nominated for the 1965 Ballon d'Or award, finishing eighth in the final standings. In international football, Asparuhov made his Bulgaria debut on 6 May 1962 at the age of 19. He made 49 appearances in total, appearing at three FIFA World Cup tournaments, in 1962, 1966 and 1970, and scoring 18 goals. Asparuhov's career was cut short in 1971 at the age of 28 when he died in a vehicle accident. Levski Sofia's stadium is named in his honour.",
"Tihomir Dovramadjiev\n Varna Sport Universiade in the chess section. In 1997, he won 1st place with the team of \"Kaissa\" (Varna) at the youth team championship in Plovdiv. He then competed for teams from Varna, as well as for \"Lokomotiv\" (Plovdiv, Bulgaria). He then he played in German team league, where he competed for SV Nashuatec (Berlin, Germany), where they won the German Landesliga for the 2003/2004 season, defeating the team of \"Gillette\" in the decisive match. For the team of \"Nashuatec\", he recorded a result of 22 wins, 2 draws and 0 defeats. He has successfully participated in a number of online championships, repeatedly ranking in the top three of tournaments held by ChessBase / Playchess Germany. His FIDE Elo rating is 2356 (November 2011).",
"Vugar Rahimov\n Vugar Hamidullovych Rahimov (also Vyugar Ragymov, Вьюгар Гамидуллович Рагімов; born February 5, 1986 in Baku, Azerbaijan SSR) is a Ukrainian Greco-Roman wrestler of Azerbaijani descent, who played for the men's featherweight category. He captured a silver medal for his division at the 2011 European Wrestling Championships in Dortmund, Germany, losing out to Armenia's Roman Amoyan. Ragymov is currently a member of the wrestling team for Metallurg Zaporzhye in his current residence Zaporizhia, and is coached and trained by Evgeny Chertkov. Rakhimov represented Ukraine at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, where he competed for the men's 55 kg class. Unfortunately, he lost the qualifying round match to China's Li Shujin, with a three-set technical score (0–4, 2–0, 0–2), and a classification point score of 1–3.",
"Radik Vodopyanov\n Radik Vodopyanov (born 20 August 1984, Водопьянов Радик Юрьевич) is a former Kyrgystani footballer, having represented the national team from 2004 to 2007.",
"Alzhan Zharmukhamedov\n Jarmuhamedov played club with CSKA Moscow (1970–1980). In 1971, he earned the title of Master of Sports of the USSR, International Class, and a year later, he was awarded the Order of the Badge of Honor.",
"Almaty\n soccer player ; Alexander Parygin (born 1973), olympic athlete ; Alexander Petrenko (1976–2006), basketball representative for Russia ; Boris Polak (born 1954), Israeli world champion and Olympic sport shooter ; Vadim Sayutin (born 1970), ice speed skater in Russia ; Thomas Schertwitis (born 1972), water polo ; Olga Shishigina (born 1968), Olympic Champion in hurdling ; Konstantin Sokolenko (born 1987), Nordic combined skier/ski jumper ; Igor Sysoev (born 1970) open-source software engineer, founder of nginx, Inc. ; Elena Likhovtseva (born 1975), tennis player ; Denis Ten (1993-2018), figure skater ; Yernar Yerimbetov (1980), gymnast ; Anatoly Vaisser (born 1949), French chess grandmaster ; Radik Zhaparov (born 1984), ski jumper ; Vladimir Zhirinovsky (born 1946), politician ; Elena Zoubareva (born 1972), opera singer ; Alexandra Elbakyan (born 1988), intellectual property activist, creator of Sci-Hub ",
"Rauan Isaliyev\n Isaliyev was born 13 May 1988 in Oral, West Kazakhstan Region, and started his bandy career in 2002 with Akzhayik Sports Club until 2008. He spent his next two seasons with Vodnik in Arkhangelsk, then two seasons with Start in Nizhny Novgorod. With the national bandy team, Isaliyev has won bronze medals at the Bandy World Championship (2012, 2013, 2014, 2015). At the 2011 Asian Winter Games, he was top goalscorer in the bandy tournament, and Kazakhstan won the goal medal on home ice at the Medeu in Almaty. He was the flag bearer at the closing ceremony. After the 2012–13 league season he was elected best player in Start. Following the 2018–19 season he achieved that feat with Sibselmash for the third year in a row. At the 2018 World Championship he was the topscorer in Division A.",
"Teodor Salparov\n In 2014 went to Russian Zenit Kazan. In March 2015 he achieved gold medal of 2014–15 CEV Champions League with Russian club. In 2017 Salparov signed for Bulgarian Neftochimic. His teammates in Bulgaria national team Georgi Bratoev and Valentin Bratoev signed for the Burgas team the same year. With the Bulgarian team, Salparov became 2 time national champion.",
"Sport in Uzbekistan\nDjamolidine Abdoujaparov, cyclist ; Artur Taymazov, wrestler ; Ruslan Chagaev, boxer ; Lina Cheryazova, freestyle skier ; Elvira Saadi, gymnast ; Maksim Shatskikh, footballer ",
"Radik Zakiev\n Radik Zakiev (born 23 December, 1986) is a Russian former professional ice hockey forward who played in the Kontinental Hockey League. He most notably led Amur Khabarovsk in scoring with 12 goals and 25 points in 54 games during the 2010–11 season.",
"Server Djeparov\n Server Reshatovich Djeparov (Uzbek: Server Jeparov, Uzbek Cyrillic: Сервер Жепаров, ; born 3 October 1982), is an Uzbek former professional football playmaker who is the head coach of Uzbekistan U-14 and the assistant coach of Uzbekistan. He has won the Asian Footballer of the Year award twice, first in 2008 and the other in 2011.",
"Yuri Zhirkov\n Zhirkov joined CSKA Moscow in January 2004. His first official match was on 7 March 2004 in the Russian Super Cup against Spartak Moscow. CSKA's 3–1 victory gave him his first trophy. Zhirkov made his debut in the UEFA Champions League on 27 July against Neftchi Baku. He also appeared in the third qualifying round against Rangers. Zhirkov made his debut in the CIS Cup against Gomel and was replaced in the 70th minute. The final score was 2–2. In his second match, against Pakhtakor Tashkent, he played all 90 minutes, with the final score being 2–1. In the last qualifying match against Regar-TadAZ Tursunzoda, which also ended 2–1, Zhirkov played all 90 minutes. After the cup, Yuri Adzhem claimed Zhirkov had a good chance to receive a "
] |
What sport does 2006 Korea Open Badminton Championships play? | [
"badminton"
] | sport | 2006 Korea Open | 1,189,879 | 61 | [
{
"id": "11262430",
"title": "2006 Korea Open",
"text": " The 2006 Korea Open in badminton was held in Seoul, from August 21 to August 27, 2006. The prize money was US$300,000.",
"score": "1.7434001"
},
{
"id": "13193421",
"title": "2006 BWF World Junior Championships – Mixed doubles",
"text": " The Mixed doubles tournament of the 2006 BWF World Junior Championships is a badminton world junior individual championships for the Eye Level Cups, held on November 6–11. The defending champion of the last edition were He Hanbin and Yu Yang from China. The host pair Lee Yong-dae and Yoo Hyun-young won the gold medal in this event after beat Li Tian and Ma Jin of China in rubber games with the score 18–21, 21–19, 21–14.",
"score": "1.6750724"
},
{
"id": "13193417",
"title": "2006 BWF World Junior Championships – Boys' doubles",
"text": " The Boys' doubles tournament of the 2006 BWF World Junior Championships is a badminton world junior individual championships for the Eye Level Cups, held on November 6–11. The defending champion of the last edition were Hoon Thien How and Tan Boon Heong from Malaysia. The host pair Lee Yong-dae and Cho Gun-woo won the gold medal in this event after beat Liu Xiaolong and Li Tian of China in straight games with the score 21–12, 21–16.",
"score": "1.6510572"
},
{
"id": "6637694",
"title": "2018 Korea Open (badminton)",
"text": " The 2018 Korea Open was the eighteenth tournament of the 2018 BWF World Tour and also part of the Korea Open championships, which has been held since 1991. This tournament was organized by the Badminton Korea Association and sanctioned by the BWF.",
"score": "1.6192412"
},
{
"id": "11262431",
"title": "2006 Korea Open",
"text": " Jangchung Gymnasium",
"score": "1.6073325"
},
{
"id": "10754050",
"title": "2007 Korea Open Super Series",
"text": " The 2007 Korea Open Super Series was the second tournament of the 2007 BWF Super Series and also part of the Korea Open championships, which had been held since 1991.",
"score": "1.5974078"
},
{
"id": "33158164",
"title": "2006 in South Korea",
"text": "South Korea at the 2006 Winter Olympics ; South Korea at the 2006 Winter Paralympics ; South Korea at the 2006 Asian Games ; 2006 BWF World Junior Championships ; 2006 World Junior Curling Championships ; 2006 Korea Open ; 2006 in South Korean football ; 2006 Peace Queen Cup ; 2006 AFC Women's Asian Cup ",
"score": "1.5922873"
},
{
"id": "13193419",
"title": "2006 BWF World Junior Championships – Girls' doubles",
"text": " The Girls' doubles tournament of the 2006 BWF World Junior Championships is a badminton world junior individual championships for the Eye Level Cups, held on November 6–11. The defending champion of the last edition were Tian Qing and Yu Yang from China. The Chinese pair Ma Jin and Wang Xiaoli won the gold medal in this event after beat Hong Soo-jung and Sun In-jang of South Korea in straight games with the score 21–13, 21–18.",
"score": "1.5911379"
},
{
"id": "5911161",
"title": "2006 in Macau",
"text": "19–23 July - 2006 Macau Open Badminton Championships at Tap Seac Multi-sports Pavilion. ",
"score": "1.5905632"
},
{
"id": "26579668",
"title": "2005 Asian Junior Badminton Championships",
"text": " The 2005 Asian Junior Badminton Championships is an Asia continental junior championships to crown the best U-19 badminton players across Asia. This tournament were held in Tennis Indoor Senayan, Gelora Bung Karno Sports Complex, Jakarta, Indonesia from 11–17 July. In the team event, South Korean boys', and the Chinese girls' team won the gold medal respectively. In the individual event, China won three gold medal in the boys' singles, girls' singles and girls' doubles event, while South Korea won two gold medal in the boys' and mixed doubles.",
"score": "1.5891734"
},
{
"id": "13193409",
"title": "2006 BWF World Junior Championships – Boys' singles",
"text": " The Boys' Singles tournament of the 2006 BWF World Junior Championships is a badminton world junior individual championships for the Eye Level Cups, held on November 6–11. The defending champion of the last edition is Chen Jin from China. The host player Hong Ji-hoon won the gold medal in this event after beat Tommy Sugiarto of Indonesia in the rubber game with the score 21–13, 10–21, 21–16.",
"score": "1.584013"
},
{
"id": "30016658",
"title": "2006 Asian Badminton Championships",
"text": " The 2006 Asian Badminton Championships was the 26th edition of the Asian Badminton Championships. It was held in Johor Bahru, Malaysia from March 28 to April 2, 2006 as a four-star tournament.",
"score": "1.5796077"
},
{
"id": "10754049",
"title": "2007 Korea Open Super Series",
"text": " The 2007 Korea Open Super Series (officially known as the Yonex Korea Open Super Series 2007 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament which took place at SK Olympic Handball Gymnasium in Seoul, South Korea, from 23 to 28 January 2007 and had a total purse of $300,000.",
"score": "1.5793042"
},
{
"id": "2818016",
"title": "Badminton at the 2006 Asian Games – Mixed doubles",
"text": " The badminton mixed doubles tournament at the 2006 Asian Games in Doha took place from 6 December to 8 December at Aspire Hall 3.",
"score": "1.5711014"
},
{
"id": "2817711",
"title": "Badminton at the 2006 Asian Games – Women's singles",
"text": " The badminton women's singles tournament at the 2006 Asian Games in Doha took place from 5 December to 9 December at Aspire Hall 3.",
"score": "1.5674963"
},
{
"id": "2817323",
"title": "Badminton at the 2006 Asian Games – Men's singles",
"text": " The badminton men's singles tournament at the 2006 Asian Games in Doha took place from 5 December to 9 December at Aspire Hall 3.",
"score": "1.5611173"
},
{
"id": "1155824",
"title": "2006 Badminton World Cup",
"text": " The 2006 Badminton World Cup was the twenty-first edition of the international Badminton World Cup tournament. The event was held at the Olympic Sports Park in Yiyang, Hunan, China from 24 to 28 October 2006. It was organized by the Table Tennis and Badminton Administration Center under General Administration of Sport of China, hosted by the Hunan Sports Bureau and the Yiyang People's Government, and also co-organized by China Mobile Group Hunan Co., Ltd., with a total prize money of US$250,000. Some of top players declined to participate, since there is no ranking points awarded in this tournament, and tight competition schedule at that year, with also held the World Championship, Thomas & Uber Cup, Asian Games, and the European Club League. In the end, the host Chinese national team won the men's singles, women's singles and women's doubles, while the men's and mixed doubles won by Indonesian players.",
"score": "1.56111"
},
{
"id": "30935476",
"title": "2008 Korea Open Super Series",
"text": " The 2008 Korea Open Super Series is the second tournament of the 2008 BWF Super Series in badminton. It was held in Seoul, South Korea from January 22 to January 27, 2008. The men's singles final marred by the incident between Lin Dan and Korea coach Li Mao.",
"score": "1.560821"
},
{
"id": "3209975",
"title": "Badminton at the 2006 Asian Games – Women's doubles",
"text": " The badminton women's doubles tournament at the 2006 Asian Games in Doha took place from 5 December to 9 December at Aspire Hall 3.",
"score": "1.5572568"
},
{
"id": "2555052",
"title": "Badminton at the 2006 Asian Games – Men's team",
"text": "update=complete ; source= Official website ; for_against_style=matches ; use_goal_diff=no ; ranking_style=wins ; team1=INA |team2=JPN |team3=THA ; win_INA=2 |loss_INA=0 |gf_INA=8 |ga_INA=2 ; win_JPN=1 |loss_JPN=1 |gf_JPN=3 |ga_JPN=5 ; win_THA=0 |loss_THA=2 |gf_THA=2 |ga_THA=6 name_THA= ; name_JPN= ; name_INA= ; result1=A ; col_A=#ccffcc {{#invoke:Sports table|main|style=WL }}",
"score": "1.5542634"
}
] | [
"2006 Korea Open\n The 2006 Korea Open in badminton was held in Seoul, from August 21 to August 27, 2006. The prize money was US$300,000.",
"2006 BWF World Junior Championships – Mixed doubles\n The Mixed doubles tournament of the 2006 BWF World Junior Championships is a badminton world junior individual championships for the Eye Level Cups, held on November 6–11. The defending champion of the last edition were He Hanbin and Yu Yang from China. The host pair Lee Yong-dae and Yoo Hyun-young won the gold medal in this event after beat Li Tian and Ma Jin of China in rubber games with the score 18–21, 21–19, 21–14.",
"2006 BWF World Junior Championships – Boys' doubles\n The Boys' doubles tournament of the 2006 BWF World Junior Championships is a badminton world junior individual championships for the Eye Level Cups, held on November 6–11. The defending champion of the last edition were Hoon Thien How and Tan Boon Heong from Malaysia. The host pair Lee Yong-dae and Cho Gun-woo won the gold medal in this event after beat Liu Xiaolong and Li Tian of China in straight games with the score 21–12, 21–16.",
"2018 Korea Open (badminton)\n The 2018 Korea Open was the eighteenth tournament of the 2018 BWF World Tour and also part of the Korea Open championships, which has been held since 1991. This tournament was organized by the Badminton Korea Association and sanctioned by the BWF.",
"2006 Korea Open\n Jangchung Gymnasium",
"2007 Korea Open Super Series\n The 2007 Korea Open Super Series was the second tournament of the 2007 BWF Super Series and also part of the Korea Open championships, which had been held since 1991.",
"2006 in South Korea\nSouth Korea at the 2006 Winter Olympics ; South Korea at the 2006 Winter Paralympics ; South Korea at the 2006 Asian Games ; 2006 BWF World Junior Championships ; 2006 World Junior Curling Championships ; 2006 Korea Open ; 2006 in South Korean football ; 2006 Peace Queen Cup ; 2006 AFC Women's Asian Cup ",
"2006 BWF World Junior Championships – Girls' doubles\n The Girls' doubles tournament of the 2006 BWF World Junior Championships is a badminton world junior individual championships for the Eye Level Cups, held on November 6–11. The defending champion of the last edition were Tian Qing and Yu Yang from China. The Chinese pair Ma Jin and Wang Xiaoli won the gold medal in this event after beat Hong Soo-jung and Sun In-jang of South Korea in straight games with the score 21–13, 21–18.",
"2006 in Macau\n19–23 July - 2006 Macau Open Badminton Championships at Tap Seac Multi-sports Pavilion. ",
"2005 Asian Junior Badminton Championships\n The 2005 Asian Junior Badminton Championships is an Asia continental junior championships to crown the best U-19 badminton players across Asia. This tournament were held in Tennis Indoor Senayan, Gelora Bung Karno Sports Complex, Jakarta, Indonesia from 11–17 July. In the team event, South Korean boys', and the Chinese girls' team won the gold medal respectively. In the individual event, China won three gold medal in the boys' singles, girls' singles and girls' doubles event, while South Korea won two gold medal in the boys' and mixed doubles.",
"2006 BWF World Junior Championships – Boys' singles\n The Boys' Singles tournament of the 2006 BWF World Junior Championships is a badminton world junior individual championships for the Eye Level Cups, held on November 6–11. The defending champion of the last edition is Chen Jin from China. The host player Hong Ji-hoon won the gold medal in this event after beat Tommy Sugiarto of Indonesia in the rubber game with the score 21–13, 10–21, 21–16.",
"2006 Asian Badminton Championships\n The 2006 Asian Badminton Championships was the 26th edition of the Asian Badminton Championships. It was held in Johor Bahru, Malaysia from March 28 to April 2, 2006 as a four-star tournament.",
"2007 Korea Open Super Series\n The 2007 Korea Open Super Series (officially known as the Yonex Korea Open Super Series 2007 for sponsorship reasons) was a badminton tournament which took place at SK Olympic Handball Gymnasium in Seoul, South Korea, from 23 to 28 January 2007 and had a total purse of $300,000.",
"Badminton at the 2006 Asian Games – Mixed doubles\n The badminton mixed doubles tournament at the 2006 Asian Games in Doha took place from 6 December to 8 December at Aspire Hall 3.",
"Badminton at the 2006 Asian Games – Women's singles\n The badminton women's singles tournament at the 2006 Asian Games in Doha took place from 5 December to 9 December at Aspire Hall 3.",
"Badminton at the 2006 Asian Games – Men's singles\n The badminton men's singles tournament at the 2006 Asian Games in Doha took place from 5 December to 9 December at Aspire Hall 3.",
"2006 Badminton World Cup\n The 2006 Badminton World Cup was the twenty-first edition of the international Badminton World Cup tournament. The event was held at the Olympic Sports Park in Yiyang, Hunan, China from 24 to 28 October 2006. It was organized by the Table Tennis and Badminton Administration Center under General Administration of Sport of China, hosted by the Hunan Sports Bureau and the Yiyang People's Government, and also co-organized by China Mobile Group Hunan Co., Ltd., with a total prize money of US$250,000. Some of top players declined to participate, since there is no ranking points awarded in this tournament, and tight competition schedule at that year, with also held the World Championship, Thomas & Uber Cup, Asian Games, and the European Club League. In the end, the host Chinese national team won the men's singles, women's singles and women's doubles, while the men's and mixed doubles won by Indonesian players.",
"2008 Korea Open Super Series\n The 2008 Korea Open Super Series is the second tournament of the 2008 BWF Super Series in badminton. It was held in Seoul, South Korea from January 22 to January 27, 2008. The men's singles final marred by the incident between Lin Dan and Korea coach Li Mao.",
"Badminton at the 2006 Asian Games – Women's doubles\n The badminton women's doubles tournament at the 2006 Asian Games in Doha took place from 5 December to 9 December at Aspire Hall 3.",
"Badminton at the 2006 Asian Games – Men's team\nupdate=complete ; source= Official website ; for_against_style=matches ; use_goal_diff=no ; ranking_style=wins ; team1=INA |team2=JPN |team3=THA ; win_INA=2 |loss_INA=0 |gf_INA=8 |ga_INA=2 ; win_JPN=1 |loss_JPN=1 |gf_JPN=3 |ga_JPN=5 ; win_THA=0 |loss_THA=2 |gf_THA=2 |ga_THA=6 name_THA= ; name_JPN= ; name_INA= ; result1=A ; col_A=#ccffcc {{#invoke:Sports table|main|style=WL }}"
] |
What sport does Sol Ky-Ong play? | [
"judo"
] | sport | Sol Kyong | 632,979 | 75 | [
{
"id": "33029179",
"title": "Sol Kyong",
"text": " Sol Kyong ( or ; born June 8, 1990) is a North Korean judoka. She represents the sports team of the Pyongyang University of Mechanical Engineering.",
"score": "1.6070538"
},
{
"id": "8449402",
"title": "Shin Yung-suk",
"text": " Shin first garnered attention in 2004 when he won the gold medal at the 2004 Asian Junior Championship as part of the South Korean junior national team. While attending Kyonggi University in 2005, Shin got called-up to the South Korean national under-21 team for the 2005 World Junior (U21) Championship, where South Korea finished in sixth place. In May 2007 Shin first joined the South Korean senior national team to compete in the 2007 FIVB World League, where South Korea finished ninth for its best result since 1995. In November 2007 Shin also took part in the 2007 FIVB World Cup as part of the national team. At the inaugural AVC Cup, Shin played as the starting middle blocker in all six matches and helped Team Korea to the gold medal match, where they lost to Asia No. 1 Iran in full sets. Shin was part of the South Korean national team that won the 2014 AVC Cup when the team defeated India 3-0 in the final match.",
"score": "1.4650074"
},
{
"id": "16196133",
"title": "Haydee Ong",
"text": " Ong was inspired to play basketball from his father who was a varsity player while her mother initially opposed to the idea of her doing something that is considered as a \"men's sport\". Haydee Ong later attended the University of Santo Tomas for her collegiate studies under an athletic scholarship. After graduating, she worked as a pharmacist for two years before getting involved in basketball again.",
"score": "1.4042678"
},
{
"id": "11124065",
"title": "Kyla Atienza",
"text": " Kyla Llana Magdaraog Atienza (born April 12, 1997) is a Filipina volleyball player. She currently plays for the Creamline Cool Smashers volleyball team in the Premier Volleyball League. She was a member of the FEU Lady Tamaraws volleyball team in both indoor and beach volleyball.",
"score": "1.3966075"
},
{
"id": "3448323",
"title": "Kim Sol-mi",
"text": " Kim Sol-mi (김솔미; born November 20, 1990) is a North Korean judoka. She won gold at the 2011 World Military Judo Championship. At the 2013 World Judo Championships, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, she finished fifth. She took bronze at the 2014 Grand Slam in Abu Dhabi, UAE. That year, she also took the bronze at the Grand Prix in Qingdao, China. She took the bronze at the 2015 Asian Judo Championships in Kuwait. At the 2016 Asian Judo Championships in Tashkent, Uzbekistan she finished third. She competed in the women's (48 kg) judo event at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, where she did not advance past her first match.",
"score": "1.3884993"
},
{
"id": "2563688",
"title": "Ky Hollenbeck",
"text": " Born and raised in the San Francisco Bay Area, Hollenbeck began wrestling at the age of ten and took up Muay Thai at fifteen initially to give him an edge against opponents while street fighting. However, under the guidance of Kru Sam Phimsoutham at the World Team USA gym, he was able to channel his aggression off the streets and into the ring, winning national and North American titles as an amateur nak muay. While studying kinesiology at the University of Hawaii, Hollenbeck turned professional and soon found himself fighting in K-1. At the K-1 World Grand Prix 2007 in Hawaii on April 28, 2007, he ",
"score": "1.3781164"
},
{
"id": "11136731",
"title": "Seo Kwang-suk",
"text": " Seo Kwang-suk (, born 5 August 1977 ) is a South Korean ice hockey coach and former player. He was the coach of the Korean national sledge hockey team which won a bronze medal at the 2018 Winter Paralympics, the country's first Paralympic medal in the sport. Seo, who cried tears of joy at the end of the bronze-medal game, received the Paralympic Leader Award at the 10th Small Steel Sports Awards. Seo graduated from Kyung Hee University and played for the Hyundai Oilbankers in the Korean Ice Hockey League. He also played on the South Korean national team at the 2001 and 2002 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships. He became the coach of the national sledge hockey team after the 2014 Winter Paralympics.",
"score": "1.3772242"
},
{
"id": "16488599",
"title": "On Byung-hoon",
"text": " On was a member of the U-20 National side in 2005, and played 7 games.",
"score": "1.3767848"
},
{
"id": "28560374",
"title": "Kang Bong-kyu",
"text": " the World Junior Baseball Championship held in Sancti Spiritus, Cuba. In July 1997, as a sophomore at Korea University, Kang got his first call-up to the South Korea national baseball team for the team's five annual friendly matches against the USA national baseball team in California, United States. In July 1998, as a junior, Kang was selected as a member of the South Korea national baseball team and led his team to runner-up at the 1998 Baseball World Cup as a starting third baseman. In December 1998, as an amateur player, Kang was selected for the South Korea national team that won the gold medal in the baseball tournament of the 1998 Asian Games in Bangkok, Thailand. In the tourney, he served as a backup to KBO star Kim Dong-Joo at third base.",
"score": "1.3708801"
},
{
"id": "6637023",
"title": "Suputtra Beartong",
"text": " Suputtra Beartong (born 31 August 1994) is a Thai female sepak takraw player. She represented Thailand at the 2018 Asian Games and was part of the Thai women's squad which clinched gold in the regu event.",
"score": "1.369652"
},
{
"id": "2596514",
"title": "Silverado High School (Las Vegas)",
"text": "Men's Baseball ; Mike Meyers played shortstop for the school baseball team. In 2010, he was voted First Team All Southeast League. In 2011, he was voted First Team Class 4-A All-Southern Nevada. In 2012, he was voted to the 2012 Louisville Slugger Pre-Season High School First Team All-America team, and was voted 2012 First Team Nevada All-State. He holds the high school's career (192) and single-season (59) records for runs scored, and its career records in doubles (50), triples (18), and steals (31). ; State Champions ; 2000 ; M Tennis ; (2005) AAAA Men's Doubles Champion. Trenton Alenik and Chris Painter (32-0) ; W Tennis ; (2009) Women's Doubles State Champion. Kristen Santero and Nicole Santero ; (2006, 2007, 2008) Women's Doubles State Runner-Up. Kristen Santero and Nicole Santero ; (2006, 2007, 2008, 2009) Women's Doubles Regional Champion. Kristen Santero and Nicole Santero ; Football ; ",
"score": "1.3664503"
},
{
"id": "9647374",
"title": "Evan Weinstock",
"text": " He played high school football as a wide receiver/safety and was the Nevada 4A Football Player of the Year at Del Sol High School in Las Vegas. He became involved in bobsledding by virtue of his participation in the decathlon. His football career ended in high school with a torn labrum that he suffered on a running play.",
"score": "1.3664112"
},
{
"id": "12868647",
"title": "Gretchen Ho",
"text": " Gretchen Ong Ho (born April 19, 1990) is a Filipino television presenter and former volleyball player. She played collegiate volleyball for the Ateneo Lady Eagles from 2008 to 2013, where she was a member of the \"fab five\" who brought Ateneo to their first back-to-back UAAP finals appearances (seasons 74 and 75). She then played professionally for the Petron Blaze Spikers in the Philippine Super Liga (PSL) from 2013 to 2015, where she helped the team win the 2014 Grand Prix Conference. Having earned a double degree in BS Management Engineering and AB Communications, and a minor in Development Management from Ateneo de Manila University, Ho moved to television work. She debuted as one of the hosts of Gameday Weekend, a sports magazine show on Balls and ABS-CBN Sports+Action. She previously worked as an anchor, segment host, and field reporter for various ",
"score": "1.3653779"
},
{
"id": "28560373",
"title": "Kang Bong-kyu",
"text": " While attending Kyungnam High School, Kang was considered one of the best hitting pitchers in the Korean high school baseball league. As an ace pitcher and cleanup hitter in Kyungnam High School, he led his team to runners-up at the Golden Lion Flag national championship in and the Hwarang Flag national championship in. In September, Kang was selected for the South Korea national junior baseball team to compete at the 3-Nation Junior Baseball Championship in Seoul, South Korea, along with Kim Sun-Woo, Seo Jae-Weong and Park Jin-Man. Upon graduation from high school in, Kang chose to play college baseball at Korea University instead of turning pro directly and completely quit pitching to focus on hitting. However, in August he was called up to the South Korea national junior baseball team again as a pitcher ",
"score": "1.3627509"
},
{
"id": "3447596",
"title": "Solangie Delgado",
"text": " Cindy Solangie Delgado Buitrago (born November 9, 1989) is a Colombian rugby sevens player. She plays for Colombia women's national rugby sevens team and was a member of the squad for the 2015 Pan American Games. She has been selected to be part of Colombia's women's sevens team to the 2016 Summer Olympics in Brazil.",
"score": "1.3611324"
},
{
"id": "15080898",
"title": "Sol Kyung-gu",
"text": " Sol was born in Seocheon on May 1, 1968, and studied Theater and Film at Hanyang University (Class of '86). Upon his graduation in 1994, he appeared in numerous theatrical productions, such as the hit Korean adaptation of the German rock musical Subway Line 1, and productions of Sam Shepard's True West and A. R. Gurney's Love Letters. In the mid-1990s, Sol began taking on minor roles in feature films, but it was not until 1999 that he made his breakthrough, with major roles in The Bird That Stops in the Air, Rainbow Trout, and Peppermint Candy in which he played ",
"score": "1.3609076"
},
{
"id": "11384468",
"title": "2009 Saint Louis Athletica season",
"text": " In their second rematch of the season, Athletic played the Los Angeles Sol, this time at the Home Depot Center. Athletica lost 0-2, ending Athletica's four-game unbeaten streak. The Sol's scorers were Camille Abily assisted by Marta in the first half and Shannon Boxx assisted by Han Duan in the second. After the match, both coach Barcellos and captain Chalupny commented on Athletica not getting things together as a team, messing up many passes.",
"score": "1.3597915"
},
{
"id": "25378156",
"title": "Kanjana Kuthaisong",
"text": " She played the 2016 Filipino league Shakey's V-League where with Bureau of Customs. They won the silver medal, after losing the final to Pocari Sweat Team. Kuthaisong played the 2017 season with the Thai club 3BB Nakornnont, playing as an outside spiker.",
"score": "1.355967"
},
{
"id": "8449400",
"title": "Shin Yung-suk",
"text": " Shin Yung-Suk (Hangul: 신영석; born October 4, 1986) is a South Korean male volleyball player. He was part of the South Korea men's national volleyball team at the 2014 FIVB World Championship in Poland. He currently plays for the Cheonan Hyundai Capital Skywalkers.",
"score": "1.3557566"
},
{
"id": "495331",
"title": "Song Hui-chae",
"text": " Song Hui-chae (Hangul: 송희채; born 29 April 1992) is a volleyball player from South Korea. He currently plays as an outside hitter for the Daejeon Samsung Fire Bluefangs in the South Korean V-League. Song made his first appearance for the South Korean national team in 2012 and played all of the team's six matches at the 2012 Asian Men's Cup Volleyball Championship, where the team finished in fifth place. In 2013, he also completed in the Summer Universiade and East Asian Games as a member of the collegiate national team.",
"score": "1.3529433"
}
] | [
"Sol Kyong\n Sol Kyong ( or ; born June 8, 1990) is a North Korean judoka. She represents the sports team of the Pyongyang University of Mechanical Engineering.",
"Shin Yung-suk\n Shin first garnered attention in 2004 when he won the gold medal at the 2004 Asian Junior Championship as part of the South Korean junior national team. While attending Kyonggi University in 2005, Shin got called-up to the South Korean national under-21 team for the 2005 World Junior (U21) Championship, where South Korea finished in sixth place. In May 2007 Shin first joined the South Korean senior national team to compete in the 2007 FIVB World League, where South Korea finished ninth for its best result since 1995. In November 2007 Shin also took part in the 2007 FIVB World Cup as part of the national team. At the inaugural AVC Cup, Shin played as the starting middle blocker in all six matches and helped Team Korea to the gold medal match, where they lost to Asia No. 1 Iran in full sets. Shin was part of the South Korean national team that won the 2014 AVC Cup when the team defeated India 3-0 in the final match.",
"Haydee Ong\n Ong was inspired to play basketball from his father who was a varsity player while her mother initially opposed to the idea of her doing something that is considered as a \"men's sport\". Haydee Ong later attended the University of Santo Tomas for her collegiate studies under an athletic scholarship. After graduating, she worked as a pharmacist for two years before getting involved in basketball again.",
"Kyla Atienza\n Kyla Llana Magdaraog Atienza (born April 12, 1997) is a Filipina volleyball player. She currently plays for the Creamline Cool Smashers volleyball team in the Premier Volleyball League. She was a member of the FEU Lady Tamaraws volleyball team in both indoor and beach volleyball.",
"Kim Sol-mi\n Kim Sol-mi (김솔미; born November 20, 1990) is a North Korean judoka. She won gold at the 2011 World Military Judo Championship. At the 2013 World Judo Championships, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, she finished fifth. She took bronze at the 2014 Grand Slam in Abu Dhabi, UAE. That year, she also took the bronze at the Grand Prix in Qingdao, China. She took the bronze at the 2015 Asian Judo Championships in Kuwait. At the 2016 Asian Judo Championships in Tashkent, Uzbekistan she finished third. She competed in the women's (48 kg) judo event at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, where she did not advance past her first match.",
"Ky Hollenbeck\n Born and raised in the San Francisco Bay Area, Hollenbeck began wrestling at the age of ten and took up Muay Thai at fifteen initially to give him an edge against opponents while street fighting. However, under the guidance of Kru Sam Phimsoutham at the World Team USA gym, he was able to channel his aggression off the streets and into the ring, winning national and North American titles as an amateur nak muay. While studying kinesiology at the University of Hawaii, Hollenbeck turned professional and soon found himself fighting in K-1. At the K-1 World Grand Prix 2007 in Hawaii on April 28, 2007, he ",
"Seo Kwang-suk\n Seo Kwang-suk (, born 5 August 1977 ) is a South Korean ice hockey coach and former player. He was the coach of the Korean national sledge hockey team which won a bronze medal at the 2018 Winter Paralympics, the country's first Paralympic medal in the sport. Seo, who cried tears of joy at the end of the bronze-medal game, received the Paralympic Leader Award at the 10th Small Steel Sports Awards. Seo graduated from Kyung Hee University and played for the Hyundai Oilbankers in the Korean Ice Hockey League. He also played on the South Korean national team at the 2001 and 2002 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships. He became the coach of the national sledge hockey team after the 2014 Winter Paralympics.",
"On Byung-hoon\n On was a member of the U-20 National side in 2005, and played 7 games.",
"Kang Bong-kyu\n the World Junior Baseball Championship held in Sancti Spiritus, Cuba. In July 1997, as a sophomore at Korea University, Kang got his first call-up to the South Korea national baseball team for the team's five annual friendly matches against the USA national baseball team in California, United States. In July 1998, as a junior, Kang was selected as a member of the South Korea national baseball team and led his team to runner-up at the 1998 Baseball World Cup as a starting third baseman. In December 1998, as an amateur player, Kang was selected for the South Korea national team that won the gold medal in the baseball tournament of the 1998 Asian Games in Bangkok, Thailand. In the tourney, he served as a backup to KBO star Kim Dong-Joo at third base.",
"Suputtra Beartong\n Suputtra Beartong (born 31 August 1994) is a Thai female sepak takraw player. She represented Thailand at the 2018 Asian Games and was part of the Thai women's squad which clinched gold in the regu event.",
"Silverado High School (Las Vegas)\nMen's Baseball ; Mike Meyers played shortstop for the school baseball team. In 2010, he was voted First Team All Southeast League. In 2011, he was voted First Team Class 4-A All-Southern Nevada. In 2012, he was voted to the 2012 Louisville Slugger Pre-Season High School First Team All-America team, and was voted 2012 First Team Nevada All-State. He holds the high school's career (192) and single-season (59) records for runs scored, and its career records in doubles (50), triples (18), and steals (31). ; State Champions ; 2000 ; M Tennis ; (2005) AAAA Men's Doubles Champion. Trenton Alenik and Chris Painter (32-0) ; W Tennis ; (2009) Women's Doubles State Champion. Kristen Santero and Nicole Santero ; (2006, 2007, 2008) Women's Doubles State Runner-Up. Kristen Santero and Nicole Santero ; (2006, 2007, 2008, 2009) Women's Doubles Regional Champion. Kristen Santero and Nicole Santero ; Football ; ",
"Evan Weinstock\n He played high school football as a wide receiver/safety and was the Nevada 4A Football Player of the Year at Del Sol High School in Las Vegas. He became involved in bobsledding by virtue of his participation in the decathlon. His football career ended in high school with a torn labrum that he suffered on a running play.",
"Gretchen Ho\n Gretchen Ong Ho (born April 19, 1990) is a Filipino television presenter and former volleyball player. She played collegiate volleyball for the Ateneo Lady Eagles from 2008 to 2013, where she was a member of the \"fab five\" who brought Ateneo to their first back-to-back UAAP finals appearances (seasons 74 and 75). She then played professionally for the Petron Blaze Spikers in the Philippine Super Liga (PSL) from 2013 to 2015, where she helped the team win the 2014 Grand Prix Conference. Having earned a double degree in BS Management Engineering and AB Communications, and a minor in Development Management from Ateneo de Manila University, Ho moved to television work. She debuted as one of the hosts of Gameday Weekend, a sports magazine show on Balls and ABS-CBN Sports+Action. She previously worked as an anchor, segment host, and field reporter for various ",
"Kang Bong-kyu\n While attending Kyungnam High School, Kang was considered one of the best hitting pitchers in the Korean high school baseball league. As an ace pitcher and cleanup hitter in Kyungnam High School, he led his team to runners-up at the Golden Lion Flag national championship in and the Hwarang Flag national championship in. In September, Kang was selected for the South Korea national junior baseball team to compete at the 3-Nation Junior Baseball Championship in Seoul, South Korea, along with Kim Sun-Woo, Seo Jae-Weong and Park Jin-Man. Upon graduation from high school in, Kang chose to play college baseball at Korea University instead of turning pro directly and completely quit pitching to focus on hitting. However, in August he was called up to the South Korea national junior baseball team again as a pitcher ",
"Solangie Delgado\n Cindy Solangie Delgado Buitrago (born November 9, 1989) is a Colombian rugby sevens player. She plays for Colombia women's national rugby sevens team and was a member of the squad for the 2015 Pan American Games. She has been selected to be part of Colombia's women's sevens team to the 2016 Summer Olympics in Brazil.",
"Sol Kyung-gu\n Sol was born in Seocheon on May 1, 1968, and studied Theater and Film at Hanyang University (Class of '86). Upon his graduation in 1994, he appeared in numerous theatrical productions, such as the hit Korean adaptation of the German rock musical Subway Line 1, and productions of Sam Shepard's True West and A. R. Gurney's Love Letters. In the mid-1990s, Sol began taking on minor roles in feature films, but it was not until 1999 that he made his breakthrough, with major roles in The Bird That Stops in the Air, Rainbow Trout, and Peppermint Candy in which he played ",
"2009 Saint Louis Athletica season\n In their second rematch of the season, Athletic played the Los Angeles Sol, this time at the Home Depot Center. Athletica lost 0-2, ending Athletica's four-game unbeaten streak. The Sol's scorers were Camille Abily assisted by Marta in the first half and Shannon Boxx assisted by Han Duan in the second. After the match, both coach Barcellos and captain Chalupny commented on Athletica not getting things together as a team, messing up many passes.",
"Kanjana Kuthaisong\n She played the 2016 Filipino league Shakey's V-League where with Bureau of Customs. They won the silver medal, after losing the final to Pocari Sweat Team. Kuthaisong played the 2017 season with the Thai club 3BB Nakornnont, playing as an outside spiker.",
"Shin Yung-suk\n Shin Yung-Suk (Hangul: 신영석; born October 4, 1986) is a South Korean male volleyball player. He was part of the South Korea men's national volleyball team at the 2014 FIVB World Championship in Poland. He currently plays for the Cheonan Hyundai Capital Skywalkers.",
"Song Hui-chae\n Song Hui-chae (Hangul: 송희채; born 29 April 1992) is a volleyball player from South Korea. He currently plays as an outside hitter for the Daejeon Samsung Fire Bluefangs in the South Korean V-League. Song made his first appearance for the South Korean national team in 2012 and played all of the team's six matches at the 2012 Asian Men's Cup Volleyball Championship, where the team finished in fifth place. In 2013, he also completed in the Summer Universiade and East Asian Games as a member of the collegiate national team."
] |
What sport does 2006–07 Primera B Nacional play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | 2006–07 Primera B Nacional | 6,397,999 | 69 | [
{
"id": "2247036",
"title": "2006–07 Primera B Nacional",
"text": " The 2006–07 Argentine Primera B Nacional was the 21st season of second division professional of football in Argentina. A total of 20 teams competed; the champion and runner-up were promoted to Argentine Primera División.",
"score": "1.8476715"
},
{
"id": "2247042",
"title": "2006–07 Primera B Nacional",
"text": " !colspan=\"5\"|Semifinals !colspan=\"5\"|Semifinals 1: Qualified because of sport advantage.",
"score": "1.8350935"
},
{
"id": "2247041",
"title": "2006–07 Primera B Nacional",
"text": " It was played by the teams placed 4th, 5th 6th and 7th in the Overall Standings: Atlético de Rafaela (4th), Tigre (5th), Chacarita Juniors (6th) and Platense (7th). The winning team played the Promotion Playoff Primera División-Primera B Nacional.",
"score": "1.830605"
},
{
"id": "3651406",
"title": "1986–87 Primera B Nacional",
"text": " 1: Qualified because of sport advantage.",
"score": "1.8137131"
},
{
"id": "2166137",
"title": "2007–08 Primera B Nacional",
"text": " The 2007–08 Argentine Primera B Nacional was the 22nd season of second division professional football in Argentina. A total of 20 teams competed; the champion and runner-up were promoted to Argentine Primera División.",
"score": "1.7839224"
},
{
"id": "2338269",
"title": "2005–06 Primera B Nacional",
"text": " This leg was played by Nueva Chicago, the losing team of the Promotion Playoff, and Belgrano, who was the best team in the overall standings under the champions. The winning team was promoted to 2006–07 Primera División and the losing team played the Promotion Playoff Primera División-Primera B Nacional. !colspan=\"5\"|Promotion Playoff",
"score": "1.7815473"
},
{
"id": "2338270",
"title": "2005–06 Primera B Nacional",
"text": " It was played by the teams placed 3rd, 4th 5th and 6th in the Overall Standings: Chacarita Juniors (3rd), Huracán (4th), San Martín (SJ) (5th) and Talleres (C) (6th). The winning team played the Promotion Playoff Primera División-Primera B Nacional.",
"score": "1.7720234"
},
{
"id": "2565950",
"title": "2004–05 Primera B Nacional",
"text": " It was played by the teams placed 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th in the Overall Standings: CAI (4th), Atlético de Rafaela (5th), Nueva Chicago (6th) and San Martín (M) (7th). The winning team played the Promotion Playoff Primera División-Primera B Nacional.",
"score": "1.7663984"
},
{
"id": "2247043",
"title": "2006–07 Primera B Nacional",
"text": " !colspan=\"5\"|Semifinals",
"score": "1.7656333"
},
{
"id": "2338264",
"title": "2005–06 Primera B Nacional",
"text": " The 2005–06 Argentine Primera B Nacional was the 20th season of second division professional of football in Argentina. A total of 20 teams competed; the champion and runner-up were promoted to Argentine Primera División.",
"score": "1.752035"
},
{
"id": "3798867",
"title": "2006–07 Torneo Argentino A",
"text": "Ben Hur remained in the Primera B Nacional by winning the playoff. ",
"score": "1.7442814"
},
{
"id": "2166140",
"title": "2007–08 Primera B Nacional",
"text": "Racing remains in Primera División by winning the playoff. ; Gimnasia y Esgrima (J) remains in Primera División by winning the playoff. The 3rd and 4th placed of the table played with the 18th and the 17th placed of the Relegation Table of 2007–08 Primera División. !colspan=\"5\"|Relegation/promotion playoff 1 !colspan=\"5\"|Relegation/promotion playoff 2 ",
"score": "1.7257624"
},
{
"id": "16546079",
"title": "2006–07 in Argentine football",
"text": " Teams and schedules will be decided based on average after the end of the Closing tournament. Tigre wins 3-1 and is promoted to Argentine First Division. While Nueva Chicago is relegated to the Argentine Nacional B.Huracán wins 5-2 and is promoted to Argentine First Division. While Godoy Cruz is relegated to the Argentine Nacional B.",
"score": "1.7219741"
},
{
"id": "2338275",
"title": "2005–06 Primera B Nacional",
"text": "} } Defensa y Justicia remains in Primera B Nacional after a 4-4 aggregate tie by virtue of a \"sports advantage\". In case of a tie in goals, the team from the Primera B Nacional gets to stay in it. ; San Martín (T) was promoted to 2006–07 Primera B Nacional by winning the playoff and San Martín (M) was relegated to 2006–07 Torneo Argentino A. !colspan=\"5\"|Relegation/promotion playoff 1 (Direct affiliation vs. Primera B Metropolitana) !colspan=\"5\"|Relegation/promotion playoff 2 (Indirect affiliation vs. Torneo Argentino A) ",
"score": "1.7153784"
},
{
"id": "2338268",
"title": "2005–06 Primera B Nacional",
"text": " This leg was played between the Apertura Winner: Godoy Cruz; and the Clausura Winner: Nueva Chicago. The winning team was declared champion and was automatically promoted to 2006–07 Primera División and the losing team played the Second Promotion Playoff. !colspan=\"5\"|Promotion Playoff",
"score": "1.707564"
},
{
"id": "3783729",
"title": "2007–08 Torneo Argentino A",
"text": "Talleres (C) remained in the Primera B Nacional by winning the playoff. ",
"score": "1.7069771"
},
{
"id": "2247046",
"title": "2006–07 Primera B Nacional",
"text": "} } Ferro Carril Oeste remains in Primera B Nacional after a 1-1 aggregate tie by virtue of a \"sports advantage\". In case of a tie in goals, the team from the Primera B Nacional gets to stay in it. ; Ben Hur remained in the Primera B Nacional by winning the playoff. !colspan=\"5\"|Relegation/promotion playoff 1 (Direct affiliation vs. Primera B Metropolitana) !colspan=\"5\"|Relegation/promotion playoff 2 (Indirect affiliation vs. Torneo Argentino A) ",
"score": "1.7056032"
},
{
"id": "2338273",
"title": "2005–06 Primera B Nacional",
"text": "Argentinos Juniors remains in Primera División after a 3-3 aggregate tie by virtue of a \"sports advantage\". In case of a tie in goals, the team from the Primera División gets to stay in it. ; Belgrano was promoted to 2006–07 Primera División by winning the playoff and Olimpo de Bahía Blanca was relegated to the 2006–07 Primera B Nacional. The Second Promotion playoff loser (Belgrano) and the Torneo Reducido Winner (Huracán) played against the 18th and the 17th placed of the Relegation Table of 2005–06 Primera División. !colspan=\"5\"|Relegation/promotion playoff 1 !colspan=\"5\"|Relegation/promotion playoff 2 ",
"score": "1.7009494"
},
{
"id": "2247045",
"title": "2006–07 Primera B Nacional",
"text": " 1: Had to play a tiebreaker to see which team played Promotion/Relegation Legs. Note: Clubs with indirect affiliation with AFA are relegated to the Torneo Argentino A, while clubs directly affiliated face relegation to Primera B Metropolitana. Clubs with direct affiliation are all from Greater Buenos Aires, with the exception of Newell's, Rosario Central, Central Córdoba and Argentino de Rosario, all from Rosario, and Unión and Colón from Santa Fe.",
"score": "1.6999886"
},
{
"id": "3825476",
"title": "2005–06 Torneo Argentino A",
"text": "San Martín (T) was promoted to 2006–07 Primera B Nacional by winning the playoff and San Martin (T) was relegated to 2006–07 Torneo Argentino A. ",
"score": "1.6918482"
}
] | [
"2006–07 Primera B Nacional\n The 2006–07 Argentine Primera B Nacional was the 21st season of second division professional of football in Argentina. A total of 20 teams competed; the champion and runner-up were promoted to Argentine Primera División.",
"2006–07 Primera B Nacional\n !colspan=\"5\"|Semifinals !colspan=\"5\"|Semifinals 1: Qualified because of sport advantage.",
"2006–07 Primera B Nacional\n It was played by the teams placed 4th, 5th 6th and 7th in the Overall Standings: Atlético de Rafaela (4th), Tigre (5th), Chacarita Juniors (6th) and Platense (7th). The winning team played the Promotion Playoff Primera División-Primera B Nacional.",
"1986–87 Primera B Nacional\n 1: Qualified because of sport advantage.",
"2007–08 Primera B Nacional\n The 2007–08 Argentine Primera B Nacional was the 22nd season of second division professional football in Argentina. A total of 20 teams competed; the champion and runner-up were promoted to Argentine Primera División.",
"2005–06 Primera B Nacional\n This leg was played by Nueva Chicago, the losing team of the Promotion Playoff, and Belgrano, who was the best team in the overall standings under the champions. The winning team was promoted to 2006–07 Primera División and the losing team played the Promotion Playoff Primera División-Primera B Nacional. !colspan=\"5\"|Promotion Playoff",
"2005–06 Primera B Nacional\n It was played by the teams placed 3rd, 4th 5th and 6th in the Overall Standings: Chacarita Juniors (3rd), Huracán (4th), San Martín (SJ) (5th) and Talleres (C) (6th). The winning team played the Promotion Playoff Primera División-Primera B Nacional.",
"2004–05 Primera B Nacional\n It was played by the teams placed 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th in the Overall Standings: CAI (4th), Atlético de Rafaela (5th), Nueva Chicago (6th) and San Martín (M) (7th). The winning team played the Promotion Playoff Primera División-Primera B Nacional.",
"2006–07 Primera B Nacional\n !colspan=\"5\"|Semifinals",
"2005–06 Primera B Nacional\n The 2005–06 Argentine Primera B Nacional was the 20th season of second division professional of football in Argentina. A total of 20 teams competed; the champion and runner-up were promoted to Argentine Primera División.",
"2006–07 Torneo Argentino A\nBen Hur remained in the Primera B Nacional by winning the playoff. ",
"2007–08 Primera B Nacional\nRacing remains in Primera División by winning the playoff. ; Gimnasia y Esgrima (J) remains in Primera División by winning the playoff. The 3rd and 4th placed of the table played with the 18th and the 17th placed of the Relegation Table of 2007–08 Primera División. !colspan=\"5\"|Relegation/promotion playoff 1 !colspan=\"5\"|Relegation/promotion playoff 2 ",
"2006–07 in Argentine football\n Teams and schedules will be decided based on average after the end of the Closing tournament. Tigre wins 3-1 and is promoted to Argentine First Division. While Nueva Chicago is relegated to the Argentine Nacional B.Huracán wins 5-2 and is promoted to Argentine First Division. While Godoy Cruz is relegated to the Argentine Nacional B.",
"2005–06 Primera B Nacional\n} } Defensa y Justicia remains in Primera B Nacional after a 4-4 aggregate tie by virtue of a \"sports advantage\". In case of a tie in goals, the team from the Primera B Nacional gets to stay in it. ; San Martín (T) was promoted to 2006–07 Primera B Nacional by winning the playoff and San Martín (M) was relegated to 2006–07 Torneo Argentino A. !colspan=\"5\"|Relegation/promotion playoff 1 (Direct affiliation vs. Primera B Metropolitana) !colspan=\"5\"|Relegation/promotion playoff 2 (Indirect affiliation vs. Torneo Argentino A) ",
"2005–06 Primera B Nacional\n This leg was played between the Apertura Winner: Godoy Cruz; and the Clausura Winner: Nueva Chicago. The winning team was declared champion and was automatically promoted to 2006–07 Primera División and the losing team played the Second Promotion Playoff. !colspan=\"5\"|Promotion Playoff",
"2007–08 Torneo Argentino A\nTalleres (C) remained in the Primera B Nacional by winning the playoff. ",
"2006–07 Primera B Nacional\n} } Ferro Carril Oeste remains in Primera B Nacional after a 1-1 aggregate tie by virtue of a \"sports advantage\". In case of a tie in goals, the team from the Primera B Nacional gets to stay in it. ; Ben Hur remained in the Primera B Nacional by winning the playoff. !colspan=\"5\"|Relegation/promotion playoff 1 (Direct affiliation vs. Primera B Metropolitana) !colspan=\"5\"|Relegation/promotion playoff 2 (Indirect affiliation vs. Torneo Argentino A) ",
"2005–06 Primera B Nacional\nArgentinos Juniors remains in Primera División after a 3-3 aggregate tie by virtue of a \"sports advantage\". In case of a tie in goals, the team from the Primera División gets to stay in it. ; Belgrano was promoted to 2006–07 Primera División by winning the playoff and Olimpo de Bahía Blanca was relegated to the 2006–07 Primera B Nacional. The Second Promotion playoff loser (Belgrano) and the Torneo Reducido Winner (Huracán) played against the 18th and the 17th placed of the Relegation Table of 2005–06 Primera División. !colspan=\"5\"|Relegation/promotion playoff 1 !colspan=\"5\"|Relegation/promotion playoff 2 ",
"2006–07 Primera B Nacional\n 1: Had to play a tiebreaker to see which team played Promotion/Relegation Legs. Note: Clubs with indirect affiliation with AFA are relegated to the Torneo Argentino A, while clubs directly affiliated face relegation to Primera B Metropolitana. Clubs with direct affiliation are all from Greater Buenos Aires, with the exception of Newell's, Rosario Central, Central Córdoba and Argentino de Rosario, all from Rosario, and Unión and Colón from Santa Fe.",
"2005–06 Torneo Argentino A\nSan Martín (T) was promoted to 2006–07 Primera B Nacional by winning the playoff and San Martin (T) was relegated to 2006–07 Torneo Argentino A. "
] |
What sport does Günter Kutowski play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Günter Kutowski | 6,350,574 | 85 | [
{
"id": "4474553",
"title": "Günter Kutowski",
"text": " Günter Kutowski (born 2 August 1965) is a German retired professional footballer who played as a defender.",
"score": "2.0000067"
},
{
"id": "4474554",
"title": "Günter Kutowski",
"text": " Born in Paderborn, Kutowski joined Borussia Dortmund in 1984 at the age of 19, arriving from local amateurs 1. FC Paderborn. He made his Bundesliga debut on 2 March 1985 in a 1–1 home draw against Bayern Munich, and finished his first season with 16 complete matches as the club ranked in 14th position and avoided relegation by just one point. In eight of the following 11 years, Kutowski was an automatic first-choice for the Black and Yellow, scoring his first goal in the top division on 10 August 1985 in a 1–1 draw at 1. FC Saarbrucken. In the 1992–93 campaign he appeared in 40 official games, including eight in the team's runner-up run in the UEFA Cup. Kutowski left Borussia in 1996, joining lower league side TuS Paderborn-Neuhaus. His last stop as a professional came in 1996–97, as he played a few matches with Rot-Weiss Essen who ultimately suffered relegation from the 2. Bundesliga; he retired altogether at 36, and subsequently became a player's agent.",
"score": "1.9665779"
},
{
"id": "4474555",
"title": "Günter Kutowski",
"text": "Bundesliga: 1994–95, 1995–96 ; DFL-Supercup: 1989, 1996 ; DFB-Pokal: 1988–89 ; UEFA Cup: Runner-up 1992–93 Borussia Dortmund",
"score": "1.7694387"
},
{
"id": "3866767",
"title": "Bruno Guttowski",
"text": " Bruno Guttowski (8 November 1924 – 4 July 1977) was a professional ice hockey player. He won the German championship with KEV in 1952 and was said to be one of the best defensemen in Germany three times. In 1955 he moved to Mannheim where he started as coach of the MERC. The following season he joined the team as defenseman and scored 71 goals for Mannheim in 8 seasons. When scoring his last goal in 1964 he was 39 years, one month and 28 days old and remains, as of 2013, the oldest scorer of the MERC. Guttowski participated in 58 matches and 10 world championships for his national team. He represented Germany in the 1956 Winter Olympics. Guttowski died in 1977 at the age of 52. He is member of the Hockey Hall of Fame Germany. On November 23. 2012 the Adler Mannheim retired his #12.",
"score": "1.7436337"
},
{
"id": "9565968",
"title": "Starogard Gdański",
"text": "Adolf Lesser (1851–1926) a German physician who specialized in forensic medicine ; Michael F. Blenski (1862–1932), Wisconsin politician ; Adolf Wallenberg (1862–1949) a German internist and neurologist ; John S. Flizikowski, (1868–1934) a Chicago architect ; Ferdinand Noeldechen (1895–1951), general ; Theo Mackeben (1897–1953) a German pianist, conductor and composer, particularly of film music ; Kazimierz Kropidłowski (1931–1998) a Polish long jumper, competed at the 1956 Summer Olympics ; Henryk Jankowski (1936-2010) a Polish Roman Catholic priest and Member of Solidarity movement ; Kazimierz Deyna (1947–1989), soccer player, over 600 pro games and 97 for Poland ; Władysław Wojtakajtis (1949–2016) a Polish swimmer, competed at the 1968 and 1972 Summer Olympics ; Andrzej Grubba (1958–2005) a Polish table tennis player ; Maria Kamrowska (born 1966) a retired Polish heptathlete. ; Paweł Papke (born 1977) a former Polish volleyball player ; Piotr Wiśniewski (born 1982) a Polish footballer, who played 230 games for Lechia Gdańsk ; Oktawia Nowacka (born 1991) a Polish modern pentathlete and bronze medalist in the 2016 Summer Olympics ",
"score": "1.7275183"
},
{
"id": "11734262",
"title": "Sport in Poland",
"text": " times, including his best performance in 2010 when he captured first place. Alan Kulwicki (14 December 1954 – 1 April 1993), nicknamed \"Special K\" and the \"Polish Prince\", was an American NASCAR Winston Cup Series. He won the 1992 Cup Series championship. Grzegorz Lato, footballer (born 8 April 1950 in Malbork, Poland) – Lato is the all-time cap leader for the Polish National Football Team. He was the leading scorer at the 1974 FIFA World Cup, where he won the Golden Shoe after scoring a tournament best seven goals. Lato's playing career coincided with the golden era of Polish football, which began with Olympic ",
"score": "1.7269666"
},
{
"id": "26035207",
"title": "Tadeusz Kuchar",
"text": " Tadeusz Kuchar (13 April 1891, in Kraków – 5 April 1966, in Warsaw) was a Polish athlete, footballer, swimmer, ice-skater, skier, sports official, and the brother of Wacław Kuchar. For most of his life he was strongly connected with the team of Pogoń Lwów, where he played midfield. He was co-founder of the Polish Olympic Committee. Occasionally, in the years 1923, 1925 and 1928 he held the post of coach of the Polish National Team. Also, he was the first director of the Polish Track and Field Association and in 1945-1946 was the director of the Polish Football Association. He fought in the World War One in Austro-Hungarian artillery. He fought in the Polish-Ukrainian War and the Polish-Soviet War as an artillery officer. He retired from the military in the rank of major. He kept his rank in spite of Poland becoming communist.",
"score": "1.7080421"
},
{
"id": "745865",
"title": "Günter Kubisch",
"text": " Günter Pumpel Kubisch (3 April 1939 in Magdeburg - 21 June 2005) was an East German football player. Kubisch began to play football as a ten-year-old at SG Eintracht Sudenburg, one of the predecessors of 1. FC Magdeburg. He played in all of the club's youth teams and had his debut in the first team of the club—now called BSG Motor Mitte Magdeburg—on 29 June 1957 against Wismut Gera. Between 1957 and 1971 he played in 326 league matches, 29 FDGB-Pokal matches and 13 matches on the European stage for 1. FC Magdeburg and its predecessors. Altogether he won the national cup competition of East Germany, the ",
"score": "1.7080364"
},
{
"id": "4158815",
"title": "Marek Szutowicz",
"text": " Szutowicz started playing football with Lechia Gdańsk, representing the team's various youth sides and winning a Polish Junior Championship. In his early years he played as a winger, eventually transitioning into a defender. He spent some time with Kaszubia Kościerzyna, but returned to Lechia Gdańsk to start his professional playing career. He made his professional debut with Lechia in the II liga on 7 September 1996 against Szombierki Bytom. Szutowicz made 14 appearances in the II liga before a cruciate ligaments injury ended his professional playing career. Due to this Szutowicz started studying at the Academy of Physical Education and Sport in Gdańsk, eventually graduating and working as a teacher for ten years, and working closely with Lechia as a footballing coach ",
"score": "1.7043836"
},
{
"id": "12252557",
"title": "Józef Kurek",
"text": " Józef Franciszek Kurek (2 January 1933 — 18 February 2015) was a Polish ice hockey player. He played for KTH Krynica, OWKS Bydgoszcz, and Legia Warsaw during his career. He also played for the Polish national team at several world championships as well as the 1956 and 1964 Winter Olympics. He won the Polish hockey league championship eight times in his career, once with Krynica in 1950 and seven times with Legia. After his playing career Kurek turned to coaching, and served as the coach of the Polish national team in the 1970s, most notably during the 1976 World Championship when Poland upset the Soviet Union 6–4, considered one of the greatest upsets in hockey history. He was awarded the Silver Cross of Merit for his services.",
"score": "1.6853805"
},
{
"id": "28359",
"title": "Herbert Burdenski",
"text": " Burdenski began his football career with the Erle 08 in Gelsenkirchen. In 1935 he was discovered playing in the local school championships by Ernst Kuzorra, who signed him to FC Schalke 04. There he became part of the Schalker team, achieving both the 1940 and 1942 the German championship. In 1949 Burdenski was a sports teacher in Bremen, and when the German championship returned he signed to play for Werder Bremen. It was during this time that \"Budde\" scored the 1–0 on 22 November 1950, the first international match of the West Germany national football team after the Second World War, against Switzerland in Stuttgart. Burdenski played five games for the national team during this second phase of his career. After retiring from playing, Burdenski became a coach for: Rot-Weiß Essen, Borussia Dortmund, SV Werder Bremen, MSV Duisburg, STV Horst-Emscher, Wuppertaler SV, and Westfalia Herne. Essen and Dortmund were relegated from the Bundesliga under his reign. Up to his death, Burdenski remained connected to FC Schalke, mainly to advise the supervisory board and presidency.",
"score": "1.6777234"
},
{
"id": "11489402",
"title": "Jenny Romatowski",
"text": " Following her baseball career, Romatowski graduated from Eastern Michigan University with a degree in physical education, and then she taught physical education for nearly 30 years in the Van Dyke-Warren school system until her retirement in 1983. Romatowski remained active by playing field hockey. A natural athlete, she later earned a spot on the United States National team and was chosen to play on an All-Star squad that toured Europe several times in the late 1950s and early 1960s. She even played in the Netherlands at the World Field Hockey tournament in 1959, and was later active as a coach and administrator, rising to first vice president of the U.S. Field Hockey Association. Her next endeavor was breeding and raising greyhound dogs for racing, competing for a number of years in Florida and Alabama.",
"score": "1.6695509"
},
{
"id": "11734258",
"title": "Sport in Poland",
"text": " Blue Jackets, Pittsburgh Penguins, New York Rangers, Boston Bruins and Calgary Flames. Zbigniew Boniek, football player (born 3 March 1956 in Bydgoszcz, Poland – He played on Zawisza Bydgoszcz, Widzew Łódź, Juventus and AS Roma. In 2004 Pelé got him on the FIFA 100 list. Today, he is the president of the Polish Football Association. He was elected as the president on 26 October 2012. Helena Rakoczy, (born 23 December 1921 in Kraków, Poland). Gymnast at Olympics (1952, 1956), and World Championships (1950, 1954). World Individual All-Around, Vault, Balance Beam, and Floor Exercise champion in 1950. Inducted into International Gymnastics Hall of Fame in ",
"score": "1.6659056"
},
{
"id": "4340003",
"title": "Zbigniew Kruszyński",
"text": " Zbigniew Kruszyński (born 14 October 1960), commonly known as Detsi Kruszyński or Detzi Kruszyński, is a Polish-German retired footballer. Primarily a midfielder, he was also adept in defence and attack. In an 18-year professional career, he played league football in Poland, Germany and England. He is probably best remembered for his three-year spell in Germany with 1. FC Saarbrücken, for whom he made over 130 appearances. He also made over 70 First Division appearances for Wimbledon in England. Kruszyński represented Poland at U18 level and was part of the team which finished third at the 1978 European U18 Championship. Kruszyński currently coaches youth football in Ohio, United States.",
"score": "1.6634417"
},
{
"id": "32790910",
"title": "Ginter Gawlik",
"text": " Ginter Gawlik (born 5 December 1930 in Borsigwerk, a district of Zabrze; died 22 August 2005 in Würzburg, Germany) was a Polish soccer player, defender and midfielder. He spent most of career playing for Polish team Górnik Zabrze. Gawlik, who was not raised in Poland (until 1945, Zabrze, then called Hindenburg, belonged to Germany), started his career in the mid-1940s for the German team Reichsbahn SV Borsigwerk. After 1945, he played for Górnik Biskupice and in 1950 he moved to Górnik Zabrze, a powerhouse of Polish soccer. While playing for Zabrze the team won 5 Polish football championships (late 1950s and early 1960s). Also, he played for the Polish National Team scoring one goal in 7 games. His debut took place on 23 June 1957 in Chorzów, when Poland beat Soviet Union 2-1.",
"score": "1.6632469"
},
{
"id": "1933852",
"title": "Rudolf Wojtowicz",
"text": " Rudolf Wojtowicz (born 9 June 1956 in Bytom) is a retired Polish football player, who in different periods of his career was a defender or a midfielder. Wojtowicz initially represented Szombierki Bytom, winning Polish championships in 1980. In the early 1980s he left Poland and settled in Germany. Wojtowicz played for Bayer Leverkusen (1982–1986) as well as Fortuna Düsseldorf (1986–1992). Also, between 1996 and 1998, he was head coach of Fortuna. Currently, he works as one of coaches of Hertha Berlin. Wojtowicz capped once for Poland, on 12 April 1978, in a game vs. Ireland.",
"score": "1.6587408"
},
{
"id": "31482538",
"title": "Mateusz Kusznierewicz",
"text": " Mateusz Kusznierewicz (born April 29, 1975, in Warsaw) is a Polish sailor, specialising in the Finn and Star classes. His first sailing success came in 1985, where he won the Puchar Spójni at the Zalew Zegrzyński in Warsaw. Most recently, he competed at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, winning a bronze medal in the Finn. For his sport achievements, he received the Order of Polonia Restituta: Knight's Cross (5th Class) in 1996, Officer's Cross (4th Class) in 2004.",
"score": "1.650357"
},
{
"id": "25504381",
"title": "Bartosz Kurek",
"text": " Kurek began his career in a team from Nysa (2004–2005), where he played alongside his father. He spent the next 3 years playing for a PlusLiga club, ZAKSA Kędzierzyn-Koźle (2005–2008). In 2008, he moved to PGE Skra Bełchatów, one of the most successful teams in PlusLiga, where he quickly became a key player. With Skra, he won the Polish Championship three times: in 2009, 2010 and 2011. On the international stage, he won two Club World Championship silver medals, in 2009 and 2010, and a bronze medal of the CEV Champions League in 2010. On 18 March 2012, they won a silver medal of the CEV Champions League after ",
"score": "1.6431749"
},
{
"id": "9911638",
"title": "Gdynia",
"text": "Jörg Berger (1944–2010), German soccer player, trainer ; Adelajda Mroske (1944–1975) a Polish speed skater, she competed in four events at the 1964 Winter Olympics ; Ryszard Marczak (born 1945) a former long-distance runner from Poland, competed in the marathon at the 1980 Summer Olympics ; Józef Błaszczyk (born 1947) a sailor from Poland, competed in the 1972 Summer Olympics ; Andrzej Chudziński (1948–1995) a Polish swimmer, competed in three events at the 1972 Summer Olympics ; Anna Sobczak (born 1967) a Polish fencer, competed in the women's individual and team foil events at the 1988 and 1992 Summer Olympics ; Tomasz Sokołowski (born 1970) a ",
"score": "1.6355627"
},
{
"id": "1890192",
"title": "Stanisław Hachorek",
"text": " Stanisław Marian Hachorek (21 January 1927 in Czeladź – 24 October 1988 in Warsaw), was a Polish football player and coach. Hachorek, who began playing football in 1945 in CKS Czeladz, spent best years of his career in Gwardia Warszawa, a team that in the 1950s was among top Polish sides. Between 1955 and 1960, he capped sixteen times for Poland, scoring eight goals. He debuted on 29 May 1955 in Bucharest, scoring a goal in a 2-2 tie with Romania. In the same year, he became top goalscorer of the Ekstraklasa, with sixteen goals. Hachorek participated in the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, where he scored a goal in Poland's 6-1 victory with Tunisia. He spent last years of his career in Warszawianka Warszawa, and after retirement from active playing (1965), became a coach.",
"score": "1.6285418"
}
] | [
"Günter Kutowski\n Günter Kutowski (born 2 August 1965) is a German retired professional footballer who played as a defender.",
"Günter Kutowski\n Born in Paderborn, Kutowski joined Borussia Dortmund in 1984 at the age of 19, arriving from local amateurs 1. FC Paderborn. He made his Bundesliga debut on 2 March 1985 in a 1–1 home draw against Bayern Munich, and finished his first season with 16 complete matches as the club ranked in 14th position and avoided relegation by just one point. In eight of the following 11 years, Kutowski was an automatic first-choice for the Black and Yellow, scoring his first goal in the top division on 10 August 1985 in a 1–1 draw at 1. FC Saarbrucken. In the 1992–93 campaign he appeared in 40 official games, including eight in the team's runner-up run in the UEFA Cup. Kutowski left Borussia in 1996, joining lower league side TuS Paderborn-Neuhaus. His last stop as a professional came in 1996–97, as he played a few matches with Rot-Weiss Essen who ultimately suffered relegation from the 2. Bundesliga; he retired altogether at 36, and subsequently became a player's agent.",
"Günter Kutowski\nBundesliga: 1994–95, 1995–96 ; DFL-Supercup: 1989, 1996 ; DFB-Pokal: 1988–89 ; UEFA Cup: Runner-up 1992–93 Borussia Dortmund",
"Bruno Guttowski\n Bruno Guttowski (8 November 1924 – 4 July 1977) was a professional ice hockey player. He won the German championship with KEV in 1952 and was said to be one of the best defensemen in Germany three times. In 1955 he moved to Mannheim where he started as coach of the MERC. The following season he joined the team as defenseman and scored 71 goals for Mannheim in 8 seasons. When scoring his last goal in 1964 he was 39 years, one month and 28 days old and remains, as of 2013, the oldest scorer of the MERC. Guttowski participated in 58 matches and 10 world championships for his national team. He represented Germany in the 1956 Winter Olympics. Guttowski died in 1977 at the age of 52. He is member of the Hockey Hall of Fame Germany. On November 23. 2012 the Adler Mannheim retired his #12.",
"Starogard Gdański\nAdolf Lesser (1851–1926) a German physician who specialized in forensic medicine ; Michael F. Blenski (1862–1932), Wisconsin politician ; Adolf Wallenberg (1862–1949) a German internist and neurologist ; John S. Flizikowski, (1868–1934) a Chicago architect ; Ferdinand Noeldechen (1895–1951), general ; Theo Mackeben (1897–1953) a German pianist, conductor and composer, particularly of film music ; Kazimierz Kropidłowski (1931–1998) a Polish long jumper, competed at the 1956 Summer Olympics ; Henryk Jankowski (1936-2010) a Polish Roman Catholic priest and Member of Solidarity movement ; Kazimierz Deyna (1947–1989), soccer player, over 600 pro games and 97 for Poland ; Władysław Wojtakajtis (1949–2016) a Polish swimmer, competed at the 1968 and 1972 Summer Olympics ; Andrzej Grubba (1958–2005) a Polish table tennis player ; Maria Kamrowska (born 1966) a retired Polish heptathlete. ; Paweł Papke (born 1977) a former Polish volleyball player ; Piotr Wiśniewski (born 1982) a Polish footballer, who played 230 games for Lechia Gdańsk ; Oktawia Nowacka (born 1991) a Polish modern pentathlete and bronze medalist in the 2016 Summer Olympics ",
"Sport in Poland\n times, including his best performance in 2010 when he captured first place. Alan Kulwicki (14 December 1954 – 1 April 1993), nicknamed \"Special K\" and the \"Polish Prince\", was an American NASCAR Winston Cup Series. He won the 1992 Cup Series championship. Grzegorz Lato, footballer (born 8 April 1950 in Malbork, Poland) – Lato is the all-time cap leader for the Polish National Football Team. He was the leading scorer at the 1974 FIFA World Cup, where he won the Golden Shoe after scoring a tournament best seven goals. Lato's playing career coincided with the golden era of Polish football, which began with Olympic ",
"Tadeusz Kuchar\n Tadeusz Kuchar (13 April 1891, in Kraków – 5 April 1966, in Warsaw) was a Polish athlete, footballer, swimmer, ice-skater, skier, sports official, and the brother of Wacław Kuchar. For most of his life he was strongly connected with the team of Pogoń Lwów, where he played midfield. He was co-founder of the Polish Olympic Committee. Occasionally, in the years 1923, 1925 and 1928 he held the post of coach of the Polish National Team. Also, he was the first director of the Polish Track and Field Association and in 1945-1946 was the director of the Polish Football Association. He fought in the World War One in Austro-Hungarian artillery. He fought in the Polish-Ukrainian War and the Polish-Soviet War as an artillery officer. He retired from the military in the rank of major. He kept his rank in spite of Poland becoming communist.",
"Günter Kubisch\n Günter Pumpel Kubisch (3 April 1939 in Magdeburg - 21 June 2005) was an East German football player. Kubisch began to play football as a ten-year-old at SG Eintracht Sudenburg, one of the predecessors of 1. FC Magdeburg. He played in all of the club's youth teams and had his debut in the first team of the club—now called BSG Motor Mitte Magdeburg—on 29 June 1957 against Wismut Gera. Between 1957 and 1971 he played in 326 league matches, 29 FDGB-Pokal matches and 13 matches on the European stage for 1. FC Magdeburg and its predecessors. Altogether he won the national cup competition of East Germany, the ",
"Marek Szutowicz\n Szutowicz started playing football with Lechia Gdańsk, representing the team's various youth sides and winning a Polish Junior Championship. In his early years he played as a winger, eventually transitioning into a defender. He spent some time with Kaszubia Kościerzyna, but returned to Lechia Gdańsk to start his professional playing career. He made his professional debut with Lechia in the II liga on 7 September 1996 against Szombierki Bytom. Szutowicz made 14 appearances in the II liga before a cruciate ligaments injury ended his professional playing career. Due to this Szutowicz started studying at the Academy of Physical Education and Sport in Gdańsk, eventually graduating and working as a teacher for ten years, and working closely with Lechia as a footballing coach ",
"Józef Kurek\n Józef Franciszek Kurek (2 January 1933 — 18 February 2015) was a Polish ice hockey player. He played for KTH Krynica, OWKS Bydgoszcz, and Legia Warsaw during his career. He also played for the Polish national team at several world championships as well as the 1956 and 1964 Winter Olympics. He won the Polish hockey league championship eight times in his career, once with Krynica in 1950 and seven times with Legia. After his playing career Kurek turned to coaching, and served as the coach of the Polish national team in the 1970s, most notably during the 1976 World Championship when Poland upset the Soviet Union 6–4, considered one of the greatest upsets in hockey history. He was awarded the Silver Cross of Merit for his services.",
"Herbert Burdenski\n Burdenski began his football career with the Erle 08 in Gelsenkirchen. In 1935 he was discovered playing in the local school championships by Ernst Kuzorra, who signed him to FC Schalke 04. There he became part of the Schalker team, achieving both the 1940 and 1942 the German championship. In 1949 Burdenski was a sports teacher in Bremen, and when the German championship returned he signed to play for Werder Bremen. It was during this time that \"Budde\" scored the 1–0 on 22 November 1950, the first international match of the West Germany national football team after the Second World War, against Switzerland in Stuttgart. Burdenski played five games for the national team during this second phase of his career. After retiring from playing, Burdenski became a coach for: Rot-Weiß Essen, Borussia Dortmund, SV Werder Bremen, MSV Duisburg, STV Horst-Emscher, Wuppertaler SV, and Westfalia Herne. Essen and Dortmund were relegated from the Bundesliga under his reign. Up to his death, Burdenski remained connected to FC Schalke, mainly to advise the supervisory board and presidency.",
"Jenny Romatowski\n Following her baseball career, Romatowski graduated from Eastern Michigan University with a degree in physical education, and then she taught physical education for nearly 30 years in the Van Dyke-Warren school system until her retirement in 1983. Romatowski remained active by playing field hockey. A natural athlete, she later earned a spot on the United States National team and was chosen to play on an All-Star squad that toured Europe several times in the late 1950s and early 1960s. She even played in the Netherlands at the World Field Hockey tournament in 1959, and was later active as a coach and administrator, rising to first vice president of the U.S. Field Hockey Association. Her next endeavor was breeding and raising greyhound dogs for racing, competing for a number of years in Florida and Alabama.",
"Sport in Poland\n Blue Jackets, Pittsburgh Penguins, New York Rangers, Boston Bruins and Calgary Flames. Zbigniew Boniek, football player (born 3 March 1956 in Bydgoszcz, Poland – He played on Zawisza Bydgoszcz, Widzew Łódź, Juventus and AS Roma. In 2004 Pelé got him on the FIFA 100 list. Today, he is the president of the Polish Football Association. He was elected as the president on 26 October 2012. Helena Rakoczy, (born 23 December 1921 in Kraków, Poland). Gymnast at Olympics (1952, 1956), and World Championships (1950, 1954). World Individual All-Around, Vault, Balance Beam, and Floor Exercise champion in 1950. Inducted into International Gymnastics Hall of Fame in ",
"Zbigniew Kruszyński\n Zbigniew Kruszyński (born 14 October 1960), commonly known as Detsi Kruszyński or Detzi Kruszyński, is a Polish-German retired footballer. Primarily a midfielder, he was also adept in defence and attack. In an 18-year professional career, he played league football in Poland, Germany and England. He is probably best remembered for his three-year spell in Germany with 1. FC Saarbrücken, for whom he made over 130 appearances. He also made over 70 First Division appearances for Wimbledon in England. Kruszyński represented Poland at U18 level and was part of the team which finished third at the 1978 European U18 Championship. Kruszyński currently coaches youth football in Ohio, United States.",
"Ginter Gawlik\n Ginter Gawlik (born 5 December 1930 in Borsigwerk, a district of Zabrze; died 22 August 2005 in Würzburg, Germany) was a Polish soccer player, defender and midfielder. He spent most of career playing for Polish team Górnik Zabrze. Gawlik, who was not raised in Poland (until 1945, Zabrze, then called Hindenburg, belonged to Germany), started his career in the mid-1940s for the German team Reichsbahn SV Borsigwerk. After 1945, he played for Górnik Biskupice and in 1950 he moved to Górnik Zabrze, a powerhouse of Polish soccer. While playing for Zabrze the team won 5 Polish football championships (late 1950s and early 1960s). Also, he played for the Polish National Team scoring one goal in 7 games. His debut took place on 23 June 1957 in Chorzów, when Poland beat Soviet Union 2-1.",
"Rudolf Wojtowicz\n Rudolf Wojtowicz (born 9 June 1956 in Bytom) is a retired Polish football player, who in different periods of his career was a defender or a midfielder. Wojtowicz initially represented Szombierki Bytom, winning Polish championships in 1980. In the early 1980s he left Poland and settled in Germany. Wojtowicz played for Bayer Leverkusen (1982–1986) as well as Fortuna Düsseldorf (1986–1992). Also, between 1996 and 1998, he was head coach of Fortuna. Currently, he works as one of coaches of Hertha Berlin. Wojtowicz capped once for Poland, on 12 April 1978, in a game vs. Ireland.",
"Mateusz Kusznierewicz\n Mateusz Kusznierewicz (born April 29, 1975, in Warsaw) is a Polish sailor, specialising in the Finn and Star classes. His first sailing success came in 1985, where he won the Puchar Spójni at the Zalew Zegrzyński in Warsaw. Most recently, he competed at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, winning a bronze medal in the Finn. For his sport achievements, he received the Order of Polonia Restituta: Knight's Cross (5th Class) in 1996, Officer's Cross (4th Class) in 2004.",
"Bartosz Kurek\n Kurek began his career in a team from Nysa (2004–2005), where he played alongside his father. He spent the next 3 years playing for a PlusLiga club, ZAKSA Kędzierzyn-Koźle (2005–2008). In 2008, he moved to PGE Skra Bełchatów, one of the most successful teams in PlusLiga, where he quickly became a key player. With Skra, he won the Polish Championship three times: in 2009, 2010 and 2011. On the international stage, he won two Club World Championship silver medals, in 2009 and 2010, and a bronze medal of the CEV Champions League in 2010. On 18 March 2012, they won a silver medal of the CEV Champions League after ",
"Gdynia\nJörg Berger (1944–2010), German soccer player, trainer ; Adelajda Mroske (1944–1975) a Polish speed skater, she competed in four events at the 1964 Winter Olympics ; Ryszard Marczak (born 1945) a former long-distance runner from Poland, competed in the marathon at the 1980 Summer Olympics ; Józef Błaszczyk (born 1947) a sailor from Poland, competed in the 1972 Summer Olympics ; Andrzej Chudziński (1948–1995) a Polish swimmer, competed in three events at the 1972 Summer Olympics ; Anna Sobczak (born 1967) a Polish fencer, competed in the women's individual and team foil events at the 1988 and 1992 Summer Olympics ; Tomasz Sokołowski (born 1970) a ",
"Stanisław Hachorek\n Stanisław Marian Hachorek (21 January 1927 in Czeladź – 24 October 1988 in Warsaw), was a Polish football player and coach. Hachorek, who began playing football in 1945 in CKS Czeladz, spent best years of his career in Gwardia Warszawa, a team that in the 1950s was among top Polish sides. Between 1955 and 1960, he capped sixteen times for Poland, scoring eight goals. He debuted on 29 May 1955 in Bucharest, scoring a goal in a 2-2 tie with Romania. In the same year, he became top goalscorer of the Ekstraklasa, with sixteen goals. Hachorek participated in the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, where he scored a goal in Poland's 6-1 victory with Tunisia. He spent last years of his career in Warszawianka Warszawa, and after retirement from active playing (1965), became a coach."
] |
What sport does 1994 Swedish Open play? | [
"tennis",
"lawn tennis",
"lawntennis"
] | sport | 1994 Swedish Open | 580,445 | 69 | [
{
"id": "313024",
"title": "1994 Swedish Open",
"text": " The 1994 Swedish Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts in Båstad, Sweden that was part of the World Series of the 1994 ATP Tour. It was the 47th edition of the tournament and was held from 4 July until 11 July 1994. Unseeded Bernd Karbacher won the singles title.",
"score": "1.8759607"
},
{
"id": "26995777",
"title": "1993 Swedish Open",
"text": " The 1993 Swedish Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts in Båstad, Sweden that was part of the World Series of the 1993 ATP Tour. It was the 46th edition of the tournament and was held from 5 July until 11 July 1993. Unseeded Horst Skoff won the singles title.",
"score": "1.8107636"
},
{
"id": "14231756",
"title": "1994 Stockholm Open",
"text": " The 1994 Stockholm Open was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 26th edition of the Stockholm Open and was part of the ATP Super 9 of the 1994 ATP Tour. It took place at the Stockholm Globe Arena in Stockholm, Sweden, from 24 October until 31 October 1994. Sixth-seeded Boris Becker won the singles title. The singles draw was headlined by World No. 1 Pete Sampras, Goran Ivanišević, and Michael Stich. Other top seeds were Sergi Bruguera, Stefan Edberg, Boris Becker, Michael Chang, and Andre Agassi.",
"score": "1.734414"
},
{
"id": "313026",
"title": "1994 Swedish Open",
"text": " 🇸🇪 Jan Apell / 🇸🇪 Jonas Björkman defeated 🇸🇪 Nicklas Kulti / 🇸🇪 Mikael Tillström, 6–2, 6–3",
"score": "1.7284677"
},
{
"id": "32911779",
"title": "1994 Swedish Golf Tour",
"text": " The 1994 Swedish Golf Tour was the eleventh season of the Swedish Golf Tour, a series of professional golf tournaments held in Sweden, Denmark and Finland. Most of the tournaments also featured on the 1994 Challenge Tour (CHA).",
"score": "1.7270068"
},
{
"id": "32911780",
"title": "1994 Swedish Golf Tour",
"text": " The season consisted of 13 events played between May and September.",
"score": "1.7221315"
},
{
"id": "4141077",
"title": "1996 Swedish Open",
"text": " The 1996 Swedish Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts in Båstad in Sweden and was part of the World Series of the 1996 ATP Tour. It was the 49th edition of the tournament and was held from 8 July until 14 July 1996. Fourth-seeded Magnus Gustafsson won the singles title.",
"score": "1.7201188"
},
{
"id": "8323452",
"title": "1994 in Swedish football",
"text": "Final ",
"score": "1.71908"
},
{
"id": "1493212",
"title": "1969 Swedish Open",
"text": " The 1969 Swedish Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts held in Båstad, Sweden. It was the 22nd edition of the tournament and was held from 7 July through 13 July 1969. Manuel Santana won the singles title.",
"score": "1.7009048"
},
{
"id": "6161411",
"title": "1995 Stockholm Open",
"text": " The 1995 Stockholm Open was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts at the Kungliga tennishallen in Stockholm, Sweden. It was the 27th edition of the tournament and was now part of the ATP International Series of the 1995 ATP Tour, having been replaced as an ATP Masters Series venue by Essen. The tournament was held from 6 November through 12 November 1995. Second-seeded Thomas Enqvist won the singles title.",
"score": "1.6900556"
},
{
"id": "32911777",
"title": "1993 Swedish Golf Tour",
"text": " The 1993 Swedish Golf Tour was the tenth season of the Swedish Golf Tour, a series of professional golf tournaments held in Sweden, Denmark and Finland. Most of the tournaments also featured on the 1993 Challenge Tour (CHA).",
"score": "1.6852562"
},
{
"id": "32911778",
"title": "1993 Swedish Golf Tour",
"text": " The season consisted of 10 events played between May and September.",
"score": "1.6817286"
},
{
"id": "767768",
"title": "1993 in Swedish football",
"text": "Final ",
"score": "1.6769814"
},
{
"id": "29348213",
"title": "1994 in sports",
"text": "Men's European Championship: Sweden ; Women's European Championship: Denmark ",
"score": "1.6761093"
},
{
"id": "27128892",
"title": "1992 Swedish Open",
"text": " The 1992 Swedish Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts in Båstad, Sweden that was part of the World Series of the 1992 ATP Tour. It was the 45th edition of the tournament and was held from 6 July until 12 July 1992. Second-seeded Magnus Gustafsson won his second consecutive singles title at the event.",
"score": "1.6735805"
},
{
"id": "1493179",
"title": "1968 Swedish Open",
"text": " The 1968 Swedish Open was a combined men's and women's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts held in Båstad, Sweden. It was the 21st edition of the tournament and was held in July 1968. Martin Mulligan won the singles title.",
"score": "1.6585956"
},
{
"id": "4962850",
"title": "1994 Davis Cup",
"text": " Russia vs. Sweden",
"score": "1.656062"
},
{
"id": "7532051",
"title": "1993 Stockholm Open",
"text": " The 1993 Stockholm Open was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 25th edition of the Stockholm Open and was part of the ATP Super 9 of the 1993 ATP Tour. It took place at the Stockholm Globe Arena in Stockholm, Sweden, from 25 October through 1 November 1993. The singles draw was headlined by Pete Sampras. Fourth-seeded Michael Stich won the singles title.",
"score": "1.6522582"
},
{
"id": "13683342",
"title": "1995 in Swedish football",
"text": "Final ",
"score": "1.6514125"
},
{
"id": "26751842",
"title": "1994 Swedish Golf Tour (women)",
"text": " Source:",
"score": "1.6462867"
}
] | [
"1994 Swedish Open\n The 1994 Swedish Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts in Båstad, Sweden that was part of the World Series of the 1994 ATP Tour. It was the 47th edition of the tournament and was held from 4 July until 11 July 1994. Unseeded Bernd Karbacher won the singles title.",
"1993 Swedish Open\n The 1993 Swedish Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts in Båstad, Sweden that was part of the World Series of the 1993 ATP Tour. It was the 46th edition of the tournament and was held from 5 July until 11 July 1993. Unseeded Horst Skoff won the singles title.",
"1994 Stockholm Open\n The 1994 Stockholm Open was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 26th edition of the Stockholm Open and was part of the ATP Super 9 of the 1994 ATP Tour. It took place at the Stockholm Globe Arena in Stockholm, Sweden, from 24 October until 31 October 1994. Sixth-seeded Boris Becker won the singles title. The singles draw was headlined by World No. 1 Pete Sampras, Goran Ivanišević, and Michael Stich. Other top seeds were Sergi Bruguera, Stefan Edberg, Boris Becker, Michael Chang, and Andre Agassi.",
"1994 Swedish Open\n 🇸🇪 Jan Apell / 🇸🇪 Jonas Björkman defeated 🇸🇪 Nicklas Kulti / 🇸🇪 Mikael Tillström, 6–2, 6–3",
"1994 Swedish Golf Tour\n The 1994 Swedish Golf Tour was the eleventh season of the Swedish Golf Tour, a series of professional golf tournaments held in Sweden, Denmark and Finland. Most of the tournaments also featured on the 1994 Challenge Tour (CHA).",
"1994 Swedish Golf Tour\n The season consisted of 13 events played between May and September.",
"1996 Swedish Open\n The 1996 Swedish Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts in Båstad in Sweden and was part of the World Series of the 1996 ATP Tour. It was the 49th edition of the tournament and was held from 8 July until 14 July 1996. Fourth-seeded Magnus Gustafsson won the singles title.",
"1994 in Swedish football\nFinal ",
"1969 Swedish Open\n The 1969 Swedish Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts held in Båstad, Sweden. It was the 22nd edition of the tournament and was held from 7 July through 13 July 1969. Manuel Santana won the singles title.",
"1995 Stockholm Open\n The 1995 Stockholm Open was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts at the Kungliga tennishallen in Stockholm, Sweden. It was the 27th edition of the tournament and was now part of the ATP International Series of the 1995 ATP Tour, having been replaced as an ATP Masters Series venue by Essen. The tournament was held from 6 November through 12 November 1995. Second-seeded Thomas Enqvist won the singles title.",
"1993 Swedish Golf Tour\n The 1993 Swedish Golf Tour was the tenth season of the Swedish Golf Tour, a series of professional golf tournaments held in Sweden, Denmark and Finland. Most of the tournaments also featured on the 1993 Challenge Tour (CHA).",
"1993 Swedish Golf Tour\n The season consisted of 10 events played between May and September.",
"1993 in Swedish football\nFinal ",
"1994 in sports\nMen's European Championship: Sweden ; Women's European Championship: Denmark ",
"1992 Swedish Open\n The 1992 Swedish Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts in Båstad, Sweden that was part of the World Series of the 1992 ATP Tour. It was the 45th edition of the tournament and was held from 6 July until 12 July 1992. Second-seeded Magnus Gustafsson won his second consecutive singles title at the event.",
"1968 Swedish Open\n The 1968 Swedish Open was a combined men's and women's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts held in Båstad, Sweden. It was the 21st edition of the tournament and was held in July 1968. Martin Mulligan won the singles title.",
"1994 Davis Cup\n Russia vs. Sweden",
"1993 Stockholm Open\n The 1993 Stockholm Open was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 25th edition of the Stockholm Open and was part of the ATP Super 9 of the 1993 ATP Tour. It took place at the Stockholm Globe Arena in Stockholm, Sweden, from 25 October through 1 November 1993. The singles draw was headlined by Pete Sampras. Fourth-seeded Michael Stich won the singles title.",
"1995 in Swedish football\nFinal ",
"1994 Swedish Golf Tour (women)\n Source:"
] |
What sport does Najeh Humoud play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Najeh Humoud | 5,245,572 | 82 | [
{
"id": "28562676",
"title": "Najeh Humoud",
"text": " Najeh Humoud (Arabic: ناجح حمود حريب) is a former football coach of Najaf FC and Iraq. He played in midfield for Kufa FC in the 1970s, and the Najaf province team but never managed to play in the Iraqi first division. He began his coaching career with Najaf FC in 1987, and helped the club to their first ever cup in 1998 as his team beat Al-Shorta 4-0 at the Al Shaab Stadium to lift the Umm Al-Maarak Cup. He went on to manage the Iraqi youth team in 1998 and worked as Zoran Smileski's assistant at the 1998 Asian Youth Championship. Najeh then coached the Iraq national football team in 1999. He was Vice-President of the Iraq Football Association from 2004-2011 and the president of the Iraq Football Association from 2011 to 2014. Aside from football, Najih was also the director of the Kufa Cement Factory.",
"score": "1.8918927"
},
{
"id": "3541541",
"title": "Mohammad Hassan Senobar",
"text": " Senobars's first national game was for Iran boys national volleyball team in 2012, he joined the Iran men's national volleyball team for 6 years.",
"score": "1.5776753"
},
{
"id": "2018632",
"title": "Daoud Musa",
"text": " Daoud Musa Daoud (born February 2, 1982) is a professional basketball player. He plays for Qatar SC of the Qatar basketball league. He is also a member of the Qatar national basketball team. Musa competed for the Qatar national basketball team at the 2005, 2007 and FIBA Asia Championship 2009. He also competed for Qatar at their only FIBA World Championship performance to date, in 2006, where he averaged 5.2 points per game. Previously he competed for the junior national team at the 1999 FIBA World Championship for Junior Men and 2001 FIBA World Championship for Young Men.",
"score": "1.5458881"
},
{
"id": "7844899",
"title": "Adel Humoud",
"text": " Adel Humoud (عادل حمود, born 20 June 1986) is a Kuwaiti footballer who is a Midfielder.",
"score": "1.5418888"
},
{
"id": "2942358",
"title": "Mohamed Masoud (volleyball)",
"text": " Mohamed Masoud (born May 1, 1994) is an Egyptian male volleyball player. He is part of the Egypt men's national volleyball team. On club level he plays for Smouha SC, then in June 2016 he moved to Al Ahly (volleyball)",
"score": "1.5231342"
},
{
"id": "7822901",
"title": "Khamis Humoud",
"text": " Khamis Humoud is a former Iraqi football defender. He competed in the 1986 Asian Games. Humoud played for Iraq between 1985 and 1987.",
"score": "1.5033067"
},
{
"id": "5377708",
"title": "Milad Meydavoudi",
"text": " Milad Meydavoudi (, born 20 January 1985 in Masjed Soleyman) is an Iranian football player, who last played for Naft Masjed Soleyman in Persian Gulf Pro League. He appointed as assistant coach of Khooshe Talaei Saveh F.C..",
"score": "1.5019236"
},
{
"id": "16371516",
"title": "Navid Niktash",
"text": " Niktash was invited to play for the Iran national basketball team in China in 2017. On August 9, 2017 he played his first official match for Iran against India. He recorded 3 points and 6 rebounds and .25 FG% in 12 minutes. He debuted with the Iran national basketball team at the FIBA Asia Cup with averaging 1.5 points, 2.0 rebounds 0.3 steals and 22% ppg.",
"score": "1.498996"
},
{
"id": "2478256",
"title": "Rasoul Najafi",
"text": " As a junior player he competed at the 2011 FIVB Men's Junior World Championship finishing 6th. Two years later he became with the national U23 team 5th at the 2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U23 World Championship. With the national team he finished 5th at the 2015 Summer Universiade and competed in the 2015 FIVB Volleyball World League. With his club Saipa Tehran he played in the 2015–16 Iran Super League.",
"score": "1.495599"
},
{
"id": "10729786",
"title": "David Najem",
"text": " David Najem (Dari: داوید نجم; born May 26, 1992) is a professional footballer who plays as a defender for USL Championship club New Mexico United and the Afghanistan national team. Najem grew up in Clifton, New Jersey and attended Paramus Catholic High School, where he set school career records for both goals and points.",
"score": "1.4921725"
},
{
"id": "7281612",
"title": "Imad Najah",
"text": " Born in Utrecht, Netherlands, Najah has played club football for PSV and RKC Waalwijk. Najah represented Morocco at the 2012 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.4910202"
},
{
"id": "5180006",
"title": "Meraj Sheykh",
"text": " In the sixth season, Sheykh continued to raid with great success and scored 94 raid points. However, the Iranian only managed 3 tackle points from 19 matches. Iran Kabaddi team He represented his country in the 2016 Kabaddi World Cup final, where they finished runners-up to India.",
"score": "1.4899657"
},
{
"id": "31121831",
"title": "Éric Micoud",
"text": " Éric Micoud (born March 18, 1973 in Cotonou, Benin) is a French basketball player who played 20 games for the men's French national team between 1999 and 2001.",
"score": "1.4834098"
},
{
"id": "24973392",
"title": "Mohammad Reza Hazratpour",
"text": " Mohammadreza Hazratpour Talatappeh (, born March 31, 1999 in Urmia) is an Iranian volleyball player who plays as a libero for the Iranian national team and Iranian club Shahrdari Urmia. Hazratpour in 2018 year invited to Iran senior national team by Igor Kolaković and made his debut match against Japan in the 2018 Nations League.",
"score": "1.4783956"
},
{
"id": "13639366",
"title": "Morteza Mehrzad",
"text": " His talent was spotted and identified by Iran national head coach Hadi Rezaei in 2011 after watching a television program which talked about unusual and differently able talented people. Hadi quickly got in touch with the television network to inquire about Mehrzad who was also one of the disabled talents to have participated in the program. Hadi convinced and encouraged Mehrzad to play sitting volleyball. He was selected for Iran's national team in March 2016 after undergoing training sessions at various regional clubs in Iran and made his international debut in 2016 at the Paralympics qualifiers. Subsequently, he was also selected for the national team to compete at the 2016 Summer Paralympics, which marked his Paralympic debut. In the 2016 Summer Paralympics sitting volleyball final, he was the match top scorer with 28 points for Iran. Iran eventually secured a gold medal after defeating Bosnia and Herzegovina 3-1 in the final. He was also the second best spiker during the 2016 Rio Paralympics. In 2018, he helped Iran win the 2018 Sitting Volleyball World Cup, securing Iran's first world title in 8 years, after a 3-0 victory over defending champions Bosnia and Herzegovina in the final.",
"score": "1.4745488"
},
{
"id": "15812497",
"title": "Moharram Navidkia",
"text": " He was first selected to the national team during the West Asian Football Federation tournament in 2002, which was held in Syria. He made his debut for Iran against Jordan in August 2002. His biggest achievement was winning the gold medal of the 2002 Asian Games with Iran U-23 in Busan, where he continued his impressive display during the games. He played in the 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification for Team Melli. Having been selected among Iran's reserve men for the 2006 World Cup, he was called up to join the team in Germany to replace injured Sattar Zare. He bid his farewell to national team on December 2009. In May 2011, he was called up to Iran national team by Carlos Queiroz, but he rejected the offer due to his \"several injuries and surgeries\" which makes him unable to play for both national team and club.",
"score": "1.4732752"
},
{
"id": "10729793",
"title": "David Najem",
"text": " David's brother, Adam, is also a professional soccer player who currently plays for FC Edmonton and the Afghanistan national team.",
"score": "1.4727124"
},
{
"id": "5091934",
"title": "Mojtaba Mirzajanpour",
"text": " Mojtaba Mirzajanpour Muziraji (, born 7 October 1991) is an Iranian volleyball player, a member of the Iran national team and Iranian Volleyball Super League club Shahrdari Varamin. He competed at the 2014 World Championship and Rio 2016 Summer Olympics. Mirzajanpour debut national game in 2013 Grand Championship did with invitations Julio Velasco.",
"score": "1.4726672"
},
{
"id": "31360711",
"title": "Hamed Noormohammadi",
"text": " Noormohammadi has played his entire career for Rah Ahan",
"score": "1.4716661"
},
{
"id": "16371511",
"title": "Navid Niktash",
"text": " Navid Niktash (born January 17, 1991) is an Iranian-French professional basketball player for the London Lions of the British Basketball League (BBL). Niktash's plays small forward and power forward.",
"score": "1.4679462"
}
] | [
"Najeh Humoud\n Najeh Humoud (Arabic: ناجح حمود حريب) is a former football coach of Najaf FC and Iraq. He played in midfield for Kufa FC in the 1970s, and the Najaf province team but never managed to play in the Iraqi first division. He began his coaching career with Najaf FC in 1987, and helped the club to their first ever cup in 1998 as his team beat Al-Shorta 4-0 at the Al Shaab Stadium to lift the Umm Al-Maarak Cup. He went on to manage the Iraqi youth team in 1998 and worked as Zoran Smileski's assistant at the 1998 Asian Youth Championship. Najeh then coached the Iraq national football team in 1999. He was Vice-President of the Iraq Football Association from 2004-2011 and the president of the Iraq Football Association from 2011 to 2014. Aside from football, Najih was also the director of the Kufa Cement Factory.",
"Mohammad Hassan Senobar\n Senobars's first national game was for Iran boys national volleyball team in 2012, he joined the Iran men's national volleyball team for 6 years.",
"Daoud Musa\n Daoud Musa Daoud (born February 2, 1982) is a professional basketball player. He plays for Qatar SC of the Qatar basketball league. He is also a member of the Qatar national basketball team. Musa competed for the Qatar national basketball team at the 2005, 2007 and FIBA Asia Championship 2009. He also competed for Qatar at their only FIBA World Championship performance to date, in 2006, where he averaged 5.2 points per game. Previously he competed for the junior national team at the 1999 FIBA World Championship for Junior Men and 2001 FIBA World Championship for Young Men.",
"Adel Humoud\n Adel Humoud (عادل حمود, born 20 June 1986) is a Kuwaiti footballer who is a Midfielder.",
"Mohamed Masoud (volleyball)\n Mohamed Masoud (born May 1, 1994) is an Egyptian male volleyball player. He is part of the Egypt men's national volleyball team. On club level he plays for Smouha SC, then in June 2016 he moved to Al Ahly (volleyball)",
"Khamis Humoud\n Khamis Humoud is a former Iraqi football defender. He competed in the 1986 Asian Games. Humoud played for Iraq between 1985 and 1987.",
"Milad Meydavoudi\n Milad Meydavoudi (, born 20 January 1985 in Masjed Soleyman) is an Iranian football player, who last played for Naft Masjed Soleyman in Persian Gulf Pro League. He appointed as assistant coach of Khooshe Talaei Saveh F.C..",
"Navid Niktash\n Niktash was invited to play for the Iran national basketball team in China in 2017. On August 9, 2017 he played his first official match for Iran against India. He recorded 3 points and 6 rebounds and .25 FG% in 12 minutes. He debuted with the Iran national basketball team at the FIBA Asia Cup with averaging 1.5 points, 2.0 rebounds 0.3 steals and 22% ppg.",
"Rasoul Najafi\n As a junior player he competed at the 2011 FIVB Men's Junior World Championship finishing 6th. Two years later he became with the national U23 team 5th at the 2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U23 World Championship. With the national team he finished 5th at the 2015 Summer Universiade and competed in the 2015 FIVB Volleyball World League. With his club Saipa Tehran he played in the 2015–16 Iran Super League.",
"David Najem\n David Najem (Dari: داوید نجم; born May 26, 1992) is a professional footballer who plays as a defender for USL Championship club New Mexico United and the Afghanistan national team. Najem grew up in Clifton, New Jersey and attended Paramus Catholic High School, where he set school career records for both goals and points.",
"Imad Najah\n Born in Utrecht, Netherlands, Najah has played club football for PSV and RKC Waalwijk. Najah represented Morocco at the 2012 Summer Olympics.",
"Meraj Sheykh\n In the sixth season, Sheykh continued to raid with great success and scored 94 raid points. However, the Iranian only managed 3 tackle points from 19 matches. Iran Kabaddi team He represented his country in the 2016 Kabaddi World Cup final, where they finished runners-up to India.",
"Éric Micoud\n Éric Micoud (born March 18, 1973 in Cotonou, Benin) is a French basketball player who played 20 games for the men's French national team between 1999 and 2001.",
"Mohammad Reza Hazratpour\n Mohammadreza Hazratpour Talatappeh (, born March 31, 1999 in Urmia) is an Iranian volleyball player who plays as a libero for the Iranian national team and Iranian club Shahrdari Urmia. Hazratpour in 2018 year invited to Iran senior national team by Igor Kolaković and made his debut match against Japan in the 2018 Nations League.",
"Morteza Mehrzad\n His talent was spotted and identified by Iran national head coach Hadi Rezaei in 2011 after watching a television program which talked about unusual and differently able talented people. Hadi quickly got in touch with the television network to inquire about Mehrzad who was also one of the disabled talents to have participated in the program. Hadi convinced and encouraged Mehrzad to play sitting volleyball. He was selected for Iran's national team in March 2016 after undergoing training sessions at various regional clubs in Iran and made his international debut in 2016 at the Paralympics qualifiers. Subsequently, he was also selected for the national team to compete at the 2016 Summer Paralympics, which marked his Paralympic debut. In the 2016 Summer Paralympics sitting volleyball final, he was the match top scorer with 28 points for Iran. Iran eventually secured a gold medal after defeating Bosnia and Herzegovina 3-1 in the final. He was also the second best spiker during the 2016 Rio Paralympics. In 2018, he helped Iran win the 2018 Sitting Volleyball World Cup, securing Iran's first world title in 8 years, after a 3-0 victory over defending champions Bosnia and Herzegovina in the final.",
"Moharram Navidkia\n He was first selected to the national team during the West Asian Football Federation tournament in 2002, which was held in Syria. He made his debut for Iran against Jordan in August 2002. His biggest achievement was winning the gold medal of the 2002 Asian Games with Iran U-23 in Busan, where he continued his impressive display during the games. He played in the 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification for Team Melli. Having been selected among Iran's reserve men for the 2006 World Cup, he was called up to join the team in Germany to replace injured Sattar Zare. He bid his farewell to national team on December 2009. In May 2011, he was called up to Iran national team by Carlos Queiroz, but he rejected the offer due to his \"several injuries and surgeries\" which makes him unable to play for both national team and club.",
"David Najem\n David's brother, Adam, is also a professional soccer player who currently plays for FC Edmonton and the Afghanistan national team.",
"Mojtaba Mirzajanpour\n Mojtaba Mirzajanpour Muziraji (, born 7 October 1991) is an Iranian volleyball player, a member of the Iran national team and Iranian Volleyball Super League club Shahrdari Varamin. He competed at the 2014 World Championship and Rio 2016 Summer Olympics. Mirzajanpour debut national game in 2013 Grand Championship did with invitations Julio Velasco.",
"Hamed Noormohammadi\n Noormohammadi has played his entire career for Rah Ahan",
"Navid Niktash\n Navid Niktash (born January 17, 1991) is an Iranian-French professional basketball player for the London Lions of the British Basketball League (BBL). Niktash's plays small forward and power forward."
] |
What sport does 2004 Legg Mason Tennis Classic play? | [
"tennis",
"lawn tennis",
"lawntennis"
] | sport | 2004 Legg Mason Tennis Classic | 2,863,715 | 89 | [
{
"id": "29783256",
"title": "2004 Legg Mason Tennis Classic",
"text": " The 2004 Legg Mason Tenis Classic was the 36th edition of this tennis tournament and was played on outdoor hard courts. The tournament was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was held at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C. from August 16 through August 22, 2004.",
"score": "1.8044329"
},
{
"id": "12137095",
"title": "2003 Legg Mason Tennis Classic",
"text": " The 2003 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C. in the United States and was part of the International Series of the 2003 ATP Tour.It was the 35th edition of the tournament and ran from July 28 through August 3, 2003. Tim Henman won the singles title.",
"score": "1.7986602"
},
{
"id": "27436551",
"title": "2005 Legg Mason Tennis Classic",
"text": " The 2005 Legg Mason Tenis Classic was the 36th edition of this tennis tournament and was played on outdoor hard courts. The tournament was part of the International Series of the 2005 ATP Tour. It was held at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C. from August 1 through August 7, 2005.",
"score": "1.7175835"
},
{
"id": "2786598",
"title": "2006 Legg Mason Tennis Classic",
"text": " The 2006 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was the 37th edition of this men's tennis tournament and was played on outdoor hard courts. The tournament was part of the International Series of the 2006 ATP Tour. It was held at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C. from July 31 through August 6, 2006.",
"score": "1.7155511"
},
{
"id": "33140578",
"title": "2002 Legg Mason Tennis Classic",
"text": " The 2002 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C. in the United States and was part of the International Series Gold of the 2002 ATP Tour. The tournament ran from August 12 through August 18, 2002.",
"score": "1.6936947"
},
{
"id": "31570383",
"title": "2004 Legg Mason Tennis Classic – Doubles",
"text": " • # 🇦🇷 Lucas Arnold Ker / 🇦🇷 Mariano Hood (Quarterfinals) • # 🇸🇪 Simon Aspelin / 🇦🇺 Todd Perry (First round) • # 🇦🇷 Martín García / 🇦🇷 Sebastián Prieto (Semifinals) • # 🇺🇸 Justin Gimelstob / Nenad Zimonjić (Quarterfinals)",
"score": "1.6852667"
},
{
"id": "11326542",
"title": "1998 Legg Mason Tennis Classic – Singles",
"text": " The 1998 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts in Washington, D.C., United States, that was part of the International Series Gold of the 1998 ATP Tour. It was the twenty-ninth edition of the tournament and was held 20 July – 26 July.",
"score": "1.6803045"
},
{
"id": "27709652",
"title": "2004 Legg Mason Tennis Classic – Singles",
"text": " • # 🇺🇸 Andre Agassi (Semifinals) • # 🇦🇺 Lleyton Hewitt (Champion) • # Sjeng Schalken (First Round, retired due to virus) • # 🇺🇸 Robby Ginepri (Semifinals) • # 🇺🇸 James Blake (First Round) • # 🇪🇸 Alberto Martín (Second Round) • # 🇫🇷 Cyril Saulnier (Quarterfinals) • # 🇷🇺 Dmitry Tursunov (Second Round)",
"score": "1.6748143"
},
{
"id": "9165363",
"title": "2007 Legg Mason Tennis Classic",
"text": " The 2007 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was the 38th edition of this tennis tournament and was played on outdoor hard courts. The tournament was part of the International Series of the 2007 ATP Tour. It was held at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C. from July 30 through August 6, 2007.",
"score": "1.6747097"
},
{
"id": "11326419",
"title": "1998 Legg Mason Tennis Classic",
"text": " The 1998 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts in Washington, D.C., United States, that was part of the International Series Gold of the 1998 ATP Tour. It was the twenty-ninth edition of the tournament and was held 20 July – 26 July.",
"score": "1.6706614"
},
{
"id": "31375296",
"title": "2009 Legg Mason Tennis Classic",
"text": " The 2009 Legg Mason Tennis Classic (also known as the 2009 Legg Mason Tennis Classic presented by GEICO for sponsorship reasons) was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 41st edition of the event known that year as Legg Mason Tennis Classic, and was part of the ATP World Tour 500 series of the 2009 ATP World Tour. It took place at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C., United States, from August 1 through August 9, 2009. The Legg Mason Tennis Classic was the third ATP stop of the 2009 US Open Series. Unlike previous years, the men's event was field 48 players instead of 32.",
"score": "1.6522708"
},
{
"id": "3073924",
"title": "2008 Legg Mason Tennis Classic",
"text": " The 2008 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 40th edition of the Legg Mason Tennis Classic, and was part of the International Series of the 2008 ATP Tour. It took place at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C., United States, from August 9 through August 17, 2008. The singles were led by ATP No. 9, San Jose and Dubai titlist, Los Angeles finalist, and defending champion Andy Roddick, winner of back-to-back titles in Stuttgart, Kitzbühel and Los Angeles Juan Martín del Potro, and Dubai finalist and Wimbledon quarterfinalist Feliciano López. Other seeds were Indian Wells quarterfinalist Tommy Haas, Indian Wells runner-up and Los Angeles semifinalist Mardy Fish, Marat Safin, Marc Gicquel and Marcel Granollers.",
"score": "1.6349732"
},
{
"id": "5694470",
"title": "2010 Legg Mason Tennis Classic",
"text": " The 2010 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 42nd edition of this event and was part of the ATP World Tour 500 series of the 2010 ATP World Tour. It took place at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C., USA, from August 1 through August 8, 2010.",
"score": "1.6244936"
},
{
"id": "12505651",
"title": "2003 Legg Mason Tennis Classic – Doubles",
"text": "1) 🇺🇸 Bob Bryan / 🇺🇸 Mike Bryan (First Round) ; 2) Wayne Black / Kevin Ullyett (First Round) ; 3) Chris Haggard / 🇦🇺 Paul Hanley (Final) ; 4) 🇦🇷 Gastón Etlis / 🇦🇷 Martín Rodríguez (Quarterfinals) ",
"score": "1.6075125"
},
{
"id": "9164709",
"title": "2007 Legg Mason Tennis Classic – Singles",
"text": " The 2007 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was the thirty-eighth edition of the Legg Mason Tennis Classic and it took place from July 30 - August 6, 2007.",
"score": "1.6064007"
},
{
"id": "1725477",
"title": "1994 Legg Mason Tennis Classic",
"text": " The 1994 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington D.C., United States. It was the 26th edition of the tournament and was held from July 18 through July 24, 1994 and was part of the Championship Series of the 1994 ATP Tour. Second-seeded Stefan Edberg, who entered the tournament on a wildcard, won the singles title.",
"score": "1.5807042"
},
{
"id": "27709651",
"title": "2004 Legg Mason Tennis Classic – Singles",
"text": " Tim Henman was the defending champion but chose to participate in the 2004 Summer Olympics. Lleyton Hewitt won in the final 6–3, 6–4 against Gilles Müller.",
"score": "1.5804343"
},
{
"id": "31741489",
"title": "2011 Legg Mason Tennis Classic",
"text": " The 2011 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 43rd edition of this event and was part of the ATP World Tour 500 series of the 2011 ATP World Tour. It took place at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C., USA, from July 30 through August 7, 2011.",
"score": "1.5751199"
},
{
"id": "31375299",
"title": "2009 Legg Mason Tennis Classic",
"text": " List of Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) singles entrants, as of July 27, 2009.",
"score": "1.5689117"
},
{
"id": "29783258",
"title": "2004 Legg Mason Tennis Classic",
"text": " Chris Haggard / Robbie Koenig defeated 🇺🇸 Travis Parrott / 🇷🇺 Dmitry Tursunov 7–6(7–3), 6–1",
"score": "1.5673237"
}
] | [
"2004 Legg Mason Tennis Classic\n The 2004 Legg Mason Tenis Classic was the 36th edition of this tennis tournament and was played on outdoor hard courts. The tournament was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was held at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C. from August 16 through August 22, 2004.",
"2003 Legg Mason Tennis Classic\n The 2003 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C. in the United States and was part of the International Series of the 2003 ATP Tour.It was the 35th edition of the tournament and ran from July 28 through August 3, 2003. Tim Henman won the singles title.",
"2005 Legg Mason Tennis Classic\n The 2005 Legg Mason Tenis Classic was the 36th edition of this tennis tournament and was played on outdoor hard courts. The tournament was part of the International Series of the 2005 ATP Tour. It was held at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C. from August 1 through August 7, 2005.",
"2006 Legg Mason Tennis Classic\n The 2006 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was the 37th edition of this men's tennis tournament and was played on outdoor hard courts. The tournament was part of the International Series of the 2006 ATP Tour. It was held at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C. from July 31 through August 6, 2006.",
"2002 Legg Mason Tennis Classic\n The 2002 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C. in the United States and was part of the International Series Gold of the 2002 ATP Tour. The tournament ran from August 12 through August 18, 2002.",
"2004 Legg Mason Tennis Classic – Doubles\n • # 🇦🇷 Lucas Arnold Ker / 🇦🇷 Mariano Hood (Quarterfinals) • # 🇸🇪 Simon Aspelin / 🇦🇺 Todd Perry (First round) • # 🇦🇷 Martín García / 🇦🇷 Sebastián Prieto (Semifinals) • # 🇺🇸 Justin Gimelstob / Nenad Zimonjić (Quarterfinals)",
"1998 Legg Mason Tennis Classic – Singles\n The 1998 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts in Washington, D.C., United States, that was part of the International Series Gold of the 1998 ATP Tour. It was the twenty-ninth edition of the tournament and was held 20 July – 26 July.",
"2004 Legg Mason Tennis Classic – Singles\n • # 🇺🇸 Andre Agassi (Semifinals) • # 🇦🇺 Lleyton Hewitt (Champion) • # Sjeng Schalken (First Round, retired due to virus) • # 🇺🇸 Robby Ginepri (Semifinals) • # 🇺🇸 James Blake (First Round) • # 🇪🇸 Alberto Martín (Second Round) • # 🇫🇷 Cyril Saulnier (Quarterfinals) • # 🇷🇺 Dmitry Tursunov (Second Round)",
"2007 Legg Mason Tennis Classic\n The 2007 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was the 38th edition of this tennis tournament and was played on outdoor hard courts. The tournament was part of the International Series of the 2007 ATP Tour. It was held at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C. from July 30 through August 6, 2007.",
"1998 Legg Mason Tennis Classic\n The 1998 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts in Washington, D.C., United States, that was part of the International Series Gold of the 1998 ATP Tour. It was the twenty-ninth edition of the tournament and was held 20 July – 26 July.",
"2009 Legg Mason Tennis Classic\n The 2009 Legg Mason Tennis Classic (also known as the 2009 Legg Mason Tennis Classic presented by GEICO for sponsorship reasons) was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 41st edition of the event known that year as Legg Mason Tennis Classic, and was part of the ATP World Tour 500 series of the 2009 ATP World Tour. It took place at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C., United States, from August 1 through August 9, 2009. The Legg Mason Tennis Classic was the third ATP stop of the 2009 US Open Series. Unlike previous years, the men's event was field 48 players instead of 32.",
"2008 Legg Mason Tennis Classic\n The 2008 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 40th edition of the Legg Mason Tennis Classic, and was part of the International Series of the 2008 ATP Tour. It took place at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C., United States, from August 9 through August 17, 2008. The singles were led by ATP No. 9, San Jose and Dubai titlist, Los Angeles finalist, and defending champion Andy Roddick, winner of back-to-back titles in Stuttgart, Kitzbühel and Los Angeles Juan Martín del Potro, and Dubai finalist and Wimbledon quarterfinalist Feliciano López. Other seeds were Indian Wells quarterfinalist Tommy Haas, Indian Wells runner-up and Los Angeles semifinalist Mardy Fish, Marat Safin, Marc Gicquel and Marcel Granollers.",
"2010 Legg Mason Tennis Classic\n The 2010 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 42nd edition of this event and was part of the ATP World Tour 500 series of the 2010 ATP World Tour. It took place at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C., USA, from August 1 through August 8, 2010.",
"2003 Legg Mason Tennis Classic – Doubles\n1) 🇺🇸 Bob Bryan / 🇺🇸 Mike Bryan (First Round) ; 2) Wayne Black / Kevin Ullyett (First Round) ; 3) Chris Haggard / 🇦🇺 Paul Hanley (Final) ; 4) 🇦🇷 Gastón Etlis / 🇦🇷 Martín Rodríguez (Quarterfinals) ",
"2007 Legg Mason Tennis Classic – Singles\n The 2007 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was the thirty-eighth edition of the Legg Mason Tennis Classic and it took place from July 30 - August 6, 2007.",
"1994 Legg Mason Tennis Classic\n The 1994 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington D.C., United States. It was the 26th edition of the tournament and was held from July 18 through July 24, 1994 and was part of the Championship Series of the 1994 ATP Tour. Second-seeded Stefan Edberg, who entered the tournament on a wildcard, won the singles title.",
"2004 Legg Mason Tennis Classic – Singles\n Tim Henman was the defending champion but chose to participate in the 2004 Summer Olympics. Lleyton Hewitt won in the final 6–3, 6–4 against Gilles Müller.",
"2011 Legg Mason Tennis Classic\n The 2011 Legg Mason Tennis Classic was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 43rd edition of this event and was part of the ATP World Tour 500 series of the 2011 ATP World Tour. It took place at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C., USA, from July 30 through August 7, 2011.",
"2009 Legg Mason Tennis Classic\n List of Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) singles entrants, as of July 27, 2009.",
"2004 Legg Mason Tennis Classic\n Chris Haggard / Robbie Koenig defeated 🇺🇸 Travis Parrott / 🇷🇺 Dmitry Tursunov 7–6(7–3), 6–1"
] |
What sport does Luciano Vella play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Luciano Vella | 2,858,802 | 78 | [
{
"id": "10113769",
"title": "Luciano Vella",
"text": " Luciano Germán Vella (born April 13, 1981) is a retired Argentine footballer who played as a right-back.",
"score": "1.8529458"
},
{
"id": "10113770",
"title": "Luciano Vella",
"text": " He started playing football for his home town club Newell's Old Boys. He transferred to then La Liga club Cádiz CF in January 2006. He endured a rather unsuccessful spell in Spain with Cádiz relegated after the 2005–06 season. They were then unable to bounce back the following season (finishing 5th), and with the club looking to miss promotion again half-way through the 2007–08 season, Vella returned to Argentina with Vélez Sársfield for the start of the 2008 Clausura championship. On 10 June 2010 Newell's Old Boys loaned the 29-year-old right wingback from Club Atlético Independiente.",
"score": "1.6954768"
},
{
"id": "26760918",
"title": "Luciano Velardi",
"text": " Luciano Velardi (born 20 August 1981) is an Italian football player. He spent one season in the Bundesliga with VfL Bochum.",
"score": "1.6767278"
},
{
"id": "13716777",
"title": "Luciano Goux",
"text": " Luciano Sebastián Goux (born 27 January 1980) is an Argentinian football player, who plays for Defensores de Belgrano. He played the majority of his football in his native Argentina, with a stint in Malaysia in between. He played for Malaysian team Perak FA in the 2004 Super League Malaysia season, and helped Perak to win that year's Malaysia FA Cup, scoring in the final. He played for Chilean team Everton de Viña del Mar in 2012-2013, before joining his current club Defensores de Belgrano in 2013.",
"score": "1.6409185"
},
{
"id": "10134741",
"title": "Roger Vella",
"text": " Roger Vella (born 15 January 1905, date of death unknown) was a Maltese water polo player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1928 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.6306789"
},
{
"id": "30081842",
"title": "Luciano Vassallo",
"text": " Luciano played for GS Gejeret and GS Asmara, an Ethiopian team as Eritrea had been annexed in 1950. During his time at GS Asmara the federation deliberately prevented the team from winning the Ethiopian First Division. However during the run-up to the 1959 Africa Cup of Nations, GS Asmara managed to humiliate the Ethiopian national team in a friendly match. He signed to play for Cotton Factory Club of Dire Dawa in 1960, where, along with his half-brother, he won the Ethiopian First Division in 1960, 1962, 1963 and 1965. Luciano credited his experience as a mechanic for getting a job at the associated cotton plantation, which allowed him to receive a salary ten times that of a normal worker.",
"score": "1.6167312"
},
{
"id": "3811323",
"title": "Luciano Vendemini",
"text": " Luciano Vendemini (11 July 1952 – 20 February 1977) was an Italian basketball player. He was a member of the Italian team that finished fifth at the 1976 Summer Olympics. He unexpectedly died of a heart failure while sitting on a bench during a basketball match.",
"score": "1.6062162"
},
{
"id": "12504832",
"title": "Maurizio Vella",
"text": " Maurizio Vella (born 10 May 1991) is an Italian football player. He plays the forward position. He also holds German citizenship.",
"score": "1.5949783"
},
{
"id": "10123013",
"title": "Luciano José Pereira da Silva",
"text": " Luciano José Pereira da Silva (born 16 March 1980 in Rio Branco) is a retired Brazilian football (soccer) goalkeeper. He has previously played for Tombense and K.F.C. Germinal Beerschot. Having signed for Eredivisie club FC Groningen, the technical manager of the club, Henk Veldmate, described Luciano as \"a spectacular keeper who, because of that, has a lot of risk in his game play\". On 24 February 2010, Luciano extended his contract with FC Groningen until 2012. On 14 February 2014, Luciano and Groningen agreed to dissolve his contract so he could return to Brazil for a knee surgery.",
"score": "1.5947709"
},
{
"id": "27435139",
"title": "Luciano Ramella",
"text": " Luciano Ramella (born April 10, 1914, in Pollone; died in 1990) was an Italian professional football player.",
"score": "1.594106"
},
{
"id": "27084002",
"title": "Michael Vella",
"text": " the Newcastle Knights. In 2005, the rugby league world was shocked to learn Vella was fighting thyroid cancer. Vella returned to the field midway through the 2005 season and was part of the Parramatta side which won the minor premiership that year. Parramatta went into the 2005 finals series as one of the favourites to take out the premiership but suffered a shock 29-0 loss against North Queensland in the preliminary final. Vella played in the match from the bench. After time out of the game, he returned to the field for the Eels in 2006. Vella's final game for Parramatta was the 12-6 qualifying final loss against Melbourne. Vella then headed to England to play in the Super League for English club Hull Kingston Rovers where he was voted Players' Player of the Year in 2007. He also captained the club in his final year, 2011.",
"score": "1.5840316"
},
{
"id": "11267315",
"title": "Luciano Narsingh",
"text": " Luciano Narsingh (born 13 September 1990) is a Dutch professional footballer. He is right-footed and usually plays as a right winger but can also play as a left winger, and both side of attacking midfield. Since 2012, he has also played for the Netherlands national team, whom he represented at that year's European Championship.",
"score": "1.5807481"
},
{
"id": "13194154",
"title": "Luciano Rezzolla",
"text": " Rezzolla is an avid sailor and currently lives in Potsdam with his wife, Carolin Schneider, and three children, Anna, Emilia and Dominik.",
"score": "1.5779753"
},
{
"id": "28155928",
"title": "Luciano Marangon",
"text": " Luciano Marangon (, ; born 21 October 1956) is a retired Italian professional footballer who played as a defender. His younger brother Fabio Marangon also played football professionally. To distinguish them, Luciano was referred to as Marangon I and Fabio as Marangon II.",
"score": "1.5743399"
},
{
"id": "27084000",
"title": "Michael Vella",
"text": " Michael Vella is an Australian former professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1990s, 2000s and 2010s. A New South Wales State of Origin and Australian international representative forward, he played his club football in the NRL for the Parramatta Eels, and in the Super League for Hull Kingston Rovers, who he also captained. In addition to representing Australia internationally, he has played for the Malta Knights as he is of Maltese descent.",
"score": "1.5675733"
},
{
"id": "30081840",
"title": "Luciano Vassallo",
"text": " Luciano Vassallo (born 15 August 1935) is a former footballer of Eritrean and Italian origin who played for the Ethiopia national team in the 1960s. He is known for his skill, and mostly for his volleys, free kicks and penalties. He played professionally with Cotton Factory Club along with his half-brother Italo.",
"score": "1.5622088"
},
{
"id": "10954908",
"title": "Luca Tramontin",
"text": " Luca Tramontin (born 22 February 1966) is an Italian former rugby union footballer, and television sports personality. He is the creator and co-writer of the TV Series \"Sport Crime\". He has played for Italy, Switzerland, and Hungary. He has also played Australian rules football and ice hockey. He has appeared on Eurosport's programs, including Total Rugby. He created and anchored a web show sports program called the Oval Bin, which he hosted with Daniela Scalia.",
"score": "1.5538851"
},
{
"id": "5907953",
"title": "Andorra la Vella",
"text": "Javier Sánchez (born 1968 in Andorra la Vella) is a former professional tennis player, 1986 to 2000 ; Sophie Dusautoir Bertrand (born 1972 in Andorra la Vella) ski mountaineer ; Toni Besolí (born 1976 in Andorra la Vella) judoka, who competed in the men's middleweight ; Marc Bernaus (born 1977 in Andorra la Vella) retired footballer who played as a left back. ; Santiago Deu (born 1980) former middle-distance freestyle swimmer, competed 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney ; Meritxell Sabate (born 1980 in Andorra la Vella) former long-distance freestyle swimmer, competed in the 1996 and 2000 Summer Olympics ; Marta Roure (born 1981 in Andorra la Vella) singer and actress ; Carolina Cerqueda (born 1985 in Andorra la Vella) former sprint freestyle swimmer, competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics ; Marc Garcia (born 1988 in Andorra la Vella), commonly known as Chiqui, is an Andorran footballer ; Xavier Cardelús (born 1998 in Andorra la Vella), is a motorcycle rider, currently competing in 2021 MotoE World Cup ",
"score": "1.5462569"
},
{
"id": "5514165",
"title": "Marco Luciano",
"text": " Marco José Luciano (born September 10, 2001) is a Dominican professional baseball shortstop in the San Francisco Giants organization.",
"score": "1.5383176"
},
{
"id": "26767628",
"title": "Jurswailly Luciano",
"text": " Jurswailly Luciano (born 25 March 1991) is a Dutch handball player, who plays for Metz Handball and the Netherlands national team.",
"score": "1.5342817"
}
] | [
"Luciano Vella\n Luciano Germán Vella (born April 13, 1981) is a retired Argentine footballer who played as a right-back.",
"Luciano Vella\n He started playing football for his home town club Newell's Old Boys. He transferred to then La Liga club Cádiz CF in January 2006. He endured a rather unsuccessful spell in Spain with Cádiz relegated after the 2005–06 season. They were then unable to bounce back the following season (finishing 5th), and with the club looking to miss promotion again half-way through the 2007–08 season, Vella returned to Argentina with Vélez Sársfield for the start of the 2008 Clausura championship. On 10 June 2010 Newell's Old Boys loaned the 29-year-old right wingback from Club Atlético Independiente.",
"Luciano Velardi\n Luciano Velardi (born 20 August 1981) is an Italian football player. He spent one season in the Bundesliga with VfL Bochum.",
"Luciano Goux\n Luciano Sebastián Goux (born 27 January 1980) is an Argentinian football player, who plays for Defensores de Belgrano. He played the majority of his football in his native Argentina, with a stint in Malaysia in between. He played for Malaysian team Perak FA in the 2004 Super League Malaysia season, and helped Perak to win that year's Malaysia FA Cup, scoring in the final. He played for Chilean team Everton de Viña del Mar in 2012-2013, before joining his current club Defensores de Belgrano in 2013.",
"Roger Vella\n Roger Vella (born 15 January 1905, date of death unknown) was a Maltese water polo player. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1928 Summer Olympics.",
"Luciano Vassallo\n Luciano played for GS Gejeret and GS Asmara, an Ethiopian team as Eritrea had been annexed in 1950. During his time at GS Asmara the federation deliberately prevented the team from winning the Ethiopian First Division. However during the run-up to the 1959 Africa Cup of Nations, GS Asmara managed to humiliate the Ethiopian national team in a friendly match. He signed to play for Cotton Factory Club of Dire Dawa in 1960, where, along with his half-brother, he won the Ethiopian First Division in 1960, 1962, 1963 and 1965. Luciano credited his experience as a mechanic for getting a job at the associated cotton plantation, which allowed him to receive a salary ten times that of a normal worker.",
"Luciano Vendemini\n Luciano Vendemini (11 July 1952 – 20 February 1977) was an Italian basketball player. He was a member of the Italian team that finished fifth at the 1976 Summer Olympics. He unexpectedly died of a heart failure while sitting on a bench during a basketball match.",
"Maurizio Vella\n Maurizio Vella (born 10 May 1991) is an Italian football player. He plays the forward position. He also holds German citizenship.",
"Luciano José Pereira da Silva\n Luciano José Pereira da Silva (born 16 March 1980 in Rio Branco) is a retired Brazilian football (soccer) goalkeeper. He has previously played for Tombense and K.F.C. Germinal Beerschot. Having signed for Eredivisie club FC Groningen, the technical manager of the club, Henk Veldmate, described Luciano as \"a spectacular keeper who, because of that, has a lot of risk in his game play\". On 24 February 2010, Luciano extended his contract with FC Groningen until 2012. On 14 February 2014, Luciano and Groningen agreed to dissolve his contract so he could return to Brazil for a knee surgery.",
"Luciano Ramella\n Luciano Ramella (born April 10, 1914, in Pollone; died in 1990) was an Italian professional football player.",
"Michael Vella\n the Newcastle Knights. In 2005, the rugby league world was shocked to learn Vella was fighting thyroid cancer. Vella returned to the field midway through the 2005 season and was part of the Parramatta side which won the minor premiership that year. Parramatta went into the 2005 finals series as one of the favourites to take out the premiership but suffered a shock 29-0 loss against North Queensland in the preliminary final. Vella played in the match from the bench. After time out of the game, he returned to the field for the Eels in 2006. Vella's final game for Parramatta was the 12-6 qualifying final loss against Melbourne. Vella then headed to England to play in the Super League for English club Hull Kingston Rovers where he was voted Players' Player of the Year in 2007. He also captained the club in his final year, 2011.",
"Luciano Narsingh\n Luciano Narsingh (born 13 September 1990) is a Dutch professional footballer. He is right-footed and usually plays as a right winger but can also play as a left winger, and both side of attacking midfield. Since 2012, he has also played for the Netherlands national team, whom he represented at that year's European Championship.",
"Luciano Rezzolla\n Rezzolla is an avid sailor and currently lives in Potsdam with his wife, Carolin Schneider, and three children, Anna, Emilia and Dominik.",
"Luciano Marangon\n Luciano Marangon (, ; born 21 October 1956) is a retired Italian professional footballer who played as a defender. His younger brother Fabio Marangon also played football professionally. To distinguish them, Luciano was referred to as Marangon I and Fabio as Marangon II.",
"Michael Vella\n Michael Vella is an Australian former professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1990s, 2000s and 2010s. A New South Wales State of Origin and Australian international representative forward, he played his club football in the NRL for the Parramatta Eels, and in the Super League for Hull Kingston Rovers, who he also captained. In addition to representing Australia internationally, he has played for the Malta Knights as he is of Maltese descent.",
"Luciano Vassallo\n Luciano Vassallo (born 15 August 1935) is a former footballer of Eritrean and Italian origin who played for the Ethiopia national team in the 1960s. He is known for his skill, and mostly for his volleys, free kicks and penalties. He played professionally with Cotton Factory Club along with his half-brother Italo.",
"Luca Tramontin\n Luca Tramontin (born 22 February 1966) is an Italian former rugby union footballer, and television sports personality. He is the creator and co-writer of the TV Series \"Sport Crime\". He has played for Italy, Switzerland, and Hungary. He has also played Australian rules football and ice hockey. He has appeared on Eurosport's programs, including Total Rugby. He created and anchored a web show sports program called the Oval Bin, which he hosted with Daniela Scalia.",
"Andorra la Vella\nJavier Sánchez (born 1968 in Andorra la Vella) is a former professional tennis player, 1986 to 2000 ; Sophie Dusautoir Bertrand (born 1972 in Andorra la Vella) ski mountaineer ; Toni Besolí (born 1976 in Andorra la Vella) judoka, who competed in the men's middleweight ; Marc Bernaus (born 1977 in Andorra la Vella) retired footballer who played as a left back. ; Santiago Deu (born 1980) former middle-distance freestyle swimmer, competed 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney ; Meritxell Sabate (born 1980 in Andorra la Vella) former long-distance freestyle swimmer, competed in the 1996 and 2000 Summer Olympics ; Marta Roure (born 1981 in Andorra la Vella) singer and actress ; Carolina Cerqueda (born 1985 in Andorra la Vella) former sprint freestyle swimmer, competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics ; Marc Garcia (born 1988 in Andorra la Vella), commonly known as Chiqui, is an Andorran footballer ; Xavier Cardelús (born 1998 in Andorra la Vella), is a motorcycle rider, currently competing in 2021 MotoE World Cup ",
"Marco Luciano\n Marco José Luciano (born September 10, 2001) is a Dominican professional baseball shortstop in the San Francisco Giants organization.",
"Jurswailly Luciano\n Jurswailly Luciano (born 25 March 1991) is a Dutch handball player, who plays for Metz Handball and the Netherlands national team."
] |
What sport does 1988–89 FA Cup Qualifying Rounds play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | 1988–89 FA Cup qualifying rounds | 3,152,683 | 80 | [
{
"id": "15187918",
"title": "1988–89 FA Cup qualifying rounds",
"text": " The FA Cup 1988–89 is the 108th season of the world's oldest football knockout competition; The Football Association Challenge Cup, or FA Cup for short. The large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down the English football league system meant that the competition started with a number of preliminary and qualifying rounds. The 28 victorious teams from the Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper.",
"score": "1.9533088"
},
{
"id": "15187916",
"title": "1987–88 FA Cup qualifying rounds",
"text": " The FA Cup 1987-88 is the 107th season of the world's oldest football knockout competition; The Football Association Challenge Cup, or FA Cup for short. The large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down the English football league system meant that the competition started with a number of preliminary and qualifying rounds. The 28 victorious teams from the Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper.",
"score": "1.9336765"
},
{
"id": "15187920",
"title": "1989–90 FA Cup qualifying rounds",
"text": " The 1989–90 FA Cup Qualifying Rounds opened the 109th season of competition in England for 'The Football Association Challenge Cup' (FA Cup), the world's oldest association football single knockout competition. A total of 540 clubs were accepted for the competition, up 15 from the previous season’s 525. The large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down (Levels 5 through 8) in the English football pyramid meant that the competition started with five rounds of preliminary (1) and qualifying (4) knockouts for these non-League teams. The 28 winning teams from Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper, where League teams tiered at Levels 3 and 4 entered the competition.",
"score": "1.9171166"
},
{
"id": "15187914",
"title": "1986–87 FA Cup qualifying rounds",
"text": " The FA Cup 1986-87 is the 106th season of the world's oldest football knockout competition; The Football Association Challenge Cup, or FA Cup for short. The large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down the English football league system meant that the competition started with a number of preliminary and qualifying rounds. The 28 victorious teams from the Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper.",
"score": "1.9046407"
},
{
"id": "15187919",
"title": "1988–89 FA Cup qualifying rounds",
"text": " See 1988-89 FA Cup for details of the rounds from the First Round Proper onwards.",
"score": "1.8823346"
},
{
"id": "15187917",
"title": "1987–88 FA Cup qualifying rounds",
"text": " See 1987-88 FA Cup for details of the rounds from the First Round Proper onwards.",
"score": "1.8726242"
},
{
"id": "27601838",
"title": "1888–89 FA Cup qualifying rounds",
"text": " The FA Cup, from this season onwards, began to incorporate a series of qualifying rounds in order to determine qualifiers for the actual Cup competition itself. The qualifying rounds were made up of amateur teams, semi-professional teams, and professional sides not yet associated with the Football League. The only game to be played on Christmas Day took place, Linfield Athletic beating Cliftonville 7–0. Everton became the first Football League team to withdraw from the Cup after drawing Ulster in the first qualifying round. See 1888–89 FA Cup for details of the rounds from the First Round onwards.",
"score": "1.8669024"
},
{
"id": "4263268",
"title": "1988–89 FA Cup",
"text": " The second round of games were played over 10–11 December 1988, with the first round of replays being played on 13–14 December. The Aldershot-Bristol City game went to two more replays.",
"score": "1.8660102"
},
{
"id": "16381886",
"title": "1992–93 FA Cup qualifying rounds",
"text": " The 1992–93 FA Cup Qualifying Rounds opened the 112th season of competition in England for 'The Football Association Challenge Cup' (FA Cup), the world's oldest association football single knockout competition. A total of 561 clubs were accepted for the competition, up three from the previous season’s 558. The large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down (Levels 5 through 8) in the English football pyramid meant that the competition started with five rounds of preliminary (1) and qualifying (4) knockouts for these non-League teams. The 28 winning teams from Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper, where League teams tiered at Levels 3 and 4 entered the competition.",
"score": "1.8597395"
},
{
"id": "16381884",
"title": "1991–92 FA Cup qualifying rounds",
"text": " The 1991–92 FA Cup Qualifying Rounds opened the 111th season of competition in England for 'The Football Association Challenge Cup' (FA Cup), the world's oldest association football single knockout competition. A total of 558 clubs were accepted for the competition, down five from the previous season’s 563. The large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down (Levels 5 through 8) in the English football pyramid meant that the competition started with five rounds of preliminary (1) and qualifying (4) knockouts for these non-League teams. The 28 winning teams from Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper, where League teams tiered at Levels 3 and 4 entered the competition.",
"score": "1.8575678"
},
{
"id": "4263270",
"title": "1988–89 FA Cup",
"text": " The fourth round of games were played over the weekend 28–29 January 1989, with replays being played on 31 January – 1 February.",
"score": "1.8523047"
},
{
"id": "16381882",
"title": "1990–91 FA Cup qualifying rounds",
"text": " The 1990–91 FA Cup Qualifying Rounds opened the 110th season of competition in England for 'The Football Association Challenge Cup' (FA Cup), the world's oldest association football single knockout competition. A total of 563 clubs were accepted for the competition, up 23 from the previous season’s 540. The large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down (Levels 5 through 8) in the English football pyramid meant that the competition started with five rounds of preliminary (1) and qualifying (4) knockouts for these non-League teams. The 28 winning teams from Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper, where League teams tiered at Levels 3 and 4 entered the competition.",
"score": "1.8447806"
},
{
"id": "4263288",
"title": "1987–88 FA Cup",
"text": " The fourth round of games were played over the weekend 30 January – 1 February 1988, with replays being played on 3 February. A second replay was then played on 9 February.",
"score": "1.8447435"
},
{
"id": "4263269",
"title": "1988–89 FA Cup",
"text": " The third round of games in the FA Cup were played over the weekend 7–8 January 1989, with the first set of replays being played on 10–11 January. Two games went to second replays, and one to a third replay.",
"score": "1.8419399"
},
{
"id": "15187915",
"title": "1986–87 FA Cup qualifying rounds",
"text": " See 1986-87 FA Cup for details of the rounds from the First Round Proper onwards.",
"score": "1.8416126"
},
{
"id": "4263287",
"title": "1987–88 FA Cup",
"text": " The third round of games in the FA Cup were played over the weekend 9–11 January 1988, with the first set of replays being played on 12–13 January. Three games went to second replays and one of these to a third replay.",
"score": "1.8366035"
},
{
"id": "15187912",
"title": "1985–86 FA Cup qualifying rounds",
"text": " The FA Cup 1985–86 is the 105th season of the world's oldest football knockout competition; The Football Association Challenge Cup, or FA Cup for short. The large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down the English football league system meant that the competition started with a number of preliminary and qualifying rounds. The 28 victorious teams from the Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper.",
"score": "1.8347305"
},
{
"id": "15187921",
"title": "1989–90 FA Cup qualifying rounds",
"text": " See 1989-90 FA Cup for details of the rounds from the First Round Proper onwards.",
"score": "1.8281686"
},
{
"id": "15187910",
"title": "1984–85 FA Cup qualifying rounds",
"text": " The FA Cup 1984–85 is the 104th season of the world's oldest football knockout competition; The Football Association Challenge Cup, or FA Cup for short. The large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down the English football league system meant that the competition started with a number of preliminary and qualifying rounds. The 28 victorious teams from the Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper.",
"score": "1.824043"
},
{
"id": "4263267",
"title": "1988–89 FA Cup",
"text": " The first round of games were played over the weekend 19–20 November 1988, with most replays being played on 22–23 November. All other replays were played on 28 November.",
"score": "1.8234961"
}
] | [
"1988–89 FA Cup qualifying rounds\n The FA Cup 1988–89 is the 108th season of the world's oldest football knockout competition; The Football Association Challenge Cup, or FA Cup for short. The large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down the English football league system meant that the competition started with a number of preliminary and qualifying rounds. The 28 victorious teams from the Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper.",
"1987–88 FA Cup qualifying rounds\n The FA Cup 1987-88 is the 107th season of the world's oldest football knockout competition; The Football Association Challenge Cup, or FA Cup for short. The large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down the English football league system meant that the competition started with a number of preliminary and qualifying rounds. The 28 victorious teams from the Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper.",
"1989–90 FA Cup qualifying rounds\n The 1989–90 FA Cup Qualifying Rounds opened the 109th season of competition in England for 'The Football Association Challenge Cup' (FA Cup), the world's oldest association football single knockout competition. A total of 540 clubs were accepted for the competition, up 15 from the previous season’s 525. The large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down (Levels 5 through 8) in the English football pyramid meant that the competition started with five rounds of preliminary (1) and qualifying (4) knockouts for these non-League teams. The 28 winning teams from Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper, where League teams tiered at Levels 3 and 4 entered the competition.",
"1986–87 FA Cup qualifying rounds\n The FA Cup 1986-87 is the 106th season of the world's oldest football knockout competition; The Football Association Challenge Cup, or FA Cup for short. The large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down the English football league system meant that the competition started with a number of preliminary and qualifying rounds. The 28 victorious teams from the Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper.",
"1988–89 FA Cup qualifying rounds\n See 1988-89 FA Cup for details of the rounds from the First Round Proper onwards.",
"1987–88 FA Cup qualifying rounds\n See 1987-88 FA Cup for details of the rounds from the First Round Proper onwards.",
"1888–89 FA Cup qualifying rounds\n The FA Cup, from this season onwards, began to incorporate a series of qualifying rounds in order to determine qualifiers for the actual Cup competition itself. The qualifying rounds were made up of amateur teams, semi-professional teams, and professional sides not yet associated with the Football League. The only game to be played on Christmas Day took place, Linfield Athletic beating Cliftonville 7–0. Everton became the first Football League team to withdraw from the Cup after drawing Ulster in the first qualifying round. See 1888–89 FA Cup for details of the rounds from the First Round onwards.",
"1988–89 FA Cup\n The second round of games were played over 10–11 December 1988, with the first round of replays being played on 13–14 December. The Aldershot-Bristol City game went to two more replays.",
"1992–93 FA Cup qualifying rounds\n The 1992–93 FA Cup Qualifying Rounds opened the 112th season of competition in England for 'The Football Association Challenge Cup' (FA Cup), the world's oldest association football single knockout competition. A total of 561 clubs were accepted for the competition, up three from the previous season’s 558. The large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down (Levels 5 through 8) in the English football pyramid meant that the competition started with five rounds of preliminary (1) and qualifying (4) knockouts for these non-League teams. The 28 winning teams from Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper, where League teams tiered at Levels 3 and 4 entered the competition.",
"1991–92 FA Cup qualifying rounds\n The 1991–92 FA Cup Qualifying Rounds opened the 111th season of competition in England for 'The Football Association Challenge Cup' (FA Cup), the world's oldest association football single knockout competition. A total of 558 clubs were accepted for the competition, down five from the previous season’s 563. The large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down (Levels 5 through 8) in the English football pyramid meant that the competition started with five rounds of preliminary (1) and qualifying (4) knockouts for these non-League teams. The 28 winning teams from Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper, where League teams tiered at Levels 3 and 4 entered the competition.",
"1988–89 FA Cup\n The fourth round of games were played over the weekend 28–29 January 1989, with replays being played on 31 January – 1 February.",
"1990–91 FA Cup qualifying rounds\n The 1990–91 FA Cup Qualifying Rounds opened the 110th season of competition in England for 'The Football Association Challenge Cup' (FA Cup), the world's oldest association football single knockout competition. A total of 563 clubs were accepted for the competition, up 23 from the previous season’s 540. The large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down (Levels 5 through 8) in the English football pyramid meant that the competition started with five rounds of preliminary (1) and qualifying (4) knockouts for these non-League teams. The 28 winning teams from Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper, where League teams tiered at Levels 3 and 4 entered the competition.",
"1987–88 FA Cup\n The fourth round of games were played over the weekend 30 January – 1 February 1988, with replays being played on 3 February. A second replay was then played on 9 February.",
"1988–89 FA Cup\n The third round of games in the FA Cup were played over the weekend 7–8 January 1989, with the first set of replays being played on 10–11 January. Two games went to second replays, and one to a third replay.",
"1986–87 FA Cup qualifying rounds\n See 1986-87 FA Cup for details of the rounds from the First Round Proper onwards.",
"1987–88 FA Cup\n The third round of games in the FA Cup were played over the weekend 9–11 January 1988, with the first set of replays being played on 12–13 January. Three games went to second replays and one of these to a third replay.",
"1985–86 FA Cup qualifying rounds\n The FA Cup 1985–86 is the 105th season of the world's oldest football knockout competition; The Football Association Challenge Cup, or FA Cup for short. The large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down the English football league system meant that the competition started with a number of preliminary and qualifying rounds. The 28 victorious teams from the Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper.",
"1989–90 FA Cup qualifying rounds\n See 1989-90 FA Cup for details of the rounds from the First Round Proper onwards.",
"1984–85 FA Cup qualifying rounds\n The FA Cup 1984–85 is the 104th season of the world's oldest football knockout competition; The Football Association Challenge Cup, or FA Cup for short. The large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down the English football league system meant that the competition started with a number of preliminary and qualifying rounds. The 28 victorious teams from the Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper.",
"1988–89 FA Cup\n The first round of games were played over the weekend 19–20 November 1988, with most replays being played on 22–23 November. All other replays were played on 28 November."
] |
What sport does Francisco Javier Lloret Martínez play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Javi Salero | 957,958 | 66 | [
{
"id": "14364894",
"title": "José Martínez Morote",
"text": " José Martínez Morote (born 5 February 1984 in Hellín, Albacete) is a Paralympic athlete from Spain competing mainly in category T20 track and field events. He has an intellectual disability, attended school in Cruz de Mayo and serves as a mentor to local track and field athletes. While he originally started sport playing football, he switched to athletics by the age of 16 at the suggestion of a teacher who noticed his speed with the ball. He has gone on to compete at the 2007 World Games, the 2011 IPC World Athletics Championships in Christchurch, New Zealand and the 2012 Summer Paralympics. Martínez has held at least two athletics scholarships to continue his participation in the sport.",
"score": "1.718105"
},
{
"id": "14364896",
"title": "José Martínez Morote",
"text": " Morote started competing in athletics when he was 16 years old. Prior to taking up the sport, he was involved with football but switched to athletics after a teacher suggested his speed with the ball was better suited for athletics. He has competed in international competitions in Tunisia, Hungary, Sweden, Australia, France, Prague, Brazil and China. Locally, he participated in a number of workshops where he was coached by Camilo and Maxi. He is a member of Club Paralímpico de la Región athletic club in Castilla-La Mancha, where he is the only male participant. He has been funded by the 'Castilla-La Mancha Olímpica' program run by the Foundation for Culture and Sports of Castilla-La Mancha. When ",
"score": "1.6972452"
},
{
"id": "4540117",
"title": "Francisco Javier Gómez Noya",
"text": " Gómez took up triathlon at the age of 15 after previously playing football and competing in swimming. However his career suffered a setback in 2000 when a routine medical test by the Consejo Superior de Deportes (CSD) revealed an \"abnormal heart valve\", leading to a six-year battle between Gómez and the Spanish sporting authorities regarding his right to compete internationally. He initially won this right in November 2003, but he was not selected for the 2004 Summer Olympics and in 2005 the CSD banned him from international and domestic competition until February 2006. In the nine years from 2002 to 2010, ",
"score": "1.6461284"
},
{
"id": "8385684",
"title": "Xavier Escudé",
"text": " Xavier Escudé Torrente (born May 17, 1966 in Terrassa, Catalonia) is a former field hockey player from Spain, who won the silver medal with the Men's National Team at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. He also participated in the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, and the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona.",
"score": "1.6303599"
},
{
"id": "917703",
"title": "Javier Humet",
"text": " Javier Humet Gaminde (born 20 January 1990) is a Spanish-born Romanian handball player who plays for Dinamo București and the Romania national team.",
"score": "1.5976818"
},
{
"id": "993523",
"title": "Joan Lino Martínez",
"text": " Martínez was born to a Cuban father and Spanish mother. After his switch from Cuba to Spain, he did not compete internationally until 2004, when he won the bronze medal in the Olympic Games. In 2005, he became European indoor champion, and in the 2005 World Championships, he finished fourth with 8.24, one centimetre short of the bronze medal.",
"score": "1.5882171"
},
{
"id": "25005704",
"title": "Javier Bosma",
"text": " Francisco Javier Bosma Mínguez (born 6 November 1969 in Roses, Girona) is a former Spanish beach volleyball player, who won the silver medal in the men's beach volleyball tournament at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens together with Pablo Herrera. Javier Bosma started playing beach volleyball in 1994 and also competed at the 1996 Summer Olympics and the 2000 Summer Olympics, finishing 5th both times. He had surgery on his right leg six times and retired at the end of 2006.",
"score": "1.5876061"
},
{
"id": "14364900",
"title": "José Martínez Morote",
"text": " the Spanish business Lafarge. In 2012, he was a recipient of a Plan ADO €2,500 coaching scholarship. He also had a scholarship from the Castilla-La Mancha Olímpica (CLAMO) program run by the regional government. In 2012, he competed in the World Intellectual Disability Indoor Athletics Championships, representing the Federation of Castilla la Mancha, where he won a bronze medal in the 4 × 400 meter event. He finished sixth in the 1,500 meters. Martínez competed in the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London, England where he finished 8th in the T20 1,500 meter race. He was one of three Spanish athletes competing in London from the Castilla-Mancha region including Francisco Javier Sánchez and Ricardo de Pedraza.",
"score": "1.5817918"
},
{
"id": "7448161",
"title": "Javier Arnau",
"text": " Xavier (\"Xavi\") Arnau Creus (born 20 March 1973 in Terrassa, Catalonia) is a former field hockey player from Spain. He won the silver medal with the Men's National Team at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. The striker also participated in the 1992 Summer Olympics and the 2000 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.5806078"
},
{
"id": "14364897",
"title": "José Martínez Morote",
"text": " was 19 years old, he competed in his first Spanish national championships, where he finished first in the 5,000 and 10,000 meter races. In 2005, Martínez earned a scholarship for athletics from the Foundation for Culture and Sports of Castilla-La Mancha. Competing at the 2006 Spanish national championships, he earned gold in the 400 and 800 meters. He competed in the 2007 World Games, where he won a silver medal in the 800 meters and a bronze in 1,500 meters. In 2008, Martínez competed in the Spanish National Athletics Championship where he finished first in the 800 and 1500 meters. That winter, he won the Spanish national winter cross country. The following year at the Spanish ",
"score": "1.5759571"
},
{
"id": "30639127",
"title": "Francisco Fábregas Monegal",
"text": " Francisco (\"Kiko\") Fábregas Monegal (born 14 October 1977 in Barcelona, Catalonia) is a field hockey midfielder from Spain, who finished in fourth position with the Men's National Team at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece. Four years earlier, in Sydney, he ended up in ninth place with the national side. Fábregas plays club hockey for Real Club de Polo in his hometown of Barcelona.",
"score": "1.5597811"
},
{
"id": "2267961",
"title": "Lucas Martínez",
"text": " Lucas Martínez Ruiz (born 17 November 1993) is an Argentine field hockey player who plays as a forward for Belgian club Dragons and the Argentine national team.",
"score": "1.5583134"
},
{
"id": "14364895",
"title": "José Martínez Morote",
"text": " Martínez was born on 5 February 1984 in Albacete, Spain, and has an intellectual disability. He continued in 2007 to reside in the city of his birth. He attended school in Cruz de Mayo. and mentors younger athletes where he lives. He has chosen not to date women because it would interfere with his ability to train and compete in athletics at the elite level. In 2008, Martínez earned a mention by the jury of the Culture and Sport at the annual award ceremony for the Federation of Employers of Albacete (FEDA).",
"score": "1.5508902"
},
{
"id": "2942261",
"title": "José Martínez (volleyball)",
"text": " Jose Martinez (born January 23, 1993) is a Mexican volleyball player. He is part of Mexico men's national volleyball team, and represented Mexico at the Olympic Games 2016 Rio. At club level he currently plays for Virtus Guanajuato in Mexico Previously, he played for Strasbourg Volley-Ball in France. He now helps to coach the volleyball academy at Albert Park College in addition to studying in Melbourne and plays for the Melbourne Vipers in the Australian Volleyball League.",
"score": "1.5507921"
},
{
"id": "29428781",
"title": "Luis Martínez (sport shooter)",
"text": " Luis Jesús Martínez Encabo (born April 15, 1976 in Logroño, La Rioja) is a Spanish sport shooter. Martinez represented Spain at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, where he competed only in two rifle shooting events. He scored a total of 589 points in the men's 10 m air rifle by two points behind Slovenia's Rajmond Debevec from the fifth attempt, finishing only in thirty-second place. Few days later, Martinez placed fiftieth in his second event, 50 m rifle prone, by one point ahead of Oman's Dadallah Al-Bulushi from the final attempt, with a total score of 582 targets.",
"score": "1.5463161"
},
{
"id": "2267962",
"title": "Lucas Martínez",
"text": " Martínez played for Club Ferrocarril Mitre in Argentina before he moved to Europe to play for Club de Campo in Madrid, Spain. The forward scored eight goals in his first season in Europe. He left the Madrid-based club in 2016 to play for HGC in the Netherlands. After two seasons with HGC, he transferred to HC Oranje-Rood from Eindhoven to replace his fellow-countrymen Agustín Mazzilli. With Oranje-Rood he made his debut in the Euro Hockey League. In May 2020, it was announced he would join Dragons in Belgium for the 2020–21 season.",
"score": "1.5450892"
},
{
"id": "28459045",
"title": "Juan Ignacio Rodríguez",
"text": " Juan Ignacio Rodríguez Liebana (born June 19, 1992) is a Spanish competitive archer. He won a silver medal as a member of the nation's archery squad at the 2013 Mediterranean Games and at the 2015 European Games. Since his sporting debut as a 19-year-old, Fernandez currently trains under the tutelage of his Korean-born coach Cho Hyung-mok for the Spanish team, while shooting at a local archery range in his native Las Rozas de Madrid. Rodríguez rose to prominence in the international archery scene, when he and his compatriots Antonio Fernández and eventual individual champion Miguel Alvariño obtained a silver medal in the men's team recurve final against Ukraine at the 2015 European Games in Baku, Azerbaijan. He promptly followed the team archery results by helping the Spaniards secure a full quota spot for Rio 2016 at the World Championships few months later in Copenhagen, Denmark, booking ",
"score": "1.5393823"
},
{
"id": "4540116",
"title": "Francisco Javier Gómez Noya",
"text": " Francisco Javier Gómez Noya (born 25 March 1983) is a Spanish triathlete. He is the winner of five ITU Triathlon World Championships, he holds three ITU Triathlon World Cup titles, and won the Silver medal for Spain at the 2012 Summer Olympics in men's triathlon. He has also won world titles for Ironman 70.3 and XTERRA Triathlon. Born to Spanish immigrants (both from Galicia) in Basel, Switzerland, he returned to Spain and now lives in Pontevedra, Galicia.",
"score": "1.5371654"
},
{
"id": "2942263",
"title": "José Martínez (volleyball)",
"text": " During the summer of 2016, Martínez along with Mexico men's national volleyball team, ended their 48-year absence in the Olympic Games, when they secured the final place at stake for the Rio 2016 Olympic Games through the World Olympic Qualification Tournament, which took place in their home turf in Mexico City.",
"score": "1.5363245"
},
{
"id": "8388157",
"title": "Francisco Caballer",
"text": " Francisco Caballer Soteras (October 14, 1932 – September 5, 2011) was a Spanish field hockey player, who won the bronze medal with the Men's National Team at the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, Italy.",
"score": "1.5351617"
}
] | [
"José Martínez Morote\n José Martínez Morote (born 5 February 1984 in Hellín, Albacete) is a Paralympic athlete from Spain competing mainly in category T20 track and field events. He has an intellectual disability, attended school in Cruz de Mayo and serves as a mentor to local track and field athletes. While he originally started sport playing football, he switched to athletics by the age of 16 at the suggestion of a teacher who noticed his speed with the ball. He has gone on to compete at the 2007 World Games, the 2011 IPC World Athletics Championships in Christchurch, New Zealand and the 2012 Summer Paralympics. Martínez has held at least two athletics scholarships to continue his participation in the sport.",
"José Martínez Morote\n Morote started competing in athletics when he was 16 years old. Prior to taking up the sport, he was involved with football but switched to athletics after a teacher suggested his speed with the ball was better suited for athletics. He has competed in international competitions in Tunisia, Hungary, Sweden, Australia, France, Prague, Brazil and China. Locally, he participated in a number of workshops where he was coached by Camilo and Maxi. He is a member of Club Paralímpico de la Región athletic club in Castilla-La Mancha, where he is the only male participant. He has been funded by the 'Castilla-La Mancha Olímpica' program run by the Foundation for Culture and Sports of Castilla-La Mancha. When ",
"Francisco Javier Gómez Noya\n Gómez took up triathlon at the age of 15 after previously playing football and competing in swimming. However his career suffered a setback in 2000 when a routine medical test by the Consejo Superior de Deportes (CSD) revealed an \"abnormal heart valve\", leading to a six-year battle between Gómez and the Spanish sporting authorities regarding his right to compete internationally. He initially won this right in November 2003, but he was not selected for the 2004 Summer Olympics and in 2005 the CSD banned him from international and domestic competition until February 2006. In the nine years from 2002 to 2010, ",
"Xavier Escudé\n Xavier Escudé Torrente (born May 17, 1966 in Terrassa, Catalonia) is a former field hockey player from Spain, who won the silver medal with the Men's National Team at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. He also participated in the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, and the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona.",
"Javier Humet\n Javier Humet Gaminde (born 20 January 1990) is a Spanish-born Romanian handball player who plays for Dinamo București and the Romania national team.",
"Joan Lino Martínez\n Martínez was born to a Cuban father and Spanish mother. After his switch from Cuba to Spain, he did not compete internationally until 2004, when he won the bronze medal in the Olympic Games. In 2005, he became European indoor champion, and in the 2005 World Championships, he finished fourth with 8.24, one centimetre short of the bronze medal.",
"Javier Bosma\n Francisco Javier Bosma Mínguez (born 6 November 1969 in Roses, Girona) is a former Spanish beach volleyball player, who won the silver medal in the men's beach volleyball tournament at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens together with Pablo Herrera. Javier Bosma started playing beach volleyball in 1994 and also competed at the 1996 Summer Olympics and the 2000 Summer Olympics, finishing 5th both times. He had surgery on his right leg six times and retired at the end of 2006.",
"José Martínez Morote\n the Spanish business Lafarge. In 2012, he was a recipient of a Plan ADO €2,500 coaching scholarship. He also had a scholarship from the Castilla-La Mancha Olímpica (CLAMO) program run by the regional government. In 2012, he competed in the World Intellectual Disability Indoor Athletics Championships, representing the Federation of Castilla la Mancha, where he won a bronze medal in the 4 × 400 meter event. He finished sixth in the 1,500 meters. Martínez competed in the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London, England where he finished 8th in the T20 1,500 meter race. He was one of three Spanish athletes competing in London from the Castilla-Mancha region including Francisco Javier Sánchez and Ricardo de Pedraza.",
"Javier Arnau\n Xavier (\"Xavi\") Arnau Creus (born 20 March 1973 in Terrassa, Catalonia) is a former field hockey player from Spain. He won the silver medal with the Men's National Team at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. The striker also participated in the 1992 Summer Olympics and the 2000 Summer Olympics.",
"José Martínez Morote\n was 19 years old, he competed in his first Spanish national championships, where he finished first in the 5,000 and 10,000 meter races. In 2005, Martínez earned a scholarship for athletics from the Foundation for Culture and Sports of Castilla-La Mancha. Competing at the 2006 Spanish national championships, he earned gold in the 400 and 800 meters. He competed in the 2007 World Games, where he won a silver medal in the 800 meters and a bronze in 1,500 meters. In 2008, Martínez competed in the Spanish National Athletics Championship where he finished first in the 800 and 1500 meters. That winter, he won the Spanish national winter cross country. The following year at the Spanish ",
"Francisco Fábregas Monegal\n Francisco (\"Kiko\") Fábregas Monegal (born 14 October 1977 in Barcelona, Catalonia) is a field hockey midfielder from Spain, who finished in fourth position with the Men's National Team at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece. Four years earlier, in Sydney, he ended up in ninth place with the national side. Fábregas plays club hockey for Real Club de Polo in his hometown of Barcelona.",
"Lucas Martínez\n Lucas Martínez Ruiz (born 17 November 1993) is an Argentine field hockey player who plays as a forward for Belgian club Dragons and the Argentine national team.",
"José Martínez Morote\n Martínez was born on 5 February 1984 in Albacete, Spain, and has an intellectual disability. He continued in 2007 to reside in the city of his birth. He attended school in Cruz de Mayo. and mentors younger athletes where he lives. He has chosen not to date women because it would interfere with his ability to train and compete in athletics at the elite level. In 2008, Martínez earned a mention by the jury of the Culture and Sport at the annual award ceremony for the Federation of Employers of Albacete (FEDA).",
"José Martínez (volleyball)\n Jose Martinez (born January 23, 1993) is a Mexican volleyball player. He is part of Mexico men's national volleyball team, and represented Mexico at the Olympic Games 2016 Rio. At club level he currently plays for Virtus Guanajuato in Mexico Previously, he played for Strasbourg Volley-Ball in France. He now helps to coach the volleyball academy at Albert Park College in addition to studying in Melbourne and plays for the Melbourne Vipers in the Australian Volleyball League.",
"Luis Martínez (sport shooter)\n Luis Jesús Martínez Encabo (born April 15, 1976 in Logroño, La Rioja) is a Spanish sport shooter. Martinez represented Spain at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, where he competed only in two rifle shooting events. He scored a total of 589 points in the men's 10 m air rifle by two points behind Slovenia's Rajmond Debevec from the fifth attempt, finishing only in thirty-second place. Few days later, Martinez placed fiftieth in his second event, 50 m rifle prone, by one point ahead of Oman's Dadallah Al-Bulushi from the final attempt, with a total score of 582 targets.",
"Lucas Martínez\n Martínez played for Club Ferrocarril Mitre in Argentina before he moved to Europe to play for Club de Campo in Madrid, Spain. The forward scored eight goals in his first season in Europe. He left the Madrid-based club in 2016 to play for HGC in the Netherlands. After two seasons with HGC, he transferred to HC Oranje-Rood from Eindhoven to replace his fellow-countrymen Agustín Mazzilli. With Oranje-Rood he made his debut in the Euro Hockey League. In May 2020, it was announced he would join Dragons in Belgium for the 2020–21 season.",
"Juan Ignacio Rodríguez\n Juan Ignacio Rodríguez Liebana (born June 19, 1992) is a Spanish competitive archer. He won a silver medal as a member of the nation's archery squad at the 2013 Mediterranean Games and at the 2015 European Games. Since his sporting debut as a 19-year-old, Fernandez currently trains under the tutelage of his Korean-born coach Cho Hyung-mok for the Spanish team, while shooting at a local archery range in his native Las Rozas de Madrid. Rodríguez rose to prominence in the international archery scene, when he and his compatriots Antonio Fernández and eventual individual champion Miguel Alvariño obtained a silver medal in the men's team recurve final against Ukraine at the 2015 European Games in Baku, Azerbaijan. He promptly followed the team archery results by helping the Spaniards secure a full quota spot for Rio 2016 at the World Championships few months later in Copenhagen, Denmark, booking ",
"Francisco Javier Gómez Noya\n Francisco Javier Gómez Noya (born 25 March 1983) is a Spanish triathlete. He is the winner of five ITU Triathlon World Championships, he holds three ITU Triathlon World Cup titles, and won the Silver medal for Spain at the 2012 Summer Olympics in men's triathlon. He has also won world titles for Ironman 70.3 and XTERRA Triathlon. Born to Spanish immigrants (both from Galicia) in Basel, Switzerland, he returned to Spain and now lives in Pontevedra, Galicia.",
"José Martínez (volleyball)\n During the summer of 2016, Martínez along with Mexico men's national volleyball team, ended their 48-year absence in the Olympic Games, when they secured the final place at stake for the Rio 2016 Olympic Games through the World Olympic Qualification Tournament, which took place in their home turf in Mexico City.",
"Francisco Caballer\n Francisco Caballer Soteras (October 14, 1932 – September 5, 2011) was a Spanish field hockey player, who won the bronze medal with the Men's National Team at the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, Italy."
] |
What sport does Alain Laurier play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Alain Laurier | 2,154,635 | 95 | [
{
"id": "13817902",
"title": "Alain Laurier",
"text": " Laurier was born in Créteil (Val-de-Marne). He made his debut for Coeuilly, which became Stade de Reims. At the champenois club, he played alongside big names such as Raymond Kopa and Lucien Muller. He played his first match in the championship alongside professionals on 17 October 1965. He took part in the return of the club to the top-flight in 1970. Two years later, he was signed by Paris Football Club, who had returned to Division 1. However, the Parisian club were relegated again two years later. Alain Laurier then joined Angers, without further success. He spent two seasons with the club in Division 2. In 1976, he began his conversion to management. He became manager (DEPF), while continuing as a player at Le Mans. He continued as a player-manager at Caen, stopping as a player in his last season at the Normandy club. He then coached Poissy, Grenoble, Istres, Dijon as well as foreign clubs in Dubai and China. From 2002 to 2004, he was technical director of the Qatar team.",
"score": "1.7146183"
},
{
"id": "13817901",
"title": "Alain Laurier",
"text": " Alain Laurier (born 12 September 1944) is a former French footballer turned manager-",
"score": "1.6535864"
},
{
"id": "13817903",
"title": "Alain Laurier",
"text": "Amateur and military international ; Took part in 1968 Mexico Olympics ; Champion of France D2 in 1966 with Stade de Reims ; First match in Division 2 : 17 October 1965 :Reims-Boulogne (2-1) ; First match in Division 1 : 8 October 1966 :Reims-Bordeaux (4-1) ; 63 matches and 3 goals in Division 1 with Stade de Reims ; 69 matches and 7 goals in Division 2 with Stade de Reims ; Best manager in D2 in 1991 with Istres (awarded by France-Football magazine) ",
"score": "1.6519034"
},
{
"id": "30213939",
"title": "Abraham François",
"text": " In 1997, François competed in the Canada Games with Quebec, winning the competition, and was then selected to represent Canada at the Francophonie Games in Madagascar, also winning the competition. At the 1997 Francophonie Games, François played alongside Patrice Bernier in the team. His best memory was defeating Cameroon 1–0 in the semi-finals of the competition. François played futsal by the QCSL World Cup 2010.",
"score": "1.6033463"
},
{
"id": "14408854",
"title": "Eddie Gerard",
"text": " Skilled in multiple sports, Gerard has been recognized by Canada's Sports Hall of Fame to have been \"a first class cricketer, an outstanding paddler and a better than ordinary baseball player\" in his youth. At age 15 he helped the Ottawa-New Edinburgh Canoe Club win the junior Dominion paddling championship. In later life he was an avid golfer and fisherman, spending his summers near Pembroke, Ontario, a town close to Ottawa. He played rugby football (a forerunner to Canadian football), joining the Ottawa Rough Riders in 1909 as a halfback, helping them win the Interprovincial Rugby Football Union title that year. He continued playing for the Rough Riders until 1913, leaving the team when he turned professional with the Senators. As Canadian football was strictly amateur at the time, Gerard would have been unable to continue in the sport if he became a professional athlete.",
"score": "1.5743119"
},
{
"id": "11130863",
"title": "List of people from Quebec City",
"text": "Alfred Bailey (1905-1997), farmer, educator, poet, anthropologist ; Steve Barakatt (b. 1973), musician ; Marty Barry (1905-1969), former NHL player ; Myriam Bédard (b. 1969), biathlon, three Olympic medals ; Johanne Bégin (b. 1971), water polo, 2000 Summer Olympics ; Patrice Bergeron (b. 1985), NHL player for the Boston Bruins ; Steve Bernier (b. 1985), NHL player ; Sylvie Bernier (b. 1964), diving, gold medal, 1984 Summer Olympics ; Martin Biron (b. 1977), NHL goaltender ; Mathieu Biron (b. 1980), NHL player ; Céline Bonnier (b. 1965), actor ; Gaétan Boucher (b. 1958), speed skating, four Olympic medals ; Francis Bouillon (b. 1975), NHL player for the Nashville Predators ",
"score": "1.5653026"
},
{
"id": "25928522",
"title": "Alain Langlais",
"text": " Joseph Alfred Langlais (born October 9, 1950) is a former professional ice hockey player who played 25 games in the National Hockey League. He played with the Minnesota North Stars. As a youth, he played in the 1963 Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament with a minor ice hockey team from Lévis, Quebec.",
"score": "1.5633657"
},
{
"id": "66058",
"title": "List of multi-sport athletes",
"text": " Black Yankees (1941 and 1947) and Philadelphia Stars (1947 and 1948). ; Red Storey – played six seasons and won the Grey Cup twice with the Toronto Argonauts, but also was an all-star in the Ontario Lacrosse Association and played with the Montreal Royals minor hockey team. Finally, he was a referee in the Canadian Football League (12 years) and in the National Hockey League (9 years.) ; Luc Tousignant – all-star college football player, he was the first French Canadian starting QB with the Montreal Concordes, having previously represented Canada in handball at the 1976 Summer Olympic games in Montreal. ",
"score": "1.5555463"
},
{
"id": "671498",
"title": "Laurien Willemse",
"text": " Laura (\"Laurien\") Eveline Gales-Willemse (born 26 March 1962 in Haarlem, North Holland) is a former Dutch field hockey defender, who won the golden medal with the National Women's Team at the 1984 Summer Olympics. She played club hockey for NMHC Nijmegen and HGC from Wassenaar. Four years later in Seoul she captured the bronze medal with the national side. From 1981 to 1988 she played a total number of 63 international matches for Holland, in which she scored eleven goals. Willemse retired after the 1988 Summer Olympics in South Korea.",
"score": "1.5548773"
},
{
"id": "29119369",
"title": "Laurier Macdonald High School",
"text": " Laurier Macdonald was traditionally strong in basketball and football. During the 1980s, the school also won titles in swimming and volleyball. Since the 1990s, the school's strongest showings, including several championships, have been in soccer, track and field and flag football. During the 2003 outdoor season a milestone was achieved when Coach Sam Longo led both the senior and junior men's team to the GMAA championships. This achievement was displayed in The Montreal Gazette. Greats from the senior teams included Brian Ceterina, goalie. Several players from the squad have played for Quebec's provincial team including Massimo Di Ioia who played for the Canadian U20 national team and signed a pro contract with the Montreal Impact for the 2007 season. He led the team in scoring with an outstanding 27 goals in 12 regular season games and was named MVP for the men's soccer team. Many of the championship teams are honoured with mosaics in the school's sports complex. Championship banners hang in the gymnasium.",
"score": "1.5516129"
},
{
"id": "185450",
"title": "Alexandre Texier",
"text": " Texier's father, Fabrice, was also a hockey player, and introduced his son to the sport. Fabrice played four games in the 1986–87 season with the Laval Titan, spending the rest of his career in France, mainly with the Brûleurs de Loups.",
"score": "1.5489938"
},
{
"id": "27132944",
"title": "Nicolas Roy",
"text": " Roy played minor ice hockey for the Rouyn-Noranda Huskies Bantam AA in the MMBAA during the 2010–11 season. He began his Quebec midget AAA hockey career at the age of 14 with the Amos Forestiers. In his rookie season with the team, he played in 43 regular season games as he led the team to the QMAAA quarterfinals. As a result of his play, Roy was invited to attend the Allstate All-Canadians mentorship camp in 2012. He also competed for Team Québec White at the QGC-16 in 2013 and received the QMAAA's Prospect Award.",
"score": "1.5337653"
},
{
"id": "5825755",
"title": "Denis Cyr",
"text": " As a youth, he played in the 1974 Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament with a minor ice hockey team from Verdun, Quebec. Cyr started his notable hockey career with the Montreal Juniors of the QMJHL. He was promptly put on a line with boyhood friends Denis Savard and Denis Tremblay in a line that was dubbed, \"Les Trois Denis\". They also shared more than first names, as they were all born on February 4, 1961 and also grew up together in the same Verdun neighbourhood. Savard, the most famous of the three and Hockey Hall of Fame member, asked \"What are the odds of that when you think about it. We played together as kids from age eight all the way through until I turned pro.\" . The line would play two full ",
"score": "1.5309857"
},
{
"id": "5825754",
"title": "Denis Cyr",
"text": " Denis Cyr (born February 4, 1961) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey right winger who played in the National Hockey League for the Calgary Flames, Chicago Black Hawks, and St. Louis Blues. He was also a member of the famous junior line, \"Les Trois Denis\", while a member of the Montreal Juniors of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League.",
"score": "1.52548"
},
{
"id": "13371255",
"title": "François-Henri Désérable",
"text": " François-Henri Désérable was also a professional ice-hockey player. In 2002-03, he played for Wayzata High School, in the American state of Minnesota. Coming from the junior team of the Gothiques d'Amiens, with which he had won, in 2007, the French junior championship, he made his senior debut with LHC Les Lions in 2008. In April 2011, he helped the Lions reach the final of the French D2 championship, moving the team up to Division 1. The same year, he was selected among the finalists of the Lions du Sport in the category Best Athlete in Lyon. He then played two seasons with the Montpellier Vipers, before moving to Paris where he played one more season with the Français Volants before hanging up his skates in 2016, at age 29.",
"score": "1.5241446"
},
{
"id": "32534649",
"title": "Sylvain Grenier",
"text": " As a child, Grenier lived with his Parents in Varennes, Québec. Grenier played baseball, tennis and hockey at an amateur level. Grenier worked as a model.",
"score": "1.5212759"
},
{
"id": "6637259",
"title": "Eric LeMarque",
"text": " Growing up in the United States, he played Division I college ice hockey with the Northern Michigan University Wildcats from 1987 to 1991. He was drafted by the Boston Bruins of the NHL at 17-years old with the 224th pick in the 1987 draft. He played the majority of his career in France, where he won three straight national championships from 1994 to 1996, and in Germany. He was selected to the French national ice hockey team and competed with the team at the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway, where he netted one goal in five games, and at the IHW World Championships in 1994 and 1995. He retired from hockey during the 1999-2000 season and took up snowboarding focusing on the X-Games.",
"score": "1.5184089"
},
{
"id": "9950370",
"title": "Arthur Bernier",
"text": " Art played intermediate hockey for Belleville in the Ontario Hockey Association in the 1903–04 season. He joined the Canadian army in 1904 and played hockey for the Kingston 14th Regiment in Senior OHA play for three seasons from 1906–1909. He joined the Montreal Canadiens in the team's inaugural 1910 season and played the full 12 game season. He was among the scorers in the Canadiens first-ever game, a 7-6 win against Cobalt in which his mother was hurt in the stands by a stick due to the lack of protective coverage for the viewers in attendance. He played 3 games for the Galt Professionals after the NHA season was finished. He returned to the Canadiens for the 1910–11 and only played in 3 games. The next season, he joined the Wanderers and played in 10 games, scoring 4 goals.",
"score": "1.5170496"
},
{
"id": "5429319",
"title": "Jean Henri Lhuillier",
"text": " Jean Henri has helped athletes in representing the Philippines in international tournaments and has supported programs that aim for the development of the youth through sports such as basketball, tennis, and softball. He was recently awarded as the Sportsman of the Year in the 36th Sportswriter Association of Cebu Awards. He has supported the sports scene in the Philippines for more than three decades. Lhuillier was recognized for his efforts in sports grassroots development and support to national teams in softball and tennis in the country. He has also majorly contributed to the successful campaigns of the RP Blu Boys in the past years as well as the fruitful Tokyo 2020 Olympics campaign of the ",
"score": "1.5163152"
},
{
"id": "29820754",
"title": "Ed Millaire",
"text": " Edouard Millaire (September 18, 1882 – November 16, 1949 ) was an amateur and later professional ice hockey player from 1898 until 1912. He is one of the first francophone players to play in senior-level ice hockey in Canada, the sport having been dominated to that time by the anglophone community in Montreal. He is an original Montreal Canadiens player.",
"score": "1.5154767"
}
] | [
"Alain Laurier\n Laurier was born in Créteil (Val-de-Marne). He made his debut for Coeuilly, which became Stade de Reims. At the champenois club, he played alongside big names such as Raymond Kopa and Lucien Muller. He played his first match in the championship alongside professionals on 17 October 1965. He took part in the return of the club to the top-flight in 1970. Two years later, he was signed by Paris Football Club, who had returned to Division 1. However, the Parisian club were relegated again two years later. Alain Laurier then joined Angers, without further success. He spent two seasons with the club in Division 2. In 1976, he began his conversion to management. He became manager (DEPF), while continuing as a player at Le Mans. He continued as a player-manager at Caen, stopping as a player in his last season at the Normandy club. He then coached Poissy, Grenoble, Istres, Dijon as well as foreign clubs in Dubai and China. From 2002 to 2004, he was technical director of the Qatar team.",
"Alain Laurier\n Alain Laurier (born 12 September 1944) is a former French footballer turned manager-",
"Alain Laurier\nAmateur and military international ; Took part in 1968 Mexico Olympics ; Champion of France D2 in 1966 with Stade de Reims ; First match in Division 2 : 17 October 1965 :Reims-Boulogne (2-1) ; First match in Division 1 : 8 October 1966 :Reims-Bordeaux (4-1) ; 63 matches and 3 goals in Division 1 with Stade de Reims ; 69 matches and 7 goals in Division 2 with Stade de Reims ; Best manager in D2 in 1991 with Istres (awarded by France-Football magazine) ",
"Abraham François\n In 1997, François competed in the Canada Games with Quebec, winning the competition, and was then selected to represent Canada at the Francophonie Games in Madagascar, also winning the competition. At the 1997 Francophonie Games, François played alongside Patrice Bernier in the team. His best memory was defeating Cameroon 1–0 in the semi-finals of the competition. François played futsal by the QCSL World Cup 2010.",
"Eddie Gerard\n Skilled in multiple sports, Gerard has been recognized by Canada's Sports Hall of Fame to have been \"a first class cricketer, an outstanding paddler and a better than ordinary baseball player\" in his youth. At age 15 he helped the Ottawa-New Edinburgh Canoe Club win the junior Dominion paddling championship. In later life he was an avid golfer and fisherman, spending his summers near Pembroke, Ontario, a town close to Ottawa. He played rugby football (a forerunner to Canadian football), joining the Ottawa Rough Riders in 1909 as a halfback, helping them win the Interprovincial Rugby Football Union title that year. He continued playing for the Rough Riders until 1913, leaving the team when he turned professional with the Senators. As Canadian football was strictly amateur at the time, Gerard would have been unable to continue in the sport if he became a professional athlete.",
"List of people from Quebec City\nAlfred Bailey (1905-1997), farmer, educator, poet, anthropologist ; Steve Barakatt (b. 1973), musician ; Marty Barry (1905-1969), former NHL player ; Myriam Bédard (b. 1969), biathlon, three Olympic medals ; Johanne Bégin (b. 1971), water polo, 2000 Summer Olympics ; Patrice Bergeron (b. 1985), NHL player for the Boston Bruins ; Steve Bernier (b. 1985), NHL player ; Sylvie Bernier (b. 1964), diving, gold medal, 1984 Summer Olympics ; Martin Biron (b. 1977), NHL goaltender ; Mathieu Biron (b. 1980), NHL player ; Céline Bonnier (b. 1965), actor ; Gaétan Boucher (b. 1958), speed skating, four Olympic medals ; Francis Bouillon (b. 1975), NHL player for the Nashville Predators ",
"Alain Langlais\n Joseph Alfred Langlais (born October 9, 1950) is a former professional ice hockey player who played 25 games in the National Hockey League. He played with the Minnesota North Stars. As a youth, he played in the 1963 Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament with a minor ice hockey team from Lévis, Quebec.",
"List of multi-sport athletes\n Black Yankees (1941 and 1947) and Philadelphia Stars (1947 and 1948). ; Red Storey – played six seasons and won the Grey Cup twice with the Toronto Argonauts, but also was an all-star in the Ontario Lacrosse Association and played with the Montreal Royals minor hockey team. Finally, he was a referee in the Canadian Football League (12 years) and in the National Hockey League (9 years.) ; Luc Tousignant – all-star college football player, he was the first French Canadian starting QB with the Montreal Concordes, having previously represented Canada in handball at the 1976 Summer Olympic games in Montreal. ",
"Laurien Willemse\n Laura (\"Laurien\") Eveline Gales-Willemse (born 26 March 1962 in Haarlem, North Holland) is a former Dutch field hockey defender, who won the golden medal with the National Women's Team at the 1984 Summer Olympics. She played club hockey for NMHC Nijmegen and HGC from Wassenaar. Four years later in Seoul she captured the bronze medal with the national side. From 1981 to 1988 she played a total number of 63 international matches for Holland, in which she scored eleven goals. Willemse retired after the 1988 Summer Olympics in South Korea.",
"Laurier Macdonald High School\n Laurier Macdonald was traditionally strong in basketball and football. During the 1980s, the school also won titles in swimming and volleyball. Since the 1990s, the school's strongest showings, including several championships, have been in soccer, track and field and flag football. During the 2003 outdoor season a milestone was achieved when Coach Sam Longo led both the senior and junior men's team to the GMAA championships. This achievement was displayed in The Montreal Gazette. Greats from the senior teams included Brian Ceterina, goalie. Several players from the squad have played for Quebec's provincial team including Massimo Di Ioia who played for the Canadian U20 national team and signed a pro contract with the Montreal Impact for the 2007 season. He led the team in scoring with an outstanding 27 goals in 12 regular season games and was named MVP for the men's soccer team. Many of the championship teams are honoured with mosaics in the school's sports complex. Championship banners hang in the gymnasium.",
"Alexandre Texier\n Texier's father, Fabrice, was also a hockey player, and introduced his son to the sport. Fabrice played four games in the 1986–87 season with the Laval Titan, spending the rest of his career in France, mainly with the Brûleurs de Loups.",
"Nicolas Roy\n Roy played minor ice hockey for the Rouyn-Noranda Huskies Bantam AA in the MMBAA during the 2010–11 season. He began his Quebec midget AAA hockey career at the age of 14 with the Amos Forestiers. In his rookie season with the team, he played in 43 regular season games as he led the team to the QMAAA quarterfinals. As a result of his play, Roy was invited to attend the Allstate All-Canadians mentorship camp in 2012. He also competed for Team Québec White at the QGC-16 in 2013 and received the QMAAA's Prospect Award.",
"Denis Cyr\n As a youth, he played in the 1974 Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament with a minor ice hockey team from Verdun, Quebec. Cyr started his notable hockey career with the Montreal Juniors of the QMJHL. He was promptly put on a line with boyhood friends Denis Savard and Denis Tremblay in a line that was dubbed, \"Les Trois Denis\". They also shared more than first names, as they were all born on February 4, 1961 and also grew up together in the same Verdun neighbourhood. Savard, the most famous of the three and Hockey Hall of Fame member, asked \"What are the odds of that when you think about it. We played together as kids from age eight all the way through until I turned pro.\" . The line would play two full ",
"Denis Cyr\n Denis Cyr (born February 4, 1961) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey right winger who played in the National Hockey League for the Calgary Flames, Chicago Black Hawks, and St. Louis Blues. He was also a member of the famous junior line, \"Les Trois Denis\", while a member of the Montreal Juniors of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League.",
"François-Henri Désérable\n François-Henri Désérable was also a professional ice-hockey player. In 2002-03, he played for Wayzata High School, in the American state of Minnesota. Coming from the junior team of the Gothiques d'Amiens, with which he had won, in 2007, the French junior championship, he made his senior debut with LHC Les Lions in 2008. In April 2011, he helped the Lions reach the final of the French D2 championship, moving the team up to Division 1. The same year, he was selected among the finalists of the Lions du Sport in the category Best Athlete in Lyon. He then played two seasons with the Montpellier Vipers, before moving to Paris where he played one more season with the Français Volants before hanging up his skates in 2016, at age 29.",
"Sylvain Grenier\n As a child, Grenier lived with his Parents in Varennes, Québec. Grenier played baseball, tennis and hockey at an amateur level. Grenier worked as a model.",
"Eric LeMarque\n Growing up in the United States, he played Division I college ice hockey with the Northern Michigan University Wildcats from 1987 to 1991. He was drafted by the Boston Bruins of the NHL at 17-years old with the 224th pick in the 1987 draft. He played the majority of his career in France, where he won three straight national championships from 1994 to 1996, and in Germany. He was selected to the French national ice hockey team and competed with the team at the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway, where he netted one goal in five games, and at the IHW World Championships in 1994 and 1995. He retired from hockey during the 1999-2000 season and took up snowboarding focusing on the X-Games.",
"Arthur Bernier\n Art played intermediate hockey for Belleville in the Ontario Hockey Association in the 1903–04 season. He joined the Canadian army in 1904 and played hockey for the Kingston 14th Regiment in Senior OHA play for three seasons from 1906–1909. He joined the Montreal Canadiens in the team's inaugural 1910 season and played the full 12 game season. He was among the scorers in the Canadiens first-ever game, a 7-6 win against Cobalt in which his mother was hurt in the stands by a stick due to the lack of protective coverage for the viewers in attendance. He played 3 games for the Galt Professionals after the NHA season was finished. He returned to the Canadiens for the 1910–11 and only played in 3 games. The next season, he joined the Wanderers and played in 10 games, scoring 4 goals.",
"Jean Henri Lhuillier\n Jean Henri has helped athletes in representing the Philippines in international tournaments and has supported programs that aim for the development of the youth through sports such as basketball, tennis, and softball. He was recently awarded as the Sportsman of the Year in the 36th Sportswriter Association of Cebu Awards. He has supported the sports scene in the Philippines for more than three decades. Lhuillier was recognized for his efforts in sports grassroots development and support to national teams in softball and tennis in the country. He has also majorly contributed to the successful campaigns of the RP Blu Boys in the past years as well as the fruitful Tokyo 2020 Olympics campaign of the ",
"Ed Millaire\n Edouard Millaire (September 18, 1882 – November 16, 1949 ) was an amateur and later professional ice hockey player from 1898 until 1912. He is one of the first francophone players to play in senior-level ice hockey in Canada, the sport having been dominated to that time by the anglophone community in Montreal. He is an original Montreal Canadiens player."
] |
What sport does Francisco David González Borges play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | David González (footballer, born 1981) | 6,289,083 | 60 | [
{
"id": "7722220",
"title": "David González (footballer, born 1981)",
"text": " Francisco David González Borges (born 25 August 1981) is a Spanish footballer who plays as a midfielder for UD Tamaraceite.",
"score": "1.9006943"
},
{
"id": "32705218",
"title": "David González (footballer, born 1982)",
"text": " In 2004, González was called up to take part of the 2004 CONMEBOL Men Pre-Olympic Tournament disputed in Chile. He played for the senior team in a 2–1 win against South Korea in 15 January 2005.",
"score": "1.7756091"
},
{
"id": "15188131",
"title": "David González (skateboarder)",
"text": " González is a Street League competitor and placed 7th at the Ontario, California event in 2012. As of 2013, his best X Games result is 9th place for the street skateboarding event.",
"score": "1.6971323"
},
{
"id": "28658963",
"title": "David González (footballer, born 1986)",
"text": " He was with the Swiss U-19 squad which finished bottom in the qualifying group in 2005 UEFA European Under-19 Football Championship. He also with the Swiss U-20 sides which finished bottom of the final group at 2005 FIFA World Youth Championship, as 3rd goalkeeper.",
"score": "1.6797212"
},
{
"id": "16406439",
"title": "Enrique González (field hockey)",
"text": " González was a part of the Spain squad which won the bronze medal at the 2014 Youth Olympic Games in Nanjing, China. He played in two Junior World Cups. He was named the best player of the 2016 Junior World Cup.",
"score": "1.6721058"
},
{
"id": "8385681",
"title": "Antonio González (field hockey)",
"text": " Antonio González Izquierdo (born 13 October 1969) is a former field hockey goalkeeper from Spain, who won the silver medal with the Men's National Team at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. He also participated in the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona.",
"score": "1.6598481"
},
{
"id": "28658961",
"title": "David González (footballer, born 1986)",
"text": " David González (born 9 November 1986) is a former Swiss football goalkeeper.",
"score": "1.6431506"
},
{
"id": "7670331",
"title": "José Borges",
"text": " José Borges (1882 – after 1909) was a Cuban baseball pitcher and second baseman in the Cuban League and Negro leagues. He played from 1902 to 1909 with several clubs, including Almendares, Nuevo Criollo and Club Fé, as well as competing in the Negro leagues for the Cuban Stars.",
"score": "1.6417136"
},
{
"id": "10076528",
"title": "Francisco González (footballer, born 1988)",
"text": " .",
"score": "1.6397605"
},
{
"id": "32705212",
"title": "David González (footballer, born 1982)",
"text": " Born in Medellín, González began his career at his hometown club Independiente Medellín. In 2002, at the age of 20, he became the youngest goalkeeping champion in the history of Colombian football. In 2006, he moved to Deportivo Cali, before going to Çaykur Rizespor, where he spent two seasons. In 2009, he spent a short time at Club Atlético Huracán in Argentina before becoming a free agent. González has played over 300 professional club games in South America and Turkey along with the SPL and the English Championship.",
"score": "1.6193539"
},
{
"id": "28749745",
"title": "Francisco González (tennis)",
"text": " Francisco González (born November 19, 1955) played professional tennis in the 1970s and 1980s. He represented Paraguay in Davis Cup and played collegiate tennis at the Ohio State University. González was ranked as high as world no. 34 in singles, achieved in July 1978, and no. 22 in doubles in November 1984. The biggest singles final of his career was at Cincinnati in 1980, defeating Jimmy Connors in the semifinals 6–2, 7–6 before falling to Harold Solomon.",
"score": "1.6095719"
},
{
"id": "6202876",
"title": "Humberlito Borges",
"text": " In 2006 Borges attracted the attention of Japanese team Vegalta Sendai. Whilst playing for them, he was top scorer in the J2 League for 2006.",
"score": "1.6085681"
},
{
"id": "434060",
"title": "Maximiliano González",
"text": " Maximiliano David González (born 12 March 1994) is an Argentine professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for San Martín.",
"score": "1.6055404"
},
{
"id": "13382627",
"title": "Francisco Maciel",
"text": " Francisco Maciel García (born 7 January 1964) is a former tennis player from Mexico. He represented his native country as a qualifier at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, where he was defeated in the first round by Switzerland's Jakob Hlasek. He won the silver medal at the 1984 Summer Olympics, when tennis was a demonstration sport. The right-hander reached his highest singles ATP-ranking in June 1986, when he became world No. 35.",
"score": "1.6038442"
},
{
"id": "30931884",
"title": "Henry Borges",
"text": " Henry Borges (born 30 April 1983) is a blind Uruguayan Paralympic judoka who competes in international level events. He was the first Uruguayan Paralympic competitor to participate in three Paralympic Games, his highest achievement was reaching the bronze medal match at 2016 Summer Paralympics and lost to Alex Bologa.",
"score": "1.6016853"
},
{
"id": "15188124",
"title": "David González (skateboarder)",
"text": " David González (born 9 August 1990) is a Colombian professional skateboarder. In December 2012, he was named Thrasher magazine's \"Skater of the Year\".",
"score": "1.5980219"
},
{
"id": "7464255",
"title": "Francisco Pagazaurtundúa",
"text": " Francisco \"Pagaza\" Pagazaurtundúa González-Murrieta (22 October 1894 – 18 November 1958) was a Spanish football (soccer) player who competed in the 1920 Summer Olympics. He was born in Santurtzi. He was a member of the Spanish team, which won the silver medal in the football tournament.",
"score": "1.5965977"
},
{
"id": "28749746",
"title": "Francisco González (tennis)",
"text": "1980--Cincinnati Masters ; 1984—Brisbane 1984--Cincinnati Masters, Johannesburg, Brisbane, Cleveland ; 1983—Florence, Rome, Venice ; 1982--Melbourne Indoor ; 1979—Sydney Indoor, Tulsa 1986—Chicago, Newport, Metz ; 1983—Cleveland ; 1982—Dortmund WCT, Maui ; 1980—Tulsa ; 1979—Maui, Tokyo Outdoor, Cleveland Singles Finals (2): Career Doubles Titles (10): Career Doubles Finals (10): Francisco González has been the head tennis professional at Sierra Sport & Racquet Club since 1998. He had career wins over Ivan Lendl, Jimmy Connors, Stefan Edberg, Andrés Gómez, Vitas Gerulaitis, Yannick Noah, Eliot Teltscher, Johan Kriek, and Henri Leconte.",
"score": "1.5951877"
},
{
"id": "28496830",
"title": "Mario David",
"text": " At international level, David played for the Italy national football team between 1958 and 1962. He is also remembered for his confrontation with Leonel Sánchez against hosts Chile in the infamous \"Battle of Santiago\" in the first round of the 1962 FIFA World Cup, which led to him being sent off: after being fouled by David, Sánchez initially punched him in retaliation; David kicked Sanchez in the head a few minutes later, and as a result he was sent off. Chile won the match 2–0, and Italy were eliminated in the first round of the tournament.",
"score": "1.592721"
},
{
"id": "15054297",
"title": "David González (footballer, born 1993)",
"text": " González was nicknamed Roni by his former Vetusta manager Iván Ania, who saw a player with physical strengths similar as of Ronaldo.",
"score": "1.5905383"
}
] | [
"David González (footballer, born 1981)\n Francisco David González Borges (born 25 August 1981) is a Spanish footballer who plays as a midfielder for UD Tamaraceite.",
"David González (footballer, born 1982)\n In 2004, González was called up to take part of the 2004 CONMEBOL Men Pre-Olympic Tournament disputed in Chile. He played for the senior team in a 2–1 win against South Korea in 15 January 2005.",
"David González (skateboarder)\n González is a Street League competitor and placed 7th at the Ontario, California event in 2012. As of 2013, his best X Games result is 9th place for the street skateboarding event.",
"David González (footballer, born 1986)\n He was with the Swiss U-19 squad which finished bottom in the qualifying group in 2005 UEFA European Under-19 Football Championship. He also with the Swiss U-20 sides which finished bottom of the final group at 2005 FIFA World Youth Championship, as 3rd goalkeeper.",
"Enrique González (field hockey)\n González was a part of the Spain squad which won the bronze medal at the 2014 Youth Olympic Games in Nanjing, China. He played in two Junior World Cups. He was named the best player of the 2016 Junior World Cup.",
"Antonio González (field hockey)\n Antonio González Izquierdo (born 13 October 1969) is a former field hockey goalkeeper from Spain, who won the silver medal with the Men's National Team at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. He also participated in the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona.",
"David González (footballer, born 1986)\n David González (born 9 November 1986) is a former Swiss football goalkeeper.",
"José Borges\n José Borges (1882 – after 1909) was a Cuban baseball pitcher and second baseman in the Cuban League and Negro leagues. He played from 1902 to 1909 with several clubs, including Almendares, Nuevo Criollo and Club Fé, as well as competing in the Negro leagues for the Cuban Stars.",
"Francisco González (footballer, born 1988)\n .",
"David González (footballer, born 1982)\n Born in Medellín, González began his career at his hometown club Independiente Medellín. In 2002, at the age of 20, he became the youngest goalkeeping champion in the history of Colombian football. In 2006, he moved to Deportivo Cali, before going to Çaykur Rizespor, where he spent two seasons. In 2009, he spent a short time at Club Atlético Huracán in Argentina before becoming a free agent. González has played over 300 professional club games in South America and Turkey along with the SPL and the English Championship.",
"Francisco González (tennis)\n Francisco González (born November 19, 1955) played professional tennis in the 1970s and 1980s. He represented Paraguay in Davis Cup and played collegiate tennis at the Ohio State University. González was ranked as high as world no. 34 in singles, achieved in July 1978, and no. 22 in doubles in November 1984. The biggest singles final of his career was at Cincinnati in 1980, defeating Jimmy Connors in the semifinals 6–2, 7–6 before falling to Harold Solomon.",
"Humberlito Borges\n In 2006 Borges attracted the attention of Japanese team Vegalta Sendai. Whilst playing for them, he was top scorer in the J2 League for 2006.",
"Maximiliano González\n Maximiliano David González (born 12 March 1994) is an Argentine professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for San Martín.",
"Francisco Maciel\n Francisco Maciel García (born 7 January 1964) is a former tennis player from Mexico. He represented his native country as a qualifier at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, where he was defeated in the first round by Switzerland's Jakob Hlasek. He won the silver medal at the 1984 Summer Olympics, when tennis was a demonstration sport. The right-hander reached his highest singles ATP-ranking in June 1986, when he became world No. 35.",
"Henry Borges\n Henry Borges (born 30 April 1983) is a blind Uruguayan Paralympic judoka who competes in international level events. He was the first Uruguayan Paralympic competitor to participate in three Paralympic Games, his highest achievement was reaching the bronze medal match at 2016 Summer Paralympics and lost to Alex Bologa.",
"David González (skateboarder)\n David González (born 9 August 1990) is a Colombian professional skateboarder. In December 2012, he was named Thrasher magazine's \"Skater of the Year\".",
"Francisco Pagazaurtundúa\n Francisco \"Pagaza\" Pagazaurtundúa González-Murrieta (22 October 1894 – 18 November 1958) was a Spanish football (soccer) player who competed in the 1920 Summer Olympics. He was born in Santurtzi. He was a member of the Spanish team, which won the silver medal in the football tournament.",
"Francisco González (tennis)\n1980--Cincinnati Masters ; 1984—Brisbane 1984--Cincinnati Masters, Johannesburg, Brisbane, Cleveland ; 1983—Florence, Rome, Venice ; 1982--Melbourne Indoor ; 1979—Sydney Indoor, Tulsa 1986—Chicago, Newport, Metz ; 1983—Cleveland ; 1982—Dortmund WCT, Maui ; 1980—Tulsa ; 1979—Maui, Tokyo Outdoor, Cleveland Singles Finals (2): Career Doubles Titles (10): Career Doubles Finals (10): Francisco González has been the head tennis professional at Sierra Sport & Racquet Club since 1998. He had career wins over Ivan Lendl, Jimmy Connors, Stefan Edberg, Andrés Gómez, Vitas Gerulaitis, Yannick Noah, Eliot Teltscher, Johan Kriek, and Henri Leconte.",
"Mario David\n At international level, David played for the Italy national football team between 1958 and 1962. He is also remembered for his confrontation with Leonel Sánchez against hosts Chile in the infamous \"Battle of Santiago\" in the first round of the 1962 FIFA World Cup, which led to him being sent off: after being fouled by David, Sánchez initially punched him in retaliation; David kicked Sanchez in the head a few minutes later, and as a result he was sent off. Chile won the match 2–0, and Italy were eliminated in the first round of the tournament.",
"David González (footballer, born 1993)\n González was nicknamed Roni by his former Vetusta manager Iván Ania, who saw a player with physical strengths similar as of Ronaldo."
] |
What sport does 1989–90 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season play? | [
"ice hockey"
] | sport | 1989–90 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season | 1,246,258 | 28 | [
{
"id": "16235538",
"title": "1989–90 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season",
"text": " The '''1989–90 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 21st season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 12 teams participated in the league, and Slovan ChZJD Bratislava won the championship and were promoted to the Czechoslovak First Ice Hockey League. Plastika Nitra was also promoted.",
"score": "2.1506538"
},
{
"id": "16235535",
"title": "1988–89 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season",
"text": " The '''1988–89 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 20th season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 12 teams participated in the league, and Partizán Liptovský Mikuláš won the championship. ZŤS Martin and ZVL Skalica relegated.",
"score": "2.0971599"
},
{
"id": "16235541",
"title": "1990–91 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season",
"text": " The '''1990–91 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 22nd season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 12 teams participated in the league, and ŠKP PS Poprad won the championship and was promoted to the Czechoslovak First Ice Hockey League. Slávia Ekonóm Bratislava was relegated.",
"score": "2.0932045"
},
{
"id": "16235534",
"title": "1987–88 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season",
"text": " The '''1987–88 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 19th season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 12 teams participated in the league, and TJ Plastika Nitra won the championship. TJ Gumárne 1. mája Púchov was relegated.",
"score": "2.0593505"
},
{
"id": "16235532",
"title": "1986–87 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season",
"text": " The '''1986–87 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 18th season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 12 teams participated in the league, and TJ Plastika Nitra won the championship. Slávia Ekonóm Bratislava was relegated.",
"score": "2.0319397"
},
{
"id": "16235571",
"title": "1992–93 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season",
"text": " The game between AC Nitra and VTJ Topoľčany was stopped during the second period due to an explosion. The game was scheduled to be replayed, but it was eventually cancelled.",
"score": "2.0130036"
},
{
"id": "16235542",
"title": "1991–92 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season",
"text": " The '''1991–92 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 23rd season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 12 teams participated in the league, and AC Nitra won the championship. Sparta ZVL Považská Bystrica was relegated.",
"score": "2.00515"
},
{
"id": "16235570",
"title": "1992–93 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season",
"text": " The '''1992–93 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 24th and last season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 12 teams participated in the league, and AC Nitra won the championship. The top six teams in the league were promoted to the Slovak Extraliga for the following season, while the bottom six teams joined the Slovak 1.Liga",
"score": "1.9999268"
},
{
"id": "16235525",
"title": "1985–86 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season",
"text": " The '''1985–86 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 17th season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 10 teams participated in the league, and VTJ Michalovce won the championship. ZVL Žilina was relegated.",
"score": "1.9620593"
},
{
"id": "16235513",
"title": "1984–85 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season",
"text": " The '''1984–85 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 16th season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 10 teams participated in the league, and PS Poprad won the championship. Slávia Ekonóm Bratislava was relegated.",
"score": "1.9210424"
},
{
"id": "5488236",
"title": "1975–76 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season",
"text": " The '''1975–76 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 7th season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 12 teams participated in the league, and TJ Lokomotíva Bučina Zvolen won the championship. TJ Spartak BEZ Bratislava relegated.",
"score": "1.7679405"
},
{
"id": "33048007",
"title": "1940–41 Národní liga",
"text": " The 1940–41 Národní liga (English: National league) was the second season of the Národní liga, the first tier of league football in the Nazi Germany-annexed Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia which had been part of Czechoslovakia until March 1939. The Czech championship was won by Slavia Prague, and Josef Bican was the league's top scorer with 38 goals. Czech clubs in what was now the German-annexed Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia continued their own league which was variously referred to as the Národní liga (English: National league), Bohemia/Moravia championship or Česko-moravská liga (English: Bohemian-Moravian league) while ethnic-German clubs played in the German Gauliga Sudetenland. In the Slovak Republic an independent Slovak league, the Slovenská liga, had been established in 1939 and played out its own championship which was won by ŠK Bratislava in the 1940–41 season. A national Czechoslovak championship was not played between 1939 and 1945.",
"score": "1.7355242"
},
{
"id": "7496387",
"title": "1940–41 Slovenská liga",
"text": " The 1940–41 Slovenská liga (English:Slovak league) was the third season of the Slovenská liga, the first tier of league football in the Slovak Republic, formerly part of Czechoslovakia until the German occupation of the country in March 1939. In the Slovak Republic an independent Slovak league had been established in 1939 and played out its own championship which was won by ŠK Bratislava in 1940–41. In the German-annexed Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia a separate league, the Národní liga (English:National league), was played and won by Slavia Prague in the 1940–41 season. A national Czechoslovak championship was not played between 1939 and 1945.",
"score": "1.7310994"
},
{
"id": "16304535",
"title": "Slovenská hokejová liga",
"text": " The Slovenská hokejová liga (Slovak Hockey League) is a professional ice hockey league composed of ten (plus one) teams in Slovakia. It is the second-level ice hockey league in Slovakia. Prior to its 2019 name change, it used to be known as '''1. Hokejova Liga (1HL), or St. Nicolaus 1HL''' due to a sponsorship agreement with spirits brand St. Nicolaus Trade.",
"score": "1.7195938"
},
{
"id": "11526208",
"title": "2012–13 2. národní hokejová liga season",
"text": " The '''2012–13 2. národní hokejová liga season''' was the 20th season of the 2nd Czech Republic Hockey League, the third level of ice hockey in the Czech Republic. 30 teams participated in the league, and VSK Technika Brno, AZ Havířov, and HC Tábor qualified for the qualification round of the 1st Czech Republic Hockey League.",
"score": "1.7167873"
},
{
"id": "33048005",
"title": "1939–40 Národní liga",
"text": " The 1939–40 Národní liga (English: National league) was the first season of the Národní liga, the first tier of league football in the Nazi Germany-annexed Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia which had been part of Czechoslovakia until March 1939. The Czech championship was won by Slavia Prague, and Josef Bican was the league's top scorer with 50 goals. Czech clubs in what was now the German-annexed Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia continued their own league which was variously referred to as the Národní liga (English: National league), Bohemia/Moravia championship or Česko-moravská liga (English: Bohemian-Moravian league) while ethnic-German clubs played in the German Gauliga Sudetenland. In the Slovak Republic an independent Slovak league, the Slovenská liga, had been established in 1939 and played out its own championship which was won by ŠK Bratislava in the 1939–40 season. A national Czechoslovak championship was not played between 1939 and 1945.",
"score": "1.7028813"
},
{
"id": "4854461",
"title": "1939–40 Slovenská liga",
"text": " The 1939–40 Slovenská liga (English:Slovak league) was the second season of the Slovenská liga, the first tier of league football in the Slovak Republic, formerly part of Czechoslovakia until the German occupation of the country in March 1939. In the Slovak Republic an independent Slovak league had been established in 1939 and played out its own championship which was won by ŠK Bratislava in 1939–40. In the German-annexed Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia a separate league, the Národní liga (English:National league), was played and won by Slavia Prague in the 1939–40 season. A national Czechoslovak championship was not played between 1939 and 1945.",
"score": "1.702273"
},
{
"id": "33048011",
"title": "1942–43 Národní liga",
"text": " The 1942–43 Národní liga (English: National league) was the fourth season of the Národní liga, the first tier of league football in the Nazi Germany-annexed Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia which had been part of Czechoslovakia until March 1939. The Czech championship was won by Slavia Prague, and Josef Bican was the league's top scorer with 39 goals. Czech clubs in what was now the German-annexed Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia continued their own league which was variously referred to as the Národní liga (English: National league), Bohemia/Moravia championship or Česko-moravská liga (English: Bohemian-Moravian league) while ethnic-German clubs played in the German Gauliga Sudetenland. In the Slovak Republic an independent Slovak league, the Slovenská liga, had been established in 1939 and played out its own championship which was won by OAP Bratislava in the 1942–43 season. A national Czechoslovak championship was not played between 1939 and 1945.",
"score": "1.6991827"
},
{
"id": "11374644",
"title": "1989–90 Polska Liga Hokejowa season",
"text": "Polonia Bytom - GKS Tychy 2:0 (6:3, 4:3) ; Zagłębie Sosnowiec - KS Cracovia 2:1 (5:1, 2:6, 6:3) ; Podhale Nowy Targ - Towimor Torun 2:0 (6:0, 5:3) ; Naprzód Janów - GKS Katowice 2:1 (1:3, 5:3, 6:3) ",
"score": "1.6957722"
},
{
"id": "11374645",
"title": "1989–90 Polska Liga Hokejowa season",
"text": "Polonia Bytom - Naprzód Janów 2:0 (10:2, 7:1) ; Podhale Nowy Targ - Zagłębie Sosnowiec 2:0 (3:2, 5:2) ",
"score": "1.6953182"
}
] | [
"1989–90 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season\n The '''1989–90 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 21st season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 12 teams participated in the league, and Slovan ChZJD Bratislava won the championship and were promoted to the Czechoslovak First Ice Hockey League. Plastika Nitra was also promoted.",
"1988–89 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season\n The '''1988–89 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 20th season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 12 teams participated in the league, and Partizán Liptovský Mikuláš won the championship. ZŤS Martin and ZVL Skalica relegated.",
"1990–91 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season\n The '''1990–91 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 22nd season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 12 teams participated in the league, and ŠKP PS Poprad won the championship and was promoted to the Czechoslovak First Ice Hockey League. Slávia Ekonóm Bratislava was relegated.",
"1987–88 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season\n The '''1987–88 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 19th season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 12 teams participated in the league, and TJ Plastika Nitra won the championship. TJ Gumárne 1. mája Púchov was relegated.",
"1986–87 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season\n The '''1986–87 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 18th season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 12 teams participated in the league, and TJ Plastika Nitra won the championship. Slávia Ekonóm Bratislava was relegated.",
"1992–93 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season\n The game between AC Nitra and VTJ Topoľčany was stopped during the second period due to an explosion. The game was scheduled to be replayed, but it was eventually cancelled.",
"1991–92 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season\n The '''1991–92 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 23rd season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 12 teams participated in the league, and AC Nitra won the championship. Sparta ZVL Považská Bystrica was relegated.",
"1992–93 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season\n The '''1992–93 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 24th and last season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 12 teams participated in the league, and AC Nitra won the championship. The top six teams in the league were promoted to the Slovak Extraliga for the following season, while the bottom six teams joined the Slovak 1.Liga",
"1985–86 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season\n The '''1985–86 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 17th season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 10 teams participated in the league, and VTJ Michalovce won the championship. ZVL Žilina was relegated.",
"1984–85 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season\n The '''1984–85 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 16th season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 10 teams participated in the league, and PS Poprad won the championship. Slávia Ekonóm Bratislava was relegated.",
"1975–76 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season\n The '''1975–76 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga season''' was the 7th season of the 1. Slovenská národná hokejová liga, the second level of ice hockey in Czechoslovakia alongside the 1. Česká národní hokejová liga. 12 teams participated in the league, and TJ Lokomotíva Bučina Zvolen won the championship. TJ Spartak BEZ Bratislava relegated.",
"1940–41 Národní liga\n The 1940–41 Národní liga (English: National league) was the second season of the Národní liga, the first tier of league football in the Nazi Germany-annexed Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia which had been part of Czechoslovakia until March 1939. The Czech championship was won by Slavia Prague, and Josef Bican was the league's top scorer with 38 goals. Czech clubs in what was now the German-annexed Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia continued their own league which was variously referred to as the Národní liga (English: National league), Bohemia/Moravia championship or Česko-moravská liga (English: Bohemian-Moravian league) while ethnic-German clubs played in the German Gauliga Sudetenland. In the Slovak Republic an independent Slovak league, the Slovenská liga, had been established in 1939 and played out its own championship which was won by ŠK Bratislava in the 1940–41 season. A national Czechoslovak championship was not played between 1939 and 1945.",
"1940–41 Slovenská liga\n The 1940–41 Slovenská liga (English:Slovak league) was the third season of the Slovenská liga, the first tier of league football in the Slovak Republic, formerly part of Czechoslovakia until the German occupation of the country in March 1939. In the Slovak Republic an independent Slovak league had been established in 1939 and played out its own championship which was won by ŠK Bratislava in 1940–41. In the German-annexed Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia a separate league, the Národní liga (English:National league), was played and won by Slavia Prague in the 1940–41 season. A national Czechoslovak championship was not played between 1939 and 1945.",
"Slovenská hokejová liga\n The Slovenská hokejová liga (Slovak Hockey League) is a professional ice hockey league composed of ten (plus one) teams in Slovakia. It is the second-level ice hockey league in Slovakia. Prior to its 2019 name change, it used to be known as '''1. Hokejova Liga (1HL), or St. Nicolaus 1HL''' due to a sponsorship agreement with spirits brand St. Nicolaus Trade.",
"2012–13 2. národní hokejová liga season\n The '''2012–13 2. národní hokejová liga season''' was the 20th season of the 2nd Czech Republic Hockey League, the third level of ice hockey in the Czech Republic. 30 teams participated in the league, and VSK Technika Brno, AZ Havířov, and HC Tábor qualified for the qualification round of the 1st Czech Republic Hockey League.",
"1939–40 Národní liga\n The 1939–40 Národní liga (English: National league) was the first season of the Národní liga, the first tier of league football in the Nazi Germany-annexed Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia which had been part of Czechoslovakia until March 1939. The Czech championship was won by Slavia Prague, and Josef Bican was the league's top scorer with 50 goals. Czech clubs in what was now the German-annexed Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia continued their own league which was variously referred to as the Národní liga (English: National league), Bohemia/Moravia championship or Česko-moravská liga (English: Bohemian-Moravian league) while ethnic-German clubs played in the German Gauliga Sudetenland. In the Slovak Republic an independent Slovak league, the Slovenská liga, had been established in 1939 and played out its own championship which was won by ŠK Bratislava in the 1939–40 season. A national Czechoslovak championship was not played between 1939 and 1945.",
"1939–40 Slovenská liga\n The 1939–40 Slovenská liga (English:Slovak league) was the second season of the Slovenská liga, the first tier of league football in the Slovak Republic, formerly part of Czechoslovakia until the German occupation of the country in March 1939. In the Slovak Republic an independent Slovak league had been established in 1939 and played out its own championship which was won by ŠK Bratislava in 1939–40. In the German-annexed Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia a separate league, the Národní liga (English:National league), was played and won by Slavia Prague in the 1939–40 season. A national Czechoslovak championship was not played between 1939 and 1945.",
"1942–43 Národní liga\n The 1942–43 Národní liga (English: National league) was the fourth season of the Národní liga, the first tier of league football in the Nazi Germany-annexed Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia which had been part of Czechoslovakia until March 1939. The Czech championship was won by Slavia Prague, and Josef Bican was the league's top scorer with 39 goals. Czech clubs in what was now the German-annexed Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia continued their own league which was variously referred to as the Národní liga (English: National league), Bohemia/Moravia championship or Česko-moravská liga (English: Bohemian-Moravian league) while ethnic-German clubs played in the German Gauliga Sudetenland. In the Slovak Republic an independent Slovak league, the Slovenská liga, had been established in 1939 and played out its own championship which was won by OAP Bratislava in the 1942–43 season. A national Czechoslovak championship was not played between 1939 and 1945.",
"1989–90 Polska Liga Hokejowa season\nPolonia Bytom - GKS Tychy 2:0 (6:3, 4:3) ; Zagłębie Sosnowiec - KS Cracovia 2:1 (5:1, 2:6, 6:3) ; Podhale Nowy Targ - Towimor Torun 2:0 (6:0, 5:3) ; Naprzód Janów - GKS Katowice 2:1 (1:3, 5:3, 6:3) ",
"1989–90 Polska Liga Hokejowa season\nPolonia Bytom - Naprzód Janów 2:0 (10:2, 7:1) ; Podhale Nowy Targ - Zagłębie Sosnowiec 2:0 (3:2, 5:2) "
] |
What sport does 1923 in Brazilian football play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | 1923 in Brazilian football | 3,135,573 | 59 | [
{
"id": "31257303",
"title": "1923 in Brazilian football",
"text": " The following article presents a summary of the 1923 football (soccer) season in Brazil, which was the 22nd season of competitive football in the country.",
"score": "1.8976507"
},
{
"id": "31257059",
"title": "1924 in Brazilian football",
"text": " The Brazil national football team did not play any matches in 1924.",
"score": "1.8735179"
},
{
"id": "31257305",
"title": "1923 in Brazilian football",
"text": " The following table lists all the games played by the Brazil national football team in official competitions and friendly matches during 1923.",
"score": "1.8730295"
},
{
"id": "31257057",
"title": "1924 in Brazilian football",
"text": " The following article presents a summary of the 1924 football (soccer) season in Brazil, which was the 23rd season of competitive football in the country.",
"score": "1.8499563"
},
{
"id": "31377058",
"title": "1922 in Brazilian football",
"text": " The following table lists all the games played by the Brazil national football team in official competitions and friendly matches during 1922.",
"score": "1.7997313"
},
{
"id": "31377056",
"title": "1922 in Brazilian football",
"text": " The following article presents a summary of the 1922 football (soccer) season in Brazil, which was the 21st season of competitive football in the country.",
"score": "1.7970225"
},
{
"id": "31256938",
"title": "1925 in Brazilian football",
"text": " The following table lists all the games played by the Brazil national football team in official competitions and friendly matches during 1925.",
"score": "1.7856019"
},
{
"id": "31256936",
"title": "1925 in Brazilian football",
"text": " The following article presents a summary of the 1925 football (soccer) season in Brazil, which was the 24th season of competitive football in the country.",
"score": "1.7810757"
},
{
"id": "7618288",
"title": "1923 Campeonato Paulista",
"text": " The 1923 Campeonato Paulista, organized by the APEA (Associação Paulista de Esportes Atléticos), was the 22nd season of São Paulo's top association football league. Corinthians won the title for the 4th time. the top scorer was São Bento's Feitiço with 18 goals.",
"score": "1.743474"
},
{
"id": "29966928",
"title": "1922 in association football",
"text": "1922 British Home Championship (October 22, 1921 – April 8, 1922) South American Championship 1922 in Brazil (September 17, 1922 – October 22, 1922) ; 🇧🇷 brazil ",
"score": "1.7406723"
},
{
"id": "31257304",
"title": "1923 in Brazilian football",
"text": " Final Stage Corinthians declared as the Campeonato Paulista champions.",
"score": "1.727189"
},
{
"id": "8628170",
"title": "1923 Campeonato Carioca",
"text": " The 1923 Campeonato Carioca, the eighteenth edition of that championship, kicked off on April 15, 1923 and ended on October 14, 1923. It was organized by LMDT (Liga Metropolitana de Desportos Terrestres, or Metropolitan Land Sports League). Sixteen teams participated. Vasco da Gama won the title for the 1st time. No teams were relegated.",
"score": "1.7246139"
},
{
"id": "3055380",
"title": "October 1922",
"text": "Brazil won the South American Championship of football with a 3–0 win over Paraguay. ; Born: John Chafee, politician, in Providence, Rhode Island (d. 1999) ",
"score": "1.7130681"
},
{
"id": "28107322",
"title": "1923 in Brazil",
"text": "Rio Grande do Norte: ; São Paulo: ",
"score": "1.7123853"
},
{
"id": "29966922",
"title": "1923 in association football",
"text": "1923 British Home Championship (October 21, 1922 – April 14, 1923) South American Championship 1923 in Uruguay (October 29, 1923 – December 2, 1923) ",
"score": "1.7121246"
},
{
"id": "7618289",
"title": "1923 Campeonato Paulista",
"text": "First round: All clubs played each other in a single round-robin system. The eight best teams qualified to the Second round. ; Second round: The remaining eight clubs played each other in a single round-robin system. The team with the most points in the sum of both rounds won the title. The championship was disputed in two stages:",
"score": "1.7119288"
},
{
"id": "31257058",
"title": "1924 in Brazilian football",
"text": " Final Stage Corinthians declared as the Campeonato Paulista champions.",
"score": "1.7013496"
},
{
"id": "29249340",
"title": "1923 in Argentine football",
"text": "Champion: San Lorenzo ",
"score": "1.6973066"
},
{
"id": "29249338",
"title": "1923 in Argentine football",
"text": "AFA Champion: Bristol ; AAm Champion: Acassuso ",
"score": "1.6878633"
},
{
"id": "29249322",
"title": "1922 in Argentine football",
"text": " Argentina lost to Brazil 2-1 at Sao Paulo.",
"score": "1.6875225"
}
] | [
"1923 in Brazilian football\n The following article presents a summary of the 1923 football (soccer) season in Brazil, which was the 22nd season of competitive football in the country.",
"1924 in Brazilian football\n The Brazil national football team did not play any matches in 1924.",
"1923 in Brazilian football\n The following table lists all the games played by the Brazil national football team in official competitions and friendly matches during 1923.",
"1924 in Brazilian football\n The following article presents a summary of the 1924 football (soccer) season in Brazil, which was the 23rd season of competitive football in the country.",
"1922 in Brazilian football\n The following table lists all the games played by the Brazil national football team in official competitions and friendly matches during 1922.",
"1922 in Brazilian football\n The following article presents a summary of the 1922 football (soccer) season in Brazil, which was the 21st season of competitive football in the country.",
"1925 in Brazilian football\n The following table lists all the games played by the Brazil national football team in official competitions and friendly matches during 1925.",
"1925 in Brazilian football\n The following article presents a summary of the 1925 football (soccer) season in Brazil, which was the 24th season of competitive football in the country.",
"1923 Campeonato Paulista\n The 1923 Campeonato Paulista, organized by the APEA (Associação Paulista de Esportes Atléticos), was the 22nd season of São Paulo's top association football league. Corinthians won the title for the 4th time. the top scorer was São Bento's Feitiço with 18 goals.",
"1922 in association football\n1922 British Home Championship (October 22, 1921 – April 8, 1922) South American Championship 1922 in Brazil (September 17, 1922 – October 22, 1922) ; 🇧🇷 brazil ",
"1923 in Brazilian football\n Final Stage Corinthians declared as the Campeonato Paulista champions.",
"1923 Campeonato Carioca\n The 1923 Campeonato Carioca, the eighteenth edition of that championship, kicked off on April 15, 1923 and ended on October 14, 1923. It was organized by LMDT (Liga Metropolitana de Desportos Terrestres, or Metropolitan Land Sports League). Sixteen teams participated. Vasco da Gama won the title for the 1st time. No teams were relegated.",
"October 1922\nBrazil won the South American Championship of football with a 3–0 win over Paraguay. ; Born: John Chafee, politician, in Providence, Rhode Island (d. 1999) ",
"1923 in Brazil\nRio Grande do Norte: ; São Paulo: ",
"1923 in association football\n1923 British Home Championship (October 21, 1922 – April 14, 1923) South American Championship 1923 in Uruguay (October 29, 1923 – December 2, 1923) ",
"1923 Campeonato Paulista\nFirst round: All clubs played each other in a single round-robin system. The eight best teams qualified to the Second round. ; Second round: The remaining eight clubs played each other in a single round-robin system. The team with the most points in the sum of both rounds won the title. The championship was disputed in two stages:",
"1924 in Brazilian football\n Final Stage Corinthians declared as the Campeonato Paulista champions.",
"1923 in Argentine football\nChampion: San Lorenzo ",
"1923 in Argentine football\nAFA Champion: Bristol ; AAm Champion: Acassuso ",
"1922 in Argentine football\n Argentina lost to Brazil 2-1 at Sao Paulo."
] |
What sport does Ye Zhibin play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Ye Zhibin | 6,225,078 | 65 | [
{
"id": "13923366",
"title": "Ye Zhibin",
"text": " Ye Zhibin (born October 3, 1971) is a Chinese assistant coach and a former professional football player. As a player, he spent his career playing for Guangzhou Songri and Guangzhou Apollo before moving into management where he spent several years with Guangzhou Pharmaceutical in numerous coaching positions before moving on to become an assistant coach at Guangdong Sunray Cave.",
"score": "1.8642275"
},
{
"id": "13923367",
"title": "Ye Zhibin",
"text": " Ye Zhibin would play for his local second tier football club Guangzhou Songri and was part of the squad that won promotion to the top tier at the end of the 1995 league season when the club came second within the division. His time in the top tier was short lived and by the end of the 1996 league season the club finished bottom of the league and received subsequent relegation at the end of the season. When the club were unable to win immediate promotion back into the top tier the following season, Ye Zhibin was allowed to leave to join local rivals and ",
"score": "1.706169"
},
{
"id": "13923368",
"title": "Ye Zhibin",
"text": " tier club Guangzhou Apollo at the beginning of the 1998 league season. In his short time at the club Ye quickly gained a reputation as tough tackling midfielder when on May 10, 1998 in a game against Shanghai Shenhua, Ye would fracture of the left leg of Claudio Lucio de Camargo, Moura and end the players career within China. By the end of the 1998 league season Guangzhou Apollo would finish bottom of the league and were relegated to the second tier. Li would remain faithful to the club and stayed with them until he retired at the end of the 2003 league season.",
"score": "1.5631808"
},
{
"id": "5080056",
"title": "Yevgeniy Zhilyayev",
"text": " Yevgeniy Zhilyayev (born 13 July 1973 in Almaty) is a Kazakhstani water polo player. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he competed for the Kazakhstan men's national water polo team in the men's event, but he has won no Olympic honor. He is 6 ft 3 inches tall.",
"score": "1.5324702"
},
{
"id": "31841879",
"title": "Yeh Ting-jen",
"text": " Yeh Ting-jen (born July 1, 1983 in Taiwan) is a Taiwanese baseball player who currently plays for Brother Elephants of Chinese Professional Baseball League. He is a pitcher who throws and bats left-handed. He is 6'1\" and weighs 189 lbs. He pitched for the Lowell Spinners minor league team in the New York Penn league in 2006, playing in 9 games, with a record of 1-0 and an Earned run average of 9.53 and batted .400 as well. The Lowell Spinners are a minor-league affiliate of the Boston Red Sox.",
"score": "1.5261866"
},
{
"id": "5655645",
"title": "Gong Xiaobin",
"text": " Gong Xiaobin (born November 23, 1969 in Jinan, Shandong), is a retired Chinese professional basketball player, who enjoyed an outstanding career in the Chinese Basketball Association (CBA). At 2.03 m (6'8\"), and 104 kg (230 lbs.), he played at the power forward and center positions. In 1990, he was chosen as one of China's 50 all-time greatest basketball players.",
"score": "1.5036687"
},
{
"id": "10031724",
"title": "Irek Zinnurov",
"text": " Irek Khaydarovich Zinnurov (Ирек Хайдарович Зиннуров; born 11 January 1969) is a Russian water polo player of Tatar origin who played on the silver medal squad at the 2000 Summer Olympics and the bronze medal squad at the 2004 Summer Olympics. He won four Russian titles as a captain of the Kazan club Sintez. After retirement from competitions, in 2010, he became its vice-president, and in 2011 its head coach. Zinnurov is married to his schoolmate; they have a son Emil, who also plays water polo.",
"score": "1.5034809"
},
{
"id": "13923369",
"title": "Ye Zhibin",
"text": " After ending his playing career in 2003 he remained at Guangzhou Apollo where he was offered a youth team coaching position at the now renamed Guangzhou Rizhiquan in 2004. After taking different positions at the now renamed Guangzhou Pharmaceutical, Li would take on his first senior management position with Guangzhou City Transport and he led them into the National City Games. After the tournament finished Li would take an assistant coaching position at Guangdong Sunray Cave.",
"score": "1.4969747"
},
{
"id": "10423230",
"title": "Chen Zhibin",
"text": " Chen Zhibin (born 21 October 1962) is a Chinese former international table tennis player and current coach. He won a bronze medal at the 1989 World Table Tennis Championships in the mixed doubles with Gao Jun. In 2000, Chen Zhibin became a German citizen and represented Germany. From 2011-2014 he worked as national coach in the Netherlands for the women's and since 2016 he has been the national coach of the women's team in Singapore.",
"score": "1.4966273"
},
{
"id": "25845282",
"title": "Ye Chongqiu",
"text": " Ye Chongqiu (Chinese: 叶重秋; Pinyin: Yè Chóngqiū; born 29 September 1992 in Shanghai) is a Chinese football player who currently plays for Chinese Super League side Wuhan.",
"score": "1.4915543"
},
{
"id": "11312250",
"title": "Ren Ye",
"text": " Ren Ye (born July 13, 1986 in Fushun, Liaoning) is a field hockey player from China, who won a silver medal with the national women's hockey team at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.",
"score": "1.4897699"
},
{
"id": "26958321",
"title": "Zhi Yaqi",
"text": " Zhi Yaqi (Chinese: 支雅琪; Pinyin: Zhī Yǎqí; born 27 March 1990) is a Chinese football player.",
"score": "1.4837229"
},
{
"id": "26227504",
"title": "Ye Chaoqun",
"text": " Ye Chaoqun (, born 7 October 1984 ) is a Chinese para table tennis player. He won a gold and a silver at the 2008 Summer Paralympics. Ye has congenital muscular dystrophy and hand/arm abnormalities.",
"score": "1.4802535"
},
{
"id": "8680868",
"title": "Liu Libin",
"text": " In 2013, Liu Libin got the champion of the junior event of volleyball in 2013 National Games of China with Jiang Chuan and Zhang Binglong as the main three wing spikers. In 2013–2014 Chinese Volleyball League, he made his debut and got the first champion of the senior event. After several seasons, he became the main OH of Beijing Baic Motor. In order to improve himself, he decided to join a foreign club and chose Tourcoing Lille Métropole Volley-Ball in 2017. Although he was always the substitute OH of Ukrainian OH, Oleksiy Klyamar, he also helped the club much. In 2018, Liu joined JT Thunders in 2018–19 V.League Division 1 Men's as the foreign player of AVC with his former clubmate, Thomas Edgar in Season 15/16 in Beijing Baic Motor. He was the main OH because he was good at the spike at Site 6, the block of the Euroamercian OP and the better serve.",
"score": "1.4675193"
},
{
"id": "8680871",
"title": "Liu Libin",
"text": "2013 National Games of China - Simple cup icon.svg Champion, with Beijing Junior ; 2013–2014 Chinese Volleyball League - Simple cup icon.svg Champion, with Beijing ; 2014–2015 Chinese Volleyball League - [[Image:Med 3.png]] Bronze medal, with Beijing ; 2015–2016 Chinese Volleyball League - Gorm silver cup.jpg Runner-Up, with Beijing ; 2016–2017 Chinese Volleyball League - Gorm silver cup.jpg Runner-Up, with Beijing ; 2017 National Games of China - Gorm silver cup.jpg Runner-Up, with Beijing ; 2017–2018 French Cup - Simple cup icon.svg Champion, with Tourcoing ; 2018 Emperor's Cup - Simple cup icon.svg Champion, with JT Thunders ; 2018–19 V.League Division 1 - Gorm silver cup.jpg Runner-Up, with JT Thunders ",
"score": "1.4626217"
},
{
"id": "29505479",
"title": "Liu Zhixin",
"text": " Liu Zhixin (born 25 April 1993) is a Chinese ice hockey player and member of the Chinese national team, currently with the KRS Vanke Rays Shenzhen of the Zhenskaya Hockey League (ZhHL). She was the youngest member of the Chinese delegation at the 2010 Winter Olympics, where she represented the country in the women's ice hockey tournament. Liu previously played in the Canadian Women's Hockey League (CWHL) with Kunlun Red Star WIH during the 2017–18 season and with the Shenzhen KRS Vanke Rays during the 2018–19 season.",
"score": "1.461158"
},
{
"id": "32606045",
"title": "Wu Zhiyu",
"text": " Wu Zhiyu (born 9 September 1983 in Shanghai) is a Chinese water polo player who was a member of the gold medal-winning team at the 2006 Asian Games. Wu also competed in the 2008 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.4585354"
},
{
"id": "15313240",
"title": "Wang Libin",
"text": " Wang Libin (born March 21, 1963) is a former male Chinese basketball player and an active basketball coach. He was born in Shaanxi Province, People's Republic of China. Wang started his playing career at the age of 14 and was one of the most talented front court players in Asia. 6'8\", Wang was not only a powerful inside player with solid footwork and impressive mobility but also a stable long range shooter. Some dubbed him as \"Asia's number one centre\" during his prime in the 1980s. As a member of the China men's national basketball team he competed at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games and was the flag bearer of the Chinese Olympic Team at the opening ceremony. Due to power struggles within China's basketball authorities, however, he was banned from playing for the national team at the age of 25—shortly ",
"score": "1.458088"
},
{
"id": "8680869",
"title": "Liu Libin",
"text": " As a young player, Liu Libin participated in 2015 Asian Men's U23 Volleyball Championship as his earliest International tournament. Later, due to injured Zhu Zhiyuan, Liu Libin participated in 2015 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship as the main OH and got the third place beyond the expectations of the Chinese U21 men's volleyball team. His International debut of the senior event is 2016 AVC Cup. Jiang Chuan and he played perfect and both got the best. Although he injured for many times, he just took part in 2017 FIVB Volleyball World League, 2018 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League and 2018 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Championship.",
"score": "1.4562564"
},
{
"id": "27652501",
"title": "Yevgeniy Shidlovskiy",
"text": " Yevgeniy Shidlovskiy (Яўген Шыдлоўскi; Евгений Шидловский; born 13 January 1991) is a Belarusian professional football player currently playing for Smolevichi. On 16 January 2020, the BFF banned Shidlovskiy for 12 months for his involvement in the match fixing.",
"score": "1.4560232"
}
] | [
"Ye Zhibin\n Ye Zhibin (born October 3, 1971) is a Chinese assistant coach and a former professional football player. As a player, he spent his career playing for Guangzhou Songri and Guangzhou Apollo before moving into management where he spent several years with Guangzhou Pharmaceutical in numerous coaching positions before moving on to become an assistant coach at Guangdong Sunray Cave.",
"Ye Zhibin\n Ye Zhibin would play for his local second tier football club Guangzhou Songri and was part of the squad that won promotion to the top tier at the end of the 1995 league season when the club came second within the division. His time in the top tier was short lived and by the end of the 1996 league season the club finished bottom of the league and received subsequent relegation at the end of the season. When the club were unable to win immediate promotion back into the top tier the following season, Ye Zhibin was allowed to leave to join local rivals and ",
"Ye Zhibin\n tier club Guangzhou Apollo at the beginning of the 1998 league season. In his short time at the club Ye quickly gained a reputation as tough tackling midfielder when on May 10, 1998 in a game against Shanghai Shenhua, Ye would fracture of the left leg of Claudio Lucio de Camargo, Moura and end the players career within China. By the end of the 1998 league season Guangzhou Apollo would finish bottom of the league and were relegated to the second tier. Li would remain faithful to the club and stayed with them until he retired at the end of the 2003 league season.",
"Yevgeniy Zhilyayev\n Yevgeniy Zhilyayev (born 13 July 1973 in Almaty) is a Kazakhstani water polo player. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he competed for the Kazakhstan men's national water polo team in the men's event, but he has won no Olympic honor. He is 6 ft 3 inches tall.",
"Yeh Ting-jen\n Yeh Ting-jen (born July 1, 1983 in Taiwan) is a Taiwanese baseball player who currently plays for Brother Elephants of Chinese Professional Baseball League. He is a pitcher who throws and bats left-handed. He is 6'1\" and weighs 189 lbs. He pitched for the Lowell Spinners minor league team in the New York Penn league in 2006, playing in 9 games, with a record of 1-0 and an Earned run average of 9.53 and batted .400 as well. The Lowell Spinners are a minor-league affiliate of the Boston Red Sox.",
"Gong Xiaobin\n Gong Xiaobin (born November 23, 1969 in Jinan, Shandong), is a retired Chinese professional basketball player, who enjoyed an outstanding career in the Chinese Basketball Association (CBA). At 2.03 m (6'8\"), and 104 kg (230 lbs.), he played at the power forward and center positions. In 1990, he was chosen as one of China's 50 all-time greatest basketball players.",
"Irek Zinnurov\n Irek Khaydarovich Zinnurov (Ирек Хайдарович Зиннуров; born 11 January 1969) is a Russian water polo player of Tatar origin who played on the silver medal squad at the 2000 Summer Olympics and the bronze medal squad at the 2004 Summer Olympics. He won four Russian titles as a captain of the Kazan club Sintez. After retirement from competitions, in 2010, he became its vice-president, and in 2011 its head coach. Zinnurov is married to his schoolmate; they have a son Emil, who also plays water polo.",
"Ye Zhibin\n After ending his playing career in 2003 he remained at Guangzhou Apollo where he was offered a youth team coaching position at the now renamed Guangzhou Rizhiquan in 2004. After taking different positions at the now renamed Guangzhou Pharmaceutical, Li would take on his first senior management position with Guangzhou City Transport and he led them into the National City Games. After the tournament finished Li would take an assistant coaching position at Guangdong Sunray Cave.",
"Chen Zhibin\n Chen Zhibin (born 21 October 1962) is a Chinese former international table tennis player and current coach. He won a bronze medal at the 1989 World Table Tennis Championships in the mixed doubles with Gao Jun. In 2000, Chen Zhibin became a German citizen and represented Germany. From 2011-2014 he worked as national coach in the Netherlands for the women's and since 2016 he has been the national coach of the women's team in Singapore.",
"Ye Chongqiu\n Ye Chongqiu (Chinese: 叶重秋; Pinyin: Yè Chóngqiū; born 29 September 1992 in Shanghai) is a Chinese football player who currently plays for Chinese Super League side Wuhan.",
"Ren Ye\n Ren Ye (born July 13, 1986 in Fushun, Liaoning) is a field hockey player from China, who won a silver medal with the national women's hockey team at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.",
"Zhi Yaqi\n Zhi Yaqi (Chinese: 支雅琪; Pinyin: Zhī Yǎqí; born 27 March 1990) is a Chinese football player.",
"Ye Chaoqun\n Ye Chaoqun (, born 7 October 1984 ) is a Chinese para table tennis player. He won a gold and a silver at the 2008 Summer Paralympics. Ye has congenital muscular dystrophy and hand/arm abnormalities.",
"Liu Libin\n In 2013, Liu Libin got the champion of the junior event of volleyball in 2013 National Games of China with Jiang Chuan and Zhang Binglong as the main three wing spikers. In 2013–2014 Chinese Volleyball League, he made his debut and got the first champion of the senior event. After several seasons, he became the main OH of Beijing Baic Motor. In order to improve himself, he decided to join a foreign club and chose Tourcoing Lille Métropole Volley-Ball in 2017. Although he was always the substitute OH of Ukrainian OH, Oleksiy Klyamar, he also helped the club much. In 2018, Liu joined JT Thunders in 2018–19 V.League Division 1 Men's as the foreign player of AVC with his former clubmate, Thomas Edgar in Season 15/16 in Beijing Baic Motor. He was the main OH because he was good at the spike at Site 6, the block of the Euroamercian OP and the better serve.",
"Liu Libin\n2013 National Games of China - Simple cup icon.svg Champion, with Beijing Junior ; 2013–2014 Chinese Volleyball League - Simple cup icon.svg Champion, with Beijing ; 2014–2015 Chinese Volleyball League - [[Image:Med 3.png]] Bronze medal, with Beijing ; 2015–2016 Chinese Volleyball League - Gorm silver cup.jpg Runner-Up, with Beijing ; 2016–2017 Chinese Volleyball League - Gorm silver cup.jpg Runner-Up, with Beijing ; 2017 National Games of China - Gorm silver cup.jpg Runner-Up, with Beijing ; 2017–2018 French Cup - Simple cup icon.svg Champion, with Tourcoing ; 2018 Emperor's Cup - Simple cup icon.svg Champion, with JT Thunders ; 2018–19 V.League Division 1 - Gorm silver cup.jpg Runner-Up, with JT Thunders ",
"Liu Zhixin\n Liu Zhixin (born 25 April 1993) is a Chinese ice hockey player and member of the Chinese national team, currently with the KRS Vanke Rays Shenzhen of the Zhenskaya Hockey League (ZhHL). She was the youngest member of the Chinese delegation at the 2010 Winter Olympics, where she represented the country in the women's ice hockey tournament. Liu previously played in the Canadian Women's Hockey League (CWHL) with Kunlun Red Star WIH during the 2017–18 season and with the Shenzhen KRS Vanke Rays during the 2018–19 season.",
"Wu Zhiyu\n Wu Zhiyu (born 9 September 1983 in Shanghai) is a Chinese water polo player who was a member of the gold medal-winning team at the 2006 Asian Games. Wu also competed in the 2008 Summer Olympics.",
"Wang Libin\n Wang Libin (born March 21, 1963) is a former male Chinese basketball player and an active basketball coach. He was born in Shaanxi Province, People's Republic of China. Wang started his playing career at the age of 14 and was one of the most talented front court players in Asia. 6'8\", Wang was not only a powerful inside player with solid footwork and impressive mobility but also a stable long range shooter. Some dubbed him as \"Asia's number one centre\" during his prime in the 1980s. As a member of the China men's national basketball team he competed at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games and was the flag bearer of the Chinese Olympic Team at the opening ceremony. Due to power struggles within China's basketball authorities, however, he was banned from playing for the national team at the age of 25—shortly ",
"Liu Libin\n As a young player, Liu Libin participated in 2015 Asian Men's U23 Volleyball Championship as his earliest International tournament. Later, due to injured Zhu Zhiyuan, Liu Libin participated in 2015 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship as the main OH and got the third place beyond the expectations of the Chinese U21 men's volleyball team. His International debut of the senior event is 2016 AVC Cup. Jiang Chuan and he played perfect and both got the best. Although he injured for many times, he just took part in 2017 FIVB Volleyball World League, 2018 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League and 2018 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Championship.",
"Yevgeniy Shidlovskiy\n Yevgeniy Shidlovskiy (Яўген Шыдлоўскi; Евгений Шидловский; born 13 January 1991) is a Belarusian professional football player currently playing for Smolevichi. On 16 January 2020, the BFF banned Shidlovskiy for 12 months for his involvement in the match fixing."
] |
What sport does Matteo Pivotto play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Matteo Pivotto | 2,876,696 | 61 | [
{
"id": "31636643",
"title": "Matteo Pivotto",
"text": " Matteo Pivotto (born September 5, 1974 in Montecchio Maggiore) is an Italian professional football player. He spent 6 seasons (70 games, 2 goals) in the Serie A for A.S. Roma, U.S. Lecce and Modena F.C.",
"score": "1.9606993"
},
{
"id": "3472180",
"title": "Matteo Mazzantini",
"text": " Matteo Mazzantini (born Livorno, 24 October 1976) is an Italian rugby union footballer. His position in the field is as a scrum-half. He played for Benetton Treviso (1996–2002), Rugby Rovigo (2002–2003), Arix Viadana (2003–2006) and SKG Gran Parma (2006- current). Mazzantini had his first cap for Italy at 5 February 2000, in a 34-20 win over Scotland. He played at the Six Nations in 2001, 2002 and 2003. He was capped twice at the 2003 Rugby World Cup finals. He was awarded nine caps for his national team. Mazzantini is married with Elisa Facchini, a veterinary surgeon who also plays as wing for Italy women's national rugby union team and the Red Panthers, Benetton Treviso's female team.",
"score": "1.7417893"
},
{
"id": "2552682",
"title": "Matteo Panunzi",
"text": " Matteo Panunzi (Rome, 12 May 1997) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Scrum-Half and he currently plays for Petrarca Padova in Top12. For 2015–16 Pro12 season, he named like Permit Player for Zebre. In 2016 and 2017, Panunzi was named in the Italy Under 20 squad.",
"score": "1.6917236"
},
{
"id": "31429136",
"title": "Matteo Barbini",
"text": " Matteo Barbini (born 8 June 1982 in Venice) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is in the centres. He plays for English National Division One club Esher RFC, although is yet to represent them in the league due to a long-standing injury suffered pre-season. He has previously played for Italian club Benetton Treviso, and been capped for the national team, and was a part of their squad at the 2003 Rugby World Cup in Australia. Barbini represented Italy at the under-21 Six Nations competition during 2002, and had subsequently moved up into the senior national side by the following summer for the Test matches in New ",
"score": "1.6859316"
},
{
"id": "25226038",
"title": "Matteo Sereni",
"text": " He was internationally selected at the age of 16 for the Italian national under-17 team, and played for the Italian national under-23 team at the 1997 Mediterranean Games, where Italy were champions.",
"score": "1.6754167"
},
{
"id": "2845560",
"title": "Matteo Muccignat",
"text": " Matteo Muccignat (Pordenone, 8 August 1985) is a retired Italian rugby union player. His usual position was as a Prop and he played for Valorugby Emilia in Top12. Until 2015–16 Pro12 season he played for Benetton Treviso. In 2010 Muccignat was also named in the Italy A squad for 2010 IRB Nations Cup.",
"score": "1.665854"
},
{
"id": "31269261",
"title": "Matteo Piano",
"text": " Matteo Piano (born 24 October 1990) is an Italian volleyball player, a member of Italy men's national volleyball team and Revivre Milano. Matteo Piano has a standing reach of 209 cm. He was silver medalist at the 2016 Olympics and the 2015 World Cup, silver medalist at the European Championship 2013, and bronze medalist of the World League (2013, 2014).",
"score": "1.6514585"
},
{
"id": "13543098",
"title": "Matteo Franchetti",
"text": " Matteo Franchetti (born 3 May 1996) also known as “Big-Pippo18” is an Italian football player. He plays for US Arcella.",
"score": "1.6416259"
},
{
"id": "32779715",
"title": "Matteo Zanusso",
"text": " Matteo Zanusso (born 9 April 1993) is an Italian rugby union player who plays as a Prop. He currently competes for Benetton in the Pro14. Born in San Dona di Piave, Matteo played locally for San Dona rugby club, which is known for its youth academy. Later he joined the first team, of which in his first year, the club achieved promotion to the National Championship of Excellence. In summer 2014, he joined Benetton Treviso, later fellow San Dona team member Amar Kudin, joined as well.",
"score": "1.6397369"
},
{
"id": "32407526",
"title": "Matteo Falsaperla",
"text": " Matteo Flasaperla (Roma, 5 May 1990) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Fullback and he currently plays for Mogliano in Top10. From 2019 to 2021, he played for Valorugby Emilia in Top12. From 2013 to 2018 Falsaperla was part of the Italy Sevens squad.",
"score": "1.639721"
},
{
"id": "5080042",
"title": "Matteo Aicardi",
"text": " Matteo Aicardi (born 19 April 1986) is an Italian water polo center forward. He won the world title in 2011 and two medals at the 2012 and 2016 Olympics. In 2012 he was awarded the Gold Collar of Sporting Merit from the Italian Olympic Committee.",
"score": "1.6384841"
},
{
"id": "5587710",
"title": "Matteo Ferro",
"text": " Matteo Ferro (Rovigo, 9 July 1992) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Flanker and he currently plays for Rovigo Delta in Top12 with the role of Captain. In 2012, Ferro was named in the Italy Under 20 squad and in 2014 he was also named in Emerging Italy squad for 2014 IRB Tbilisi Cup",
"score": "1.6271555"
},
{
"id": "2166532",
"title": "Andrea Lovotti",
"text": " Andrea Lovotti (born 28 July 1989) is an Italian rugby union player who plays as a Prop. He currently plays for Zebre in the Pro14. He grew up in the youth sporting team of Piacenza Gossolengo, in 2008-09 season he passed to Rugby Calvisano. After beginning down the ranks of the Italian system he returned to his previous youth club Calvisano at the top flight of the National Championship of Excellence where he immediately won the title of Champion of Italy and the Excellence Trophy. In May 2014, it was announced that he moved to Zebre. In 2009 Lovotti was named in the Italy Under 20 ",
"score": "1.6144947"
},
{
"id": "31234038",
"title": "Matteo Corazzi",
"text": " Matteo Corazzi (born 10 September 1994) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Flanker. He played for Mogliano in Top12 from 2013 to 2021. From 2015 to 2017 Corazzi was named in the Emerging Italy squad for the annual World Rugby Nations Cup.",
"score": "1.6022098"
},
{
"id": "3600148",
"title": "Matteo Cornelli",
"text": " Matteo Cornelli (Piacenza, 6 June 1995) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Flanker and he currently plays for Fiamme Oro in Top12. In 2016–17 Pro12 season, he was named Additional Player for Zebre. After playing for Italy Under 20 in 2014 and 2015, in 2018 Cornelli also was named in the Emerging Italy squad.",
"score": "1.5994982"
},
{
"id": "27802651",
"title": "Matteo Barbini (footballer)",
"text": " Born in Venice, Barbini started playing football with local team Sesto Bagnarola at the age of 5, before joining Sanvitese at the age of 10 and then moving to Treviso at the age of 15. In August 2009, aged 18, he was signed by Serie A club Milan and spent one season in the club's youth system.",
"score": "1.598811"
},
{
"id": "12561299",
"title": "Matteo Piscopo",
"text": " Matteo Piscopo (born 9 August 1954) is a Canadian retired international soccer player.",
"score": "1.5941545"
},
{
"id": "5441838",
"title": "Matteo Canali",
"text": " Matteo Canali (Marino, 11 September 1998) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Lock and he currently plays for Petrarca Padova in Top10. For 2020–21 Pro14 season, he was named as Permit Player for Benetton Rugby. In 2018 Canali was named in the Italy Under 20 squad. On the 14 October 2021, he was selected by Alessandro Troncon to be part of an Italy A 28-man squad and on 8 December he was named in Emerging Italy 27-man squad for the 2021 end-of-year rugby union internationals.",
"score": "1.5919198"
},
{
"id": "31269262",
"title": "Matteo Piano",
"text": " He debuted with the Italy men's national volleyball team in 2013. In 2013 Italy, including Piano, won bronze medal of World League. In the same year he achieved silver medal of European Championship. In 2014 he and his Italian teammates won bronze of World League held in Florence, Italy.",
"score": "1.5878475"
},
{
"id": "1989109",
"title": "Andrea Pratichetti",
"text": " Andrea Pratichetti (born 26 November 1988) is an Italian rugby union player who currently plays for Mogliano as a centre in Top12. Pratichetti was raised at Rugby Roma, where his uncle Carlo was a player and then a coach. Andrea was then passed on to UR Capitolina's youth team, before being hired as a professional by Calvisano. At Calvisano he played alongside is older brother and Italian international Matteo. Andrea then joined Rovigo for a year, before signing for Treviso in 2010. He played for Benetton from 2010 to 2017. He debuted for the Italian national rugby union team in 2012 against Canada. From 2017 he is also part of the Italy Sevens squad also to participate at the Qualifying Tournament for the 2020 Summer Olympics and the 2020 World Rugby Sevens Challenger Series.",
"score": "1.5786239"
}
] | [
"Matteo Pivotto\n Matteo Pivotto (born September 5, 1974 in Montecchio Maggiore) is an Italian professional football player. He spent 6 seasons (70 games, 2 goals) in the Serie A for A.S. Roma, U.S. Lecce and Modena F.C.",
"Matteo Mazzantini\n Matteo Mazzantini (born Livorno, 24 October 1976) is an Italian rugby union footballer. His position in the field is as a scrum-half. He played for Benetton Treviso (1996–2002), Rugby Rovigo (2002–2003), Arix Viadana (2003–2006) and SKG Gran Parma (2006- current). Mazzantini had his first cap for Italy at 5 February 2000, in a 34-20 win over Scotland. He played at the Six Nations in 2001, 2002 and 2003. He was capped twice at the 2003 Rugby World Cup finals. He was awarded nine caps for his national team. Mazzantini is married with Elisa Facchini, a veterinary surgeon who also plays as wing for Italy women's national rugby union team and the Red Panthers, Benetton Treviso's female team.",
"Matteo Panunzi\n Matteo Panunzi (Rome, 12 May 1997) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Scrum-Half and he currently plays for Petrarca Padova in Top12. For 2015–16 Pro12 season, he named like Permit Player for Zebre. In 2016 and 2017, Panunzi was named in the Italy Under 20 squad.",
"Matteo Barbini\n Matteo Barbini (born 8 June 1982 in Venice) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is in the centres. He plays for English National Division One club Esher RFC, although is yet to represent them in the league due to a long-standing injury suffered pre-season. He has previously played for Italian club Benetton Treviso, and been capped for the national team, and was a part of their squad at the 2003 Rugby World Cup in Australia. Barbini represented Italy at the under-21 Six Nations competition during 2002, and had subsequently moved up into the senior national side by the following summer for the Test matches in New ",
"Matteo Sereni\n He was internationally selected at the age of 16 for the Italian national under-17 team, and played for the Italian national under-23 team at the 1997 Mediterranean Games, where Italy were champions.",
"Matteo Muccignat\n Matteo Muccignat (Pordenone, 8 August 1985) is a retired Italian rugby union player. His usual position was as a Prop and he played for Valorugby Emilia in Top12. Until 2015–16 Pro12 season he played for Benetton Treviso. In 2010 Muccignat was also named in the Italy A squad for 2010 IRB Nations Cup.",
"Matteo Piano\n Matteo Piano (born 24 October 1990) is an Italian volleyball player, a member of Italy men's national volleyball team and Revivre Milano. Matteo Piano has a standing reach of 209 cm. He was silver medalist at the 2016 Olympics and the 2015 World Cup, silver medalist at the European Championship 2013, and bronze medalist of the World League (2013, 2014).",
"Matteo Franchetti\n Matteo Franchetti (born 3 May 1996) also known as “Big-Pippo18” is an Italian football player. He plays for US Arcella.",
"Matteo Zanusso\n Matteo Zanusso (born 9 April 1993) is an Italian rugby union player who plays as a Prop. He currently competes for Benetton in the Pro14. Born in San Dona di Piave, Matteo played locally for San Dona rugby club, which is known for its youth academy. Later he joined the first team, of which in his first year, the club achieved promotion to the National Championship of Excellence. In summer 2014, he joined Benetton Treviso, later fellow San Dona team member Amar Kudin, joined as well.",
"Matteo Falsaperla\n Matteo Flasaperla (Roma, 5 May 1990) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Fullback and he currently plays for Mogliano in Top10. From 2019 to 2021, he played for Valorugby Emilia in Top12. From 2013 to 2018 Falsaperla was part of the Italy Sevens squad.",
"Matteo Aicardi\n Matteo Aicardi (born 19 April 1986) is an Italian water polo center forward. He won the world title in 2011 and two medals at the 2012 and 2016 Olympics. In 2012 he was awarded the Gold Collar of Sporting Merit from the Italian Olympic Committee.",
"Matteo Ferro\n Matteo Ferro (Rovigo, 9 July 1992) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Flanker and he currently plays for Rovigo Delta in Top12 with the role of Captain. In 2012, Ferro was named in the Italy Under 20 squad and in 2014 he was also named in Emerging Italy squad for 2014 IRB Tbilisi Cup",
"Andrea Lovotti\n Andrea Lovotti (born 28 July 1989) is an Italian rugby union player who plays as a Prop. He currently plays for Zebre in the Pro14. He grew up in the youth sporting team of Piacenza Gossolengo, in 2008-09 season he passed to Rugby Calvisano. After beginning down the ranks of the Italian system he returned to his previous youth club Calvisano at the top flight of the National Championship of Excellence where he immediately won the title of Champion of Italy and the Excellence Trophy. In May 2014, it was announced that he moved to Zebre. In 2009 Lovotti was named in the Italy Under 20 ",
"Matteo Corazzi\n Matteo Corazzi (born 10 September 1994) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Flanker. He played for Mogliano in Top12 from 2013 to 2021. From 2015 to 2017 Corazzi was named in the Emerging Italy squad for the annual World Rugby Nations Cup.",
"Matteo Cornelli\n Matteo Cornelli (Piacenza, 6 June 1995) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Flanker and he currently plays for Fiamme Oro in Top12. In 2016–17 Pro12 season, he was named Additional Player for Zebre. After playing for Italy Under 20 in 2014 and 2015, in 2018 Cornelli also was named in the Emerging Italy squad.",
"Matteo Barbini (footballer)\n Born in Venice, Barbini started playing football with local team Sesto Bagnarola at the age of 5, before joining Sanvitese at the age of 10 and then moving to Treviso at the age of 15. In August 2009, aged 18, he was signed by Serie A club Milan and spent one season in the club's youth system.",
"Matteo Piscopo\n Matteo Piscopo (born 9 August 1954) is a Canadian retired international soccer player.",
"Matteo Canali\n Matteo Canali (Marino, 11 September 1998) is an Italian rugby union player. His usual position is as a Lock and he currently plays for Petrarca Padova in Top10. For 2020–21 Pro14 season, he was named as Permit Player for Benetton Rugby. In 2018 Canali was named in the Italy Under 20 squad. On the 14 October 2021, he was selected by Alessandro Troncon to be part of an Italy A 28-man squad and on 8 December he was named in Emerging Italy 27-man squad for the 2021 end-of-year rugby union internationals.",
"Matteo Piano\n He debuted with the Italy men's national volleyball team in 2013. In 2013 Italy, including Piano, won bronze medal of World League. In the same year he achieved silver medal of European Championship. In 2014 he and his Italian teammates won bronze of World League held in Florence, Italy.",
"Andrea Pratichetti\n Andrea Pratichetti (born 26 November 1988) is an Italian rugby union player who currently plays for Mogliano as a centre in Top12. Pratichetti was raised at Rugby Roma, where his uncle Carlo was a player and then a coach. Andrea was then passed on to UR Capitolina's youth team, before being hired as a professional by Calvisano. At Calvisano he played alongside is older brother and Italian international Matteo. Andrea then joined Rovigo for a year, before signing for Treviso in 2010. He played for Benetton from 2010 to 2017. He debuted for the Italian national rugby union team in 2012 against Canada. From 2017 he is also part of the Italy Sevens squad also to participate at the Qualifying Tournament for the 2020 Summer Olympics and the 2020 World Rugby Sevens Challenger Series."
] |
What sport does Imbi Hoop play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Imbi Hoop | 580,143 | 48 | [
{
"id": "30461567",
"title": "Winis Imbi",
"text": " Winis Imbi (born 26 April 1979 in Papua New Guinea) is an Australian rules footballer. He is 172cm in height. Imbi was named in the 1997 TAC Cup team of the year before training with Essendon in 1998. In 1999, Imbi was promoted to the Essendon rookie list and played some promising games in the Bomber's Ansett Cup finals campaign. That year he won the Essendon Football Club reserves best and fairest. At the end of the season, he was delisted and added to the Kangaroos Football Club's rookie list where he lasted until the end of the year. Imbi holds the North Ballarat Rebels games record with 53 games. He played football in Aberfeldie, Victoria in 2002. He continues to play football semi-professionally for the Portland Football Club in the Western Border Football League, where he was joint winner of the league's best and fairest in 2003. His younger brother, James Imbi, began at the Portland Football Club before trying out with the Sturt Football Club in the South Australian National Football League in 2004, after which he went to the Palmerston Football Club in the Northern Territory Football League in 2006.",
"score": "1.4628818"
},
{
"id": "12353899",
"title": "Liliane Mukobwanakawe",
"text": " According to the New Times, a Rwandese daily, Mukobwanakawe was introduced to sitting volleyball, a sport in the Paralympic Games, in 2007, and was recruited by a team called Imena. She left Imena a year later and joined the Nyarugenge-based Troupe Handicapee Tuzuzanye (THT) Club where she also played for one year before crossing to Intwari in Kicukiro where she was appointed captain and later the club vice president, roles she holds to date. She has since gone ahead to represent her country at the 2016 Intercontinental and World ParaVolley Championship was held between March 17-23 in Hangzhou City, China.",
"score": "1.4497957"
},
{
"id": "10367409",
"title": "HoopWorld",
"text": " HoopWorld is an action sports basketball game in arcade style where two teams fight each other in order to defend their home courts. The point of the game is to get the highest score possible before match time runs out. The player runs, fights, kicks, steals the ball from opponents, and performs dunks and ball passes to win the match. Mystery Boxes will appear randomly on the court during the match revealing one of eight power-ups that impact game play. The game comes with three game modes (Quick Match, Tournament, and Survival) and has four difficulty levels (easy, normal, difficulty, and crazy) that enable the player to unlock teams and courts when played in Tournament mode. HoopWorld is an offline multiplayer game that can be played with 1-2 players. There is also an online leader board allowing players to upload their accumulated scores generated in Tournament mode. There are six available courts that are set in nature and outdoor locations, such as a jungle, a volcano, a Caribbean island, a Greek village, a desert, and a mystical forest. Each court is defended by its respective team that the player can pick from.",
"score": "1.335885"
},
{
"id": "10491780",
"title": "Imed Mhedhebi",
"text": " Imed Mhedhebi or Mhadhbi (عماد المهذبى) (born 22 March 1976 in Tunis) is a former Tunisian football winger. He was a member of the Tunisian national team that participated at the 2002 FIFA World Cup and won the 2004 African Cup of Nations. On January 27, 2007 he played his first Ligue 1 match for Nantes against Lorient",
"score": "1.3341119"
},
{
"id": "8867213",
"title": "Festus Ezeli",
"text": " Shortly after Ezeli arrived in Yuba City, his uncle encouraged him to take up what seemed to be the most appropriate sport for a 6'8\" (2.03 m) teenager—basketball. This proved much more difficult for him than academics; although he had played soccer as a child, he had never played any organized sports. He took a year of classes at Jesuit High School in Sacramento, but did not play basketball; different sources report that he was either ineligible to play because he had graduated from high school in Nigeria or cut during tryouts. The start of his organized basketball career, with a low-level AAU team, was especially inauspicious; his first points were scored in his own team's basket. ",
"score": "1.329997"
},
{
"id": "3872292",
"title": "Bulgantamir Sergelenbaatar",
"text": " Sergelenbaatar has been practicing athletics, freestyle wrestling, basketball, and handball when she was a child. She has been practicing volleyball since she was 13 years old with her first volleyball trainer Munkhtulga.M. She likes to watch Lee Jae-yeong, the outside spiker of the South Korea women's national volleyball team and Incheon Heungkuk Life Pink Spiders. Their body measurements are quite similar so she compares her play with her matches. Because Lee Jae-yeong is considered as one of the world's best players who takes an advantage of their shorter height in a volleyball play.",
"score": "1.3065944"
},
{
"id": "26141610",
"title": "Gabriela Guimarães",
"text": " Gabriela Braga Guimarães, nickname Gabi, (born May 19, 1994) is a Brazilian indoor volleyball player. She plays as an outside spiker. She competed at the 2020 Summer Olympics, in the Women's tournament, winning a sliver medal.",
"score": "1.3027817"
},
{
"id": "26446064",
"title": "Jessica Gallagher",
"text": " She played netball and basketball with able-bodied competitors, having first participated at the elite level in both sports as she started to lose her vision. In netball, she was a goal keeper and goal attack, represented Victoria several times and was named as an emergency for the Australian U16 team. In the Victorian league's Championship Division, she represented both Palladians and Altona Lightning. In basketball, she represented the Geelong Cats for five years and also represented Victoria Country. At that time, her goal was to become a professional netball or basketball player. As well, she played netball in the Geelong Football Netball League, representing South Barwon and Leopold. Despite her low vision and missing one third of the games due to her Paralympic training program, she won the A grade Best and Fairest Award in 2007, representing Leopold. Gallagher is also a snowboarder, having taken up the sport while on a working holiday in Vail, Colorado before she found out about the Winter Paralympic Games.",
"score": "1.2995386"
},
{
"id": "9889223",
"title": "Manipur",
"text": " and blocks any such attempt as well as tries to grab the coconut and score on its own. In Manipur's long history, Yubi lakpi was the annual official game, attended by the king, over the Hindu festival of Shree Govindajee. It is like the game of rugby, or American football. Oolaobi (Woo-Laobi) is an outdoor game mainly played by females. Meitei mythology believes that UmangLai Heloi-Taret (seven deities–seven fairies) played this game on the Courtyard of the temple of Umang Lai Lairembi. The number of participants is not fixed but are divided into two groups (size as per agreement). Players are divided as into Raiders (Attackers) or Defenders (Avoiders). Hiyang tannaba, also called Hi Yangba Tanaba, is a traditional boat rowing race and festivity of the Panas.",
"score": "1.2979581"
},
{
"id": "31535592",
"title": "Hoop rolling",
"text": " as hoops: \"A wheel must be protected. You make me a useful present. It will be a hoop to children, but to me a tyre for my wheel.\"(14. CLXVIII) Martial also mentions the sport was practised by Sarmatian boys, who rolled their hoops on the frozen Danube river. According to Strabo, one of the popular Roman venues for practising the sport was the Campus Martius, which was large enough to accommodate a wide variety of activities. The Roman game was to roll the hoop while throwing a spear or stick through it. For Romans, this was more an entertainment and military development, not a philosophical activity. Several ancient sources praise the sport. According to Horace, hoop driving was one of the manly sports. Ovid in his Tristia is more ",
"score": "1.2968388"
},
{
"id": "32700073",
"title": "Mikaela Dombkins",
"text": " Dombkins came to the Australian Institute of Sport on a scholarship when she was 16. She represented Australia at the Under 19s World Championship for Women in Tunisia in 2005, and at the Under 21 World Championship for Women in Russia, where the team won silver. She played for the Australian Institute of Sport team in the WNBL, starting with the 2003/2004 season. During that season, she had a knee injury. She was part of the team during the 2005/2006 season. During that season, she was the most senior player on the squad. Early in that season, she had an injury to her foot. In an October 2005 game against the Perth Lynx, she scored 24 points. In a December 2005 game against the Capitals, she scored 11 points. While playing for the team, she ruptured her anterior cruciate ligament.",
"score": "1.2953737"
},
{
"id": "3168488",
"title": "Basketball",
"text": " Variations of basketball are activities based on the game of basketball, using common basketball skills and equipment (primarily the ball and basket). Some variations only have superficial rule changes, while others are distinct games with varying degrees of influence from basketball. Other variations include children's games, contests or activities meant to help players reinforce skills. An earlier version of basketball, played primarily by women and girls, was Six-on-six basketball. Horseball is a game played on horseback where a ball is handled and points are scored by shooting it through a high net (approximately 1.5m×1.5m). The sport is like a combination of polo, rugby, and basketball. There is even a form played on donkeys known as Donkey basketball, which has attracted criticism from animal rights groups. ",
"score": "1.2949746"
},
{
"id": "31535594",
"title": "Hoop rolling",
"text": " Early 19th-century travellers saw children playing with hoops over much of Europe and beyond. The game was also a common pastime of African village children on the Tanganyika plateau, and not long after it is recorded in the Freetown settler community. In China, the game may well go back to 1000 BC or further. Christian missionaries encountered it there in the 19th century. Children in late Edo period Japan also were known to play the game. In English the sport is known by several names, \"hoop and stick\", \"bowling hoops\", or \"gird and cleek\" in Scotland, where the gird is the hoop and ",
"score": "1.2948676"
},
{
"id": "8828303",
"title": "Tess Madgen",
"text": " Madgen plays guard and forward and is an offensive player. In 2008, she was featured as a basketball star on myFiba. Madgen played junior basketball for the Eastern Mavericks. She has been affiliated with the South Australian Institute of Sport. She competed at the 2004 and 2005 Australian U16 Championships, playing for South Australia Country. She competed at the 2006 and 2007 Australian U18 Championships, playing for South Australia Country. In 2007, she played for Barossa Valley. She competed at the 2007 and 2008 Australian U18 Championships, playing for South Australia Country. In 2008, her team finished first, beating Victoria 99–61 for one of the biggest wins ever in the competition's history. As a competitor at the 2009 Australian Under-20 national championships, she won the Bob Staunton Award while her team took home silver.",
"score": "1.293514"
},
{
"id": "12490982",
"title": "Chris Imes",
"text": " Chris Imes (born August 27, 1972), is an American former ice hockey player. He played for HK Olimpija, the Anchorage Aces, and the Minnesota Moose during his career. He also played for the American national team at the 1994 Winter Olympics and 1995 World Championships. Imes played for the University of Maine Black Bears from 1990 to 1995. During his freshman and sophomore year at the University of Maine, Imes won the Shawn Walsh Defensive Player Award twice and helped guide Maine to their first NCAA Championship in 1992–93. In his senior year, Imes was a runner up for the Hobey Baker Award and was named the Hockey East Player of the Year in 1995. He was inducted into the University of Maine Sports Hall of Fame in 2003. After retiring, Imes joined the Chicago Blues youth hockey organization as a director.",
"score": "1.2931914"
},
{
"id": "25584055",
"title": "Bilqis Abdul-Qaadir",
"text": " Abdul-Qaadir's hopes were to continue playing professionally in Europe, but were quickly diminished when she was informed of the rule from the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) that prohibits headgear larger than five inches. Unwilling to stray in her beliefs, Abdul-Qaadir has stood up to the international rules, petitioning for an exemption to the rule. She put her dreams of playing professionally aside as she works to now pave a way for other Muslim women in sports. FIBA eventually ruled in her favor in 2017. Abdul-Qaadir started an online campaign called “Muslim Girls Hoop Too” to raise awareness for Muslim women in sports with an emphasis on female basketball players. She hopes ",
"score": "1.293004"
},
{
"id": "6628417",
"title": "Punjabi sports (India)",
"text": " This is played by a group of girls using a ball made of seven layers of cloth. The ball is bounced in one hand with the girl singing rhymes. The girl who sings the longest is the winner.",
"score": "1.2918838"
},
{
"id": "15364863",
"title": "Šarūnas Jasikevičius",
"text": " played in the gym, and also in the street using scrap metal instead of real baskets, and their favorite pastime was called minus, a kind of forerunner of little game that can be seen today during the NBA All-Star Game called \"horse\". It was far from ideal, but his parents preferred to see him play with the scrap metal hoops in front of their home rather than down at the pitch, where it would have taken him less than five minutes to pick a fight with the wrong person. His childhood dream was to become a Žalgiris player about which he was so crazy that he ",
"score": "1.2906189"
},
{
"id": "16208119",
"title": "Darshika Abeywickrama",
"text": " She initially took interest in high jump as a kid and she received her first certificate in high jump when she was studying Grade 4. She later switched to netball after watching one of her sisters playing the sport. It was revealed that she was urged to join the school netball team when she switched to Anula Vidyalaya. In addition, she also participated in athletic events such as shot put, discus throw and javelin throw at school level competitions. She also took up basketball in school sportsmeet when she was in Grade 9 and was subsequently called up to the ",
"score": "1.2851167"
},
{
"id": "2620760",
"title": "Sani Sakakini",
"text": " Sakakini started playing basketball at the age of 14 in the Sarriyet Ramallah club. His international career started in 2007 after he went to Applied Science University in Jordan and joined the Jordanian Premier League playing three seasons for Al Riyadi Amman. He came back to the league in 2015 to play one season with Orthodox and help the team win the title. In 2011, Sakakini started in the minor NBL league with Guangzhou Free Man before playing in the main CBA league for four seasons with Qingdao Eagles, Jiangsu Monkey King and Tianjin Gold Lions. He started 115 games for 126 appearances, averaging 19.3 PPG and 12.5 RPG. Sakakini played a few games in 2013 in the PBBA league for Sarriyet Ramallah and helped the team win the championship. He also played a few games in 2014 and 2016 in the LBL league for Hoops Club and Champville SC. He started 17 games out of 17 appearances, averaging 18.4 PPG and 10.6 RPG. For the 2017-2018 season, Sakakini joined the LPB league playing for the Trotamundos de Carabobo. On August 29, 2021, Sakakini officially joined the Taichung Suns of the T1 League in Taiwan.",
"score": "1.2849996"
}
] | [
"Winis Imbi\n Winis Imbi (born 26 April 1979 in Papua New Guinea) is an Australian rules footballer. He is 172cm in height. Imbi was named in the 1997 TAC Cup team of the year before training with Essendon in 1998. In 1999, Imbi was promoted to the Essendon rookie list and played some promising games in the Bomber's Ansett Cup finals campaign. That year he won the Essendon Football Club reserves best and fairest. At the end of the season, he was delisted and added to the Kangaroos Football Club's rookie list where he lasted until the end of the year. Imbi holds the North Ballarat Rebels games record with 53 games. He played football in Aberfeldie, Victoria in 2002. He continues to play football semi-professionally for the Portland Football Club in the Western Border Football League, where he was joint winner of the league's best and fairest in 2003. His younger brother, James Imbi, began at the Portland Football Club before trying out with the Sturt Football Club in the South Australian National Football League in 2004, after which he went to the Palmerston Football Club in the Northern Territory Football League in 2006.",
"Liliane Mukobwanakawe\n According to the New Times, a Rwandese daily, Mukobwanakawe was introduced to sitting volleyball, a sport in the Paralympic Games, in 2007, and was recruited by a team called Imena. She left Imena a year later and joined the Nyarugenge-based Troupe Handicapee Tuzuzanye (THT) Club where she also played for one year before crossing to Intwari in Kicukiro where she was appointed captain and later the club vice president, roles she holds to date. She has since gone ahead to represent her country at the 2016 Intercontinental and World ParaVolley Championship was held between March 17-23 in Hangzhou City, China.",
"HoopWorld\n HoopWorld is an action sports basketball game in arcade style where two teams fight each other in order to defend their home courts. The point of the game is to get the highest score possible before match time runs out. The player runs, fights, kicks, steals the ball from opponents, and performs dunks and ball passes to win the match. Mystery Boxes will appear randomly on the court during the match revealing one of eight power-ups that impact game play. The game comes with three game modes (Quick Match, Tournament, and Survival) and has four difficulty levels (easy, normal, difficulty, and crazy) that enable the player to unlock teams and courts when played in Tournament mode. HoopWorld is an offline multiplayer game that can be played with 1-2 players. There is also an online leader board allowing players to upload their accumulated scores generated in Tournament mode. There are six available courts that are set in nature and outdoor locations, such as a jungle, a volcano, a Caribbean island, a Greek village, a desert, and a mystical forest. Each court is defended by its respective team that the player can pick from.",
"Imed Mhedhebi\n Imed Mhedhebi or Mhadhbi (عماد المهذبى) (born 22 March 1976 in Tunis) is a former Tunisian football winger. He was a member of the Tunisian national team that participated at the 2002 FIFA World Cup and won the 2004 African Cup of Nations. On January 27, 2007 he played his first Ligue 1 match for Nantes against Lorient",
"Festus Ezeli\n Shortly after Ezeli arrived in Yuba City, his uncle encouraged him to take up what seemed to be the most appropriate sport for a 6'8\" (2.03 m) teenager—basketball. This proved much more difficult for him than academics; although he had played soccer as a child, he had never played any organized sports. He took a year of classes at Jesuit High School in Sacramento, but did not play basketball; different sources report that he was either ineligible to play because he had graduated from high school in Nigeria or cut during tryouts. The start of his organized basketball career, with a low-level AAU team, was especially inauspicious; his first points were scored in his own team's basket. ",
"Bulgantamir Sergelenbaatar\n Sergelenbaatar has been practicing athletics, freestyle wrestling, basketball, and handball when she was a child. She has been practicing volleyball since she was 13 years old with her first volleyball trainer Munkhtulga.M. She likes to watch Lee Jae-yeong, the outside spiker of the South Korea women's national volleyball team and Incheon Heungkuk Life Pink Spiders. Their body measurements are quite similar so she compares her play with her matches. Because Lee Jae-yeong is considered as one of the world's best players who takes an advantage of their shorter height in a volleyball play.",
"Gabriela Guimarães\n Gabriela Braga Guimarães, nickname Gabi, (born May 19, 1994) is a Brazilian indoor volleyball player. She plays as an outside spiker. She competed at the 2020 Summer Olympics, in the Women's tournament, winning a sliver medal.",
"Jessica Gallagher\n She played netball and basketball with able-bodied competitors, having first participated at the elite level in both sports as she started to lose her vision. In netball, she was a goal keeper and goal attack, represented Victoria several times and was named as an emergency for the Australian U16 team. In the Victorian league's Championship Division, she represented both Palladians and Altona Lightning. In basketball, she represented the Geelong Cats for five years and also represented Victoria Country. At that time, her goal was to become a professional netball or basketball player. As well, she played netball in the Geelong Football Netball League, representing South Barwon and Leopold. Despite her low vision and missing one third of the games due to her Paralympic training program, she won the A grade Best and Fairest Award in 2007, representing Leopold. Gallagher is also a snowboarder, having taken up the sport while on a working holiday in Vail, Colorado before she found out about the Winter Paralympic Games.",
"Manipur\n and blocks any such attempt as well as tries to grab the coconut and score on its own. In Manipur's long history, Yubi lakpi was the annual official game, attended by the king, over the Hindu festival of Shree Govindajee. It is like the game of rugby, or American football. Oolaobi (Woo-Laobi) is an outdoor game mainly played by females. Meitei mythology believes that UmangLai Heloi-Taret (seven deities–seven fairies) played this game on the Courtyard of the temple of Umang Lai Lairembi. The number of participants is not fixed but are divided into two groups (size as per agreement). Players are divided as into Raiders (Attackers) or Defenders (Avoiders). Hiyang tannaba, also called Hi Yangba Tanaba, is a traditional boat rowing race and festivity of the Panas.",
"Hoop rolling\n as hoops: \"A wheel must be protected. You make me a useful present. It will be a hoop to children, but to me a tyre for my wheel.\"(14. CLXVIII) Martial also mentions the sport was practised by Sarmatian boys, who rolled their hoops on the frozen Danube river. According to Strabo, one of the popular Roman venues for practising the sport was the Campus Martius, which was large enough to accommodate a wide variety of activities. The Roman game was to roll the hoop while throwing a spear or stick through it. For Romans, this was more an entertainment and military development, not a philosophical activity. Several ancient sources praise the sport. According to Horace, hoop driving was one of the manly sports. Ovid in his Tristia is more ",
"Mikaela Dombkins\n Dombkins came to the Australian Institute of Sport on a scholarship when she was 16. She represented Australia at the Under 19s World Championship for Women in Tunisia in 2005, and at the Under 21 World Championship for Women in Russia, where the team won silver. She played for the Australian Institute of Sport team in the WNBL, starting with the 2003/2004 season. During that season, she had a knee injury. She was part of the team during the 2005/2006 season. During that season, she was the most senior player on the squad. Early in that season, she had an injury to her foot. In an October 2005 game against the Perth Lynx, she scored 24 points. In a December 2005 game against the Capitals, she scored 11 points. While playing for the team, she ruptured her anterior cruciate ligament.",
"Basketball\n Variations of basketball are activities based on the game of basketball, using common basketball skills and equipment (primarily the ball and basket). Some variations only have superficial rule changes, while others are distinct games with varying degrees of influence from basketball. Other variations include children's games, contests or activities meant to help players reinforce skills. An earlier version of basketball, played primarily by women and girls, was Six-on-six basketball. Horseball is a game played on horseback where a ball is handled and points are scored by shooting it through a high net (approximately 1.5m×1.5m). The sport is like a combination of polo, rugby, and basketball. There is even a form played on donkeys known as Donkey basketball, which has attracted criticism from animal rights groups. ",
"Hoop rolling\n Early 19th-century travellers saw children playing with hoops over much of Europe and beyond. The game was also a common pastime of African village children on the Tanganyika plateau, and not long after it is recorded in the Freetown settler community. In China, the game may well go back to 1000 BC or further. Christian missionaries encountered it there in the 19th century. Children in late Edo period Japan also were known to play the game. In English the sport is known by several names, \"hoop and stick\", \"bowling hoops\", or \"gird and cleek\" in Scotland, where the gird is the hoop and ",
"Tess Madgen\n Madgen plays guard and forward and is an offensive player. In 2008, she was featured as a basketball star on myFiba. Madgen played junior basketball for the Eastern Mavericks. She has been affiliated with the South Australian Institute of Sport. She competed at the 2004 and 2005 Australian U16 Championships, playing for South Australia Country. She competed at the 2006 and 2007 Australian U18 Championships, playing for South Australia Country. In 2007, she played for Barossa Valley. She competed at the 2007 and 2008 Australian U18 Championships, playing for South Australia Country. In 2008, her team finished first, beating Victoria 99–61 for one of the biggest wins ever in the competition's history. As a competitor at the 2009 Australian Under-20 national championships, she won the Bob Staunton Award while her team took home silver.",
"Chris Imes\n Chris Imes (born August 27, 1972), is an American former ice hockey player. He played for HK Olimpija, the Anchorage Aces, and the Minnesota Moose during his career. He also played for the American national team at the 1994 Winter Olympics and 1995 World Championships. Imes played for the University of Maine Black Bears from 1990 to 1995. During his freshman and sophomore year at the University of Maine, Imes won the Shawn Walsh Defensive Player Award twice and helped guide Maine to their first NCAA Championship in 1992–93. In his senior year, Imes was a runner up for the Hobey Baker Award and was named the Hockey East Player of the Year in 1995. He was inducted into the University of Maine Sports Hall of Fame in 2003. After retiring, Imes joined the Chicago Blues youth hockey organization as a director.",
"Bilqis Abdul-Qaadir\n Abdul-Qaadir's hopes were to continue playing professionally in Europe, but were quickly diminished when she was informed of the rule from the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) that prohibits headgear larger than five inches. Unwilling to stray in her beliefs, Abdul-Qaadir has stood up to the international rules, petitioning for an exemption to the rule. She put her dreams of playing professionally aside as she works to now pave a way for other Muslim women in sports. FIBA eventually ruled in her favor in 2017. Abdul-Qaadir started an online campaign called “Muslim Girls Hoop Too” to raise awareness for Muslim women in sports with an emphasis on female basketball players. She hopes ",
"Punjabi sports (India)\n This is played by a group of girls using a ball made of seven layers of cloth. The ball is bounced in one hand with the girl singing rhymes. The girl who sings the longest is the winner.",
"Šarūnas Jasikevičius\n played in the gym, and also in the street using scrap metal instead of real baskets, and their favorite pastime was called minus, a kind of forerunner of little game that can be seen today during the NBA All-Star Game called \"horse\". It was far from ideal, but his parents preferred to see him play with the scrap metal hoops in front of their home rather than down at the pitch, where it would have taken him less than five minutes to pick a fight with the wrong person. His childhood dream was to become a Žalgiris player about which he was so crazy that he ",
"Darshika Abeywickrama\n She initially took interest in high jump as a kid and she received her first certificate in high jump when she was studying Grade 4. She later switched to netball after watching one of her sisters playing the sport. It was revealed that she was urged to join the school netball team when she switched to Anula Vidyalaya. In addition, she also participated in athletic events such as shot put, discus throw and javelin throw at school level competitions. She also took up basketball in school sportsmeet when she was in Grade 9 and was subsequently called up to the ",
"Sani Sakakini\n Sakakini started playing basketball at the age of 14 in the Sarriyet Ramallah club. His international career started in 2007 after he went to Applied Science University in Jordan and joined the Jordanian Premier League playing three seasons for Al Riyadi Amman. He came back to the league in 2015 to play one season with Orthodox and help the team win the title. In 2011, Sakakini started in the minor NBL league with Guangzhou Free Man before playing in the main CBA league for four seasons with Qingdao Eagles, Jiangsu Monkey King and Tianjin Gold Lions. He started 115 games for 126 appearances, averaging 19.3 PPG and 12.5 RPG. Sakakini played a few games in 2013 in the PBBA league for Sarriyet Ramallah and helped the team win the championship. He also played a few games in 2014 and 2016 in the LBL league for Hoops Club and Champville SC. He started 17 games out of 17 appearances, averaging 18.4 PPG and 10.6 RPG. For the 2017-2018 season, Sakakini joined the LPB league playing for the Trotamundos de Carabobo. On August 29, 2021, Sakakini officially joined the Taichung Suns of the T1 League in Taiwan."
] |
What sport does Gerd Schwidrowski play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Gerd Schwidrowski | 4,232,627 | 27 | [
{
"id": "10587952",
"title": "Gerd Schwidrowski",
"text": " Gerd Schwidrowski (born 19 September 1947 in Rendsburg) is a former professional German footballer. Schwidrowski made a total of 9 appearances in the Fußball-Bundesliga for Tennis Borussia Berlin during his playing career.",
"score": "1.887978"
},
{
"id": "11892042",
"title": "Gerd Truntschka",
"text": " Truntschka played for Kölner Haie and DEG Metro Stars. He played for West Germany 1984 Canada Cup as well as three Winter Olympics. He competed for the West German national team at the 1980 Winter Olympics and also played for the German national team at the 1992 Winter Olympics.",
"score": "1.5567532"
},
{
"id": "9565968",
"title": "Starogard Gdański",
"text": "Adolf Lesser (1851–1926) a German physician who specialized in forensic medicine ; Michael F. Blenski (1862–1932), Wisconsin politician ; Adolf Wallenberg (1862–1949) a German internist and neurologist ; John S. Flizikowski, (1868–1934) a Chicago architect ; Ferdinand Noeldechen (1895–1951), general ; Theo Mackeben (1897–1953) a German pianist, conductor and composer, particularly of film music ; Kazimierz Kropidłowski (1931–1998) a Polish long jumper, competed at the 1956 Summer Olympics ; Henryk Jankowski (1936-2010) a Polish Roman Catholic priest and Member of Solidarity movement ; Kazimierz Deyna (1947–1989), soccer player, over 600 pro games and 97 for Poland ; Władysław Wojtakajtis (1949–2016) a Polish swimmer, competed at the 1968 and 1972 Summer Olympics ; Andrzej Grubba (1958–2005) a Polish table tennis player ; Maria Kamrowska (born 1966) a retired Polish heptathlete. ; Paweł Papke (born 1977) a former Polish volleyball player ; Piotr Wiśniewski (born 1982) a Polish footballer, who played 230 games for Lechia Gdańsk ; Oktawia Nowacka (born 1991) a Polish modern pentathlete and bronze medalist in the 2016 Summer Olympics ",
"score": "1.5565984"
},
{
"id": "25292340",
"title": "Gerd (name)",
"text": " Schwidrowski (born 1947), German footballer ; Gerd Siegmund (born 1973), German ski jumper ; Gerd Springer (1927–1999), Austrian footballer and coach ; Gerd Tacke (1906–1997), German businessman ; Gerd Theissen (born 1943), German theologian ; Gerd Türk, German tenor ; Gerd Völs (1909–1991), German rower ; Gerd vom Bruch (born 1941), German football player and coach ; Gerd von Rundstedt (1875–1953), German military officer ; Gerd Wessig (born 1959), East German high jumper ; Gerd Zimmermann (disambiguation) ; Gerd Zimmermann (footballer) (born 1949), German football player ; Gerd Zimmermann (speed skater) (born 1942), German speed skater ; Gerd-Volker Schock (born 1950), German football player and coach ",
"score": "1.5329847"
},
{
"id": "28345496",
"title": "Switzerland at the 2012 Summer Olympics",
"text": " and close friend Wawrinka to perform the duty at the opening ceremony instead. Along with Federer, three other Swiss athletes made their fourth Olympic appearance: marathon runner Viktor Röthlin, Star sailor Flavio Marazzi, and quadruple sculls rower André Vonarburg. Equestrian show jumper Pius Schwizer, at age 49, was the oldest athlete of the team, while all-around gymnast Giulia Steingruber was the youngest at age 18. Other notable Swiss athletes featured mountain biker and bronze medalist Nino Schurter, freestyle swimmer and six-time national record holder Dominik Meichtry, triathletes Sven Riederer and Nicola Spirig, and equestrian show jumper Steve Guerdat, who led his team by winning the bronze medal in Beijing. The following is the list of number of competitors participating in the Games. Note that reserves in fencing, field hockey, football, and handball are not counted as athletes:",
"score": "1.5205474"
},
{
"id": "31017472",
"title": "Gerd Saborowski",
"text": " Gerd Saborowski (born 3 September 1943) is a retired German football player. He spent five seasons in the Bundesliga with Eintracht Braunschweig.",
"score": "1.5167527"
},
{
"id": "2595269",
"title": "Władysław Gędłek",
"text": " Represented Poland in 20 games (1949–1953), also played in both Poland's games of the 1952 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.5097002"
},
{
"id": "11734257",
"title": "Sport in Poland",
"text": " Poland in the 1992 Winter Olympics where he collected one assist in five games. Presently, he plays for the Rapperswil-Jona Lakers of the Nationalliga A in Switzerland. Krzysztof Oliwa, hockey player (born 12 April 1973 in Tychy, Poland) – Former professional ice hockey player who played the left wing position in the National Hockey League. Oliwa was nicknamed \"The Hammer\" due to his physical and intimidating on-ice presence. At 6'5\", with a strong build, he would normally play the role of the team's enforcer. Oliwa won the 1999–2000 Stanley Cup as a member of the New Jersey Devils. Oliwa has also played for the ",
"score": "1.5038918"
},
{
"id": "11892041",
"title": "Gerd Truntschka",
"text": " Gerhard Truntschka (born September 10, 1958 in Landshut, West Germany) is a retired professional ice hockey player who played in the Ice hockey Bundesliga.",
"score": "1.4966569"
},
{
"id": "30102459",
"title": "Solothurn",
"text": "Edgar Buchwalder (1916–2009), cyclist, silver medalist at the 1936 Summer Olympics ; Anton Allemann (1936–2008), footballer, played 27 times for the Swiss national team ; Alex Tschui (born 1939), modern pentathlete, competed at the 1968 Summer Olympics ; Marco Walker (born 1970), former footballer who played 344 games ; Alexander Popov (born 1971), Russian former swimmer, won gold in the 50m. and 100m. freestyle at the 1992 and 1996 Summer Olympics, lives in Solothurn ; Tim Hug (born 1987), Nordic combined skier, competed in the 2010 Winter Olympics ; Yannick Schwaller (born 1995), curler ",
"score": "1.490468"
},
{
"id": "29753138",
"title": "Holger Glinicki",
"text": " Holger Glinicki was born in Hamburg on 25 October 1952. He was paralysed following a motorcycle accident in 1972 that broke his fourth thoracic vertebra. He became involved in disability sports, playing wheelchair basketball for RSC Hamburg, who were the German national champions in 1983, and played a total of 123 international games. He became assistant coach of the German women's national wheelchair basketball team in 2003, and then coach in 2006. The team won five consecutive European championships, in 2003, 2005, 2007, 2009 and 2011, and a silver medal at the 2008 Summer Paralympics in Beijing. The German team started off slow in its games against the United States and China at the 2012 Summer Paralympics, winning these games by slim six-point margins. Marina Mohnen thought that ",
"score": "1.4883349"
},
{
"id": "8230817",
"title": "Gary Schmalzbauer",
"text": " Gary Owen Schmalzbauer (born January 27, 1940) is an American former ice hockey forward and Olympian. Schmalzbauer played with Team USA at the 1964 Winter Olympics held in Innsbruck, Austria. He also played for the Rochester Mustangs in the United States Hockey League.",
"score": "1.4847257"
},
{
"id": "11734262",
"title": "Sport in Poland",
"text": " times, including his best performance in 2010 when he captured first place. Alan Kulwicki (14 December 1954 – 1 April 1993), nicknamed \"Special K\" and the \"Polish Prince\", was an American NASCAR Winston Cup Series. He won the 1992 Cup Series championship. Grzegorz Lato, footballer (born 8 April 1950 in Malbork, Poland) – Lato is the all-time cap leader for the Polish National Football Team. He was the leading scorer at the 1974 FIFA World Cup, where he won the Golden Shoe after scoring a tournament best seven goals. Lato's playing career coincided with the golden era of Polish football, which began with Olympic ",
"score": "1.4715533"
},
{
"id": "32790910",
"title": "Ginter Gawlik",
"text": " Ginter Gawlik (born 5 December 1930 in Borsigwerk, a district of Zabrze; died 22 August 2005 in Würzburg, Germany) was a Polish soccer player, defender and midfielder. He spent most of career playing for Polish team Górnik Zabrze. Gawlik, who was not raised in Poland (until 1945, Zabrze, then called Hindenburg, belonged to Germany), started his career in the mid-1940s for the German team Reichsbahn SV Borsigwerk. After 1945, he played for Górnik Biskupice and in 1950 he moved to Górnik Zabrze, a powerhouse of Polish soccer. While playing for Zabrze the team won 5 Polish football championships (late 1950s and early 1960s). Also, he played for the Polish National Team scoring one goal in 7 games. His debut took place on 23 June 1957 in Chorzów, when Poland beat Soviet Union 2-1.",
"score": "1.4651275"
},
{
"id": "32795026",
"title": "Tjeerd Borstlap",
"text": " Tjeerd Borstlap (born January 10, 1955) is a former field hockey player from the Netherlands, who played eight international matches for the Dutch National Men's Team in the years 1978–1979 under coach Wim van Heumen. He played club hockey for the hockey club HC Klein Zwitserland from The Hague.",
"score": "1.4633955"
},
{
"id": "5224274",
"title": "Bibi Torriani",
"text": " Richard \"Bibi\" \"Riccardo\" Torriani (1 October 1911 – 3 September 1988) was a Swiss ice hockey player and coach, and luge athlete. He played for HC Davos from 1929 to 1950, and served as captain of the Switzerland men's national ice hockey team from 1933 to 1939. He scored 105 goals in 111 international matches for the national team, won two bronze medals in ice hockey at the Olympic Games and won an additional four medals at the Ice Hockey World Championships. Playing for HC Davos, he won 18 Swiss championships and six Spengler Cups. He was chosen as the flag bearer for Switzerland at the 1948 Winter Olympics, and ",
"score": "1.4593987"
},
{
"id": "2595268",
"title": "Władysław Gędłek",
"text": " His first team was Krowodrza Kraków, where Gedlek's career started in 1935. During World War II, participated in secret games in Kraków, as the German occupiers banned Poles from playing all sports. In 1945 he moved to Cracovia, where he played until 1953, winning Championships of Poland in 1948. Regarded as a very talented and skilled player. Tough in defence, active in offence, often initiated dangerous attacks on opponents. In late 1940s Poland Gedlek had the status of a celebrity, and his immense talent was appreciated not only in his native country. As the first Pole ever he was called to the FIFA's official \"World Team’’, to a friendly game in 1953.",
"score": "1.4590664"
},
{
"id": "13427234",
"title": "Koszalin",
"text": " Berdnikov (born 1946), painter and glass artist ; Mirosław Okoński (born 1958), footballer, played 418 pro games and 29 for Poland ; Kuba Wojewódzki (born 1963), journalist, TV personality, drummer and comedian ; Mirosław Trzeciak (born 1968), footballer, director of sport development of Legia Warszawa ; Marcin Horbacz (born 1974), modern pentathlete, competed at the 2008 Summer Olympics ; Adam Sztaba (born 1975), composer, music producer, conductor, arranger and pianist ; Maciej Stachowiak (born 1976), software engineer at Apple Inc. ; Kasia Cerekwicka (born 1980), pop singer ; Marzena Diakun (born 1981), conductor ; Jakub Różalski (born 1981), artist and illustrator ; Paweł Spisak (born 1981), equestrian, competed at the 2004, 2008, 2012 and 2016 Summer Olympics ; Sebastian Mila (born 1982), footballer ; Santall (born 1983), musician ; Schwesta Ewa (born 1984), musician, moved to Germany as a child ; Joanna Majdan (born 1988), chess player ",
"score": "1.4546293"
},
{
"id": "11734258",
"title": "Sport in Poland",
"text": " Blue Jackets, Pittsburgh Penguins, New York Rangers, Boston Bruins and Calgary Flames. Zbigniew Boniek, football player (born 3 March 1956 in Bydgoszcz, Poland – He played on Zawisza Bydgoszcz, Widzew Łódź, Juventus and AS Roma. In 2004 Pelé got him on the FIFA 100 list. Today, he is the president of the Polish Football Association. He was elected as the president on 26 October 2012. Helena Rakoczy, (born 23 December 1921 in Kraków, Poland). Gymnast at Olympics (1952, 1956), and World Championships (1950, 1954). World Individual All-Around, Vault, Balance Beam, and Floor Exercise champion in 1950. Inducted into International Gymnastics Hall of Fame in ",
"score": "1.4528766"
},
{
"id": "181071",
"title": "Gerd Springer",
"text": " Gerhard \"Gerdi\" Springer (6 February 1927 – 28 July 1999) was an Austrian footballer and coach. He was also an ice hockey player (bronze medalist with the Austrian team at the World Championships 1947; member of the Austrian team in the men's tournament at the 1956 Winter Olympics. ) and coach. Springer's grave is in his home-town Klagenfurt, Carinthia (\"Friedhof Annabichl\"). He coached, inter alia, SK Sturm Graz, SK Rapid Wien, Austria Klagenfurt, Grazer AK, 1. Wiener Neustädter SC, Alpine Donawitz. Due to his \"defence-playing system\", Springer's nick-name was \"Karawanken-Herrera\" - \"Karawanken\" are the higher mountains in South Carinthia (near of Klagenfurt) - Helinio Herrera (team-manager in Italy, initiator of \"Catenacco\").",
"score": "1.4504547"
}
] | [
"Gerd Schwidrowski\n Gerd Schwidrowski (born 19 September 1947 in Rendsburg) is a former professional German footballer. Schwidrowski made a total of 9 appearances in the Fußball-Bundesliga for Tennis Borussia Berlin during his playing career.",
"Gerd Truntschka\n Truntschka played for Kölner Haie and DEG Metro Stars. He played for West Germany 1984 Canada Cup as well as three Winter Olympics. He competed for the West German national team at the 1980 Winter Olympics and also played for the German national team at the 1992 Winter Olympics.",
"Starogard Gdański\nAdolf Lesser (1851–1926) a German physician who specialized in forensic medicine ; Michael F. Blenski (1862–1932), Wisconsin politician ; Adolf Wallenberg (1862–1949) a German internist and neurologist ; John S. Flizikowski, (1868–1934) a Chicago architect ; Ferdinand Noeldechen (1895–1951), general ; Theo Mackeben (1897–1953) a German pianist, conductor and composer, particularly of film music ; Kazimierz Kropidłowski (1931–1998) a Polish long jumper, competed at the 1956 Summer Olympics ; Henryk Jankowski (1936-2010) a Polish Roman Catholic priest and Member of Solidarity movement ; Kazimierz Deyna (1947–1989), soccer player, over 600 pro games and 97 for Poland ; Władysław Wojtakajtis (1949–2016) a Polish swimmer, competed at the 1968 and 1972 Summer Olympics ; Andrzej Grubba (1958–2005) a Polish table tennis player ; Maria Kamrowska (born 1966) a retired Polish heptathlete. ; Paweł Papke (born 1977) a former Polish volleyball player ; Piotr Wiśniewski (born 1982) a Polish footballer, who played 230 games for Lechia Gdańsk ; Oktawia Nowacka (born 1991) a Polish modern pentathlete and bronze medalist in the 2016 Summer Olympics ",
"Gerd (name)\n Schwidrowski (born 1947), German footballer ; Gerd Siegmund (born 1973), German ski jumper ; Gerd Springer (1927–1999), Austrian footballer and coach ; Gerd Tacke (1906–1997), German businessman ; Gerd Theissen (born 1943), German theologian ; Gerd Türk, German tenor ; Gerd Völs (1909–1991), German rower ; Gerd vom Bruch (born 1941), German football player and coach ; Gerd von Rundstedt (1875–1953), German military officer ; Gerd Wessig (born 1959), East German high jumper ; Gerd Zimmermann (disambiguation) ; Gerd Zimmermann (footballer) (born 1949), German football player ; Gerd Zimmermann (speed skater) (born 1942), German speed skater ; Gerd-Volker Schock (born 1950), German football player and coach ",
"Switzerland at the 2012 Summer Olympics\n and close friend Wawrinka to perform the duty at the opening ceremony instead. Along with Federer, three other Swiss athletes made their fourth Olympic appearance: marathon runner Viktor Röthlin, Star sailor Flavio Marazzi, and quadruple sculls rower André Vonarburg. Equestrian show jumper Pius Schwizer, at age 49, was the oldest athlete of the team, while all-around gymnast Giulia Steingruber was the youngest at age 18. Other notable Swiss athletes featured mountain biker and bronze medalist Nino Schurter, freestyle swimmer and six-time national record holder Dominik Meichtry, triathletes Sven Riederer and Nicola Spirig, and equestrian show jumper Steve Guerdat, who led his team by winning the bronze medal in Beijing. The following is the list of number of competitors participating in the Games. Note that reserves in fencing, field hockey, football, and handball are not counted as athletes:",
"Gerd Saborowski\n Gerd Saborowski (born 3 September 1943) is a retired German football player. He spent five seasons in the Bundesliga with Eintracht Braunschweig.",
"Władysław Gędłek\n Represented Poland in 20 games (1949–1953), also played in both Poland's games of the 1952 Summer Olympics.",
"Sport in Poland\n Poland in the 1992 Winter Olympics where he collected one assist in five games. Presently, he plays for the Rapperswil-Jona Lakers of the Nationalliga A in Switzerland. Krzysztof Oliwa, hockey player (born 12 April 1973 in Tychy, Poland) – Former professional ice hockey player who played the left wing position in the National Hockey League. Oliwa was nicknamed \"The Hammer\" due to his physical and intimidating on-ice presence. At 6'5\", with a strong build, he would normally play the role of the team's enforcer. Oliwa won the 1999–2000 Stanley Cup as a member of the New Jersey Devils. Oliwa has also played for the ",
"Gerd Truntschka\n Gerhard Truntschka (born September 10, 1958 in Landshut, West Germany) is a retired professional ice hockey player who played in the Ice hockey Bundesliga.",
"Solothurn\nEdgar Buchwalder (1916–2009), cyclist, silver medalist at the 1936 Summer Olympics ; Anton Allemann (1936–2008), footballer, played 27 times for the Swiss national team ; Alex Tschui (born 1939), modern pentathlete, competed at the 1968 Summer Olympics ; Marco Walker (born 1970), former footballer who played 344 games ; Alexander Popov (born 1971), Russian former swimmer, won gold in the 50m. and 100m. freestyle at the 1992 and 1996 Summer Olympics, lives in Solothurn ; Tim Hug (born 1987), Nordic combined skier, competed in the 2010 Winter Olympics ; Yannick Schwaller (born 1995), curler ",
"Holger Glinicki\n Holger Glinicki was born in Hamburg on 25 October 1952. He was paralysed following a motorcycle accident in 1972 that broke his fourth thoracic vertebra. He became involved in disability sports, playing wheelchair basketball for RSC Hamburg, who were the German national champions in 1983, and played a total of 123 international games. He became assistant coach of the German women's national wheelchair basketball team in 2003, and then coach in 2006. The team won five consecutive European championships, in 2003, 2005, 2007, 2009 and 2011, and a silver medal at the 2008 Summer Paralympics in Beijing. The German team started off slow in its games against the United States and China at the 2012 Summer Paralympics, winning these games by slim six-point margins. Marina Mohnen thought that ",
"Gary Schmalzbauer\n Gary Owen Schmalzbauer (born January 27, 1940) is an American former ice hockey forward and Olympian. Schmalzbauer played with Team USA at the 1964 Winter Olympics held in Innsbruck, Austria. He also played for the Rochester Mustangs in the United States Hockey League.",
"Sport in Poland\n times, including his best performance in 2010 when he captured first place. Alan Kulwicki (14 December 1954 – 1 April 1993), nicknamed \"Special K\" and the \"Polish Prince\", was an American NASCAR Winston Cup Series. He won the 1992 Cup Series championship. Grzegorz Lato, footballer (born 8 April 1950 in Malbork, Poland) – Lato is the all-time cap leader for the Polish National Football Team. He was the leading scorer at the 1974 FIFA World Cup, where he won the Golden Shoe after scoring a tournament best seven goals. Lato's playing career coincided with the golden era of Polish football, which began with Olympic ",
"Ginter Gawlik\n Ginter Gawlik (born 5 December 1930 in Borsigwerk, a district of Zabrze; died 22 August 2005 in Würzburg, Germany) was a Polish soccer player, defender and midfielder. He spent most of career playing for Polish team Górnik Zabrze. Gawlik, who was not raised in Poland (until 1945, Zabrze, then called Hindenburg, belonged to Germany), started his career in the mid-1940s for the German team Reichsbahn SV Borsigwerk. After 1945, he played for Górnik Biskupice and in 1950 he moved to Górnik Zabrze, a powerhouse of Polish soccer. While playing for Zabrze the team won 5 Polish football championships (late 1950s and early 1960s). Also, he played for the Polish National Team scoring one goal in 7 games. His debut took place on 23 June 1957 in Chorzów, when Poland beat Soviet Union 2-1.",
"Tjeerd Borstlap\n Tjeerd Borstlap (born January 10, 1955) is a former field hockey player from the Netherlands, who played eight international matches for the Dutch National Men's Team in the years 1978–1979 under coach Wim van Heumen. He played club hockey for the hockey club HC Klein Zwitserland from The Hague.",
"Bibi Torriani\n Richard \"Bibi\" \"Riccardo\" Torriani (1 October 1911 – 3 September 1988) was a Swiss ice hockey player and coach, and luge athlete. He played for HC Davos from 1929 to 1950, and served as captain of the Switzerland men's national ice hockey team from 1933 to 1939. He scored 105 goals in 111 international matches for the national team, won two bronze medals in ice hockey at the Olympic Games and won an additional four medals at the Ice Hockey World Championships. Playing for HC Davos, he won 18 Swiss championships and six Spengler Cups. He was chosen as the flag bearer for Switzerland at the 1948 Winter Olympics, and ",
"Władysław Gędłek\n His first team was Krowodrza Kraków, where Gedlek's career started in 1935. During World War II, participated in secret games in Kraków, as the German occupiers banned Poles from playing all sports. In 1945 he moved to Cracovia, where he played until 1953, winning Championships of Poland in 1948. Regarded as a very talented and skilled player. Tough in defence, active in offence, often initiated dangerous attacks on opponents. In late 1940s Poland Gedlek had the status of a celebrity, and his immense talent was appreciated not only in his native country. As the first Pole ever he was called to the FIFA's official \"World Team’’, to a friendly game in 1953.",
"Koszalin\n Berdnikov (born 1946), painter and glass artist ; Mirosław Okoński (born 1958), footballer, played 418 pro games and 29 for Poland ; Kuba Wojewódzki (born 1963), journalist, TV personality, drummer and comedian ; Mirosław Trzeciak (born 1968), footballer, director of sport development of Legia Warszawa ; Marcin Horbacz (born 1974), modern pentathlete, competed at the 2008 Summer Olympics ; Adam Sztaba (born 1975), composer, music producer, conductor, arranger and pianist ; Maciej Stachowiak (born 1976), software engineer at Apple Inc. ; Kasia Cerekwicka (born 1980), pop singer ; Marzena Diakun (born 1981), conductor ; Jakub Różalski (born 1981), artist and illustrator ; Paweł Spisak (born 1981), equestrian, competed at the 2004, 2008, 2012 and 2016 Summer Olympics ; Sebastian Mila (born 1982), footballer ; Santall (born 1983), musician ; Schwesta Ewa (born 1984), musician, moved to Germany as a child ; Joanna Majdan (born 1988), chess player ",
"Sport in Poland\n Blue Jackets, Pittsburgh Penguins, New York Rangers, Boston Bruins and Calgary Flames. Zbigniew Boniek, football player (born 3 March 1956 in Bydgoszcz, Poland – He played on Zawisza Bydgoszcz, Widzew Łódź, Juventus and AS Roma. In 2004 Pelé got him on the FIFA 100 list. Today, he is the president of the Polish Football Association. He was elected as the president on 26 October 2012. Helena Rakoczy, (born 23 December 1921 in Kraków, Poland). Gymnast at Olympics (1952, 1956), and World Championships (1950, 1954). World Individual All-Around, Vault, Balance Beam, and Floor Exercise champion in 1950. Inducted into International Gymnastics Hall of Fame in ",
"Gerd Springer\n Gerhard \"Gerdi\" Springer (6 February 1927 – 28 July 1999) was an Austrian footballer and coach. He was also an ice hockey player (bronze medalist with the Austrian team at the World Championships 1947; member of the Austrian team in the men's tournament at the 1956 Winter Olympics. ) and coach. Springer's grave is in his home-town Klagenfurt, Carinthia (\"Friedhof Annabichl\"). He coached, inter alia, SK Sturm Graz, SK Rapid Wien, Austria Klagenfurt, Grazer AK, 1. Wiener Neustädter SC, Alpine Donawitz. Due to his \"defence-playing system\", Springer's nick-name was \"Karawanken-Herrera\" - \"Karawanken\" are the higher mountains in South Carinthia (near of Klagenfurt) - Helinio Herrera (team-manager in Italy, initiator of \"Catenacco\")."
] |
What sport does 2014 Powiat Poznański Open play? | [
"tennis",
"lawn tennis",
"lawntennis"
] | sport | 2014 Powiat Poznański Open | 1,214,123 | 54 | [
{
"id": "4816613",
"title": "2014 Powiat Poznański Open",
"text": " The 2014 Powiat Poznański Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2014 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Sobota, Greater Poland Voivodeship, Poland, on 21–27 July 2014.",
"score": "1.8097277"
},
{
"id": "4816614",
"title": "2014 Powiat Poznański Open",
"text": "1 Rankings as of 14 July 2014 ",
"score": "1.7787975"
},
{
"id": "29617570",
"title": "2014 Poznań Open",
"text": " The 2014 Poznań Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the eleventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2014 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place at the Park Tenisowy Olimpia in Poznań, Poland from 12 to 20 July 2014, including the qualifying competition in the first two days.",
"score": "1.6698304"
},
{
"id": "16091973",
"title": "1938 in Poland",
"text": " Chorzów 4-2 (att. 12 000), in Łódź, ŁKS Łódź ties 0–0 with Warta Poznań, and in Warsaw, Polonia Warszawa ties 2–2 with Cracovia (att. 5000), ; August 29. In an international lawn tennis game in Žilina, Czechoslovakia ties 3–3 with Poland. In games of the Ekstraklasa, ŁKS Łódź ties with Warta Poznań 0-0, Ruch Chorzów beats at home AKS Chorzów 4-2 (att. 15 000), Pogoń Lwów beats Warszawianka Warszawa 3-0 (att. 3500), Wisła Kraków beats Śmigły Wilno 4–1, and Cracovia ties with Polonia Warszawa 2-2. In qualifiers to the Ekstraklasa, Garbarnia Kraków beats at home Union Touring Łódź 2–1, and in Luck, local team PKS loses to Śląsk Świętochłowice 1-4 (att. 3000), ",
"score": "1.5793395"
},
{
"id": "28622558",
"title": "Poznań Open",
"text": " The Poznań Open is a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor red clay courts. It is currently part of the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) Challenger Tour. It has been held annually at the Park Tenisowy Olimpia in Poznań, Poland, since 2004. The tournament is regarded as a continuation of Polish Open, which was held in Poznań for nine consecutive years between 1992 and 2000. The current champions are Bernabé Zapata Miralles in singles and Zdeněk Kolář with Jiří Lehečka in doubles event.",
"score": "1.5683873"
},
{
"id": "4900866",
"title": "2014 Powiat Poznański Open – Singles",
"text": " The tournament in Sobota was a new addition to the ITF Women's Circuit. The second seed Kristína Kučová won the title, defeating Sesil Karatantcheva in the final, 1–6, 7–5, 6–3.",
"score": "1.5671394"
},
{
"id": "15886629",
"title": "Warta Poznań",
"text": " a tennis section in 1914. During German rule, matches involving Polish teams were forbidden, which prompted the decision to organize the first Wielkopolska football championship in 1913, in which three teams participated: Warta Poznań, Posnania and Ostrovia Ostrów Wielkopolski. Warta became the first champion. The results were as follows: Posnania - Warta 1–1, Warta - Ostrovia 3–2, Ostrovia - Warta 3–4, Warta - Posnania 2–2. The inaugural championship of the region resulted in a surge of football popularity in Poznań. New football teams emerged such as Trytonia founded in Łazarz and a team called Sparta established in Jeżyce. In 1914, despite the start of hostilities related to the outbreak of World War I, efforts were made ",
"score": "1.5589597"
},
{
"id": "4816615",
"title": "2014 Powiat Poznański Open",
"text": "🇵🇱 Magdalena Fręch ; 🇵🇱 Katarzyna Kawa ; 🇵🇱 Daria Kuczer ; 🇺🇸 Natalie Suk 🇷🇺 Natela Dzalamidze ; 🇮🇹 Anastasia Grymalska ; 🇨🇿 Pernilla Mendesová ; 🇷🇺 Valeria Savinykh 🇪🇸 Inés Ferrer Suárez ; 🇱🇹 Lina Stančiūtė 🇨🇿 Barbora Krejčíková ; Lara Michel The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw: The following players received entry from the qualifying draw: The following players received entry into the singles main draw as lucky losers: The following players received entry by a Special Exempt:",
"score": "1.5563121"
},
{
"id": "4900868",
"title": "2014 Powiat Poznański Open – Doubles",
"text": " The tournament in Sobota was a new addition to the ITF Women's Circuit. The fourth seeds Barbora Krejčíková and Aleksandra Krunić won the tournament, defeating third seeds Anastasiya Vasylyeva and Maryna Zanevska in the final, 3–6, 6–0, [10–6].",
"score": "1.5558237"
},
{
"id": "4900867",
"title": "2014 Powiat Poznański Open – Singles",
"text": " • # 🇨🇿 Andrea Hlaváčková (first round) • # 🇸🇰 Kristína Kučová (champion) • # 🇩🇪 Dinah Pfizenmaier (first round) • # Arantxa Rus (second round) • # 🇺🇦 Maryna Zanevska (quarterfinals) • # 🇷🇸 Aleksandra Krunić (second round) • # 🇺🇦 Anastasiya Vasylyeva (first round) • # Richèl Hogenkamp (first round)",
"score": "1.5547326"
},
{
"id": "16091969",
"title": "1938 in Poland",
"text": " 3–3 with Warszawianka (att. 4000), Ruch Chorzów beats at home Cracovia 4-0 (att. 10 000), ŁKS Łódź ties at home with Śmigły Wilno 1-1 (att. 4000), and Wisła Kraków beats in Kraków Pogoń Lwów 1-0 (att. 3000). In international track and field-friendly, Poland beats France 119,5 – 91,5. Ignacy Tłoczyński becomes lawn tennis champion of Poland, after beating Jozef Hebda, ; June 26. In games of the Ekstraklasa, Cracovia beats at home Ruch Chorzów 3-2 (att. 7000), in Chorzów AKS beats Polonia Warszawa 1-0 (att. 6000), in Wilno, Śmigły beats ŁKS Łódź 4-0 (att. 4000), in Lwów Pogon beats Wisła Kraków 2–1, and in Warsaw, Warszawianka beats Warta Poznań 2-1 (att. 4000). KPW Poznań becomes handball champion of Poland, 2nd is AZS Warszawa, 3rd Cracovia, and 4th ŁKS Łódź. ",
"score": "1.5543662"
},
{
"id": "16091968",
"title": "1938 in Poland",
"text": "June 5. In Strasbourg, in a 1938 FIFA World Cup match, Poland loses to Brazil 5-6 (see also Poland v Brazil (1938)), ; June 11. In Rome, Italian wrestling team beats Poland 6–1, ; June 12. In games of the Ekstraklasa, AKS Chorzów beats at home Warta Poznań 4–0, ŁKS Łódź loses in Łódź to Cracovia 0–1, Pogoń Lwów beats at home Ruch Chorzów 3-1 (att. 6000), Wisła Kraków beats in Kraków Warszawianka Warszawa 3–1, and Polonia Warszawa beats at home Śmigły Wilno 5–2. In Budapest, Hungary beats Poland 13–7, in an international handball game. In Poznań, in a rowing competition, Poland loses to Germany 25–47, ; June 15. In Poznań, Polish boxing team beats France 14 -2, ; June 19. In games of the Ekstraklasa, Warta Poznań ties at ",
"score": "1.5503626"
},
{
"id": "28622638",
"title": "2013 Poznań Open",
"text": " The 2013 Poznań Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the jubilee tenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place at the Park Tenisowy Olimpia in Poznań, Poland from 13 to 21 July 2013, including the qualifying competition in the first two days.",
"score": "1.5431387"
},
{
"id": "29617572",
"title": "2014 Poznań Open",
"text": "Before the tournament ; 🇪🇸 Roberto Carballés Baena ; 🇧🇷 Guilherme Clezar ; 🇦🇷 Andrea Collarini ; 🇫🇷 Lucas Pouille ",
"score": "1.5430777"
},
{
"id": "29617557",
"title": "2015 Poznań Open",
"text": " The 2015 Poznań Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the twelfth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2015 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place at the Park Tenisowy Olimpia in Poznań, Poland from 11 to 19 July 2015, including the qualifying competition in the first two days. The tournament had its prize money increased to €64,000 + Hospitality, and thus offered 100 ATP Ranking points for singles and doubles winners.",
"score": "1.534514"
},
{
"id": "16091965",
"title": "1938 in Poland",
"text": "May 1. In games of the Polish Football League, Śmigły Wilno beats at home AKS Chorzów 3-1 (att. 5000), Pogoń Lwów beats at home ŁKS Łódź 1-0 (att. 4000), Wisła Kraków ties with Cracovia 2-2 (att. 8000), Ruch Chorzów beats at home Warta Poznań 3-2 (att. 5000) and Warszawianka Warszawa beats Polonia Warszawa 3-1 (att. 7000), ; May 3. In several Polish cities and towns, the National Running Day is celebrated to commemorate the Polish Constitution. The biggest runs take place in Poznań and Slonim. Polish national soccer team leaves Poland, heading to Strasbourg for a World Cup game vs Brazil, ; May 8. In Katowice, in the Davis Cup game, Poland beats Denmark 5–0. In games of the Ekstraklasa, Ruch Chorzów beats at home Warszawianka Warszawa ",
"score": "1.5285006"
},
{
"id": "16091959",
"title": "1938 in Poland",
"text": "January 2. Boxers of Warta Poznań become team champions of Poland, ; January 9. In Warsaw, the reserve ice hockey team of Poland beats Latvia 2–1, ; January 16. In Warsaw, in an international boxing match, Poland beats Italy 11–5, ; January 19. In Bern, Polish national ice hockey team beats Switzerland 1–0, ; January 22. In Brzesc nad Bugiem, AZS Warszawa becomes a women's volleyball champion of Poland. Second is HKS Łódź, third Olsza Kraków, ; January 30. Stanisław Marusarz wins a ski-jumping tournament in Garmisch-Partenkirchen. ",
"score": "1.5247679"
},
{
"id": "1568616",
"title": "1937 in Poland",
"text": "January 1. In a friendly game at Stuttgart, Ruch Chorzów beats VfB Stuttgart 3-1. All three goals for the Polish football champions are scored by Ernst Wilimowski, ; January 3. In a friendly game in Chorzów, football team of AKS Chorzów beats 5-0 the champion of Latvia, Olimpija Liepāja, ; January 4. Women's Volleyball Championships of Poland begin in Łódź, with eight teams: Polonia Warszawa, AZS Lwów, HKS Łódź, Olsza Kraków, Gryf Toruń, Unia Lublin, Warta Poznań and AZS Warszawa. The tournament is won by HKS Łódź, ; January 7. In Poznań, Polish boxing team beats 12-4 Norway, ; January 15. Men's Volleyball Championships of Poland begin in Warsaw, with ten teams: AZS Warsaw, Sokol Piotrkow Trybunalski, WKS Łódź, YMCA Kraków, Jednosc Ostrow Wielkopolski, Polonia Warszawa, KPW Katowice, Gryf Toruń, Sokol II Lwów, Ognisko Wilno. The tournament is won by Polonia Warszawa, ; January 16. Table Tennis Championships of Poland begin in Tarnów. Skiing Championships of Poland begin in Wisła. ",
"score": "1.5238829"
},
{
"id": "4816617",
"title": "2014 Powiat Poznański Open",
"text": "🇨🇿 Barbora Krejčíková / 🇷🇸 Aleksandra Krunić def. 🇺🇦 Anastasiya Vasylyeva / 🇺🇦 Maryna Zanevska 3–6, 6–0, [10–6] ",
"score": "1.5194123"
},
{
"id": "16091977",
"title": "1938 in Poland",
"text": "November 1. In a postponed game of the Ekstraklasa, Cracovia loses at home to Polonia Warszawa 0-2 (att. 4000), ; November 5. In Poznań, Poland loses to Italy 1–6 in a wrestling match, ; November 13. In international football game, which takes place in Dublin, Poland loses to Ireland 2–3, with goals by Ernest Wilimowski and Leonard Piątek. In Breslau, in a double boxing game, Germany beats Poland 12–4. In Toruń, Polish \"B\" boxing team beats Latvia 12–4, ; Final matches of Polish boxing championship begin, with such teams, as Elektrit Wilno, IKP Łódź, Lechia Lwów, Okęcie Warszawa, Wisła Kraków, LSW Lublin, HCP Poznań, Goplania Inowrocław, Warta Poznań, Strzelec Janowa Dolina and IKB Świętochłowice. The championship is won by Warta Poznań, ; November 27. In Lwów, in the final game of the President of Poland's Football Cup, Lwów beats Kraków 5–1, ",
"score": "1.5167227"
}
] | [
"2014 Powiat Poznański Open\n The 2014 Powiat Poznański Open was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the first edition of the tournament which was part of the 2014 ITF Women's Circuit, offering a total of $50,000 in prize money. It took place in Sobota, Greater Poland Voivodeship, Poland, on 21–27 July 2014.",
"2014 Powiat Poznański Open\n1 Rankings as of 14 July 2014 ",
"2014 Poznań Open\n The 2014 Poznań Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the eleventh edition of the tournament which was part of the 2014 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place at the Park Tenisowy Olimpia in Poznań, Poland from 12 to 20 July 2014, including the qualifying competition in the first two days.",
"1938 in Poland\n Chorzów 4-2 (att. 12 000), in Łódź, ŁKS Łódź ties 0–0 with Warta Poznań, and in Warsaw, Polonia Warszawa ties 2–2 with Cracovia (att. 5000), ; August 29. In an international lawn tennis game in Žilina, Czechoslovakia ties 3–3 with Poland. In games of the Ekstraklasa, ŁKS Łódź ties with Warta Poznań 0-0, Ruch Chorzów beats at home AKS Chorzów 4-2 (att. 15 000), Pogoń Lwów beats Warszawianka Warszawa 3-0 (att. 3500), Wisła Kraków beats Śmigły Wilno 4–1, and Cracovia ties with Polonia Warszawa 2-2. In qualifiers to the Ekstraklasa, Garbarnia Kraków beats at home Union Touring Łódź 2–1, and in Luck, local team PKS loses to Śląsk Świętochłowice 1-4 (att. 3000), ",
"Poznań Open\n The Poznań Open is a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor red clay courts. It is currently part of the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) Challenger Tour. It has been held annually at the Park Tenisowy Olimpia in Poznań, Poland, since 2004. The tournament is regarded as a continuation of Polish Open, which was held in Poznań for nine consecutive years between 1992 and 2000. The current champions are Bernabé Zapata Miralles in singles and Zdeněk Kolář with Jiří Lehečka in doubles event.",
"2014 Powiat Poznański Open – Singles\n The tournament in Sobota was a new addition to the ITF Women's Circuit. The second seed Kristína Kučová won the title, defeating Sesil Karatantcheva in the final, 1–6, 7–5, 6–3.",
"Warta Poznań\n a tennis section in 1914. During German rule, matches involving Polish teams were forbidden, which prompted the decision to organize the first Wielkopolska football championship in 1913, in which three teams participated: Warta Poznań, Posnania and Ostrovia Ostrów Wielkopolski. Warta became the first champion. The results were as follows: Posnania - Warta 1–1, Warta - Ostrovia 3–2, Ostrovia - Warta 3–4, Warta - Posnania 2–2. The inaugural championship of the region resulted in a surge of football popularity in Poznań. New football teams emerged such as Trytonia founded in Łazarz and a team called Sparta established in Jeżyce. In 1914, despite the start of hostilities related to the outbreak of World War I, efforts were made ",
"2014 Powiat Poznański Open\n🇵🇱 Magdalena Fręch ; 🇵🇱 Katarzyna Kawa ; 🇵🇱 Daria Kuczer ; 🇺🇸 Natalie Suk 🇷🇺 Natela Dzalamidze ; 🇮🇹 Anastasia Grymalska ; 🇨🇿 Pernilla Mendesová ; 🇷🇺 Valeria Savinykh 🇪🇸 Inés Ferrer Suárez ; 🇱🇹 Lina Stančiūtė 🇨🇿 Barbora Krejčíková ; Lara Michel The following players received wildcards into the singles main draw: The following players received entry from the qualifying draw: The following players received entry into the singles main draw as lucky losers: The following players received entry by a Special Exempt:",
"2014 Powiat Poznański Open – Doubles\n The tournament in Sobota was a new addition to the ITF Women's Circuit. The fourth seeds Barbora Krejčíková and Aleksandra Krunić won the tournament, defeating third seeds Anastasiya Vasylyeva and Maryna Zanevska in the final, 3–6, 6–0, [10–6].",
"2014 Powiat Poznański Open – Singles\n • # 🇨🇿 Andrea Hlaváčková (first round) • # 🇸🇰 Kristína Kučová (champion) • # 🇩🇪 Dinah Pfizenmaier (first round) • # Arantxa Rus (second round) • # 🇺🇦 Maryna Zanevska (quarterfinals) • # 🇷🇸 Aleksandra Krunić (second round) • # 🇺🇦 Anastasiya Vasylyeva (first round) • # Richèl Hogenkamp (first round)",
"1938 in Poland\n 3–3 with Warszawianka (att. 4000), Ruch Chorzów beats at home Cracovia 4-0 (att. 10 000), ŁKS Łódź ties at home with Śmigły Wilno 1-1 (att. 4000), and Wisła Kraków beats in Kraków Pogoń Lwów 1-0 (att. 3000). In international track and field-friendly, Poland beats France 119,5 – 91,5. Ignacy Tłoczyński becomes lawn tennis champion of Poland, after beating Jozef Hebda, ; June 26. In games of the Ekstraklasa, Cracovia beats at home Ruch Chorzów 3-2 (att. 7000), in Chorzów AKS beats Polonia Warszawa 1-0 (att. 6000), in Wilno, Śmigły beats ŁKS Łódź 4-0 (att. 4000), in Lwów Pogon beats Wisła Kraków 2–1, and in Warsaw, Warszawianka beats Warta Poznań 2-1 (att. 4000). KPW Poznań becomes handball champion of Poland, 2nd is AZS Warszawa, 3rd Cracovia, and 4th ŁKS Łódź. ",
"1938 in Poland\nJune 5. In Strasbourg, in a 1938 FIFA World Cup match, Poland loses to Brazil 5-6 (see also Poland v Brazil (1938)), ; June 11. In Rome, Italian wrestling team beats Poland 6–1, ; June 12. In games of the Ekstraklasa, AKS Chorzów beats at home Warta Poznań 4–0, ŁKS Łódź loses in Łódź to Cracovia 0–1, Pogoń Lwów beats at home Ruch Chorzów 3-1 (att. 6000), Wisła Kraków beats in Kraków Warszawianka Warszawa 3–1, and Polonia Warszawa beats at home Śmigły Wilno 5–2. In Budapest, Hungary beats Poland 13–7, in an international handball game. In Poznań, in a rowing competition, Poland loses to Germany 25–47, ; June 15. In Poznań, Polish boxing team beats France 14 -2, ; June 19. In games of the Ekstraklasa, Warta Poznań ties at ",
"2013 Poznań Open\n The 2013 Poznań Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the jubilee tenth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2013 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place at the Park Tenisowy Olimpia in Poznań, Poland from 13 to 21 July 2013, including the qualifying competition in the first two days.",
"2014 Poznań Open\nBefore the tournament ; 🇪🇸 Roberto Carballés Baena ; 🇧🇷 Guilherme Clezar ; 🇦🇷 Andrea Collarini ; 🇫🇷 Lucas Pouille ",
"2015 Poznań Open\n The 2015 Poznań Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the twelfth edition of the tournament which was part of the 2015 ATP Challenger Tour. It took place at the Park Tenisowy Olimpia in Poznań, Poland from 11 to 19 July 2015, including the qualifying competition in the first two days. The tournament had its prize money increased to €64,000 + Hospitality, and thus offered 100 ATP Ranking points for singles and doubles winners.",
"1938 in Poland\nMay 1. In games of the Polish Football League, Śmigły Wilno beats at home AKS Chorzów 3-1 (att. 5000), Pogoń Lwów beats at home ŁKS Łódź 1-0 (att. 4000), Wisła Kraków ties with Cracovia 2-2 (att. 8000), Ruch Chorzów beats at home Warta Poznań 3-2 (att. 5000) and Warszawianka Warszawa beats Polonia Warszawa 3-1 (att. 7000), ; May 3. In several Polish cities and towns, the National Running Day is celebrated to commemorate the Polish Constitution. The biggest runs take place in Poznań and Slonim. Polish national soccer team leaves Poland, heading to Strasbourg for a World Cup game vs Brazil, ; May 8. In Katowice, in the Davis Cup game, Poland beats Denmark 5–0. In games of the Ekstraklasa, Ruch Chorzów beats at home Warszawianka Warszawa ",
"1938 in Poland\nJanuary 2. Boxers of Warta Poznań become team champions of Poland, ; January 9. In Warsaw, the reserve ice hockey team of Poland beats Latvia 2–1, ; January 16. In Warsaw, in an international boxing match, Poland beats Italy 11–5, ; January 19. In Bern, Polish national ice hockey team beats Switzerland 1–0, ; January 22. In Brzesc nad Bugiem, AZS Warszawa becomes a women's volleyball champion of Poland. Second is HKS Łódź, third Olsza Kraków, ; January 30. Stanisław Marusarz wins a ski-jumping tournament in Garmisch-Partenkirchen. ",
"1937 in Poland\nJanuary 1. In a friendly game at Stuttgart, Ruch Chorzów beats VfB Stuttgart 3-1. All three goals for the Polish football champions are scored by Ernst Wilimowski, ; January 3. In a friendly game in Chorzów, football team of AKS Chorzów beats 5-0 the champion of Latvia, Olimpija Liepāja, ; January 4. Women's Volleyball Championships of Poland begin in Łódź, with eight teams: Polonia Warszawa, AZS Lwów, HKS Łódź, Olsza Kraków, Gryf Toruń, Unia Lublin, Warta Poznań and AZS Warszawa. The tournament is won by HKS Łódź, ; January 7. In Poznań, Polish boxing team beats 12-4 Norway, ; January 15. Men's Volleyball Championships of Poland begin in Warsaw, with ten teams: AZS Warsaw, Sokol Piotrkow Trybunalski, WKS Łódź, YMCA Kraków, Jednosc Ostrow Wielkopolski, Polonia Warszawa, KPW Katowice, Gryf Toruń, Sokol II Lwów, Ognisko Wilno. The tournament is won by Polonia Warszawa, ; January 16. Table Tennis Championships of Poland begin in Tarnów. Skiing Championships of Poland begin in Wisła. ",
"2014 Powiat Poznański Open\n🇨🇿 Barbora Krejčíková / 🇷🇸 Aleksandra Krunić def. 🇺🇦 Anastasiya Vasylyeva / 🇺🇦 Maryna Zanevska 3–6, 6–0, [10–6] ",
"1938 in Poland\nNovember 1. In a postponed game of the Ekstraklasa, Cracovia loses at home to Polonia Warszawa 0-2 (att. 4000), ; November 5. In Poznań, Poland loses to Italy 1–6 in a wrestling match, ; November 13. In international football game, which takes place in Dublin, Poland loses to Ireland 2–3, with goals by Ernest Wilimowski and Leonard Piątek. In Breslau, in a double boxing game, Germany beats Poland 12–4. In Toruń, Polish \"B\" boxing team beats Latvia 12–4, ; Final matches of Polish boxing championship begin, with such teams, as Elektrit Wilno, IKP Łódź, Lechia Lwów, Okęcie Warszawa, Wisła Kraków, LSW Lublin, HCP Poznań, Goplania Inowrocław, Warta Poznań, Strzelec Janowa Dolina and IKB Świętochłowice. The championship is won by Warta Poznań, ; November 27. In Lwów, in the final game of the President of Poland's Football Cup, Lwów beats Kraków 5–1, "
] |
What sport does 1997 Conference USA Baseball Tournament play? | [
"baseball",
"America's pastime",
"⚾"
] | sport | 1997 Conference USA Baseball Tournament | 3,158,009 | 61 | [
{
"id": "27304899",
"title": "1997 Conference USA Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 1997 Conference USA Baseball Tournament was the 1997 postseason baseball championship of the NCAA Division I Conference USA, held at Turchin Stadium in New Orleans, Louisiana from May 13–18. defeated in the championship game, earning the conference's automatic bid to the 1997 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. With the completion of Houston's move from the Southwest Conference, the conference expanded to 10 teams in baseball. As a result, the tournament's play-in round was expanded to include the 7th–10th seeds, instead of only the 8th and 9th.",
"score": "1.9644473"
},
{
"id": "27304901",
"title": "1997 Conference USA Baseball Tournament",
"text": " Two play-in games among the four teams with the worst regular season records decided which two teams would have the final two spots in the eight-team double-elimination bracket.",
"score": "1.9158049"
},
{
"id": "3300001",
"title": "1996 Conference USA Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 1996 Conference USA Baseball Tournament was the 1996 postseason college baseball championship of the NCAA Division I Conference USA, held at Pete Taylor Park in Hattiesburg, Mississippi from May 14–19. won the tournament and received Conference USA's automatic bid to the 1996 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. The tournament consisted of nine teams with a play-in game, two double-elimination brackets, and a single-game final.",
"score": "1.8839111"
},
{
"id": "27304900",
"title": "1997 Conference USA Baseball Tournament",
"text": "Records reflect conference play only. ",
"score": "1.8810439"
},
{
"id": "27305038",
"title": "1998 Conference USA Baseball Tournament",
"text": " Two play-in games among the four teams with the worst regular season records decided which two teams would have the final two spots in the eight-team double-elimination bracket.",
"score": "1.8722866"
},
{
"id": "27304902",
"title": "1997 Conference USA Baseball Tournament",
"text": "Bold indicates the winner of the game. ; Italics indicate that the team was eliminated from the tournament. ",
"score": "1.8689286"
},
{
"id": "27305036",
"title": "1998 Conference USA Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 1998 Conference USA Baseball Tournament was the 1998 postseason baseball championship of the NCAA Division I Conference USA, held at Zephyr Field in New Orleans, Louisiana from May 12–17. defeated in the championship game, earning the conference's automatic bid to the 1998 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.",
"score": "1.8603835"
},
{
"id": "27305037",
"title": "1998 Conference USA Baseball Tournament",
"text": "Records reflect conference play only. ",
"score": "1.8239236"
},
{
"id": "27305039",
"title": "1998 Conference USA Baseball Tournament",
"text": "Bold indicates the winner of the game. ; Italics indicate that the team was eliminated from the tournament. ",
"score": "1.8214018"
},
{
"id": "33100663",
"title": "Conference USA Baseball Tournament",
"text": " See, for example, 1997 Conference USA Baseball Tournament. From 1996 to 1999, the tournament format consisted of an eight-team double-elimination tournament preceded by a single-game play-in round. The play-in round determined which of the lowest seeds (by regular season conference record) would qualify for the eight-team bracket. In 1996, when the league had nine baseball-sponsoring schools, the play-in round included the 8th and 9th seeds. When Houston joined from the Southwest Conference prior to the 1997 season, the play-in round featured the 7th–10th seeds. The eight-team double-elimination tournament consisted of two four-team double-elimination brackets, the winners of which met in a single-game final.",
"score": "1.818594"
},
{
"id": "3300003",
"title": "1996 Conference USA Baseball Tournament",
"text": "Bold indicates the winner of the game. ; Italics indicate that the team was eliminated from the tournament. The two teams with the worst records in regular season conference play faced each other in a single elimination situation to earn the 8th spot in the conference tournament. ",
"score": "1.799979"
},
{
"id": "27305188",
"title": "1999 Conference USA Baseball Tournament",
"text": " Two play-in games among the four teams with the worst regular season records decided which two teams would have the final two spots in the eight-team double-elimination bracket.",
"score": "1.7939756"
},
{
"id": "27305186",
"title": "1999 Conference USA Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 1999 Conference USA Baseball Tournament was the 1999 postseason baseball championship of the NCAA Division I Conference USA, held at USA Stadium in Millington, Tennessee from May 12–17. defeated in the championship game, earning the conference's automatic bid to the 1999 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.",
"score": "1.7831361"
},
{
"id": "3300002",
"title": "1996 Conference USA Baseball Tournament",
"text": "Records listed are conference play only. Marquette and DePaul did not field baseball teams. Houston participated in the Southwest Conference for baseball. ",
"score": "1.7733512"
},
{
"id": "27483892",
"title": "2000 Conference USA Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 2000 Conference USA Baseball Tournament was the 2000 postseason baseball championship of the NCAA Division I Conference USA, held at Florida Power Park in St. Petersburg, Florida from May 17–21. Houston defeated Cincinnati in the championship game, earning the conference's automatic bid to the 2000 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. The tournament's format was changed slightly from the format used from 1996 to 1999. The play-in round that had been used to determine which of the lowest seeds would participate in the eight-team bracket was eliminated. Instead, only the top eight of the conference's ten teams in the regular season qualified for the tournament. The loss of the play-in round shortened the tournament from six to five days.",
"score": "1.756568"
},
{
"id": "26678494",
"title": "1997 Mid-American Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The top four finishers based on conference winning percentage only, participated in the tournament. The teams played double-elimination tournament. This was the final year of the four team format, as the field expanded to six teams in 1998.",
"score": "1.7531585"
},
{
"id": "10078536",
"title": "1998 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The opening rounds of the tournament were played at eight regional sites across the country, each consisting of a six-team field. Each regional tournament is double-elimination, however region brackets are variable depending on the number of teams remaining after each round. Regional games were scheduled for Thursday, May 21 through Sunday, May 24; however, one final Sunday game (Arizona State vs. Georgia Tech at Wichita) had to be played the next day due to rainout. The winners of each regional advanced to the College World Series. In the final year of the 48-team tournament, five regionals required the full 11 games. Florida State, LSU and Mississippi State advanced to the CWS unscathed. Bold indicates winner.",
"score": "1.7500949"
},
{
"id": "26678493",
"title": "1997 Mid-American Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 1997 Mid-American Conference Baseball Tournament took place in May 1997. The top four regular season finishers met in the double-elimination tournament held at Trautwein Field on the campus of Ohio University in Athens, Ohio. This was the ninth Mid-American Conference postseason tournament to determine a champion. Top seeded won their first tournament championship to earn the conference's automatic bid to the 1997 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.",
"score": "1.749112"
},
{
"id": "28869499",
"title": "1998 Southern Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 1998 Southern Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Joseph P. Riley, Jr. Park in Charleston, SC from April 30 through May 3. Second seeded The Citadel won the tournament and earned the Southern Conference's automatic bid to the 1998 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was the Bulldogs fourth tournament win The tournament used a double-elimination format. Only the top eight teams participated, so VMI and Appalachian State were not in the field. 1998 was the first season with UNC Greensboro and Wofford in the league, having joined the conference in the previous offseason.",
"score": "1.7475652"
},
{
"id": "27305189",
"title": "1999 Conference USA Baseball Tournament",
"text": "Bold indicates the winner of the game. ; Italics indicate that the team was eliminated from the tournament. ",
"score": "1.74388"
}
] | [
"1997 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\n The 1997 Conference USA Baseball Tournament was the 1997 postseason baseball championship of the NCAA Division I Conference USA, held at Turchin Stadium in New Orleans, Louisiana from May 13–18. defeated in the championship game, earning the conference's automatic bid to the 1997 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. With the completion of Houston's move from the Southwest Conference, the conference expanded to 10 teams in baseball. As a result, the tournament's play-in round was expanded to include the 7th–10th seeds, instead of only the 8th and 9th.",
"1997 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\n Two play-in games among the four teams with the worst regular season records decided which two teams would have the final two spots in the eight-team double-elimination bracket.",
"1996 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\n The 1996 Conference USA Baseball Tournament was the 1996 postseason college baseball championship of the NCAA Division I Conference USA, held at Pete Taylor Park in Hattiesburg, Mississippi from May 14–19. won the tournament and received Conference USA's automatic bid to the 1996 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. The tournament consisted of nine teams with a play-in game, two double-elimination brackets, and a single-game final.",
"1997 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\nRecords reflect conference play only. ",
"1998 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\n Two play-in games among the four teams with the worst regular season records decided which two teams would have the final two spots in the eight-team double-elimination bracket.",
"1997 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\nBold indicates the winner of the game. ; Italics indicate that the team was eliminated from the tournament. ",
"1998 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\n The 1998 Conference USA Baseball Tournament was the 1998 postseason baseball championship of the NCAA Division I Conference USA, held at Zephyr Field in New Orleans, Louisiana from May 12–17. defeated in the championship game, earning the conference's automatic bid to the 1998 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.",
"1998 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\nRecords reflect conference play only. ",
"1998 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\nBold indicates the winner of the game. ; Italics indicate that the team was eliminated from the tournament. ",
"Conference USA Baseball Tournament\n See, for example, 1997 Conference USA Baseball Tournament. From 1996 to 1999, the tournament format consisted of an eight-team double-elimination tournament preceded by a single-game play-in round. The play-in round determined which of the lowest seeds (by regular season conference record) would qualify for the eight-team bracket. In 1996, when the league had nine baseball-sponsoring schools, the play-in round included the 8th and 9th seeds. When Houston joined from the Southwest Conference prior to the 1997 season, the play-in round featured the 7th–10th seeds. The eight-team double-elimination tournament consisted of two four-team double-elimination brackets, the winners of which met in a single-game final.",
"1996 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\nBold indicates the winner of the game. ; Italics indicate that the team was eliminated from the tournament. The two teams with the worst records in regular season conference play faced each other in a single elimination situation to earn the 8th spot in the conference tournament. ",
"1999 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\n Two play-in games among the four teams with the worst regular season records decided which two teams would have the final two spots in the eight-team double-elimination bracket.",
"1999 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\n The 1999 Conference USA Baseball Tournament was the 1999 postseason baseball championship of the NCAA Division I Conference USA, held at USA Stadium in Millington, Tennessee from May 12–17. defeated in the championship game, earning the conference's automatic bid to the 1999 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.",
"1996 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\nRecords listed are conference play only. Marquette and DePaul did not field baseball teams. Houston participated in the Southwest Conference for baseball. ",
"2000 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\n The 2000 Conference USA Baseball Tournament was the 2000 postseason baseball championship of the NCAA Division I Conference USA, held at Florida Power Park in St. Petersburg, Florida from May 17–21. Houston defeated Cincinnati in the championship game, earning the conference's automatic bid to the 2000 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. The tournament's format was changed slightly from the format used from 1996 to 1999. The play-in round that had been used to determine which of the lowest seeds would participate in the eight-team bracket was eliminated. Instead, only the top eight of the conference's ten teams in the regular season qualified for the tournament. The loss of the play-in round shortened the tournament from six to five days.",
"1997 Mid-American Conference Baseball Tournament\n The top four finishers based on conference winning percentage only, participated in the tournament. The teams played double-elimination tournament. This was the final year of the four team format, as the field expanded to six teams in 1998.",
"1998 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament\n The opening rounds of the tournament were played at eight regional sites across the country, each consisting of a six-team field. Each regional tournament is double-elimination, however region brackets are variable depending on the number of teams remaining after each round. Regional games were scheduled for Thursday, May 21 through Sunday, May 24; however, one final Sunday game (Arizona State vs. Georgia Tech at Wichita) had to be played the next day due to rainout. The winners of each regional advanced to the College World Series. In the final year of the 48-team tournament, five regionals required the full 11 games. Florida State, LSU and Mississippi State advanced to the CWS unscathed. Bold indicates winner.",
"1997 Mid-American Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 1997 Mid-American Conference Baseball Tournament took place in May 1997. The top four regular season finishers met in the double-elimination tournament held at Trautwein Field on the campus of Ohio University in Athens, Ohio. This was the ninth Mid-American Conference postseason tournament to determine a champion. Top seeded won their first tournament championship to earn the conference's automatic bid to the 1997 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.",
"1998 Southern Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 1998 Southern Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Joseph P. Riley, Jr. Park in Charleston, SC from April 30 through May 3. Second seeded The Citadel won the tournament and earned the Southern Conference's automatic bid to the 1998 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was the Bulldogs fourth tournament win The tournament used a double-elimination format. Only the top eight teams participated, so VMI and Appalachian State were not in the field. 1998 was the first season with UNC Greensboro and Wofford in the league, having joined the conference in the previous offseason.",
"1999 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\nBold indicates the winner of the game. ; Italics indicate that the team was eliminated from the tournament. "
] |